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January 29, 2017

Sir Francis Drake: Knight and Explorer, Slave Trader and Pirate

Although the 1519 voyage of Ferdinand Magellan is openly acknowledged to be the first successful expedition to circumnavigate the globe, it is also commonly known that Magellan did not survive the undertaking, having been killed in the Philippines during a local political dispute in 1521.1 In that respect, the first man to lead an expedition that successfully circumnavigated the globe–and survive the undertaking–was Sir Francis Drake, the sixteenth-century English explorer who is frequently cited as the most famous (and notorious) explorer of the Elizabethan Era (1558-1603).2 From a more modern perspective, Drake appears as quite a controversial figure in history. To the British, he was a living folk hero, equatable to Robin Hood or King Arthur, a romantic figure who rose from humble origins and ascended to knighthood, the man who circumnavigated the globe, and a hero who helped repel the Spanish Armada. On the other hand, to the Spanish, Drake was a notorious pirate who raided peaceful merchant vessels and sacked Spanish settlements. Drake’s reputation has been stained by many other disreputable acts, including multiple accusations of desertion and his participation in the slave trade. What no one can doubt, however, is the undeniable impact that Drake has had on the world’s history.

Sir Francis Drake in Buckland Abbey, by Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger | Courtesy of Buckland Abbey (Public Domain)

Francis Drake was born to Edmund Drake circa 1540, in the town of Tavistock in the county of Devon, England. He was apprenticed at an early age to his relative, William Hawkins, with whom Drake learned the fundamentals of sailing, trade, exploration, and piracy. While he was still a young man, Drake accompanied his cousin John Hawkins on two successful slave trading expeditions from Africa to the Caribbean. These expeditions earned Drake and his cousin the enmity of the Spanish, who alongside Portugal claimed exclusive rights to trade with the Americas under the 1494 Treaty of Tordesillas. And so, during Hawkins and Drake’s third slave trading expedition in 1567, their convoy was set upon by Spanish warships at San Juan de Ulúa, Mexico. The Spanish’s raid was largely successful, and Hawkins and Drake barely escaped with their lives aboard separate vessels. Separated from his cousin, Drake’s vessel returned to England empty-handed. To add insult to injury, when Hawkins finally managed to return to England, he accused Drake of cowardice and of abandoning him in the Caribbean. Drake protested that he had been following Hawkins’ orders by returning to England, but Hawkins’ accusation would taint Drake’s reputation for years to come.3

These events embittered Drake towards Spain, and he would spend the rest of his life taking vengeance against the Spanish for the theft of what he believed had been his rightful property. In 1571 Drake secured a privateer’s license from Queen Elizabeth I, which he used to conduct a successful raid against a Spanish silver shipment in Panama. After returning to England, Drake spent the next few years assisting the Earl of Essex, Robert Devereux, to quell an Irish rebellion, during which Drake forged many important political friendships that would serve him well over the course of his life.4 It was after this service to the crown that Drake would embark on his most famous venture, one that would result in his circumnavigation of the globe.

In 1577, Queen Elizabeth dispatched Drake on an expedition to cross through the Strait of Magellan–a passage located at the southern tip of South America that connects the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans–ostensibly with the purpose of seeking trade opportunities along South America’s eastern coast. However, Drake’s mission also had a second, secret objective: to raid as many Spanish outposts and merchant vessels as possible, with the goal of reducing the vast revenue that Spain was receiving from trade with the Americas and thus indirectly decrease Spain’s ability to fund an invasion of England. And so, Drake departed from England in December of 1577, with a fleet of five ships and less than two hundred men.5

Sir Francis Drakes West Indian Voyage, engraving by Baptista Boazio | Courtesy of the Library of Congress

From the beginning, the journey was fraught with complications. While crossing the Atlantic Ocean, Drake ordered two of his ships, the Christopher and the Swan, stripped of supplies and burned due to the loss of too many personnel.6 Additionally, while moored at Port St. Julian–in what is now Argentina–Drake tried and convicted Thomas Doughty, his friend and captain of the Swan, for the crimes of treachery and incitement to mutiny. Doughty was executed there in Port St. Julian, the same spot where Magellan ironically had tried and convicted several mutineers of his own exactly 58 years earlier during his own circumnavigation expedition.7 However, Drake’s troubles did not end there. After reaching and traversing the Strait of Magellan and entering the Pacific Ocean, Drake’s remaining ships encountered powerful storms. The storms separated him from the Elizabeth and sank the Marigold, with the crew of the Elizabeth returning to England under the assumption that Drake’s sole remaining ship, the Golden Hind, had sunk beneath the waves.8

With only eighty crewmen and the Golden Hind, Drake nevertheless pressed onward. The Golden Hind had been pushed southward away from Cape Horn to the southern tip of Tierra del Fuego, an archipelago at the southernmost tip of South America. Exploring the waters south of South America, Drake was able to debunk the belief that a hypothetical continent, referred to as Terra Australis, was located just south of Chile. Returning northward, Drake began raiding the relatively unguarded Spanish ports along Chile’s coast, the Spanish firm in the belief that they were safe so far away from Europe. Drake reportedly traveled up the coast as far as California, although some believe he may have reached as far as Canada or Alaska. His hold full of Spanish treasure, Drake feared the possibility of a Spanish trap waiting for him in the Strait of Magellan, and decided to return to England by way of the Pacific instead.9

Unlike his journey thus far, the remainder of Drake’s expedition was comparatively uneventful. The Golden Hind crossed the Pacific, making stops in the Palau Islands, the Philippines, and Indonesia. He then crossed the Indian Ocean and sailed around the Cape of Good Hope in Africa, traveling up the coast towards Europe. On September 26, 1580, almost three years after his departure, Drake sailed into Plymouth Harbor with just fifty-six of his original crew. He returned to a hero’s welcome, his expedition an unquestionable success in the eyes of England. The venture made both he and his investors incredibly wealthy, and in April of the following year Drake was knighted by Queen Elizabeth for his service to the crown. That same year, Drake was elected to Parliament and became the mayor of Plymouth. He purchased a large estate known as Buckland Abbey where he settled down to enjoy the riches and acclaim he had earned.10

Spanish Armada, by Philip James de Loutherbourg | Courtesy of the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich Hospital Collection

Fate would see Drake return to the sea sooner than expected, however. In 1585, tensions between England and Spain had escalated to the point that war had become inevitable. In response, Queen Elizabeth placed Drake in charge of a fleet of 25 warships, and ordered him to attack Spanish-held territories across the world. With his fleet Drake attacked multiple settlements, capturing Santiago in the Cape Verde Islands, Cartagena in Colombia, St. Augustine in Florida, and San Domingo in Hispanola. Returning to Europe, Drake scored further victories against Spain and Portugal by capturing or destroying 37 merchant vessels at Cadiz, Spain and by occupying the city of Sagres, Portugal.11 Despite these victories, the English were unable to stop the Spanish Armada from attacking England, which at the time was considered to be the largest and most powerful naval force in the world. Queen Elizabeth made Drake the vice admiral in charge of leading the defense against the Armada, making him second-in-command of the British Navy.

Ultimately, however, Drake did not play a significant role in protecting England from the Spanish Armada, despite exaggerations on his part emphasizing his role in the defense. It is believed that, against orders, Drake captured a Spanish pay ship carrying a significant shipment of gold coins in the early stages of the defense, then quarreled with another English officer, Sir Martin Frobisher, about how to split the money. Frobisher later went on to accuse Drake of withdrawing in the middle of the attack, labeling him a coward and a traitor.12

It would soon become clear that Drake’s naval career was on the decline. In 1589, Queen Elizabeth sent Drake on a counteroffensive against Spain with a fleet of 180 ships.  This offensive resulted in a catastrophic attempt to capture the Portuguese capital of Lisbon, leading to the death of thousands of English sailors. Six years later, in 1595, Drake set off on what would be his final voyage. Drake led an expedition to attack Spanish settlement at San Juan, Puerto Rico; however, like his raid against Lisbon, this assault ultimately resulted in failure, one that Drake would not survive. In 1596, still out at sea, Drake became ill and passed away from dysentery. His body, dressed in full armor, was placed in a lead coffin and lowered into the sea, to the accompaniment of trumpets and cannon fire.13

Relief Depicting the Burial of Drake on the Tavistock Monument | Courtesy of the town of Tavistock (Public Domain)

Mixed reputation or no, Drake unquestionably was and is one of the most famous figures in English history. In many ways, he transcended history and became a legend in his own time, being featured heavily in the works of Richard Hakylut and Samuel Purchas, two prominent writers who also lived during Drake’s lifetime.14 Nevertheless, there are just as many who would argue that Drake was no paragon, who would contend that his cowardice, indecision, greed, and avarice, made him more villain than hero. Whatever the case may be, there’s no denying that Drake indisputably had a major impact on world history, making him quite arguably the most significant mariner of his time.

  1. “Drake, Francis,” in Elizabethan World Reference Library, edited by Sonia G. Benson and Jennifer York Stock, Vol. 2, Biographies. Detroit: UXL, 2007. Gale Virtual Reference Library (accessed January 24, 2017), 67.
  2. “Drake, Francis,” in Elizabethan World Reference Library, edited by Sonia G. Benson and Jennifer York Stock, Vol. 2, Biographies. Detroit: UXL, 2007. Gale Virtual Reference Library (accessed January 24, 2017), 63.
  3. “Drake, Francis,” in Pirates Through the Ages Reference Library, edited by Jennifer Stock, Vol. 3, Biographies. Detroit: UXL, 2011. Gale Virtual Reference Library (accessed January 24, 2017), 79-81.
  4. “Drake, Francis,” in Pirates Through the Ages Reference Library, edited by Jennifer Stock, Vol. 3, Biographies. Detroit: UXL, 2011. Gale Virtual Reference Library (accessed January 24, 2017), 81-83.
  5. “Drake, Francis,” in Elizabethan World Reference Library, edited by Sonia G. Benson and Jennifer York Stock, Vol. 2, Biographies. Detroit: UXL, 2007. Gale Virtual Reference Library (accessed January 24, 2017), 65-66.
  6. “Drake, Francis,” in Elizabethan World Reference Library, edited by Sonia G. Benson and Jennifer York Stock, Vol. 2, Biographies. Detroit: UXL, 2007. Gale Virtual Reference Library (accessed January 24, 2017), 66-67.
  7. Hans Kraus, “The Famous Voyage: The Circumnavigation of the World, 1577-1580” in Sir Francis Drake: a Pictorial Biography (Amstredam, N. Israel, 1970), Library of Congress, Accessed January 25, 2017, https://www.loc.gov/rr/rarebook/catalog/drake/drake-4-famousvoy.html.
  8. “Drake, Francis,” in Pirates Through the Ages Reference Library, edited by Jennifer Stock, Vol. 3, Biographies. Detroit: UXL, 2011. Gale Virtual Reference Library (accessed January 24, 2017), 84.
  9. “Drake, Francis,” in Pirates Through the Ages Reference Library, edited by Jennifer Stock, Vol. 3, Biographies. Detroit: UXL, 2011. Gale Virtual Reference Library (accessed January 24, 2017), 84.
  10. “Drake, Francis,” in Elizabethan World Reference Library, edited by Sonia G. Benson and Jennifer York Stock, Vol. 2, Biographies. Detroit: UXL, 2007. Gale Virtual Reference Library (accessed January 24, 2017), 66-67.
  11. “Drake, Francis,” in Pirates Through the Ages Reference Library, edited by Jennifer Stock,  Vol. 3, Biographies. Detroit: UXL, 2011. Gale Virtual Reference Library (accessed January 24, 2017), 86.
  12. “Drake, Francis,” In Elizabethan World Reference Library, edited by Sonia G. Benson and Jennifer York Stock, Vol. 2, Biographies. Detroit: UXL, 2007. Gale Virtual Reference Library (accessed January 24, 2017), 71-72.
  13. “Drake, Francis,” in Pirates Through the Ages Reference Library, edited by Jennifer Stock, Vol. 3, Biographies. Detroit: UXL, 2011. Gale Virtual Reference Library (accessed January 24, 2017), 86-88.
  14. “Drake, Sir Francis,” in The Oxford Companion to English Literature, edited by Birch, Dinah. Oxford University Press, 2009.

Cameron Adelman

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Recent Comments

79 comments

  • Sebastian Carnero

    It was a really interesting and detailed article. I had read about Drake before, but I didn’t know he became vice-admiral neither Hawkin’s accusations and the split of coins during the raid of the Spanish ship. Maybe Drake thought after Hawkin’s betrayal that doing the expeditions and just following orders was not worth it, he could be accused again leading to another decline in his career. It is sad how people can be affected by just accusations without proof.

  • Peter Coons

    The story of Drake is perhaps one of the most embellished in navel history. For the longest time, he was seen as the champion of the seas under the British flag. In reality, he was simply a glorified pirate and coward who would swindle his way out of situations just to save his own life. What’s more shocking to me, considering how high honor is held in British culture, especially among sailors, is how many commissions and commands the Queen gave Drake, despite the negative claims made against him and his many failures.

  • Christopher King

    I have always known Francis Drake to be a pirate. A privateer during those times were basically legal practices to be a pirate as long as you do not raid the employing countries ships or forts. I did not know that he was so successful in a naval career and that he had sailed around the globe. I knew that he had a thing for riches and possibly something about buried treasure somewhere of Spanish gold. This article highlighted on his career out at sea very well.

  • Tyler Sleeter

    Great article with lots of information. I have to say that I did not know that one had to be trained in the fundamentals of piracy, I found that extremely interesting. It is easy to see why Drake had such a hatred for the Spanish after his early adventures at sea, but I am not sure I would consider him a hero. Even so, he had an impact on history and did much to advance the British Empire. It astounds me that anyone could get on a boat and sail around the world for three years.

  • Maria Esquivel

    I definitely see why Sir Francis Drake was seen as a hero and as a villain in your article. The article provided both the good and the bad of Drake’s voyage time. He did many great things for Queen Elizabeth but personally, I see him as as coward because of the things described in the article, such as the way he wanted to split the money with an officer and his secret objectives. Despite everything he did, he did achieve very good things for the English and as a mariner.

  • Natalia Flores

    It’s hard to say whether the guy was a hero since most of these stories are a ‘he said, she said,’ sort of deal. It is amazing that Drake was able to attack multiple Spanish posts on the Western coast of both South and North America. His circumnavigation of the world is extremely rocky to say the least and this article really went into depth with that. All in all, this was a great article and Drake’s life is told in great detail.

  • Fumei P.

    Sir Francis Drake has such a diverse character in this article. He was said to be involved in the slave trade, accused of being a coward, vigilante/world explorer in the name of Queen, hero, traitor, patriot, he’s done it all. I enjoyed the vivid recounts depicting him as all of those things. I would like to think that he was neither hero or villain, but a brilliant man of opportunity. He stayed loyal to his country while finding a profitable solution to meet his own needs, and his was service to the Queen was patriotic as well as self serving.

  • Aaiyanna Johnson

    It is intriguing to me that whomever writes the history gives their point of view. For the British, it was that Sir Drake was a hero to them, whereas for the Spanish Drake was an infamous cold-hearted man. I had heard of Sir Drake. I have not, however, heard of him being involved with the slave trade. I am glad that have now. This was such a beautifully written article.

  • Nicolas McKay

    This was a fantastic article from beginning to end. This is certainly one of those articles that I can read multiple times because it remains just as interesting. Francis Drake was truly one of the greatest explorers of all time, having achieved and lived through so much. It is very sad to think that a life as rich as his would end with dysentery. He played so many roles as he made his mark on history, and his legacy will no doubt live on.

  • Sergio Cervantes

    I must say what a life this man lived! The numerous adventures he had and the different opinions that existed over the type of man he was must have been a spectacle. I did not know that he was the first man to successfully circumnavigate the globe. The fact that he partook in various battles for the crown of England shows how patriotic he was for his country. Also, just a side note, to be placed in command of a fleet of 180 ships is impressive! I enjoyed this well-researched article.

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