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					| Document Number: | AJ-038 |  
					| Author: | White, John, 1570-1615 |  
					| Title: | The Fifth Voyage of M. John White, 1590 |  
					| Source: | Burrage, Henry S. Early English and French Voyages, Chiefly from Hakluyt, 1534-1608. (N.Y., Scribner's Sons, 1906). Pages 303-323. |  
					| Pages/Illustrations: | 23 / 0 |  
					| Citable URL: | www.americanjourneys.org/aj-038/ |  Author Note Almost nothing is known about John White beyond what little
                can be gleaned from his two voyage reports. It is widely assumed
                that the author of this text is the same man as John White, the
                artist. If this is correct, he possibly accompanied Martin
                Frobisher on a voyage to the Arctic in 1577 and served as the
                artist for Ralph Lane�s 1585 expedition to Roanoke Island. In
                1587, White returned to Sir Walter Raleigh�s Virginia as the
                governor of another group of colonists (see AJ-037). He intended
                to stop at Roanoke Island to pick up fifteen men abandoned there
                the year before by Sir Richard Grenville, and then proceed to
                the Chesapeake Bay to establish a new colony at a site with
                deepwater access. When the three ships carrying the group
                arrived at Roanoke after a somewhat troubled crossing, the
                ship�s commander refused to carry the colonists any farther. In
                need of supplies, the settlers insisted that White immediately
                return to England. The war with Spain and the attack of the
                Spanish Armada in 1588 prevented White�s return until 1590.
                Almost nothing is known about John White�s life after his return
                to Europe. A letter addressed from White to Richard Hakluyt,
                published by Hakluyt as a preface to the text presented here,
                indicates that, in 1593, White lived at Newtowne, in Kylmore,
                County Cork, Ireland. He died never knowing the fate of his
                colony. In 1998, tree ring analysis revealed that the severest
                drought to strike the mid-Atlantic coastal region in eight
                hundred years
                occurred from 1587 to 1589 which would have caused severe food
                shortages. White�s Fifth Expedition, 1590 This voyage combined the dual purposes of privateering
                against the Spanish with re-supplying the settlement at Roanoke
                Island. White sailed to Morocco, the Virgin Islands, Santo
                Domingo, Haiti, Cuba, Florida, and finally Virginia. Although
                White�s ship departed from England in March 1590, the search for
                Spanish prizes delayed its arrival at Roanoke until the middle
                of August. The settlement had been ransacked and abandoned.
                White assumed the settlers had moved to Croatoan Island, but
                foul weather prevented him from looking for them there before
                returning to England in October 1590. This document provides an excellent example of the
                conflicting ambitions that drove many of the earliest English
                expeditions�privateering and colonization. This text is also
                important for the information it provides about the fate of
                White�s colony on Roanoke Island. These include the mysterious
                clues, �CRO� and �Croatoan,� the name of a neighboring island,
                carved on two trees, presumed by White to be indications that
                the settlers moved there when the supply vessels failed to
                arrive. White�s settlement is now commonly referred to as �the
                Lost Colony� and elements drawn from this account helped make
                its story one of the most popular and romanticized episodes in
                early colonial American history.  Other Internet and Reference Sources The text is available online from both the �Virtual
                Jamestown� and University of Virginia Library�s Electronic Text
                Center sites:http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/etcbin/jamestown-browse?id=J1019
 http://www.etext.lib.virginia.edu/toc/modeng/public/J1019.html
 For specific information on the Roanoke Colony and a short
                biography of John White, see the National Parks Service site,
                �Roanoke Revisited�http://www.nps.gov/fora/roanokerev.htm
 http://www.nps.gov/fora/first.htm
 http://www.nps.gov/fora/jwhite.htm
 For an article on the possible fate of the lost colony, see:
                <http://www.coastalguide.com/packet/lostcolony01.htm> The National Park Service has also placed their Fort Raleigh
                guidebook online:http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/hh/16/index.htm
 Hume, Ivor No�l. The Virginia Adventure: Roanoke to James
                Towne, an Archeological Odyssey. (New York: Alfred A. Knopf,
                1994) discusses the archaeological evidence. For more information on the tree ring analysis, which
                received broad television coverage, see Stahle,David W., Malcolm
                K. Cleaveland, Dennis B. Blanton, Matthew Therrell, and David A.
                Gay, �The Lost Colony and Jamestown Droughts,� Science
                Magazine 280: 5356 (April 24, 1998): 564-67.  |  |