This post is in partnership with the History News Network, the website that puts the news into historical perspective. The article below was originally published at HNN. In late December, 1607, ...
2006-10-15 04:00:00 PDT Jamestown, Va.-- If history were fair, I was thinking as I left Jamestown, Va., last month, Pocahontas would be on Mount Rushmore, and so would John Smith. They deserved it.
Offers a look at the life of the explorer, soldier of fortune, and colonist John Smith, from his early life and adventures to his exploits in the New World and role in the founding of America. "He ...
The names of John Smith and Pocahontas are more intertwined than perhaps any others in U.S. history. The story of the English captain saved by a love-struck Indian princess has been told and retold, ...
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Adults' observations in Pocahontas
Indeed, there was a lot to love about the movie at the time because it was a great love story that followed the fictionalized ...
According to legend, Pocahontas threw herself between the leader of the Jamestown colony, John Smith, and a warrior's club to save him. But experts have some doubts about whether she was even present.
Movie"A white man and an Indian Princess! They dared a nation's vengeance and the red man's savagery... to live the greatest love story of them all!" With the help of Pocahontas, Captain John Smith ...
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Lost Indigenous settlements described by Jamestown colonist John Smith finally found
Excavations along the Rappahannock River in Virginia have revealed the likely spot of Indigenous villages once described by ...
Continuation of the full-length cartoon about the adventures of Pocahontas, the daughter of an Indian chief. In 1614, John Smith returns to Jamestown, where he meets Pocahontas again.
Over 400 years ago, English explorer John Smith wrote of several Indigenous settlements along a river in modern-day Virginia.
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