List of English possessions in North America ,"Admiral of New England" •
St John's, Newfoundland, chartered in 1583 by
Sir Humphrey Gilbert, was seasonally settled
ca. 1520 and had a few settlers who remained all year round by 1620. •
Roanoke Colony, in present-day
North Carolina, was first founded in 1585 but was abandoned the next year. In 1587 a second attempt was made at establishing a settlement, but the colonists disappeared, leading to the name 'Lost Colony.' One of those lost was
Virginia Dare. • At
Cuttyhunk, one of the
Elizabeth Islands (named after Queen Elizabeth I) of present-day
Massachusetts, a small fort and trading post was established by
Bartholomew Gosnold in 1602, but the island was abandoned after only one month. • The
Virginia Company was chartered in 1606, and in 1624 its concessions became the
royal Colony of Virginia. •
Jamestown, Virginia, was founded by the
Virginia Company of London in 1607. •
Bermuda, also known as the Somers Isles, lying in the
North Atlantic, were accidentally settled by the
Virginia Company of London in 1609, due to the wrecking of the company's
flagship Sea Venture; the company's possession was made official in 1612, when
St George's, the oldest continually-inhabited, and the first proper, English town in the New World was established; in 1615 its administration passed to the
Somers Isles Company, which was formed by the same shareholders;
House of Assembly of Bermuda established in 1620; Bermudians' complaints to the Crown led to the revocation of the company's Royal charter in 1684. •
Henricus, also called Henricopolis, Henrico Town, and Henrico, was founded by the London Virginia Company in 1611 as an alternative to the swampy Jamestown, but it was largely destroyed in the
Indian massacre of 1622. •
Popham Colony: on 13 August 1607, the
Virginia Company of Plymouth settled the Popham Colony along the
Kennebec River in present-day
Maine. The company had a licence to establish settlements between the
38th parallel (the upper reaches of the
Chesapeake Bay) and the
45th parallel (near the current US border with Canada). However, Popham was abandoned after about a year, and the Company then became inactive. marking
Humphrey Gilbert's landing there, 1583 • The
Society of Merchant Venturers of
Bristol began to settle
Newfoundland: •
Cuper's Cove, founded in 1610, was abandoned in the 1620s •
Bristol's Hope, founded in 1618, was abandoned in the 1630s •
London and Bristol Company (
Newfoundland) •
Cambriol, founded in 1617. In 1616
Sir William Vaughan (1575–1641) bought from the
Newfoundland Company all that land on the
Avalon Peninsula located south of a line drawn from Caplin Bay (now
Calvert) to
Placentia Bay. The colony had been abandoned by 1637. •
Renews, founded in 1615, abandoned in 1619 •
Plymouth Council for New England •
Plymouth Colony, founded 1620, merged with
Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1691 •
Ferryland, Newfoundland, granted to
George Calvert, 1st Baron Baltimore in 1620, first settlers in August 1621 •
Province of Maine, granted 1622, sold to
Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1677 •
South Falkland,
Newfoundland, founded 1623 by
Henry Cary, 1st Viscount Falkland •
Province of New Hampshire, later
New Hampshire settled in 1623, see also
New Hampshire Grants •
Cape Ann was an unsuccessful fishing colony settled in 1624 by the
Dorchester Company. •
Salem Colony, settled in 1628, merged with the Massachusetts Bay Colony the next year •
Massachusetts Bay Colony, later part of Massachusetts, founded in 1629 •
Providence Island colony was founded in 1630 by English
Puritans on
Providence Island; it was controlled by a group of English investors, the
Providence Island Company. Intended to be a model Puritan colony engaged in agriculture, it also functioned as a base for
privateers operating against Spanish ships and settlements in the region. In 1641, Spanish captured the colony expelled the English settlers. •
Nova Scotia, 1654–1670 •
Connecticut Colony, later part of
Connecticut, founded in 1633 •
Province of Maryland, later
Maryland, founded in 1634 •
Province of New Albion, chartered in 1634, but had failed by 1649–1650. •
Saybrook Colony, founded in 1635, merged with Connecticut in 1644 •
Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, first settled in 1636 •
New Haven Colony, founded 1638, merged with Connecticut in 1665 •
Gardiners Island, founded 1639, now part of
East Hampton, New York • The
New England Confederation, formally the 'United Colonies of New England', was a short-lived military alliance of the English colonies of
Massachusetts Bay,
Plymouth,
Connecticut, and
New Haven, established in 1643, aiming to unite the
Puritan colonies against the
Native Americans. Its charter provided for the return of fugitive criminals and
indentured servants. •
Province of New York, captured from the Dutch in 1664 •
Province of New Jersey, also captured in 1664 • Was divided into
West Jersey and
East Jersey after 1674, each held by its own company of Proprietors. •
Rupert's Land, named in honour of
Prince Rupert of the Rhine, the cousin of King Charles II. In 1668, Rupert commissioned two ships, the
Nonsuch and the
Eaglet, to explore possible trade into
Hudson Bay.
Nonsuch founded
Fort Rupert at the mouth of the
Rupert River. Prince Rupert became the first governor of the
Hudson's Bay Company, which was established in 1670. •
Province of Pennsylvania, later
Pennsylvania, founded in 1681 as an English colony, although first settled by the Dutch and the Swedes •
Delaware Colony, later
Delaware, separated from Pennsylvania in 1704 •
Province of Carolina, settled 1653 at the
Albemarle Settlements, chartered 1663 as a single territory but soon functioning in practice as two separate colonies: •
Province of North Carolina, later
North Carolina; first settled at Roanoke in 1586, permanently settled 1653, became a separate British colony in 1710. •
Province of South Carolina, later
South Carolina; first permanently settled in 1670, became a separate British colony in 1710. • One possession established after 1707 as a
British colony rather than English: •
Province of Georgia, later
Georgia; first settled in 1732.
List of English possessions in the West Indies •
Barbados, first visited by an English ship, the
Olive Blossom, in 1605, was not settled by England until 1625, soon becoming the third major English settlement in the Americas after
Jamestown, Virginia, and the Plymouth Colony. •
Saint Kitts was settled by the English in 1623, followed by the French in 1625. The English and French united to massacre the local
Kalinago, pre-empting a Kalinago plan to massacre the Europeans, and then partitioned the island, with the English in the middle and the French at either end. In 1629 a Spanish force seized St Kitts, but the English settlement was rebuilt following the peace between England and Spain in 1630. The island then alternated between English and French control during the 17th and 18th centuries until it became permanently associated with Britain since 1783. •
Nevis, settled 1628 •
Providence Island colony, settled by the
Providence Island Company in 1629 and
captured by Spain in 1641 •
Montserrat, settled 1632 •
Antigua, settled in 1632 by a group of English colonists from
Saint Kitts •
The Bahamas were mostly deserted from 1513 to 1648, when the
Eleutheran Adventurers left
Bermuda to settle on the island of
Eleuthera. •
Anguilla, first colonized by English settlers from St Kitts in 1650; the French gained the island in 1666, but under the
Treaty of Breda of 1667 it was returned to England •
Jamaica, formerly a Spanish possession known as Santiago, it was conquered by the
English Commonwealth under
Oliver Cromwell in 1655. •
Barbuda, first settled by the Spanish and French, was colonized by the English in 1666. • The
Cayman Islands were visited by
Sir Francis Drake in 1586, who named them. They were largely uninhabited until the 17th century, when they were informally settled by pirates, refugees from the
Spanish Inquisition, shipwrecked sailors, and deserters from
Oliver Cromwell's army in Jamaica. England gained control of the islands, together with Jamaica, under the
Treaty of Madrid of 1670.
List of English claims in Central and South America •
Elizabeth Island off
Cape Horn, and another Elizabeth Island in the
Straits of Magellan, were claimed for England by Sir Francis Drake in August 1578. •
Mosquito Coast: the
Providence Island Company occupied a small part of this area in the 17th century. •
Falkland Islands: Claimed for England by mariner
John Strong in 1690, who made the first recorded landing on the islands. ==English possessions in South Asia and the East Indies==