Bernard Romans facts for kids
Bernard Romans (born around 1720, died 1784) was a very talented person from the Netherlands. He was a navigator, surveyor, mapmaker, and even a soldier! He worked in the British colonies in America and later in the United States.
His most famous work is A Concise Natural History of East and West Florida, published in 1775. This book is a great source of information about Florida when it was controlled by the British. His maps and charts were considered the best of their time. They were even better than many maps made years later.
Contents
Biography
Bernard Romans was born as Barend Romans in Delft, a city in the Netherlands. His parents were Pieter Barendsz Romans and Margareta van der Linden. He grew up and went to school there. Later, as a young man, he moved to Great Britain. Around 1757, he came to British North America. This was during the Seven Years' War, which was known as the French and Indian War in America.
On March 3, 1761, Romans married Maria Wendel in Albany, New York. She was born in 1739. Their son, Peter Milo Romans, was born in Albany on January 16, 1762. Peter later married in 1785 and had ten children. There are no more records of Maria Wendel Romans, so she might have died young. Romans married again in 1779.
Romans said that around 1761, he started working for the King. He was a "commodore," which meant he sometimes led many men in the woods. Other times, he was the captain of a merchant ship that was set up for fighting. After the war ended, Romans kept sailing. He traveled widely as a privateer (a private ship allowed to attack enemy ships) during the war. He also worked as a merchant, sailing to places like Labrador in the north and Curaçao and Cartagena in the south. In 1774, Romans was chosen to be a member of the American Philosophical Society.
Travels in the Floridas
In 1766–67, Romans was the captain of a ship called the Mary. On his first trip, the ship got stuck on the Dry Tortugas. But he managed to free the ship and reach a port. On his second trip, the ship was lost near Cape Florida (Key Biscayne).
Romans lost a lot of his money when the Mary sank. So, he decided to become a surveyor. He found work as a deputy surveyor for Georgia. He also took on private jobs to survey land in East Florida. This area had come under British control after the French and Indian War.
In 1768, Romans became the main deputy surveyor for the Southern District. This area included the British Colonies of Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, East Florida, and West Florida. Starting in 1769, Romans surveyed the coastal waters of East Florida. Later that year, his boat sank in the Manatee River near Tampa Bay. Romans then walked overland from there to St. Augustine. He knew he was walking where famous explorers had been. He later wrote that he had been "on Ferdinando Soto's tract."
He got another boat, paying for it himself, and continued surveying the coast in September 1770. He reached Pensacola, Florida in August 1771. He had recorded water depths, good harbors, and fresh water sources. He also drew coastal maps for much of the East Florida coast.
When he arrived in Pensacola, Romans was hired to survey the western part of West Florida. He also surveyed the lands of the Choctaws and Chickasaws. This survey was dangerous because the Choctaws and the Creeks were at war. Rumors even reached Mobile that Romans and his group had been killed by Creeks. Romans continued his survey work in West Florida into 1772.
In Pensacola, a man named John Lorimer asked Romans to look for new plant types. Romans soon found what he thought was true jalap. This plant was highly wanted in Europe as a medicine that helps digestion. Before this, jalap only came from New Spain. Having a supply under British control made many people in West Florida happy. Later, it was realized that Romans' jalap was not the Mexican jalap. It was a related plant, probably Solanum jamesii. This "wild jalap" was used in medicine in the United States from 1820 to 1863. Romans loved looking for plants. He collected many plant samples and seeds. He also started looking for support to build a botanical garden in West Florida.
Publishing A Concise Natural History of East and West Florida
In early 1773, Romans left West Florida to travel to the northern colonies. He wanted to publish his sea maps and sailing instructions. He also wanted to publish the information he had collected about the natural history of the Floridas. He also took rare seeds and plant samples he had gathered. His ship was "over-set at sea," meaning it capsized. The seeds and plant samples were lost or ruined. However, his sailing maps and the book he was writing were saved.
Romans now planned a big book, about 300 pages long. It would have copper plate engravings (pictures made from copper plates) and two large maps of the Floridas and the Caribbean. He needed to find people to help pay for it and get people to sign up to buy the book beforehand. This led him to meet many new people. In August 1773, Romans joined the Marine Society of the City of New York. In January 1774, he was chosen to be a member of the American Philosophical Society. The society published a paper by Romans about an improved sea compass. He also showed them descriptions of new plants he found in Florida. Even though he no longer lived in West Florida, Romans was also named the botanist for West Florida.
During this time, Romans suggested an expedition to the northeastern parts of Asia. He proposed this to William Legge, 2nd Earl of Dartmouth, who was a very important government official. Romans gave more details of his plan to Hugh Williamson, another member of the American Philosophical Society. Romans explained his idea for a trip to explore the Mississippi River basin and the Great Lakes. Then, they would move west to the Pacific coast. From there, the expedition would cross the Pacific Ocean to Asia, travel through Russia, and finally reach Great Britain. This was 30 years before President Thomas Jefferson sent the Lewis and Clark Expedition. It was also almost 20 years before Alexander MacKenzie crossed the Canadian Arctic.
Romans kept working to get his book published. He first thought of his book as a guide for sailors. About a quarter of the people who signed up to buy his book worked in shipping. But Romans also got questions from people who wanted to move to the Floridas. So, Romans made his book bigger to help them. The book grew from 300 pages to about 800 pages. It had to be split into two volumes. Romans promised his subscribers that the second volume would be sent to them for free. Romans put ads in many newspapers and traveled a lot to find people to buy his book.
Romans chose James Rivington, who published Rivington's New-York Gazetteer, to print his book. He hired Paul Revere to make most of the pictures for the book. Romans also worked with Paul Revere on other projects. This included a map that went with Rivington's printing of John Hawkesworth's book about the voyages of James Cook.
The first volume of A Concise Natural History of East and West Florida was finally ready in late April 1775. Romans announced in Rivington's New-York Gazetteer that his subscribers should tell him where to deliver the books. Romans' announcement was published eight days after the Battles of Lexington and Concord. A second printing of the first volume was needed in 1776 to fulfill all the orders.
Revolutionary War activities
Romans' support for the American Revolution grew before his book was published. He spoke to the Boston Marine Society on December 1, 1773. He was in Boston when the Boston Tea Party happened. In his book, Romans called tea "a despicable weed, and of late attempted to be made a dirty conduit, to lead a stream of oppressions into these happy regions." This shows his strong feelings against British taxes.
In early April 1775, Romans was made a captain by the Connecticut Committee of Safety. He was given the job of capturing Fort Ticonderoga and other British forts nearby. He received £100 to gather troops. Within a few days, Romans had over 200 men. While Benedict Arnold and Nathanael Greene took charge of the main troops going to Fort Ticonderoga, Romans' company was sent to capture Fort George on Lake George. This fort was not well-guarded and surrendered without a fight. Romans then went to Ticonderoga. There, he helped check the captured ammunition. Benedict Arnold spoke highly of Romans as an engineer after this service.
Romans soon returned to Connecticut. We don't know if Romans was at the Battle of Bunker Hill. But he did publish a picture of it, called An Exact View of the Late Battle at Charlestown, June 17, 1775. Romans also published a map of the area around Boston, called The Seat of Civil War in America. He dedicated this map to John Hancock. Romans' earlier work was also used by the British in their maps. One example is A General Map of the Southern British Colonies. This map was in the American Military Pocket Atlas, which was for British officers on horseback.
In New York, James Rivington was seen as too neutral in his news coverage of the conflict. In November 1775, a group of patriots destroyed his printing shop. The second volume of Romans' book was being printed at that time and was lost.
Later in 1775, the Second Continental Congress suggested Romans to the New York Commissioners. They wanted him to oversee the building of a fort at Martelaer's Rock. This was across the Hudson River from West Point. Romans began surveying the river and designing the forts. When the commissioners checked the site, they were not happy with Romans' plans or the location. The site was exposed to better positions across the river at West Point. Romans went to New York City and showed his plans to the Committee of Safety. He did not mention the commissioners' doubts. The Committee of Safety sent Romans' plan and expenses to the Continental Congress. According to Romans, they promised him he would be the main engineer for New York. He would have the rank and pay of a Colonel.
A disagreement started between Romans and the Commissioners for Fortifications. Romans continued with much of the work. But he eventually went to Philadelphia to report and ask for support. While Romans seemed to get approval from the Congress, people generally agreed that his work had not been very useful. George Washington said Romans' forts were "very neat" and "very picturesque." But he added that "upon the whole, Mr. Romans has displayed his genius at a very great expense and to very little publick advantage."
Romans was then made a captain of the First Pennsylvania Company of Artillery. This company soon joined the campaign against Quebec. After the Americans lost in Quebec, Romans' company was moved to Fort Ticonderoga in July 1776. Soon after, General Horatio Gates sent Romans to check on the defenses being prepared by Major General Philip Schuyler. These defenses were meant to protect Lake Champlain from the expected British invasion. Romans was shocked by the ships being prepared for the lake fleet. But he could not do anything. This fleet was soon defeated at the Battle of Valcour Island. Luckily for the Americans, the battle was also costly for the British. So, they delayed their invasion southwards.
In November 1776, the Pennsylvania Council of Safety appointed Romans as an Engineer. They ordered that he be given what he needed to try an experiment. This experiment was about "destroying distant objects by fire." Unfortunately, there are no more records of this experiment. Romans also continued to make maps. He made two maps of Connecticut. He also made one map centered on Philadelphia, including most of New Jersey and Delaware. It also showed parts of Maryland and Pennsylvania. This map showed the location of the Grand American Winter Camp 1778 at Valley Forge. He also made a map of the Northern Department of North America.
Romans left his military position on June 1, 1778. He continued working on a history of how the British had treated the Netherlands. By the end of 1778, he had finished the two-volume book Annals of the Troubles in the Netherlands. The first volume was in bookstores in January 1779. The second volume did not appear until 1782.
On January 28, 1779, Romans married Elizabeth Whiting of Wethersfield, Connecticut. She was only 19 years old. Their son, Hubertus Romans, was born on October 23, 1779.
Romans joined the Southern Campaign in 1780. It's not clear what his exact job was. But an application for a pension filed by Elizabeth Romans in 1848 says that Romans "was ordered to go to the State of South Carolina, there to join the Southern Army." The ship Romans was on, traveling from New London, Connecticut, to Charleston, South Carolina, was captured by the Royal Navy. Romans was held prisoner until the war ended. He died on a ship while returning home. Both his wife, Elizabeth Whiting, and at least one early historian believed that Romans had been murdered on the journey.
See also
In Spanish: Bernard Romans para niños