While captive, Pocahontas met the colonist John Rolfe, who—according to various English accounts, including his own—fell in love with her. Pocahontas agreed to marry Rolfe and, shortly before ...
John Rolfe of Heacham. The couple were a key part in the establishment of the Jamestown colony but returned to the UK in 1616. They had one child together, named Thomas Rolfe, and the family planned ...
During her captivity at Jamestown, Pocahontas falls in love with an English settler, John Rolfe. Was this coincidence or was it strategy? It's hard to know. What we do know is that the marriage ...
A lesser-known fact from the life of Matoaka — Pocahontas was just a nickname meaning “playful one” — is that she lived with then-husband John Rolfe on a riverside property in Henrico ...
John Rolfe - and she and Smith sail away to Britain together at the end of the film. History, however, tells a different and darker tale. To start, Pocahontas was just a nickname, meaning "the ...
The Native American travelled to England in 1616 with husband John Rolfe after helping save ... tree and others have proved inconclusive. Rolfe and Pocahontas spent 10 months in England - before ...