Travels Through A Lens

By SnapshotSam

The Matthew

Spent the day exploring Bristol with friends who live nearby. To think that explorers set sail in these types of vessels not knowing what they were going to find and whether they would actually make it back home again!

Extract from wiki

The Matthew was a caravel sailed by John Cabot in 1497 from Bristol to North America, presumably Newfoundland. After a voyage which had got no further than Iceland, Cabot left again with only one vessel, the Matthew, a small ship (50 tons), but fast and able. The crew consisted of only 18 people. The Matthew departed either 2 May or 20 May 1497. She sailed to Dursey Head (latitude 51°36N), Ireland, from where she sailed due west, expecting to reach Asia. However, landfall was reached in North America on 24 June 1497. His precise landing-place is a matter of much controversy, with Cape Bonavista or St. John's in Newfoundland the most likely sites.

Cabot went ashore to take possession of the land, and explored the coast for some time, probably departing on 20 July. On the homeward voyage his sailors incorrectly thought they were going too far north, so Cabot sailed a more southerly course, reaching Brittany instead of England. On 6 August he arrived back in Bristol.


This is a replica which retraced the voyage 500 years later.

Posted on 12 August and apologies for lack of commenting, which I'll be catching up on soon.

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