CONTENTS

PAGE
[General Background]251
[The Trinidad Bay Landfall Theory]255
[The Arguments for the Bodega Bay or Drake's Bay Landfall]258
[Analysis of the World Encompassed Account]259
[Additional Ethnographic Items in the Richard Madox and John Drake Accounts]273
[Supposed Indian Traditions of Drake's Visit]276
[Recapitulation and Conclusion]277
APPENDIX
[ I. The Sources]280
[II. Excerpt from The World Encompassed by Sir Francis Drake]283
[Plates]293

FRANCIS DRAKE AND THE CALIFORNIA
INDIANS, 1579

by

ROBERT F. HEIZER

[General Background]

For nearly a century, historians, geographers, and anthropologists have attempted to solve the problem of locating Francis Drake's anchorage in California, but the opinion of no one investigator has been universally accepted. Indeed, it seems likely that the problem will forever remain insoluble in detail, although it may well be reduced to the possibility that one of two bays, either Drake's or Bodega, was the scene of Drake's stay in California.

Historically and ethnographically, Drake's California visit is exceedingly important. He was the first Englishman to see and describe the Indians of Upper California, and the third Caucasian to mention them. The account of the voyage given in The World Encompassed by Sir Francis Drake (London, 1628) (of uncertain authorship but usually attributed to Francis Fletcher) gives the earliest detailed description of California Indian life, including such particulars of native culture as ceremonial behavior and linguistic terms. This account is reproduced in [Appendix II], below.