When they arrived on Jamestown Island in May 1607, John Smith tells us that they dug the well “six or seven fathoms” deep. By midsummer, saltwater had backed into the well (the haliocline in the river shifts by as much as a mile) and they filled it with trash and buried it. The second and third wells suffered the same fate. At one point that summer George Percy tells us that they’ve been reduced to drinking “water taken out of the river, which was at a flood very salt, at a low tide full of slime and filth, which was the destruction of many of our men.” Filling abandoned wells with trash was a common practice in England and Virginia at the time, although the Roman lock pistol seems to be from the lower level of the 1611 well that Lord de la Warre ordered replaced with a pump. The archaeological team posit that it was accidentally deposited, based on their assumption that it was functioning properly when lost, and a piece of a halberd bent into a crude hook like shape found in the well, which they guess could have been used to try to recover the pistol. It’s unlikely to have been an attempt to “dispose of evidence” as some have speculated, as we have no record of any firearm-related killings of Englishmen at Jamestown and it’s unlikely someone would have reloaded before dropping the gun into the well. The first known altercation with pistols at Jamestown was the duel between captains Eppes and Stallinge in 1619.
The first gunsmith at Jamestown was Peter Keffer, who arrived on the Phœnix in 1608. Parts of snaphaunce pistols including a cock, a whole lock, and a barrel have been found in contexts (such as a post mold in the southern palisade) which indicate that they were lost or discarded before his arrival. We also know that when the colonists attempted to abandon the site in 1610, equipment that they couldn’t take and wanted to keep from the Indians was buried, including in the well.
Jay