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Newfoundland Discovered: English Attempts at Colonization 1610-1630
by Gillian Townsend Cell ( 1937-2012) [editor]
- Used
- Hardcover
- first
- Condition
- Very Good to Fine/Near Fine
- ISBN 10
- 0904180131
- ISBN 13
- 9780904180138
- Seller
-
Fort Worth, Texas, United States
Payment Methods Accepted
About This Item
xviii+310 pages with frontispiece, maps, plates, bibliography and index. Octavo (8 3/4" x 5 3/4") issued in blue cloth with gilt lettering to spine and decorative gilt sailing ship to front cover. Second series, volume 160. First edition.
Despite the relative obscurity surrounding the earliest English settlements in Newfoundland, the documents in this volume show that they were neither unimportant nor, ultimately, unsuccessful. Unlike the sites of other English colonies founded in the New World in the early seventeenth century, Newfoundland had an already-established economic base - the flourishing fishery for cod in which European fishermen had engaged for over a century. Settlement, from it beginnings in 1610, was closely tied to the exploitation of the fishery. But fishing was not the only occupation; the early settlers searched for iron and tried to grow food, to make glass and soap, and to establish a trade in furs with the indigenous Beothuk Indians. Keenly aware of their new and often hostile environment, the colonists recorded their impressions of the island's geography, climate, resources, and people, as well as their own struggle to survive. Some of their earliest letters are printed in this collection. In the third decade of the century, the first wave of settlers sent by the Newfoundland company were followed by a second despatched by independent proprietors: the Welshman, William Vaughan, the courtier, Lord Baltimore, and the lord deputy of Ireland, Lord Falkland. Their correspondence and the writings of their publicists reveal not only their idiosyncratic reasons for involvement in Newfoundland, but also place the island and its fishery firmly in the context of their economic and strategic significance to England. In the works of Richard Whitbourne, reprinted here for the first time, are to be found the most complete statements of the value and practice of the fishery and international trade in fish, together with vividly detailed descriptions of the island with which a lifetime connection had bread a loving obsession.
Condition:
A very good to fine copy in a near fine jacket.
Despite the relative obscurity surrounding the earliest English settlements in Newfoundland, the documents in this volume show that they were neither unimportant nor, ultimately, unsuccessful. Unlike the sites of other English colonies founded in the New World in the early seventeenth century, Newfoundland had an already-established economic base - the flourishing fishery for cod in which European fishermen had engaged for over a century. Settlement, from it beginnings in 1610, was closely tied to the exploitation of the fishery. But fishing was not the only occupation; the early settlers searched for iron and tried to grow food, to make glass and soap, and to establish a trade in furs with the indigenous Beothuk Indians. Keenly aware of their new and often hostile environment, the colonists recorded their impressions of the island's geography, climate, resources, and people, as well as their own struggle to survive. Some of their earliest letters are printed in this collection. In the third decade of the century, the first wave of settlers sent by the Newfoundland company were followed by a second despatched by independent proprietors: the Welshman, William Vaughan, the courtier, Lord Baltimore, and the lord deputy of Ireland, Lord Falkland. Their correspondence and the writings of their publicists reveal not only their idiosyncratic reasons for involvement in Newfoundland, but also place the island and its fishery firmly in the context of their economic and strategic significance to England. In the works of Richard Whitbourne, reprinted here for the first time, are to be found the most complete statements of the value and practice of the fishery and international trade in fish, together with vividly detailed descriptions of the island with which a lifetime connection had bread a loving obsession.
Condition:
A very good to fine copy in a near fine jacket.
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Details
- Bookseller
- The Book Collector ABAA, ILAB, TBA
(US)
- Bookseller's Inventory #
- BOOKS002467
- Title
- Newfoundland Discovered: English Attempts at Colonization 1610-1630
- Author
- Gillian Townsend Cell ( 1937-2012) [editor]
- Format/Binding
- Hardcover
- Book Condition
- Used - Very Good to Fine
- Jacket Condition
- Near Fine
- Quantity Available
- 1
- Edition
- First
- ISBN 10
- 0904180131
- ISBN 13
- 9780904180138
- Publisher
- Hakluyt Society
- Place of Publication
- London
- Date Published
- 1982
- Pages
- xviii+310 pages with frontispiece, maps, plates, bibliography and index
- Size
- Octavo
- Keywords
- Arctic
- Bookseller catalogs
- Exploration;
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About the Seller
The Book Collector ABAA, ILAB, TBA
Biblio member since 2005
Fort Worth, Texas
About The Book Collector ABAA, ILAB, TBA
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