La Isabela

La Isabela in the Puerto Plata, Dominican Republic is considered the first formal European settlement in the New World.

It was founded by Christopher Columbus during his second voyage in 1493. This was after discovering that the fort of La Navidad, which he had constructed during his first trip, had been totally destroyed by the native Taino people. The settlement was established to search for precious metals.[1]

La Isabela was struck by two of the earliest Atlantic hurricanes observed by Europeans in 1494 and 1495. Hunger and disease soon led to mutiny, punishment, disillusion, and more hunger and disease. It reached the point where a group of settlers, led by Bernal de Pisa, attempted to capture and make off with several ships and go back to Spain. Isabella barely survived until 1496 when Columbus decided to abandon it in favor of a new settlement, now Santo Domingo.

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