The Historic Jamestowne area of
Jamestown Island includes several important structures, both historical and modern.
Old Town This area includes the ruins within the original 1607 James Fort, the restored
Jamestown Church, and the ruins of the Statehouse.
New Town Situated to the east of the Old Towne area, this area includes the Ambler Mansion ruins, the rowhouse, and Governor Harvey House.
Monuments The tall
Tercentenary Monument, which resembles the
Washington Monument in Washington, was placed on
Jamestown Island by the United States government in 1907 for the 300th anniversary of the settlement. It cost $50,000 at the time, stands tall, and is made of New Hampshire granite. The north face inscription reads:
Jamestown - The first permanent colony of the English people. The birthplace of Virginia and of the United States - May 13, 1607. The
General Assembly Monument was unveiled on July 31, 1907, as a gift of the Norfolk branch of the APVA. Located near the church, it is a small obelisk designed to commemorate the first meeting of Virginia's General Assembly in July 1619. A
horse trough, a gift from the Society of Colonial Wars in 1907, was installed in a place now just outside the Yeardley House offices of the
Jamestown Rediscovery project. It was designed by architect
Harold Van Buren Magonigle. The bronze
John Smith statue was unveiled on May 13, 1909, and was a gift from Joseph Bryan and his wife, Isobel, early supporters of the APVA. William Couper, from Norfolk, designed the statue. It has a granite base, and measures 20 feet tall. The inscription on the base reads:
John Smith, Governor of Virginia, 1608 and features Smith's adopted coat of arms and motto,
vincere est vivere ("to live is to conquer"). The bronze
Pocahontas statue was unveiled in June 1922, and stood south of the church, where it could "welcome" visitors coming from off the ferry. It was moved to the low rock base near the APVA entrance gate for the 350th celebration in 1957. In 2014 it was moved slightly to the west to make way for archaeological work. Also in June 1922, The Colonial Dames of America erected the
Hunt Shrine (dedicated to
Robert Hunt), the first Anglican minister of the colony. It was designed by Ralph Adams Cram. The shrine frames a bas-relief depicting the 1607 service. It was first set with its back to the James River, but in 1960 it was rotated to face the river from the northern earthwork of the Civil War's
Fort Pocahontas. Its inscription, taken from John Smith, reads Our factions were oft qualified, and our wants and greater extremities so comforted that they seemed easie in comparison of what we endured after his memorable death. ... The
wooden cross that stands near the entrance to the Archaearium museum was erected by the APVA in 1957 to honor the settlers who died in first years of the settlement. The inscription reads:To the Glory of God and in grateful memory of those early settlers, the founders of this nation who died at Jamestown during the first perilous years of the colony. Their bodies lie along the ridge beyond this cross, in the earliest known burial ground of the English in America.
Voorhees Archaearium Officially named the Nathalie P. and Alan M. Voorhees Archaearium, or simply the
Voorhees Archaearium, it is a museum with excavated artifacts and exhibits about Jamestown. The building is located over the excavated remains of the last Statehouse in Jamestown, which visitors can see. The museum onsite opened just prior to the 400th anniversary and displays objects that belonged to Jamestown colonists 400 years ago, unearthed from the long-lost James Fort site, in a 7,500 sq ft gallery space that integrates both life and death experiences of the colonists and the landscape they shaped. ==Gallery==