Thomas Warner (explorer)
Captain in the guards of James I of England (1580–1649)
title: "Thomas Warner (explorer)" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["1580-births", "1649-deaths", "english-explorers", "english-emigrants", "governors-of-british-saint-christopher", "governors-of-antigua-and-barbuda", "governors-of-nevis", "people-from-saint-thomas-middle-island-parish", "warner-family-(caribbean)", "perpetrators-of-indigenous-genocides-in-north-america"] description: "Captain in the guards of James I of England (1580–1649)" topic_path: "people/1580s" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Warner_(explorer)" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0
::summary Captain in the guards of James I of England (1580–1649) ::
Thomas Warner (1580 – 10 March 1649) was an English colonial official who served as the Governor of Saint Kitts from 1627 to 1649. The English colony he founded in Saint Kitts in 1624 is the oldest English settlement in the West Indies. The native Kalinago were massacred during his time as governor.
Early life
Thomas Warner was from Suffolk, England. He became a member of King James VI and I's bodyguard.
Career
Warner participated in Roger North's failed English colony in Guyana in 1620.
An English mission to Saint Kitts arrived on 28 January 1624, and followed by a French mission in 1625. The French were led by Pierre Belain d'Esnambuc while the English were led by Warner and they arrived on opposite sides of the island. D'Enambuc and Warner agreed to return to their countries and discuss dividing the island. Warner returned with 400 men and a treaty signed on 13 May 1627, divided the island between France and England. The French suffered from high mortality and the English seized their colony. However, the French regained their colony in 1629. The settlement established by Warner is the oldest English settlement in the West Indies.
The French and English united to kill and expel the local inhabitants. The English killed many Kalinago at the Massacre at Bloody Point in January 1626, and the area became known as Bloody Point due to all of the blood that washed into the river.
James Hay, 1st Earl of Carlisle, the proprietary grantee, appointed Warner as governor for life of Saint Kitts in 1627. The overproduction of tobacco led to Warner and French Governor Phillippe de Longvilliers de Poincy agreeing to destroy the current crop and prohibit planting of tobacco for eighteen months.
Personal life
Warner died on 10 March 1649. Warner's son Thomas Warner was made governor of Dominica.
References
Works cited
Books
Journals
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