Sir Thomas Smith, Burghley’s successor as Elizabeth’s…
December 1577 CE
Sir Thomas Smith, Burghley’s successor as Elizabeth’s principal secretary, had retired unexpectedly in 1576, leaving foreign policy specialist Francis Walsingham in sole charge.
Elizabeth calls him her "Moor,” due to his small, dark frame and his preference to dress always in black.
She tolerates his blunt, sometimes unwelcome advice because she knows that her welfare is one of his priorities (after the Protestant faith).
An admirer of Machiavelli and a proficient espionage-weaver, Walsingham excels in the use of intrigues and deception to secure the English Crown; he establishes the forerunner of the British Intelligence services at about this time.
He has spent the years since 1574 consolidating his control of the routine business of the English state, foreign and domestic, including the substantial rebuilding of Dover Harbour, and the coordination of support for Frobisher's attempts to discover the north west passage and exploit the mineral resources of Labrador.
He is among the major promoters of the career of Sir Francis Drake, who, following his service under Essex in Ireland, makes almost no appearance in the records until 1577, when he is chosen as the leader of an expedition intended to pass around South America through the Strait of Magellan and to explore the coast that lies beyond.
Walsingham's participation in this venture is calculated to promote the Protestant interest by provoking the Spanish and demonstrating the vulnerability of their Pacific possessions.
The expedition, in which Walsingham a major shareholder, is backed by the queen herself.
Nothing could suit Drake better.
He has official approval to benefit himself and the queen, as well as to cause the maximum damage to the Spaniards.
This is the occasion on which he first meets the queen face-to-face and hears from her own lips that she “would gladly be revenged on the king of Spain for divers injuries that I have received.”
The explicit object is to “find out places meet to have traffic.”
On December 1, 1577, Walsingham receives a knighthood.