It was Newport's experience as well as his reputation which led to his hiring in 1606 by the
Virginia Company of London. The company had been granted a proprietorship to establish a settlement in the
Virginia Colony by King James I. Newport took charge of the ship
Susan Constant, and on the 1606–1607 voyage, she carried 71 colonists, all male, one of whom was
John Smith. As soon as land was in sight, sealed orders from the Virginia Company were opened which named Newport as a member of the governing Council of the Colony. On 29 April, Newport erected a cross at the mouth of the bay, at a place they named Cape Henry, to claim the land for the Crown. In the following days, the ships ventured inland upstream along the
James River seeking a suitable location for their settlement as defined in their orders. Newport (accompanied by Smith) then explored the Powhatan Flu (River) up to the site of present-day
Richmond (the Powhatan Flu would soon be called the James River), then a few weeks after arriving at Jamestown he was allowed to assume his seat on the council.
First and Second Supply missions In June 1607, a week after the initial Fort at Jamestown was completed, Newport sailed back for London on the
Susan Constant with a load of
pyrite ("fools' gold") and other supposedly precious minerals, Accordingly, Newport left again for England almost immediately to obtain more supplies for the colonists. On this trip Newport took
Powhatan's tribesman
Namontack to London, arriving on 10 April 1608. Namontack remained in London for three months and then returned to Virginia with Newport.
The Second Supply arrived in September 1608, this time with Newport commanding the
Mary Margaret, a ship of about 150 tons. In addition to urgently needed supplies, the Second Supply delivered another 70 persons as well as the first two women from England, a "gentlewoman" and a woman servant. The coronation went badly however, because he stated he was already a king and refused to kneel to receive the crown. The need for another, ideally much larger, supply mission was conveyed to the leaders of the Virginia Company effectively when Newport returned to England. Additional funds and resources were gathered and readied. However, the
Third Supply, as well as the company's new purpose-built flagship, the
Sea Venture, were each to become big problems for Jamestown.
Third Supply: ill-fated Sea Venture 's "A Discovery of the Barmudas" Newport made a third trip to America in June 1609, as captain of the
Sea Venture and "Vice Admiral" of the
Third Supply mission. Normally, ships destined for North America from Europe sailed south as far as the
Canary Islands as at that latitude the mean direction of the wind is to the West, pushing them across the Atlantic (ships returning to Europe turned eastward at the Carolinas, as at that latitude the mean wind direction is to the East), then followed the chain of west Indian islands to Florida and from there followed the Atlantic coast of the continent. However, with the West Indies firmly in the grip of the Spanish Empire, the English fleet turned Northwards in the open Atlantic, intending to bypass the Spanish threat and head directly for Virginia. Days away from Jamestown, on 24 July, the nine ships encountered a massive three-day-long storm, and became separated. The flagship of the mission, the
Sea Venture, being newly built for the voyage, was leaking heavily, having lost her caulking. Admiral Sir
George Somers, who had taken the helm, deliberately drove her upon a reef in
Bermuda to prevent her foundering. Eventually, in May 1610, the survivors (150 colonists and crew members, and one dog) constructed two smaller ships, the
Deliverance and the
Patience, from the wreck and the abundant native
Bermuda cedar. Arriving at Jamestown 10 months later than planned, where the death of over 80% of the colonists had occurred during the
Starving Time, Newport and the others had precious few supplies to share. Both groups felt they had no alternative but to return to England. On 7 June, they boarded the ships, and started to sail downstream and abandon Jamestown. However, as they approached
Mulberry Island, they were met by
a 'fourth" supply mission sailing upstream headed by a new governor,
Thomas West, who ordered the remaining settlers to return. He was also a part of Jamestown governing, and made Jamestown progress. On his last voyage to Jamestown in 1610, Newport brought John Rolfe. Rolfe would engineer a new kind of tobacco that would become the key to the colony's eventual prosperity. == Later voyages, death ==