160,075 members
2,260,579 photos
6,119,738 comments
 

Wifey's Fotothing

Browse.Upload
and share
your photos
Browse.Explore
our fantastic photo library
Friends.Make Friends
Join our community and have some fun
Photos 16 - 20 of 242

314 views

There are many monuments in The Bahamas but this one… which marks the supposed landing of Christopher Columbus in the new world... is located on San Salvador in the southern isles. Scanned from a print (2002).

The Landfall Park (at the Long Bay Site), a ten-acre site rich in archaeological artifacts, is the first landfall of Christopher Columbus in the "New World." On October 12,1492, after 33 days at sea, Columbus landed probably at beautiful Fernandez Bay (Long Bay). A simple white cross, erected in 1956 by Mrs. Ruth D. Wolper, commemorates the historic event. Also on this site is the Mexican Monument which housed the Olympic flame in 1968 on its journey from Greece to Mexico City.
—————————————————————————————————————

Just Where Was Columbus?
Pinpointing the explorer's whereabouts on October 12, 1492
—By Borgna Brunner

Christopher Columbus, of course, thought he had arrived in the “Indies,” the medieval name for Asia. Using Marco Polo's Travels among other sources, Columbus calculated that his voyage would lead him to Cathay (China), Cipango (Japan), the Spice Islands (the Mollucas), and India.

A Slow Boat to China

After landing on a small island on Oct. 12, 1492, in what he believed were the Indies, Columbus sailed along the coast of Cuba, certain that he had finally reached the continent of Cathay. He searched in vain for the magnificent cities Marco Polo had described, hoping to deliver a letter from the Spanish monarchs to “the great Khan,” the Chinese emperor. “Afterwards,” Columbus wrote on Oct. 21, “I shall set sail for another very large island which I believe to be Cipango, according to the indications I receive from the Indians on board.” Columbus's Japan proved to be the island of Hispaniola.

Refusing to Ask for Directions

Three voyages later, Columbus still resolutely maintained that he had reached Asia despite growing contrary evidence. Amerigo Vespucci's 150l voyage along the coast of South America convinced most explorers and their patrons that a huge unexplored continent existed across the Atlantic—what Vespucci called Mundus Novus, the New World. Columbus, however, died in 1506 still insisting that he had found a new route to Asia.

Where in the New World is San Salvador?

But confusion over where Columbus landed in the New World has not been restricted to the explorer himself. For centuries scholars have hotly debated where Columbus first set foot in the Western Hemisphere—the so-called landfall controversy. All have agreed that Columbus arrived on an island in the Bahamas that he named San Salvador (Holy Savior), and that the island's Arawak inhabitants called Guanahani. But dozens of different islands have been bandied about by numerous historians as the genuine San Salvador. The three most popular contestants have been Watlings Island (called San Salvador today), Cat Island, and Grand Turk (which today is no longer part of the Bahamas).

More than 500 years later, there still is no definitive answer to the landfall question, but the general consensus is that Columbus landed on what was known until 1926 as Watlings Island. The island was named for a local pirate famous for his piety—marauding and pillaging was strictly forbidden on Sundays. The residents of Watlings renamed their island San Salvador in 1926, figuring the right name was key to their claim as Columbus's island.

The 400th Centennial

Among the early historians involved in the landfall controversy was Washington Irving, whose volume, Life and Voyages of Christopher Columbus (1828), suggested that the explorer first landed on Cat Island, to the northeast of Watlings. As the 400th anniversary of Columbus's arrival in the New World drew near, a special investigation of various Bahamian islands was commissioned, meant to clear up the controversy once and for all. The report, however, just emphasized how muddled the controversy had become:

“…No two investigators agree as to the first landfall without disagreeing as to the second; and if they happen to coincide on the first, it is only to fall out over the fourth.” —Frederick A. Ober, In the Wake of Columbus (1893)

Not Just Another Pretty Island

The difficulty in pinpointing Columbus's first landing is in part the result of the sketchy information provided in his captain's log. The island is described as large, level, and with a lagoon, and like all the other islands he encounters, “these lands are the most fertile, temperate, level, and beautiful countries in the world.” With so little to go on, it is easy to make an argument for nearly any beautiful lagoon in the Bahamas.

Another difficulty is the lack of archeological evidence. Columbus landed only briefly on the island—he was far more interested in moving on to richer and more promising parts of the Indies. No definitive trace of his presence has been uncovered. And although a number of early maps show the island of Guanahani, the island is found in various locations depending on the vagaries of the cartographer.

More Centennial Squabbling

In 1986, the landfall controversy again grew tempestuous. As the 500th Columbus centennial approached, National Geographic presented a sophisticated argument claiming that Samana Cay was the true island of Columbus's landing. This stirred up the waters, but most historians, including such luminaries as Samuel Eliot Morison, maintained that Watlings/San Salvador was the true landfall.

This is a perfectly agreeable conclusion according to San Salvador's roughly 500 inhabitants, who depend on Columbus-inspired tourism for their livelihood. The present-day San Salvadorans are the descendents of freed slaves—the original inhabitants, the Arawaks, have long since vanished.

The Voyages
First voyage, 1492–1493:
San Salvador, The Bahamas, Cuba, Hispaniola

Second voyage, 1493–1494:
Dominica, Hispaniola, Guadeloupe, Antiqua, Puerto Rico, Cuba, Jamaica

Third voyage, 1498–1500:
St. Vincent, Grenada, Trinidad, Margarita, Venezuela

Fourth voyage, 1502–1504:
St. Lucia, Martinique, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama
Friends
More latest photos

Comments on this photo:

Nov 02 2007 04:08 GMT PhotoPro PRO
even if it's just a chance this was it - wow, what a feeling!!

great entry!
Nov 02 2007 04:21 GMT gtc126
Super Capture...Fascinating Info!!!!!! The Start of Religious Freedom!!!!! I sure am glad that Cross is Empty!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Nov 02 2007 04:26 GMT wifey
Thank you Glenn… I wished the plants were alive though.
Nov 02 2007 04:32 GMT bojtorjan
The most interesting entry.... Congratulations Tracy! ;o)
Nov 02 2007 04:36 GMT jomoud PRO
Wow Tracy...this is fantastic.
And the narrative you placed with it brings it all home.
An exceptional contribution for this week's theme!
Have a fabulous weekend my friend!!!!
Nov 02 2007 06:10 GMT sini
Great shot and entry!:)
Nov 02 2007 06:50 GMT Midworlder PRO
Tracy ... fabulous photo ... and informative text .... all information is good information I say.
Nov 02 2007 06:56 GMT lupion
no he podido averiguar el rollazo precedente, pero da igual, la foto es bonita.......
Nov 02 2007 07:14 GMT csabi
great entry !
Nov 02 2007 07:56 GMT alhoafun
beautiful in its simplicity -and thanks for all the info too!
Nov 02 2007 08:44 GMT Minz PRO
Fabulous - Wonderful colours !
Thanks for the information - So very interesting.
Nov 02 2007 09:01 GMT iyerhari
wonderful shot for the thme:)
Nov 02 2007 10:00 GMT Bellavista
WOW! Thank you Tracy for all this valuable informations!! Have a nice weekend!!
Nov 02 2007 10:26 GMT jett366
Nice shot! thanks for the info!
Nov 02 2007 11:18 GMT hans55 PRO
good monument and great info !!
Nov 02 2007 11:38 GMT rock
great memory! thanks for sharing!
Nov 02 2007 11:52 GMT ashdad PRO
Great entry! And history lesson.
Nov 02 2007 12:19 GMT Petra17 PRO
Well done Tracey, you took extra time to teach us all a little bit about this conflict...
Great entry and thanks for your hard work!
Nov 02 2007 12:20 GMT LizSA
beautiful entry..... all that INfo.... wow.
have a good weekend Wifey.!
Nov 02 2007 12:33 GMT jenylew PRO
Excellent photo and super interesting info!
I had to refuel with coffee half way through! :-)
Have a great weekend, my friend!
Nov 02 2007 13:51 GMT senna3 PRO
Very interesting documentation and a fantastic photo!
Great choice for todays theme Tracy.
Nov 02 2007 13:55 GMT PaP67
.great shot & view !......always interresting, ........
...........................and all that without an oil barrel under 100 dollars !
Nov 02 2007 15:02 GMT Poulet PRO
Great shot and history!!!
Great entry!

Have a beautiufl weekend, Tracy! :))
Nov 02 2007 16:43 GMT fhelsing PRO
that's quite a monument!
Nov 02 2007 17:46 GMT jamaboop
beautiful....simply beautiful!!! (love all the information you added too!)
Nov 02 2007 20:18 GMT Portasejanelas
gorgeous choice
Nov 02 2007 21:36 GMT MagentaStar PRO
Great entry ...fascinating info....
Nov 03 2007 00:22 GMT megmet PRO
Exceptional notes and a lovely image too!
Nov 03 2007 14:51 GMT Barton
You score a Good 100% On your report, Go to the head of the class Tracy.
Nov 03 2007 21:32 GMT wifey
But I didn't write it Barton… thank you. :D
Nov 03 2007 21:36 GMT bennystr
Fabulous entry Tracy!
Nov 04 2007 15:37 GMT jceca PRO
quite interesting entry ...
excellent photo !!!
Nov 07 2007 19:43 GMT d0ntthink2hard
wow. that's beautiful!