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The Historiography of the Activities of Francis Drake along the Pacific Coast of North America in 1579
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 July 2014
Extract
Francis Drake's circumnavigation of the world (1577-1581) marks the first certain approach of Europeans to what later became known as the Northwest Coast of America. Historical research on this voyage has stemmed from Great Britain and the United States. British scholars concerned with the subject as part of English maritime activity have included Richard Hakluyt, James Anthony Froude, E. G. R. Taylor, James A. Williamson and A. L. Rowse. The latest British scholar to inquire into the motives and events of the great voyage is Kenneth R. Andrews. These writers have generally given little space to Drake's experiences on the Northwest Coast. However, the late California scholar Henry Raup Wagner published a monumental study of the subject in 1926. This work and two volumes published by the Hakluyt Society provide most of the documents relating to the voyage.
The pertinent passages describing Drake's activities in the North Pacific are as follows:
- From Guatulco [a village near Acapulco on the Mexican
- west coast] we departed the day following, viz. April 16.
- setting our course directly into the sea: whereon we sayled
- 500. leagues in longitude, to get a winde: and between that
- and June 3. 1400. leagues in all, till we came into 42. deg.
- of North latitude. ….
The land in that part of America, bearing farther out into the West, then we before imagined, we were neerer on it than wee were aware; and yet the neerer still wee came unto it, the more extremitie of cold did sease upon us. The 5. day of June, wee were forced by contrary windes, to run in with the shoare, which we then first descried; and cast anchor in a bad bay, the best roade we could for the present meete with: where wee were not without some danger, by reason of the many extreme gusts, and flawes that beate upon us; which if they ceased and were still at any time, immediately upon their intermission, there followed most vile, thicke, and stinking fogges; against which the sea prevailed nothing, till the gusts of wind were againe remowed them, which brought with them, such extremitity and violence when they came, that there was no dealing or resisting against them.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © North American Conference on British Studies 1969
References
1 Andrews, Kenneth R., Drake's Voyage: A Re-Assessment of Their Place in Elizabethan Maritime Expansion (New York, 1967)Google Scholar, and by the same author, “The Aims of Drake's Expedition of 1577-1580,” American Historical Review, LXXIII (Feb. 1968), 724–41.Google Scholar
3 From the facsimile edition of The World Encompassed published in Cleveland, 1966. See also the explanatory pamphlet accompanying the facsimile by A. L. Rowse, 62-64, 80. The quote is exactly as printed except for the modernizing of certain letters, e.g., s and u.
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7 Ibid.
8 Heizer, Robert T., Francis Drake and the California Indians (Berkeley, 1947; University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnography, vol. 42, no. 3), esp. 277–79.Google Scholar
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