The first place the English ever landed in the new world was Croatoan, better known as Cape Hatteras. It is at Croatoan that the English made their first contact with Native Americans. It was the beginning of a friendship that would last forever. Croatoan is where the lost colony of 1587 went, and assimilated into the Croatoan nation. Find out how this colony was never lost but abandoned. The evidence for the colony going to Croatoan is overwhelming The only thing that became lost was the truth thanks to the greed of a few, who rewrote history for the sole purpose of making money.
Researching these and other stories never proved the fate of the "Lost Colonists". But one thing is for certain; in 1588 the Spanish from Saint Augustine explored the area looking for the English settlement that had been made known to them.
But what will happen when a great, ancient evil threatens? Can Naomi and the Council save the world? Start the journey in book one of... The Croatoan Council.
In The Lost Colony and Hatteras Island, Hatteras native and amateur archaeologist Scott Dawson compiles what scholars know about the Lost Colony along with what scholars have found beneath the soil of Hatteras.
Croatoan
This book is to set the record straight and tell the real story of what transpired on the 16th century voyages.
The word Croatoan carved onto a post and the letters ÒCROÓ scratched onto a tree.
As an ardent "student" of American history and native to the Tidewater region of southeastern Virginia, James has had a long fascination when it comes to the issue of the "lost colony.
The story that, for thousands of years, has been waiting to be told-begins at page one for those who dare to explore, accept, and shift.
Once John White stepped onto Roanoke Island in 1590, he discovered the English colony he had helped found 3 years earlier completely abandoned.
As for me, I stick to more of the Biblical sense of the term. The true issue here is that very little is accomplished without love, a most necessary term that is not discussed enough, especially in today's writings.