Document Number: |
AJ-115 |
Author: |
Champlain, Samuel de, 1567-1635. |
Title: |
Voyage of Samuel de Champlain, 1604-1608 |
Source: |
Champlain, Samuel de. Voyages of Samuel de Champlain. Translated from the French by Charles Pomeroy Otis. With Historical Illustrations, and a Memoir by the Rev. Edmund F. Slafter. (Boston: Prince Society, 1878). Volume 2, pages 1-157. |
Pages/Illustrations: |
175 / 16 |
Citable URL: |
www.americanjourneys.org/aj-115/ |
Author Note
Samuel de Champlain (1567-1635) first became known when his
reports of his travels to the West Indies and Central America
with a Spanish expedition in 1598 caught the attention of the
French King, Henri IV. In 1603, Champlain made his first trip to
North America, to the St. Lawrence River to explore and
establish a French colony. In 1604, he returned to northeastern
Canada, and over the next four years became the first to map the
North Atlantic Coast. Between 1604 and 1608, Champlain led
several expeditions south as far as Cape Cod, often aided by
Indian interpreters. He documented the European discovery of the
Kennebec, Penobscot, and Saco rivers and Mt. Desert Island in
Maine, and Plymouth Harbor and Cape Cod in Massachusetts fifteen
years
before the English established their own colony there.
Champlain recommended further exploration and settlement of
St. Lawrence area to allow the French to take advantage of the
river for the valuable fur trade. He founded Quebec in 1608, and
made his famous explorations in present-day New York State and
on Lake Huron and Lake Ontario in 1615. From 1620-1624 he
remained in Canada, was in France from 1629-1633, and then
returned to Quebec. He sent his protégé Jean Nicolet to explore
further west in 1634 (see AJ-043) and died on Christmas Day
1634, having learned of the existence of Lake Michigan and Green
Bay.
Expeditions of 1604-1608
In 1604 Champlain was directed by his superiors to establish
a colony near modern Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia. From this
base he made three exploring voyages south through the Canadian
maritime provinces and along the New England coast. In 1604 he
went as far as Mount Desert Island and the Penobscot River near
present-day Bangor, Maine. In the second, in 1605, he went
further south, sighting New Hampshire’s White Mountains from
Casco Bay, Maine, passing Cape Ann and entering Plymouth Harbor
in Massachusetts Bay, and then skirting the outer arm of Cape
Cod as far as Nauset. On his third trip he followed the route of
1605, but was repulsed by Indians at modern Stage Harbor on
Vineyard Sound, and returned to Nova Scotia.
Document Note
Champlain published various short accounts of his discoveries
soon after they happened, and spent part of the years 1629-1632
writing up a seven hundred-page composite narrative published as Les
Voyages de la Nouvelle France occidentale dicte Canada faits par
le Sr de Champlain ... : & toutes les descouvertes qu'il a
faites en ce païs depuis l'an 1603 jusques en l'an 1629 ... :
ensemble une carte generalle [sic] de la description dudit pays
... : avec ce qui s'est passé en ladite Nouvelle France en
l'année 1631. (Paris: Claude Collet, 1632). The standard
English-language edition of all his works was translated by H.
P. Biggar in seven volumes in 1922.
Other Internet and Reference Sources
Page images of the full text from which we have excerpted the
1604-1608 voyages is available online from the Early Canadiana
Online project at
www.canadiana.org and a digital text of them all is at
www.gutenberg.org
Biographical information, maps and additional leads can be
found at the “Virtual Museum of New France”:
http://www.civilization.ca/vmnf/explor/champ_e1.html
See also the Library of Congress reproduction of a map
created by Champlain in 1607:
http://lcweb.loc.gov/exhibits/treasures/trr009.html |
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