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<h2> TURPENTINE AND TAR </h2>
<p>To us in Jamestown the making of anything which we may send back to
England for sale, is of such great importance that we are more curious
regarding the manner in which the work is done, than would be others who
are less eager to see piled up that which will bring money to the people.</p>
<p>Therefore it was that Nathaniel and I watched eagerly the making of
turpentine, and found it not unlike the method by which the Indians gain
sugar from maple trees. A strip of bark is taken from the pine, perhaps
eight or ten inches long, and at the lower end of the wound thus made, a
deep notch is cut in the wood.</p>
<p>Into this the sap flows, and is scraped out as fast as the cavity is
filled. It is a labor in which all may join, and so plentiful are the pine
trees that if our people of Jamestown set about making turpentine only,
they might load four or five ships in a year.</p>
<p>From the making of tar much money can be earned, and it is a simple
process such as I believe I myself might compass, were it not that I have
sufficient of other work to occupy all my time.</p>
<p>The pine tree is cut into short pieces, even the roots being used, for, if
I mistake not, more tar may be had from the roots than from the trunks of
the tree. Our people here dig a hollow, much like unto the shape of a
funnel, on the side of a hill, or bank, fill it in with the wood and the
roots, and cover the whole closely with turf.</p>
<p>An iron pot is placed at the bottom of this hollow in the earth, and a
fire is built at the top of the pile. While the fuel smolders, the tar
stews out of the wood, falling into the iron pot, and from there is put
into whatsoever vessels may be most convenient in which to carry it over
seas.</p>
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<h2> THE MAKING OF CLAPBOARDS </h2>
<p>There is far greater labor required in the making of clapboards, and it is
of a wearisome kind; but Captain Newport declares that clapboards made of
our Virginia cedar are far better in quality than any to be found in
England. Therefore it is Captain Smith keeps as many men as he may,
employed in this work, which is more tiring than difficult.</p>
<p>The trunks of the trees are cut into lengths of four feet, and trimmed
both as to branches and bark. An iron tool called a frow, which is not
unlike a butcher's cleaver, is then used to split the log into thin
strips, one edge of which is four or five times thicker than the other.</p>
<p>You will understand better the method by picturing to yourself the end of
a round log which has been stood upright for convenience of the workmen.
Now, if you place a frow in such a position that it will split the
thicknesses of an inch or less from the outer side, you will find that the
point of the instrument, which is at the heart of the tree, must come in
such manner as to make the splint very thin on the inner edge. The frow is
driven through the wood by a wooden mallet, to the end that the sides of
the clapboard may be fairly smooth.</p>
<p>Master Hunt has told me that if we were to put on board a ship the size of
the John and Francis, as many clapboards as she could swim under, the
value of the cargo would be no less than five hundred pounds, and they
would have a ready sale in London, or in other English ports.</p>
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<h2> PROVIDING FOR THE CHILDREN </h2>
<p>And now before I am come to the most terrible time in the history of our
town of James, let me set down that which the London Company has decreed,
for it is of great importance to all those who, like Nathaniel and me,
came over into this land of Virginia before they were men and women grown.</p>
<p>Master Hunt has written the facts out fairly, to the end that I may
understand them well, he having had the information from Captain Newport,
for it was the last decree made by the London Company before the John and
Francis sailed.</p>
<p>I must say, however, that the reason why this decree, or order, whichever
it may be called, has been made, was to the end that men and women, who
had large families of children, might be induced to join us here in
Jamestown, as if we had not already mouths enough to feed.</p>
<p>The Council of the Company has decided to allow the use of twenty-five
acres of land for each and every child that comes into Virginia, and all
who are now here, or may come to live at the expense of the Company, are
to be educated in some good trade or profession, in order that they may be
able to support themselves when they have come to the age of four and
twenty years, or have served the time of their apprenticeship, which is to
be no less than seven years.</p>
<p>It is further decreed that all of those children when they become of age
or marry, whichever shall happen first, are to have freely given and made
over to them fifty acres of land apiece, which same shall be in Virginia
within the limits of the English plantation. But, these children must be
placed as apprentices under honest and good masters within the grant made
to the London Company, and shall serve for seven years, or until they come
to the age of twenty-four, during which time their masters must bring them
up in some trade or business.</p>
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<h2> DREAMS OF THE FUTURE </h2>
<p>On hearing this, the question came into my mind as to whether Nathaniel
and I could be called apprentices, inasmuch as we were only houseboys,
according to the name Captain Smith gave us.</p>
<p>Master Hunt declared that being apprentices to care for the family, was of
as much service as if we were learned in the trade of making tar,
clapboards, or of building ships, and he assured me that if peradventure
he was living when we had been in this land of Virginia seven years, it
should be his duty to see to it that we were given our fifty acres of land
apiece.</p>
<p>Thus understanding that we might ourselves in turn one day become
planters, Nathaniel and I had much to say, one with the other, concerning
what should be done in the future. We decided that when the time came for
us to have the land set off to our own use, we would strive that the two
lots of fifty acres each be in one piece. Then would we set about raising
tobacco, as the Indian girl Pocahontas taught us, and who can say that we
might not come to be of some consequence, even as are Captain Smith and
Master Hunt, in this new world.</p>
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