http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/a/AP-Jamestown-Deaths.html

April 12, 2000

Colonists May Have Been Poisoned

     RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -- In what could be a macabre sequel to the
     Pocahontas story, a pathologist says many of the settlers who died
     at Jamestown may have been poisoned with arsenic -- perhaps by
     Capt. John Smith himself.

     Dr. Frank Hancock examined writings by Smith and other English
     settlers in Jamestown, Va., in search of a medical explanation for
     why so many colonists died within two years after the first
     permanent English settlement in America was established in 1607.

     His conclusion: Many of the colonists may been poisoned.

     ``I continue to find what I consider circumstantial evidence that
     would lead one to believe that a plot may have been in place,''
     said Hancock, medical director for Laboratory Corp. of America.

     While reluctant to name suspects, he said one settler wrote that
     Dutchmen in the colony had accused Smith of poisoning others with
     ratsbane, or arsenic trioxide.

     ``There was an indication Smith was having disputes with the
     Dutchmen and others,'' Hancock said Wednesday.

     He said he found no mention of possible motives, but there was no
     question the atmosphere at the colony was politically charged.

     In Europe, James I had angered both Catholics and Puritans as he
     sought to consolidate his hold on the throne; England and Spain
     were continuing their fight for global dominance; and the brother
     of colonist George Percy was imprisoned in the Tower of London,
     suspected of conspiracy.

     In going through the writings of that period, Hancock found about
     60 phrases that suggested symptoms of illness.

     ``Out of that, I began to seek a common medical diagnosis,'' he
     said.

     He ruled out lead, cadmium and mercury, then settled on arsenic.

     Hancock believes the poisonings occurred in at least four episodes
     from 1607 to 1610.

     The deaths during the so-called ``starving time'' of 1609, after
     which only 60 of the 504 colonists remained, may have been
     poisonings as well, he said.

     Historians blame rats for the starvation, saying they destroyed
     much of the colony's corn stores in the spring of 1609. Hancock
     acknowledged that ratsbane, used to kill rats, was present
     throughout the Jamestown settlement and on ships, and the poisoning
     could have been accidental.

     But he said, ``There is some pattern for the deaths in terms of
     timing'' that warrants further study.

     Hancock, who is not a forensic pathologist and has no experience
     with arsenic poisoning, admitted he has no clinical or historical
     evidence to prove his conspiracy theory.

     Bone samples found in an excavation of the Jamestown site were
     provided by the Association for the Preservation of Virginia
     Antiquities, but test results were inconclusive.

     ``Without modern toxicologic evidence, it may never be answered,''
     Hancock said.

     His research will be featured in a documentary being produced by
     the BBC and PBS for Channel Four Television's ``Secrets of the
     Dead.''

     ``As far as a conspiracy, anything's possible, but I don't think
     it's probable,'' said Bill Kelso, director of archaeology for the
     APVA.

     Karen Kupperman, a New York University professor and expert in
     Colonial history, said she is vaguely familiar with the accusations
     made against Smith but somewhat skeptical of Hancock's theory.

     In a 1979 article in the Journal of American History, Kupperman
     speculated that nutritional diseases such as pellagra and scurvy
     killed many colonists, who were helped early on by Powhatan, a
     local chieftain and father of Pocahontas, but who endured frequent
     episodes of hunger and disease.

     ``Obviously, this is something that has intrigued a lot of people,
     because there does seem to be a pattern that is hard to explain,''
     she said.

     Another historian, Carville Earle, has argued that colonists died
     of salt poisoning from drinking the brackish water of the James
     River. Kelso said a geology student from the College of William and
     Mary is testing groundwater in the area to see whether any
     conclusions can be drawn.

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