I | INTRODUCTION |
Captain James
Cook (1728-1779), British explorer and navigator, famous for his three
voyages of exploration in the South Pacific Ocean and the coastal waters of
North America. Although Cook is best known as the discoverer of the Hawaiian
Islands (see Hawaii), his greatest achievements were the broad scope of
his exploration and his detailed, careful documentation of his discoveries.
II | EARLY LIFE AND SEAFARING EXPERIENCE |
The son of a farm worker, Cook was born in
the rural village of Marton, in what was then the county of Yorkshire, England.
At age 17 he moved to the coast, settling in the port town of Whitby, where he
apprenticed himself to a merchant and shipowner. In 1755, with England on the
verge of war with France (see Seven Years’ War), Cook enlisted in the
British Royal Navy. Within two years he was master of a warship en route to
Canada. There he began assisting an army surveyor assigned to map newly acquired
territory. Cook’s aptitude for this work was evident to his superiors, and as a
result he spent the rest of the war mapping Québec and the St. Lawrence River.
After the war ended in 1763, the British government assigned Cook to map the
coast of Newfoundland.
III | FIRST PACIFIC VOYAGE |
Cook’s talent for mapmaking made him a
logical choice when the British government decided to launch a voyage to the
Pacific. Officially, the expedition was designed to observe the transit of
Venus, a rare astronomical phenomenon that would be visible only in the southern
hemisphere. A second motive, however, was to search for Terra Australis,
a large continent widely believed to exist in the far southern latitudes. The
scientific importance attached to the voyage was evident in its crew, which
included an astronomer, two artists, and three naturalists (among them Joseph
Banks, later president of the Royal Society).
The expedition set sail from Plymouth,
England, in 1768 aboard a single ship, the Endeavour. After crossing the
Atlantic Ocean and rounding Cape Horn at the tip of South America, the crew
headed for Tahiti, which British explorer Samuel Wallis had encountered in 1767.
Tahiti was ideally situated for observing the transit of Venus. Centrally
located in the South Pacific, with good harbors, friendly inhabitants, a balmy
climate, and abundant food and water, Tahiti would prove an important site for
rest and reprovisioning on Cook’s voyages.
Once the transit observations were
concluded, Cook launched his search for the fabled southern continent. In the
17th century, explorers had sighted bits of what are known today as Australia
and New Zealand, but their maps were sketchy, encouraging speculation that these
lands might constitute the northern fringe of a huge continent. Cook headed
southwest in search of these previously reported lands and had striking success.
He circumnavigated the North and South islands of New Zealand. He also sailed
the entire length of Australia’s eastern coast (never before seen by a
European), which he claimed for Britain and named New South Wales. He then
navigated the treacherous waters between Australia and New Guinea. Stops at Java
and the Cape of Good Hope concluded the voyage, and Cook and his crew returned
in July 1771.
Cook’s first voyage added immensely to the
world’s knowledge of the southern hemisphere. The vast number of specimens
collected and the detailed observations recorded by Cook, Banks, and other
members of the crew set a new standard for scientific exploration. Cook also set
a new standard in another area: keeping his men healthy. He realized that lack
of fresh food likely caused high mortality on long voyages. Therefore, he
stocked his ship with sauerkraut (to prevent scurvy, a disease caused by vitamin
C deficiency) and insisted that his men eat fresh provisions during stops at
port. As a result, Cook lost only seven men until the ship reached Java, where
many succumbed to malaria and dysentery. On Cook’s subsequent voyages, mortality
was close to zero.
IV | SECOND PACIFIC VOYAGE |
Cook’s second and most ambitious voyage began
in 1772 and lasted until 1775. Its aim was to settle once and for all the
question of the existence of a southern continent by sailing around the globe at
the farthest south latitudes possible. To avoid harsh weather conditions in the
extreme southern latitudes, Cook charted a zigzag course, sailing far south in
the summers and retreating north to more temperate waters during the winters. He
made good use of the experience he had gained on his first voyage, using Tahiti
and New Zealand as winter ports.
Cook set out with two ships, the
Resolution (commanded by Cook) and the Adventure, and another
strong scientific team, including father and son naturalists Johann and George
Forster. The expedition sailed around the Cape of Good Hope and then southward
toward the Antarctic Ocean, making the first recorded crossing of the Antarctic
Circle in January 1773. The two ships then sailed across the southern Indian
Ocean to New Zealand and on to Tahiti. Not content to just relax in port, Cook
spent the remaining winter months searching for islands that other explorers had
encountered more than a century earlier but then “lost” due to primitive
navigation techniques. Heading west from Tahiti, he became the first European to
sight the island group that was subsequently known as the Cook Islands. He also
reached the islands of present-day Tonga, which he called the Friendly Islands
because of the welcome he received. The expedition returned to New Zealand to
stock up on fresh food before embarking on the long, cold voyage across the
southern latitudes. Cook’s determination kept the crew pushing farther south at
every opportunity, eventually reaching the southernmost point attained at that
time.
In early 1774 Cook and his crew returned to
the tropics, where they searched for other islands that earlier explorers had
vaguely described. First, they located Easter Island, where Cook was shocked to
find people speaking a language similar to that of the Tahitians, Tongans, and
New Zealanders. Discovering linguistic similarities among inhabitants of widely
scattered islands led Cook to speculate about the history of these Pacific
peoples, who are known today as Polynesians (see Polynesia). Speculation
continued as the crew sailed west to find a group of islands far west of Tahiti
and Tonga. Cook named the islands the New Hebrides (now Vanuatu), after an
island group off the coast of Scotland. The inhabitants of the New Hebrides
differed physically from the Polynesians and spoke very different languages.
These islands are part of what is known today as Melanesia. Among the other
islands that Cook relocated and charted were the Marquesas and New Caledonia.
Cook spent the next summer crossing both the
Pacific and the South Atlantic to Cape Town. This crossing completed Cook’s
circumnavigation of the globe at extreme southern latitudes, proving
conclusively that no large, habitable continent existed in this area. After
returning to England in 1775, he was made a fellow of the Royal Society. Just
months after his return, Cook proposed a third voyage, to tackle another great,
unresolved geographical mystery: the supposed Northwest Passage across North
America.
V | THIRD PACIFIC JOURNEY |
Cook’s third voyage (1776-1779) was fraught
with problems almost from the outset. In New Zealand, Cook’s expedition suffered
the first serious incident of violence on any of his voyages when local people
killed and ate a small group of his men. Cook found the consequences of European
encounters becoming evident in both Tonga and Tahiti. European visitors to the
islands depleted food supplies, creating resentment among native inhabitants and
intensifying rivalries between local rulers. Increasing petty theft by native
residents annoyed Cook and his crew, and Cook resorted to uncharacteristically
harsh methods to control it.
After leaving Tahiti, the expedition headed
north into uncharted territory. After becoming the first Europeans to sight the
Hawaiian Islands (which Cook named the Sandwich Islands) in 1778, they sailed
along the west coast of Canada and Alaska. Twice Cook explored inlets that
offered some promise of a Northwest Passage, but to no avail. After sailing
through the Bering Strait into the Arctic Sea and briefly scouting the Asian
side of the strait, Cook decided to winter in the Hawaiian Islands. He intended
to return to the Arctic the following summer.
The crew spent several pleasant weeks at
Kealakekua Bay in Hawaii. Soon after they left, they ran into a storm that
seriously damaged one of their ships, the Resolution. Upon returning to
Hawaii for repairs, Cook’s crew encountered a much less friendly reception,
probably because they had depleted local food supplies. When locals stole one of
the ship’s boats, Cook responded by taking their chief hostage. The incident
ended in violence when one of the islanders struck Cook and killed him. Cook’s
companions managed to get back to their ships, and the violence did not
escalate. The crew returned to the Arctic and then home. Although the expedition
had failed to discover a Northwest Passage, it added detailed charts of the
North Pacific to the achievements of Cook’s first two voyages.
VI | EVALUATION |
Cook’s greatest accomplishments stemmed from
his careful, thorough approach to exploration. Although he made few original
discoveries, he consolidated the work of several earlier explorers, mapping much
of the Pacific from the Arctic to the far south and laying to rest the myth of a
habitable continent surrounding the South Pole. In the process, he and his crews
collected specimens of plant and animal life and made serious efforts to
understand the cultures of native peoples. They tested new methods of navigating
at sea and demonstrated that proper diet could reduce the high mortality rates
of sailors on long voyages. In the spirit of scientific exploration, Cook and
his men documented their work, producing accurate maps and detailed descriptions
of their discoveries.
Cook’s journals have been published as The
Journals of Captain James Cook on His Voyages of Discovery, edited by J. C.
Beaglehole (1955-1967). Other publications resulting from his voyages
include The Endeavour Journal of Joseph Banks, 1768-1771, edited
by J. C. Beaglehole (1962), and The Resolution Journal of Johann
Reinhold Forster, 1772-1775, edited by Michael Hoare (1982).
No comments:
Post a Comment