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Drake, Sir Francis

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Drake, Sir Francis (1540?-96), English navigator and explorer, born near Tavistock. He served an apprenticeship as a mariner, and in 1567 he was given his first command. His ship, the Judith, was one of a squadron of vessels led by a kinsman of Drake, the English navigator Sir John Hawkins, on a slave-trading voyage in the Gulf of Mexico. All but two ships of the expedition were lost when attacked by a Spanish squadron. In 1570 and 1571 Drake made two profitable trading voyages to the West Indies. In 1572 he commanded two vessels in a marauding expedition against Spanish ports in the Caribbean Sea. During this voyage, Drake first saw the Pacific Ocean; he captured the port of Nombre de Dios on the Isthmus of Panama and destroyed the nearby town of Portobelo. He returned to England with a cargo of Spanish silver and a reputation as a brilliant privateer. He was sent next to Ireland to help quell the rebellion there from 1573 to 1576.

In 1577 Drake was secretly commissioned by Elizabeth I, queen of England, to undertake an expedition against the Spanish colonies on the Pacific coast of the New World. With five ships and 166 men, Drake set sail from Plymouth, England, on December 13, 1577. After crossing the Atlantic Ocean, two of the ships had to be abandoned in the Río de la Plata estuary of South America. In August 1578 the three remaining ships left the Atlantic Ocean and entered the Strait of Magellan at the southern tip of the South American continent. Sixteen days later they sailed into the Pacific Ocean. A series of violent storms, lasting more than 50 days, destroyed one ship. Another sailed back to England. Drake, blown far south, sailed on in his flagship, the Golden Hind.

The lone vessel moved northward along the Pacific coast of South America, plundering Valparaíso and other Spanish ports; Drake also captured Spanish ships and subsequently made use of their more accurate charts. Seeking an eastward passage back to the Atlantic Ocean, Drake continued to sail north, possibly reaching as far as latitude 48° North, near the present U.S.-Canadian border. Unable to find a passage, he came about and headed south. The Golden Hind put in for repairs at an inlet (now called Drake's Bay) north of present-day San Francisco. Drake claimed the land for England, naming it New Albion.

On July 23, 1579, Drake set sail again, this time heading westward across the Pacific Ocean. In November he reached the Moluccas, a group of islands in the southwest Pacific. He stopped at Sulawesi (Celebes) and Java, islands of Indonesia, rounded the Cape of Good Hope at the southern tip of Africa, and reached England in September 1580. Bearing a rich cargo of spices and captured Spanish treasure, he was hailed as the first Englishman to circumnavigate the world. Seven months later he was knighted aboard the Golden Hind by Queen Elizabeth. He became mayor of Plymouth in 1581 and served as a member of Parliament in 1584 and 1585.

Sir Francis Drake

Sir Francis DrakeSir Francis Drake was the first English navigator to sail around the world. An explorer and military leader, Drake raided Spanish shipping and became the greatest privateer of his time. His fleets destroyed the powerful Spanish Armada. Queen Elizabeth I supplied him with money and ships, but it was his daring and military genius that helped England become a major sea power. Hulton Deutsch

 

Golden Hind

English explorer Francis Drake sailed around the world from 1577 to 1580 in his ship the Golden Hind. On his voyage Drake seized large amounts of treasure from Spanish possessions in South America. As a result of his success, he was knighted by Queen Elizabeth I of England. This replica of Drake’s ship can be seen on the Thames

 

Sir Francis Drake Quick Facts

English navigator, explorer, and privateer

Date Baptized

1540?

Death

January 28, 1596

Place of Birth

Tavistock, England

Known for

Being the first Englishman to circumnavigate the globe

 

Playing a major role in the 1588 defeat of the Spanish Armada

Milestones

1567 Gained the notice of Queen Elizabeth I when his first command, the Judith, survived a Spanish attack during a slave-trading expedition in the Gulf of Mexico

 

1572 Commanded two ships in a Caribbean expedition during which he raided Nombre de Dios, Panama, and became the first English sea captain to see the Pacific Ocean

 

1573-1576 Helped put down a rebellion in Ireland

 

December 1577 Was secretly commissioned by Queen Elizabeth I to cross the Strait of Magellan and raid Spanish settlements along the Pacific Coast

 

1579 Stopped north of present-day San Francisco to repair his ship, the Golden Hind, at an inlet now called Drake's Bay, which he claimed for England and named New Albion

 

1579 Continued on his journey and headed west across the Pacific Ocean, stopping in the Moluccas, also known as the Spice Islands

 

September 1580 Returned to England, where he was heralded for being the first Englishman to circumnavigate the globe and knighted several months later by Queen Elizabeth on board the Golden Hind

 

1581 Became mayor of Plymouth

 

1585-1586 Sailed on an expedition for the West Indies, raiding Saint Augustine in present-day Florida and stopping at Roanoke Island, where he rescued the remaining English colonists of the failed colony and took them back to England

 

1588 Served as vice admiral of the fleet that defeated the Spanish Armada

 

1596 Died on an expedition in the Caribbean and was buried at sea

Did You Know

Drake ordered an execution in response to a mutiny at Port San Julián (in present-day Argentina), where almost 60 years earlier Spanish explorer Ferdinand Magellan had two men executed for the same reason.

 

Drake was the eldest of 12 boys.

 

Drake was related to English shipbuilder and privateer Sir John Hawkins, whom he joined on several expeditions.

 

Poems and songs were composed during Drake's lifetime to celebrate his adventures.

 

Want to find out more about Sir Francis Drake ? Links related to Sir Francis Drake: 

http://www.cdli.ca/CITE/exdrake.htm

 http://www.global-travel.co.uk/drake.htm

 www.mcn.org/2/oseeler/llama.htm 

  http://goofy313g.free.fr/calisota_online/exist/drake.html 

  www.bbc.co.uk/history/historic_figures/drake_francis.shtml

 http://www.legends.dm.net/pirates/drake.html