The Jamestown Brides

The Bartered Wives of the New World

Jennifer Potter author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Atlantic Books

Published:4th Oct '18

£20.00

Available to order, but very limited on stock - if we have issues obtaining a copy, we will let you know.

The Jamestown Brides cover

The extraordinary story of the British women who made the perilous journey to Jamestown, Virginia, to become wives for tobacco planters in the New Colony.

In 1621, fifty-six English women crossed the Atlantic in response to the Virginia Company of London's call for maids 'young and uncorrupt' to make wives for the planters of its new colony in Virginia. The English had settled there just fourteen years previously and the company hoped to root its unruly menfolk to the land with ties of family and children.

While the women travelled of their own accord, the company was in effect selling them at a profit for a bride price of 150 lbs of tobacco for each woman sold. The rewards would flow to investors in the near-bankrupt company. But what did the women want from the enterprise? Why did they agree to make the dangerous crossing to a wild and dangerous land, where six out of seven European settlers died within their first few years - from dysentery, typhoid, salt water poisoning and periodic skirmishes with the native population? And what happened to them in the end?

Delving into company records and original sources on both sides of the Atlantic, Jennifer Potter tracks the women's footsteps from their homes in England to their new lives in Virginia. Giving voice to these forgotten women of America's early history, she triumphantly invites the reader to journey alongside the brides as they travel into a perilous and uncertain future.

I love this kind of historical writing, with the stitching showing. There is a story here, but it is Potter's skilful guidance through the disparate sources that makes it work. Engaged and thoughtful, she has given her women an existence they would recognise. -- Lucy Moore * Literary Review *
An evocative and painstakingly researched account of these early female settlers, who have lacked a voice, an identity, even a name, until now. From 400 years ago, they step from these pages and speak to us. -- Hilary Davies * The Tablet, 'Books of the Year' *
Compelling... A pleasure to read. * BBC History Magazine *
With extraordinary scholarship and painstaking use of contemporary texts Potter succeeds in her professed task of bearing witness to the lives of young women unknown to history... Full of sensational material... * TLS *

ISBN: 9781782399131

Dimensions: 240mm x 160mm x 32mm

Weight: 745g

384 pages

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