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NOVA reveals the Native-American side of the Jamestown story.
On May 13, 1607, three English sailing vessels drop anchor beside a
small island fringed by swamps in the James River, Virginia. On
board are 104 colonists who will establish the first successful
English settlement in the New World at Jamestown. The exploits of
the brash, swashbuckling John Smith, the wily, venerable chief
Powhatan and his infatuated daughter, Pocahontas, will be recited,
retold and embroidered until they gather the status of an epic
founding myth of the new nation. Now, on the 400th anniversary of
Jamestown, science is revealing the truth behind the myth - a
saga of unparalleled adventure, greed and savagery. Virginia
archaeologists have just discovered the site of Chief Powhatan's
capital, Werowocomoco, some 17 miles from Jamestown beside the York
River. This is the very spot where the captive John Smith had his
famous life-and-death encounter with the mighty chief, when (so the
story goes) the smitten Pocahontas begged her father to spare the
Englishman's neck. NOVA has covered the excavation of this unique
site for four years and for the first time reveals the
Native-American side of the Jamestown story. The evidence from
Werowocomoco provides a fascinating new perspective on the
colonists' inevitably one-sided accounts of their sometime allies
and adversaries.