Lane is best remembered for his attempt to establish a
settlement on Roanoke Island at the request of
Sir Walter Raleigh. Queen Elizabeth was looking for places to colonise and the
Americas appeared ripe for English expansion. The voyage began on 9 April 1585, when Lane set sail from
Plymouth with Raleigh's cousin,
Sir Richard Grenville, a sailor who upon return to England wrote a book about his findings in the Chesapeake. The fleet comprised the
Tiger (Grenville's), the
Roebuck, the
Red Lion, the
Elizabeth, and the
Dorothy. The voyage on the
Tiger proved difficult, as Lane quarrelled with the aggressive leadership of Grenville, whom he found a person of "intolerable pride and insatiable ambition". Unfortunately, during a severe storm off the coast of Portugal, the
Tiger was separated from the rest of the fleet.
The Tiger arrived on 11 May to Baye's Muskito (
Guayanilla, Puerto Rico). While waiting for the other ships, Grenville established relations with the Spanish (whilst at the same time participating in privateering against their ships) Finally, Grenville grew tired of waiting for the remaining ships and departed on 7 June. The fort was abandoned and its location is now unknown. When the
Tiger sailed through the
Ocracoke Inlet on 26 June, she ran aground on a sand bank, ruining most of the food supply. Almost immediately, Grenville and his crew set sail for England, promising to return in April 1586 with more men and fresh supplies. Contact was quickly made with the local
Native Americans. The English treated them with suspicious harshness; on several occasions the colonists kidnapped Indians to extort supplies or extract information. Lane's military background led him to rely more upon arms than diplomacy, and that approach soured his dealings with the natives from the start. Also in June,
Sir Francis Drake arrived at Roanoke and offered Lane and his men a return voyage to England, which Lane readily accepted because of a weakened food supply and increased tensions with local tribes. Drake's fleet reached
Portsmouth on 28 July, at which the settlers of Roanoke introduced
snuff,
corn, to England.
The Account of Ralph Lane first appeared in Richard Hakluyt's
Principall Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation in 1589. The Grenville relief fleet arrived shortly after Drake's departure with the settlers. Finding the colony abandoned, Grenville returned to England with the bulk of his force, leaving behind a small detachment to maintain a British presence and protect Raleigh's claim to Virginia. Lane later participated in other expeditions. In January 1592 he was appointed muster-master general of
Ireland and was
knighted the following year by
Sir William FitzWilliam, the
Lord Deputy of Ireland. ==Death==