As Captain of the Revenge Drake helped defeat the Armada. |
On
December 13, 1577 Francis Drake on
board the Pelican led four other small ships out of the harbor of Falmouth, Cornwall. Ostensibly on a private expedition of trade,
Drake carried secret orders from Queen
Elizabeth I to round Cape Horn,
explore the western coast of the Americas,
and establish an English claim
on the coast north of Spanish possessions. And, by the way, he could pursue
opportunities for plunder among the Spanish coastal cities and ships at
sea. The Queen would be glad to accept
50% of the proceeds from this piracy against a nation with which she was at
least technically at peace.
No
doubt about it, Drake cut a dashing figure and had made a name for himself as a
daring mariner and audacious pirate.
He
was born sometime between 1535 and 1544—no birth records have been found and he
gave widely varying account of his age at various parts of his career—to a
tenant farmer in Devonshire. Most likely evidence points to February
through March of 1540. His father was a
passionate Protestant and came under
some persecution during that period of Henry
the VIII’s reign when he strove to keep the newly separate Anglican Church essentially Catholic in theology and ritual and not
unite with continental Reformers. Drake himself always stoutly defended
Protestantism and hated the Catholic Church.
Despite
the “lowly station” of a tenant farmer, the Drakes were related to the Earl of Bedford, their landlord and
Drake’s Godfather.
After
fleeing persecution in Devonshire the family settled in Kent. When the persecution
of Protestants eased the elder Drake became a chaplain to men of the King’s
Navy and eventually was ordained a deacon. At the age of about thirteen, he had his son
Francis apprenticed to the captain of a costal and cross Chanel sailing barque. The boy turned out to be a natural seaman—and
a shrewd businessman. When the owner of
the ship died childless, he left the craft to Drake, who was about 20.
In 1563 he was second in command to his second
cousin Captain John Hawkins on a
lucrative voyage as a slaver, taking
captives from West Africa and slaves
captured from Portuguese traders to
the Caribbean to be sold to the
Spanish. It was just the fourth English
slaving expedition, but by far the most successful and helped establish a
regular trade.
Drake
made more voyages to the Spanish Main,
now commanding his own ship in Hawkins’s fleet.
He alternately traded slaves with the Spanish and preyed on their
shipping, often in the same voyage. In
1568 Hawkins and Drake were taking supplies and trading at San Juan de Ulua, fortress near Veracruz, New Spain when the small fleet was surprised and attacked
by a superior Spanish flotilla. All but
two of Hawkins’s ships were sunk and Drake had to swim from the wreckage of his
ship to safety. The episode was said to
have turned him to a furious hatred of the Spanish.
Out
to get even, in 1572 Drake with a crew of mostly French privateers and Maroons—slaves
who had escaped the Spanish—attacked the treasure port of Nombre de Díos on the Isthmus
of Panama. Ashore, Drake and his men
captured the legendary Spanish Silver
Train, a mule train carrying Peruvian
gold and silver across the Isthmus. Capturing nearly 20 tons of precious
metal, far more than his small crew could handle. Drake buried the bulk of the treasure and
took with him only some of the gold.
After adventures and narrow escapes, he returned to England a fabulously
wealthy—and famous—man. Drakes buried
treasure has never been found, though it has long been sought. It is probably the origin of all of the
legends of buried pirate treasure. It
was also on this trip that Drake saw the Pacific
from the top of a tall tree and vowed to sail its waters.
In
1575 Drake entered the service of the Queen under the command of her lover, the
Earl of Essex, charged with
pacifying Ireland. Drake commanded a small fleet that
attacked Rathlin Island off the
north coast of Ulster. The island was being colonized by Scottish Catholics of the MacDonald Clan. While Drake’s naval forces prevented
rescue by the Scots, English troops massacred more than 300 residents, mostly women,
children and the infirm as the men were away at war.
With
this additional notch in his belt, the Queen selected Drake, by now a favorite,
for her world-girdling expedition two years later.
Drake
added a sixth ship to his fleet, the Portuguese trader Santa Maria captured off
of the Cape Verde Islands. He convinced her captain, who had
experience in South American waters,
to join him and renamed the ship Mary.
The
rugged Atlantic crossing began the
attrition of men and ships that plagued the expedition. The Christopher and Swan had to be scuttled
because of losses to the crew because of illness and their remaining men
transferred to the other ships.
Drake
put into the bay at San Julian in what is now southern Argentina in June. He decided stay through the approaching harsh
Southern Hemisphere winter in the
barren bay. More than fifty years
earlier Magellan had done the same
thing and executed dozens of mutineers while there. Drake’s crew found the skeletons still tied
to gibbets. The Mary was found to be rotten and was taken apart to be used as
firewood to get the crews through the winter.
While
there Drake dealt, somewhat mysteriously, with a charge of witchcraft levied at his second in command Thomas Doughty and high handedly had the man executed. Doughty was a nobleman and had been the
personal secretary to the powerful Christopher
Hatton, Lord Chancellor of England and with the Queen a major investor in
the voyage. To assuage Hatton’s probable
wrath, Drake renamed his flagship The Golden Hind after the principal
feature in Hatton’s coat of arms.
Upon
leaving San Julian, the three remaining ships headed south to cross into the
Pacific. They were battered by the
legendary storms in that region. One
ship foundered and another was too badly damaged to continue and had to return
to England. In mid September Drake and
the Golden Hind finally made the
passage through the Straights of
Magellan. Despite later claims, he did not go further south around Tierra de Fuego and make the crossing
by the erroneously named Drake’s Passage.
Pushing
northward along the coast, Drake utterly surprised several Spanish towns and
settlements, looting and sacking them. None of these towns were fortified, as
were town on the eastern coast and Caribbean because no enemy was ever expected
to reach them. He captured several small coastal vessels. The greatest value of
these prized were their charts, which he used as he pushed north. He had a near
brush with death when he was injured by native Mapuches on Mocha Island.
After
raiding the port of Valparaiso, Drake
found his richest plunder off the coast of Peru. First he took more than 25,000 pesos worth of Peruvian gold—worth
about $7.5 million today. Then he got word of the Manila galleon headed to the Philippines
with a year’s worth of treasure from the old Inca mines. Drake gave chase
to Nuestra Señora de la Concepción. The
haul was staggering—26 tons of silver, 8 lbs of pure gold, 13 chests of plate, bags of jewels, and a large gold
crucifix.
Despite the huge hall, Drake puzzled the crew,
which knew nothing of his secret orders, by continuing north instead of running
for home and safety. He went all the way
up the coast of South America, Central
America, and New Spain (Mexico.) Eventually he was north of the
final Spanish outpost, Point Loma at
the entrance of San Diego Bay.
Further north at a point he named Nova Albion, Drake lay in for supplies
which he bartered from the natives and to rest.
He claimed the coast in the name of the Queen and the Holy Trinity and buried a bronze plaque
to verify the claim.
The exact location of Nova Albion is in
dispute. Drake altered his charts in case
he was captured by the Spanish. Later
all of his logs, charts, and records were ordered under lock and key by the
Queen who considered them a high state secret.
These papers were lost when Whitehall Palace burned in
1698. Most believe it was somewhere
along the northern California coast. Marin is often cited, but others place
Nova Albion at Whale’s Bay in what
is now Oregon, or even Vancouver Island. We know at least that side expeditions
from Nova Albion charted the waters off Vancouver and up the coast to the Inner Passage along the Alaska panhandle.
What
made these discoveries as state secret for Elizabeth is that apart from Newfoundland, they were the first
English claims in North America. Thereafter all charters granted to fledgling
colonies on the east coast extended all the way to the Pacific, at least in
theory. The British later used Drake’s
claims to shore up their claims on British
Columbia against the Spanish and Russians
in Alaska. The United States also used the claims to legitimize land grabs from Mexico in California and New Mexico.
Drake
finally abandoned his explorations and headed southwest across the broad
Pacific. He ran aground in the Moluccas in modern Indonesia. The Golden Hind refloated by jettisoning
some cargo—but no treasure. Drake made
friends with a local ruler and in exchange for supplies intrigued with him
against the Portuguese.
Then
it was across the southern Indian Ocean. After stops along the African Coast, Drake rounded Cape
Horn. He was in Sierra Leone by July 1580 and home in Plymouth on September 25.
In
less than three years, Drake had become the first Englishman to circumnavigate
the globe and only the second mariner to come back in a ship on which he
departed. At the end only 58 members of
the crews of his ships—minus the one that had returned before crossing into the
Pacific, survived the adventure. But
Drake and his investors were rich. The
Queen’s 50% take exceeded all other royal revenue for the year. And she was in now in secret possession of
valuable intelligence and a possible claim to a whole continent. Drake presented the Queen with a jewel commemorating
the voyage made of enameled gold, taken as a prize off the Pacific coast of
Mexico with an African diamond and a ship with an ebony hull. No wonder she was
happy.
In
return Elizabeth, who could now afford it, gave Drake another jewel with an
enamel miniature portrait of the Queen on one side and an elaborate cameo on
the other. In April, 1581 she also
personally visited the Golden Hind to
honor Drake with knighthood. But because
Drake was considered a pirate by the Spanish, with whom she was still at peace,
she handed the sword to the French ambassador,
a brother of the French king, to perform the dubbing, thus also signally French
endorsement of the whole affair.
Honors
continued to be piled on Drake. He was
elected Mayor of Plymouth and twice
a Member of Parliament. With his new
wealth he bought Buckland Abbey, a
large manor near Yelverton in Devon.
When
war officially broke out with Spain in 1685, Drake sailed again for the
Caribbean. He sacked the great fortress ports of Santo Domingo and Cartagena
and captured St. Augustine in Florida.
By now he was a fearful legend among the Spanish in the New
World. Parents frightened their children
by telling them that Drake would get them.
Folklore arose around El Draque, the Dragon.
King Phillip II was simply
furious. He posted enormous rewards for
Drake’s capture and death. He is said to
have plotted the Spanish Armada in
revenge.
Getting word that the Spanish were amassing a large
new fleet, Elizabeth called upon Drake to “singe the beard” of the Spanish
king. He raided the ports of Cadiz and Corunna
destroying
37 naval and merchant vessels and then spent months raiding shipping in Spain’s
home waters. The raid delayed the Armada
by a full year and helped Elizabeth raise her own naval power.
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