Sometime before 1620, Jordan married
Cecily, who had arrived in Virginia around 1611 and was around 18 when they married. By 1621, their first daughter Mary had been born, and when Jordan died in 1623, Cecily was pregnant with her second daughter, Margaret. In 1620, Samuel Jordan officially received his patent for 450 acres of land. This patent included 200 acres for both his and Cecily's claim as ancient planters, as well as an additional 250 acres as
headright for paying the transportation costs to Virginia for five
indentured servants. Jordan's patent, located at today's
Jordan Point, Virginia, was originally known as
Beggars Bush and later as Jordan's Journey. When the
paramount chief Opechancanough of the
Powhatan Confederacy launched the
surprise attack of 1622 that killed nearly a third of the English colonists and triggered the
Second Anglo-Powhatan War, nobody from Jordan's Journey was listed as killed. Jordan's Journey withstood the attack and became a fortified refuge. After the initial assault, many of the outlying settlements were temporarily abandoned, and most of the colonists were ordered to move to a small number of relatively safer settlements, one of which was Jordan's Journey. As a result, Jordan's Journey grew. In February 1624, 42 people were living at Jordan's Journey; a year later, 56 people were living there. ==Death and legacy==