Colonial Tough Guys
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| Archaeologist Michael Lavin excavates an iron breastplate, one remnant of the clunky British armor dumped in a well by Jamestown's residents when they found it ill suited to guerrilla-style combat in the New World. Photograph courtesy of the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities. |
After the initial losses, the remaining settlers quickly learned to jettison their European manners and armor, judging from Kelso's recent excavation. His team found an assortment of body armor, swords, and a helmet that had evidently been discarded. "The natives wouldn't have fought in nice orderly marching lines, so the settlers would have adapted similar guerrilla tactics that made the heavy traditional European armor more hindrance than help," says Kelso. Archaeologists have also recovered lightweight, arrow-proof vests constructed by chopping armor into pieces and threading it back together. Such innovations helped the colonists survive repeated attacks until supply ships arrived. "The Jamestown colonists arrived in stiff armor and then adapted it to suit their needs, much as they did with government and with the language. It's a little insight into how and when Englishmen became Americans," says Kelso.



