John White (surveyor)

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A sketch by John White of Indians at Roanoke.
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A sketch by John White of Indians at Roanoke.

John White (c.1540 – c.1606)[1] John White was sent by Sir Walter Raleigh as Sir Richard Grenville's artist-illustrator on his first voyage to the New World (1585-6). During this journey he made numerous sketches of the landscape and people they encountered (including the one at right). These works are significant as they pre-date the first body of "discovery voyage art" created in the late eighteenth century by the artists who sailed with Captain James Cook.

White, "Gentleman of London," later became governor of the newly-established Roanoke Colony. The first baby born there was his granddaughter, Virginia Dare. However, when the colony ran low on supplies the colonists requested that White return to England for provisions. His return to Roanoke was delayed by England's conflict with Spain and the Spanish Armada, and when he at last returned to Roanoke in August of 1590 he found it deserted. Forced by bad weather to abandon the search of adjacent islands for the colonists, he arrived in Plymouth on October 24 of that year.

Little is known of White's life after the failure of the Roanoke Colony. He appears to have been in Ireland living on the estates of Sir Walter Raleigh and making maps of land for Raleigh's tenants. The last surviving document related to White is a letter he wrote from Ireland in 1593 to the publisher of his Roanoke drawings.

However, a record from May of 1606 that a Bridgit White was appointed estate administrator for her brother "John White" may refer to him. A Bridgett White was also the second wife of a Robert Wight (1578–1617) of Hareby, Lincolnshire, England whom he married on November 25, 1613 at Alford. As this Robert was also the son of an obscure John Wight (b. abt. 1552) and the father of an Elizabeth Wighte (1606–1671) who is sometimes thought to have been the ex-wife of Nathaniel Eaton (1610–1674), the first schoolmaster of Harvard College, Massachusetts; there is a possibility that Bridgit White, the sister of John White the Governor of Roanoke Colony, and Bridgett White, the second wife of the same above-mentioned Robert Wight, are directly related to each other.

As an additional matter of interest, there is also a record of an Ann Barlow of Petersfield, Hants (died 1665), who was the second wife of a certain Josias White (1573–1622) of Hornchurch, Essex, son of a John White of Stanton St John, Oxford (1540 – before September 30, 1618), who afterwards married a Francis Drake (1573–1634) of Walton, Surrey – the nephew of Sir Francis Drake (1540–1596) the famous explorer.[2] This Josias White was the grandson of another John White (died 1580) whose relations were connected to the British Crown such as Dr Thomas White (1514–1588), "Lord Warden of New College, Oxford" and apparently good friend of Queen Elizabeth I as he avoided censure due to her personal intervention even though he was an avowed Catholic. Its only conjecture, but as the name Barlow is associated with the initial discovery and mapping of the Virginia coast by Capt Arthur Barlowe (1550–1620) in 1584, and that it was on Barlow's ship John White first sailed in on as the official illustrator of the New World, its easy to jump to conclusions and say that Ann Barlow is directly connected to the first Governor of Roanoke, Virginia in this way.

John White of Stanton St John This same "John White of Stanton St John" who died in 1618 respectfully had a son by the name of the Rev. John White (1575–1648) of Dorchester who himself became famous for his role in establishing what became the town of Salem as the "Founder of Massachusetts." No connection has been shown between John White of Dorchester and John White, painter, of Roanoke.

Being an expert 16th-century illustrator required training as a painter, and John White clearly was educated as such, not as an engineer, doctor, or surveyor. He is probably the John White who was a member of the Painter-Stainers Livery Guild of London in the 1580s, which meant he probably served for seven years as an apprenctice to a member of the Guild to learn his craft.

[edit] Endnotes

  1. ^ . Very little is known of the life of John White. There is record in February 22, 1539 of a christening in the Church of St Margaret, London of a "John Whyte" on that same day; but there is no proof this is the same person.
  2. ^ Sir Francis was the son of Edmund Drake and Mary Mylwaye [a probable relation to Sir Anthony Mildmay (1549–1617)] and grandson of John Drake and Margaret Cole. The above-mentioned nephew Francis Drake was the son of Richard Drake and Ursula Stafford, grandson of John Drake and Amy Grenville (1510–1577), and great-grandson of the same above-mentioned John Drake and Margaret Cole. Richard Grenville was the grand-nephew of Amy Grenville, the grandson of Richard Grenville, Amy's older brother. Some think they were related and others don't.

[edit] References

  • Frances Rose-Troup, John White, the Patriarch of Dorchester and the Founder of Massachusetts 1575 - 1648 (1930)
  • Paul Hope Hulton, America 1585: The Complete Drawings of John White (1984)
  • Arthur Wilmot Ackerman, Reverend John White of Dorchester...(1929)
  • Thomas Perrin Harrison, The First Water Colors of North American Birds (John White and Edward Topsell) (1964)
  • Thomas Hariot, A Briefe and True Report of the New Found Land of Viginia (1590) [the complete 15 vol Theodor De Bry edition]
  • John Hill Wheeler, Historical Sketches of North Carolina, from 1584 to 1851, vols I – II (1851)
  • Charles Edward Banks, The Planters of the Commonwealth (1930, 1st ed. no. 668 of 758) p. 87 [ship's list of the Mary & John, sponsored by the Rev John White (1575–1648) of Dorchester and departed Plymouth on March 20, 1630]
  • Thomas Hariot, Voyages en Virginie et en Floride ... (1927 edition) [subjects: Thomas Hariot (1560–1621) and Theodor DeBry (1528–1598)]

[edit] External links