When was john lederer born




















The militiamen who deserted Lederer spread stories that served to discredit the explorer. Claims related to his journey were doubted and scorned. Lederer moved to Maryland in shame, but in time regained his reputation. His accounts are still widely studied by cartographers, historians and ethnologists today. To receive these updates automatically each day, subscribe by email using the box on the right and follow us on Facebook , Twitter and Pinterest.

Skip to main content. If you prefer not to leave an email address, check back at your NCpedia comment for a reply. Please allow one business day for replies from NCpedia. Skip to main content. Is anything in this article factually incorrect? Please submit a comment. Lederer, Johann or John by W. Cumming, References: C. Cumming, ed. Dieter Cunz, The Maryland Germans The Discoveries of John Lederer Additional Resources: "John Lederer.

UNC Press. Cumming, W. Erin Bradford, Government and Heritage Library. Your name. More information about text formats. After his third "march," he moved to Maryland, where he met Sir William Talbot, secretary of that colony and nephew of its proprietor, Lord Baltimore. Talbot translated Lederer's account from Latin into English and arranged to have the journal published in London. Lederer may or may not have been the first European to reach the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia, but he was the first to publish an account of his discoveries.

He was an astute observer of Indian customs and beliefs, and his book was the first scientific report on the western portion of Virginia. His influential map provided new data about unknown areas, but it also contained several errors, most notably the "barren Sandy dessert" and a nonexistent lake in North Carolina that were often reproduced by other map makers. Lederer's expeditions inspired other explorers searching for passes through the mountains, and they helped to develop the fur trade with the Catawba and Cherokee.

John Lederer. He went on three expeditions to the Blue Ridge between Lederer wrote an account of his three journeys to the Blue Ridge in Latin. From them, we know that by he had identified the major landforms and physiography of Virginia.

Evidently Lederer's discoveries were not honored by the English in Tidewater Virginia. His translator noted that Governor William Berkeley had authorized Lederer's travels, but that "our Traveller at his return, instead of Welcome and Applause, met nothing but Affronts and Reproaches Lederer's traveling companion on his second trip, Major Harris, returned early while Lederer himself continued further west.

Harris apparently disparaged the German, in order to increase his own reputation as an adventurer in Virginia In , Virginia Governor William Berkeley had a plan, somewhat as of twenty years gone, to go out to the West "with gents," and find the Indian Sea. The translator, Sir William Talbot, attributed this rejection to jealousy and embarrassment that a non-Englishman had been brave enough to explore the unknown.



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