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More information
OR MORE information on Capt. John Smith, his voyages from Jamestown,
Virginia Indians, the Rappahannock tribe and historic preservation,
check out the following Web sites:
Virtual Jamestown
http://www.iath.virginia.edu/vcdh/jamestown/page2.html
Jamestown-Yorktown Foundation
http://www.jamestown2007.org
Virginia's Indians, Past & Present
http://falcon.jmu.edu/~ramseyil/vaindians.htm
Rappahannock Tribe
http://indians.vipnet.org/rapph.htm
Virginia Dept. of Historic Resources
http://state.vipnet.org/dhr/
Or, check out the following books:
- “General History of Virginia, New England, and the Summer Isles,” Capt. John Smith
- “The Three Worlds of Captain John Smith,” (Houghton Mifflin), Philip
Barbour
- “Jamestown Narratives–Eyewitness Accounts of the Virginia Colony, The First Decade: 1607-1617,” (RoundHouse), Edward Wright Haile.
Books are available at Borders, the Old Stone Warehouse in Fredericksburg, and at the American History Company.
- Haile has produced a map of John Smith sites plotted on a modern map of Virginia: “Virginia Discovered & Described by Captayn John Smith, 1608 ” (RoundHouse). Contact Haile’s
publishing company at P.O. Box 155, Champlain Va., 22438, or call (804) 443-4813.
- “Pocahontas’s People,” (University of Oklahoma Press), Helen C. Rountree.
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