
FRESH STUFF DAILY
Seacoast New Hampshire
& South Coast Maine
Subscribe To Our Newsletter
|
|
| |
|
|
|
f82
panama pharmacy canadian pharmacy viagra without prrescription online prescritions prescription drugs on line levitra 10 canadianpharmacy propecia 5mg no prescription online pharmacy Levitra 10 mg get viagra without a prescription united pharmacy buy cialis online cialis online viagra eaiest way to get viagra online viagra without prescription 100mg cialis where can i buy propecia without a prescription cialis online online viagra online pharmacy to buy phentermine no prescription zoloft buy sildenafil online canadian cialis viagara online canada canadian pharmacy support team where to buy fenfluramine cialia or viagro viagara online canada sialis pharmacy viagra
0
|
How NH Was Settled by Mistake
|
|
|
|
Written by J. Dennis Robinson
|
|
Page 1 of 2 
New Hampshire founder John Mason lost a fortune on his New Hampshire colony. Its settlers were supposed to find gold and plant vineyards for wine. That didn’t work. He hoped that his Piscataqua River connected him with Indian traders on the Great Lakes. And in a perfect world, his river went all the way to China.
If you don’t know much about the founding of New Hampshire, join the club. Historians too are uncertain about exactly who landed where, when and why. But one curious fact is clear. New Hampshire’s seaport, Portsmouth, was founded by mistake. Captain John Mason, the primary English investor in the colony at Strawbery Banke, pinned his hopes on bad information. Mason was looking for a shortcut to an imaginary place called "The Lake of the Iroquois." where he hoped to make his fortune trading in Indian furs. Mason hoped too that New Hampshire’s Piscataqua River was the secret "northwest passage" to the Indian lakes, and possibly, to China itself.
Like his investment partner Sir Ferdinando Gorges, Mason was convinced that the rivers in the New World were the gateway to the riches of the Orient. Gorges, the Governor of Plymouth, England funded George Weymouth’s 1605 expedition to find the elusive passage to the East. Weymouth returned, instead, with five kidnapped Maine natives, the first Indians ever seen in England. Weymouth presented three of them – Tisquamtum, Manida and Skidwarres – to Gorges, who entertained, housed and studied them for three years. Gorges presented the Indians to the English court as a public relations tool to drum up investors for high-stakes New World exploration. His PR campaign led, in part, to the creation of the London Company of investors who started Jamestown at Virginia in 1607.

The Plymouth Company, a second group of investors run largely by Gorges, formed at the same time. Their early voyages to "Northern Virginia", later called New England, are largely ignored by American history texts because they did not lead to "permanent" settlements. The groups first voyage misfired, ending up in Puerto Rico. Gorges group quickly launched another, bigger mission with 124 men, two ships and a prestigious leader named Sir George Popham. This group settled near the mouth of the Kennebec River in Maine just ahead of the southern expedition that set foot at Jamestown in 1607. The Popham Colony survived just over a year, abandoning a sophisticated fort and leaving behind the body of leader George Popham who died during the frigid winter in Maine. But this failure did not kill Ferdinando Gorges’ hope that he was on the right track. Before his death, Popham wrote to Gorges saying that the local Indians had assured him there was a great large sea only seven days journey from their fort.
"This cannot be other than the Southern Ocean, reaching to the regions of China," Popham wrote back, "which unquestionably cannot be far from these regions."
Whether Popham’s sources were talking about nearby Sebago Lake or Lake Winnepesaukee in New Hampshire or the distant Great Lakes is unknown. While the idea of sailing up the Piscataqua to reach the East Indies seems ridiculous today, it was downright logical to English entrepreneurs like Gorges and Mason whose explorers had scarcely pierced the skin of the mysterious American continent, and whose Indian guides spoke of great lakes to the west. When Henry Hudson discovered his giant Hudson’s Bay deep in the Canadian wilderness the following year in 1610, he assumed, at first, it was the Pacific Ocean. It wasn’t, but the game was on. Hudson’s voyage opened a lucrative new European fur trade with North American Indians.
CONTINUE with FOUNDING OF NH
<< Start < Prev 1 2 Next > End >>
|
Please visit these SeacoastNH.com ad partners.
Portsmouth Herald
|
Portsmouth Herald Latest Headlines
|
| Portsmouth Herald News from SeacoastOnline.com |
-
Thief stole charity jar from donut shop, say police
PORTSMOUTH — While a Dunkin' Donuts clerk turned her back to fill an order, Derrick Rice stole a counter-top jar filled with donations for children with cancer, allege police.
-
Portsmouth police log
7:08 a.m. Arrested Shari Webber, 29, of 258 Leslie Dr., for a count of driving after alcohol-related suspension.
-
City resident arrested on child porn charges
PORTSMOUTH — Eight months after a woman accused him of viewing child pornography, a Salmon Avenue man has been arrested on multiple counts of possessing child porn and a single...
-
Boys soccer: STA falls in double overtime
EXETER — For 110 minutes the St. Thomas Aquainas and Coe-Brown High School boys soccer teams battled for a spot in the Class I final, taking a 0-0 game into...
-
High School football: Clippers need to start strong
Like a stubborn man who refuses to take his medication, the Portsmouth High School football team has been living dangerously this season.
-
High School football: Weekend game capsules
WINNACUNNET VS. SPAULDING
-
Montreal edges Bruins in shootout
BOSTON — Patrice Bergeron's goal with 52 seconds left in regulation helped the Bruins avoid a historic third straight shutout, but Michael Cammalleri scored in the shootout to give the...
-
Little Clippers advance
-
High School football: Playoffs begin with York and Portsmouth
If you look at the Mountain Valley High School football team's two most recent games — losses to second-seeded York (33-14) and top-seeded Cape Elizabeth (34-0) ˆ' you might conclude...
-
UNH hockey regroups after Wisconsin losses
After spending much of their time in scrambling to get the puck out of their own zone against Wisconsin last weekend, the University of New Hampshire men's hockey team is...
-
Seacoast mourning Bavicchi, a 'visionary'
PORTSMOUTH — There is a granite slab outside the Shoals Building at Portsmouth Regional Hospital that recognizes the tireless work of three men who guided the health care facility to...
-
Ferris G. Bavicchi
RYE BEACH — Ferris G. Bavicchi, 84, died Wednesday, Nov. 4, 2009, at Portsmouth Regional Hospital.
-
Stephen M. Carroll
PORTSMOUTH — Stephen Michael Carroll, beloved son, brother and uncle, died peacefully Wednesday, Nov. 4, 2009, after a brief illness.
-
William C. Wilson
HAMPTON — William C. Wilson of Hampton Beach and Cape Coral, Fla., husband of Maryann T. (Fitzgerald), died Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2009.
-
Gov. Lynch helps Red Cross honor 'Heroes'
PORTSMOUTH — Heroes may not be as rare as thought.
-
Community asked to welcome home Jordyn Boucher
BRENTWOOD — Jordyn Boucher is coming home after a two-month stay at Children's Hospital in Boston, and her family is asking the Seacoast community to help welcome her.
-
Plea deal follows police call alleging man had firearm
RYE — Arrested after police responded to a 911 call about an intoxicated man with a gun, Sean Tichey was absolved of a Class A misdemeanor Thursday as part of...
-
UNH study: Child porn probes take physical, mental toll on police
PORTSMOUTH — Police officers exposed to child pornography as part of criminal investigations live with "mental health problems," according to a University of New Hampshire study based on interviews with...
-
Woman on trek to feed need in Maine
If you see a lively lady in a bright yellow hard hat walking along the highways and streets of Maine, be sure to stop and say hello — and while...
-
Portsmouth shop to give away cupcakes Saturday
PORTSMOUTH — If there's one thing Debbie Mugherini, owner of the Old Stove Bake Shoppe, wants people to take away from her shop, it's a smile.
|
|
|
|
|
| Saturday, November 07, 2009 |
|
|
|