<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_2"></SPAN>CHAPTER 2</h2>
<h3>SPANISH AND FRENCH PIONEERS IN THE UNITED STATES</h3>
<p class="side">Indian traditions.</p>
<p><b>10. Stories of Golden Lands.</b>--Wherever the Spaniards
went, the Indians always told them stories of golden lands
somewhere else. The Bahama Indians, for instance, told their cruel
Spanish masters of a wonderful land toward the north. Not only was
there gold in that land; there was also a fountain whose waters
restored youth and vigor to the drinker. Among the fierce Spanish
soldiers was Ponce de Leon (Pon'tha da la-on'). He determined to
see for himself if these stories were true.</p>
<p class="side">De Leon visits Florida, 1513. <i>Higginson</i>,
42.<br/>
De Leon's death.</p>
<p><b>11. Discovery of Florida, 1513.</b>--In the same year that
Balboa discovered the Pacific Ocean, Ponce de Leon sailed northward
and westward from the Bahamas. On Easter Sunday, 1513, he anchored
off the shores of a new land. The Spanish name for Easter was La
Pascua de los Flores. So De Leon called the new land Florida. For
the Spaniards were a very religious people and usually named their
lands and settlements from saints or religious events. De Leon then
sailed around the southern end of Florida and back to the West
Indies. In 1521 he again visited Florida, was wounded by an Indian
arrow, and returned home to die.</p>
<p class="side">Discovery of the Mississippi.<br/>
Conquest of Mexico.</p>
<p><b>12. Spanish Voyages and Conquests.</b>--Spanish sailors and
conquerors now appeared in quick succession on the northern and
western shores of the Gulf of Mexico. One of them discovered the
mouth of the Mississippi. Others of them stole Indians and carried
them to the islands to work as slaves. The most famous of them all
was Cortez. In 1519 he conquered Mexico after a thrilling campaign
and found there great store of gold and silver. This discovery led
to more expeditions and to the exploration of the southern half of
the United States.</p>
<p class="side">Coronado sets out from Mexico, 1540.<br/>
The pueblo Indians. <i>Source Book</i>, 6.</p>
<p><b>13. Coronado in the Southwest, 1540-42.</b>--In 1540 Coronado
set out from the Spanish towns on the Gulf of California to seek
for more gold and silver. For seventy-three days he journeyed
northward until he came to the pueblos (pweb'-lo) of the Southwest.
These pueblos were huge buildings of stone and sun-dried clay. Some
of them were large enough to shelter three hundred Indian families.
Pueblos are still to be seen in Arizona and New Mexico, and the
Indians living in them even to this day tell stories of Coronado's
coming and of his cruelty. There was hardly any gold and silver in
these "cities," so a great grief fell upon Coronado and his
comrades.</p>
<p>[Illustration: <i>By permission of the Bureau of Ethnology.</i>
THE PUEBLO OF ZUÑI (FROM A PHOTOGRAPH).]</p>
<p class="side">Coronado finds the Great Plains.</p>
<p>14. The Great Plains.--Soon, however, a new hope came to the
Spaniards, for an Indian told them that far away in the north there
really was a golden land. Onward rode Coronado and a body of picked
men. They crossed vast plains where there were no mountains to
guide them. For more than a thousand miles they rode on until they
reached eastern Kansas. Everywhere they found great herds of
buffaloes, or wild cows, as they called them. They also met the
Indians of the Plains. Unlike the Indians of the pueblos, these
Indians lived in tents made of buffalo hides stretched upon poles.
Everywhere there were plains, buffaloes, and Indians. Nowhere was
there gold or silver. Broken hearted, Coronado and his men rode
southward to their old homes in Mexico.</p>
<p class="side">De Soto in Florida, 1539. <i>Explorers</i>,
119-138.<br/>
De Soto crosses the Mississippi.</p>
<p><b>15. De Soto in the Southeast, 1539-43.</b>--In 1539 a Spanish
army landed at Tampa Bay, on the western coast of Florida. The
leader of this army was De Soto, one of the conquerors of Peru. He
"was very fond of the sport of killing Indians" and was also greedy
for gold and silver. From Tampa he marched northward to South
Carolina and then marched southwestward to Mobile Bay. There he had
a dreadful time; for the Indians burned his camp and stores and
killed many of his men. From Mobile he wandered northwestward until
he came to a great river. It was the Mississippi, and was so wide
that a man standing on one bank could not see a man standing on the
opposite bank. Some of De Soto's men penetrated westward nearly to
the line of Coronado's march. But the two bands did not meet. De
Soto died and was buried in the Mississippi. Those of his men who
still lived built a few boats and managed to reach the Spanish
settlements in Mexico.</p>
<p class="side">Other Spanish explorers.<br/>
Attempts at settlement.</p>
<p><b>16. Other Spanish Expeditions.</b>--Many other Spanish
explorers visited the shores of the United States before 1550. Some
sailed along the Pacific coast; others sailed along the Atlantic
coast. The Spaniards also made several attempts to found
settlements both on the northern shore of the Gulf of Mexico and on
Chesapeake Bay. But all these early attempts ended in failure. In
1550 there were no Spaniards on the continent within the present
limits of the United States, except possibly a few traders and
missionaries in the Southwest.</p>
<p class="side">Verrazano's voyages, 1524. <i>Higginson</i>, 44-45;
<i>Explorers</i>, 60-69.<br/>
Cartier in the St. Lawrence, 1534-36. <i>Explorers</i> 99-117.</p>
<p><b>17. Early French Voyages, 1524-36.</b>--The first French
expedition to America was led by an Italian named Verrazano
(Ver-rä-tsä'-no), but he sailed in the service of Francis
I, King of France. He made his voyage in 1524 and sailed along the
coast from the Cape Fear River to Nova Scotia. He entered New York
harbor and spent two weeks in Newport harbor. He reported that the
country was "as pleasant as it is possible to conceive." The next
French expedition was led by a Frenchman named Cartier (Kar'-tya').
In 1534 he visited the Gulf of St. Lawrence. In 1535 he sailed up
the St. Lawrence River to Montreal. But before he could get out of
the river again the ice formed about his ships. He and his crew had
to pass the winter there. They suffered terribly, and twenty-four
of them perished of cold and sickness. In the spring of 1536 the
survivors returned to France.</p>
<p class="side">Ribault explores the Carolina coasts, 1562.<br/>
French colonists in Carolina. <i>Explorers</i>, 149-156.</p>
<p><b>18. The French in Carolina, 1562.</b>--The French next
explored the shores of the Carolinas. Ribault (Re'-bo') was the
name of their commander. Sailing southward from Carolina, he
discovered a beautiful river and called it the River of May. But we
know it by its Spanish name of St. Johns. He left a few men on the
Carolina coast and returned to France. A year or more these men
remained. Then wearying of their life in the wilderness, they built
a crazy boat with sails of shirts and sheets and steered for
France. Soon their water gave out and then their food. Finally,
almost dead, they were rescued by an English ship.</p>
<p class="side">French colonists in Florida.</p>
<p><b>19. The French in Florida, 1564-65.</b>--While these
Frenchmen were slowly drifting across the Atlantic, a great French
expedition was sailing to Carolina. Finding Ribault's men gone, the
new colony was planted on the banks of the River of May. Soon the
settlers ate up all the food they had brought with them. Then they
bought food from the Indians, giving them toys and old clothes in
exchange. Some of the colonists rebelled. They seized a vessel and
sailed away to plunder the Spaniards in the West Indies. They told
the Spaniards of the colony on the River of May, and the Spaniards
resolved to destroy it.</p>
<p class="side">Spaniards and Frenchmen.<br/>
End of the French settlement, 1565. <i>Explorers</i>, 159-166.</p>
<p><b>20. The Spaniards in Florida, 1565.</b>--For this purpose the
Spaniards sent out an expedition under Menendez (Ma-nen'-deth). He
sailed to the River of May and found Ribault there with a French
fleet. So he turned southward, and going ashore founded St.
Augustine. Ribault followed, but a terrible storm drove his whole
fleet ashore south of St. Augustine. Menendez then marched over
land to the French colony. He surprised the colonists and killed
nearly all of them. Then going back to St. Augustine, he found
Ribault and his shipwrecked sailors and killed nearly all of them.
In this way ended the French attempts to found a colony in Carolina
and Florida. But St. Augustine remained, and is to-day the oldest
town on the mainland of the United States.</p>
<br/>
<br/>
<hr style="width: 35%;">
<br/>
<br/>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_3"></SPAN>CHAPTER 3</h2>
<h3>PIONEERS OF ENGLAND</h3>
<p class="side">Hawkins's voyages, 1562-67.</p>
<p><b>21. Sir John Hawkins.</b>--For many years after Cabot's
voyage Englishmen were too busy at home to pay much attention to
distant expeditions. But in Queen Elizabeth's time English seamen
began to sail to America. The first of them to win a place in
history was John Hawkins. He carried cargoes of negro slaves from
Africa to the West Indies and sold them to the Spanish planters. On
his third voyage he was basely attacked by the Spaniards and lost
four of his five ships. Returning home, he became one of the
leading men of Elizabeth's little navy and fought most gallantly
for his country.</p>
<br/>
<p class="ctr"><ANTIMG src="images/028.jpg" width-obs="60%" alt=""><br/>
<b>SIR FRANCIS DRAKE.</b></p>
<br/>
<p class="side">Drake on the California coast, 1577-78.
<i>Source-Book</i>, 9.</p>
<p><b>22. Sir Francis Drake.</b>--A greater and a more famous man
was Hawkins's cousin, Francis Drake. He had been with Hawkins on
his third voyage and had come to hate Spaniards most vigorously. In
1577 he made a famous voyage round the world. Steering through the
Straits of Magellan, he plundered the Spanish towns on the western
coasts of South America. At one place his sailors went on shore and
found a man sound asleep. Near him were four bars of silver. "We
took the silver and left the man," wrote the old historian of the
voyage. Drake also captured vessels loaded with gold and silver and
pearls. Sailing northward, he repaired his ship, the
<i>Pelican</i>, on the coast of California, and returned home by
the way of the Cape of Good Hope.</p>
<p class="side">Ralegh and his colonies. <i>Eggleston</i>, 13-17;
<i>Explorers</i>, 177-189.</p>
<p><b>23. Sir Walter Ralegh.</b>--Still another famous Englishman
of Elizabeth's time was Walter Ralegh. He never saw the coasts of
the United States, but his name is rightly connected with our
history, because he tried again and again to found colonies on our
shores. In 1584 he sent Amadas and Barlowe to explore the Atlantic
seashore of North America. Their reports were so favorable that he
sent a strong colony to settle on Roanoke Island in Virginia, as he
named that region. But the settlers soon became unhappy because
they found no gold. Then, too, their food began to fail, and Drake,
happening along, took them back to England.</p>
<p class="side">Ralegh's last attempt, 1587. <i>Explorers</i>,
189-200.</p>
<p><b>24. The "Lost Colony," 1587.</b>--Ralegh made still one more
attempt to found a colony in Virginia. But the fate of this colony
was most dreadful. For the settlers entirely disappeared,--men,
women, and children. Among the lost was little Virginia Dare, the
first English child born in America. No one really knows what
became of these people. But the Indians told the later settlers of
Jamestown that they had been killed by the savages.</p>
<p class="side">Ruin of Spain's sea-power. <i>English History for
Americans</i>, 131-135.</p>
<p><b>25. Destruction of the Spanish Armada, 1588.</b>--This
activity of the English in America was very distressing to the King
of Spain. For he claimed all America for himself and did not wish
Englishmen to go thither. He determined to conquer England and thus
put an end to these English voyages. But Hawkins, Drake, Ralegh,
and the men behind the English guns were too strong even for the
Invincible Armada. Spain's sea-power never recovered from this
terrible blow. Englishmen could now found colonies with slight fear
of the Spaniards. When the Spanish king learned of the settlement
of Jamestown, he ordered an expedition to go from St. Augustine to
destroy the English colony. But the Spaniards never got farther
than the mouth of the James River. For when they reached that
point, they thought they saw the masts and spars of an English
ship. They at once turned about and sailed back to Florida as fast
as they could go.</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>QUESTIONS AND TOPICS</p>
<p>CHAPTER 1</p>
<p>§§ 1-3.--a. To how much honor are the Northmen
entitled as the discoverers of America?</p>
<p>b. Draw from memory a map showing the relative positions of
Norway, Iceland, Greenland, and North America.</p>
<p>c. What portions of the world were known to Europeans in 1490?
Explain by drawing a map.</p>
<p>§§ 4-6.--a. State Columbus's beliefs about the shape
and size of the earth.</p>
<p>b. What land did Columbus think that he had reached?</p>
<p>c. What is meant by the statement that "he took possession" of
the new land?</p>
<p>d. Describe the appearance of the Indians, their food, and their
weapons.</p>
<p>§§ 7-9.--a. What other Italians sailed across the
Atlantic before 1500? Why was Cabot's voyage important?</p>
<p>b. Why was the New World called America and not Columbia?</p>
<p>c. Describe the discovery of the Pacific Ocean. Why was this
discovery of importance?</p>
<br/>
<p>CHAPTER 2</p>
<p>§§ 10-12.--a. What was the chief wish of the Spanish
explorers?</p>
<p>b. How did they treat the Indians?</p>
<p>§§ 13-16.--a. Describe a pueblo. What do the existing
pueblos teach us about the Indians of Coronado's time?</p>
<p>b. Describe Coronado's march.</p>
<p>c. What other band of Spaniards nearly approached Coronado's
men? Describe their march.</p>
<p>d. What other places were explored by the Spaniards?</p>
<p>§§ 17-20.--a. Why did Verrazano explore the
northeastern coasts?</p>
<p>b. Describe Cartier's experiences in the St. Lawrence.</p>
<p>c. Describe the French expeditions to Carolina and Florida.</p>
<p>d. What reason had the Spaniards for attacking the French?</p>
<br/>
<p>CHAPTER 3</p>
<p>§§ 21, 22.--a. Look up something about the early
voyages of Francis Drake.</p>
<p>b. Compare Drake's route around the world with that of
Magellan.</p>
<p>§§ 23-25.--a. Explain carefully Ralegh's connection
with our history.</p>
<p>b. Was the territory Ralegh named Virginia just what is now the
state of Virginia?</p>
<p>c. What is sea-power?</p>
<p>d. What effect did the defeat of Spain have upon <i>our</i>
history?</p>
<br/>
<p>GENERAL QUESTIONS</p>
<p>a. Draw upon an Outline Map the routes of all the explorers
mentioned. Place names and dates in their proper places.</p>
<p>b. Arrange a table of the various explorers as follows, stating
in two or three words what each accomplished:--</p>
<blockquote>
<table border="1" cellpadding="10" summary="">
<tr>
<th>DATE.</th>
<th>SPANISH.</th>
<th>FRENCH.</th>
<th>ENGLISH.</th>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>1492</td>
<td>Columbus</td>
<td> </td>
<td> </td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>1497</td>
<td> </td>
<td> </td>
<td>Cabot.</td>
</tr>
</table>
</blockquote>
<p>TOPICS FOR SPECIAL WORK</p>
<p>a. Columbus's first voyage, Irving (abridged edition).</p>
<p>b. Coronado's expedition, Lummis's <i>Spanish Pioneers</i>.</p>
<p>c. Verrazano and Cartier, Higginson's <i>Explorers</i>.</p>
<p>d. The "Lost Colony," Higginson's <i>Explorers</i>.</p>
<p>e. The England of Elizabeth (a study of any small history of
England will suffice for this topic).</p>
<br/>
<p>SUGGESTIONS TO THE TEACHER</p>
<p>The teacher is recommended to study sources in preparing her
work, making selections where possible, for the pupil's use. Some
knowledge of European history (English especially) is essential for
understanding our early history, and definite work of this nature
on the teacher's part, at least, is earnestly advised.</p>
<p>Encourage outside reading by assigning subjects for individual
preparation, the results to be given to the class. Let the children
keep note books for entering the important points thus given.</p>
<p>Map study and map drawing should be constant, but demand correct
relations rather than finished drawings. Geographical environment
should be emphasized as well as the influence of natural resources
and productions in developing the country and in determining its
history.</p>
<p>In laying out the work on this period the teacher should
remember that this part is in the nature of an introduction.</p>
<br/>
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<hr style="width: 35%;">
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