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REMEMBER: In North America, the month of September 1752 was exceptionally short, skipping 11 days, when the Gregorian Calendar was adapted from the old Julian one, which didn't have leap year days.

Monday, March 15, 2021

More about Capt. Nathaniel Bass, early Virginia immigrant

A repost about the first Bass colonist to the Virginia Colony

 Re: Basse's Choice Plantation, 1600s, VA


By genealogy.com user March 06, 1999 at 04:39:42
On 4/27/1619 a ship commanded by Capt. Evans arrived at Jamestown, Va. Passengers listed: Capt. Christopher Lawne, Dir Richard Worsley, Nathaniel Basse, John Hobson, Anthony Olevan, Richard Wiseman, Robert Newland, Robert Gyner, and Willian Willis.These men settled near the mouth of the creek on the south side of the James River(still known as Lawne's Creek) and called it the Isle of Wright Plantation.Capt. Basse established a plantation in this same area on the Warrosquoyacke River (now known as the Pagan River) and named it "Basse's Choice."Patented on 11/21/1621 and originally listed 300 acres, was actually closer to 400 acres of which 250 acres was marshland.
Source: https://www.genealogy.com/forum/surnames/topics/bass/393/

Nathaniel Basse (bap. 1589–1654)

Nathaniel Basse was an English colonist who represented Warrosquyoake in the House of Burgesses (1624, 1625, 1628, 1629) and served on the governor's Council. The length of his service on the Council is unknown, but he is named as a member on documents dated December 20, 1631, and February 21, 1632. He came to Virginia in March 1619 with Christopher Lawne. In 1621 he received a grant of 300 acres of land; his settlement, Basse's Choice, was among the first English settlements in Isle of Wight County. Knowledge of his personal and family life is obscured by a lack of documentation, but tradition holds that he may have been the father of John Bass, who married a member of the Nansemond tribe in 1638 and from whom the Bass family of lower Tidewater Virginia is descended. However, a deposition recorded in England on August 30, 1654, states that Basse died without issue.

Basse was the second of twelve sons and second of eighteen children of Humphrey Basse and Mary Buschier Basse. His mother was of Italian descent, and his father was a prosperous London girdler of French ancestry who invested in the Virginia Company of London. Basse was probably born in London and was christened there in the parish of Saint Gabriel Fenchurch on December 19, 1589.
Basse first arrived in Virginia, so far as is known, in March 1619 with Christopher Lawne and other colonists associated in the settlement of Warrosquyoake Plantation in what is now Isle of Wight County. During 1620 Basse returned to England and obtained from the Virginia Company a confirmation of the patent to Warrosquyoake in November of that year. The company reconfirmed this patent in January 1622. In November 1621 Basse received a separate patent in his own name for a 300-acre tract a short distance west of Warrosquyoake on the east side of the Pagan River that has been called Basse's Choice ever since. He returned to Virginia on the Furtherance about August or September 1622, after the Powhatan uprising on March 22, 1622, when, according to John Smith's Generall Historie, the Indians "had fired Lieutenant Basse his house, with all the rest there about, slaine the people, and so left that Plantation."

Basse represented Warrosquyoake in the General Assembly sessions of February and March 1624, May 1625, March 1628, and October 1629. In June 1625 he signed a petition requesting Charles I to preserve the General Assembly as a fixture of the new royal government of the colony. Soon after arriving in Virginia late in March 1630, Governor Sir John Harvey appointed Basse to the governor's Council. The length of his service is unknown, but he is named as a member on documents dated December 20, 1631, and February 21, 1632. On March 6, 1632, Harvey commissioned Basse "to trade between 34 and 31 degrees North Latitude and to go to New England, Nova Scotia, or the West Indie Islands with instructions to invite the inhabitants hither if any so inclined," and sometime the same month Basse became presiding justice of the court of Warrosquyoake.

Extant records do not indicate whether Basse traveled to the other English colonies as directed, or whether he ever returned to England. He probably either remained in Virginia or returned to the colony following the voyages. The dearth of documentation also obscures much of Basse's personal and family life. Tradition has it that he married Mary Jordan in London on May 21, 1613, that the third son of their ten sons and three daughters married a member of the Nansemond tribe in 1638, and that the Bass family of lower Tidewater Virginia is descended from this son. However, a deposition in England on behalf of his three surviving sisters, identified as his coheirs, asserted that he had died in Virginia without issue, an assertion borne out by a suit brought by Theodorick Bland against William Drummond, attorney of Basse's coheirs, and settled in 1658. Nathaniel Basse died, probably in Virginia, sometime before this August 30, 1654, deposition was taken.


Time Line

  • December 19, 1589 - Nathaniel Basse, the second of eighteen children born to Humphrey Basse and Mary Buschier Basse, is christened in the parish of Saint Gabriel Fenchurch in London.
  • May 21, 1613 - Tradition holds that Nathaniel Basse and Mary Jordan were married on this day in London.
  • March 1619 - Nathaniel Basse arrives in Virginia with Christopher Lawne and other colonists associated in the settlement of Warrosquyoake Plantation in what is now Isle of Wight County.
  • 1620 - Nathaniel Basse travels from Virginia to England to obtain from the Virginia Company a confirmation of the patent to Warrosquyoake.
  • November 1621 - Nathaniel Basse receives a patent in his name for a 300-acre tract of land a short distance west of Warrosquyoake on the east side of the Pagan River. It becomes known as Basse's Choice.
  • August or September 1622 - Nathaniel Basse returns to Virginia on the Furtherance.
  • February–March 1624 - Nathaniel Basse represents Warrosquyoake in the General Assembly.
  • May 1625 - Nathaniel Basse represents Warrosquyoake in the General Assembly.
  • June 1625 - Nathaniel Basse signs a petition requesting that Charles I preserve the General Assembly as a fixture of the new royal government of the colony.
  • March 1628 - Nathaniel Basse represents Warrosquyoake in the General Assembly.
  • October 1629 - Nathaniel Basse represents Warrosquyoake in the General Assembly.
  • ca. 1630–1632 - Nathaniel Basse serves on the governor's Council.
  • March 1632 - Nathaniel Basse becomes presiding justice of the court of Warrosquyoake.
  • March 6, 1632 - Governor Sir John Harvey commissions Nathaniel Basse "to trade between 34 and 41 degrees North Latitude and to go to New England, Nova Scotia, or the West Indie Islands with instructions to invite the inhabitants hither if any so inclined."
  • August 14, 1638 - John Bass, who may be the son of Nathaniel Basse and Mary Jordan Basse, marries Elizabeth, a Nansemond woman who has converted to Christianity. 
  • August 30, 1654 - A deposition in England on behalf of the three surviving sisters of Nathaniel Basse, identified as his coheirs, asserts that Basse died in Virginia without issue. 
Further Reading
Gentry, Daphne. "Basse, Nathaniel." In Dictionary of Virginia Biography, Vol. 1, edited by John T. Kneebone et al., 382–383. Richmond: Library of Virginia, 1998.
Cite This Entry
APA Citation:Gentry, D., & the Dictionary of Virginia Biography. Nathaniel Basse (bap. 1589–1654). (2015, October 9). In Encyclopedia Virginia. Retrieved from http://www.EncyclopediaVirginia.org/Basse_Nathaniel_bap_1589-1654.

Copied from: https://www.encyclopediavirginia.org/Basse_Nathaniel_bap_1589-1654#start_entry


Basse's Choice

Inscription. In Nov. 1621, Capt. Nathaniel Basse received a grant of 300 acres of land, now known as Basse’s Choice, located nearby. It was one of the first English settlements in Isle of Wight County, though humans had lived there more than 5000 years. On Mar. 1622, during the Powhatan-English War of 1622–1632, attacks coordinated by Chief Opechancanough struck various English settlements including Base’s Choice. Basse was in England when this event occurred. He resettled the region by 1624, when twenty people lived there. Basse later served in the House of Burgesses and was appointed to the governor’s council in Mar. 1630.

Erected 2000 by Department of Historic Resources. (Marker Number K-242.)

Location. 37° 0.832′ N, 76° 38.053′ W. Marker is in Smithfield, Virginia, in Isle of Wight County. Marker is on Old Stage Highway (Virginia Route 10) north of Bounts Corner Road, on the right when traveling north. This marker sits with K-241 before Hardy Elementary School. 

and you know I wanted to know what the other marker (seen in the background) says...




Bennett's Plantation:

Inscription. By Nov. 1621, Edward Bennett had obtained a patent from the Virginia Company to establish Bennett’s Plantation, also known as Warrascoyack and Bennett’s Welcome. By Feb. 1622, the Sea Flower arrived with the first residents and they began settling the south bank of the James River at the lower reaches of Burwell’s Bay. On 22 Mar. 1622, the Powhatan-English War of 1622–1632 began with attacks coordinated by Chief Opechancanough against many English settlements including Bennett’s Plantation. More than 50 colonists died there and the survivors were transported to Jamestown. Bennett’s Plantation was reestablished by June 1623.


Now I must mention, that we have 2 stories about Nathaniel Basse. One where he married and had 13 children, and the other where he remained single and had no heirs (according to his sisters and their attorneys.)

Since there is the prayer book belonging to John Bass, stating he married Elizabeth, daughter of the chief of the Nansemonds,  I tend to think Nathaniel had children.

Do we believe there was an Indian masacre that killed many of the Bass family? Probably.

How did John get raised by Indians before marrying Elizabeth? Nobody knows.

So evidently Nathaniel returned to England, where he is buried. And his sisters were led to believe that he had no heirs.  A very unlikely story.

Nathaniel lost many of his children early in their lives, as many children at that time died before their 3rd birthday.  I'm more amazed that Mary managed to produce 13 children and then died (so says one source) in childbirth.  And were there as many twins as the dates give them? Who knows.

But Nathaniel came to America, got land, and served in various government functions which are documented.  That much we know for sure.

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