Emigrants, James Evans
Emigrants, James Evans
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Emigrants
Why the English Sailed to the New World

Author: James Evans

Narrator: David Shaw Parker

Unabridged: 13 hr 58 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 09/21/2017


Synopsis

AN EVENING STANDARD NO. 1 BESTSELLER

During the course of the seventeenth century nearly 400,000 people left Britain for the Americas, most of them from England. Crossing the Atlantic was a major undertaking, the voyage long and treacherous. There was little hope of returning to see the friends and family who stayed behind. Why did so many go?

A significant number went for religious reasons, either on the MAYFLOWER or as part of the mass migration to New England; some sought their fortunes in gold, fish or fur; some went to farm tobacco in Virginia, a booming trade which would enmesh Europe in a new addiction. Some went because they were loyal to the deposed Stuart king, while others yearned for an entirely new ambition - the freedom to think as they chose. Then there were the desperate: starving and impoverished people who went because things had not worked out in the Old World and there was little to lose from trying again in the New.

EMIGRANTS casts light on this unprecedented population shift - a phenomenon that underpins the rise of modern America. Using contemporary sources including diaries, court hearings and letters, James Evans brings to light the extraordinary personal stories of the men and women who made the journey of a lifetime.

Read by David Shaw Parker
(p) Orion Publishing Group with Audible Ltd 2017

About James Evans

James Evans completed a doctorate at Oriel College, Oxford, following a first-class degree and a Masters in Historical Research. He is a writer and producer of historical documentaries for the BBC and Channel 4, and the author of MERCHANT ADVENTURERS and EMIGRANTS. He lives in London with his wife and three children.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Michael on November 21, 2019

Excellent and accessible analysis of the 17th century's mass migration of English people to the New World. James Evans explains the reasons, hopes, fears and arduous trials of the emigrants through individual accounts from the time which are both fascinating and frequently moving. We also learn how......more

Goodreads review by Pippa on June 14, 2019

This interests me particularly because I know that a branch of my mother's family (Tayer - now Theyer/ Thayer) went to Boston in the late 1630s, and ended up doing extremely well there. I wished there was more in the book about Boston, but in a volume this size there is not room for everything! Ther......more

Goodreads review by Frank on December 08, 2019

Not much better than a high school American history book. Instead of discussing the economic, political and religious situation in England, the author choses to use well known historical figures to illustrate reasons to leave England. This produces a tired and over used discussion.......more


Quotes

James Evans has written a marvellously engaging and comprehensive account of this ambitious undertaking and the men and women who accomplished it, often with the odds stacked against them. Here he tells the exciting, sometimes heartbreaking stories of the pioneers and explains what kind of world they dreamt of creating. It was one in which individual liberty and freedom was cherished: both became part of the modern American mindset THE TIMES

Otto von Bismarck was once asked to identify the pre-eminent fact in modern world history. That America spoke English, he replied. In Emigrants, James Evans attempts to explain how and why that happened ... Evans' book is an eloquent testimony to the fact that the commodity America has always traded in, above all others, is hope FINANCIAL TIMES

What led a person in 17th-century England to get on a ship bound for the Americas? James Evans attempts to answer that question by exploring both the push and pull factors involved ... His descriptions are vivid ... and he relates in a readable style the lives of people who chose to make the journey THE SPECTATOR

Engaging ... Evans is vivid on the risks of going to a land that, for a good portion of the century, had little to recommend it ... Brisk, informative and ... eye-opening ... A fascinating book that gives real insight into the age that birthed the modern West DAILY TELEGRAPH

A vivid and thoughtful take on the ways that the hopes and concerns of many, often ordinary, English people contributed to their burgeoning empire HISTORY TODAY

With great vigour, Evans transports us back to this time of America's earliest immigrants. Many had already migrated across England, before landing in London and then heading off in search of a fresh start across the ocean. In this thought-provoking book, Evans uses contemporary sources, such as diaries, court records and letters, to cast vivid new light on a historic population shift, bringing to life the stories of English emigrants and their colonisation of the New World. All proving, perhaps, that mass migration is nothing new FAMILY TREE MAGAZINE

Why this book is such a gripping and enjoyable read is that Evans does not focus on the great and the good of history, but on the ordinary men, women, and children who migrated, with their hopes, fears, and desperation. Through primary sources of diaries, court hearings, and letters, Evans tells their stories, which sometimes inspire you with their heroism, and sometimes make you weep over their tragedies ... In a lucid, well-written, and solidly researched analysis, he teases out the mixed and complicated reasons that so many people were compelled to make the risky sea voyage to a perilous wilderness CHURCH TIMES

Emigrants is an intriguing idea for a book and one which James Evans has executed masterfully. His prose is highly readable, shedding light on just why so many people bravely sought to start a new life in a region which, as contemporaries admitted, was 'not yet perfectly discovered' WHO DO YOU THINK YOU ARE MAGAZINE