David Beers Quinn
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
David Beers Quinn (1909-2002) was an Irish historian who wrote extensively on the voyages of discovery and colonisation of America. Many of his publications appeared as volumes of the Hakluyt Society. He played a major role in assisting the presentation of the historical aspects during the quadricentennial celebrations (1984-1987) of the first establishment a colony at Roanoke Island.
Quinn was born in Ireland and was the single pupil at his first school. He graduated from Queen's University, Belfast, 1931. After a PhD on the early Tudor administration in Ireland at King's College London, he spent five years as lecturer at University College, Southampton. Returning Belfast in 1939 he taught Irish history.
He became interested in the voyages of discovery made by Humphrey Gilbert. At that time historians relied uncritically on the works of Richard Hakluyt published around 1600. Quinn's work and the new sources he discovered resulted in his first volume for the Hakluyt Society, and marked the beginning of his seminal work on voyages of exploration, which he developed from 1944 at University College, Swansea. In 1957 he moved to Liverpool University.
At the instigation of America's Four Hundredth Anniversary Committee his Set Fair for Roanoke: Voyages and Colonies, 1584–1590 was published by University of North Carolina Press in 1985.