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How Britain gained an empire - geographical summaryMigration between Britain and the Americas

Competition with Spain and France for land and trade gave Britain the motivation to build an enormous navy that seized new lands and protected Britain鈥檚 global business interests.

Part of HistoryBritain: migration, empires and the people c790 to the present day

Summary of migration between Britain and the Americas

Image gallerySkip image gallerySlide 1 of 3, Two maps illustrating the growth of British imperial involvement in the Americas in 1562 and 1584-85,

1562: The first slave voyage of John Hawkins

  • The voyages of English sailor John Hawkins around the West Coast of Africa in the 1560s are considered as England鈥檚 entry into the infamous .
  • Whilst sailing off the coast of West Africa searching for Portuguese ships to hijack, he managed to acquire a Portuguese vessel that held 300 enslaved Africans.
  • Hawkins sold the enslaved Africans and the rest of the stolen cargo in the Spanish colony of Santa Domingo for a great deal of money.

1584-85: Walter Raleigh鈥檚 establishment of the Roanoke Island colony

  • Walter Raleigh was given royal permission by Queen Elizabeth I to establish a settlement on the coast of the Northern continent of America.
  • The aim was to set up a base to use for attacks on the Spanish further south.
  • Raleigh called the colony Virginia, in honour of the 鈥榁irgin Queen鈥.
  • A group of English settlers sent by Raleigh established a settlement on Roanoke Island in 1584.

1607: The first Virginia colony establishing Jamestown

  • The Virginia Company was established in 1606, with the aim of establishing a permanent English colony in North America.
  • There was increasing demand for tobacco in Europe, which at the time only grew in the Americas.
  • The first successful colony established by the Virginia Company was named Jamestown.

1620: The Pilgrim Fathers voyage

  • In 1606 the Plymouth Company was also given a Royal Licence to establish a colony.
  • They were not as successful as the Virginia Company and in 1620 gave a group of , known as the Pilgrim Fathers, the right to establish their own colony.
  • They managed to land far away from their intended destination but established their own successful colony in Provincetown.

1759: The Battle of the Plains of Abraham

  • On 13 September 1759 General James Wolfe defeated a French army just outside the city of Quebec, at the time the capital of New France.
  • The French surrender at Quebec ensured that the whole of Canada would come under the control of the British.

1759: The Battle of Quiberon Bay

  • On 20 November 1759 the British admiral Sir Edward Hawke demolished a French fleet in Quiberon Bay off the coast of France.
  • A great deal of Britain鈥檚 navy was busy fighting the French in North America and Hawke鈥檚 victory against a French force that intended to invade an undefended Britain was a victory that would guarantee the rise of the in the century that followed.