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Latest comment: 19 years ago1 comment1 person in discussion
John White was actually very important and smart. What happened was that when he left for supplies, the rest of his group was attack and killed by an Indian tribe. I'm doing a report on him so that's how I know all this stuff.
Give me credit for that!!!!
Every time I put down something of value on your pages here, your server logs me out and posts whatever IP I'm on at the time instead.
For the record, WB2 is the person who wrote the following paragraph, infra:
The IP "207.214.244.173" is where he sent it from at "23:45, 17 August 2005"
A Bridgett White was also the second wife of a Robert Wight (1578–1617) of Hareby, Lincolnshire, England whom he married on November 25, 1613 at Alford. As Robert was also the son of an obscure John Wight (b. abt. 1552) and the father of an Elizabeth Wighte (1606–1671) who is sometimes thought to have been the ex-wife of Nathaniel Eaton (1610–1674), the first schoolmaster of Harvard College, Massachusetts; there is a strong possibility that Bridgit White, the sister of John White the Governor of Roanoke Colony, and Bridgett White, the second wife of the same above-mentioned Robert Wight, are directly related.
Latest comment: 15 years ago4 comments3 people in discussion
I don't know who did all the original references here, but its obvious to me that there have been a lot of scared "nine-to-fivers" who just simply copied, or "plagerized", off of other people and didn't do any research of their own.
I'm going to (eventually) change this to: John White of Stanton St John (1540 – before September 30, 1618) the son of John White and Mildred Weston, and nephew of Dr Thomas White (1514 – 1588) the Warden of New College, Oxford.
It's obvious to me that these are one and the same people.
John White was actually very important and smart. What happened was that when he left for supplies, the rest of his group was attack and killed by an indian tribe. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 97.127.31.221 (talk) 21:29, 29 April 2009 (UTC)Reply
The location of Croatoan is clearly indicated on John White's own map
Latest comment: 4 months ago2 comments2 people in discussion
I dispute this assertion: "Croatoan was the name of a nearby island (likely modern-day Hatteras Island)".
John White's own map shows an island called Croatoan, it is coloured pink, and it appears to correlate with modern-day Ocracoke.
White's map is understandably inaccurate, to a degree, but the easternmost point of the easternmost island on his map is triangular and correlates remarkably well with the area round modern-day Buxton/Cape Hatteras.
If we orientate White's map around so that his north should actually be closer to northeast, or even east-northeast, we can see that he misconstrued the length and orientation of Hatteras Island, but he correctly positioned Croatoan/Ocracoke, which is the next island in the chain going south west from Hatteras.
I assert that the artice text should be changed to:
"Croatoan was the name of a nearby island (likely modern-day Ocracoke Island)" — Preceding unsigned comment added by JonathanPeterG (talk • contribs) 15:20, 6 February 2020 (UTC)Reply