Captain Ralph Hamor (Hamer) was one of the original colonist to settle Virginia, and author of "A True Discourse of the Present State of Virginia" when he returned to London in 1615.
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Captain Ralph Hamor was the second son of Ralph Hamor and Mabell (Loveland) Hamor of London.
In 1609, as member of the London Company, Hamor, along with his father, joined the Second Charter of Virginia as a captain of one of the vessels to sail to the new world as part of the large investment of settling a new colony in Virginia. Funded by the Earls of Salisbury, Suffolk, Southampton, Pembroke, and others, five hundred persons set sail for what will be known as Jamestown.[1]
Upon the latter end of May, 1609, a fleet of nine ships, with the five hundred persons, lead by the admiral ship the "Sea-Venture" commanded by the three commissions of Captain Christopher Newport, Sir Thomas Gates, and Sir George Somers, set sail for Jamestown. But, as the fleet passed Bermuda on July 25, the tail end of a hurricane caught the flag ship carrying 150 passengers, stranding it on the island and sinking one of the other smaller vessels. Captain Ralph Hamor's ship, along with the other six ships commanded by Captains; Ratcliffe, Martin, Wood, Webbe, Moon, King and Davies arrived in Virginia safe.[1]
In the Fall of 1609, Hamor set sail back to London, only to return the following Spring. On April 9, 1610, Captain Hamor escorted Lord Delaware and about one hundred new settlers including "Frenchmen to plant vines, and Swiss to find mines," aboard the "De La Warr", along with two other ships, the "Blessing of Plymouth" and the "Hercules of Rye", back to Virginia. The three ships arrived safely in Jamestown on Sunday, June 20, 1610.[2]
On June 22, 1610, Hamor was named Secretary of the Colony by Lord Delaware, and served from 1611 to 1614, as he well documented the Colonies' accounts.[3] In 1611 Hamor and Thomas Savage visited the Native American village of Matchcot, to sit with Chief Powhatan father of the legend Pocahontas. Ralph Hamor forgot to ware the pearl necklace to signify his status as a representative of his government, but told the chief that Sir Thomas Dale wants to marry one of his daughters.[4]
In 1615, he returned to London to publish their stories in the; "A True Discourse of the Present State of Virginia". In his tales, he talks about Pocahontas as the most beloved child of her father, as his "delight and darling," according to Ralph Hamor.[5]
He returned to Virginia on November 28, 1616, and was named Vice-Admiral to Admiral Samuel Argall.[6]
On January 18, 1617, Hamor was awarded eight shares of the Virginia Company and was put in charge of 16 men.[6]
By Summer of 1621, some local Indian tribes became increasingly hostile towards the colonist. Hamor wrote in a letter to the Council after the attack on the Flowerieu Hundred plantation; "So sudden in their cruel execution, that few or none discerned the weapon or blow that brought them to destruction." That evening, Captain Hamor then took his ship and a Pinnace to try to save and collect the wounded from the different Plantations. On June 27, Hamor reached an agreement with the King of the Potomac Indians against the Opechancanough and Necochincos tribes, "Their and our enemy." Mid July Captain Newport was killed in an attack.[7]
As Council member, Hamor was granted land from the Virginia Company in June 1621, upon which he began to establish his own plantation. And, on November 28, 1621, the new Governor, Sir Francis Wyatt, appointed Ralph Hamor to the King's Council.[6]
One of Captain Hamor's official duties as Council member was to insure that Lady Cecily Delaware was satisfied with the cultivation of her assigned Virginian land.[3]
In February, 1622, Captain Ralph Hamor returned from England to Virginia as the command of the "Sea Flower" with 120 new settlers, of which were two servants of Hamor's; Thomas Powell and Elkinton Ratliffe, both to work on Hog Island.[8]
On Friday, March 22, 1622, Hamor, his older brother Thomas, and six of their male 'servants' were attacked by the Indians as they were building Hamor's new house in Warrosquyoake Shire. Inside the new homes were large groups of women and children. They were able to drive off the renegades with bricks, spades, and anything else they could get their hands on.[4] Of the roughly twelve hundred Jamestown residents, 347 were killed that day. Thomas was wounded with an arrow to the back during the attack, and his cousin Nathaniel Powell was killed.[9] After the attack, Hamor was ordered to escort the surviving Warrosquyoake Shire settlers to the safety of Jamestown Island, then to stand as command of the Martin's Hundred settlers who were also brought up to Jamestown. Once thing settled down, Hamor found himself in a land dispute with one of the biggest plantation owners in Virginia, Edward Bennett.[3] Also, over the next few month, in the Summer of 1622, Hamor embarked on a few trade expeditions, as well as a few retaliatory raids against the Native Americans.
By the Summer of 1622, the Colony was struggling with keeping up the food supplies, so in early the Council ordered several ships to travel far up the Chesapeake Bay to trade with the other tribes for food, and if diplomacy failed, use force. Captain Eden commanded the "Furtherance" while Captain Hamor commanded the "Tiger" up the bay. These efforts brought back 4,000 lbs of critically needed corn.
With little food set aside for Winter, the ship "Abigail" arrived in December, with what should have been food, but was loaded instead with armor and gunpowder. This ship also was loaded with sick passengers, as all were allowed to come ashore. By the Spring of 1623, another 500 colonist died from illness, malnutrition, and more sporadic Indian attacks.
On June 11, 1623, Ralph's brother Thomas Hamor died of a burning fever, as reported by surgeon Samuel Mole, leaving him the rights to Thomas' land. In that same year, Ralph married Elizabeth Fuller, born in 1579. Elizabeth was the widow of Jeffrey Clements. Elizabeth had seven children from her previous marriage, all born between 1601 and 1609 in Clarkenwell, England.[10] And in October of that same year, he gave a formal update to the Virginia Company of the condition of the Colony.[3]
During the Spring of 1624, Ralph Hamor became involved in another land dispute, this time with Ralph Evers, over cleared land on Hog Island. Evers was eventually allowed the rights to the land, and Hamor was given 200-acres along with funds compensating him for the building he erected on the property.[3]
On August 14, 1624, Hamor acquired a home on a one and one half acre (1.5 acre) lot.[11] He resided there with his wife, Elizabeth, and two of her children, Jeremiah II and Elizabeth Clements. According the 1624 Census of Hog Island, Hamor had a total of seven servants.[12] Six of those servants, Jeoffrey Hull, Mordecay Knight, Thomas Doleman, Elkinton Ratcliffe, Thomas Powell, and John Davies, lived with them.[6]
By 1625, Hamor had acquired 250 acres on Hog Island, and another 500 acres at Blue Point, all the while staying very active in the legal matters of the Jamestown colony, including; land disputes, public blasphemy hearings, illegal alcohol sales, even the authorization of the arrest of the town's gunsmith John Jefferson, who eloped with his maidservant.[3]
Captain Hamor died around October 11, 1626. Just after his death, Elizabeth remarried Captain Tobias Felgate in early February, 1627, but she died just two years later back in England, in 1629.[10]