Ok, it’s quiz time, campers! For 100
points and a gold star on your forehead, what was the first English colony in North America? Bzzzzz.
If you said, I bet almost all of you did, Virginia (Jamestown) or Plymouth
Plantation, you would be dead wrong. By decades.
On August 5, 1583 Sir Humphrey Gilbert established that first English colony
at what is now St. John’s, Newfoundland
and Labrador in Canada.
Venetian navigator John Cabot sailing for England's King Henry VII discovered the deep natural harbor in what is now Newfoundland in 1497 and name it for St. John the Baptist
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John
Cabot became the first European to sail into the deep a commodious harbor way back on June 24, 1497,
the feast day of Saint John the Baptist and bestowed the
Saint’s name on the place, although
his exact landfall is unknown. Cabot made his charts and reported back to his English employers including the information that the harbor had easy access to the seemingly endless cod fisheries off shore.
By the early 16th Century Portuguese from the Azores, Basques from Spain, and
the French were annually visiting
the fisheries and sometimes making
temporary camp ashore and trading with the natives. On August 3 1527 English sailor John Rut on a mission from King Henry VIII to find the Northwest Passage that Cabot had been
seeking thirty years earlier sailed into the harbor where he found eleven Norman, one Brittany, and two Portuguese fishing
vessels moored. He described the event in a letter to the King, the first ever written from North America.
By the 1640’s St. Johns, by now a
well-established seasonal fishing camp, appeared in various Portuguese and
French atlases. Around that time Water Street running along
harbor shore was in use, making it the oldest
street or road in North America.
Reports on the rich fisheries and
fine harbor began to attract English fishermen from the west country as
well. Within the next thirty years or so
they dominated the annual summer runs.
Sir Humphrey Gilbert, a soldier/explorer/adventurer like his half-brother Sir Walter Raleigh, managed to set sail for the New World under a nearly expired six-year royal patent for
exploration in 1683 with a small six
or seven ship fleet crewed by the dregs
of English ports. One ship sailed
under the command of Raleigh, but he was forced
to turn back when his ship was damaged
in a storm.
After trials and tribulations
Gilbert and his little fleet arrived off St. Johns but found themselves blocked from landing by the united opposition of multinational
fishing fleet which was commanded by an Englishman appointed by the seamen as Admiral. One of Gilbert’s ship masters had committed
piracy against the Portuguese some years earlier and was recognized.
Sir Humphrey Gilbert claims St. John's as a colony of England and Queen Elizabeth I be fore astonished fishermen from half a dozen countries.
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Eventually Gilbert satisfied the fishermen and was allowed to land on August 5. They were astonished when Gilbert, waving his patent papers, claimed St. Johns and a vast surrounding
area for the English Crown. The
claim was solemnized in a brief ceremony
ashore. After a few days Gilbert and
his fleet sailed away, supposedly
back to England.
But Gilbert decided to do a little freelance exploring first and managed
to ground his largest vessel loosing
most of his food, water, and supplies. On board his personal favorite, a leaking
tub called the Squirrel instead of
the far more sea worthy Golden
Hind, the ship that had circumnavigated
the globe under Sir Francis Drake a
few years earlier, he foundered and
was lost on September 9.
But his claim made it safely back into the hands of Queen Elizabeth,
officially making it the first colony in North America. Plans
for permanent settlement, however, were put aside for some years.
But the seasonal fishing village flourished and the Queen and her
successors made a pretty penny taxing
the fleet.
Sometime before 1620 a permanent settlement was finally
established, about the same time as Jamestown
in 1619 and Plymouth a year later.
Shortly after it became the first
incorporated English city on the continent.
An early view of the St. John's waterfront.
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St. John’s because of its magnificent harbor and command of the rich Grand Bank fisheries became a strategic point in the control of the
entire continent. The Dutch
under Admiral Michiel de Ruyter temporarily seized the port in June
1665. After that the English began to erect fortifications, which were re-enforced after each new threat.
French
Admiral Pierre Le Moyne d’Iberville
captured and destroyed the town in
1696 and leveled the original earth work
fortification. The English returned
the next year to find the town all but
deserted after which stronger stone
and masonry fortifications were built. The French attacked St. John’s again
in 1705 and captured it in 1708 in the Battle
of St. John’s. Both times the civilian
town was leveled by fire.
The French attack St. Johns in 1762 in the Seven Years War.
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The French captured the town for the
last time in 1762 during the Seven Years
War known as the French and Indian
War in the lower English colonies. The English took it back after the Battle of Signal Hill, the final major action of the war.
The port city was a major English naval base and staging area for operations in both the American Revolution and the War
of 1812.
British aviators John Alcock and Arthur Brown made the first non-stop transatlantic flight in June 1919 taking off in a modified World War I Vickers Vimy bomber from St. John's.
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Because it is the eastern most port in North America, St.
Johns figured prominently in several
communications and transportation firsts. Guglielmo
Marconi received the first transatlantic
radio signal there from his wireless
station in Poldhu, Cornwall in December 1901. Alcock
and Brown made the first transatlantic
flight in a modified Vickers Vimy IV bomber, in June 1919 leaving from Lester’s Field in St. John’s
and ending in a bog near Clifden, Connemara, Ireland.
St. John’s is the capital city of Newfoundland and
Labrador which after a long history as
an independent colony became the 10th
Province of Canada in 1949.
In the 1990’s the cod fisheries of
the Grand Banks, the economic engine of
the city for hundreds of years, collapsed
plunging the city and province into a depression
and causing a hemorrhage of population
to the rest of Canada.
In recent years the development of the Hibernia, Terra Nova and
White Rose oil fields has spurred
population growth and commercial
development.
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