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The Long Walk
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The Long Walk

Dean Snow on David Ingram’s extraordinary journey across North America

Originally published on March 6, 2023 (Episode 306)

Introduction

In October 1569, a French captain off the coast of Nova Scotia was astonished when a canoe approached carrying three Englishmen. They claimed to be survivors of a slave-trading expedition marooned on the Gulf coast of Mexico—who had then walked 3,600 miles north in just a year. One of them, David Ingram, over a decade later gave testimony to Sir Francis Walsingham, Elizabeth I’s secretary of state and spymaster.

When it was published, Ingram’s tale quickly became infamous. He spoke of kings borne in crystal chairs, iron-working Native Americans, and even elephants and penguins along the Atlantic coast. Small wonder the geographer Samuel Purchas later observed that “the reward of lying is not to be believed in truths.” For centuries Ingram’s story was dismissed as fantasy.

But in The Extraordinary Journey of David Ingram: An Elizabethan Sailor in Native North America (Oxford University Press, 2023), Dean Snow revisits the evidence. He argues that while Ingram may have embroidered his account, the core of his long walk was real—and offers a rare glimpse of Native America just decades before European colonization transformed it.


About the Guest

Dean Snow is Professor Emeritus of Anthropology at Penn State and past president of the Society for American Archaeology. He is best known for his work on the archaeology of Native North America, especially the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois).


For Further Investigation


💬 Listen & Discuss

Could Ingram really have walked 3,600 miles across North America—and what does his story reveal about the early encounters between Europeans and Native peoples? Share your reflections in the comments, and send this episode to a friend who loves tall tales which might not be quite so tall.

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