were killed
3 yearsJohn White took three years to return from England with the supply ship. He returned to check on the colonists.
John White was the leader (governor) of the Roanoke colony settled off the cost of Virginia in 1587. It used the site of a previous failed colony from 1585. His daughter gave birth to the first child born in the English colonies, Virginia Dare. However, the colony vanished while White was on an ill-fated voyage back to England to bring more colonists and supplies, leaving only traces of his daughter and the other families by the time White returned in 1590.
John White left Roanoke Island to go back to England. He told the colony that he'd be back in about 7 months to get some more supplies. (The colony was starving.) When he got to England, it was at war with Spain. It took 3 years to get back to Roanoke Island. When John White returned, everyone had dissapeared. ALL 100 PEOPLE HAD GONE MISSING.IF THERE IS A BETTER ANSWER, PLEASE IMPROVE.
Sir Richard Grenville who returned to England leaving Ralph Lane in charge.
The name refers to the colony of men, women and boys who traveled to Roanoke Island (in what is now North Carolina) in 1587. Their governor, John White, returned to England in August of 1587 to secure more supplies for the struggling colony. When he returned to Roanoke Island in 1590 there was no trace of the colonists. They had abandoned the settlement and were never heard of or from again. Thus they became known as "the lost colony." This is a brief and true report, with the emphasis on 'brief'.
When John White returned to Roanoke after several years in England, he found that the colonists he had left behind had mysteriously disappeared.
3 yearsJohn White took three years to return from England with the supply ship. He returned to check on the colonists.
John White returned to Roanoke to check on the colony he had previously established there. He left the colonists to return to England for supplies and reinforcements. Upon his return, he found the colony abandoned with no sign of the colonists, a mystery that remains unsolved to this day.
He returned in 1590 to search for his family and the 1587 colonists.
Captain John White
John White attempted to set up Roanoke Island the second time. He led a group of colonists known as the "Lost Colony" in 1587, but when he returned to England for supplies and reinforcements, he was delayed by the Anglo-Spanish War. When he finally returned in 1590, the colonists had vanished, leading to the mystery of the Lost Colony.
Roanoke Island was the site of the first English settlement in North America in 1585, but it mysteriously disappeared by 1590, earning the nickname "The Lost Colony." The colonists were led by John White, who left briefly to get supplies from England and returned to find the settlement abandoned with no trace of the settlers. The fate of the colonists remains a historical mystery.
John White governed the Roanoke colony in coastal North Carolinain 1587. His trip back to England for supplies was delayed bynearly two years, and on his return in 1590, he found that thecolonists had mysteriously disappeared. There were few clues tosuggest where they had gone. To the Englishmen, the region was avast unexplored territory, with numerous islands and bays and quitea few native tribes. To this day, there exists no definitiveexplanation for the disappearance.
John White returned to England to gather supplies and reinforcements for the Roanoke colony that he had established. He intended to return quickly, but due to delays caused by the Anglo-Spanish War, he was unable to come back for three years. When he finally returned to Roanoke Island, the colonists had disappeared, leading to the mystery of the Lost Colony of Roanoke.
When John White returned to Roanoke after several years in England, he found the colony abandoned with no trace of the settlers. The only clue left behind was the word "Croatoan" carved into a post. The fate of the Roanoke settlers remains a mystery to this day.
When John White returned to Roanoke in 1590, he found the settlement deserted with no sign of the 118 colonists he had left behind. The only clue left behind was the word "CROATOAN" carved on a post, suggesting they may have moved to Croatoan Island or been met with another fate. The disappearance of the Roanoke colonists remains a mystery to this day.
the colony had been abandoned