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Early Explorers to Canada. Who were the Vikings?. Eric the Red was the Viking who led Europeans to Greenland. He started a settlement there. Leif Ericson, the son of Eric the Red, led 35 Vikings to find a land he had heard about.
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Who were the Vikings? • Eric the Red was the Viking who led Europeans to Greenland. He started a settlement there. • Leif Ericson, the son of Eric the Red, led 35 Vikings to find a land he had heard about. • Leif Ericson landed on Newfoundland and called it Vinland (Wine Land) because they found grapes there that they made into wine. • The Vikings were the first Europeans to visit North America. http://www.histori.ca/minutes/minute.do?id=10121
Christopher Columbus • Christopher Columbus convinced King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella to have three ships. • The three ships were: Nina, Pinta, and Santa Maria. • He saw people and named them “Indians” because he thought that he was in the East Indies. • He got others explorers excited and curious about the fortunes they may find around the world. Picture Credit: http://www.mariner.org/age/columbus.html
Columbian Exchange • As a result of Columbus’s voyages to the New Word an exchange began between the North America and the rest of the world.
John Cabot: English Explorer • He was the first European explorer since the Vikings to explore the mainland of North America and the first to search for the Northwest Passage. http://www.histori.ca/minutes/minute.do?id=10122
John Cabot Born: 1450 Died: 1499 • He was born in Italy. • He loved to watch sailors at the docks and hear their stories. • At age 16, he began studying sailing and mapping. • He moved to England and got the King to support his exploration. • He is important because his exploration for England gave England the right to North America. Picture Credit: http://www.heritage.nf.ca/exploration/cabot.html
Jacques Cartier Born: 1491 Died: 1557 • Jacques Cartier was born in France. He studied navigation. • In 1531, the King of France, Francis I, hired Cartier to look for the Northwest Passage, the short route to the Pacific Ocean. • He sailed down the coast of Newfoundland, discovering Prince Edward islands. • He crossed the Gaspe Peninsula and took possession of it for France before returning home. Unfortunately he had mistaken the mouth of the St. Lawrence River for a bay, and failed to investigate it.
Jacques Cartier: Second Expedition • In 1535, the king sent him out again. • He sailed up the St. Lawrence River and recognized it for what it was. • He continued on, establishing Mont Real (Mount Royal) which is now Montreal, Canada. • They spent the winter at an Indian village near Quebec, where Cartier watched 25 of his men die of scurvy. • Cartier may have named Canada; "Kanata" meaning village or settlement in the Huron-Iroquois language.
Jacques Cartier: Takes Prisoners • The Huron were generous to Cartier, but he betrayed them. • He kidnapped 12 Indians, including their chief, and headed straight for France. • Cartier hoped that his prisoners would tell him where their gold mine was located, but there really was no gold. • An epidemic of scurvy killed many explorers and Indians. The Iroquois, were the first affected and were slow in giving up the secret of anedda, a white cedar tea which would save them – Vitamin C.
Jacques Cartier: Third Expedition • In 1541, Cartier was hired to help Jean Roberval begin a colony in Canada. • They could not find enough French colonists willing to give up the advantages of home for the uncivilized New World. • They asked the French Government for help. • They helped by giving them prisoners who were willing to join the expedition. • Cartier left Roberval stranded in New France with a colony of robbers and murderers. • Cartier never found the Northwest Passage. • He died in England in 1499.
Samuel de Champlain French Explorer • He was a French explorer and skilled mapmaker, who mapped much of northeastern North America. • He started a settlement in Quebec and founded the city of Quebec as a center of the fur trade. • Champlain explored the Ottawa River, and the eastern Great Lakes. • Champlain was important in establishing the French colonies in the New World.
Champlain’s Final Years • He wanted to convert the Indians to Christianity. • Champlain headed the Quebec settlement for years, until the English attacked and took the Fort at Quebec. • Champlain returned to France. • After a French-British peace treaty in 1632, Quebec was once again French, and Champlain returned as its governor (1633). • He died from a stroke on Dec. 25, 1635.
Henry Hudson: English Explorer • He was an English explorer and navigator who sailed to northern North America four times. • He had been hired to find a Northwest passage. • A trip through the Hudson Strait and into Hudson Bay ended in a mutiny. • The Hudson River, Hudson Strait, and Hudson Bay are named for Hudson.
HENRY KELSEY: English Explorer • Kelsey was a British explorer of inland Canada. • He was only 17 years old when he explored Canada. • Kelsey was the first European to see the Canadian prairies. • Kelsey began the trade routes of the Hudson's Bay Company in Saskatchewan. • He negotiated with various Indian tribes; he respected and enjoyed Indian culture.
Simon Fraser: English Explorer • Fraser was a fur trader and explorer in British Columbia. • He was hired by the Northwest Company to set up fur trading post out west. • He explored what is now known as the Fraser River, which is named after him. • He was the first European to establish permanent settlements in the area.
Samuel Hearne: English Explorer • Samuel Hearne was an was an English explorer, fur-trader, and author. • He was the first European to make an overland excursion across northern Canada to the Arctic Ocean. • Hearne built Cumberland House for the Hudson’s Bay Company, its first interior trading post and the first permanent settlement in present Saskatchewan.
Mathieu de Costa: African Translator • His translating skills helped close the cultural gap between early French explorers and the Mi'kmaq people. • Mathieu de Costa is the first recorded black person in Canada. • De Costa spoke many different languages and was able to communicate in Mi'kmaq, an Indian language. • He was a translator for the Europeans.
Can you name the explorers? C_bot V_k___ K_ls__ C__tier Ch__plain H__rne F__ser Hud___ Col__b__ De C____
Can you name the explorers? Vikings Cabot Cartier Kelsey Champlain Hearne Fraser Hudson Columbus De Costa