The survival of the Jamestown Colony can be directly tied to the assistance they received from the nearby Native American tribes. They shared food so that the pilgrims would not starve, and showed them how to plant Indian corn in their fields.
the increase of tabacco as a cash crop
Location of the settlement.
The Seattlers found gold
The Jamestown colony was built along the James River. The Jamestown colony was built in the year 1607. The colony was located in the USA.
A Royal Colony
Jamestown was the major colony.
The founder of the Jamestown colony was the Virginia Company of London. It was named for James I of England.
this question doesn't make any sense Jamestown was a settlement in the Massachusetts colony
The survival of the Jamestown colony can be most directly attributed to the realization that they needed to focus on agriculture, particularly the cultivation of tobacco, for economic sustainability. Additionally, strong leadership from individuals such as Captain John Smith and the arrival of new settlers and supplies through resupply missions played significant roles in the colony's survival. Finally, the establishment of trade relationships with Native American tribes for food and supplies also contributed to their survival.
Tobacco.
Jamestown colony was in the Virginia Colony!
Jamestown colony was in the Virginia Colony!
I'm not positive but I'm pretty sure John Smith did a huge help with the survival of Jamestown which is in Virginia.
the first colony in Ame was Jamestown ,virgnia
The Jamestown colony was built along the James River. The Jamestown colony was built in the year 1607. The colony was located in the USA.
Jamestown was from the English colony
Captain John Smith
After they exhausted the food supplies they brought with them, the Jamestown colonists had no ready source of food except for what they could grow themselves or the fish and game they could kill.
Virginia was a colony and Jamestown one of the places in the colony. It helped establish Virginia as a colony.
The Jamestown colony was led by John Smith.