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Explorers of the New World

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Title: Explorers of the New World


1
Explorers of the New World
  • -How Europeans discovered the Americas

2
European Exploration and Settlement
  •     Exploration of North and South America was
    spurred after Christopher Columbus , sailing for
    the Spanish monarchy, made his voyage in 1492.
  • Men who were important explorers for Spain
    include Ponce de León , Cabeza de Vaca , Hernando
    De Soto , and Coronado.
  • Important explorers for France were Giovanni da
    Verrazano , Samuel de Champlain , Louis Jolliet ,
    Jacques Marquette , and La Salle .
  • John Cabot explored the North American coast for
    England in 1498.
  • These three nations, Spain, France, and England
    were the chief nations to establish colonies in
    the present United States, although others also
    took part, notably the Netherlands in the
    establishment of New Netherlands which later
    became New York, and Sweden in a short-lived
    colony on the Delaware River called New Sweden
    ).

3
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4
Leif Erikson
  • Leif Eriksson, son of Norse explorer Eric the
    Red, led the first European expedition to North
    America around ad 1000, according to folk legend.
  • Norwegian archaeologists found the ruins of an
    old Norse settlement in Newfoundland in the early
    1960s. They believe Norse expeditions to North
    America may have ceased because of attacks by
    Native Americans.

5
Spanish Explorers
  • Columbus voyages mark the beginning of
    continuous European efforts to explore and
    colonize the Americas.
  • Spain wanted to break the growing Portuguese
    monopoly on Asian spice trade and goods into
    Europe. Columbus was deeply religious and hoped
    to convert souls as well as find gold for his
    beloved Spain. Columbus made four trips to
    America, discovering the West Indies, Central
    America and South America.

6
  • The image of Columbus as a hero has been
    tarnished by criticism from Native Americans and
    revisionist historians.
  • Although he was always judged to be vain,
    ambitious, greedy, and ruthless, traditional
    historians viewed his voyages as opening the New
    World to Western civilization and Christianity.
  • For revisionist historians, however, his voyages
    symbolize the more brutal aspects of European
    colonization and represent the beginning of the
    destruction of Native American peoples and
    culture. One point of agreement among all
    interpretations is that his voyages were one of
    the turning points in history.

7
First Expedition
  • On Aug. 3, 1492, Columbus sailed from Spain, with
    three small ships, the Santa María, , the Pinta,
    and the Niña. After halting at the Canary
    Islands, he sailed due west and southwest. On
    Oct. 10 a small mutiny was quelled, and on Oct.
    12 he landed on a small island in the Bahama
    group. He took possession for Spain and, with
    impressed natives aboard, discovered other
    islands in the neighborhood. On Oct. 27 he
    sighted Cuba and on Dec. 5 reached Hispaniola.
        On Christmas Eve the Santa María was
    wrecked on the north coast of Hispaniola, and
    Columbus, leaving men there to found a colony,
    hurried back to Spain on the Niña. His reception
    was all he could wish according to his contract
    with the Spanish monarchs he was made admiral of
    the ocean sea and governor-general of all new
    lands he had discovered or should discover.

8
Second Expedition
  • Fitted out with a larger fleet of 17 ships and
    with 1,500 colonists aboard, Columbus sailed in
    Oct., 1493. His landfall this time was made in
    the Lesser Antilles, and his new discoveries
    included the Leeward Islands and Puerto Rico. The
    admiral arrived at Hispaniola to find the first
    colony destroyed by Native Americans.
  • He founded a new colony nearby, then sailed off
    in the summer of 1494 to explore the southern
    coast of Cuba. After discovering Jamaica he
    returned to Hispaniola and found the colonists
    interested only in finding gold and completely
    disorderly. His attempts to enforce strict
    discipline led some men to seize ships and return
    to Spain to complain.
  • Leaving his brother Bartholomew in charge
  • at Hispaniola, Columbus also returned to
    Spain
  • in 1496.

9
Third Expedition
  • On his third expedition, in 1498, Columbus was
    forced to use convicts as colonists because of
    the bad reports on conditions in Hispaniola and
    because the novelty of the New World was wearing
    off.
  • He sailed still farther south and made his
    landfall on Trinidad. He sailed across the mouth
    of the Orinoco River (in present Venezuela) and
    realized that he saw a continent, but without
    further exploration he hurried back to Hispaniola
    to run his colony.
  • In 1500 an independent governor arrived and he
    sent Columbus back to Spain in chains. The
    admiral was immediately released, but his favor
    was on the wane other navigators, including
    Amerigo Vespucci , had been in the New World and
    established much of the coast line of northeast
    South America.

10
Fourth Expedition
  •     It was 1502 before Columbus finally gathered
    together four ships for a fourth expedition, by
    which he hoped to reestablish his reputation. If
    he could sail past the islands and far enough
    west, he hoped he might still find lands
    answering to the description of Asia or Japan. He
    struck the coast of Honduras in Central America
    and coasted southward along an inhospitable
    shore, suffering terrible hardships. Attempting
    to return to Hispaniola, he was marooned on
    Jamaica. After his rescue, he was forced to
    abandon his hopes and return to Spain.

11
John Cabot stakes claims for England
  • 1461-1498, English explorer, probably b. Genoa,
    Italy. He went to England, probably in the 1480s,
    and resided chiefly at Bristol, a port then
    promising as a base for discovery.

12
  • In 1497, John Cabot (Giovanni Cabotto) set off on
    a voyage to Asia. On his way he, like Christopher
    Columbus, ran into an island off the coast of
    North America. As a result, Cabot became the
    second European to discover North America, thus
    laying an English claim
  • John Cabot left on his second voyage sometime in
    the year of 1498. He had with him 4 or 5 ships
    and about 300 men. Little was known about this
    voyage but more than likely he was shipwrecked
    and drowned. One thing is known, Cabot failed to
    return from his second voyage to the "New Founde
    Land".
  • .

13
Juan Ponce de León, Spanish explorer.
  • c.1460-1521, Spanish explorer, first Westerner to
    reach Florida. After finding gold on Boriquén
    (Puerto Rico) in 1508, he conquered the island
    and, as governor (1509-12), made a fortune in
    gold, slaves, and land. Hearing tales from the
    Carib of a wonderfully rich island called Bimini,
    said to be North of Cuba, Ponce de León secured a
    commission (1512) to conquer and colonize that
    land.

14
  • There is a legend that he was seeking a spring
    with waters having the power of restoring youth.
    From Puerto Rico on Mar. 3, 1513, with three
    vessels, he sailed NE through the Bahamas,
    sighting the Florida peninsula (which he thought
    was an island) late in March and landing near the
    site of St. Augustine early in April.
  • Probably because his arrival in Florida occurred
    at the time of the Easter feast ( Pascua Florida
    ), Ponce de León named the land (which he claimed
    for Spain) La Florida.

15
  • He turned south, exploring the coast he then
    returned to Puerto Rico, arriving Sept. 21, 1513.
    After partly pacifying Puerto Rico, which had
    been in revolt, he sailed to Spain, where the
    king commissioned him (Sept., 1514) to subdue the
    Carib of Guadeloupe and to conquer and colonize
    the isle of Florida. In 1515 he led an
    unsuccessful expedition against the Carib and
    returned to Puerto Rico, where he resided until
    1521.
  • With two vessels, 200 men, 50 horses and other
    domestic animals, and farm implements, he sailed
    for Florida in 1521. Upon landing on the west
    coast, probably in the vicinity of Charlotte
    Harbor or Tampa Bay, his party was fiercely
    attacked by Native Americans, and he was severely
    wounded by an arrow.
  • The expedition sailed immediately for Cuba, where
    Ponce de León soon died.

16
Cabeza de Vaca Spanish Explorer
  • Cabeza de Vaca came to the New World as treasurer
    in the expedition of Pánfilo de Narváez that
    reached Florida (probably Tampa Bay) in 1528.
    When hardship and native hostility caused the end
    of the expedition, he was one of the survivors
    whose barges were shipwrecked on an island off
    the Texas coast, possibly Galveston or Mustang
    Island. Their story is one of the most remarkable
    in the annals of exploration.

17
  • After suffering considerably as slaves of the
    Native Americans inhabiting the island, Cabeza de
    Vaca and three other survivors escaped and
    started a long journey overland. His companions
    gained great repute among the Native Americans as
    healers since remarkable cures were attributed to
    their Christian prayers. Their route westward is
    as disputed as is the identity the island of the
    shipwreck, but after much wandering they did
    reach W Texas, then probably New Mexico and
    Arizona, and possibly (some argue) California
    before, turning south in 1536, they arrived in
    Culiacán in Mexico and told their story to
    Spaniards there.

18
    They were almost certainly the first
Europeans to see bison, and their stories about
the Pueblo gave rise to the legend of the Seven
Cities of Cibola
19
Samuel de Champlain explores for France
  • 1567-1635, French explorer and the chief founder
    of New France.    
  • After serving in France in the religious wars,
    Champlain was given command of a Spanish fleet
    sailing to the West Indies, Mexico, and the
    Isthmus of Panama.     With the sieur de Monts ,
    who had a monopoly of the trade of the region,
    Champlain returned in 1604 to found a colony,
    which was landed at the mouth of the St. Croix
    River.
  • In the next three years Champlain explored the
    New England coast south and most of the larger
    rivers of Maine and making the first detailed
    charts of the coast. After the sieur de Monts's
    privileges had been revoked, the colony had to be
    abandoned, and through the efforts of Champlain a
    new one was established on the St. Lawrence
    River.

20
  •     In 1608 in the ship Le Don de Dieu, he
    brought his colonists to the site of Quebec. In
    the spring of 1609, accompanying a war party of
    Huron against the Iroquois, Champlain discovered
    the lake that bears his name, and near Crown
    Point, N.Y., the Iroquois were met and defeated
    by French troops. The incident is believed to be
    largely responsible for the later hatred of the
    French by the Iroquois.

21
  • In 1612 Champlain returned to France, where he
    received a new grant of the fur-trade monopoly.
    Returning in 1613, he set off on a journey to the
    western lakes.     Thereafter Champlain devoted
    his time to the welfare of the colony, of which
    he was the virtual governor. He helped to
    persuade Richelieu to found the Company of One
    Hundred Associates, which was to take over the
    interests of the colony. In 1629 Quebec was
    suddenly captured by the English, and Champlain
    was carried away to four years of exile in
    England. When New France was restored to France
    in 1632, Champlain returned. In 1634 he sent Jean
    Nicolet into the West, thus extending the French
    explorations and claims as far as Wisconsin. He
    died on Christmas Day, 1635, and was buried in
    Quebec.

22
Routes of Champlain
23
Robert Cavelier La Salle, sieur de explores for
France
  • 1643-87, French explorer in North America, one of
    the most celebrated explorers and builders of New
    France.   
  •   In 1673 the governor of New France.

24
  •   After studying for the priesthood in his native
    France and entering the Jesuit order in 1658,
    Réne-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle left the
    Jesuits and moved to Canada in 1666. La Salle
    received a land grant near Montréal and entered
    the fur trade. He also began to build forts,
    explore, and trade. During an expedition on the
    Mississippi River in 1682, La Salle descended the
    Mississippi to its mouth, arriving Apr. 9, 1682.
    La Salle took possession of the whole valley for
    France, calling the region Louisiana.
  • La Salle was deprived of his authority by the new
    governor in 1683 and went to France where he was
    given power to colonize and to govern the region
    between Lake Michigan and the Gulf of Mexico, La
    Salle set out (1684) with four ships for the
    mouth of the Mississippi.

25
  • He never reached it. With his ships La Salle
    reached the Gulf of Mexico but because of the
    sandy sameness of the coastline he was unable to
    find the Mississippi. He and his men landed
    probably on Lavaca Bay, Texas.
  • They were unable to reach the Mississippi
    overland, and the men grew mutinous. On the third
    attempt the great explorer was murdered by his
    own men.

26
Henry Hudson for England
  • 1607-11, English navigator and explorer.
  • He was hired (1607) by the English Muscovy
    Company to find the Northeast Passage to Asia. He
    failed, and another attempt (1608) to find a new
    route was also fruitless. Engaged (1609) for the
    same purpose by the Dutch East India Company, he
    sailed to Spitsbergen, where extreme ice and cold
    brought his crew near mutiny. Hudson, determined
    not to lose his reputation as an explorer,
    disregarded his instructions and sailed westward
    hoping to find the Northwest Passage . He entered
    Chesapeake Bay, Delaware Bay, and later New York
    Bay.

27
  • He was the first European to ascend (1609) the
    Hudson River (named for him), nearly to
    present-day Albany, New York. His voyage gave the
    Dutch their claim to the region. His fourth
    expedition (1610), financed by English
    adventurers, started from England. Again he
    sailed westward, hoping to find the Northwest
    Passage. Between Greenland and Labrador he
    entered Hudson Strait and by it reached Hudson
    Bay. After weeks of exploration, he was forced by
    ice to winter there.

28
  • By the next summer (1611) his starved and
    diseased crew mutinied and set Hudson, with his
    son and seven men, adrift in a small boat,
    without food or water. He was never seen again.
    His discoveries, however, gave England its claim
    to the Hudson Bay region.

29
Jacques Cartier
  • In 1534 King Francis I sent French explorer
    Jacques Cartier to find a northwest passage to
    the Moluccas, or Spice Islands. Cartier explored
    the Gulf of St. Lawrence and regions now known as
    Newfoundland, New Brunswick, Québec. Much of the
    French claim to Canada was based on Cartiers
    explorations.
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