Native Americans have been living in and exploring the vast territory
that makes up the present-day United States for tens of thousands of
years. Many tribes traded far and wide and had a vast knowledge of the
continent’s geography. The first known European explorers to arrive on
the continent, Vikings from Scandinavia led by Leif Eriksson (c.
970–1020), appeared around 1000 C.E. and established a temporary settlement in the present-day Canadian province of Newfoundland. After
that, there were no known European explorations of the New World
until the Spanish-sponsored Italian navigator Christopher Columbus
(1451–1506) arrived in 1492.
Early European explorers
Trade was the major incentive in the burst of European exploration that
began in the fifteenth century. Once European countries, particularly
Italy, had developed trade relations with the Middle East (a vast region
of the world encompassing North Africa and Southwest Asia), goods
from Asia were in high demand. European governments began to sponsor navigators (people who set the courses for ships) to explore new
routes to the mysterious regions beyond the borders of Europe. The
Portuguese were the first to find routes around the Horn of Africa (a
peninsula in northeastern Africa) to India in 1498. Portugal then reaped
huge profits in trade in Asia and Africa. In 1492, Columbus convinced the Spanish queen that he could
reach Asia by taking a westward course across the Atlantic. He famously
located the New World when he landed in the islands of the Caribbean
Sea. Thinking he had arrived in Asia, he called the islands the “West
Indies” and their people, “Indians.” Columbus went to explore and create colonies for Spain in the islands.
Italian explorer John Cabot (c. 1450–c. 1499) was living in England
when he learned of Columbus’s voyages. He convinced the English king
to sponsor him in an expedition to the New World to seek the
Northwest Passage, a fabled sea route cutting directly through the New
World that would provide easy passage to Asia. (Though none of the
early explorers of the American continent would ever find the Northwest
Passage, it was actually discovered in the Arctic Ocean in 1903.) In 1497,
Cabot made a thirty-one-day voyage across the Atlantic. The exact spot
where he landed is uncertain, but it was probably either Cape Breton
Island (in the present-day Canadian province of Nova Scotia) or
Newfoundland. He explored the coast for a month and returned to
England. His reports, along with Columbus’s discoveries, changed the
shape of the world in European understanding.
Spanish explorers
The first Spaniards to arrive in the New World
found gold and silver there. News of possible
riches brought many more explorers and
Spanish conquistadors (conquerors) to the
American continents in the first half of the sixteenth century. In 1499 and 1500, Italian navigator Amerigo de Vespucci (1454–1512) led a
Spanish-sponsored expedition that first discovered the mainland of the American continents;
the name “America” is derived from his name. In
1513, Vasco Núñez de Balboa (1475–1519) became the first European to find the eastern
shores of the Pacific Ocean. That same year,
Juan Ponce de León (1460–1521) led the first
European expedition into Florida, which he
claimed for Spain. From 1519 to 1521, Hernán
Cortés (1485–1547) explored central Mexico and conquered the powerful Aztecs, taking over their principal city and
establishing the headquarters of New Spain in Mexico City.
From 1519 to 1521, Ferdinand Magellan, or Fernão de Magalhães
(c. 1480–1521), a Portuguese navigator financed by the Spanish king,
became the first known person to circumnavigate (go all the way around)
the world.
Most Spanish exploration efforts were spent on regions in Central
and South America, but there was interest in the lands to the north as
well. Spain played the leading role in exploration of vast areas of what is
now the southern section of the United States. In 1527 and 1528,
Pánfilo de Narváez (c. 1478–1528) led a disastrous expedition to Florida
and the Texas shoreline of the Gulf of Mexico. Although Narváez and
most of his crew were killed, the expedition contributed greatly to the
knowledge and history of the southern United States. One of the expedition’s members, Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca (c. 1490–c. 1560), managed to survive the eight-year ordeal, and he published an eyewitness
account, La Relación (1555; The Account).
From 1539 to 1542, Hernando de Soto (c. 1496–1542) led a goldseeking expedition through present-day Florida, Alabama, Tennessee,
Mississippi, Arkansas, Oklahoma, and Louisiana. His was the first
European expedition to encounter the Mississippi River. From 1540 to
1542, Francisco Vásquez de Coronado (c. 1510–1554) explored present-day New Mexico, Colorado, Texas, Oklahoma, and Kansas.
Around the same time, Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo, or João Rodriguez
Cabrilho (d. 1543), a Portuguese explorer in the service of Spain, became the first explorer of the California coast, including San Diego Bay
and Monterey Bay.
After these initial explorations, the hard work of exploring Spanish
territory north of present-day Mexico fell to Spanish conquistadors and
colonizers such as Juan de Oñate (c. 1550–1630), who explored and colonized present-day New Mexico, and Gaspar de Portolá (c. 1723–c.
1784), who led an overland expedition of explorers, colonists, and missionaries into present-day California. Spanish missionaries played a huge
role in the exploration. (See Spanish Missions). Eusebio Francisco Kino
(1645–1711) established a network of missions that extended from
Mexico far into present-day Arizona, and Junípero Serra (1713–1784)
explored California and set up the first nine missions in a network that
would become twenty-one missions spanning the California coast. French explorers
France, too, wished to find trade routes to Asia and establish colonies in
the New World. In 1524, the French king sponsored an expedition to
the New World seeking the elusive Northwest Passage. The expedition
was led by Italian explorer Giovanni da Verrazzano (c. 1485–c. 1528),
who explored the East Coast of the present-day United States from what
is now North Carolina up to Nova Scotia, Canada. He reported on the
New York and Narragansett Bays upon his return. From 1534 to 1541,
Jacques Cartier (1491–1557) made three voyages to Canada, discovering
the Gulf of St. Lawrence and the St. Lawrence River.
In 1603, French explorer Samuel de Champlain (c. 1567–1635),
who became known as the “father of New France” (which later became
Canada), first set out for the North American coast. Upon his return, he
convinced the French king that North America had potential for settlement and commercial development, particularly in fur trading. In his
many journeys to New France, Champlain established the settlement of
Quebec. He explored the Atlantic coast from present-day Nova Scotia
down to Massachusetts, as well as Vermont, northern parts of New
York, and the Great Lakes region.
In 1672, explorer Louis Jolliet (1645–1700) led a French-Canadian
expedition to explore the Mississippi River and
to discover whether it emptied into the Gulf of
Mexico or the Pacific Ocean. French Jesuit missionary Jacques Marquette (1637–1675) was
chosen to go along as the expedition’s interpreter
because he spoke several Indian languages fluently. Jolliet’s account of the expedition was lost
in a canoe accident, and Marquette’s journal became the only first-person record of the historic
trip. In 1682, explorer Sieur René Robert
Cavelier de La Salle (1643–1687) navigated the
Mississippi River all the way down to the Gulf
of Mexico and claimed for France the vast territory known as Louisiana.
English explorers
The English were slow to take an interest in the
New World, but in 1576 English explorer Martin Frobisher (c. 1535–1594) set out to find
the Northwest Passage. Like Cabot, he failed in
his original goal, but Frobisher returned with
samples of shiny gold rocks that English geologists declared to be gold. After a second fruitless
search for the Northwest Passage, he brought
back more of the golden mineral. On a second
test, the gold rocks were deemed to be iron
pyrite, or “fool’s gold.”
England stopped seeking gold in the New
World, but it wanted to establish colonies there to
provide markets for England’s burgeoning industrial economy. Sir Humphrey Gilbert (c.
1539–1583) led the first of the new colonizing
expeditions. He claimed Newfoundland for
England in 1583, but his ship disappeared shortly
thereafter, and nothing came of his enterprise.
Francis Drake (c. 1540–1596), the most
renowned and successful English seaman of the
late sixteenth century, was best known for winning major sea battles against Spain for England. Drake was a highly
skilled navigator who, in 1577, embarked on an exploratory voyage up the
western side of the Americas. After raiding Spanish ships and settlements
along the South American coast and claiming present-day California for
Britain, he returned to Plymouth, England, via the Cape of Good Hope,
thus becoming the first English captain to circumnavigate the globe.
In 1584, Queen Elizabeth I (1533–1603) granted statesman, explorer, and writer Sir Walter Raleigh (1554–1618) the title to any lands
he might claim along the Atlantic coast of the New World, from Florida
to present-day Canada, that were not already claimed by Christians.
Raleigh organized two expeditions to the New World, in 1585 and 1587,
though the queen would not allow him to accompany them. Raleigh’s
colonists attempted to settle on Roanoke Island (off the coast of presentday North Carolina), naming the region Virginia, after Elizabeth, the
“Virgin Queen.” (See also Roanoke Colony.) Both of Raleigh’s expeditions failed to establish a permanent settlement. It was 1607 before
Jamestown, the first permanent English settlement, was founded in
present-day Virginia.
Other European explorers
The Dutch employed English explorer Henry Hudson (d. 1611) to find
the Northwest Passage in 1609. After sailing to the coast of Nova Scotia,
Hudson headed south as far as the Chesapeake Bay, then returned north
to explore the Delaware Bay, and finally sailed into the entrance to New
York harbor on September 12, 1609. He sailed up the large river that now
bears his name as far as the site of Albany. On his voyage up and down
the Hudson River, the explorer noted how rich the land was and how
much opportunity there would be for a prosperous fur trade. His report
inspired the Dutch to form a new company, the Dutch West India
Company, which founded the colony of New Netherland in 1614.
In 1725, the Russian tsar commissioned Danish navigator Vitus
Bering (1681–1741) to explore Siberia’s Pacific coast. During that time,
the Russian Empire was rapidly expanding east, and it was not yet
known whether eastern Siberia and northwestern North America were
connected. In two extensive expeditions into eastern Siberia and the
northern Pacific Ocean, Bering proved without question that the two
landmasses were separate. His many geographical discoveries in the area
introduced Russia to the region of present-day Alaska, which they would
soon settle to reap the profits of a rich fur trade.