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When English governor John White sailed back to Roanoke Island in 1590 after three years away, he expected to find a struggling but surviving colony of more than a hundred men, women, and children he had left behind. Instead, he found silence. The settlement had been fortified — someone had built it up further — but it stood completely empty. And carved into one of the posts of the palisade was a single word: CROATOAN.
No bodies. No note. No explanation. The fate of somewhere between 112 and 121 colonists remains, to this day, largely unknown.
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A Dream of Empire on the Carolina Shore
The story of Roanoke didn’t begin with a mystery. It began with ambition — specifically, the ambition of Sir Walter Raleigh, who in 1584 received a charter from Queen Elizabeth I to explore and colonize lands south of Newfoundland. His charter came with a deadline: establish a colony by 1591, or forfeit his rights entirely. The pressure was real, and so was the opportunity. England wanted a foothold in the New World, and Raleigh, forbidden from leaving the queen’s side, set about organizing others to do the work.
The region itself had caught English attention partly through an old geographic mistake. In 1524, explorer Giovanni da Verrazzano had sailed along the Outer Banks of present-day North Carolina and, looking out over the vast Pamlico Sound behind them, mistakenly concluded he was gazing at the Pacific Ocean. He thought the thin barrier islands were an isthmus — a shortcut to Asia. Though no one acted on this error for decades, it planted the idea of the region’s strategic value in European minds.
Raleigh moved quickly. In April 1584, he dispatched an expedition under Philip Amadas and Arthur Barlowe to survey his claim. They landed in July, made friendly contact with the local Secotan people, and returned to England with enthusiastic reports describing the land in terms that evoked, according to the Wikipedia text, the Golden Age and the Garden of Eden — though these accounts may have been embellished by Raleigh himself. They also brought back two Native Americans: Wanchese, a Secotan, and Manteo, a Croatan whose mother was the chieftain of Croatoan Island. Queen Elizabeth was impressed enough to proclaim the territory “Virginia” and knight Raleigh as its governor.
The First Colony: A Military Experiment That Fell Apart
Raleigh’s first attempt at settlement, in 1585, was designed as a largely military operation. Ralph Lane was appointed governor, and roughly 100 men were left on Roanoke Island after a disastrous voyage that saw their flagship, the *Tiger*, strike a shoal and destroy most of the food supplies. From the outset, the colony was underpowered and under-provisioned, heavily dependent on Native American generosity.
That generosity eventually wore thin. Poor relations with some of the local tribes troubled Lane’s colony throughout its existence. A planned resupply mission from England was delayed — redirected to Newfoundland to warn fishing fleets about Spanish aggression — and Lane’s men grew increasingly desperate. When the privateer Sir Francis Drake appeared in 1586 with his fleet, Lane made the decision to abandon the colony entirely and sail home with Drake.
The timing was almost darkly comic: Sir Richard Grenville arrived with resupply ships just two weeks after Lane departed. Finding the colony empty, Grenville also returned to England, but left behind a small detachment of men to protect Raleigh’s territorial claim. What happened to those men would become the first unanswered question in Roanoke’s troubled history.
The Second Colony and the Fateful Departure
The more famous attempt came in 1587. John White — the artist who had traveled with Lane’s colony and sketched detailed images of Native American life — now returned as governor, leading a new group of settlers. Raleigh’s plan this time was more ambitious: White was supposed to establish a proper settlement called the “Cittie of Raleigh” on the Chesapeake Bay, a far better harbor than the shallow Outer Banks.
That plan immediately went wrong. The fleet’s pilot, Simon Fernandes, forced White and all his colonists to disembark at Roanoke Island during what was supposed to be a brief stop. White had little choice but to make the best of it. The settlers found the buildings from the previous occupation still standing, though overgrown, and set about making repairs and fortifications. Grenville’s men, left behind the year before, were nowhere to be found — only bones.
Among the settlers was White’s own daughter, Eleanor, who gave birth on the island to a girl named Virginia Dare — reportedly the first English child born in North America. The birth only deepened the urgency of the colony’s needs. The settlers were short on everything, and they persuaded White, somewhat reluctantly, to return to England personally to secure resupply ships. He sailed back in late 1587 with the pilot Fernandes, intending to return with provisions in 1588.
He would not see his granddaughter — or any of the colonists — again for three years.
The Anglo-Spanish War and the Abandoned Settlement
The timing of White’s return to England could not have been worse. England and Spain were locked in the Anglo-Spanish War, and every available ship was pressed into military service. White’s planned 1588 resupply voyage never happened. He managed to arrange a small expedition, but it turned back without reaching Roanoke. Year after year, the colonists waited for a governor who could not come.
When White finally sailed back in 1590, he arrived at Roanoke to find the settlement fortified — someone had strengthened the defenses in the years since his departure — but entirely deserted. His thorough search turned up two clues. The letters “CRO” were carved into a tree. And on the palisade, clearly and deliberately carved, was the full word: CROATOAN.
White was not without hope. Before his departure in 1587, he had instructed the colonists that if they moved, they should carve their destination into a tree or post. If they were in distress, they should add a cross. There was no cross. White interpreted the carving as a message: the colonists had relocated to Croatoan Island — the home island of their Native American ally Manteo, roughly 50 miles to the south.
He wanted to follow up immediately. But the sea refused to cooperate. Rough weather battered the ships, and a lost anchor made the mission impossible. The fleet was forced to abandon the search and return to England. White never made it back to Croatoan Island. He never learned what happened.
What We Still Don’t Know
The honest answer, more than four centuries later, is that the fate of the Roanoke colonists remains unsolved. Speculation that they had assimilated with nearby Native American tribes appears in writings as early as 1605. When the Jamestown colonists arrived in Virginia after 1607 and investigated, they produced reports that the Roanoke settlers had been killed — but also stories of people with European features living in Native American villages. Neither claim came with conclusive evidence.
Interest in the mystery waned for two centuries, until historian George Bancroft revived it in 1834 with his *History of the United States*. Bancroft’s framing cast the colonists — and particularly Virginia Dare, White’s infant granddaughter — as foundational figures in American cultural mythology, and the story caught the public imagination in a way it has never quite let go.
The Wikipedia article on Roanoke Colony is candid about what remains open: the number of colonists itself is uncertain (estimates range from 112 to 121), the exact sequence of events after White’s departure is unknown, and no physical evidence has definitively resolved where the colonists went. The single carved word — CROATOAN — remains the most concrete clue anyone has ever found. And it leads, still, only to more questions.
Sources
– This article is a synthesis of the Wikipedia article on Roanoke Colony (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roanoke_Colony), which itself cites the underlying scholarship. Readers wanting primary sources should follow that article’s reference list.
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