Person    | Female  Born 1596  Died /3/1617

Pocahontas

Categories: Race Issues, Seriously Famous, Tragedy

Countries: USA

Native American daughter of an Algonquian chief; birth date approximate. According to colonist John Smith, when he was being held captive by her tribe the 11-year old Pocahontas saved his life by befriending him.

Aged 17 she was captured by the colonists and, the story goes, chose to stay with them. Tobacco planter John Rolfe took her for his wife and she bore a son in January 1615. The next year, to publicise the Jamestown settlement Rolfe took her to London and showed her off as a "civilised savage" to high society including King James.

Our suspicion that the widely accepted version of her story is heavily Disneyfied was supported by the Stuff the British Stole podcast. The alternative version includes kidnap and rape.  We are not able to verify one version or the other but colonialists are not renowned for their good behaviour towards the natives.

From MyLondon: "Ealing local historian Steven Richards ... says ... “She lived for a short time in Brentford, near to Syon House, and it was here that her boat set off down the Thames. ... the actual place that they lived in... is now a Royal Mail sorting office...".

In 1617 they began the journey back to Jamestown but Pocahontas died at Gravesend, where she was buried. Her grave is lost but there is a statue.

Now here's an odd coincidence... our image, showing a young attractive female native American, was the emblem of the Cassell Company from before 1896. 'La Belle Sauvage' (French for 'the beautiful savage') was also the name given, prior to 1914, to Cassells' building just north of Ludgate Hill. It was demolished in 1873 to make way for a railway viaduct, but before 1852 when Cassells moved in it had been an inn, the inn where Pocahontas had stayed during her time in London. This perfectly explains Cassells' use of the image and their use of the name 'La Belle Sauvage' and we would stop there, perfectly satisfied, were it not for one additional fact.

The inn where Pocahontas stayed was called the Bell Savage Inn and had had this name, and variants of it, since at least 1420. Wikipedia and the document it reference) explains that the name probably came from a proprietor named Savage and a bell being a symbol for an inn. Was it just chance that Pocahontas, 'la belle sauvage' was boarded in a pub called the Bell Savage?

That is a big coincidence so we suggest some alternatives. Did Rolfe, knowing of the inn, deliberately chose it, possibly hoping to gain extra publicity from the 'coincidence'? Or perhaps Pocahontas did not stay there at all. We cannot find the text of the Wikipedia source on-line but the National Archive says "We have surprisingly few references to her visit in the public records..." and goes on to quote a few, none of which refer to her accommodation. Perhaps Wikipedia's source is rock solid but if not we think the most likely solution to the puzzle is that the story that she stayed at this inn grew out of the inn's name, probably after she had left London, as a type of urban legend, and Cassells' adoption of the story only strengthened it.

2023: Grunge carried a story: "Two of the most notable Native Americans from early North American colonial history, Pocahontas and Squanto, may have met one another while living in London".

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in here to see them

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Pocahontas

Commemorated ati

Pocahontas statue

This photo of the statue in place in Red Lion Square comes from RedLionSquare...

Read More

Other Subjects

Henry Ford

Henry Ford

American industrialist, business magnate, founder of the Ford Motor Company, and chief developer of the assembly line technique of mass production. By creating the first automobile that middle-clas...

Person, Commerce, Industry, Race Issues, Seriously Famous, Transport

1 memorial
Black Lives Matter

Black Lives Matter

Black Lives Matter (BLM) is a decentralized political and social movement, that started in the US, that seeks to highlight racism, discrimination, and racial inequality experienced by black people....

Concept, Race Issues

1 memorial
Bill Richmond

Bill Richmond

Boxer. Born a slave in Richmondtown, Staten Island, New York. He become a servant of Hugh Percy, 2nd Duke of Northumberland, a lieutenant-general in the British army, and it is presumed that he bec...

Person, Race Issues, Sport / Games, USA

1 memorial
Samuel Coleridge-Taylor

Samuel Coleridge-Taylor

Composer. Born 15 Theobalds Road, of a mixed race couple, his father being a Sierra Leonean Creole, and brought up in Croydon. His surname was Taylor and he was given the names Samuel Coleridge in ...

Person, Music / songs, Race Issues

3 memorials
Henry Sterry

Henry Sterry

The Quakers list a Henry Sterry born 1803 in the parish of St George the Martyr, Southwark and a Henry Sterry (1803-1869) was included in the group portrait of 'The Anti-Slavery Society Convention ...

Person, Race Issues, Social Welfare

1 memorial

Previously viewed

Wallingford House

Wallingford House

In 1560 Sir Francis Knollys leased the land where the Old Admiralty Building now stands to build a house which later became known as Wallingford House. In 1622 George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham, ...

Building, Property

1 memorial
Family Planning Association

Family Planning Association

Founded by Doctor Charles Vickery Drysdale as the National Birth Control Council, formed by the merger of five birth control societies. Name changed to the National Birth Control Association in 193...

Group, Social Welfare

1 memorial