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A colonial history: Jamestown, Plymouth and, yes, Bermuda

A tragic storm off the coast of Bermuda, like the one depicted in this 1850 painting by Francis Danby, brought the first English settlers to the island in 1609. (Yale Center for British Art)

A Rochester historian argues Bermuda belongs at the center, not the periphery, of the American colonial story.

Bermuda was a tabula rasa when European explorers first set foot on the North Atlantic archipelago in 1505. No indigenous people, just colonies of shrieking birds, interrupted sporadically by violent storms. Spanish explorer Juan de Berm煤dez came, saw little value, and left nothing but his name behind. Permanent settlers wouldn鈥檛 arrive for another hundred years鈥攁nd then only by serendipity.

In this case鈥攖ragic serendipity. The Sea Venture, an English ship on its way to the colony at Jamestown, got caught in a monster storm and wrecked on a coral reef off Bermuda鈥檚 shore in 1609. Most of the wreck鈥檚 survivors eventually made their way to their original destination鈥攁lbeit months later. But a scant handful stayed behind. Within a few years, Bermuda became a British territory, and with that one of the cradles of English colonization: settled just five years after the first permanent English settlement in Jamestown, Virginia, and eight years before Plymouth.

And yet, reading histories about the early beginnings of the American colonies鈥攖he traditional origin stories of the United States鈥攐ne would be hard pressed to find much, if any, mention of Bermuda.

鈥淲hen historians have considered it, they usually dismiss it as a curiosity or a failure,鈥 writes , an associate professor of history at the 人妻少妇专区.

Jarvis has spent most of his academic career trying to fill in the blanks. His latest book, (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2022) is his most recent contribution toward that end. As a prequel, it continues the work he started in his first book, In the Eye of All Trade: Bermuda, Bermudians, and the Maritime Atlantic World, 1680鈥1783 (University of North Carolina Press, 2010). In Isle of Devils, Isle of Saints, Jarvis makes the case that the small island is nothing less than 鈥渢he crucible of colonization,鈥 and deserves to join historic Jamestown and Plymouth as part of 鈥渁n English-American historical triangle of origin.鈥

a double image with the cover of a book titled Isle of Devils, Isle of Saints by Michael Jarvis, and a photo of Michael Jarvis in front of a large screen with a map of Brmuda.
Isle of Devils, Isle of Saints, the new book by associate professor of history Michael Jarvis. (人妻少妇专区 photo / J. Adam Fenster)

Could the American colonies have developed without Bermuda?

Several earlier attempts at establishing colonies on the North American shoreline failed because of hunger, lack of provisions, and harsh environments. But Bermuda started to thrive鈥攚hich was of considerable consequence for the future United States.

When the newcomers at Jamestown faced starvation, and 鈥渄esperate settlers resorted to cannibalism,鈥 just 800 miles 鈥渢o the east of this hell鈥 another group of English colonists 鈥渇ound a veritable paradise, an uninhabited island lush with forests and marine life,鈥 Jarvis writes.

Bermuda became the first of England鈥檚 experimental colonial laboratories to produce a successful export staple鈥擲panish tobacco鈥攚hich, Jarvis argues, once transferred to the mainland became the foundation of Virginia鈥檚 economic success. With the success, however, also came Bermuda鈥檚 dubious distinction as the first English colony to import enslaved African people, thereby developing slavery into 鈥渁n institution that became ubiquitous throughout English America.鈥

Drawing on three decades of his own research and archaeological work, Jarvis who directs the聽聽in Bermuda, delves into the interplay of slavery, race, gender, and the environment, tracing how 鈥淓uropeans and Africans became distinctly American鈥 on the island鈥攕ome 600 miles offshore from what would later become North Carolina.

He argues the histories of several US states and Atlantic and Caribbean islands鈥攕uch as Virginia, Barbados, Providence Island, Jamaica, the Bahamas, and South Carolina鈥攁re firmly intertwined with Bermuda and that historic accounts that 鈥渙mit or ignore founding Bermudian settlers鈥 presence and contributions are thus incomplete.鈥

Both in his research and teaching, Jarvis fuses history with archaeology and . Since his arrival at Rochester in the fall of 2001, he has taken scores of Rochester students along for archaeological field work, most recently this spring to Bermuda鈥檚 St. George鈥檚 Island where he and his students, in partnership with the Bermuda National Trust, helped to document and preserve what鈥檚 still there, as modern Bermuda engages in a frenzy of building and property development.

A professor and a student, kneeling on the ground inside a structure, using archaeological tools to scrape at a square of ground.
PHOTO ESSAY: Historian Michael Jarvis and Skylar DiBlasi 鈥25, an archaeology, technology, and historical structures major, discovered this past spring black charring on the packed floors under the cellar鈥檚 flagstones of the historic Globe Hotel in St. George, Bermuda, pointing to fire damage. Jarvis regularly takes students along on archaeological digs in Bermuda. about his recent archaeological dig in the cellar of the Globe Hotel in St. George鈥檚, Bermuda鈥檚 first capital. (Photo courtesy of Michael Jarvis)

Devil or saint?

Extensive archival and archaeological work allows Jarvis to explore Bermuda鈥檚 split personality. On the one hand, it was England鈥檚 first Puritan colony, founded on the idea of building a moral Christian society. On the other, its founders committed, promoted, and helped entrench the profound moral crime of slavery.

Jarvis鈥檚 juxtaposed title鈥Isle of Devils, Isle of Saints鈥攈as several origins, however. One springs from a 1622 investor’s letter, noting how a place once thought to be haunted by devils was now being colonized by utopian Puritan settlers, intent on building a model Christian Commonwealth, as Jarvis explains.

鈥淚t captures the constant tension between religious colonial leaders, trying to maintain a godly society,鈥 he says, 鈥渁nd more worldly, sinful settlers聽who enjoyed Bermuda’s nice weather, tobacco, and rum.鈥

Bermuda’s puritans鈥攐r 鈥渟elf-appointed saints鈥 as he also calls them鈥攕aw themselves 鈥渋n constant battle with the devil, in the forms of Catholic enemies, the English Civil War, witchcraft, hurricanes, slave revolts, and the Bermuda parent company exploitation.鈥

The devil reference also stems from a Spanish nickname given to the island because of its location鈥攆irmly in the path of frequent, roaring storms. With more than 300 shipwrecks on its reefs, Bermuda has rightly earned the moniker 鈥渟hipwreck capital of the world,鈥 although Canada鈥檚 Sable Island still trumps that sad record.

鈥淎s Catholics trying to save the world, they assumed the devil, or at least some of his demon henchmen, lived on the island to conjure up storms to sink their ships,鈥 Jarvis says. That superstitious lore, by the way, wasn鈥檛 lost on William Shakespeare either, who reportedly used the account of Bermuda鈥檚 shipwrecks, especially the Sea Venture鈥檚 fate in 1609, as a source for his play The Tempest, likely written just a year or two after the wreck.

By the 1670s, Bermuda had freed itself from its former parent company and become England’s most densely populated possession鈥攐n its way to become an intercolonial maritime hub.

So, who was the winner鈥攕aints or devils?

Given the 鈥渦ltimate implosion鈥 of Bermuda鈥檚 Puritan society and its eventual shift to a commercial, secular, and maritime society, Jarvis jokes, 鈥渨e might conclude that in this war, the devil鈥攊n the details鈥攚on.鈥


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