In the Disney movie Pocahantas there are some historical inaccuracies. For example her age is said to be around 11 years old when she met John Smith in 1607. In the Disney film they bumped up her age to go alone with John Smith's age. In the movie John and Pocahanatas meet almost instantly after he lands in America. According to the History books Pocahantas meets John when he gets captured by her brother Opechancanough. In the movie the colonists sailed on the Susan Constant. Really they sealed in 3 ships the Susan Constant, Godspeed, and, Discovey. As soon as they landed, John Smith started exploring around. In reality John smith was arrested and clapped in irons during the voyage, and was not released until a month after the
landing at Jamestown. After that, thats when he did lots of exploring and trading.
Thus, Smith was a very proud and boastful man. Before reaching 25, he battled in many areas, such as the Netherlands and Hungary. He fought at sea off the Atlantic coast, where he was captured as a slave. As a slave, he was rough and beaten. The Indians that captured him brought him to their leader named Powhatan. Powhatan didn’t like him, so he threatened him to death and began to plan his death. Powhatan’s daughter, Pocahontas, fell in love with Smith and gained her fathers trust. He soon became Powhatan’s son. Burned severely in a gunpowder explosion, Smith was sent back to England for recovery. He returns to America in 5 years, only this time to New England.
The Disney movie Pocahontas is not historically accurate. There are many differences in the plot and characters. A few are that there was no love story between Pocahontas and John Smith, Pocahontas was 12 not 20 when John Smith came, John Smith was not tall and blond, and in the movie, they came to Jamestown in one ship. There are much more ways that the Movie is not historically accurate, but you can already see that it was very different from what actually happened.
John’s was born on January 16, 1736 in Braintree, Massachusetts. He was the middle child of three. He was the son of John Hancock, who was born on June 1, 1702 in Lexington, Massachusetts and child of Mary Hawke, who was born on October 13, 1711 in Hingham, Massachusetts. His mother was married once before she married Johns farther. Her marriage ended in her former husband’s death. John Hancock Sr was a “faithful Shepard.” He always kept an alert watch over the ethics and religious well-being of all members of the neighborhood. Ever since John’s (Jr.) birth, he was perceived to go to Harvard. When he was six, his parents sent him to a local dame school. Later he was sent to another institute, in where he met John Adams, whom became a friend of his. Like all the other children, John learned the basics of writing, figuring, and reading. All things appeared to be going well, until spring of 1774. His father had gotten sick, that later would kill him. His grief grew more because they would have to move. His mother’s parents were both dead and a very difficult choice would have to be made by her. Her anxiety to make that decision was diminished by the offer from the bishop and his wife, to live with them in Lexington. A year later, John was sent away to live with his uncle Thomas and aunt Lydia, and attend Boston Latin School. The move genuinely altered John Hancock’s life.
middle of paper ... ... John Smith. Pocahontas was 12 and John Smith was possibly as old as 50! The things that were left out include diseases that were brought over from Europe, high deaths rates and the fact that the Europeans often stole food from the Indians. These were left out as including them may have made the film unsuitable for the audience it was aimed at.
Fishwick, Marshall. “Was John Smith A Liar?” American Heritage. American Heritage, n.d. Web. 13 Mar. 2014.
After their original leader, Bartholomew Goznold, dies, John Smith takes up his leadership position. Determined to survive and keep the colony going, he starts learning and observing the ways of the Indians. He tried to learn their language as well and tried to break the language barrier. He took a big gamble and came into the Indian camp to speak to chief Powhatan to bargain for food. Luckily for him, Powhatans daughter, Pocahontas, influenced her father to aid the Englishmen and John was able to secure food for the
The main characters of the film were John Smith, Pocahontas and John Rolfe. Usually it is hard for films to portray c...
Disney movie “Pocahontas” and John Smiths “The General History of Virginia” there were many differences, other than things someone could compare. The two versions had different thoughts and views on the accounts of Pocahontas, the Native Americans, and John Smith. The way Disney portrayed Pocahontas had more of a view of mending enemies, compromises being made between two parties, and that there is more to life than materialistic things. On the other hand, John Smith’s account of what happened was way different than Disney’s version of what happened. For example, John Smith describes his journey to Virginia as a long journey, filled with Hunger, with a majority of the people who attended the voyage with john smith ended up dying. At the end, with him and others being captured by Native Americans who reside on that land. Although, no one knows the actual events that took place during this time.
Pocahontas was the daughter of Chief Powhatan which made her an Indian Princess. When she was 12 years old, she saved a colonist named John Smith from being clubbed to death. After this, the relationship between the colonist and the Indians were at peace. Captain Smith sent many presents to Powhatan and the Indian woman gave food to the colonist. When John Smith left Jamestown because of a gunpowder accident, the peace between the Indians and the colonist weaken. In 1612, Governor Thomas Dale ordered for Pocahontas to be kidnapped, held for ransom that would be paid in corn by Chief Powhatan. While she was held captive, Pocahontas was baptized Christian and given the name Rebecca. Also while she was imprisoned, Pocahontas fell in love with John Rolfe, who then asked for her hand in marriage. Sir Thomas Dale and Chief Powhatan gave their consent and they got married in Jamestown on April, 1613. This marriage brought peace between the English and the Indians for many years. On 1615, John and Pocahontas had a child named Thomas. Pocahontas became the center of English society’s attention. She had then become Lady Rebecca Rolfe. Before going back to Virginia, Pocahontas became sick. She died on March, 1617, at the age of 21 in England. She was buried in the chapel of the parish church in Gravesend. Rolfe returned to Virginia, where he manufactured tobacco. I liked Pocahontas because she was the kind of person who was willing to do new things and she did the right thing even if no one would agree with her. She is famous for her actions (even if Disney exaggerated them) and I admire her strength and courage to stand up for what she believed in.
After examining the sources, I strongly believe that Pocahontas did not save John Smith from the urgent, deadly circumstance that legends speak of. Although history textbooks such as The Americans: A History write that Pocahontas “rescued Smith when he was captured”, it refers to her rescue as a legend. While some legends may be exaggerated versions of partial truths, many are purely just stories. Although Pocahontas may have “saved” John Smith from a less dire circumstance, the odds of her rescuing him from a desperate, violent capture is probably not true. Furthermore, Smith did not mention any threat or capture in his book written a year after the “actual” event. However, in order to gain more fame and money, he included an epic, detailed description of her rescue in the Generall Historie of Virginia. If Pocahontas truly tried to “save him from death” (Smith), John Smith would’ve had to mention her rescue in his first book.
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain is a classic novel about a young boy who struggles to save and free himself from captivity, responsibility, and social injustice. Along his river to freedom, he aids and befriends a runaway slave named Jim. The two travel down the Mississippi, hoping to reach Cairo successfully. However, along the way they run into many obstacles that interrupt their journey. By solving these difficult tasks, they learn life lessons important to survival.
The essence of Pocahontas’ history is debatable, with very few documented facts. Pocahontas lived over four hundred years ago, and the known facts may also be manipulated. The story John Smith recounted of his own ordeal may have been altered to suit his own needs. The truth of the story may not be the facts given of the story. The essence of Pocahontas’ legend is really what is argued. Some may object to Disney’s version of the tale; however, it is Disney’s version to tell.
Jedediah Smith was a trailblazer and a brigade leader. He was a partner in two fur-companies. Was the first to transverse the Sierra Nevada and the first to cross the Great Basin Desert. In 1824 helped a destitute party of Hudson’s Bay Company trappers get back to the Flathead house. In 1825 he moved his group from Salt Lake to California. In 1826 he was sent ahead of the west bound pack train to arrange for the rendezvous held that year in Cache Valley and in the spring of 1827 Smith and two of his trappers left the remaining party on the Stanislaus river. He
In an article called The Pocahontas Myth, written by Chief Roy Crazy Horse, he states that Pocahontas real name was Matoaka and that “Pocahontas” was given to her as a nickname meaning “spoiled child". In the movie, Disney portrays Pocahontas to be a young woman around the age of twenty but it is revealed that by the time John snow had gotten to the village, Pocahontas was only 10 years of age and John was twenty-eight. Pocahontas died on March 21, 1617 at the age of twenty-one, around the same age she was illustrated in the movie (Horse). With all the dissimilarities pictured, it is hard to imagine how difficult her prior life would had have
“The Wonderful World of Walt Disney,” is the phrase Disney used with passion spreading positive messages to kids growing up but behind these movies they put out, they all had a deeper meaning and understanding. From Storey’s book “Cultural Theory and Popular Culture,” he stated that structuralism has two ideas from Saussure, concern with underlying relations of text and practices and the grammar that makes meaning possible and the view that meaning is always the result of the interplay of relationships of selection and combination made possible by the underlying structure. Post-structuralism is saying that there are no underlying relations to text and practices and that meanings of things are always