| Answer Key for Teachers | Fasttrack
to America's Past
Section 2: Colonial America Page 2 - 7 and 2 - 8 Capt. John Smith's Tale |
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| The
Reading Selection:
Before reading this selection, be sure students are familiar with the basic facts about John Smith and Jamestown. Use the map on page 2 - 14 or the matching map from our overhead transparency collection. Remind students that John Smith did not marry Pocahontas. They were great friends, but Pocahontas was only 11 or 12 when Jamestown was first settled. In 1609 Smith returned to England after being burned badly in a gunpowder explosion, and Pocahontas thought Smith had died. She later married another colonist, John Rolf. When they visited England, Pocahontas was overjoyed to find Smith was alive, and met him once again. (Sadly, Pocahontas died soon after as she and her husband were preparing to return to Virginia.) Historians are not all agreed about the section in which Smith tells how he was saved from death by Pocahontas. Many say that the event was actually an initiation ceremony of some sort, and point out that Smith was known for exaggeration. Others, however, believe the story is probably true as it is presented. |
The
Pictures:
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Discussion, p. 2 - 8:
Smith writes in glowing terms to praise Virginia as an
ideal place for the English to settle. Although the climate and weather
runs to extremes wider than England, he writes, "Heaven and Earth never
agreed better to frame a place for man's habitation..."
Smith notes that the Indians are not numerous, and gives
an interesting account of them. He describes Native Americans as
attractive in build and very strong. His account is factual, and
mostly free of prejudice. For example, he notes that they are "very
ingenious," but vary in personal characteristics such as boldness or fearfulness.
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Discussion,
continued
The problems faced by the original settlers at Jamestown
were many, but the reading makes it clear that a deadly disease was by
far the worst.
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