On this day in Tudor history, 7 October 1589, the bells of Deptford tolled for William Hawkins: merchant, sea captain, three-time mayor of Plymouth, and the steadier, quieter elder of the famous Hawkins brothers. Buried at St Nicholas’s, his monument is lost, but his impact isn’t.
In this episode, I trace how Hawkins turned Plymouth into a launchpad for Elizabethan sea power:
- From Brazil voyages with his father to a Plymouth shipowner and civic powerhouse
- Privateering in the Channel during the 1557–58 war and pushing London for reprisals after San Juan de Ulúa
- Building Plymouth’s infrastructure (new water conduit, weighhouse, grain transport) and securing Hawkins’ Quay
- Leading a bold 1582–83 venture via Cape Verde to the Caribbean (Margarita, Puerto Rico)
- Backing, and benefiting from, ventures tied to the 1560s transatlantic slave trade
- Helping marshal seven Plymouth ships against the Spanish Armada in 1588
Not a household name like Drake or John Hawkins, William was the engineer of capacity - the quay-master, quartermaster, and mayor who kept ships, money, and men moving when England needed them most.
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