Have We Found the “Lost Colony”? (November 2020 | Volume: 65, Issue: 7)

Have We Found the “Lost Colony”?

AH article image

Authors: Scott Dawson

Historic Era: Era 2: Colonization and Settlement (1585-1763)

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November 2020 | Volume 65, Issue 7

Editor’s Note: Scott Dawson, founder of the Croatoan Archaeological Society, has been the driving force behind ten years of archaeological excavations on Hatteras Island that have led to a new understanding of what may have happened to the abandoned settlers. His recent book, The Lost Colony and Hatteras Island, reveals his team’s important discoveries. 

The author examines pottery left by the Croatoan Indians, who welcomed English colonists to their towns on modern Hatteras island.
The author examines shards of pottery left by the Croatoan Indians, who welcomed English colonists to their towns on modern Hatteras island. Edwin Grosvenor

The story of the “Lost Colony” – the disappearance of the first English settlers in America – is one of the most famous legends in history.

It goes like something this: in 1587, thirty-three years before the Mayflower and twenty years before Jamestown, more than one hundred men, women, and children established a settlement on Roanoke Island in what is now the Outer Banks of North Carolina. After a palisade and some rudimentary dwellings were built, the governor of the colony, John White, returned to England for supplies. But he couldn’t get back for three years because of war with Spain.

Our archaeology in the last ten years has uncovered evidence that the colony was never lost, but abandoned at Croatoan — modern-day Hatteras Island.  

When White finally returned to Roanoke, there was no trace of the colony, which had included his daughter and granddaughter. Even the houses were gone. All that was left was a mysterious message carved on a tree that said “CROATOAN.” No one had a clue what it meant. Thus, the “lost” colony.

Governor John White returns to Roanoke to find the colonists all missing and the word "CROATOAN" carved on a tree.
The colony’s governor John White returned in 1589 to discover all the settlers missing including his daughter and grandchild. Supposedly the only clue was the mysterious word “Croatoan.”  American Heritage Collection

That legend, passed down through generations and augmented by popular media and many textbooks, is largely false. My twenty years of research in primary sources about the first English settlements in North America and ten years of archaeological digs on Hatteras have led to a new understanding of what actually happened to the colony. The truth is far more interesting than the legend.

In fact, the colony was never lost, but, rather, abandoned at Croatoan — modern-day Hatteras Island. Authorities in England in the 1600s and 1700s were aware of gray-eyed Indians wearing English-style clothing. John Lawson, an explorer hired by the Crown in 1701 to survey Native tribes in the Carolinas, wrote of the Croatoans that, “These tell us, that several of their Ancestors were white People, and could talk in a Book, as we do.” He expressed his horror that in order to survive the colonists had “degenerated” and assimilated with the Natives, who were often called