Archive for the ‘representative government’ tag
Jamestown Tercentenary Monument
Monuments, Statues, and Memorials
Jamestown Tercentenary Monument
Location: Historic Jamestowne, Colonial NHP, Jamestown, VA 23185
Visited: July 4, 2009, 1:45pm
Transcription of monument:
[north side]
Virginia Company
of London
Chartered April 10, 1606
Founded
Jamestown
and sustained
Virginia
1607 — 1624
This monument
was erected by
the United States
A.D. 1907
to commemorate
the three hundredth
anniversary of
the settlement here
[south side, at same level as other engravings]

Jamestown
The first permanent
colony of the
English people
The birthplace of
Virginia
and of
the United States
– May 13 — 1607 -
[south side, on the base]
“Lastly and chiefly the way to prosper and achieve good success is to make yourselves all of one mind for the good of your country, and your own, and to serve and fear God, the giver of all goodness, for every plantation which our heavenly Father hath not planted shall be rooted out.”
Advice of London Council for Virginia to the colony — 1606
Representative
government in
America
began in the
first House of
Burgesses
assembled here
July 30, 1619
My impressions: This is a very tall and impressive monument. There seems to me to be something very American about the obelisk: I don’t recall any off the top of my head that I saw in Canada, but this is the third significant one I’ve seen in the U.S. (The other two were in my pre-snarfing days: the Washington Monument in Washington, DC and the Masonic monument to Washington in Alexandria, VA.) I don’t know what that says that the United States adopted the obelisk so often as a symbol.
Coming, as it does, as you are entering Historic Jamestowne, the monument is a great introductory reminder to how much history the place holds. It also challenged a bit of my faulty memories of history. I had it in my head that Nova Scotia was the birthplace of representative government in the British Empire, but the Internet tells me I’m mistaken. Nova Scotia saw the start of representative government in Canada, but that came in 1758, well over a century later than the establishment of the House of Burgesses here. (In fact, Nova Scotia celebrated the 250th anniversary of its establishment there just last year.)
It also awes me to see a monument like this and know that it was made early in the 20th century and that it was erected without all of the technology we have today. And to think of the number of hours it would have taken for all that lettering…what patience and dedication and craftsmanship!




