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Virginia
Dare and the Lost Colony: Fact and Legend
by Sandra Boyd*
More than four hundred years ago, Europeans
wanted to set up colonies in the New World. For them, the New World meant
the present-day continents of North and South America. What challenging
times those must have been! Sir Walter Raleigh, an adventurous English
gentleman, sent a group of men to explore the New World. A later expedition
established a settlement on Roanoke Island, on the North Carolina coast.
In 1586, after enduring winter hardships, lack of food, and disagreements
with the Indians, survivors of this colony returned home to England with
Sir Francis Drake. Then Raleigh decided to send a second group of colonists.
On April 26, 1587, a small fleet set sail from England, hoping to establish
the first permanent English settlement in the New World.
This second group of colonists differed
from the first because it included not only men but also women and children.
It would be a permanent colony. The little fleet consisted of the ship
Lyon,
a flyboat (a fast, flat-bottomed boat capable of maneuvering in shallow
water), and a pinnace (a small sailing ship used to carry supplies). These
vessels carried more than 150 men, women, and children. Also aboard were
two Indians, Manteo and Wanchese, who had gone to England with Raleigh’s
previous expedition and were returning to their home. The pilot was a Spaniard,
Simon Fernando, and the governor of the new colony was John White. Among
the colonists were Governor White’s daughter, Eleanor, and her husband,
Ananias Dare. The voyage took longer than the usual six weeks, and the
ships finally anchored off Roanoke Island on July 22.
Once the colonists landed, they began repairing
the houses already there and started building new homes. Eleanor Dare gave
birth to a baby girl on August 18 and named her Virginia. Virginia Dare
became the first English child born in the New World.
The Lost Colony legacy
lends itself to changing trends and tastes, as shown by the Dare Bear family:
Ananias Dare Bear; his wife, Eleanor Dare Bear; and their daughter, Virginia
Dare Bear. Making teddy bears in the image of famous people became popular
in the 1980s. Jean S. Noah of Holly Hill, South Carolina, made these bears,
now in the museum’s collection, in 1983.
The colonists begged Governor White to
return to England for supplies. He was very reluctant to leave the colony
but finally agreed. On August 27, nine days after his granddaughter’s birth,
he set sail. He planned to get relief supplies and more colonists in England
and then return to Roanoke Island as soon as possible. However, his plans
did not work out. Soon after White returned to England, King Philip II
of Spain and his armada (fleet of warships) attacked the British. Because
of this attack and for other reasons, White could not return to Roanoke
until three years later.
He finally reached Roanoke Island on August
18, 1590, his granddaughter’s third birthday. The colony was abandoned.
What had happened? The only clues are found in a log book kept by Governor
White. He found the letters CRO carved on a tree near the water’s edge.
The settlement had been enclosed by a palisade (a tall fence of stakes
pointed at the tops and set close together) to make a fort. At the right
side of the entrance, the word CROATOAN had been carved on a post “without
any cross or signe of distress” near it. White and his men continued to
search but never found a trace of the colony. White hoped that the colonists
were safe with Manteo and his friendly Croatoan tribesmen at their home
on Hatteras Island.
What happened to these “Lost Colonists”?
No one knows for sure. As with many mysteries, when the answer cannot be
found, legends grow to explain the story. One of the most enduring North
Carolina legends is about Virginia Dare as the white doe.
In 1901 Sallie Southall Cotten wrote The
White Doe: The Fate of Virginia Dare, a long narrative poem that tried
to explain the mystery. According to Ms. Cotten’s story and later variations
of the legend, Virginia Dare grew up in the tribe of the friendly Indian
Manteo. She became known as Winona-Ska and grew into a beautiful young
woman whom everyone loved. Okisko was a handsome young Indian chieftain
who wished to marry her. However, an old witch doctor, Chico, also wanted
to win Winona-Ska. Chico was very jealous of Okisko. In spite of his efforts
to win her love, Chico was turned down by Winona-Ska. Enraged, he used
his evil magic to turn her into a white doe. If she wouldn’t be his, no
other man could have her, either.
Okisko was determined to undo the evil
magic of Chico. He found a kindly magician, Wenokan, to help him. Okisko
made an arrow with an oyster shell tip. Then he and Wenokan took the arrow
to a magic fountain. When Okisko put the arrow into the water, the arrow
became pearl. If the white doe was shot with this pearl arrow, the evil
spell would be broken, and Winona-Ska would become human again.
At this time Wanchese decided he would
seek fame and glory by killing the charmed white doe. He knew that only
a silver arrow could kill this special doe. His father, also named Wanchese,
was the Indian who had traveled to England with Manteo. Queen Elizabeth
I had given a silver arrow to his father. Now the son would use it to kill
the white doe.
One day Okisko saw the white doe near the
ruins of Fort Raleigh on Roanoke Island. Nervously, he raised his bow and
shot his magic pearl arrow, but at exactly the same time, Wanchese shot
his silver arrow from another direction. Both arrows pierced the white
doe’s heart. Magically, Okisko’s pearl arrow turned her back into a beautiful
young woman, but Wanchese’s silver arrow pierced her human heart. Okisko
rushed to her, but Winona-Ska died in his arms.
In desperation, Okisko ran to the magic
fountain and threw both arrows into the water, begging for Winona-Ska’s
life. When he returned to the place where she had died, he found no sign
of either the doe or Winona-Ska. Later the white doe appeared and looked
at Okisko with her soft eyes. Then she ran into the woods.
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The Virginia Dare Memorial
Association, formed by Sallie Southall Cotton and other women to promote
the state’s history, raised money for a North Carolina exhibition at the
1893 Columbian exposition in Chicago. Using Virginia Dare as a symbol of
North Carolina’s importance to the nation’s history, the association commissioned
this desk for the exhibit. Silas McBee of Lincolnton designed it, and a
group of Wilmington craftsmen led by E.V. McKenzie built it. Kate Cheshire
of Tarboro carved the five panels. The central front panel (shown in close-up
here) interprets the white doe legend. |
To this day many people report seeing a
ghostly white doe near the area where the Lost Colony first settled on
Roanoke Island. Will the mystery ever be solved? We may never know all
the facts, but this legend of the white doe is an interesting way to explain
the fate of Virginia Dare, one of the Lost Colonists.
*Sandra Boyd, a former special education teacher
at Apex High School in Apex, volunteers at the North Carolina Museum of
History.
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