

Native princess
Pocahontas was the daughter of the powerful Indian
Chief Powhatan.
The Jamestown
colonists first met her when she was about 13 years
old and Powhatan sent her to Jamestown to help
establish peace with the colonists and
to beg for the release of Indian captives
being held in their fort. Captain John Smith describes
her in his True Relation, 1608:
"Not
only for feature, countenance, and proportion, much exceedeth any of the rest of
his [Powhatan's] people: but for wit and spirit, the only Nonpariel of his
Country."
In a letter to the wife of King James I, Queen Anne, Smith recounts the deep
respect and friendship he shared with Pocahontas as exemplified by this story:
"When
her father with the utmost of his policie and power, sought to surprize mee,...the
darke night could not affright her from comming through the irkesome woods, and
with watered eies gave me intelligence, with her best advice to escape his furie;
which had hee knone, hee had surely slaine her."
Pocahontas was captured on the Potomac and brought to Jamestown as a hostage so
as to ransom the return of several imprisoned colonists along with arms and
tools confiscated by Chief Powhatan's people. While in Jamestown she met tobacco
farmer John Rolfe, whom she married one year later. Their marriage helped
establish peace between the natives and colonists for eight years. In 1616 they
sailed to England where Pocahontas was officially
presented to the Royal Court of England.