Showing posts with label York River. Show all posts
Showing posts with label York River. Show all posts

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Pocahontas, John Smith, Rescue Site In Spotlight, Gloucester, VA

Written by
Steve Szkotak
Associated Press
English: Plate 10 of an illustration based on ...
English: Plate 10 of an illustration based on the work of John White, however, this is used by John Smith and Strachey at Jamestown to document Virginia Indian communities. #3 is described as a tomahawk. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)



GLOUCESTER, VA. — A farm field overlooking the York River in Tidewater Virginia is believed to be where Pocahontas interceded with her powerful father Powhatan to rescue English Capt. John Smith from death.

That’s a fanciful footnote for many Virginia Indians, historians and archaeologists, who say the real story is that this land was the center of a complex, sprawling empire ruled by Powhatan long before the first permanent English settlement in America was founded in 1607.

It was called Werowocomoco, which roughly translates to a “place of chiefs.”

“This is like our Washington,” said Kevin Brown, chief of the Pamunkey tribe. “History didn’t begin in 1607, and there are a lot of people who overlook that.”

On loan to archaeologists for more than a decade, these 57 privately owned acres will be preserved forever under an agreement years in the making and to be officially announced Friday.

The deal is important for Native Americans because they believe their story has been overshadowed for centuries by the narrative of Smith and his fellow Europeans. In a departure from past digs involving native sites, archaeologists sought the counsel of Indian leaders before and during the exploration, honoring their wishes that burial grounds not be disturbed and helping interpret what was discovered.

For Ashley Atkins, a College of William & Mary doctoral candidate who has worked at the site since 2005, “recovering things out of the ground” was secondary to working with her fellow Pamunkey.

“Unfortunately, native people in the past have had no involvement at all in the way that their history has been investigated, uncovered and presented to the public,” said Atkins, who is 28. “Most people would think, ‘They wouldn’t be involved in uncovering your own history?’ But the reality is that has not been the common practice.”

Jeff Brown, a Pamunkey and Kevin Brown’s brother, worked at the site for years. He recalled Indians visiting the sweeping expanse overlooking the York River and being overcome.



“It gets emotional,” he said. “And when you’re digging you can really feel it.”

Martin Gallivan, a William & Mary anthropologist, said the involvement of native people “enhanced the project immensely.”

Only a fraction of Werewocomoco has been explored, perhaps just 2 percent.

After decades of research, archaeologists used the writings of Smith and others, ancient maps and detective work to conclude with near-certainty that this was Powhatan’s seat of power about 15 miles from Jamestown.

Powhatan’s chiefdom covered 30 political divisions and a population of 15,000 to 20,000 people while Jamestown settlers struggled to survive. Excavations have yielded the outline of the largest longhouse ever found in Virginia and a system of ditches that may have separated sacred and secular areas.

Randolph Turner, a retired state archaeologist whose hunt for Werewocomoco dates to the 1970s, said Powhatan’s empire was “one of the most complex political entities in all of eastern North America.”

The leader “had the power of life and death” and expanded his empire through warfare or the threat of warfare.

“He’s one of the most interesting political and military figures that I’ve ever read about,” Turner said. “And we’re just getting hints in the historical records of all he accomplished in his lifetime.”

The discovery of Werewocomoco can be credited to a purebred dog belonging to the land’s owners, Lynn and Robert Ripley.

Lynn Ripley used to walk around their land with her Chesapeake Bay Retriever, an American Kennel Club competitor named Mobjack Rhett Master Hunter.

She would remove debris that could cut her dog’s paws, and found arrowheads, spear tips, pipe stems and pottery shards.

“I just seemed to have an eye for it,” she said. “That’s how it all began, so our dog wouldn’t cut his feet. It’s like we were meant to be there and I was meant to find these things.”

The clincher was the discovery of copper, which was valued by the Indians as gold is today.

“I am absolutely convinced this is Werewocomoco,” Turner said. “It makes no sense for it to be anywhere else.”

That conclusion is supported by the U.S. Park Service, William & Mary, the Virginia Department of Historic Resources and the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities.

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Thursday, June 13, 2013

Caged Gloucester girl continues to struggle after surviving horrific living conditions



Gloucester County, Va. – The couple who adopted the Gloucester girl whose biological parents starved her and locked in a cage say “she will spend years trying to relearn and regain what was stolen from her.”
In the victim impact statement written by the girl’s new adoptive parents, they say she “often cries thinking that she isn’t going to eat another meal”.  They also say “she asks repeatedly when we will eat again and if she will be allowed to have any” and she has to be watched carefully when she eats for she eats so fast that she has choked.”
Brian and Shannon Gore, the girl’s biological parents, were sentenced to 30 years in prison for their treatment of the girl.  Authorities found the girl inside the Gores’ home, trapped in a makeshift cage.  The girl was literally skin and bones, and had resulted to eating her own hair, flakes of her skin, and feces to survive.
The girl’s new parents adopted her in 2011 after authorities rescued the girl. The parents say she was in the hospital nearly three months before she was able to go home with them.
Her mother wrote “at first glance one would see a beautiful blonde haired, blue-eyed little girl” and “a smile that is bright and full of innocence,” but her father wrote that she “cries asking why she is different.”
Her mother says the girl had to learn how to “stand, walk, use a cup and fork” when they brought her home two years ago.
They say her muscles have been damaged so badly from being hunched over in the cage that “she is not able to do the monkey bars at school.”
They say she’s can’t ride the school bus because “she was unable to climb the three steps necessary to get on the bus.”
Her mother writes that while the girl is nearly nine-years-old “she is mentally approximately three years of age.”
Her new parents say the girl’s biggest struggle is with food.
Her father wrote that his daughter “asks repeatedly when we will eat again and if she will be allowed to have any” and that “she has to be watched carefully when she eats for she eats so fast that she has choked.”
Her mother also said “she had to be continually reminded not to eat off the floor.”

NEWS UPDATE:
Gloucester County, Va. – Officials have confirmed that a person has been blown off of a pier in Gloucester Point on the York River.
Crews are now searching for the missing person according to Sheriff Warren with the Gloucester Sheriffs Office.

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Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Gloucester supervisors look to clean up local waters

Seal of Gloucester County, Virginia
Seal of Gloucester County, Virginia (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
The banks of the Piankatank River
The banks of the Piankatank River (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The Board of Supervisors unanimously approved Tuesday night moving forward with the establishment of No Discharge zones in Gloucester County's waters.
Establishing No Discharge zones in Gloucester County means boaters would be prohibited from dumping human sewage in rivers, streams and creeks. The county's Go Green Committee began working on the process last year before coming before the supervisors for approval to continue the work.
The zone areas would include the Piankatank River, Mobjack Bay and the York River and all of their tributaries. Establishing the zones on some of the waterways — including the Piankatank and upper North rivers and Adams and Poropotank creeks and Morris Bay — will require coordination with neighboring counties.
Phil Olekszyk, a member of the Go Green Committee said boaters whose vessels are equipped with marine sanitation devices can discharge without penalty in Gloucester waters. He showed a map that highlighted thousands of acres ofGloucester rivers, streams, creeks and bays that are off-limits to shellfish harvesting due to polluted waters.
Click Here for the rest of the story from the Daily Press.

We wish the board good luck with this.  How do they propose to stop people from dumping?  Will dumping police now be patrolling all the water ways?  This looks like a forced business that people now have to use if they want to own and use a boat.   More of your freedoms being taken away in the name of environmental correctness.  Just wear orange to protest the go green movement.

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