Hugh Willoughby

Sir Hugh Willoughby (died 1554) was an English soldier and an early Arctic voyager. He served in the court of Henry VIII and fought in the Scottish campaign where he was knighted for his valour. In 1553 he was selected by a company of London merchants to lead a fleet of three vessels in search of a northeast route to the Far East. Willoughby and the crews of two ships died on the voyage while the third vessel went on to open a successful and long-lasting trading arrangement with Russia.

Sir Hugh Willoughby
Portrait of Willoughby created posthumously in 17th century.
Died1554
NationalityEnglish

Biography

Willoughby was the third and youngest son of Sir Henry Willoughby of Middleton, Derbyshire, a wealthy and influential gentleman who served in the courts of Richard III and Henry VII and was knighted by Henry VII following the Battle of Stoke Field in 1487.[1]

Hugh Willoughby served various roles in the court of Henry VIII[2] and then joined the military to serve as a captain in the Scottish campaign of 1544. He was knighted at Leith by Edward Seymour, then Earl of Hertford. In 1548 he became commander of Thirlestane Castle and served there until 1550, successfully withstanding a siege by the Scots and the French.[3] In 1551 he was again campaigning in the border country and eastern marches. The downfall and execution of Somerset in 1552 affected Willoughby's standing and caused him to look for other opportunities.[4][5]

In 1553 a company of London merchants and courtiers were financing a voyage of exploration and trade. Organized by Sebastian Cabot, they hoped to find a northeast sea route to the Far East. Initially called the Company of Merchant Adventurers to New Lands, the trade organization became better known as the Muscovy Company. Willoughby petitioned to lead this expedition and although he lacked significant maritime experience, he was selected based on his distinguished family and his "singular skill in the services of war."[2]

Three new vessels were constructed specifically for the voyage; on one ship the keel was lined with lead in hopes of preventing attack by shipworms. The fleet was well-provisioned for a lengthy voyage and an experienced crew was selected. On 10 May 1553, Willoughby set sail on the Bona Esperanza as captain-general of the fleet with two other vessels, the Edward Bonaventura and the Bona Confidentia, under his command. His chief pilot, Richard Chancellor, sailed on the Edward, captained by Stephen Borough. They left London with great fanfare and travelled slowly down the Thames, pausing at Greenwich to fire an artillery salute for the young King Edward.[3]

They were seriously delayed by unfavourable winds, only reaching the coast of Norway on July 14, more than two months after leaving London. The ships were careful to stay together and agreed that if they were separated, they would rendezvous at Wardhouse, a small fortified outpost on Norwegian island of Vardø. On July 30, they were beset by storms and "terrible whirlwinds" probably in the vicinity of the North Cape. Willoughby and one other ship, the Bona Confidentia, became separated from Chancellor on the Edward. The Edward sailed to Wardhouse as agreed and waited for seven days but the other two ships never appeared. Setting out again to resume their eastward journey, Chancellor found the entrance to the White Sea and moored at the mouth of the Dvina River near the convent of St. Nicholas. From there he was summoned to Moscow and Ivan the Terrible's Court, where he negotiated an agreement opening trade with Russia through the northern ports that lasted three hundred years.[2][3]

Willoughby and his crew were never seen alive again but the events following their separation can be pieced together from Willoughby's journal which was later recovered. The storm had blown them far from the coast and without any landmarks they became disoriented. Willoughby attempted to reach Wardhouse but their maps were misleading, compass readings were unreliable, and the weather was too overcast to measure latitude. For two weeks the ships sailed eastward until they encountered an uninhabited shoreline that was teeming with ducks and other birds. It was likely a part of the south island of Novaya Zemlya which came to be known to the Russians as Gusinaya Zemlya (Goose Land).[3] They turned back and headed west, coasting along Kolguev Island and just missing the entrance to the White Sea where Chancellor had already landed. As the weather became colder and sea ice began to form they decided to winter in a bay formed by the Varzina River on the coast of the Kola Peninsula. Searches were made in three directions but no settlements were discovered.[2]

No one survived the winter; the two ships with the bodies of the crews, including Willoughby and his journal, were found by Russian fishermen the following spring. For many years it was assumed that they died from some combination of starvation and bitter cold. More recently it has been suggested that the crew may have been killed by carbon monoxide poisoning, resulting from a decision to insulate their ship and block their stove chimney to fight the Arctic cold.[6]

The discovery was quickly reported back to the tsar in Moscow who ordered the ships secured and transferred to the White Sea to await recovery by the English. It was not until 1556 that crews were sent to Russia to sail the ships back to London. It was claimed that Willoughby's body was put on board for transport home. After leaving St. Nicholas on July 20. 1556, the two ships made it as far as the west coast of Norway when they encountered a storm that sank them both. Willoughby's journal did make it back to England safely on another ship.[2]

During the voyage, Willoughby thought he saw islands to the north. Based on his description, these were subsequently depicted on maps as Willoughby's Land and Macsinof or Matsyn Island.[7]

See also

Notes

  1. Payling, 2004
  2. Evans 2014
  3. Mayers, 2005
  4. Laughton, 1900
  5. McDermott, 2004
  6. Gordon, 1986
  7. Hacquebord, 1995

References

  • Evans, James (2014). Tudor Adventurers: An Arctic Voyage of Discovery. New York: Pegasus Books.
  • Gordon, Eleanora C. (1986). "The Fate of Sir Hugh Willoughby and His Companions: A New Conjecture". The Geographical Journal. 152 (2): 243–247. doi:10.2307/634766. JSTOR 634766.
  • Hacquebord, Louwrens (1995). "In Search of Het Behouden Huys: A Survey of the Remains of the House of Willem Barentsz on Novaya Zemlya" (PDF). Arctic. 48 (3): 250. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.505.5702. doi:10.14430/arctic1246. Retrieved 8 March 2009.
  • Hamel, J. (1854). England and Russia. Translated by Leigh, John Studdy. London: Richard Bentley.
  • Laughton, John Knox (1900). "Willoughby, Hugh" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. 62. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  • Mayers, Kit (2005). North-East Passage to Muscovy. Sutton Publishing.
  • McDermott, James (2004). "Willoughby, Sir Hugh". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. 1. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/29599.
  • Payling, S. J. (2004). "Willoughby family". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/52802.
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