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Columbus’ Voyage and His Three Ships
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cvannoyReplica of the Santa Maria with Columbus on deck, on display at the Edmonton, Alberta, Canada Mall. (Vannoy photo)
Today, Monday Oct. 9, is the federal holiday celebrating Columbus, who is given the honor of discovering North America in 1492. Although some people feel it should be celebrated as Indigenous Peoples Day, as they feel it was an invasion rather than a discovery. However, in Wyoming it is still celebrated as Columbus Day.
This year we are celebrating the 532th anniversary of Christopher Columbus’s arrival in the Americas on October 12, 1492, even though he did not set foot in North America. He landed in what is now the Bahamas and named his newly discovered island San Salvador.
From The Uintah Chieftain, (Evanston, Wyoming Territory) May 1882, it gives the history of how America got its name.
….We can look back to day, and fix the date in the not very distant past, that Christopher Columbus first beheld the island of San Salvador, or Saint Savior. It was on the 12th day of October 1492. Supposing he was in India, he called the inhabitants Indians. He then returned to his home in Spain
Amerigo Vespucci an explorer from Florence, visited the mainland in 1490, and gave the first published account of the discovery, from which the continent takes its name, America; but his claims as the discoverer are disallowed.
But, according to the Deaver Sentinel, July 1920: Columbus Entitled to Honor. Columbus discovered part of the western continent on Oct.12, 1492, and therefore deserves the title, even though he did not see the mainland of America until 1498. John Cabot and his son, Sebastian, are considered the discoverers of the North American continent, having reached the coast of Labrador or Nova Scotia, June 24. 1497. Their voyage was inspired by the reports of Columbus’ discoveries, and to Columbus is given credit for being pioneer discoverer, though, of course, Columbus never saw the North American mainland.
Columbus was a born in Genoa in 1451. He was an explorer who was chosen to lead a Spanish enterprise to cross the Atlantic in search of an alternative route to India and the Far East. But the North American continent was in the way. Columbus’ first voyage with his three ships the Niña, the Pinta and the Santa María, took about three months.
The voyage was not only long, it was dangerous. The Laramie Daily Boomerang, October 15, 1892 talks about Columbus’ three ships. –The Wonder to the Mariner of today is how the Navigator crossed the ocean in his little carvael, Spain is now in the midst of series fetes in commemoration of the discovery of America which will last till late in October. On the 3d of August, date of the sailing of Columbus from Palos, (Spain) the jubilation began, and of all the sights the exact reproduction of the flagship of Columbus, the Santa Marta, excited most amazement. Among the sailors in the vast gathering there was a loud chorus of astonishment and unbelief. Almost unanimously they declared that such a ship could not do the thing— it was impossible. It is indeed hard to believe that the little caravel of 240 tons at the outside could have made such a voyage, and when one compares it with thelarge sailing vessels of today he may well be incredulous.
With the achievements of steam and practical science we are tolerably familiar, but the fact that though sailing vessels antedate written history, the progress therein since 1492 is as great as in anything else, comes to one as a great surprise. Compare the little Santa Maria with, for instance, the magnificent Shenandoah, the American four masted bark and queen of all sailing vessels, which a few months ago went from San Francisco to Liverpool with 5,002 tons of wheat on board.
The Santa Maria might have been placed on the deck of the Shenandoah without adding perceptibly to her weight of cargo. She was a decked vessel, and while the Spanish historians do not deal in exact measurements they are so minute in detail of her capacity that her size is known.
Captain Gustavus W. Fox, after a very careful calculation, declares her length was “63 feet over all and 57 feet along her keel, with 20 feet beam and 10½ feed in depth.” Her crewconsisted of fifty seamen, and in a list are found the names of one Englishman and one Irishman. Small as she was, her consorts, the Pinta and the Nina were considerably smaller, being mere barks, called carvels, but without decks, unless the high prow and stern may be so called. In the center such a vessel was open and in no respect superior to the fishing craft and other light coasting vessels of today. The men should have been willing to dare the passage of the stormy Atlantic in such a craft gives us a high idea of their courage.
The Casper Record, May 1914, talks about some of the sailors on the ships.
Columbus was an Italian. Among the officers and sailors there was a Jewish man named Luis do Torres, an Irishman named William Harris, and an Englishman by the of the name of Arthur Laws, or maybe Larkins. The rank and file of the men were Portuguese, Spanish and Italians.
Columbus’ arrival in the New World initiated the colonization of the Americas by Spain. The oldest continuously occupied European city the contiguous United States is St. Augustine, Florida, founded in 1565 by Spanish explorers. In 1672, the Spanish Crown approved plans for a stone fortress, to protect St. Augustine from pirate raids, and other hostile forces, Native American tribes and other imperial powers such as the French and the English.
We see that Columbus Day was a national federal holiday in Wyoming as early as 1892. From The Sundance Reform, September 1892. Proclamation By the Governor, State of Wyoming, Executive Department. Whereas, in commemoration, of the four hundredth anniversary of the discovery of America by Columbus, congress has enacted a law designating Friday, October 21, 1892, as Columbus Day to be observed as a public holiday throughout the United States.
And whereas, in accordance with this act of congress, the president of the United States has issued a proclamation recommending the observance of that day by public demonstration and by suitable exercises in our schools and other places of assembly throughout the land;
Now, therefore, I, Amos W. Barber, acting governor of the State of Wyoming, in accordance with the foregoing act of congress and proclamation by the president, and imbued with the patriotic spirit that has actuated the proposed commemoration of an event so far-reaching in its resulting happiness and prosperity among the millions of people who have found a haven within our shores, do hereby designate and recommend the observance of Friday, October 21, A. D. 1892, as a public holiday throughout the State of Wyoming. ln witness whereof, I have here unto set my hand and caused to be affixed the great seal of the State of Wyoming. Done at Cheyenne, the capital, this 7th day of September, A. D. 1892. Signed by Amos W. Barber Secretary of State.
In observance of the day, federal offices and banks are closed. The Lusk Standard, October 1919: Columbus Day the local banks were closed Monday, the day being observed as a legal holiday in honor of Columbus, who, on October 12, 1492, discovered America, sailing from Spain with a few hardy spirits in three caravels. The 12th, being Sunday the following day was observed.
And from The Sheridan Post, October 12, 1921 – October 12 is the 429th anniversary of the discovery of America by Christopher Columbus. All over the world it is celebrated as Columbus Day. What Columbus sought was a short-cut route to India, by way of the westward ocean. What he discovered was more than a continent, it was a turning-point in civilization and government. When the fearless Italian navigator landed on the Island of Guanahani, West Indies, in the early morning of October 12, 1492, he opened the door of the land that made government by the people possible.
Gold lured the early explorers of America. But it was refugees from European political oppression that built the foundations of the mighty civilization that has risen on the American continent. Individually, and as a nation, we owe a tremendous debt to Christopher Columbus. And let us not forget the queen who pawned her jewels to finance his venture into the uncharted Atlantic Ocean.
Area schools were encouraged to celebrate Columbus’ achievement.
This from The Sheridan Post, October 4, 1918 – Harvest Home Festival Is Suggested County Superintendent of schools urges all rural schoolteachers of Sheridan County to celebrate Liberty Day and Columbus Day with a harvest home festival to be held on Saturday, October 12. In urging teachers to celebrate this day Mrs. Rice, county superintendent of schools, makes the following announcement: “At the request of the treasury department and the United States bureau of education, all the schools of the county are being asked to celebrate Liberty day, the second Friday of the Liberty Loan drive, and Columbus day, the anniversary of the discovery of America, which falls on October the twelfth, jointly on Saturday, October twelfth.
The important date, it has been suggested, may appropriately be celebrated by a harvest home festival.” A program suitable to the occasion has been planned by the bureau of education, which is being mailed to the teachers. In case this material should fail to reach you, it is encouraged that you utilize whatever you may happen to have, that suggests the significance of the day. “The members of your school board and the people of the community will learn through your interest and that of your school of this effort to instill patriotism, and love of country. Please give the plan due publicity in your neighborhood.
“Trusting that you will have no difficulty in securing the material, and carrying out the above plan,” I am Blanche Alexander Rice, County Superintendent.
Today, Columbus Day is celebrated on the Monday closest to Oct. 12, thus giving workers a three-day holiday weekend.
Not all Americans celebrate Columbus Day, some consider it an invasion rather than a discovery. In many states it is now called Indigenous Peoples Day, which celebrates Native American peoples and their histories and cultures.
Several states celebrate Indigenous People’s Day, but in Wyoming it is still Columbus Day. So happy Columbus Day everyone.