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To return to the Vaughans,
and "Golden Grove" -
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William Vaughan (writer)
Sir William Vaughan (1575 - August 1641) was a Welsh writer and colonial investor.
He was the son of Walter Vaughan (died 1598) and was born at
Golden Grove, Carmarthenshire, Wales--his father's estate.
He was descended from an ancient prince of Powys.
He was brother to John Vaughan, 1st Earl of Carbery (1572-1634) and General Sir Henry or Harry Vaughan (1587-1659), a well-known Royalist leader in the English Civil War.
William was educated at Jesus College, Oxford, and took the degree of Doctor of Laws at Vienna.
In 1616 he bought a grant of land, the southern Avalon Peninsula (from Calvert to Placentia Bay) of the island of Newfoundland, from the London and Bristol Company.
In 1617 he sent Welsh colonists to Renews to establish a permanent colony, which eventually failed. The colonists were ill equipped, without an experienced leader, and had built for themselves mere shacks for shelter for the winter.
By 1619 Vaughan had given up hope of establishing a colony and signed over part of his grant to Henry Cary. Vaughan's brother had convinced him to also to give up a portion of his tract to George Calvert, the area around Ferryland. This area George Calvert had established his Colony of Avalon.
Vaughan did retain the southern portion of his tract determined by a line drawn from Renews to Placentia Bay, an area that included Trepassey. Further attempts at colonizing Trepassey on two occasions had also failed.
Vaughan did visit his colony in 1622, which he called Cambriol, and returned to England in 1625. Vaughan apparently paid another visit to his colony, but his plans for its prosperity were foiled by the severe winters. In 1628 he transferred his interests to the colony of Virginia. He died at his house of Torcoed, Carmarthenshire, in August 1641.
His chief work is The Golden Grove (1600), a general guide to morals, politics and literature, in which the manners of the time are severely criticized, plays being denounced as folly and wickedness. The section in praise of poetry borrows much from earlier writers on the subject.
The Golden Fleece ... transported from Cambriol Colchis, by Orpheus junior (1626) is the most interesting of his other works. A long and fantastic prose allegory, it demonstrates "the Errours of Religion, the Vices and Decayes of the Kingdome, and lastly the wayes to get wealth, and to restore Trading" through the colonization of Newfoundland.
References
* This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica
Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.
External links
* Biography at the Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
* Text of The Golden Fleece
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