The 'Third Supply' was the first truly successful wave of
colonization in the first
British settlement in the
Americas at
Jamestown. It also resulted in the settlement of
Bermuda (as an unintended side-effect).
However, from the perspective of the colonists anxiously awaiting supplies at Jamestown, the Third Supply was anything but smooth, and 80% of the colonists perished during the
"starving time" before the leaders and some of the supplies which had been aboard the ill-fated flagship ''
Sea Venture'' finally arrived in Virginia, 10 months later than expected. Even then, the salvation of the colony only came with the timely arrival of
Thomas West, 3rd Baron De La Warr (Lord Delaware) and another supply mission a few weeks later.
Main articles: Jamestown, Virginia
History
The Third Supply Mission from England to Jamestown consisted of five to six hundred people, in a fleet of eight ships, with Admiral
George Somers,
Samuel Jordan and Sir
Thomas Gates. All of these were on the new
flagship of the
Virginia Company, the ''
Sea Venture''.
The ships ran into a massive 3 day storm believed to have been a
hurricane. The ''Sea Venture'' became separated. Taking on water through her new caulking, she was deliberately run aground on
Bermuda. Admiral Somers and his officers managed to land everyone safely from the wreck. The rest of the fleet continued on to Jamestown, not knowing of the fate of the ''Sea Venture''.
Over a period of 9 months, the survivors built two new ships -- ''Patience'' and ''Deliverance'' -- using hardware salvaged from the ''Sea Venture''. Their struggle to survive may have been the inspiration for
Shakespeare's play,
The Tempest.
Without the leadership, and most of the supplies, all of which had been aboard the ''Sea Venture'', the rest of the group which arrived at Jamestown on the other ships and those already there were ill-prepared to survive, resulting in the
"starving time'' of 1609-1610 when over 80% of the colonists perished.
The fate of Jamestown and the surrounding colony only turned when the officers showed up less than a year later in their replacement vessels, and were resupplied by yet another supply mission from England headed by
Lord Delaware.
John Rolfe was one of the surviving colonists who had been shipwrecked with the ''Sea Venture''. Despite the death of his wife and young son en route, he went on to
Virginia, and in 1611, successfully cultivated new strains of
tobacco, providing a critical
cash crop for the colonists to grow and export beginning in 1612. Rolfe later married
Pocahontas, a
Native American leader's daughter. Through their son,
Thomas Rolfe, many of the
First Families of Virginia trace both English and Native American heritage roots.