Where the 'Endeavour' hauled up
By COOK, Captain James; and Robert BENARD , 1774
£600
BUY

Carte de la N.le Galles Merid.le Ou de la Côte Orientale de la Nlle. Hollande Découverte et visitée par le Lieutenant J. Cook Commandant de L'Endeavour, Vaisseau de sa Majesté 1770.

Australasia & the Pacific Australia
  • Author: COOK, Captain James; and Robert BENARD
  • Publication place: [Paris,
  • Publisher: Chez Nyon l'aine..., chez Merigot le jeune...,
  • Publication date: 1774].
  • Physical description: Double-page folding engraved chart, old folds.
  • Dimensions: 380 by 800mm (15 by 31.5 inches).
  • Inventory reference: 22746

Notes

Oriented with west at the top, this chart shows the east coast of Australia from Point Hicks to Cape York, and is testament to Cook's extraordinary achievement on his first voyage. Cook's original manuscript chart is in the British Library, and it was first printed in the first official account of Cook's first voyage by Hawkesworth.

While charting the coastline for this map, on the 10th of June, 1770, HMB 'Endeavour' ran aground on the Great Barrier Reef, and began to sink. In a desperate attempt to regain buoyancy, the crew threw everything heavy that they lay hands on overboard, including six cannon. At the next high-tide they were successful, in no small part because the 'Endeavour' was a low-drawing "flat"-bottomed bark, and not a deep-drawing ship with a keel. This also meant that the crew could haul the Endeavour ashore, in order to make the necessary repairs, which took about six weeks, at what is now known as Endeavour River, near Cooktown, in Queensland, which is marked on this chart.

Published as plate 16 in volume III, 'Cartes et figures des voyages entrepris par ordre de Sa Majeste britannique, actuellement regnante, pour faire des decouvertes dans l'hemisphere meridional, et successivement executes par le Commodore Byron, le Capitaine Carteret, le Capitaine Wallis, & le Capitaine Cook, dans les vaisseaux le Dauphin, le Swallow & l'Endeavour : rediges d'apres les journaux tenus par les differens commandans & les papiers de M. Banks par J. Hawkesworth' (1774).

The Mapmaker
Captain James Cook's (1728 - 1779) name was made with the three voyages he made to Australasia. The first, with HMB 'Endeavour', from 1768 to 1771, was supposedly made in order to observe the Transit of Venus across the sun, but Cook was actually under orders to search for "Terra Australis", the mythical continent thought to lie at the south pole. Sir Joseph Banks, the eminent naturalist, accompanied the exhibition. The voyage took them to Tahiti and then New Zealand: Cook was the first European to set foot there. By 1770, they had sailed west past New Zealand and sighted land, which Cook named New South Wales.

Cook returned to the area three years later, this time with HMS Resolution and Adventure. He reached Australasia by a different route, completing the first crossing of the Antarctic Circle. At Huaheine, they were joined by a native called Omai, who became a member of Adventure's crew and accompanied them back to England. In 1774 Cook continued through the Pacific from New Zealand, stopping at Easter Island. He was aided this time by new methods of calculating longitude and latitude, and concluded that "Terra Australis" did not exist.

Cook's third and final voyage began in 1776. This time, the expedition sent out to explore a different region. They followed the coast of Australia (then called Van Diemen's Land) and New Zealand and then sailed into the north Pacific, discovering multiple island groups along the way. Christmas Island was sighted and named on Christmas Day 1777, and on the 18th of January 1778 they sighted Hawaii. Captain William Bligh, the eventual commander of the ill-fated Bounty, was sent to check the depth of the water and thus became the first recorded European to set foot on the island. Cook stopped to reprovision and exchange goods with the islanders, participating in several ceremonies on apparently good terms. They then continued to California and made their way up the coast of America, passing through the Bering Strait before the frozen sea forced then to turn back and head south. Almost exactly a year after they had sighted Hawaii for the first time, the expedition returned to the north coast and stopped in Kealakekua Bay on 17 January 1779.

It has been suggested that the first visit of the voyage to Hawaii had been taken as a divine symbol by the islanders: their return into Kealakekua Bay, a harbour dedicated to the fertility god Lono, had happened to coincide with one of Lono's religious festivals, and after one of the crew died their divine status was supposedly called into question. It is unclear exactly at what point tensions emerged, but when Cook was forced to return with a broken mast after attempting to leave on the 4th of February, the reception was hostile. The Hawaiians began to steal from the ships, and sparred with the crew. Eventually, they captured a small boat. While Cook was negotiating for its return, his crew opened fire and killed a Hawaiian leader; in the ensuing melee, Cook was killed.

Provenance

Provenance
Freycinet family archives

Bibliography

  1. Tooley, 'Australia', 342.
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