Brereton joined Captain Bartholomew Gosnold,
Bartholomew Gilbert, Gabriel Archer, and others to make the first English attempt to settle in the land since called New England. Twenty-four gentlemen and eight sailors left
Falmouth in a small
Dartmouth bark, the Concord, on 26 March 1602, twelve of the gentlemen intending to settle, while twelve others were to return home with the produce of the land and of their trading with the Native Americans. The voyage was permitted by
Walter Raleigh, who had an exclusive crown grant of the whole coast. Instead of making the circuitous route by the
Canary Islands, Gosnold steered, as the winds permitted, due west, only southing towards the
Azores, and was the first to accomplish a direct course to America, saving
the better part of a thousand leagues. In May 1602 they arrived at
Cape Elizabeth in
Maine and skirted the coastline for several days before anchoring in York Harbor, Maine, on 14 May 1602. The next day, they sailed into Provincetown Harbor and named it
Cape Cod. Here Gosnold, Brereton, and two others went ashore on
the white sands, the first spot in New England ever trodden by English feet. They were astonished by the sheer number of fish (hence the cape being named Cape Cod) with large numbers of cod, herring, halibut, bass, and tuna as well as a large preponderance of whales. Doubling the Cape and passing
Nantucket, they arrived at
Martha's Vineyard. Gosnold named it after his deceased daughter, Martha, and the wild grapes that covered much of the land. In addition to the grapes, Brereton records the number and types of berries particularly blueberries, as well as mentioning the abundance of flora and fauna. Passing round Dover Cliff they entered Buzzard's Bay, which they called Gosnold's Hope, reached the island of
Cuttyhunk, which they named Elizabeth's Island. Here some of them thought about settling, so within three weeks they built a small fort on an island in the centre of a lake. They also traded with Native Americans in furs, tobacco, and trinkets. It had been agreed beforehand that some of the group would stay and form a colony whilst the others would return to England (some of whom would collect supplies for a return trip). After the fort was built, it was then decided that so small a company would be useless for colonisation; their provisions, after division, would have lasted only six weeks. The whole company therefore sailed for England, making a very short voyage of five weeks, landing at
Exmouth on 23 July. Later further eastwards in Weymouth,
Walter Raleigh met Gosnold, Gilbert and Brereton. Their cargo and freight realised a great profit, the bark and leaves of the sassafras alone selling for £336 a ton. Although the mission failed to establish a colony, the attempt is commemorated in the
New World Tapestry. ==The published account and Shakespeare Play==