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Arthur Barlowe

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7-538: Arthur Barlowe (1550–1620) was one of two British captains (the other was Philip Amadas ) who, under the direction of Sir Walter Raleigh , left England in 1584 to find land in North America to claim for Queen Elizabeth I of England . His account survives in a letter written to Raleigh as a report on their journey. It is one of the earliest detailed English commercial reports written from direct observation about any place in North America and has been called "one of

14-464: A smell, as if we had been in the midst of some delicate garden," indicating that land was nearby. Two days later (July 4), they saw the coast and continued to sail for 120 miles until they could find an entrance or river going in from the sea. They finally landed on the outer banks of what is now the Pamlico Sound of North Carolina. Barlowe described the land as a place where "in all the world

21-486: The "Lost Colony," whose members are presumed to have either starved to death or been incorporated into one of the local native American Indian populations. Philip Amadas Philip Amadas (1550–1618) was a naval commander and explorer in Elizabethan England . Little is known from his early life, but he grew up within a wealthy merchant family in southwestern England. Amadas was instrumental in

28-545: The clearest contemporary pictures of the contact of Europeans with North American Indians." Barlowe and Philip Amadas departed England with two ships on April 27, sailing down to the Canary Islands and then on to the West Indies, where they stopped briefly for food and water before sailing north along the eastern coast of Florida. After eleven days they came to shallow water and smelled "so sweet, and so strong

35-653: The early years of the English colonisation of North America . He served alongside Arthur Barlowe in the 1584 exploratory voyage to the Outer Banks of North Carolina . Leaving on 27 April 1584, he captained the Bark Ralegh with Simon Fernandes as his master and pilot on the voyage. Fernandes is best known for his controversial decision to maroon the colonists of the infamous " Lost Colony " on Roanoke Island in 1587. The voyage of 1584 determined Roanoke Island as

42-547: The like abundance is not to be found...." He and his crew were met by a large group of the Secotan tribe, led by their king's brother Granganimeo . Their king Wingina was unable to be there because of a leg wound sustained during a battle with a neighboring tribe. Several of the natives accompanied them as they sailed north to Roanoke island. There they found a Secotan village, where, according to Barlowe, they were treated with great hospitality and generosity. Barlowe described

49-597: The people of the village as "gentle, loving and faithful, void of all guile and treason, and such as live after the manner of the golden age ." He ended up having the King come to the Land with his family and this led to the future colonization of Virginia. The discovery of Roanoke Island and the coast of North Carolina led to the establishment of the Roanoke Colony . This colony at Roanoke Island would later be known as

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