New light on first English-led voyage to America

LONDON,  (Reuters) – A university lecturer has  uncovered a letter written by Henry VII which he believes  suggests the first English-led expedition to reach America  arrived three years earlier than thought.

The letter caught the attention of Dr Evan Jones, a history  lecturer at the University of Bristol, the city where Hugh Eliot  was a farmer when he undertook his 1502 voyage to America —  usually regarded as the first led by an Englishman.

Jones believes one William Weston, a merchant and mariner  from Bristol, holds that honour and that he landed in 1499, just  seven years after Christopher Columbus.

Henry’s letter called for the Lord Chancellor to withhold an  injunction against Weston, who had failed to pay his rent and  was facing repossession of his house, because “he will shortly  with God’s grace, pass and sail for to search and find if he can  the new found land.”  Jones said: “It seems Weston sailed north, perhaps to get  round this great rock that was in the way of his passage to  China.”
That rock was North America.

Jones tracked down the letter at the National Archives. He  had been spurred on his quest for details about Weston after the  death in 2005 of researcher Alwyn Ruddock, who for 40 years  studied early English voyages but whose will ordered all her  notes to be burned.

Her findings were never published but she was known to have  been aware of Weston’s voyage and to have believed he was the  first to America, although she had not seen Henry’s letter.   “It’s now become pretty clear that Weston did sail,” said  Jones. “Finding this letter only corroborates her claim about  him.”