Harrison's description of England, 69-70
Hatton, Sir Christopher, 127, 146
Hawkins, Sir John, son of William Hawkins, 34;
—enters slave trade with New Spain (1562), 74;
—takes 300 slaves at Sierra
—Leona, 75;
—second expedition (1564), 75;
—issues sailing orders, 76;
—John Sparke's account, 77;
—at Teneriffe, 77;
—meets Peter de Ponte, 78;
—Arbol Santo tree, 78;
—takes many Sapies, 79;
—at Sambula, 79;
—island of the Cannibals, 80;
—makes for Florida, 80;
—finds French settlement, 82 et seq.;
—sells the Tiger, 85;
—sails north to Newfoundland, 85;
—arrives at Padstow, Cornwall (1565), 85;
—a favorite at court, 85;
—watched by Spain, 86;
—sets out on third voyage (1567), 86;
—begins the sea-dog fighting with Spain, 86;
—Drake joins the expedition, 86;
—disasters, 87;
—crosses from Africa to West Indies, 88;
—clashes with Spaniards at Rio de la Hacha, 88;
—at Cartagena, 89;
—at St. John de Ulua, 89;
—fight with the Spaniards, 90 et seq.;
—parted from Drake in a storm, 93;
—leaves part of his men ashore, 93;
—voyage ends in disaster, 94;
—strikes another blow at Spain (1595), 223;
—unhappily combined with Drake, 224;
—sails for New Spain 226;
—dies, 226;
—bibliography, 243
Hawkins, Sir Richard, grandson of William Hawkins, 35
Hawkins, William, story of, in Hakluyt Voyages, 33 et seq.;
—father of Sir John Hawkins, 34;
—grandfather of Sir Richard Hawkins, 35,
—and of the second William Hawkins, 35
Hawkins, William, the Second, grandson of William Hawkins, 35
Henry IV of France, 223
Henry VII, Cabot enters service of, 3;
—refuses to patronize Columbus, 4;
—gives patent to the Cabots, 4-6
Henry VIII, the monarch of the sea, 20;
—establishes a modern fleet and the office of the Admiralty, 21;
—a patron of sailors, 22;
—menaced by Scotland, France, and Spain, 25;
—defies the Pope, 25;
—defies Francis I, 26;
—birth of modern sea-power (1545), 28;
—and the voyage of Hawkins, 33-34;
—as a patron of the Navy, 232 et seq.
Henry Grace à Dieu, The, ship, 234