Sir Humphrey Gilberts Voyage to Newfoundland | Page 3

Edward Hayes
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Etext prepared by Dagny, [email protected] and John Bickers,
[email protected]
PREPARER'S NOTE
This text is one of the items included in Voyages and Travels: Ancient
and Modern and was prepared from a 1910 edition, published by P F
Collier & Son Company, New York.

Sir Humphrey Gilbert's Voyage to Newfoundland
by Edward Hayes

INTRODUCTORY NOTE
Sir Humphrey Gilbert, the founder of the first English colony in North
America, was born about 1539, the son of a Devonshire gentleman,
whose widow afterward married the father of Sir Walter Raleigh. He
was educated at Eton and Oxford, served under Sir Philip Sidney's
father in Ireland, and fought for the Netherlands against Spain. After
his return he composed a pamphlet urging the search for a northwest
passage to Cathay, which led to Frobisher's license for his explorations
to that end.
In 1578 Gilbert obtained from Queen Elizabeth the charter he had long
sought, to plant a colony in North America. His first attempt failed, and
cost him his whole fortune; but, after further service in Ireland, he
sailed again in 1583 for Newfoundland. In the August of that year
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