Quick Facts
Born:
Dec. 9, 1561, Worcestershire, Eng.
Died:
October 1629, Kent (aged 67)

Sir Edwin Sandys (born Dec. 9, 1561, Worcestershire, Eng.—died October 1629, Kent) was a leading Parliamentary opponent of King James I of England and a founder of the colony of Virginia. His activities in Parliament prepared the way for the Parliamentarian movement that eventually deposed and executed James’s successor, Charles I.

Sandys was the son of Edwin Sandys, bishop of Worcester and later archbishop of York, and the brother of the poet George Sandys. Trained in law, he entered Parliament in 1586. While traveling on the Continent from 1593 to 1599, he wrote A Relation of the State of Religion (1605), a conciliatoryanalysis of contemporary creeds. He was knighted shortly after the accession of James I, and in 1604 he was reelected to Parliament, where he unexpectedly emerged as a critic of the king, especially in opposition to royal plans for the union of England and Scotland. He earned James’s enmity by boldly expressing his belief in constitutional monarchy and rejecting the doctrine of the divine right of kings.

Sandys’ interest in overseas expansion caused him to join the Virginia Company (1607) and several other joint-stock enterprises, including the East India Company. Upon gaining control of the Virginia Company in 1619, he had a representative assembly established in Virginia—the first representative body in the North American colonies. Nevertheless, in 1624 James’s government dissolved the company.

In the 1621 Parliament, Sandys actively opposed monopolies, Roman Catholics, and the royal minister Sir Lionel Cranfield, whom he helped to impeach in the 1624 Parliament.

Virginia Company

British trading company
Also known as: London Company, Virginia Company of London
Quick Facts
In full:
Virginia Company of London
Also called:
London Company
Date:
1606 - 1624
Areas Of Involvement:
international trade

Virginia Company, commercial trading company, chartered by King James I of England in April 1606 with the object of colonizing the eastern coast of North America between latitudes 34° and 41° N. Its shareholders were Londoners, and it was distinguished from the Plymouth Company, which was chartered at the same time and composed largely of men from Plymouth.

In December 1606 the Virginia Company sent out three ships carrying approximately 105 colonists led by Christopher Newport. In May 1607 the colonists reached Virginia and founded the Jamestown Colony at the mouth of the James River. After some initial hardships, the colony took root, and the Virginia Company itself was reconstituted on a broader legal basis. A new charter in 1609 reorganized its governing structure.

In 1619 the company established continental America’s first true legislature, the General Assembly, which was organized bicamerally. It consisted of the governor and his council, named by the company in England, and the House of Burgesses, made up of two burgesses from each of the four boroughs and seven plantations.

Despite increasing prosperity in Virginia over the following years, the company’s role came under attack as internecine disputes among the shareholders grew and as the king himself became offended both by the trend toward popular government in Virginia and by the colony’s efforts to raise tobacco, a “noisome” product of which he disapproved. A petition submitted to the king, calling for an investigation of conditions in the colony, led to a trial before the King’s Bench in May 1624. The court ruled against the Virginia Company, which was then dissolved, with the result that Virginia was transformed into a royal colony.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Amy Tikkanen.