George Vancouver

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A statue of George Vancouver outside of Vancouver City Hall in Vancouver, British Columbia.
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A statue of George Vancouver outside of Vancouver City Hall in Vancouver, British Columbia.

Captain George Vancouver RN (June 22, 1757May 12, 1798) was an officer of the Royal Navy, best known for his exploration of North America, including the Pacific coast along present-day Oregon, Washington, and British Columbia; he also explored the southwest coast of Australia.

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[edit] Early career

George Vancouver was born in King's Lynn, England. At the age of fifteen, he traveled to the Pacific aboard HMS Resolution, on Captain James Cook's second voyage (1772-1775). It was Vancouver's first naval service. He also accompanied Cook on his third voyage (1776-1779), this time aboard Resolution's sister ship, HMS Discovery.

Upon his return to Britain in 1779, Vancouver was commissioned as a lieutenant. He was then posted aboard the sloop HMS Martin, on patrol in the English Channel.

Vancouver next served on the 74-gun ship of the line, HMS Fame. The Fame was involved in the British victory in the Battle of the Saintes in 1782.

While serving on the West Indies station, Vancouver put the surveying and cartographic skills he learned under Cook to use surveying Port Royal and Kingston Harbour. He was assisted by Joseph Whidbey, who later served as his sailing master.

In 1789, the Royal Navy was planning another voyage to the Pacific. It was to be commanded by Henry Roberts, another of Captain Cook's protégés, with Vancouver as his second in command. HMS Discovery (not Cook's ship) was purchased specifically for this mission.

However, when Spanish forces seized Nootka Island in Nootka Sound, the expedition was put on hold. Spain and Britain came close to war, but an accommodation was reached with the Nootka Convention. However the dispute disrupted the preparations for the expedition. By the time the convention was signed, Roberts was unavailable and Vancouver was given command.

[edit] Vancouver's 1791-1794 explorations

Vancouver followed the coasts of what is now Washington and Oregon northward. In April 1792 he encountered American Captain Robert Gray off the coast of modern Oregon just prior to Gray's sailing up the Columbia River.[1] Then in June he named Burrard Inlet after his friend Sir Harry Burrard. In October 1792, he sent Lieutenant William Robert Broughton with several boats up the Columbia River. Broughton got as far as the Columbia River Gorge, sighting and naming Mount Hood. Vancouver also entered the Strait of Juan de Fuca, between Vancouver Island and the mainland. He intended to explore every bay and outlet in this region, and many times had to use boats, as the inlets were often too narrow for his ships. He met a Spanish exploring party led by Dionisio Alcala Galiano and Cayetano Valdes y Flores, and for some time they explored Puget Sound (after Peter Puget) together.

Afterwards, Vancouver went to Nootka on Vancouver Island, then the region's most important harbour, where he was to get any British buildings or lands returned by the Spanish. The Spanish commander, Bodega y Quadra, was very cordial and he and Vancouver exchanged the maps they had made, but no agreement was reached; they decided to await further instructions. After a visit to Spanish California, Vancouver spent the winter in further exploration of the Sandwich Islands (Hawaii).

The next year, he returned to British Columbia, and proceeded further north. He got to 56°N, but because the more northern parts had already been explored by Cook, he sailed south to California, hoping to find Bodega y Quadra and fulfill his mission, but the Spaniard was not there. He again spent the winter in the Sandwich Islands.

In 1794, he first went to Cook Inlet, the northernmost point of his exploration, and from there followed the coast south to Baranov Island, which he had visited the year before. He then set sail for England by way of Cape Horn, thus completing a circumnavigation.

Vancouver determined that the Northwest Passage did not exist at the latitudes that had long been suggested. Various locations around the world have been named after George Vancouver, including Vancouver Island (originally Vancouver & Quadra Island) and the cities of Vancouver, British Columbia, and Vancouver, Washington.

Vancouver faced a disciplinary inquiry when he returned because of an action he had taken against a junior officer who happened to be well connected politically. His career was effectively at an end. One of Britain's greatest navigators, Vancouver died in obscurity. His modest grave lies in St. Peters churchyard, Petersham.

[edit] Origin of the family name

The origin of Vancouver's name is a disputed issue. It is commonly believed that the name is derived from van Coevorden, meaning "from Coevorden," a city in the northeast of the Netherlands. This theory was suggested by Adriaan Mansvelt, the Consul General of the Netherlands based in Vancouver, British Columbia in the 1970s. It is known that a number of businessmen from the Coevorden area relocated to England in the 18th Century. Some of them were known as van Coevorden. Others adopted the surname Oxford, which is approximately the English translation of coevorden. Information presented by the city of Vancouver during the Expo '86 World's Fair, sanctioned Mansvelt's theory as historical fact. However, the documents cited in support are inconclusive.

An alternative theory claims that Vancouver is a misspelling or anglicized version of van Couwen, a very common name in the Netherlands.

[edit] Others present on Vancouver's voyage

[edit] Works by George Vancouver

  • Voyage Of Discovery To The North Pacific Ocean, And Round The World In The Years 1790-95, by George Vancouver (ISBN 0-7812-5100-1)

[edit] References

  • Captain Vancouver North-West Navigator by E C Coleman. 2006. Published by Tempus Publishing, ISBN 0-7524-3892-1
  1. ^ Flora, Stephenie. Captain Robert Gray. OregonPioneers.com. Retrieved on 2006-12-11.

[edit] External links