Sir Walter Raleigh. This portrait was engraved shortly before his
last voyage and is the only one published during his lifetime.
FORT RALEIGH NATIONAL HISTORIC SITE directly connects
the American people with the Court of Queen Elizabeth and the golden age
of English art, literature, and adventure. The figures who play the
chief roles in the story of the exploration and attempted settlement of
the island are the epic figures of English history: Queen Elizabeth,
after whom the new land was named "Virginia," is easily the premier
sovereign of England; Sir Walter Raleigh, poet, soldier, and statesman,
and the inspiration and financial mainstay of the Roanoke Island
project, is the best remembered of gallant English courtiers; Sir
Richard Grenville, of the Revenge, who brought the first colony
to America in 1585 and left another small group there in 1586, is the
Elizabethan hero who in 1592 taught English sailors how to dare and die
in the face of overwhelming odds; Sir Frances Drake, who rescued the
first colony from starvation, is famous as the first English
circumnavigator of the globe and as the preeminent seadog and explorer
of English history.
As Plymouth and other early New England sites connect
the United States with the great European movement known as the
Reformation, so the scene of Raleigh's settlements connects the American
people with the powerful activating force known as the Renaissance. When
energized by the Renaissance movement, the human spirit knew no earthly
bounds nor recognized any limits to intellectual or physical endeavor.
Thus, Raleigh, who was born a gentleman of only moderate estate, willed
to be the favorite of a Queen, aspired to found an empire across the
seas in the teeth of Imperial Spain and undertook in prison to write the
history of the world! For the glory and enrichment of England, Sir
Francis Drake pillaged the cities and mighty galleons of Spain and dared
to sail around the globe. Sir Richard Grenville, shortly after his
memorable voyages to Roanoke Island, gave the British Navy an immortal
tradition by duelling for a day and a night with one small ship against
a Spanish fleet of 53.
Truly heroic was the Roanoke Island colonial venture.
Here, despite the hostility of Spain and Spanish Florida, the greatest
naval and colonial power of that day, the agents of Sir Walter Raleigh
and the subjects of Queen Elizabeth suffered, or died, in the first
serious effort to begin the conquest of the larger part of the North
American continent by the slow process of agriculture, industry, trade,
and natural increase. The hardships of the first colony under Governor
Lane, 158586, and the disappearance of the "Lost Colony" of 1587
taught the English the practical difficulties that would be attendant
upon the conquest of the continent and enabled them to grow in colonial
wisdom. Thus, the birth of Virginia Dare, in the "Citie of Raleigh in
Virginia," August 18, 1587, first child of English parentage to be born
in the New World, was a prophetic symbol of the future rise of a new
English-speaking nation beyond the seas.
Queen Elizabeth, the Virgin Queen after whom the
whole territory in America covered by Raleigh's patent was named
"Virginia." From an engraving of 1596 which refers to Elizabeth
as "Queen of England, France, Ireland and Virginia."
Jamestown, Va., commemorates the successful
settlement of English America growing out of the dreams of Sir Walter
Raleigh and Sir Humphrey Gilbert, his elder half-brother. Fort Raleigh,
because of the tragic mystery of the "Lost Colony," memorializes better
than any other site the cost of early English colonial effort. To a
certain degree it also commemorates a forgotten part of the price that
England paid for English liberty. The colonists at Fort Raleigh were, in
a sense, sacrificed that England might employ all her fighting strength
against the juggernaut of Spain in the battle against the Armada. To
relieve the Roanoke colony in 1588, in the place of Grenville's
warships, only two small pinnaces could be spared, and these did not
reach Roanoke. For the glorious victory over the Armada and for the
gradual emergence of British sea power after 1588, England gave her
infant colony in America.
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