Sir Francis Drake: England's Greatest Hero

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Dan Davis History

Dan Davis History

Күн бұрын

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Sir Francis Drake's attacks on Spanish ships, towns, and ports in the Caribbean, the Pacific, and on Iberia itself frustrated and terrorised Spanish governors, admirals, King Phillip II himself and even the Pope in Rome. He robbed the Spanish gold and silver from the jungles of Panama, seized laden treasure ships from the Azores to the Pacific and helped save England from the terrifying Spanish Armada.
The first captain to successfully circumnavigate the globe, he was without doubt the finest navigator, most accomplished explorer, and wealthiest pirate of his age. But who was this man really? What caused him to sail around the world and spend a lifetime seeking fame and fortune at sea? And why was he so motivated to wage an endless personal war against the entire Spanish Empire?
This is the incredible story of England’s greatest hero, Sir Francis Drake.
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Sources
Sir Francis Drake by John Sugden: amzn.to/49qrEht
In Search of a Kingdom by Laurence Bergreen: amzn.to/49kKRBj
The World Encompassed by Francis Drake: amzn.to/3QLfatx
Sir Francis Drake's Famous Voyage Round the World by Francis Pretty: amzn.to/3u11wcZ
Elizabethan Sea Dogs 1560-1605 by Konstam and McBride: amzn.to/47070TP
Tudor Warships (2): Elizabeth I’s Navy by Konstam and McBride: amzn.to/40o5FDY
The Defeat Of Spanish Armada by Garrett Mattingly: amzn.to/3shLTNR
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Video Chapters
00:00 The Life of Francis Drake
02:04 Video Sponsorship
03:08 Drake's Early Voyages
13:24 The Battle of San Juan de Ulúa
18:27 Drake Steals Treasure in Panama
27:18 The Rathlin Island Massacre
28:44 The Circumnavigation Begins
39:29 The Great Pirate Raid in the Pacific
49:10 Nova Albion
51:50 Completing the Circumnavigation
56:00 The Great Raid on the Spanish West Indies
01:05:17 Drake's Attack on Cadiz
01:12:03 The Spanish Armada
01:18:57 Drake's Final Years

Пікірлер: 1 700
@DanDavisHistory
@DanDavisHistory 7 ай бұрын
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@gaslitworldf.melissab2897
@gaslitworldf.melissab2897 7 ай бұрын
Hey fellow viewers. If you've not read Mr. Brown's fiction, let me tell you . . . I just finished God-born, the first book. It's an immersive experience that richly brings to life a time far removed from human memory. I'm going on to the second book very soon. This would make an excellent gift for fans of the fantasy-fiction genre at the emergence of the Bronze Age.
@hotstepper887
@hotstepper887 7 ай бұрын
Walter Raleigh next?
@DanDavisHistory
@DanDavisHistory 7 ай бұрын
Good idea!
@pasquinomarforio
@pasquinomarforio 7 ай бұрын
Great story. Again. Thanks.
@jordijones
@jordijones 7 ай бұрын
@@DanDavisHistory An in-depth comparison of Cochrane and Smith? Not sure anyone's done that yet.
@commieswine
@commieswine 7 ай бұрын
As a Californian its insane to me that he made it this far. We dont have many opportunities to physically engage with history. So being at Drake's bay and imagining English sailors landing there so many years ago as a kid helped fire my passion for history! Thank you covering such a fascinating character.
@DanDavisHistory
@DanDavisHistory 7 ай бұрын
What's amazing to me is that they sailed past San Francisco Bay but their accounts don't mention it. So they either saw it and decided against going into it or they somehow missed it entirely. Maybe they were too far out to sea at that point or maybe it was foggy.
@theeddorian
@theeddorian 7 ай бұрын
@@DanDavisHistory San Francisco Bay was discovered by a party traveling by land. The entry is not that obvious from the sea. E Clampus Vitus members played a prank on a fellow member and friend, planting a plaque to found showing that Drake's Bay was, indeed, Drake's Bay. The joke worked too well, and rather than embarrass their friend, a serious historian, the truth was kept secret until after he died. It was, as far as California's history is concerned, a hoax on scale similar to Piltdown. E Clampus Vitus was a Gold Rush-era humourous pastiche society founded to make fun of the Masons and other "secret" societies, whose members tended to make production of their secrets and membership. The motto is Credo quia absurdum. It is still going strong. There is a good discussion on WIkipedia for the interested.
@commieswine
@commieswine 7 ай бұрын
@@DanDavisHistory the fog is definitely an issue. I've been on the Golden gate when it was so thick you could maybe see 100ft? To me thats the simplest answer, but who knows.
@philsooty61
@philsooty61 7 ай бұрын
Nice one, but remember he was a bit of a scoundrel but those where different times and sometimes you need people like him!
@duaneaikins4621
@duaneaikins4621 7 ай бұрын
@@DanDavisHistoryI can not imagine that they would sail with the fog that thick. The California coast is littered with rocky islands and they didn’t know the coast.
@AndyorAndrew
@AndyorAndrew 3 ай бұрын
The BBC could never make a documentary this good, thank you
@sarahhearn-vonfoerster7401
@sarahhearn-vonfoerster7401 Ай бұрын
BBC has made many classic documentaries as good as these. It is good to have two excellent sources. 😅
@arbimoradian
@arbimoradian Ай бұрын
Seriously? Read the comment above. Regards.
@olddirtybasterd-ex2vb
@olddirtybasterd-ex2vb Ай бұрын
Not true, the BBC gave money to freelance historian legends like Ruth Goodman.
@thepm3972
@thepm3972 Ай бұрын
Attenborough ¿??
@williamcathcart7994
@williamcathcart7994 Ай бұрын
Thank you Sir. You certainly do weave magic. As a young boy, my across the street buddies were twin boys. Their father was an Englishman. He was a sailor in Royal Navy during WW II . His ship took damage and he was wounded. His ship came here to Charleston, South Carolina for repairs in our shipyard. While he was recovering, he met a local girl. After the war, they were married and settled here. He was talented carpenter who built sailing dinghies in his workshop. He taught how to sail and compete in local regattas. While we watched him build his boats, he regaled us with the adventures of Sir Francis Drake. He was a good man.
@thewayfarer8849
@thewayfarer8849 7 ай бұрын
Remember lads; always aim to be so famous your enemies make a passtime of your death. Really love these videos Dan, great history coverage.
@hotstepper887
@hotstepper887 7 ай бұрын
So much British history has been distorted, lied about, and criticized, that hearing accounts of our history without that endless barrage of unfounded hate, is fantastic, interesting and educational. Great stuff, thank you.
@EstbXCIII
@EstbXCIII 7 ай бұрын
Sadly, I think the state of British history is in a lot of danger. Young people and especially the woke mob are severely tainting ture British history. Britains historical figures are being hijacked and being represented by nom-British actors like the way Queen Anne Boleyn, Queen Charlotte of Spain, King Richard the III etc. are being played by black people. Non-Europeans are denying us our history by rewriting it and claiming that European history is actually black history and all of it's achievements are the work of black ppl that white people stole from them. And now the most recent claim is that it was black and brown people that built Britain after WWii. Britain and Europe has welcomed In millions of migrants from war and poverty stricken countries yet this is how we are repayed. We welcome them to live in a country to live a quality of life that they would never have even dreamed of back in their homeland and then completely throw us under the bus.
@libertycoffeehouse3944
@libertycoffeehouse3944 7 ай бұрын
The British have a proud history. The Ancient Rights of Englishmen, representative government, and limited government was a blessing to the world.
@hyperboreanforeskin
@hyperboreanforeskin 7 ай бұрын
the people who lie about Our History have names and addresses.
@jtjames79
@jtjames79 7 ай бұрын
​@@hyperboreanforeskin Well that escalated quickly. Don't civilize me bro!
@hyperboreanforeskin
@hyperboreanforeskin 7 ай бұрын
@@jtjames79 just an observation
@normagordon1375
@normagordon1375 6 ай бұрын
Learned about Sir Francis Drake by my Mum as a child in Jamaica. She would always give us extra homework and caused us to love world history so much! Sir Francis Drake was such a fascinating discovery for us, we read, talked and sang about him. Still love history today because of her and Drake will forever be a favorite... So glad to be able to partake of this lovely piece!❤️
@DanDavisHistory
@DanDavisHistory 6 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for watching and commenting, I'm delighted to hear of the passion you and your family have for history.
@roytaylor6361
@roytaylor6361 6 ай бұрын
What a great mum you have!
@emergencylowmaneuvering7350
@emergencylowmaneuvering7350 6 ай бұрын
Pirate Drake was wounded and lost The Battle Of San Juan in year 1595. He already had lost the Battle of The Counter Armada a few years before. Drake lost too and fled to Panama, wounded, where he also failed to win. Drake, now wounded and depressed after losing so many ships and men in the last 3 battles he was assigned to, and too ashamed to return to England as big loser, he died from the battle wounds and depression due big failures. Admiral Hemmings, another director of the Great Armada battle was killed in that battle too and was hurry up buried at sea, all mangled in front of San Juan. But the Brittish reported Hemmings died of a Tropical disease BEFORE the battle of San Juan.. And Drake also died from a TROPICAL DISEASE AFTER the battle. Big Lies. Both died from TROPICAL CANNONFIRE from the 70 cannons of El Morro Fortress in Puerto Rico, the biggest in the caribbean, even now. British Empire covered up that 2 of their 3 “Great admirals” of the Great Armada battle died in The Battle of San Juan in 1595. Tropical disease died was a big lie. Pirates dead by PR.. LOL..
@roytaylor6361
@roytaylor6361 6 ай бұрын
@@emergencylowmaneuvering7350 no amount of your reinterpretation of the facts can alter them.
@davidwhelan1545
@davidwhelan1545 5 ай бұрын
What a man! I'm lucky enough to have lived,worked and retired on his wider Manor! Great man.
@Kevin-bl6lg
@Kevin-bl6lg 3 ай бұрын
Fascinating! How did he treat you and others when he was at his home?
@davidwhelan1545
@davidwhelan1545 3 ай бұрын
@@Kevin-bl6lg very reasonably, thanks for enquiring.
@TyrSkyFatherOfTheGods
@TyrSkyFatherOfTheGods 7 ай бұрын
As a native Vancouver Islander, I learned about Drake in school (along with other European explorers of Canada's west coast). The highest mountain on the island, at 2195 m (7200 ft) is named "The Golden Hinde," as Drake reported spotting it in the far distance. I think it's kind of cool that the northernmost part of his epic voyage was where I grew up and live! Thanks for this, Dan.
@Carcajou72
@Carcajou72 7 ай бұрын
Didn't know that about The Golden Hinde. I also live on Vancouver Island.
@dancarter482
@dancarter482 7 ай бұрын
@@Carcajou72 I assume you know all about _Captain Van_ though?
@MariaVictoriaGarciaAzuero
@MariaVictoriaGarciaAzuero 6 ай бұрын
It never happened. Drake stopped near San Francisco in 1579 on his way to cross the Pacific Ocean. Which by the way. It was already a highway for the maritime Spanish empire having discovered the Philippines (after Felipe II king of Spain) as early as 1525 by a monk, cosmographer, Urdaneta. Google it!
@battambangscooterandmotorc303
@battambangscooterandmotorc303 3 ай бұрын
I'm with ya. Way before Cook & Vancouver eh?
@Survivethejive
@Survivethejive 7 ай бұрын
Every time you drink a mojito, you must toast this bad lad
@martinezperez9026
@martinezperez9026 5 ай бұрын
Amazing documentary, Dan, as always. As a Spaniard, I never learned a single word about Drake as a kid in school; just, from the movies, that he was a pirate and a buccaneer. I was surprised by all the parallels between his circumnavigation of the world and that of the Magellan-Elcano (el Cano) expedition 60 years earlier. Both Drake and Magellan faced challenges to their command from high-born people in their armadas due in part to a lack of clarity as to the chain of command, both confronted this obstacle in the exact same spot, the Bay of San Julián, and both ended up eliminating the challengers to their authority (Magellan had two men executed, marooned other two). After the Pacific crossing, both reached the exact same islands, both had the exact same experience with the natives and both gave the island the exact same name! (Magellan called it Isla de los Ladrones: Island of Thieves). I wonder if Drake had available any chronicle of the Magellan journey (if I am not mistaken, Pigafetta’s account made the rounds in Europe) and he may have just confirmed the name he may have known Magellan gave the island. I also wonder if Drake encountered the same troubles with scurvy during the Pacific crossing as Magellan. No one knew about the effects of carrying citrus fruits on board at either time, right? Then, both expeditions stopped at Ternate and acquired great amounts of Clove... I was also surprised of how fast Drake travelled the Indian Ocean and made it back to Europe compared to el Cano (who took 5 months, although he lost the mizzenmast in a storm in Cape of Hope and also went out into the Atlantic to shake off Potuguesse pursuers from Cabo Verde). Both el Cano’s and Drake’s ships spent 3 years at sea, being both brand new when they started, so they must have been equally deteriorated by shipworm. I wonder how much ships and the art of navigation may have advanced in the intervening 60 years... neither one had steering wheel yet, which was introduced in the 1700’s... The whip-staff (or gooseneck? for the rudder?) appears around 1513 in Spain, so Magellan might have already had it in 1518, but I read descriptions in which they seem to have been steering with just the rudder arm (tiller?), as they did at the time of Columbus; by Drake’s time they must have all been fitted with the whip-staff... Although in many modern retellings of Magellan’s trip it is presumed that they used the common log to calculate speed, I believe in 1518 the device didn’t exist yet... but it probably did by the time of Drake... They both had quadrants but not Sextants or Octants (I ignore if the English also used astrolabes like the Castilians)... Regarding the Invincible Armada, I understand that the Castilians meant to bring their infantry on board in Flanders, but weren’t able because the English engaged them in the English Channel (as you describe) and the Dutch blocked access to the Flemish ports (considering the ultimate outcome, if the Castilian tercios had all been on board, they would have drowned and that would have really been a crippling blow to Spain’s grip on Europe). From what I read, after several gunnery exchanges both armadas ran out of ordnance, but while the English were able to re-ammunition in their own coasts, the Castilians were cut off from Spain by the English fleet and from their Flemish safe harbor by the Dutch and became sitting ducks. If the English had previously been hard pressed to penetrate the Castilian hulls, they were now able to fire at a much closer range; then, as you describe, when the Castilians attempted to flee around Scotland and Ireland to save their ships, their armada was shipwrecked by storms. In Spain, of course, we emphasize how few ships were lost to enemy fire and how many to the storms :)
@user-zq8js3cb6v
@user-zq8js3cb6v 2 ай бұрын
When was disease like scurvy first discovered on the british navy was it im christopher columbus time also how about the penal trips to australia was it to tesmania new south wales
@olddirtybasterd-ex2vb
@olddirtybasterd-ex2vb Ай бұрын
@@user-zq8js3cb6v The need to prevent scurvy was known knowledge in ancient times and Roman times and remained so by some Asians and Africans (Muslims) but was lost by Europeans.
@klaunwelt4404
@klaunwelt4404 7 ай бұрын
This is absolutely outstanding. I’ve watched it twice now and will watch it with my son next. Dan Davis’ work is peerless. What a terrific antidote to the parlous state of contemporary history programming.
@marniebawlf2786
@marniebawlf2786 7 ай бұрын
Thank You Dan for this marvelous documentary. My husband wrote the book, The Secret Voyage of Sir Francis Drake (by Samuel Bawlf) mentioned by @bietuns earlier in this comment section. He was passionate about Drake's historical voyages since his childhood. Thoroughly enjoyed this. He would have enjoyed this as well but sadly passed away in 2016.
@stephenburnage7687
@stephenburnage7687 6 ай бұрын
I read that book! A great story.
@roytaylor6361
@roytaylor6361 6 ай бұрын
Ordered!
@danrubin4506
@danrubin4506 5 ай бұрын
Marnie, I have a copy of that book among my sailing books. I treasure it. Very well written and valuable to know the details of Drake’s exploration of the Americas.
@MK-nd2ij
@MK-nd2ij 5 ай бұрын
May your deceased husband rest in peace, I was looking for an opportunity to read a book and I decided to read his book! Good luck!
@WildWestRosie
@WildWestRosie 7 ай бұрын
That quiet, sly change to Drake's portrait 1:06:35 was the best part of all of this! Nope, the full grin is! 1:07:31
@DanDavisHistory
@DanDavisHistory 7 ай бұрын
Thanks for noticing. These little things amuse me and I'm glad they do you too.
@philiptownsend4026
@philiptownsend4026 6 ай бұрын
Ah you noticed too ;-)
@klaunwelt4404
@klaunwelt4404 7 ай бұрын
Dan Davis’ content is an absolute treasure. Thank you Dan. It is such a treat to see a new video from you, and this one being so long is a delight.
@Stephen2K4
@Stephen2K4 7 ай бұрын
I loved the movie Master and Commander. Now I need a movie based on Sir Francis Drake. What an adventurer.
@madMARTYNmarsh1981
@madMARTYNmarsh1981 7 ай бұрын
Now isn't the best time in history to make such a film. Drake would magically become a black lesbian woman. 'For modern audiences'.
@alexjn5460
@alexjn5460 7 ай бұрын
Yeah that's a great shout actually. 'Drake' (2025) Starring Christian Bale as Sir Francis Drake
@stevencarroll8315
@stevencarroll8315 7 ай бұрын
Captain Cochraine was based in Master & Commander, check out his life story, that guy is a legend to our navy.
@rexrecumbent
@rexrecumbent 7 ай бұрын
Na the papacy own Hollywood, sadly that will never happen...
@bear1245
@bear1245 7 ай бұрын
Yes so many British historical figures deserve a movie. Like Napoleon getting a movie, well so should Nelson too! See Drake of England (1935) by Arthur Woods.
@roberttreborable
@roberttreborable 7 ай бұрын
Thank you for such a full fascinating story of one of my Childhood heroes. I well remember our primary school teacher Mr Dunn telling us, "Sir Francis Drake, took gold from the Spanish Galleons, but he didn't really steal it because that gold had been stolen, by the Spanish from the native people, it didn't belong to the Spanish they had stolen it, so Francis Drake took it off them". "When he got home, the Spanish King complained to Elizabeth and she was going to punish him, but Sir Francis said he had taken to gold as a present for her, because she as Queen would know what to do with it, and so the Queen changed her mind"... I've remembered that all these years.
@juanmorales5133
@juanmorales5133 Ай бұрын
spanish did not steal any gold from natives becouse natives were spanish in the new world,redneck. English killed all the native in northamerica and australia, Francis drake was a pirate and defeated by the spanish empire in Spain. The english armada 1589.
@suzannejones5992
@suzannejones5992 7 ай бұрын
With that title, a must watch. Always a hero in my mind. Thank you.
@joezephyr
@joezephyr 5 ай бұрын
Fabulous thank you!! I am Australian and I was in Plymouth in May and made a point of seeing his statue.
@davidludford2164
@davidludford2164 7 ай бұрын
Absolutely brilliant,I was in Panama City last may,and my plan was to go to portobello and throw some flowers in to the sea for our hero,I let the side down,but I have promised my self next time,and there will be a next time,my next new country Bhutan will be country 155,and I have devoted my life to travel,a few weeks back I was in Calcutta for the cricket England v Pakistan,the British history in India is truly amazing,I am so happy to have found your channel at 01.00 in my home in rural Thailand,as you must know the British maritime museum in Greenwich is a total joke concerning sir Francis drake,thank you for your brilliance
@Jesusisafriendofmine
@Jesusisafriendofmine 7 ай бұрын
My paternal grandmother's family are descended from him. My great great aunt the last to have any of his wealth. Really cool to hear his story.
@NarlyLyfe
@NarlyLyfe 6 ай бұрын
cap, the Drake line died out in the 18th century.
@philiptownsend4026
@philiptownsend4026 6 ай бұрын
How could he have descendents? He had no children.
@domfrancis3140
@domfrancis3140 6 ай бұрын
​@@philiptownsend4026he had 11 brothers many of whom probably had children, a niece/nephew are still descendants even if not directly.
@NarlyLyfe
@NarlyLyfe 6 ай бұрын
his brother@@philiptownsend4026
@NarlyLyfe
@NarlyLyfe 6 ай бұрын
his brother took over everything after he died.
@philiptownsend4026
@philiptownsend4026 6 ай бұрын
I like the way Drake's portrait changes expressions. Did anyone else notice?
@joelhernstrom6060
@joelhernstrom6060 7 ай бұрын
The intro gave me chills. Top work man!
@honestorchard
@honestorchard 7 ай бұрын
This should be shown in schools. Great content! You're a treasure Dan.
@gustavodiniz6156
@gustavodiniz6156 6 ай бұрын
SI DEBERIA CONTARSE EN LAS ESCUELAS LO LADRONES QUE FUERON.
@manxman8008
@manxman8008 6 ай бұрын
Amazing - I didn't realise they sailed the world so much
@Replicaate
@Replicaate 7 ай бұрын
'Now take Sir Francis Drake - the Spanish, they despise him! But to the British, he's a hero and they idolize him! It's how you look at buccaneers that makes them bad or good..."
@sreveparker2011
@sreveparker2011 4 ай бұрын
Thankyou for your documentary. As a West country boy, and with a great fondness of the oceans, I have always hooked on to Francis Drake. This story you have narrated has been most helpful to me, once again thankyou.
@STATERECALLMUSIC
@STATERECALLMUSIC 7 ай бұрын
I loved this. I learned more about drake than I did at school!
@q.e.d.9112
@q.e.d.9112 7 ай бұрын
Excellent, expertly told history. Well done.👍👍👍 1:14:10 The reason Drake continued with his game of bowls is that his ships couldn’t leave until the tide turned and, when it did, the Spanish would be pushed back seawards. He also wanted to follow them up channel, giving him the weather gauge. His smaller, nimbler ships could always escape upwind, if they found themselves out gunned. The armada, travelling in convoy at the speed of the slowest ship, could be picked off, a ship or two at a time.
@juanmorales5133
@juanmorales5133 Ай бұрын
drake and his English armada at a Coruna Spain 1589 defeated by a woma Maria Pita, even in panama defeated by the spanish empire and he died by disenteria like an animal.
@q.e.d.9112
@q.e.d.9112 Ай бұрын
@@juanmorales5133 Hi Juan, In what way is your comment relevant to my post? I merely stated a simple fact and having sailed yachts in and out of Plymouth Sound on many occasions I know a little bit about it. Drake carried on with his game because there was no point in rushing about like a headless chook. He couldn’t set off until the tide turned and he wanted to be following the Spanish fleet eastward rather than meeting them as they approached from the west.
@marac200
@marac200 7 ай бұрын
I really never knew about Sir Francis Drakes moral compass I’m happy to know that he led a chivalrous life.
@brendanstoran7555
@brendanstoran7555 7 ай бұрын
As pirates go you mean?😂
@LordOfLight
@LordOfLight 7 ай бұрын
Are you serious? He was a very greedy man and happy to drop his comrades in the 💩 in his pursuit of money.
@roberttreborable
@roberttreborable 7 ай бұрын
@@brendanstoran7555 But the gold didn't belong to the Spanish they had stolen it off the Native.
@roberttreborable
@roberttreborable 7 ай бұрын
@@LordOfLight They were happy to be part of his crew and he gave them all a share of the bounty.
@LordOfLight
@LordOfLight 7 ай бұрын
@@roberttreborable Oh? So, he gave it back to the natives then did he? Like Robin Hood. Right?
@NorwayT
@NorwayT 7 ай бұрын
This was an impressive presentation of one of History's most remarkable Mariners and Heroes, Dan Davis History! KUDOS! Well done, sir!
@bieituns
@bieituns 7 ай бұрын
I read a book a couple of years ago, I think it was called the secret voyage of sir Francis Drake. It was fascinating because it appears that some of drakes greatest discoveries and achievements were hidden because Queen Elizabeth didn't want the French and Spanish to know what he was up to during his search for the northwest passage. But some unofficial records such on charts made at the time suggest he got a lot further than most official records would show. Also about a month was missing from the record during his travels when comparing the distances he could cover during a set period of time. Some of the descriptions of the cold weather suggest he was a lot further north than the latitude would suggest. It is believed that he took off 10 degrees of latitude to hide their actual position. Unfortunately it is thought all the secret records were lost during the English civil war or the great fire of London. I would love to know if he did discover the northwest passage.
@cattymajiv
@cattymajiv 7 ай бұрын
🤣😂🤣😂🤣 Nobody could have discovered it back then. It was frozen solid year round for centuries to come. If anyone could have gotten into the edges of northern Canada, from the east or the west, those white men would not be able to distinguish the water from the ice or the land. It was all 1 frozen solid block. Even now only modern double steel hulled icebreakers can get through for almost all of every summer, because there are still areas that are periodically frozen up in summer. The melting is proceeding, but slowly, so it hasn't changed all that much up there. Nuclear icebreakers are still preferred, because it would otherwise take too much time and fuel.
@bieituns
@bieituns 7 ай бұрын
@@cattymajiv you are talking out your arse. The northwest passage was discovered in the mid 1800s officially. And I am an officer in the merchant navy and a guy I worked with showed me the pictures of him traveling through the northwest passage and it wasn't an ice breaker
@Ampdrive411
@Ampdrive411 6 ай бұрын
The book does'nt claim that Drake found the northwest passage.It does claim Drake was looking for it in the area of the alaskan panhandle.If true,he was in the area almost 200 years earlier than the next european explorers.A facinating read indeed. @@bieituns
@NarlyLyfe
@NarlyLyfe 6 ай бұрын
Thanks for this gem, have already listened to it like 5 times while I'm at work.
@MariaVictoriaGarciaAzuero
@MariaVictoriaGarciaAzuero 6 ай бұрын
Panamá “Drake… Drake stayed for two weeks and ransomed the town but on hearing no answer he ordered the town destroyed and so it was set ablaze. All of the ships in the harbour (consisting of frigates, barks, and galliots) were thoroughly pillaged, after which they were all destroyed or burnt. Although no money was found in the town, a watchtower on the summit of a nearby hill was discovered which contained a chest of silver along with two bars of gold, some pearls, and other valuables.[12]… We were undefeated. Again.
@Charles-oo8bq
@Charles-oo8bq 5 ай бұрын
Thank you brother. The imagery of the olde ships interior were beautiful. Blessings from Bavaria
@joedredd1168
@joedredd1168 7 ай бұрын
Here is glorious Devon, we know this man well, hail Sir Francis Drake! The Dragon of the Waves.
@Crecganford
@Crecganford 7 ай бұрын
Thoroughly enjoyed that!
@DanDavisHistory
@DanDavisHistory 7 ай бұрын
Glad to hear it bro, thanks very much for watching.
@thefisherking78
@thefisherking78 7 ай бұрын
Been too long but what an opus! Absolutely worth the wait 😁
@DanDavisHistory
@DanDavisHistory 7 ай бұрын
Thank you so much! Yes it took a while to make that's for sure.
@thefisherking78
@thefisherking78 7 ай бұрын
@@DanDavisHistory I've been fascinated by characters like Drake ever since playing Sid Meier's Pirates as a young kid. That age was full of complicated characters with a mix of motives and interests, with strong ethical codes despite being killers and thieves.. ahh, love it.
@DanDavisHistory
@DanDavisHistory 7 ай бұрын
I loved that game too. Absolutely loved it.
@thefisherking78
@thefisherking78 7 ай бұрын
@@DanDavisHistoryI should have known!...they don't make em like they used to 😭
@jackholloway1
@jackholloway1 7 ай бұрын
I'll never circumnavigate the globe while meeting interesting new people and dabbing on the Spaniards to the point they still seethe centuries on Why live?
@alexdunphy3716
@alexdunphy3716 6 ай бұрын
Not with that attitude you won't!
@elvenkind6072
@elvenkind6072 7 ай бұрын
I'm only halfway into this, but just had to take a pause to say how much I loved this story telling, and the feeling of adventure it gives me. I have to commend you for the beautiful illustrations, pictures, video, music and well spoken storytelling. Have you perhaps thought about writing non-fiction books, after having studied it to the depths? I would certainly not mind reading it, or rather listening to audio-books of it, preferably with you yourself as the narrator of it. Great job Mr. Davis, looking forward to more, so changing the subscription to get notified for every new one.
@EpicHistoryoftime
@EpicHistoryoftime 7 ай бұрын
I've been waiting for my favorite late night relax and learn podcast for too long now!!!
@shantiescovedo4361
@shantiescovedo4361 6 ай бұрын
It is astonishing that this video has so few likes. I have read books about Drake and this video is so much more fun and the density of information means I often have to rewind to watch a part again.
@user-gk3jk2wr4u
@user-gk3jk2wr4u 7 ай бұрын
He is one if my heroes what a leader and adventurer
@smithwesson7765
@smithwesson7765 5 ай бұрын
Drake was my childhood hero. He was one of the greatest sailors in history.
@DFranco23
@DFranco23 5 ай бұрын
Slave trader
@celtibero599
@celtibero599 4 ай бұрын
In Spain is consider no more than pirate and a plunderer who was made an admiral
@rossrreyes
@rossrreyes 3 ай бұрын
Great Sailor and greatest Pirate in history
@NTL578
@NTL578 2 ай бұрын
​@@celtibero599Where did Spain get all of the treasure to plunder?
@celtibero599
@celtibero599 2 ай бұрын
@@NTL578 In a very similar way that all the nobles of the time exploited their servants for their personal benefit and enrichment, but with some small differences, such as that these "nobles" in America did not have lands nor were their titles eternal, but rather these they changed possession every few generations, although it also depended on the time period. It is also a very complex teme, I recomend you to investigate deeper about it, not only English sources, but also Spanish ones. No one can know about truce if only reeds about one side of the story.
@jjuniper274
@jjuniper274 7 ай бұрын
As a distant relative of Drake, this is very cool to watch. Thank you.
@MailSivad
@MailSivad 7 ай бұрын
Such a great video. Did the old boy proud. Well done.
@DanDavisHistory
@DanDavisHistory 7 ай бұрын
Thank you very much.
@liezldldb
@liezldldb 7 ай бұрын
Yeh, I have been waiting for new share! Quality as alsways! Baie dankie, meneer Davis
@douglasparker577
@douglasparker577 4 ай бұрын
Excellent work. Thank you very much. Sir Francis Drake = England's greatest hero.
@juanmorales5133
@juanmorales5133 Ай бұрын
hero???? PIRATE and defeaed by the spanish empire at panama, and the english armada in spain 1589. less fake english propaganda and lies
@Boatperson
@Boatperson 7 ай бұрын
That was fascinating! What a dude!! Amazing life…….so many movies there!
@gordisbella719
@gordisbella719 6 ай бұрын
Great Documentary, I see Drake in a whole new way. Thank you I enjoyed this !!!
@ML69898
@ML69898 7 ай бұрын
A timeless video. I know I will come back to this one many times in the future and ponder on Drakes deeds and adventures. Keep doing what you are doing. Your storytelling and narrative skills are top notch. Your channel may not be the behemoth that other channels are but you can get there with this kind of content. Grounded, detailed history is the best!
@roberttreborable
@roberttreborable 7 ай бұрын
I know I'll also be coming back to this video.
@leemurphybrazil1258
@leemurphybrazil1258 2 ай бұрын
Well done! Drake would have been proud of this biography.
@janvanhoyk8375
@janvanhoyk8375 7 ай бұрын
definitely the most fascinating one of these more historical stories you have yet told.
@baarbacoa
@baarbacoa 6 ай бұрын
A masterpiece
@gustavwestergren5410
@gustavwestergren5410 7 ай бұрын
Always waiting for Dans latest video. This channel is such a gem. Good work and keep it up!
@DanDavisHistory
@DanDavisHistory 7 ай бұрын
Thank you so much. I will do my best.
@markhughes7927
@markhughes7927 4 ай бұрын
1:29:09 Have recognised his spirit abroad as recently as the 1990s - and worth remembering concerning ‘the other one’ that in 2005 (200 years after) marine traffic passing Portsmouth some 200 - 300 ships from all nations stopped - faced inwards to the port and saluted with every siren they had got at an appointed hour!
@mikef.1000
@mikef.1000 7 ай бұрын
What a fascinating story. It strikes me that Drake was a lot like Captain James Cook in his attitudes towards native peoples. Both enlightened men for their times.
@vonartal381
@vonartal381 7 ай бұрын
You should read the reports of spanish authorities in the Américas, ando read the thing Drake did on his expedition
@roberttreborable
@roberttreborable 7 ай бұрын
@@vonartal381 How did the SPANISH treat the native people of the Americas ?
@cattymajiv
@cattymajiv 7 ай бұрын
It's possible both stories have been spun. There's no way of knowing I guess, unless someone does an investigation of the original sources.
@sTraYa249
@sTraYa249 7 ай бұрын
@@vonartal381 ahhh the hard done by Spanish, eh!? 😆😅
@vatsal7640
@vatsal7640 7 ай бұрын
​​@@vonartal381well ,drake was fighting the Spanish wasn't he?
@yorkshireaquatics9537
@yorkshireaquatics9537 7 ай бұрын
An hour and a half of awesomeness! I can't wait 😊. Thank you for your top notch content Dan 🎉
@DanDavisHistory
@DanDavisHistory 7 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@MotDoiAnLac258
@MotDoiAnLac258 6 ай бұрын
Many thanks for sharing.
@MrTomFlan
@MrTomFlan 7 ай бұрын
Truly awesome Dan! I knew drake was an extraordinary character but I didn’t know half of this.
@TamaraJohnBlue
@TamaraJohnBlue 7 ай бұрын
Holy cow. Ytube safe* Dan. That was magnificent. Well done Sir. I really appreciate your work and enjoyed this immensely. Thank you.
@subtropicalken1362
@subtropicalken1362 7 ай бұрын
As a sailor, a fan of naval history (Patrick O’brian, et al.) and museums, I loved this video. Thank you. I hope Drake’s statue is still standing. 🙄
@DanDavisHistory
@DanDavisHistory 7 ай бұрын
Thank you very much. I love Patrick O'Brian too.
@PaulFisher-uj9vb
@PaulFisher-uj9vb 7 ай бұрын
The Drake statue is still there in Tavistock on a roundabout ,the postal address is 1 drake villas pl19 8da.
@subtropicalken1362
@subtropicalken1362 7 ай бұрын
@@PaulFisher-uj9vbcool. Glad to hear the woke madness hasn’t land there yet.
@hotstepper887
@hotstepper887 7 ай бұрын
@@subtropicalken1362 Oh, but it has, and to such an extent, it is the end of this country. This country, the UK, is finished, and will never be back. Today we have a society who all watched our own PM, (Johnston, the elitist, paid off Washington puppet), betray all of us, our own country, and our own grandparents, standing in Ukraine, and just outright lying, (like the most uneducated, clueless, excuse for a PM, any of us have ever seen, heard, or experienced before)! And not only that, no, but then lifting Zelenskiy's hand in the air, (while shouting out) "Slava Ukraini" - the official slogan of Stepan Bandera's OUN (order of Ukraine) that was made up from Ukrainian bourgeois nationalists, Banderites, and Nazi henchmen. Just how treacherous was that? It was 100%, outright treachery, against everything we've all been brought up believing in! Only 25-30 years ago, he'd of been removed for that. Yet unbelievably, we saw people in this country waving their really pathetic embarrassing Ukrainian flags, agreeing with him, even joining in, shouting out "Slava Ukraini"! Honestly, just how sick is that. I mean, really, are you kidding me? Just what kind of people are my fellow countrymen today? I don't recognise any of these people, they've clearly become just as uneducated as the Americas themselves. How embarrassing is that! I actually have become so disheartened that I really do want to see this country, my own country, completely annihilated today. And it has to be said, man, ain't they all making sure this happens? Best of luck with that.... I'm lucky, I have another home, and a long way away, and a yacht that I'm planning to sit in, (at a safe distance), beer in hand, watching this Island burn. Wipe this urban jungle of the worst excuses for British people, we've ever seen, or ever experienced before, from the face of this earth, and do the rest of the world a massive favour. It was members of the OUN, that took the most active part in the mass murder in Ukraine and Poland during October 1942, murdering millions of innocent people. They cheer for that? As, today, it just seems that none of these people know anything about any of this history, or know any of these facts, let alone understand just how treacherous that really was! Our own PM, knowingly, and purposely, betrayed our own grandparents, (many who fought and gave their lives defeating Nazism)! While our own PM, (and only on behalf of the criminal USA), raises a Nazi supporter's hand in the air, while shouting out "Slava Ukraini"? And nobody in this country said a word about it? Absolutely hilarious, man!! You really can kiss this country goodbye. These people we see supporting Ukraine, are only traitors (against every one of us, and our own country). Only, again, much too uneducated to ever understand why. And truth be told, it's actually more disturbing, that we could see anyone in this country, thinking that Russia have acted in any way, other than 100% the right way, 100% the ethical way, and a 100% the moral way, in absolutely everything they've done? Yet these people all claim Russia invaded Ukraine, and Russia are wrong? It's nothing but outright, in your face, Idiocy! It is not, and it has never been, a "Russian invasion of Ukraine". Seriously, only a propaganda believing sucker, and complete fool could think it was!. Obviously, we do hear that from our own lying government of paid off Washington puppets, yet they all obviously know very well, that it wasn't, and isn't, a Russian invasion of Ukraine. Yet barely any of these excises for Brits do! Many of them don't even know what we've all really seen happen in Ukraine, (since the illegal US coup of Ukraine in 2014). Many of them don't even know that it was the USA that caused the coup in Ukraine! And again, many of them have no idea, that the "illegal" Ukrainian government's, army, with their neo-Na*i (NATO trained thugs), have non-stop been trying to murder and wipe out all those innocent Eastern Ukrainians, for the last 9 years! And why? Because those former Eastern Ukrainians, speak Russian, and they didn't agree with the illegal coup committed against their legally elected government. So, the truth, and the undeniable reality is, they're supporting Ukraine trying to murder all those innocent former eastern Ukrainian people, and regardless if they think so or not, that is exactly what they're supporting. We then saw, on 14th May 2014, those Eastern Ukrainians hold a referendum on whether they should claim independence from Ukraine, (who only want to slaughter them all). And they then overwhelmingly voted to claim their own independence from Ukraine, (seeing the creation of both) the Donetsk People's Republic, and the Luhansk People's Republic. Then, in February 2022, both the Donetsk People's Republic, and the Luhansk People's Republic, saw Ukraine building up a military force of over 200,000 troops (with Nazi battalions included) on their borders, (who were well dug in, and heavily armed with modern western weapons targetting them). Ukraine were about to carry out a pre-planned full-frontal military assault against all those innocent people in Eastern Ukraine, to wipe them all out. Then both the Donetsk People's Republic, and the Luhansk People's Republic (REQUESTED) Russian military protection from Ukraine, and (REQUESTED) Russian military assistance against Ukraine's illegal government's army and their Nazi murdering thugs. -- To which Russia (QUITE RIGHTLY) agreed, while also recognising their own independence from Ukraine. Nobody has ever attempted to claim an invited, and requested military intervention into a country to protect innocent people from slaughter, as a military invasion by anyone, NOT EVER! Are these people we really are suffering from here, really this uneducated? We then saw, during 23-27 September 2022, the Donetsk People's Republic, and the Luhansk People's Republic, hold a referendum whether to join Russia, or to remain part of Ukraine, (who only want to slaughter them all). They then, again, overwhelmingly voted to join the Russian Federation, and were elated to finally do so. Yet people here believe the western narrative, who wrongly claim Russia invaded Ukraine? It's just complete and utter ignorance Putin made it very clear what Russia's aim was in Ukraine (before they entered), and honestly, he could not have made it any clearer, than he did. He told us all, very clearly, the aim for Russia was to protect those Eastern Ukrainian people (who have been subjected to bullying, torture, murder, and attempted genocide against them by the Kiev regime for the last eight years) - ABOUT TIME TOO, IS THE TRUTH!! For Russia to achieve that, they planned to carry out a full "demilitarization and denazification" of Ukraine, to bring to justice, all war criminals responsible for the bloody war crimes against civilians in Donbass. GOOD is the truth, well done Russia is the correct response! Because no matter where anyone's loyalty may lie?, we, the people, never support wrong, over right, but should always be willing to stand up and fight for right, over wrong! These people must unbelievably, think, that Russia protecting all those innocent people (at their own request), is a Russian invasion of Ukraine, and the wrong thing for Russia to do? So, they must have expected Russia to just ignore all those innocent eastern Ukrainian people's request for help and protection from Ukraine? And then just watch Ukraine murder them all? Think about it, that is exactly what they must have expected to see? And that, really is, only a Nazi mindset.
@hotstepper887
@hotstepper887 7 ай бұрын
Why has nobody ever asked why this government is even involved in Ukraine in any capacity at all? It's claimed that this is all about Ukraine wanting to join the EU, right? Well, apparently we left the EU?, so why are we giving Ukraine a couple of billion £'s and all those weapons to help them join the EU, that we left? HOW BACKWARD IS THIS? Why? Two reasons... 1) The US demands we do this. They're certainly not doing this for a single one of us, that's for sure. This so-called propaganda against Russia and Putin, is only a remedial standard of propaganda that's all so backward in its entire context, that it shouldn't fool even the least educated members of our society!! Only looking around?, it's fooled so many? Get educated!! 2) Because this government never wanted to leave the EU, that's why, and that's because the EU is where many of their ill-gotten gains (they fill all their offshore accounts with) come from. What was the going rate to bribe an unelected British MEP for our powerful vote on various issues, like which of the poorer EU countries will receive extra financial support from the EU over the next coming financial year? A couple of million £'s, maybe? We reelected that same "remain" government, to lead us out of the EU, (while we all knew they never wanted to leave)? How insane was that? Honestly, the people in this country today, are, without question, easily the least educated society we've ever experienced before. Also, who were the two main countries that we were going to need good trading relations with, if we were going to succeed after leaving the EU? Both Russia and China, of course, you know, those same two countries this government has non-stop been demonising while destroying any chance of ever having any kind of relations with, ever! That makes such great sense, right? I can hear it already?..... "We have decided, for our own security, to rejoin the EU. We must all understand, that in these dangerous times, we're stronger together" (as they pack up, and send off another shipment of weapons to Ukraine) How long till we hear that?
@kimberlyperrotis8962
@kimberlyperrotis8962 6 ай бұрын
I live in the California County, Marin, where Drake landed on the coast. Many things are named Sir Francis Drake here, or just Drake, from highways to beaches to schools. It’s a distant, but cool, connection to the Mother country, from which most of my maternal ancestors came.
@raypurchase801
@raypurchase801 5 ай бұрын
FUN FACT: Francis himself had no offspring, but the descendants of his siblings live in Devon to this day. My grandmother's maiden name was Drake. My mum's line is supposedly descended from his younger brother, Edmund. The Drakes used to have a big import/export business. My mum was excited to read a newspaper story about a senior Devonshire policeman's daring activities in the 1970s. No big deal - we're ALL related if you go back far enough. Errol Flynn's "The Sea Hawk" was originally intended to be Drake's story, but the REAL story didn't fit a movie so a completely fictitious character was invented.
@xavisanchez7522
@xavisanchez7522 Ай бұрын
Francis drake is an alias, to hide his real name, just like with columbus, cabot,and so on Francis drake( francesc darragona i gurmea), columbus( joan colom i bertran) , escept cabot( sebastià/joan cabot) but all are Catalan Native speakers, against the imposition of the king of the spanish monarchy ( creation of castilian language)
@MK-wt2sp
@MK-wt2sp 2 ай бұрын
Who's here from 2073
@jakebean8855
@jakebean8855 18 күн бұрын
Holla!!!!
@JZsBFF
@JZsBFF 6 күн бұрын
Your profile says that you're here from 2018.
@gunslinger626
@gunslinger626 7 ай бұрын
Been waiting for this!!!
@lawrieflowers8314
@lawrieflowers8314 7 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for this - what a splendid and stirring story!
@miketackabery7521
@miketackabery7521 7 ай бұрын
This was an excellent video. Thank you for your hard work on it. Subscribed.
@mikemccartneyable
@mikemccartneyable 7 ай бұрын
This story and production was absolutely phenomenal. Well done!
@Joecard71
@Joecard71 7 ай бұрын
I listened and waited for the word Tavistock, then I listened more. Good job enjoyed
@CruiserBruiser
@CruiserBruiser 7 ай бұрын
I, Nathan Drake, am incredibly proud of you that you made this video about my great great great grandfather Sir Francis Drake.
@jorgeo4483
@jorgeo4483 6 ай бұрын
So you have Spanish cousins, since your great-great-grandfather left descendants in the Caribbean after another of his defeats with Spain, who emigrated to Cuba and became rich with sugar thanks to Charles III of Spain, later granting them a title of nobility in Madrid. In fact you are related to the family of a friend of mine "de la Cerda" Grandees of Spain. That helped in part to clean up your family's past of piracy an slavery.
@philiptownsend4026
@philiptownsend4026 6 ай бұрын
I thought this documentary said Drake had no children? If so then how could he have descendants?
@dje3.16
@dje3.16 6 ай бұрын
@@philiptownsend4026You really don’t have a sense of humor
@jorgeo4483
@jorgeo4483 6 ай бұрын
@@philiptownsend4026 Well, it's easy, most of what this documentary tells is a lie, it is amateurish and politically interested, and what I answer to this commentator is true, it can be verified and Drake is a surname known today in Spain since it is related to several families, in addition to the oldest and noblest in Spain. In those times it was not enough to be someone's son, you had to be recognized by your father and a pirate who left some bastard abandoned in the Caribbean is not surprising, his surname was recognized by Spain. Furthermore, the one who claims to be a descendant of the pirate ignores that the pirate is not the only Drake who was born in the UK.
@benjamindejonge3624
@benjamindejonge3624 5 ай бұрын
I would be personalbe ashamed with this name
@CaucAsianSasquatch
@CaucAsianSasquatch 7 ай бұрын
Thank you, you do some of the best work on KZfaq.
@DanDavisHistory
@DanDavisHistory 7 ай бұрын
Thank you very much indeed.
@workingfortheirfuture
@workingfortheirfuture 7 ай бұрын
Been anticipating something soon(!).... Great timing! Love seeing new vids of yours in my notifications. Cheers! And thank you, Dan!
@markwhitbread7383
@markwhitbread7383 6 ай бұрын
Well done Dan. Another great documentary from you. Objective, informative and entertaining. What more could we ask for?
@ws175
@ws175 7 ай бұрын
Dan, this was another really great and fascinating video. Thank you !
@rumbaughsteven5577
@rumbaughsteven5577 7 ай бұрын
I grew up in ranchland of western Nebraska, about as different from Drake’s life as possible. But when I was little, my older brother built a model Golden Hind that fascinated me and began a lifelong devotion to Sir Francis Drake.
@bradrowleyaz
@bradrowleyaz 5 ай бұрын
I built one of those too! Around 1971 I think.
@hetty43
@hetty43 4 ай бұрын
I recall learning about Sir Francis Drake at primary school in Northern Ireland. A true hero. In later life I got to spend some time in Panama with work. I recall those long flights approx 12 hours from Paris to Panama City. What an amazing journey to do in a sailing boat. The flight was long enough never mind sailing for months. I don’t think we give enough credit to the sailors and explorers of old. I recall seeing some of these old Spanish fortifications on the Caribbean side of Panama. I guess the dude near the entrance to canal called Colon. Some of those old forts are in a poor state nowadays. Also in Panama there was reference to black beard attacking the city and the capital moved to pacific side of Panama. I saw a bit of the jungle and those lakes and rivers and I found it very scary particularly the sounds from the jungle at night. How brave were those English men / Devon men to venture in to such an environment. I was truly touched hearing this account. Given my experience of learning of sir Francis drake at school and my later travel existences in adult life. Thanks.
@luissalazar6960
@luissalazar6960 4 ай бұрын
Drake was a pirate. It is amazing how British people glorify a pirate.
@hetty43
@hetty43 4 ай бұрын
@@luissalazar6960 not English.
@luissalazar6960
@luissalazar6960 4 ай бұрын
@@hetty43 Thanks
@HendrixTaylor24
@HendrixTaylor24 6 ай бұрын
This was utterly fantastic. Thank you.
@sof5858
@sof5858 5 ай бұрын
Great video Dan. I will be going through the rest.
@Aspasia2929
@Aspasia2929 7 ай бұрын
The coast north of San Francisco where Drake landed is BEAUTIFUL but it’s also is one of the deadliest beaches in the country. We vacationed there when our sons were seven and four. It wasn’t a beach day but the boys wanted to see the seals. As soon as we pulled in the parking lot a large sign read DANGER in large red letters on the top. Below it read This is the Most Dangerous Beach in California; it then explains very clearly why and how to keep safe. I wanted to leave but I was voted down. The exact same sign was at the top of the stairs: another was halfway down: a third was at the bottom and still others were on the beach. What’s crazy is I couldn’t see any waves, but a ranger explained it’s the undertow that can pick you and suck you in… even if you only have your toes in the water. Even if you’re just standing too close to the surf a wave can pull you in. A lot of people drown there every year because they clearly aren’t taking the NUMEROUS warnings seriously. I kept my boys 50 FEET from the shoreline and it was the most stressed out I’ve ever felt at the beach. No warning signs for Drake and co… I wonder if anyone nearly drowned?
@DanDavisHistory
@DanDavisHistory 7 ай бұрын
I had no idea it was so dangerous there! But I very much doubt any of the sailors would have wanted to swim. Most of them probably couldn't even swim in the first place. The first hand accounts of the voyage don't mention dangerous waters in the bay, mostly they just talk about the local people and how the land was like England.
@duaneaikins4621
@duaneaikins4621 7 ай бұрын
It’s not dangerous when there are no waves. But the water is cold and super sharky. There is some current, and the rip currents get bad when the waves are bigger. The rangers don’t want people in the water because there are no lifeguards and people underestimate how cold the water is. Undertow isn’t some sneaky thing. It is a rip current. All the water that gets pushed up on the beach by a wave has to go back to sea while more water is getting pushed up on the beach. That causes a channel of water headed out to sea. They are pretty easy to spot. If there are no waves, then they do not exist.
@duaneaikins4621
@duaneaikins4621 7 ай бұрын
@@DanDavisHistoryLike any beach, it’s only dangerous when the swell is up. When it’s calm, they could have paddled right up to the beach.
@sTraYa249
@sTraYa249 7 ай бұрын
@@duaneaikins4621 ahhh, & so kids & families, the weary traveller all have this knowledge I s'pose?! The signs are there for a reason. Good for you though, that perhaps you're a local....not all are & those warnings are of absolute importance
@kevinstreet5709
@kevinstreet5709 7 ай бұрын
Brilliant, thank you
@hilding2063
@hilding2063 7 ай бұрын
What an unreal man from a today's perspective. Unbelievable his daring. I enjoyed your story telling very much.
@cortain330
@cortain330 7 ай бұрын
Great video as always Dan, thank you for bringing into light the exploits of this absolute chad, and making spaniards seethe.
@fideliselan
@fideliselan 7 ай бұрын
I love your work and seeing new video drop is always a joy. Thank you for your talent and the hard work that is required to create your art.
@cherylbrooks7005
@cherylbrooks7005 7 ай бұрын
❤ I wait eagerly for your videos! Thanks!
@craig2129
@craig2129 7 ай бұрын
This is a masterpiece that is better than anything on television. Thank you.
@Ed_Stuckey
@Ed_Stuckey 7 ай бұрын
Fascinating. So much more than I learned about him in school some sixty-five years ago.
@OnwardsUpwards
@OnwardsUpwards 4 ай бұрын
The highest peak on Vancouver Island in British Columbia, is called The Golden Hinde, as he may have reached as far north as the island. It's a week-long hike and a goal of mine to hike it one day.
@laara1426
@laara1426 6 ай бұрын
Excellent presentation on the life of the great Sir Francis Drake !
@CocoaBeachLiving
@CocoaBeachLiving 7 ай бұрын
Fantastic presentation. I've learned facts about Drake's life I had never heard before. 👍
@iforbach4003
@iforbach4003 7 ай бұрын
Absolutely outstanding.
@bitesizeforaging6983
@bitesizeforaging6983 4 ай бұрын
This is fascinating, it takes real skill to make a documentary like this. Brilliant narration. Thanks.
@trailerparkwerewolf910
@trailerparkwerewolf910 7 ай бұрын
The tale of Drake calls an ancestral whirlwind of pride to my blood. He should be as revered as the founding fathers for Americans
@cattymajiv
@cattymajiv 7 ай бұрын
If I had founded that disaster of a country I would deny it.
@sTraYa249
@sTraYa249 7 ай бұрын
@@cattymajiv America?
@adambane1719
@adambane1719 7 ай бұрын
he and his family were actually Irish, the O Drake's.
@biggusdickus9148
@biggusdickus9148 7 ай бұрын
​@@cattymajivtell me your insane without telling me your insane
@rweezy6246
@rweezy6246 7 ай бұрын
​@@cattymajivsays the Hindi from the dirtiest smelliest place on earth
@SolarFrost
@SolarFrost 7 ай бұрын
Amazing inspiring man
@maverick4037
@maverick4037 7 ай бұрын
Another excellent video, very informative and entreating.
@machinegunsally1874
@machinegunsally1874 4 ай бұрын
Drake was my distant uncle on my grandfather’s side. This fact was passed down by mouth, so i am not sure about the accuracy. I was surprised about how kind Drake was to the natives, and how deeply kind he was to his men. A truly honest and great man. Thank you for this video on Drake.
@melissavancleave8686
@melissavancleave8686 7 ай бұрын
So enjoy your videos. THank you.
@MorrisonLee-wt2jp
@MorrisonLee-wt2jp 7 ай бұрын
Thanks Dan. Great story telling and easy-listening commentary. Always on point and moving forward and the editing always relevant and illustrative. Hats off to you man. Wonderfully educational. I had no idea of his sterling character. (A child of the manse.) Many thanks. Australia
@CZPanthyr
@CZPanthyr 6 ай бұрын
I was born and raised in Panama. There, he was not a hero, but a very feared person. Maybe doing a video about him from the perspective of Panama would be interesting.
@xavisanchez7522
@xavisanchez7522 Ай бұрын
For who? Panama s natives must be also fear all english and spanish, since none were in their native land
@artawhirler
@artawhirler 5 ай бұрын
Brilliant documentary! Thanks!
@peterpiper_203
@peterpiper_203 4 ай бұрын
That was Awesome Thanks so much for bringing us along Felt like I was kid in school reading about these captains of the seas
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