Class _tS^SD_ Os^t. .JJA^M Q 2- / o- V Jh^/ka^^ "j^t^ %> '2i!^v.\>\^'5C.^%V\\:i "Xa^^Wn, MEMOIR, HISTORICAL AND POLITICAL, NORTHWEST COAST OF NORTH AMERICA, ADJACENT TERRITORIES ILLUSTRATED BY A MAP AND A GEOGRAPHICAL VIEW OF THOSE COUNTRIES. TRANSLATOR AND LIBRARIAN TO THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE. WRITTEN BY DIRECTION OP THE HONORABLE JOHN FORSYTH, SECRETARY OF STATE OP UNITED STATES, AND PUBLISHED BY ®RDER OF THE SENATE, ON MOTION OP THE HONORABLE L. F, LINN, CHAIRMAN OP THE SELECT COMMITTEE ON THE OREGON TERRITORY. WASHINGTON: BLAIR AND RIVES, PRINTERS. 1840. PREFACE. The following correspondence, between the Chairman of the Commit- tee of the Senate on the Oregon Territory and the Secretary of State, to- gether with extracts from the Journal of the Senate, will serve to show the circumstances under which this Memoir has been written and pub- lished. Washington, January 25, 1840. Sir : I am informed that your department is in possession of much in- formation relating to the territory of Oregon, its geography, resources, and the title of the United States to the same. If consistent with your duty, I would be pleased to be put in possession of such papers and documents as you may think proper to send me, requesting that j^ou will mark such as you would rather not have printed or made public. Your obedient servant, L. F. LINN, Chairman pf the Select Committee on the Territory of Oregon. Hon. John Forsyth, Secretary of State. Ansioer. Department of State, Washington, January 25, 1840. Sir : I have had the honor to receive your letter of this day's date, ask- ing for information relative to the territory of Oregon, its geography and resources, and the title of the United States to the same. Sir. Greenhow, the translator and librarian of this department, has been for some time past, by my direction, employed in collecting and arranging historical in- formation on the subject of the northwestern coasts of America ; I send you the result of his labors, and submit it to the discretion of the com- mittee to be printed or not, as they may think most advisable. Not hav- ing had the leisure to compare the statements in the Memoir with the va- rious works and documents upon which they are founded, I can vouch only for the zeal, industry, and good faith of Mr. Greenhow, by whom they were prepared. I am, sir, your most obedient servant, JOHN FORSYTH, Secretary of State, Hon. Lewis F. Linn, Senator of the United States. IV From the Journal of the Senate of the United States. " Monday, February 10, 1840. — On motion by Mr. Linn, " Ordered^ That a history of the northwest coast of North America and the adjacent territories, conmmnicated to the Select Committee on the Oregon Territory, be printed, with the accompanying map ; and that two thousand five hundred copies, in addition to the usual number, be printed for the use of the Senate." ^'Wednesday, February 12, 1840. — On motion by Mr. Linn, " Ordered^ That the history of the northwest coast of North America, ordered to be printed on the 10th instant, be printed under the direction of Mr. Greenhow." The Memoir relates principally to the southern and middle portions of the northwest coast of this continent and the adjoining territories, which have for many years formed the subjects of discussions between the Governments of the United States, Great Britain, and Russia ; and it is designed to show the origin, nature, and extent of the several claims, in order to afford the means of correctly estimating the justice of each. In prosecuting these objects, it has been found necessary to trace the whole progress of discovery and settlement, not only in the territories above mentioned, but also in those farther north, in which the exclusive right of the Russians to form establishments has been recognised by the other Powers, and in the region called California, on the south, which constitutes a part of the Mexican republic. With this view, the original authorities have been carefully examined and compared, and the facts thus elicited are here related concisely or at length, as their general im- portance or their bearing upon the chief objects of the Memoir appeared to justify. Expeditions for the purposes of discovery, trade, or settlement, and disputes between the Governments or the people of distant civilized na- tions, have afforded, as yet, the only materials for the history of this section of America ; and those materials have remained scattered through the annals of other countries, the journals of voyages and travels, and official or private reports and letters, the correctness of which could not be ascertained without great labor and research. Accounts of all these expeditions and discussions are here presented, arranged in the form of a regular narrative, so as to embrace a complete history of the west- ern portion of our continent — if it be allowable to speak of the history of a country which still remains almost entirely in a state of nature. This work is, however, not strictly a history; nor is it merely an ar- gument in support of the title of the United States to the possession of the territories in dispute. The writer has endeavored, agreeably to the directions of Mr. Forsyth, to afford a clear and distinct view of the pretensions of each of the claimant Powers, and of the circumstances on which they are based. Although he has, for the sake of complete- ness, introduced some facts and reasonings not directly relevant to those objects, he has, on the other hand, suppressed none which, if given, might have led to conclusions more nearly just. In illustration of the Memoir, a geographical account of the western section of North America has been prefixed to it, together with a map of those countries, drawn from the best authorities which could be procured. The geographical account has been necessarily much compressed, the limits of the work not permitting details ; while the map is, on the whole, much fuller than any other of that part of the world which has yet been published. With regard to the correctness of the descrip- tions, the coast will, it is believed, be found represented with sufficient accuracy, both in the account, and on the map ; but the interior of the continent, from the Pacific to the Rocky Mountains, and, indeed, to the vicinity of the Mississippi, has been as yet so imperfectly examined, that very little precise topographical information respecting it can be procured. Great care has been taken to present the dates of the several occur- rences, and the authorities on which they are recounted, so that the reader will have the means of satisfying himself as to the truth of each statement ; with regard to the reasonings and deductions, he must rely upon his own powers of discrimination. Washington, May 12, 1840. J TABLE OF CONTENTS. GEOGRAPHY OF THE WESTERN SECTION OF NORTH AMERICA, Page. Introduction -----------1 Great natural divisions of the western section of North America - - - 1 Political divisions --..--.---2 Claims of Great Britain, Russia, the United States, and Mexico - - - - 2 General view of the whole coast --------3 Description of the northernmost territories of the western section - - - 4 Descripiion of the southern portion, or California ------ 9 General view of the mountain-ridges of the western section - - - - 11 Particular description of Oregon, or the country drained by the Columbia - - 12 First region of Oregon, or loto country -------14 Second region, or middle country --------16 Third region, or tipper country - - - - - - - -17 The Columbia and its branches .----.--18 MEMOIR, HISTORICAL AND POLITICAL, ON THE NORTHWEST COAST OF NORTH AMERICA, AND THE ADJACENT TERRITORIES. Year, Page. 1493. America discovered, and supposed to be connected with Asia - - - 21 1495. Treaty of Partition between Spain and Portugal - - - - - 21 1499. First voyage from Europe to India, by Gama, around Africa - - - 22 1500. Discovery of the Strait of Anian (probably Hudson's Strait) by Cortereal - 39 1513. Discovery of the Pacific Ocean by Balboa - - - - - 22 1517. Discovery of Mexico by Grijalva - - - - - - -22 1520. Voyage of Magellan from Europe to India, westward across the Pacific - 23 1523. Conquest of Mexico completed by Cortes, who explores the adjacent coasts in search of rich countries and passages for ships between the Atlantic and the Pacific 23 1532. Voyages of Hurtado Mendoza, Grijalva, and Becerra in the north Pacific, by order of Cortes ----.-.-.g4 1534. Becerra discovers the southern extremity of California - - - - 24 1535. Voyage ofCortes in the Gulf of California 25 1536. Cabeza Vaca completes his journey across the continent, from Florida to the Californian Gulf 27 1539. Voyage of Ulloa, who discovers the west coast of California to the 30th degree of latitude- ...--.--_ 26 Journey of Friar Marcos de Niza, who pretends to have discovered a rich country, called Cibola, northwest of Mexico - - - - - 28 1540- '3. Expeditions of Alarcon and Coronado in search of Cibola - - - 29 Voyage of Cabrillo and Ferielo, who discover the west coast to the 43d degree of latitude- .-.---.--30 Expedition of Villalobos from Mexico to India, and discovery of the Philippine Islands -.-..-.---32 1547. Death of Cortes .--.----. 28 1564. Expedition of Legaspi from Mexico to India ; conquest of the Philippine Islands, and discovery of the mode of navigating the Pacific from west to east, by Ur- danete - - - - - - . - - - 32 Establishment of the Spanish trade between America and India - - 33 Prohibitory measures of the Spaniards against the trade or settlement of other nations in America .-.--.--34 1578 '80. Voyage of Francis Drake, who visits the northwest coast - - 36, 201 1580. Voyage of Gali from China to Mexico, in which he sails along the northwest coast .-.----.-- 33 1587. Voyage of Cavendish around the v/orld ------ 37 vm Year. Page 1587. Attempts of the English to discover passages for ships between the Atlantic and the Pacific Oceans, causing great uneasiness to the Spanish Government - 39 1588. Pretended northern voyage ol Maldonado from the Atlantic to the Pacific 40, 205 1592. Voyage of .Tuan de Fuca along ihe northwest coast ... 42,207 1594. Voyage of Cermenon, who is wrecked on the Bay of San Francisco - - 44 Spanish Government orders colonies to be established in California - - 44 1596. Voyage of Vizcaino in the Gulf of California - - - - - 44 1602. Survey of the west coast to the 43d degree of latitude by Vizcaino - - 44 1603. Supposed discovery of a great river, near the 43d degree, by Aguilar, in one of Vizcaino's vessels .-..._-_ 46 1610. Discovery of Hudson's Bay by Hudson - - - - - - 47 1616. Discovery of the navigation around Cape Horn, by Lemaire and Van Schouten 47 1640. Supposed northern voyage of Fonte from the Pacific to the Atlantic - - 41 1643. Voyage of De Vries in the Pacific, north of Japan - - - - 58 1669. Charter given to the Hudson's Bay Company by King Charles 11. of England - 75 Unsuccessful attempts of the Spaniards to plant colonies in Calilbrnia - - 48 1697. The Jesuits undertake the reduction of California for the King of Spain - 48 The Russians conquer Kamschatka - - - - - - 58 1700. Father Kuhn, a Jesuit, ascertains that California is connected with the Amer- ican continent --------^59 1711. Peter the Great, Czar of Russia, forms plans for exploring the seas east of Kam- schatka, and for extending his dominion to America - - - - 150 1712. Louis XIV,, King of France, grants Louisiana to Crozat - - _ 150 Supposed extent of Louisiana at that time _ - - . , 150 1714. Treaty of Utrecht between Great Britain and France, no boundary-line estab- lished in America agreeably to its provisions - - . - 150, 216 1728. Voyage of Beering, by order of the Empress Catherine of Russia, from Kam- schatka into the Arctic Sea .---.-.59 The sea east of Kamschatka ascertained to be a part of the Pacific - - 60 1741. Voyage of Beering and Tschirikof to America - - - - - 60 Beering discovers the American continent near Mount Saint Elias - - 61 Beering is wrecked on one of the Aleutian Islands, where he dies - - 63 Tschirikof discovers America near the 56th degree of latitude, and returns to Kamschatka .--.--..-63 1742. The survivors of Beering's crew return to Kamschatka, and begin the fur trade between that country and the islands eastward of it - - - - 64 1762. France cedes Louisiana to Spain - - - - - ' - - 75 1763. France cedes Canada to England - - - - - - " - 149 General peace ; British and French voyages of discovery - - - 51 1766. Voyage of Synd 66 1766-'8. Journey of Carver through the country west of Lake Superior - - - 76 1768. Voyage of Krenitzin and Levashef from Kamschatka - - - -66 Expulsion of the Jesuits from America - - - - - - 50 1769. Establishment of the first colonies on the west coast of North America by the Spaniards ----------52 1769-'72. Journeys of Hearne, west and northwest from Hudson's Bay, to the Arctic Sea 75 1770. Dispute between Great Britain and Spain about the Falkland Islands - - 54 1771. First voyage from Kamschatka to China, by a party of Polish exiles, under Count Benyowsky _-..-__. 66 1774. Voyage of the Spaniards, under Perez, along the northwest coast to the 53d de- gree of latitude - - - -'- - - - -69 1775. Voyage of the Spaniards, under Heceta, Bodega, and Maurelle, to the 58th de- gree of latitude ---------70 Heceta discovers the mouth of a river, named by him San Roque, now called the Columbia .-.---.--72 1776. Captain Cook sails from England for the Pacific, in search of a northern pas- sage from that sea to the Atlantic - - - - . - 78 1778. Cook examines the northwest coast of America to the 70th degree - - 79 1779. Death of Cook and of his successor Clerke - - - - - 83 The English, under Gore, on their way to England, carry to Canton the first furs which entered that place by sea - - - - - - 83 Voyage of the Spaniards under Arteaga, Bodega, and Maurelle, to Prince Wil- liam's Sound - - - - -- - - -84 1783. Association of merchants in Siberia for carrying on the fur trade - - 88 Expedition under Shellikof, who establishes settlements on the Island of Kodiak 88 1784. Publication of the Journals of Cook's Voyage - - - - - 86 Preparations begun in many countries for carrying on the fur trade between Northwest America and China -------87 IX Year. ' 1786. Voyage of the French, under La Perouse, from Mount Saint Elias to Monterey 88 1787. Bc-rkely discovers ihe Strai of Fuca - - - - - - 91 Voyages of Ponlock and Dixon ------- 92 Sept. 30. The ship Columbia, Capt. Kendrick, and sloop Washington, Captain Gray, sail together from Boston for the north Pacific - - - - 89 Forraa.ion of the Northwe^t Fur trading Company of Montreal - - 139 1788. Captains Kendrick and Gray arrive at Nootka, where they spend the following winter --.--.-. -.90 Voyages of Meares and Douglas from Macao to the northwest coast - - 100 Meares attempts to find the River San Roque, and pronounces that none such exists -..----.--93 Voyage of the Spaniards, under Martinez and Haro, to observe the progress of the Russians on the north Pacific coasts - - - - - - 96 Attempt of Ledyard to pass, through Russia and America, from Paris to the United Slates " - - - - - - - - - 94 1789. Martinez and Haro sent by the Viceroy of Mexico to occupy Nootka - - 97 Complaints addressed by the Spanish Government to that of Russia against the encroachments of Russians in America - - - - - 97 The Spaniards occupy Mootka, and seize vessels which are said to be the prop- erty of British subjects ------- 104, 212 Captain Gray first sails around Clueen Charlotte's Island, to which he gives the name of Washington Island - - - - . . 92 The Spaniards quit Nootka ; which they, however, reoecupy in the following spring, under the command of Elisa . - - . - - 117 1790.^ The owners of the vessels seized at Nootka complain to the British Government, which demands satisfaction from that of Spain - . _ . . m The King of Spain asks aid from Louis XVI. of France to resist the demand, which is refused by the National Assembly of France - - . - 113 Spain promises satisfaction to Great Britain ----- 114 Oct. -28. A convention is signed between those Powers, respecting the naviga- tion of thePacific and the right of occupying its vacant American coasts - 114 Remarks made on that convention in the British Parliament - - - 115 The Spaniards from Nootka endeavor to explore the northwest coasts - - 118 Voyages of Fidalgo and Gluimper ------- 118 Voyage of the Russians, under Billings, from Kamschalka - - - 122 Observations on the nature and duration of the engagements entered into be- tween Great Britain and Spain by the convention of October 28 - - 171 1791. Captain Vancouver sent from England with two ships to explore the northwest coasts of America, and as commissioner to receive the lands and buildings at Nootka, to be restored by the Spaniards according to the convention of 1790 118 Voyages of the Spaniards under Malaspina and Elisa . - - - 118 Voyage of Marchand in the French ship Solide ----- 119 Seven vessels arrive from the United States in the north Pacific, to be employed in the fur trade - - - - - - - - -119 Captain Ingraham, in the Hope, from Boston, discovers the Washington Islands 119 Captain Gray, in the Columbia, from Boston, discovers the mouth of the great river seen by Heceta in 1775, but cannot enter it - - - - 120 Captain Kendrick, in the Washington, irom Boston, discovers a new passage from Nootka Sound to the sea, and purchases lands near Nootka from the savages ---.--_--- 121 He commences the trade in sandal-wood ------ 122 Unsuccessful voyage of the Russians from Kamschatka, under Hall and Sarets- chef 122 1792. Voyasres of the Spaniards under Caamano, and Galiano and Valdes - - 122 The Spaniards endeavor, unsuccessfully, to establish a new settlement on the Strait of Fuca 123 Clueen Charlotte's, or Washington Island, explored and frequented by the American fur-traders ------- 92, 123 Captain Cluadra arrives at Nootka as commissioner on the part of Spain to exe- cute the convention of 1790 - - - - - - - 132 Vancouver arrives on the American coast, near Cape Mendocino - - 123 He examines the coast northward to the Strait of Fuca, and pronounces that there is no large river or inlet there ------ 125 Gray, in the Columbia, on his way to examine the river which he had found in the preceding year, meets Vancouver near the Strait of Fuca, and informs him of the discovery, which Vancouver doubts ----- 125 Gray discovers BulfincA's Harbor, and enters the great river, (May 11,) which he names after his ship, the Columbia ------ 128 Year. Page. 1792. Observations on this discovery - - - - - - - 139 Vancouver surveys the Strait of Fuca, partly in company with the Spanish ves- sels Suiil and Mexicana, under Galiano and Valdes . - - _ 131 Observations on the Journal of the Voyage of the Sutil and Mcxicana - - 132 Vancouver and Cluadra meet at Nooika - - - - - - 132 Letter addressed to Cluadra by Gray and Ingraham, (August 3,) detailing the occurrences at Nootka in the summer of 1789 - ... - 132, 212 Vancouver's false synopsis of that letter ------ 134 Negotiations between Vancouver and Cluadra, as related by Howel - - 134 The commissioners agree to wait for orders from their Governments - - 134 Cluadra communicates accounts and charts of Gray's dis^-overies to Vancouver 135 Survey of BuJfinch's Harbor by Vancouver's lieutenant, Whidbey - - 135 Survey of the Columbia by Lieutenant Broughton, who attempts to appropriate to himself the merit of first entering the great river . . - - 136 Vancouver winters ai the Sandwich Islands; his proceedings there - - 137 Expedition of Rodman and a party of Americans from the mouth of the Missouri across the continent, to the Pacific ------ 140 1793. Vancouver surveys the northwest Archipelago ----- 137 He winters at tlie Sandwich Islands, the sovereignty of one of which is ceded to Great Britain by Tamahamaha ------- 138 Death of auadra ----.---- 138 A1ava appointed Spanish commissioner in place of Cluadra . - - 138 Expeditions of Mackenzie across the continent to the Pacific, which he reaches near the 53d degree of latitude - - - - - - - 140 1794. Vancouver completes his surveys of the northwest coast, and sails for England 141 1795. The Spaniards abandon Nootka -.-..-- 141 1796. Brou2:hton arrives as British commissioner at Nootka, which he finds occupied only by the savages -------- 141 Spain declares war against Great Britain - - - - - - 143 1797. Deathof Vancouver, and publication of his Journals . - . . 139 Observations on his Journals - - - - - - - 139 Whole of the direct trade in furs from the northwest coast to China carried on by Americans, from 1796 to 1814 -.-... 143 Formation of the Russian -American Company, which receives a charter (1799) from the Emperor Paul -------- 145 1800. Foundation of Sitca, or New Archangel, by the Russians, under Baranof - 145 Louisiana ceded by Spain to France, which (1803) cedes it to the United States 149 Observations on the extent of Louisiana ------ 150 1803. Voyao:e of Krusenstern and Lisiansky from St. Petersburgh to the north Pacific 146 Desi ruction of the ship Boston, of Boston, by the savages at Nootka Sound - 142 1804. Lewis and Clarke begin their expedition across the continent - - . 152 1805. They reach the mouth of the Columbia ------ 152 1806. And" return to the United States - - - - - - - 153 Frazer, and others in the employ of the Northwest Trading Company, cross the Rocky Mountains, and form the first British establishment in that part of America on Frazer's Lake - ... - - - - 155 Krusenstern and Lisiansky complete their voyage of circunmavigalion - - 147 1807. Convention signed at London between the plenipotentiariesof Great Britain and the United States, for the settlement of boundaries in America, but not con- cluded - -- - -,- - - - - 154 1808. Missouri Fur Company at Saint Louis ------ 156 Henry establishes a tradmg-post on the Lewis River - - - - 156 Russian Government complains to that of the United States of the misconduct of American fur-traders in supplying the natives on the northwest coasts with arms ---------- 147 Negotiations on that subject ineffectual ------ 148 1810. Formation of the Pacific Fur Company at New York, by J. J. Astor - - 156 Parties sent by sea from New York, and by land from Saint Louis, to establish factories on the Columbia -...--- 157 1811. Foundation of Jisiorm, near the mouth of that river - - - - 157 Adventurous journey of the land party under Hunt _ - - - 158 Destruction of the ship Tonquin, which had carried out the other party, and her crew, by the savages ni-ar Nootka .-.-.- 158 1812. War declared by the United States against Great Britain _ . - 158 The Russians establish themselves in California near Port San Francisco - 148 1813. Property of the Americans on the Columbia sold to the Northwest Company - 160 Astoria taken by a British ship ofA^ar, and its name changed to Fort George - 161 1814. Peace of Ghent between Great Britain and the United States - - - 163 XI Year. Page. 1814. Agreeably to which, (1815,) the Americans demand the restitution of Astoria - 164 The Russians attempt unsuccessfully to taKe possession of one of the Sandwich Islands - 148 1817. Messrs. Prevost and Biddle sent in the ship Ontario to take possession ol Astoria, 164 Discussions on the subject between the British and American Governments - 164 1818. Astoria restored formally by the British authorities to those of the United Slates 165 Negotiation between Great Britain and the United States - - - 168 Negotiation ended by the convention of October, 1818 - - - 169,219 Negotiaiion between the United Slates and Spain, terminated by the Florida Treaty, (February, 1819,) in which the 42d parallel of laliiude is made the boundary between the territories of the two Powers west of the Rocky Moun- tains 170,219 1819. Charter of the Russian- American Company renewed for twenty years - - 176 1820. Florida Treaty ratified 173 1821. Mexico becomes independent of Spain ------ 173 Coalition of the Northwest and the Hudson's Bay Companies - - - 175 Act of British Parliament for regulating the fur trade, and establishing a crimi- nal and civil jurisdiction in the Indian territories, which are granted to the Hudson's Bay Company --.....- 175 Ukase of the Russian Emperor, claiming all the west coasts of America north of the 51sl parallel --------- 176 1822. Discussions between the Russian and the American Governments on this subject 176 1823. Propositions made on the part of the United States for a joint convention respect- ing Northwest America, between the United States, Great Britain, and Russia 177 Propositions for a joint convention declined by the other Powers - - 178 Proceedings in the Congress of the United States - - 173, 178, 179 1824. Negotiation between the United States and Great Britain broken oflf - - 179 Negotiation between the United States and Russia terminated by a convention, fixing the parallel of 54 degrees 40 minutes as the limit between the parts of the coast on which either Power could ibrm establishments - 180, 220 1825. Convention of a similar nature between Great Britain and Russia - 181, 221 Revival of the fur trade between Saint Louis and the Columbia countries - 195 1826. Renewal of negotiation at London between the British and American Govern- ments ..-.-.--.- 183 1827. Con vention prolonging for an indefinite period the third article of the convention of October, 1818 185,223 Observations on the pretensions advanced by the parties in this negotiation - 185 1829. First trading expedition from Missouri to the Rocky Mountains in which wag- ons were employed .--.---- 195 Debates in Congress with respect to the occupation of Oregon - - . 188 1834-'38. Negotiations between the Governments of the United States and Russia, respect- ing the renewal of the 4lh article of the convention of 1825 - - - 189 Hudson's Bay Company's expedition to lake possession of the River Stikine ren- dered fiuiiless by the Russians ------- 190 Particular account of the Hudson's Bay Companv's system and establishments - 192 Captain Bonneville's trading expedition from Missouri to the Columbia - 196 Captain Wyeth's attempts to form American trading establishments beyond the Rocky Mountains -.-...-. 196 Establishment of American colonies on the river Wallamet . . - 198 Reflections on the fur trade in America, and on the future destinies of the coun- tries beyond the Rocky Mountains ------ 199 APPENDIX. A. — Respecting the part of the northwest coast seen bv Drake in 1579 - - - 201 B.— Respecting the pretended northern voyage of Maldonado from the Atlantic to the Pacific in 1588 - 205 C. — Account of the voyage of Juan de Fuca in the north Pacific in 1592, extracted from Purcha-'s Pilgrims - - - - - - - - - 207 D.— Correspondence at Nootka in 1792, between the Spanish commissioner Cluadra, and Messrs. Gray and Ingrabam, the commanders of two America^n vessels, respecting the occurrences at that place in 1789 ...... 212 E. — Showing that the 49th parallel of latitude was probably 710^ adopted as the line of sep- aration between the British and French territories in America, agreeably to the treaty of Utrecht in 1714 ...--... 216 F.— Containing extracts and copies of treaties between various nations respecting the northwest coast of America -------- 219 ERRATA. Since the following pages were printed, the author has discovered two errors, which, though not bearing upon any important question, he regrets, and is anxious to correct; particularly as the misstatements are injurious to the memory of Captain Cook, one of the noblest men whom any age or country has produced. In order to correct these errors, 1. Substitute for the two last sentences of the second paragraph, in page 46, the following: VThe Cape Blanco, mentioned as the northern limit of Aguilar's progress along the coast, is probably the same on which Vancouver, in 1792, bestowed the name of Cape Orford. 2. Expunge the last sentence but one of the third paragraph in page 79, containing the words—" in this part of his voyage he recognised the Cape Blanco of Aguilar, near the 43d parallel, but he thought proper to bestow on it the name of Cape Gregory." II GEOGRAPHY WESTERN SECTION OF NORTH AMERICA INTRODUCTION. I. The northwest coast is the expression usually employed in the Uni- ted States, at the present time, to distinguish the vast portion of the American continent, which extends north of the 40th parallel of latitude from the Pacific to the great dividing ridge of the Rocky Mountains^ to- gether with the contiguous islands in that ocean. The southern part of this territory, which is drained almost entirely by the River Columbia, is commonly called Oregon., from the supposition (no doubt erroneous) that such was the name applied to its principal stream by the aborigines. To the more northern parts of the continent many appellations, which will hereafter be mentioned, have been assigned by navigators and fur- traders of various nations. The territory bordering upon the Pacific southward, from the 40th parallel to the extremity of the peninsula which stretches in that direction as far as the Tropic of Cancer, is called California; a name of uncertain derivation, formerly applied by the Span- iards to the whole western section of North America, as that of Florida was employed by them to designate the regions bordering upon the At- lantic. The northwest coast and the west coast of California, together, form the loest coast of North America; as it has been found impossible to separate the history of these two portions, so it will be necessary to in- clude them both in this geographical view.* In order to show that the. fortieth parallel of latitude is not assumed ar- bitrarily, and without adequate grounds, as the southern limit of the northwest coast, it would be sufficient to cite the fact, that this line crosses the American continent exactly midway between its most north- ern and its most southern points ; but there are physical reasons for the assumption, no less strong than those based on such geometrical consid- erations. Almost immediately under the said parallel the coast makes an * In the following pages, the term coast will be used, sometimes as signifying only the sea- shore, and soraelimes as embracing the whole territory, extending therefrom to the sources of the river; care has been, however, taken to prevent misapprehension, where the context does not sufficiently indicate the true sense. In order to avoid repetitions, the northwest coast will be understood to be the northwest coast of North America; all latitudes will be taken as north lati- tudes^ and all longitudes as west from Greenwich, unless otherwise expressed. angle at a point called Cape Mendocino^ from which one line runs due north for a great distance, while the other takes a southeast direction. Moreover, this cape is the western extremity of a ridge of lofty moun- tains, extending continuously from the Pacific to the Rocky Mountains, nearly in the course of the 40th parallel, and completely dividing the region of which the waters flow southward from that drained by streams entering the Pacific north of the cape. This transverse ridge, generally called the Snowy Mountains^ appears, indeed, to be the boundary indi- cated by nature between California, on the south, and Oregon, or the country of the Columbia, on the north ; not only does it serve as a bar- rier of separation almost impassable, but the differences in climate and productions between the territories on either side of it are much greater than could have been supposed, considering merely their respective dis- tances from the equator. California is essentially a southern country, while Oregon exhibits the peculiarities of the north. The coasts of this section of America have been carefully surveyed by distinguished scientific navigators, and they may be found accurately delineated on charts ; with regard to the interior, however, little exact geographical information has been yet obtained. From all that can be learned respecting the continent north of the 58th parallel, it is a waste of rocky snow-clad mountains, incapable of sustaining a population, and, indeed, almost impenetrable. Of California, or the country south of the 40th parallel, no accounts are to be procured, except as to the portion im- mediately contiguous to the sea. It is only of the territory included be- tween these two lines of latitude, which is drained principally by the great River Columbia, that we can speak with any confidence ; even of this territory, all descriptions must be conveyed in general and qualified terms, and much remains to be done in it by the astronomer before our maps can present any other than very imperfect representations of its surface. In the following geographical sketch, an attempt will be made to com- bine the results of information and inquiry, relative to the western sec- tion of North America, in such a manner as to produce distinct impres- sions of its most prominent and characteristic features, adding only those details which may be requisite or useful in order to illustrate the state- ments and views contained in the political and historical memoir. In so doing, it has been found convenient to adopt the territorial divisions indicated by nature, rather than those which have been agreed on be- tween the Governments of various distant nations. The boundaries set- tled by these conventions will, however, be first described, and general ideas of the political questions at issue, with regard to this part of the world, will thus be easily communicated. POLITICAL DIVISION OF THE WESTERN SECTION OF NORTH AMERICA. II. By the Florida treaty, concluded in 1819 between the United States and Spain, a line drawn along the 42d parallel of latitude, from the Rocky Mountains to the Pacific, was fixed as the northern limit of the Spanish territory and the southern limit of that of the United States in western America. By a subsequent treaty between the latter Power and Mexico, the same line was admitted to separate the possessions of the two republics, Mexico taking the place of Spain. The Mexicans, accord- s ingly, claim the country as far north as the 42d parallel ; but the Rus- sians effectually bar the exercise of any Mexican authority beyond the Bay of San Francisco, near the 38th degree, by means of their colonies and garrisons in that quarter, established in 1812, and ever since main- tained in defiance alike of Spain and of her republican successors. By the convention of 1824, between the United States and Russia, it was agreed that the Russians should make no settlements on the west coasts of North America, or the adjacent islands, south of the latitude of 54 degrees 40 minutes, and the United States should establish none north of that parallel. By the convention of 1825, between Russia and Great Britain, it was in like manner stipulated that the British should occupy no place on the coasts or islands north of 54 degrees and 40 minutes, and that the Rus- sians should make no settlement south of the same latitude ; it was, more- over, agreed that a line drawn from that parallel northward, along the summits of the mountains, within 20 miles of the sea, to its intersec- tion with the 141st meridian of longitude west from Greenwich, (passing through Mount Saint Elias,) and thence, along that meridian, to the Arc- tic Sea, should be the "limit between the Russian and British posses- sions on the continent of America to the northwest." Thus two lines of boundary appear on the map of Northwest America, running completely across it : one northward, from the latitude of 54 de- grees 40 minutes, to the Arctic sea, as settled between Great Britain and Russia; and the other following the course of the 42d parallel, from the Pacific to the Rocky Mountains, as agreed on between, the United States and Mexico. Of the intermediate region, no part has been as yet defini- tively assigned by convention to any one nation ; the Americans claim the portion north from the 42d parallel, and the British claim that south fi-om the other line of boundary — each party to an extent undefined, but so far as to secure for itself the large and valuable country drained by the Columbia River. These nations have provisionally compromised their pretensions by an arrangement, made in 1818, and continued in 1827 for an unlimited period, to the effect, that any territory in that section of America, claimed by either, should be equally free and open for naviga- tion, trade, and settlement, to the citizens or subjects of both ; the Gov- ernment of each being at liberty to abrogate the arrangement, after giv- ing due notice of twelve months to that of the other.* III. The political questions at issue between the Governments of Great Britain, the United States, Russia, and Mexico having been summarily stated, we will now present a — VIEW OF THE WESTERN SECTION OF NORTH AMERICA, ACCORDING TO ITS NATURAL DIVISIONS. The northern extremity of the west coast of America is Cape Prince of Wales ^ in latitude of 65 degrees 52 minutes, which is also the western- most spot in the whole continent ; it is situated on the eastern side of ♦ The Russian settlements in America are under the control of the Russian-American Com- pany, of which a particular account will be found at page 143 of the memoir. For notices of the Hudson's Bay Company, to which belong all the B ritish establishments west of the Rocky Mountains, see pages 75 and 192 ; and, for copies of the treaties, see Appendix [F.J 4 Beering^s Strait, a channel fifty-one miles in width, connnecting the Pa- cific with the Arctic (or Icy, or North Frozen) Ocean, on the western side of which strait, opposite Cape Prince of Wales, is East Cape, the eastern extremity of Asia. Beyond Beering's Strait the shorus of the two continents recede from each other. 'The north coast of America has been traced from Cape Prince of Wales northeastward, to Cape Bar- row, in latitude of 71 degrees 23 minutes, which is probably the north- ernmost point of America, and thence eastward for more than a thou- sand miles, though not continuously to the Atlantic ; no vessel has, how- ever, yet proceeded beyond Beering's Strait as far as Cape Barrow. The southernmost point of the west coast of North America is Cape San Lucas, in latitude of 22 degrees 52 minutes, the extremity of the great Peninsula of California, which stretches from the American con- tinent on the Pacific side, nearly in the same direction, and between nearly the. same parallels of latitude as that of Florida on the Atlantic. The Californian peninsula joins the main land under the 33d parallel ; south of which, it is separated from Mexico, on the east, by the long arm of the ocean called by the Spaniards the Vermillion Sea and the Sea of Cortes, but more generally known as the Gulf of California. The coast extending between these two capes is not less than four thousand miles in length, and is bordered by a continuous line of moun- tains, which in most places overhang the sea, and are nowhere distant fi*om it more than eighty miles. From Cape San Lucas the general di- rection of the shores is northwest as far as Cape Mendocino, near the 40th degree of latitude ; thence it runs almost due north to Cape Flat- ter]/, at the entrance of the Strait of Fuca, near the 48th degree, where it makes an angle by turning to the east. South of Cape Flattery the coast is comparatively regular and free from great sinuosities, and there are only a few islands, all of which are small, in its vicinity ; northward of that point, to Cape Spenser near the 58th degree, it is, on the contrary, indented by numerous bays and inlets penetrating the land, and it is completely masked by islands separated from each other and from the continent by narrow and intricate chaimels. These islands compose the Northivest Archipelago ; they lie together in a recess of the continental coast between Cape Flattery and Cape Spenser, in length about seven hundred miles, and in breadth about one hundred and twenty ; and they are, indeed, simply a continuation, through the sea, of the mountain- chain which forms the westernmost rampart of America. Beyond Cape Spenser the American coast makes a bend, running northwest to the foot of Mount Sai?it Elias, the loftiest peak on the continent, and the most striking landmark on its western shore ; thence westward nearly in the course of the 60th parallel, and then southwest to the extremity of the Peninsula of Aliaska, in 54 degrees 40 minutes, around which it again turns to the north, and contiimes in that course to Cape Prince of Wales. Aliaska is, like California, formed by the projection of a lofty mountain -ridge into the Pacific ; from its extremity, and as if m contin- uation of it, a chain of islands, called the Aleutian Archipelago, extends westward, across the sea, to the vicinity of the opposite Asiatic Penin- sula of Kamschatka. IV. Of the northwesternmost division of the American coast, extending from Cape Prmce of Wales, southward, to the extremity of Aliaska, little need be said. The part of the Pacific north of the Aleutian Islands, which bathes those shores, is commonly distinguished as the Sea of Kamschatka^ and sometimes as Beering^s Sea, in honor of the Russian Inavigator of that name who first explored it. From this sea several arms run up into the main land of America, of which the largest are Norton Sound, on the south side of the peninsula terminated by Cape Prince of Wales, and Bristol Bay, called by the Russians Kamischezgaia Gulf, on the northwest side of Aliaska. The upper part of Bristol 'Bay receives the waters of a large lake called Lake Sliellikof; a little west of the outlet of which, on the shore of the bay, stands the small Russian factory, or fur-trading establishment, of Alexandrowsk, the only spot on. this whole coast occupied by civilized persons. The Aleutian Archipelago is considered by the Russians as consisting oi three groups of islands. Nearest Aliaska are the Fox Islands, of which, the largest are TJnimak, Unalashka, and Umnak ; next to these are the Andreanowsky Islands, among which are Atscha, Tonaga, and Kanaga^ with many smaller islands, sometimes called the Rat Islands ; the most western group is that first called the Aleutian or Aleoutsky Islands, which are Attou, Mednoi, (or Copper Island,) and Beering^s Island. On the lat- ter Beering was wrecked and lost his life in 1741. These islands are nearly all, like Aliaska, rocky, mountainous, and volcanic ; they are of little value in an agricultural point of view, but the Russians derive great advantage from the skins and furs of animals in and about their shores, for procuring which they have several establishments in the Archipel- ago, particularly on Unalashka. The original inhabitants are a hardy and bold race, whom the Russians had great difficulty in subduing ; these people are, however, at the present day, employed by their masters in fishing and hunting for furs in every part of the Pacific, and they com- pose a large proportion of the population of all the Russian settlements in America. There are other islands in the Sea of Kamschatka, of which the largest are Nunivak, near the American shore, under the 60th parallel, and Saint Laiorence or Clerke^s Island, at the entrance of Beering's Strait. V. Kamschatka is a large peninsula formed of volcanic mountains, ex- tending from the Asiatic continent southward to the latitude of 52 degrees 10 minutes, under which its southernmost point. Cape Lopatka, is situ- ated. West of the peninsula, between it and the main land of Asia, is the Sea of Ochotsk, which is separated fii'om the Pacific on the south- east by the Kurile Islands, extending southwest from Kamschatka to- wards Japan. The principal place in Kamschatka is Petro-Paulowsk, or the Harbor of Saint Peter and Saint Paul, on the Bay of Avatscha, in latitude of 53 degrees 58 minutes ; it is a small town, the inhabitants of which are all engaged directly or indirectly in the fur trade. VI. The next natural division of the coast is that included in the great bend between the southwest extremity of Aliaska and Cape Spenser. Here are to be remarked two deep gulfs, extending northward into the continent to the 62d degree, through each of which it was for some time hoped that a passage would be discovered communicating with the At- lantic. The westernmost of these gulfs was originally called Cook^s River, but is now generally named on English maps Cook'^s Inlet, and is known by the Russians as the Gulf of Kenay ; the other, which is only separated fi'om the former by a peninsula, received from the British navigators the appellation of Prince William^s Sound, and is distin- guished by the Russians as the Bay of Tschugatsch ; it is unnecessary 6 here to say more of them than that they contain many islands, and that the Russians have several factories on the shores of each. Further east- ward are Comptroller's Bay and Admiralty^ or Beering's^ or Mulgrave, or Yakutat Bay^ where it is generally believed that Beering first landed in America in 1741. In the reports of Beering's voyage, it is stated that the mouth of a large and rapid river was found on this part of the coast ; none such, however, has been discovered, though a considerable stream called by the Russians Reca Mednaia^ (or Copper River,) empties into Comptroller's Bay at some distance from the ocean. On this coast are several islands, of which the most extensive is Kodi- ak, at the entrance of Cook's Inlet, separated fi-om Aliaska on the west by the Strait of Shellikof ; its surface is rugged and mountainous, and it is indented by many deep bays, on one of which, called the Gulf of Chiniatskoy, on the east side of the island, is situated Saint Paul, one of the largest Russian settlements in America. South of Kodiak, near the southern extremity of Aliaska, are the Schumagin Islands, called after a seaman of Beering's ship, who died and was buried on one of them. Mount Saint Elias is on the northeast side of the bend, nearly under the 60th parallel of latitude ; its height is estimated at seventeen thousand feet, and that of Mount Fairweather, a little farther south, at fourteen thousand. They are both volcanic, as are nearly all the mountains in this part of America. The region bounded on the west and south by the divisions of the American coast above described is believed to be a frozen waste, traversed in all directions by mountains, and utterly incapable of affording a sup- port to a population except in the immediate vicinity of the ocean. It is used by the Russians only for the purposes of the fur trade, which is carried on at the cost of a dreadfiil sacrifice of comfort and of life ; and, as the animals yielding furs are daily diminishing in number, this part of the world must, no doubt, ere long be abandoned by all civilized persons. VII. The Northioest Archipelago is contained, as already stated, in a re- cess of the coast of the continent, between the 48th and the 58th parallels, (between which also extend the islands of Great Britain and Ireland on the western side of Europe.) This Archipelago was first minutely exam- ined by British navigators, who have bestowed on the islands names de- rived almost exclusively from the lists of the royal family, the ministry, the parliament, the peerage, the army, and the navy of Great Britain ; none of which names are, however, or probably will be at any future pe- riod, used by the occupants of the islands. To present all these names would be a tedious and useless labor •, and little more will be attempted than to afford some idea of the principal groups. King George the Third's Islands are the most northwestern ; the two largest of these are, respectively, called by the Russians who occupy them Chichagqfs and Baranoff's Islands. Near the western side of the latter, and divided from it by a narrow strait, is a small island, in the middle of which rises a beautiful conical peak, named by the Spaniards in 1775, Mount San Jacinto, and by the English under Cook, three years afterwards. Mount Edgecumb. On the southeast side of this strait, called by the Spaniards Port Remedios, by the British Norfolk Sound, and by the Russians the Gulf of Sitca, stands Sitca, or New Archangel, the capital of all the Russian possessions in America. It was estab- lished on its present site in 1804 ; and, by the most recent accounts, it contains about a thousand inhabitants, more than three-fourths of whom are Aleutians. The fort mounts sixteen short eighteen-pounders, and ten long nine-pounders, and is garrisoned by about three hundred persons. The Admiralty Islands are between the first described group and the main land, being separated from the former by the Chatltam Canal, and jfrom the latter by Step/ieii^s Passas'e. The part of the sea between these two groups and the continent on the north is called Cross Sound, from which the Lynn Canal, an extensive bay, stretches northward behind Mount Fairweather. South of the King George's and the Admiralty Islands are the groups of the Duke of York, the Prince of Wales, and Revillagigedo, (the last called after a Viceroy of Mexico,) between which are Prince Frederick's Sound, the Duke of Clarence's Strait, and other passages. All the islands above mentioned are north of the parallel of 54 degrees 40 minutes, which is the latitude of the southernmost point of the Prince of Wales's Islands, and are therefore all, with the coasts of the continent in their vicinity, among the territories on which the Russians claim the exclusive right of making settlements, in virtue of their treaties with the United States and Great Britain, as before stated at page 3. Between the 52d and 54th parallels, extends a large island, of triangular shape, which will be found on the map, bearing the name of Queen Char- lotte's, or Washington's Island. Its western coast was discovered by the Spaniards in 1774; from which time to 1787 it was considered, like all the other islands of the Archipelago, as forming part of the continent. In the last mentioned year, Captain Dixon, commanding the merchant ship Queen Charlotte, of London, becoming convinced that it was an insulated territory, bestowed on it the name of his vessel; but it was first circum- navigated in the summer of 1789, by Captain Gray, in the sloop Wash- ington, of Boston, who, without knowing any thing of Dixon's voyage, called the country Washing-ton's Island. It was the favorite resort of the early American fur-traders in the north Pacific ; and the manuscript Jour- nal of Captain Ingraham, who commanded the brig Hope, of Boston, in that sea, from 1791 to 1793, contains minute descriptions and charts of several ports, particularly on its eastern side, which are not noticed in any published accounts or maps. The limits of this sketch do not admit of mi- nute descriptions, or many interesting facts relative to the island in ques- tion might be related on the authority of Ingraham. He describes the soil and climate as being well adapted for agricultural purposes, particu- larly in the vicinity of Cunmiashawah Bay, a fine harbor on the east coast^ in latitude of 53 degrees 3 minutes; and oi Hancock's River, on the north side, called by the Spaniards Port Estrada, which was after it had been surveyed and named by the captain of the brig Hancock, from Boston. Pitt's, Burke's, and the Princess Royal groups, are composed of many small islands, situated very near the continent, east of Q^ueen Charlotte's islands. On one of these, called Dundas Island, the British Hudson's. Bay Company have a trading-post. The largest and southernmost island in the northwest Archipelago, is. that called Quadra and Vancouver's Island, extending, in its greatest length, from northwest to southeast about 200 miles, between the parallels of 48.Jand 51 degrees, and separated from the continent on the southvand east by the arm of the sea called the Strait of Fuca. The spot on this 8 island most worthy of note is Nootka Sound, an extensive bay communi- cating with the Pacific in latitude of 49 degrees 34 minutes, and affording excellent harbors for vessels in many places, particularly in Friendly Cove, on the north side, about ten miles from the ocean. This place was for many years the chief rendezvous of the fur-traders on the northwest coast; and some of the most important events in the history of that part of the world occurred there, as may be seen in the 6th and 7th chapters of this memoir. The name of Nootka was first applied by Cook, who believed it to be that employed by the natives ; no word has, however, since been found in use among them more nearly resembling Nootka than Yuquotl, their name for Friendly Cove. A few miles southeast from Nootka is another bay called Clyoquot; and further in the same direction, at the en- trance of the Strait of Fuca, is a third called Nittinat, in which are many islands. The Strait of Fuca extends between the island last described and the continent, from Cape Flattery, directly eastward, about one hundred and twenty miles, and thence northwest about two hundred and fifty miles, communicating with the ocean in the north through an entrance, called by the Americans Pintard's, and by the British Queen Charlotte's Sound. The southern part of the strait is about forty miles in width ; the part runniag northeast is in some places nearly as wide, but generally much narrower, and is filled with islands. This passage was discovered, in 1592, by Juan de Fuca, a Greek pilot, who declared that he had sailed through it into the Atlantic ; his statement was, however, disproved in 1792 by Vancouver, Galiano, and Valdes, who surveyed it together, and determined that it was only a great sound. The island which it sepa- rates from the continent, in that year received its present long and in- convenient appellation, by agreement between Vancouver and the Span- ish commandant, Quadra. VIII. The parts of the continent contiguous to these islands have re- ceived fi:om British navigators many names, such as Neiv Norfolk, New Corniuall, New Hanover, and New Georgia; all of which have become obso- lete. The country north of the 58th parallel is almost unknown. Two large rivers, the Peace River and the Turnagain, flow from it eastward through the Rocky Mountains into the Mackenzie, which empties into the Arctic Sea ; another river, called the Stikine, has also been lately discovered entering the Pacific east of Duke of York's Island, in latitude of 56 de- grees 50 minutes, which is said to be three miles wide at its mouth and one mile wide thirty miles higher up. The country on the Pacific, between the 49th and 58th parallels, is usual- ly distinguished by the British fur-traders as Neio Caledojiia; and, fi-om all accounts, it resembles the northern part of Scotland in its ruggedness, its lakes, and its barrenness. Its principal lakes are Stuarfs, Babine, and Fra- zer^s Lakes, all situated between the 54th and the 56th parallels. Babine Lake communicates with the Pacific by a large stream called Simpson^ s River; Frazer's and Stuart's Lakes are head- waters of Frazer''s River, which flows fi-om them nearly due south about four hundred miles, and enters the ocean in latitude of 49 degrees. The soil of New Caledonia is everywhere steril, very small portions only being fit for cultivation; and the climate, though much milder than that of the other countries of America between the same latitudes, is generally too severe for the pro- duction of the esculent grains and vegetables. The British Hudson's 9^ Bay Company have several establishments for carrying on the fur trade in this country, of which the principal are Fort Alexandria^ on Frazer's River, about three hundred miles from the sea, and Foi^t Langly, at the mouth of the same stream. From these, and other ports in New Caledo- nia, communications are maintained with Fort Vancouver, on the Colum- bia, by way of the rivers, and by steam and sail-vessels on the sea. The coast of Oregon extends from the Strait of Fuca to Cape Mendo- cino ; it will be hereafter particularly described. IX. Cape Mendocino presents two points running out into the ocean, about ten miles apart, of which the southernmost, in latitude of 40 de- grees 19 minutes, is the highest and the most prominent. From it the coast of California extends southeastward, about one thou- sand four hundred miles, to Cape San Lucas. On this coast are several harbors, of which the principal will be described. Port Bodega^ communicating with the Pacific in latitude of 38 degrees 19 minutes, is supposed to be the harbor in which Drake lay with his vessel in 1579. Here the Russians made their first settlement in Cali- fornia in 1812. Their chief establishment at present is Ross^ immediately on the ocean, about thirty miles farther north ; it contains about four hun- dred inhabitants, and from it the northern factories receive their supplies of provisions. Port San Francisco joins the Pacific, by a passage about two miles wide, under the parallel of 37 degrees 55 minutes. At a short distance from the sea it expands into a large bay, offering, as admitted by all the navigators who have visited it, one of the finest harbors in the world, and possessing every requisite for a great naval establishment. It receives two rivers, the Jesus Maria and the Sacramento^ at its northern extremity, and another called the San Joaquin from the south. The Sacramento is navigable for small vessels to the distance of eighty miles from its mouth, beyond which little is known about its course ; it is believed, however, to rise in the northeast angle of California, near the junction of the Snowy Mountains with the Rocky Mountains. This bay is much frequented by British and American whaling vessels, and it is, no doubt, destined to be the centre of an extensive commerce. Particular accounts of its nume- rous advantages may be found in the Journal of the Voyage made by Captain Beechey through the North Pacific in the years 1824-'25. Monterey Bay is contained in a semicircular recess of the coast, open- ing westward, about twenty miles in width, between its northern point. Cape Ano Nuevo and Cape Pinos on the south. Just within Cape Pinos there is good anchorage for vessels, where they are protected from the prevailing northwest winds, and are only in danger from the violent gusts which sometimes blow from the southeast along the whole Californian coast. Port San Diego^ in latitude of 32 degrees 51 minutes, near which the Spaniards planted their first colony on the west coast of California in 1769, is a long arm of the sea, extending southeast from its mouth into the land, and defended against the billows by a sand-ridge. The Bay of San Jose^ near the 23d degree, immediately east of Cape San Lucas, at the southernmost part of the peninsula, is probably the same in which the Spaniards first anchored when California was dis- covered by them in 1535, and which received from Cortes the name of Port Santa Cruz. It is one of the places where the pearl-fishery has been most successful. 10 Near the Californian coast are many small settlements, which were originally established by missionaries of the Franciscan order from Mex- ico, and were intended chiefly for the purpose of civilizing and convert- ing the natives. During the subsistence of the Spanish authority, these missions were fostered by the Government, and were maintained by means of supplies sent from Mexico ; but, since the downfall of that Power, they have not only received little assistance from Mexico, but have, moreover, been taxed for the support of the republic, of which the Indian neophytes were declared to be citizens. These Indians are, how- ever, unfortunately, among the most indolent and unintellectual of the human family; incapable of being affected by any other considerations than those addressed to their present and immediate hopes and fears. The missionaries treated them as children ; and those who have been re- moved from under the care and authority of these priests have uniformly sunk at once into misery and vice. The Mexican population is little, if at all, better than the aboriginal ; the soldiers and colonists sent there be- ing generally criminals banished to this — the Botany Bay of the republic. There is no rain on the coast of California from March to November; during the other months the rains are generally incessant, though in some years very little falls. The dews in summer are, hoAvever, so heavy as to prevent the destruction of vegetation. Near the sea, the temperature IS at all times salubrious and agreeable, the heat of the sun in summer be- ing moderated by constant breezes ; but farther inland it is said to be most oppressive. Agriculture has been, as yet, little practised in this country ; the inhabitants subsisting almost entirely on the meat of the wild cattle which cover the plains. The soil and climate appear to be favorable to the growth of every vegetable substance necessary for the subsistence and enjoyment of man ; but no large portion of the territory will probably be found productive without artificial irrigation. Of the interior of California little is known. The northern part, or continental portion, called Neiu California^ is said to be traversed by mountain-ridges, betAveen which are extensive plains ; some covered with grass, forming prairies, others sandy and destitute of vegetation, and others again being marshes. It appears to be certain that very little of the water which falls on this country from the clouds finds its way directly to the sea; as the line of mountains which borders the coast is traversed only by a few inconsiderable streams, besides those emptying into the Bay of San Francisco. The peninsula, or Old California^ is about seven hundred miles in length, and one hundred and thirty in breadth where it joins the conti- nent, under the 33d parallel ; farther south its breadth is less, not exceed- ing fifty miles in some places. The whole territory consists of moun- tains ; its climate is hot and dry, the soil is barren, and the inhabitants are few and miserable, deriving their support almost exclusively from the sea. The Gulf of California^ or ^ea of Cortes^ or Vermillion Sea, which separates the peninsula from the main land of Mexico on the east, is about seven hundred miles in length, varying in breadth from sixty to one hundred and twenty. At its northern extremity it receives two large rivers — the Gila, flowing from the east; and the Colorado, which rises in the north among the Rocky Mountains, about the 40th degree of latitude, near the sources of the Lewis, the Platte, the Arkansas, and the Rio del Norte. The northern part of the territory, on the eastern side of the 11 gulf, is called Sonora^ and the southern part Sinaloa ; they together form one department of the Mexican republic. The harbor of Guo.ymas in So- nora, near the 28th degree of latitude, is said to be one of the best in America, and the town has a large and increasing trade ; at the entrance of the gulf, on its eastern side, is another rising commercial place, called Mazatlan ; and farther south is San Bias, among the principal ports of Mex- ico on the Pacific. The old Mexican towns of Culiacan, on the river of the same name a little north of Mazatlan, and Chiametla, between the latter place and San Bias, are now nearly deserted. X. We next proceed to take a — GENERAL VIEW OF THE PRINCIPAL MOUNTAIN-CHAINS OF NORTH AMERICA. It has been already said, that the whole western coast of North America is bounded by a continuous chain of mountains ; and it may now be added, that the whole interior of the continent, to a considerable distance from the Pacific, is traversed by lofty ridges, sepaiated from each other by val- leys or plains of small extent. Of these interior ridges, the principal in every respect is that known by the general name of the Hocky Momi- tains, forming the northern portion of the great chain of highlands which stretches from the Arctic Sea to the Strait of Magellan, dividing, except in a few places, the territories drained by streams flowing into the Atlantic, from those whose waters enter the Pacific. Throughout its whole course, this chain lies nearer to the western shores of the continent than to the eastern, and therefore much the greater quantity of the water which Amer- ica supplies to the ocean is discharged into the Atlantic. The general course of the Rocky Mountain ridge is from north-north- west to south-southeast. Between the 58th degree of latitude and the 48th, it is nearly parallel to the Pacific coast, from which its distance is about five hundred miles ; from the 48th degree to the 40th, the coast runs due south, so that the distance between it and the ridge is constantly in- creasing, and on the 40th parallel exceeds seven hundred miles. The name of Rocky Mountains is not applied to any part of the chain south of the last-mentioned latitude ; the parts north of the 50th degree are some- times called the Cliipewyan Mountains. The highest points in the Rocky Mountains, and probably in North America, if not in the whole western continent, are those about the 52d degree of latitude, near the northernmost sources of the Columbia river. Mr. Thompson, the astronomer of the Hudson's Bay Trading Company, has measured several of these peaks, of which, one called Mount Brown is estimated by him at sixteen thousand feet, and another, Mount Hooker, at fifteen thousand seven hundred feet above the ocean level. It has been stated that the same gentleman has recently found other points farther north, which he considers to be more than ten thousand feet higher than either of those above mentioned. About the 42d parallel are also many lofty peaks, particularly among the Wind -river Mountains, a spur orojffset, which extends southeast from the main chain, and from which flow many of the head-waters of the Missouri and the Yellow Stone Rivers. North of the 56th degree the ridge diminishes in height, and near the Arctic Sea it is only a line of hills. Near the 42d degree of latitude, three other extensive ridges are united to the Rocky Mountains ; one on its eastern side, running towards the 12 Mexican Gulf, and forming the eastern wall of a great valley or basin, through which flows the river Bravo del Norte ; another, stretching south- west to and through the peninsula of California, between which and the Rocky Mountains is a vast region, drained principally by the rivers Colo- rado and Gila^ emptying into the northern extremity of the Californian Gulf; the third ridge is that commonly called the Snowy Mountains^ run- ning westward to the Pacific, in which it terminates at Cape Mendocino, and completely separating Oregon, or the country of the Columbia, on the north, from California on its southern side. From the place of union of these chains also flow the head-waters of the Bravo, emptying into the Mexican Gulf — of the Colorado — of the Lewis, the principal southern branch of the Columbia which falls into the Pacific —and of the Missouri, the Yellow Stone, the Platte, and the Arkansas, all of which are dis- charged into the Mississippi. Near the place of union of these chains is a remarkable depression of the Rocky Mountains, called the Southern Pass, affording a short and easy route for carriages between the head-waters of the south branch of the Platte, on the east, and those of the Colorado, on the west ; from which latter, is another pass through the mountains, northward, to the Lewis River. There are other depressions of the great chain farther north, between the Yellow Stone, on the one side, and the Salmon River and Flathead branches of the Columbia, on the other ; but they offer much greater difficulties to the traveller than the Southern Pass, which is, and will probably continue to be, the principal avenue of communica- tion between the United States and the territories of the Far West. In latitude of 53 is the great cleft, from which the Columbia flows, on one side, to the Pacific, and the Athabasca, on the other, to the Mackenzie emptying into the Arctic Ocean. Farther north, the Peace and the Turn- again Rivers, which rise near the Pacific, pass through the Rocky Moun- tains into the Mackenzie. Respecting the Snowy Mountains, very little exact information has been obtained. They appear to run in an unbroken line, from Cape Mendocino to the Rocky Mountains, between the 39th and the 42d parallels of lati- tude, and to be united with the other ridges extending northward and southward. Whether they are to be considered as a distinct chain, or as formed by the union of branches from the others, is a question interesting only to the geologist ; certain it is, that they present a complete barrier between California and the country of the -Columbia. XL The remainder of this sketch will be devoted entirely to the con- sideration of — OREGON, OR THE COUNTRY OF THE COLUMBIA. Oregon, considered as comprehending the territory drained by the Co- lumbia river, together with the seacoasts of that territory, lies within the following natural boundaries : on the east, the Rocky Mountains, extend- ing about nine hundred miles, from the 54th parallel to the 41st; on the south, the Snowy Mountains, in their whole length about seven hundred miles, from the Rocky Mountains to Cape Mendocino, on the Pacific, near the 40th degree of latitude ; on the west, the Pacific Ocean, from Cape Mendocino, about five hundred miles due north, to Cape Flattery, at the entrance of the Strait of Fuca, near the 48th degree of latitude; and on 13 the nortJi^ the Strait of Fuca, from Cape Flattery, about one hundred and twenty miles eastward, and thence by a line running northeast, along the summit of the highlands separating the waters of the Columbia from those of Frazer's River, to the Rocky Mountains, which it would reach about the 54th degree of latitude. Such are the natural boundaries of the territory drained by the Columbia, the surface of which may be estimated at about three hundred and fifty thousand square miles. The coast of Oregon on the Strait of Fuca is about one hundred and twenty miles in length, eastward from Cape Flattery^ where the strait joins the Pacific under the parallel of 48 degrees 23 minutes. The shores are composed of low sandy cliff's, overhanging beaches of sand or stones; from them the land ascends gradually to the foot of the mountains, which rise abruptly to a great height within a few miles of the sea. The only harbor immediately on the strait is Po7't Discovery^ situated near the southeast angle, which Vancouver pronounces perfectly safe and conve- nient for ships of any size ; it runs southward from the strait into the land, and is defended from the violence of the waves by Protection Island^ which stretches partly across its entrance on the north. A few miles far- ther east a long arm of the sea, called Admiralty Inlet^ penetrates the continent, southward from the strait, more than one hundred miles, ter- minating near the 47th degree of latitude in a bay named by Vancouver Puget^s Sound ; Hood^s Canal is a branch of this inlet, extending south- westward, and many smaller branches are given off on each side. The country surrounding Admiralty Inlet is described by Vancouver as beau- tiful, fertile, and in every respect agreeable ; and the bay, with its nume- rous arms stretching into the interior, must offer great advantages for commercial intercourse hereafter. The Hudson's Bay Company has tra- ding-posts on these waters, of which the principal is Fort Nasqually^ at the southernmost part of Puget's Sound. On the Pacific, the coast of Oregon extends five hundred miles in a line nearly straight from north to south, presenting in its whole length but two places of refuge for vessels. The northernmost of these is Bul- JincWs or Graves Bay, discovered in May, 1792, by Captain Robert Gray, of Boston ; it is situated in latitude of 46 degrees 58 minutes, and offers a secure anchorage for small vessels, sheltered from the sea by sandy spits and bars. " It appears to be of little importance as a port, in its natural state," says Vancouver, '' as it affords but two or three situations where boats can approach sufficiently near the shore to effect a landing ;" yet should the country become settled, this and other disadvantages may, per- haps, be corrected by artificial means. The other harbor is the mouth of the River Columbia, about thirty miles south of the former, which was also discovered by Captain Gray, and received from him the name of his ship; it will be described particularly hereafter. Port Trinidad, so called by the Spaniards who anchored there in 1775, is an open roadstead in lati- tude 41 degrees 3 minutes, entirely unprotected fi^om the ocean, and, ac- cording to Vancouver, unworthy to be called a harbor. Several small rivers fall into the Pacific south of the Columbia, of which the principal are the Klamet and the Uniqua, both discharging their waters near the 43d parallel. Vessels drawing not more than eight feet water may enter the Umqua ; at the mouth of which the Hudson's Bay Company have a trading-factory. On this coast are several capes ; none of which, however, project far 14 into the ocean. The most remarkable is Cape Blanco, discovered by the Spanish navigator Aguilar in 1803, and named by Vancouver in 1792 Cape Orford: it lies nearly nnder the 43d parallel, and is the extremity of a line of highlands which separates the valley of the Umqua, on the north, from the Klamet, on the south. The only island between Cape Flattery and Cape Mendocino, which has been thought worthy of a name, is one close to the continent^ near the latitude of 47^ degrees, called by the Span- iards Isla de Dolores^ or Isle of Griefs in commemoration of the murder of some of their men on the contiguous main land ; it afterwards re- ceived the appellation of Destruction Island^ from a similar loss there sus- tained by a British vessel in 1787. XII. The territory drained by the Columbia presents a constant suc- cession of mountain-ridges and valleys, or plains of small extent. The principal ridges are two in number, besides the Rocky Mountains, run- ning nearly parallel to each other and to the coasts ; and the country is thus divided into three great regions, which differ materially in climate, soil, and productive powers. ^The Jirst region^ or low country^ is that between the coast and the chain of mountains nearest to the sea; the sec- ond region is between the mountains nearest the sea and the middle ridge, called the Blue Mountains ; and the third region^ or high country^ is be- tween the Blue Mountains and the Rocky Mountains. All these divis- ions are crossed by the Columbia, the main stream of which is formed in the middle region, by the union of several branches flowing from the Rocky Mountains, and receiving in their course supplies from innumera- ble smaller tributaries draining the intermediate countries. The chain of mountains running nearest the Pacific, southward from the Strait of Puca, has received many names, no one of which appears to have been generally adopted. It is called the Calif oryiia Mountains ; the Klamet Mountains^ from the Indian nation which occupies a part of the territory on its western side; and the Cascade Mountains^ fi-om the cas- cades or cataracts formed by the Columbia, in passing through the ridge. Mr. Kelly, a patriotic American citizen, has proposed to call it the Presi- dent Rans^e^ and has accordingly assigned to the seven highest peaks, respectively, the names of the Cliief Magistrates of the United States, from Washington to Jackson, in succession.* These mountains are of con- siderable elevation, and many of their summits are visible from a great distance at sea, especially the most northern, called Mount Olympus^ near Cape Flattery. Mr. Wyeth speaks' thus rapturously of the view of them from the top of one of the Blue Mountains : " The traveller going west, sees the high points of the California Mountains, about one hundred and sixty miles distant, some of which rise about sixteen thousand feet above the level of the Pacific. All other views in America sink into lit- tleness in comparison with this. From one spot, I have seen seven of * Kelly's Mount Washington is the same called by Vancouver Mount Hood, rising due east of the moulh of the Columbia, at the di-iance of about one hundred miles; Mount Adams is the Mount St. Helenas, of the same naviga or, umier the 45th parallel ; Mount Jefferson re- ceived that name from Lewis and Clarke, in ISuS; it is the lofty peak in latitude of 4'H de- grees, which thf British fur-traders have thought proper to call Mount Vancouver ; M»unt Madison is the Mount Maclaughlin of the B' Irish maps; Mount Monroe is in latitude of 43 de- grees 20 minutes ; Mount John Quincy Adams is in 42 degrees 10 minutes; Mount Jackson is a stupendous pinnacle, under the parallel of 41 degrees 40 minutes, called by the British Mount Pitt. i 15 the high points of this range, extending from north to south, their perfect whiteness and steep conical shape causing them to appear hke huge sugar- loaves."* The distance from the coast to the foot of this chain is in some places one hundred miles, in others much less. The intervening country is crossed in various directions by low ridges connected with the principal chain, some of which run parallel to it, while others stretch towards the ocean. Between these ridges are valleys, of which the two most extensive lie immediately at the base of the great chain, and are drained by rivers flowing into the Columbia; the waters from the others falling directly into the Pacific. Of the two rivers which empty into the Columbia, the northern, called the Coiuilitz^ has been imperfectly examined, and little has been reported concerning it. The southern, described by Lewis and Clarke as the Multonomah^ but now more generally known as the Wallamet^ has been traced more than two hundred miles due south, from its en- trance into the Columbia, through a valley which is said to be the most de- lightful and fertile part of Northwest America. The climate of this region is more favorable to agriculture than those of the other parts of Oregon, although it is certainly adverse to great produc- tiveness. The summer is warm and very dry. From April to October, while the westerly winds prevail, rain seldom falls in any part of Ore- gon ; during the other months, when the south wind blows constantly, the rains are almost incessant in the lower region, although sometimes the dry season there continues longer. Farther from the Pacific, the rains are less frequent and abundant; and near the Rocky Mountains, they are reduced to a few showers in the spring. In the valleys of the low country snow is rarely seen, and the ground is not often frozen, so that ploughing may generally be carried on during the whole winter. In 1834 the Co- lumbia was frozen for thirteen days, but this was principally in conse- quence of the accumulation of ice from above. " This country," says Mr. Wyeth, " is well calculated for wheat, barley, oats, rye, pease, apples, po- tatoes, and all the roots cultivated in the northern States of the Union ; Indian corn does not succeed well, and is an unprofitable crop. The yield of wheat, with very poor cultivation, is about fifteen bushels of the best quality to the acre. Horses and neat cattle succeed tolerably well ; the winter being mild, they are enabled to subsist upon the produce of the open fields. Hogs live and multiply, but cannot be made fat on the range of the countiy. The agriculture of this region must always suffer from the extreme dryness of the summer. The products which ripen earliest sustain the least damage, but those which come late are often injured." Of the soil of diis region, the same acute observer says : " The up- lands are tolerably good, but the cost of clearing the enormous growth of timber on them would be beyond their worth; it is too thick and heavy to allow of crops being obtained by girdling the trees ; and it must be removed or burnt, the labor of which is beyond the conception of those acquainted only with the forests of the United States. There are, how- ever, prairies sufficiently numerous and extensive for the cultivation of the next century, which, being chiefly on the second bottoms of rivers, are extremely fertile, and above inundation." The forests in this part of * Letter from Nath. Wyelh, in the report of the committee of the House of Representatives on the Oregon Territory, presented February 16, 1838, See page 190 of this memoir. 16 America are, from all accounts, magnificent. Ross Cox describes a fir growing near Fort George, or Astoria, on the Columbia, about eight miles from the sea, which measured forty-six feet in circumference at ten feet from the ground, one hundred and fifty-three feet in length before giving off a branch, and not less than three hundred feet in its whole height. Another tree, of the same species, is said to be standing on the banks of the Umqua, the trunk of which is fifty-seven feet in circumference, and two hundred and sixteen feet in length, below its branches. Cox adds, that "prime sound pines, from two hundred to two hundred and eighty feet in height, and from twenty to forty feet in circumference, are by no means uncommon." XIII. The Blue Mountains extend from north to south, though the whole territory of the Columbia, between the Rocky Mountains and the chain which borders the coast. Their course is not so regular or clearly de- fined as those of the other chains ; and they appear to be broken into sev- eral ridges, some of which run towards the Rocky Mountains on the east, while others join the westernmost chain. These mountains are steep and rocky, generally volcanic, and some of them covered with eternal snow ; they are crossed by both branches of the Columbia, which also receives several tributaries from the valleys on their western sides. The middle region of Oregon^ between the mountains nearest the coast on the west and the Blue Mountains on the east, is more elevated, more dry, and less fertile, than the low country. It consists chiefly of plains, between ridges of mountains, the soil of which is generally a yellow sandy clay, covered with grass, small shrubs, and prickly pears. Timber is very scarce; the trees, which are small, and of soft useless woods, such as cotton-wood, sumach, and Avillow, being only found in the neighborhood of the streams. The climate during the summer is universally repre- sented as most agreeable and salubrious ; the days are warm, and the nights cool ; but the want of moisture in the air prevents the contrast of temperature from being injurious to the health. The rains begin later in the year, and end sooner, than in the lower country, and they are less constant and heavy. There is little snow in the southern valleys ; farther north it is more common. Few attempts at cultivation have been made in this region, and they have not been, upon the whole, successful. Wyeth conceives that " the agriculture of this territory must always be limited to the wants of a pas- toral people, and to the immediate vicinity of the streams and mountains; and irrigation must be resorted to, if a large population is to be supported in it. This country, which affords little prospect for the tiller of the soil, is perhaps one of the best for grazing in the world. It has been much underrated by travellers who have only passed by the Columbia, the land along which is a collection of sand and rocks, and almost with- out vegetation ; but a few miles from the Columbia, towards the hills and mountains, the prairies open wide, covered with a low grass of a most nu- tritious kind, which remains good throughout the year. In September there are slight rains, at which time the grass starts ; and in October and November there is a good coat of green grass, which remains so until the ensuing summer ; and about June it is ripe in the lower plains, and, dry- ing without being wet, is like made hay; in this state it remains until the autumn rains again revive it. The herdsman in this extensive valley (of more than one hundred and fifty miles in width) could at all times 17 keep his animals in good grass, by approaching the mountains in sum- mer, on the decUvities of which ahiiost any chmate may be had; and the dry grass of the country is at all times excellent. It is in this section of the country that all the horses are reared for the supply of the Indians and traders in the interior. It is not uncommon that one Indian owns some hundreds of them. I think this section, for producing hides, tallow, and beef, is superior to any part of North America ; for, with equal facilities for raising the animals, the weather in winter, when the grass is best, and consequendy the best time to fatten the animals, is cold enough to salt meat, which is not the case in Upper California. There is no question that sheep might be raised to any extent, in a climate so dry and suffi- ciently warm, where very little snow or rains falls. It is also, I think, the healthiest country I have ever been in, which, I suppose, arises from the small quantity of decaying vegetable matter, and there being no obstruc- tion from timber to the passing winds." Xiy. The third and last natural division of Oregon is the high country^ included between the Blue Mountains on the west and the Rocky Moun- tains on the east. The southern part of this region is a desert, of steep rocky mountains, deep narrow valleys, called holeshy the fur-traders, and wide plains, covered with sand or gravel, generally volcanic, which can never be rendered capable of supporting more than a very small number of inhabitants. The distinguishing features of this territory are, its ex- treme dryness^ and the great difference in temperature betiveen the day and the night. It seldom rains, except during a few days in the spring; there is little snow in the valleys in winter, though a great deal falls occasion- ally on the mountain tops ; and no moisture is deposited in dews. Mr. Wyeth saw the thermometer, on the banks of Snake River, in August, 1S32, mark eighteen degrees of Fahrenheit at sunrise, and ninety-two degrees at noon of the same day ; and he says that a difference of forty degrees between sunrise and noon is not uncommon. Such circum- stances are alone sufficient to render any attempts at cultivation in this region entirely fruitless ; and a great portion of the surface is moreover so strongly impregnated with salts of various kinds, that plants could not flou- rish in it, even were a sufficiency of heat and moisture regularly supplied. In this region, nevertheless, are situated the sources of all the principal branches of the Columbia, the northernmost of which rises near the 54th parallel, and the southernmost near the 42d; they, of course, receive their waters from the mountains, as very little can be furnished by the valleys. There are also many lakes in this part of America, some of which commu- nicate with the Columbia ; the others have no outlets, and their waters are therefore necessarily salt.* The largest of these collections of salt water, * Whenever water runs on or through the earth, it finds salts, which it dissolves, and carries with itself to its recipient. If that recipient have no outlet either above or under the surface of Lhe earth, by which it communicates with some lower recipient, and thus its waters are not taken from it except by evaporation, the salt carried into it by streams must necessarily be ::onstantly accumulating there, as evaporation does not abstract a single saline particle. If the facts here stated be admitted as true, the deductions cannot be denied; and it is believed that no case can be cited in contradiction of either. In like manner, the surfaces of great plains or vallt ys, from which the water is not carried off either by streams or by infiltration, are always tmnregnnted with salt. Of this, the high plains of Mexico, and the valleys immediately west jf the Rocky iVIoun tains, offer examples; the soil of the parts not regularly drained being so >alt OS to render vegetation impossible, even where all the other requisites are furnished in abundance. The reverse is not always true ; nevertheless, the saltness of a large body of water, 3r of a large extent of ground, affords strong reasons for suspecting that there is no regular drain from it into a lower recipient. 18 is that called by the Indians LakeYouta, and represented on the old Spanish maps as Lake Timpanogos^ situated in one of the valleys or hol- lows produced by the interlocking of the Snowy Mountains with the other chains, near the Rocky Mountains. Very little is known as to the extent and position of this lake, except that it is very large, that it is surrounded by high mountains, and that it receives on its northern side a considera- ble stream, called the Bear River. Captain Wyeth places its northern extremity in latitude of 42 degrees 3 minutes. In one of the maps at- tached to Mr. Irving's account of Captain Bonneville's Adventures in the Far West, that point is represented under the parallel of 42 degrees 50 min- utes ; while in the other map illustrating the same work, it is placed still farther north by half a degree. In the map annexed to this memoir, Lake Youta is made to extend from 40^ to 41^ degrees, on the authority of Arrowsmith; which position appears more conformable than any other with the best accounts. The northern part of the upper region about the Clarke River is less barren than that which has been just described ; the valleys are wider, the rains more frequent, and the soil is freed from salt by the numerous streams which traverse it. The country east of the Rocky Mountains^ for more than two hundred miles, is almost as dry and barren as that immediately on the western side ; offering no means of support for a population, except in the vicinity of the rivers, which flow through it from the great chain into the Missis- sippi. The interposition of this wide desert-tract between the productive regions of the Mississippi and those of the Columbia, must retard the set- tlement of the latter countries, and exercise a powerful influence over their political destinies. XV. The Columbia River now remains to be particularly noticed, and it will be traced from the sources of its principal confluents to the ocean. The northernmost stream of the Columbia is Canoe River, which rises near the 54th degree of latitude, and near the 52d is joined by two other streams, at a place called by the fur- traders Boat Encampment. Of the two streams which join Canoe River, one flows from the south along the base of the Rocky Mountains ; the other rises in a great gorge of that chain, under the parallel of 53 degrees, its head being a small lake, within a few feet of which is another, whence the waters run into the Athabasca, one of the branches of the Mackenzie. Of this gorge. Cox says : " The country around our encampment presented the wildest and most terrific appear- ance of desolation. The sun, shining on a range of stupendous glaciers, threw a chilling brightness over the chaotic mass of rocks, ice, and snow, by which we were environed. Close to our encampment, one gigantic mountain, of conical form, towered majestically into the clouds, far above the others; while at intervals, the interest of the scene was heightened by the rumbling noise of a descending avalanche." The ground about this spot is higher than any other in North America, and probably on the whole western continent. After a course of about two hundred miles due south from the point of union of the three streams above mentioned, the Columbia receives Mac- gillivray^s River, and a little lower down darkens, or the Flathead River, both flowing from the Rocky Mountains. Clarke's river is nearly as large, as the Columbia, above the place of their junction ; its sources are situa* ted within a short distance of those of the Missouri, and, as the interven- 19 ing ridge is not very high, it will doubtless form one of the great channels of communication between the eastern and the western sides of the con- tinent. In its course it spreads out into a lake, about thirty-five miles long and five or six broad, which is situated in a rich valley, surrounded by lofty snow-clad mountains. The Clarke rushes down into the Columbia, over a ledge of rocks, a little before the passage of the latter through the Blue Mountains, where it forms the Kettle Falls. Just below these falls, on the south side of the river, in latitude of 48 degrees 37 minutes, is situated Fort Colville^ one of the prin- cipal establishments of the Hudson's Bay Company ; the country around which is fertile and agreeable, producing wheat, barley, oats, Indian corn, potatoes, peas, and various garden vegetables, in abundance. Thence the river flows due west, receiving in its course the Sjjokan from the south- east, about one hundred miles, to its junction with the Okanogan, a large stream from the north, where the Hudson's Bay Company have another fort, called Fort Okanagan. This place was first occupied by the Astoria, or Pacific Fur Company, in 1811 ; from it the Columbia runs south to the latitude of 46 degrees 8 minutes, and there joins the Lew^is, or Snake, the great south branch of which will now be in like manner traced from its sources. The head -waters of the Lewis River are in the angle formed by the Rocky and the Snowy Mountains, between the 42d and the 44th degrees, near the sources of the Colorado, the Platte, the Yellow Stone, and the Missouri. Thence it flows westward along the foot of the Snowy Moun- tains to the Blue Mountains, through one ridge of which it passes near the 43d degree of latitude, making there the Salmon, or Fishing Falls, It then runs northwestward to its junction with the Columbia, receiving on its way the Malade, the Wapticacos, or north branch, and the Koos- koosee, or Sahnon River, from the east, and the Malheur, the Burnt River, and Poioder River from the west, besides numerous smaller streams on each side. The Salmon River is believed to be that on and near which the party sent from the United States, in 1811, to form an establishment at the mouth of the Columbia, experienced the dreadful sufierings de- picted by Mr. Irving in his Astoria. The Columbia, below the junction of its two great branches, receives the Walla-walla, the Umatalla, John Day^s River, and the Falls River from the south, and then passes through the range of mountains nearest the Pacific, under the 46th parallel of latitude. kX the mouth of the Walla- walla is Fort Walla-walla, or Nezperces, belonging to the Hudson's Bay Company, near which is some land tolerably well adapted for cultivation. Below this river the Columbia descends considerably, forming many rapids before entering the mountains. The Falls are represented by Wyeth as impassable at low water, but passable at high water both up and down. Five miles below them are the Dalles, or narrows, where the river rushes ithrough a space not more than one hundred and fifty feet wide, walled in by basaltic columns on both sides ; and thirty- six miles lower, are the Cascades, which are falls impassable at all times. The tide comes up to the foot of the cascades, and the navigation is good for vessels drawing not more than fourteen feet to this point, which is one hundred and twenty- five miles from the ocean. At the distance of about one hundred miles from the Pacific, on the north side of the Columbia, and a quarter of a mile from it, stands Fort 20 Vancouver^ the principal establishment of the Hudson's Bay Company west of the Rocky Mountains. It consists of a number of wooden build- ings within a stockade, serving as dwelling-houses, stores, magazines, and workshops ; and near it are other small buildings inhabited by the laborers, together with a saw-mill and grist-mill. The whole number of residents at the place is about eight hundred, of whom a large proportion are Indians or half-breeds. Several hundred acres of land near the fort are under cultivation, producing wheat, barley, oats, pease, potatoes, &c., in abundance ; and the stock of cattle is also considerable. The Multonomah^ or Wallaniet^ enters the Columbia in the south, about twenty miles below Vancouver. It is navigable for small vessels to the distance of twenty miles from its mouth — or, rather, from its mouths, for it divides into two branches before entering the Columbia, and thus forms a long narrow island, on which Captain Wyeth endeav- ored unsuccessfully to establish an American trading-factory in 1835. At the head of the navigation is a fall, where the river crosses a ridge of hills ; before reaching which, it flows through prairies of the richest ground, varying in breadth from a few feet to several miles. In this de- lightful valley the Hudson's Bay Company have formed a settlement for its retiring servants ; and another has been made by American citizens, under the direction of Methodist missionaries, which is said to be in a prosperous condition. A large body of emigrants to this place sailed from New York in the latter part of 1839 ; and other persons are said to be now in that city preparing for their departure for the same point. Astoria^ the first settlement made on the Columbia by the Americans in 1811, is on the south side of the river, eight miles from its mouth; it consists at present of only a single house, occupied by the Hudson's Bay Company, and called Fort George. The Columbia, twenty-five miles from the sea, varies in width fi'om seven miles to one, and that part of the river has been, in consequence, sometimes considered as a bay or inlet; this view is, however, contradict- ed by the fact, that the water continues to be fresh and potable to the immediate vicinity of the Pacific, except when the stream is very low, or the wind has long blown violently from the west. The river enters the Pa- cific between two points of land : one, on the north, called Cape Disap- pointment^ or Cape i3«?zcocA:, in latitude of 46 degrees 18 minutes; the other, called Point Adams, being seven miles southeast fi*om the former. From each of these points a sand-bar ruhs into the water ; above which the waves of the Pacific, on the one side, and the torrents of the Colum- bia, on the other, meet with terrific violence, producing a most formida- ble line of breakers. These circumstances render the entrance and de- parture of vessels hazardous at all times, and almost impossible when the winds are high. The depth of the water, between the bars, is thirty feet at the lowest ; no vessel drawing more than fourteen feet can, how- ever, proceed far up the river, on account of the irregularities of the channel. This river, like the others in Northwest America, abounds in fish, partic- ularly in salmon, which ascend all its branches up to the Blue Mountains, and form the principal means of subsistence for the natives of the first and middle regions. Of those natives, the hmits of the present sketch do not admit a detailed description ; they are supposed to be in number about twenty thousand, all savages incapable of civilization. MEMOIR, HISTORICAL AND POLITICAL, ON THE NORTHWEST COAST OF NORTH AMERICA, AND THE ADJACENT TERRITORIES. CHAPTER I. Preliminary observations — Early attempts of the Spaniards to explore the western coasts of North America — Voyages made by authority of Hernan Cortes — Dis- covery of California by Becerra, in 1535 — Voyage of Cortes in the Gulf of Cali- fornia — Discovery ot the west coast of California by Ulloa, in 1539 — Expedi- tions of Coronado and Alarcon — Voyage of Cabrillo, in 1542 — Establishment ©f direct intercourse by the Pacific, beWeen Mexico and India — Visit of Francis Drake to the northwest coast in 1579. The territories first seen by Europeans on the western side of HS3. the Atlantic were naturally supposed to be parts of Asia, or to lie in the immediate vicinity of that continent, the eastern limits of which were then unknown ; and, as the circumference of the eaith was moreover, at that time, considered to be much less than it really is, hopes were entertained among the maritime nations of Europe that some route for their ships to India, safer and short- er than any around the southern extremity of Africa, would be speedily discovered. It was under the influence of such expectations that the uni- 14S5. ted Spanish Sovereigns concluded with the King of Portugal the celebrated Treaty of Partition, founded on the bull issued in 1494, by Pope Alexander VI. Agreeably to this treaty, the Spaniards were to make no attempts to communicate with India by sea through eastern routes, which became in a manner the property of Portu- gal ; while, on the other hand, they were to possess exclusive control and use of every western channel of intercourse with those countries, which might be discovered. This and other im- portant questions of jurisdiction having been thus definitively settled between the two greatest maritime Powers of Europe, ander the guaranty of the highest authority then recognised among civilized nations, each of the parties to the treaty contin- ued its researches within the limits assigned to it. 3 22 1493. In these examinations, the Portuguese were the most success- ful. They soon found their way by the Cape of Good Hope to India, where they firmly estabUshed their pre-eminence; while the Spaniards were vainly exploring the Atlantic coasts of the New World, in search of some opening through which they might penetrate with their ships into the ocean bathing the southern 1513. side of Asia. At length, in 1513, Vasco Nunez de Balboa, the Governor of the Spanish colony of Darien, on the Atlantic, after a short march across the mountains overlooking that place, arrived on the shore of a sea, which was supposed to be no other than the long-sought Southern ocean ; and, as the proximity of this sea to the Atlantic was at the same time demonstrated, farther en- couragement was afforded for the hope that the two great waters would be found united in a position the most favorable for the prosecution of the desired objects. The researches of the Span- iards were, in consequence, directed particularly towards the isth- mus of. Darien; and were conducted with zeal, until the fact of the entire separation of the oceans in that quarter was deter- mined. 1519, In the mean time, however, Fernando Magaihaens, or Magel- lan, a Portuguese in the service of Spain, discovered the strait which has ever since borne his name, and, having passed through it with his ships, continued his voyage westward to India. The grand geographical question, as to the possibility of circumnaviga- ting the earth, was thus solved ; but not in a manner satisfactory to the Spaniards. The strait of Magellan was intricate, and be- set by dangers of every kind ; and it was itself almost as distant fi-om Europe as India by the eastern route. Moreover, the sea in- tervening between the new continent and Asia proved to be much wider than had been supposed ; and, in every part of it, which was traversed by vessels for many years after its discovery, the winds were found to blow constantly from eastern points. 1520. These circumstances, as they successively became known, con- tributed to depress the hopes of the Spaniards, with regard to the establishment of their dominion in India; other events, however, occurred at the same time, which consoled them in part for the disappointment, and fixed their attention upon the New World. 1517 While Magellan's voyage was in progress, the rich and popu- 1532 ^^^^ empire of Mexico was discovered, and it was soon after con- quered by the Spaniards, under Hernan Cortes. Within the en- suing ten years Peru and Chili were likewise subjected to the authority of the Spanish monarch ; and the silver of America be- gan to be considered as ample compensation for the loss of the spices and diamonds of India. The brilliant results of these ex- traordinary enterprises attracted fi-om Europe crowds of adventu- rers, all eager to acquire wealth and distinction by similar means, who, uniting in bands under daring leaders, traversed the new continent in various directions, seeking rich nations to plunder. Fortunately for the cause of humanity, these expeditions were fruitless, so far at least as regards the object for which they were undertaken; on the other hand, much information was speedily acquired by means of them, respecting the geography of coasts 23 and regions, which would not otherwise have been explored, per- 1517 haps, for centuries. ^0 Among those who were at this period engaged in endeavoring to discover new kingdoms in America, and new passages be- tween the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, the most zealous and per- severing was Hernan Cortes. Scarcely *had he effected the es- tablishment of the Spanish authority in Mexico, ere he com- menced preparations for exploring the adjacent seas and coun- tries ; in expeditions of which nature he employed a great portion of his time, as well as of his private fortune, during the whole period of his residence in that kingdom. In prosecution of his plans, the interior, as well as the coasts on both sides of the region connecting Mexico with South America, were minutely explored, until it had been ascertained that no wealthy nations occupied those territories, and that the two seas were entirely separated by land throughout the whole extent. This arduous task having been accomplished, the enterprising conqueror of Mexico directed his attention towards the northwest. At that period, the most northern settlements of the Spaniards in the American continent were : on the Atlantic side, Panuco, situated near the spot now occupied by the town of Tampico, within a few miles of the Mexican Gulf; and, on the Pacific, Cu- liacan, a small place near the eastern side of the entrance to the Gulf of California. Northward of these settlements, which were both in the vicinity of the tropic of Cancer, nothing was known of the continent, except with regard to some isolated portions of Us eastern coasts. It should here be observed, that the accounts which have de- scended to us of all voyages performed before the middle of the last century, and of all Spanish voyages to a much more recent peri- od, are very defective, especially as regards geographical positions. Seldom, indeed, is it possible to identify a spot by means of the descriptions contained in those accounts. This arises, in the first place, from the circumstance that such narratives were usually written by priests, or other persons unacquainted with nautical matters, who paid little attention to latitudes and bearings. In the next place, the instruments employed in those days for deter- mining the altitudes and relative distances of heavenly bodies were so imperfect, both in plan and in execution, that observations made with them on land, and under the most favorable conditions of atmosphere, led to results which were far from accurate; while at sea, when there was much motion in the vessel, or the air was not absolutely clear, those instruments were useless. To these causes of error are to be added the want of proper methods of calculation, as well as of knowledge of various modifying circum- stances, such as refi-action, aberration, &c. Hence, it followed that the statements of latitude, given in the accounts above men- tioned, are of little value as indicating the positions of places, and are at best only approximative ; while those of longitude, being, ♦ Letter of Cortes to Charles V., written from Mexico, in 1523. 1531. when given at all, deduced merely from the notes of the vessel's course and rate of sailing, are entirely worthless. It is scarcely necessary to add that this uncertainty as to the geographical sit- uations of places produced confusion with regard to names ; and, accordingly, we find that there are few remarkable spots on the northwest coast of America, discovered before the middle of the last century, which have not at different times been distin- guished by many different appellations. Respecting the voyages of discovery, made by order of Cortes in the Atlantic seas, little is to be found on record; and no notice of them is required for our present purposes. The first expedition, under his auspices, towards the northwest, took place in 1532, and terminated most disastrously. 1532. This expedition was commanded by Diego Hurtado de Men- doza, a relation of Cortes, who sailed from Acapulco in a small ship, accompanied by another under Juan de Mazuela; they advanced together along the southwest coast of Mexico, as far north as the 27th degree of latitude, and were there separated by a storm : after which nothing more was heard of the vessel com- manded by Mendoza. The other ship, under Mazuela, was ob- liged, after the storm, to put back to the river of Culiacan, the nearest Spanish port, where she was deserted by the greater part of her crew. Those who remained then endeavored to carry her to Acapulco ; but she was stranded on the shore of the province of Jalisco, near the place Avhere San Bias now stands; and her crew, with the exception of three, were murdered by the savages. The vessel was subsequently seized and rifled by Nuno de Guz- man, the chief of a roving band of adventurers, who, assuming the title of Governor of Jalisco, pretended to act for the Sovereign of Spain, independently of Cortes. 1533. A year having elapsed after the departure of these vessels, with- out any news being received of them, Cortes despatched two others in the same direction, under Hernando de Grijalva and Diego de Becerra, who sailed together from Tehuantepec on the 30th of October, 1533. Grijalva, being soon separated from his companion, took a west- ward course, and reached a group of small islands at the distance of a hundred and fifty miles from the main land, (now called the Revillagigedo islands.;) after which he returned to Mexico, with- out having effected any other discovery. Meanwhile, Becerra, likewise sailing westward from Tehuan- tepec, found land almost immediately under the tropic Of Cancer, and anchored in a small bay, where his men, having obtained some valuable pearls, became anxious to fix themselves for a time. This Becerra refused to permit; and he was preparing to continue his voyage, when a mutiny took place, in the course of which he was murdered, and the command was assumed by Fortunio Xim- enes, the pilot. In pursuance of their plan, the mutineers then landed, and began to construct habitations on the shore of the bay ; but, while thus engaged, they were surprised by a body of savages, who killed nearly the whole of them. The survivors escaped with the vessel, and succeeded in navigating her over to 25 the little port of Chiametla, on the coast of Jalisco, where she was 1533. also seized by the lawless Nuno de Guzman. It may be mentioned, at once, that the land thus discovered by Becerra was the southern extremity of the peninsula of Califor- nia. The bay in which his ship was lying at the time of his as- sassination is supposed to be that now called the bay of La Paz, and sometimes the bay of San Jose.* When Cortes became assured of the seizure and spoliation of 1534. his vessels by Guzman, he prosecuted that person before the Au- diencia, or royal court of justice of Mexico, which immediately de- cided in his favor. The pretended Governor of Jalisco, however, proved refractory, and refused to make restitution ; whereupon, the conqueror assembled a body of troops, and marched at their head to Chiametla, in order to recover his vessels, and re-estab- lish his authority in that country. On his approach, Guzman fled, with his adherents, to the interior; and Cortes having been joined at Chiametla, agreeably to his orders, by three vessels, de- termined to proceed with them in person to the new country dis- covered by Becerra in the west, which was said to be so rich in pearls and precious stones. He accordingly embarked with his forces at Chiametla, and on 1535. the 3d of May, the day of the Invention or Finding of the Holy April 15. CrosSy agreeably to the Roman Catholic calendar, he reached the bay in which Becerra had been murdered. In honor of this day, the name of La Saiita Cruz (the Holy Cross) was bestowed upon the country, as well as on the bay ; and possession having been solemnly taken of the whole in the name of the Sovereign of Spain, preparations were commenced for the establishment of a colony on the spot. These arrangements being completed, Cortes took his departure with two vessels, to examine the coasts of the new territory towards the north and east, for the purpose of as- suring himself whether or not it was united to the American con- tinent. Of the voyage made by Cortes in the arm of the sea between California and the continent, the accounts are so confused and contradictory that it is impossible to ascertain his route. It ap- pears, however, that, although he crossed this sea several times, he did not reach its northern extremity. After some time spent in this manner, during which his vessels were frequently in dan- ger of destruction from storms, and their crews were suffering from want of provisions, he at length returned to Santa Cruz, where he found the colonists in the utmost distress from famine and privations of all sorts. Under these circumstances, he re- solved to go back to Mexico, in order to procure supplies ; which he accordingly did, leaving the colony in charge of his lieutenant, Francisco de UUoa. On arriving at Acapulco, in the beginning of 1536, Cortes learn- 153G. ed that, during his absence from Mexico, he had been superseded * The accounts of these voyaj^es are derived from Herrera's History of the Span- ish Empire in America, and from Navarrete's Introduction to the Journal of the voyage of the Suiil and Mexicana. 26 1536, in the government of that country by Don Antonio de Mendoza, a nobleman of high rank, who had already made his entrance into the capital as Viceroy. The conqueror thus saw himself, in a moment, despoiled of his power, in the territory which had been, through his exertions, added to the Spanish dommions ; and the blow was the more severe, as his private property had been al- most entirely expended in his endeavors to make new discove- ries. He was, however, not to be depressed by these difficulties ; and as he still possessed the right, in his quality of Admiral of the South Sea, to prepare and despatch vessels upon the Pacific, he immediately resolved to engage in another expedition towards the northwest, where he hoped to find the means of retrieving his fortunes. He accordingly recalled UUoa and the colonists from Santa Cruz ; and having Avith difficulty succeeded in raising the necessary fimds, he equipped three ships for the contemplated voyage, which was not commenced until 1539. 1539, The command of this expedition was intrusted to Francisco de UUoa, Cortes being obliged to remain at Mexico in order to at- tend to some important suits at laAv, in which he had become in- July a volved. Ulloa quitted Acapulco on the 8th of July, 1539, and, after losing one of his ships in a storm near the coast of Culiacan, he sailed with the two others towards the west, as far as the har- Sept. 7. bor of Santa Cruz, which, as well as the surrounding country, began by this time to be called California.^ To ascertain the extent of this country, and whether it was connected with Amer- ica or with Asia, or Avas detached from both those continents, were the first objects of the voyage ; in pursuance of which, the Spanish navigator directed his course fi:om Santa Cruz northward, through the arm of the ocean separating California from the main land of Mexico on the east. In this course he proceeded, exam- ining both shores, until he had convinced himself that the two territories were united near the 33d degree of latitude. He then Oct. 18. returned southward to Santa Cruz, through the same arm of the ocean, to which he gave the appropriate name of Mar de Cortes^ (Sea of Cortes.) This great gulf has since received a variety of appellations, of which that principally used by the Spaniards is Mar Vermejo, (Vermillion Sea.) Among all other nations, it is known as the Gulf of California. Having thus ascertained the continuity of California with Amer- ica in the northeast, Ulloa next proceeded to examine the western sides of the nev/ country. With this view, he sailed from the Oct. 29. harbor of Santa Cruz, around the southern extremity of the land which is now called Cape San Lucas ; thence he advanced along Nov. 7. the coast, northward, struggling almost constantly against the vi- olent northwest winds which prevail in that part of the Pacific, tJ^^^. ^^^il h® reached the 30th degree of latitude. By the time of his ' arrival at that parallel, many of the men in both vessels were dis- abled by sickness, and the stock of provisions was much reduced; * With regard to the origin or the signification of the word California, many spec- ulations have been offered, none of which are enher satisfactory or ingenious. 27 in consequence of which, it was determined that one of the ves- 1540, sels should go back to Mexico, carrying the sick and the news of their discoveries, while Ulloa should remain in the other for the purpose of examining the coast still farther. The necessary ar- rangements having been accordingly made, the two vessels parted April 5. at the Isle of Cedars, (now called Isla de Cerros^ or Isle of Moun- tains,) situated near the coast, in the 28th degree of latitude. The vessel called the Santa Agueda, bearing the sick and the des- patches, reached Acapulco in safety before the end of May, 1540. Whether or not Ulloa ever returned to Mexico, is not known with certainty.* Thus terminated the last expedition of discovery made by authority of Hernan Cortes. ' In the mean time, the Viceroy, Don Antonio de Mendoza, who succeeded Cortes in the government of Mexico, had also become interested in the examination of the coasts and countries north of that kingdom ; his attention having been thus directed by the ac- counts of some persons who had made a long and toilsome pere- grination across those regions. These persons, Alvaro Nunez, (better known in history as Ca- 15^7 (o beza Vaca, or Bull-head,) two other Spaniards, and a negro, had ^^^'^• landed, in 1527, near Tampa Bay, in East Florida, among the adventurers under Panfilo Narvaez, who invaded that country in search of mines or nations to plunder ; and after the destruction of their comrades by starvation, shipwreck, and the arrows of the savages, had wandered for nine years through forests and deserts, until, at length, they reached Culiacan, near the Gulf of Califor- nia, in 1536. Although these adventurers had themselves seen no signs of cultivation or wealth in the territories thus traversed, yet they had received from the savages, on their way, many con- fused accounts of rich and populous kingdoms situated still far- ther northward ; and the Viceroy, having heard their statements, thought proper to endeavor to ascertain the truth of the reports. For this purpose he was induced, by the advice and solicitation of his friend, the celebrated Bartolome de las Casas, to employ two Franciscan friars, in place of the soldiers who were usually sent on such expeditions ; in order that the natives might be in this manner preserved from the violence which military men would not fail to exercise, if opportunity should be offered for the grat- ification of their cupidity. The friars, Marcos de Niza and Honorato, with the negro who 1539. had accompanied Cabeza Vaca, and some Indians, accordingly departed from Cuhacan on the 7th of March, 1539. What route Mar. 7. they took it is impossible now to discover. The reverend explor- ers, however, returned before the end of the year, (without the negro,) bringing accounts of countries which they had visited in :he northwest, abounding in gold and precious stones, and in- + Our kiiowledge of Ulloa's voyaj^e is derived chiefly from the narrative of Fran- •isco Preciado, one of the officers of the Santa Aguedrt, which is interesting, though )y no means exact. It may be found in Italian, in the Collection of Ramusio, vol. iii, •age 283; and in English, though badly translated, in the reprint of Hakiuyt, vol. iii, >age 503. 28 1&39. habited by a population more numerous and more civilized than either Mexico or Peru. According to the letter* addressed to the Viceroy by friar Mar- cos, upon his return, these rich and delightful countries were sit- uated beyond the 35th degree of latitude, in the vicinity of the sea, and were separated from those previously known to the Span- iards by extensive tracts of forest and desert, through which it would be necessary to pass in order to reach the golden region. The friar describes with minuteness his route, as well as the. sit- uation, extent, and divisions of the new countries ; dwelling par- ticularly on the magnificence and greatness of a city called Cibola, the capital of a province of the same name, which he describes as containing more than twenty thousand large stone houses, all richly adorned with gold and jewels. The people of this place, as the letter says, were at first hostile to the strangers, and had killed the negro ; but, in the end, they had evinced a disposition to embrace Christianity, and to submit to the authority of Spain;, m consequence of which, the friars had secretly taken possession of the whole country for their Sovereign, by setting up crosses in various parts. These, and other things of the like nature, gravely related by ec- clesiastics, who professed to have witnessed what they described, were admitted as true by the Viceroy ; and he accordingly pre- pared, without delay, to conquer these new countries, which were considered as belonging of right to his Catholic Majesty, as well as to convert their inhabitants to Christianity. For these pur- poses, he raised a body of soldiers and missionaries, who were to pursue the route described by friar Marcos, under the command of Francisco Vasquez de Coronado, the governor of the territory immediately north of Mexico, called New Gallicia. At the same time, in order, if there should be occasion, to support these forces, a small squadron was sent along the western coast, towards the north, under the direction of Fernando de Alarcon. Cortes also claimed the right, as Admiral of the South Sea, to attempt the conquest of these countries by means of a naval ar- mament; and a violent dispute in consequence arose between the 1540. two chiefs. The conqueror, however, had expended all his dis- posable funds upon the equipment of the shipsf which he had sent out under Ulloa, before the return of friar Marcos from the north ; and he had, therefore, only to console himself with the hope that those vessels might accidentally have reached the shores of the golden land before its invasion by the forces of the Vice- roy. In this expectation he was disappointed, as already shown. This extraordinary man, soon after the conclusion of Ulloa's voy- age, returned to Spain, where he passed the remaining seven years of his life in vain efforts to procure restitution of his prop- * See Ramusio, vol. iii, page 297; and Haklayt, vol. iii, page 438. t Herrera says that Ulloa was sent by Cortes to subdue the countries discovered by friar Marcos. This is, however, an error, if the dates given by him and the otker historians of that period be correct. 29 erty and honors, in the vast and valuable dominions which he 1540. had rendered subject to the crown of Castile. * Fernando de Alarcon, the commander of the naval forces sent by Mendoza for the conquest of Cibola, sailed from the harbor of Santiago, on the west coast of Mexico, with two ships of war, and May 9. advanced northward along that coast to the extremity of the Cal- ifornian gulf, where he found the entrance of a large and rapid river. Having embarked, with a portion of his crew, in boats, Aug. 26 upon this river, to which he gave the name of Niiestra Senora de Buena Guia^ (Our Lady of Safe Conduct,) he ascended one of its branches, (probably that now called the Colorado^ to the distance of eighty leagues from its mouth. Throughout this whole dis- tance he found the stream broad and rapid, and the country on either side rich and thickly peopled, though occupied only by savages. In reply to the inquiries made by him respecting Coro - nado's party, and the rich territories of which they were m search, he received a number of confused stories of kingdoms abounding in gold and precious stones, and inhabited by civilized nations ; of rivers filled with crocodiles ; of droves of buffaloes ; of enchant- ers, and other wonderful or remarkable objects. At the extrem- ity of his course up the river, he received what he considered def- inite information respecting Cibola, and was even assured that he might reach that country by a march of ten days into the in- terior. He, however, suspected some treachery on the part of those who gave such assurances ; and fearing lest he should be cut off in case he proceeded farther onwards, he descended the river to his ships, and returned to Mexico before the end of the year. His report to the Viceroy displays great self-conceit, and violent animosity against Cortes and Ulloa. Mendoza w^s, how- ever, so little satisfied with his conduct, that he was, immediately after his return, dismissed from the service. The land forces sent under Coronado exhibited much greater perseverance in their search for the rich kingdoms believed to be situated in the northwestern part of America. According to the letter of their general ,-|- who appears to have been a person of so- ber and resolute character, this body of soldiers and priests, after leaving Culiacan, followed the route described by the two friars, April e-2 and found the forests, and deserts mentioned in their narrative. Having toiled through these dreary regions, however, they had ample cause to distrust the other statements of the reverend dis- coverers. They indeed reached a country called Cibola, situa- August ted nearly in the position assigned by the missionaries to their golden land ; but they there saw before them only a half-culti- vated territory, thinly inhabited by a people not absolutely bar- barous, but 3^et entirely destitute of that wealth and refinement which had been attributed to them in the reports made to the Viceroy. The magnificent cities were small Indian villages, the * Letter of Alarcon to the Viceroy, in Ramusio, vol. iii, page 303 ; and in Hakiuyt, vol. iii, page 505. t Ramusio, vol. iii, page 300; Hakiuyt, vol. iii, page 447. 30 1510, largest not containing more than two hundred houses ; and the immense quantities of precious metals and stones dwindled down into ^' afeio turquoises^'' and " so'me little gold and silver ^ supposed to be good.'''' In fine, as Coronado says in his despatch written from Cibola, " the reverend father provincial had told the truth in 7iothing which he said respecting kingdoms^ provinces^ and cities^ in this region ; for we have found all quite the contrary,'''' The Spaniards, although they were thus disappointed in their hopes of plunder, yet did not like to return empty-handed to Mex- ico, and petitioned their leader to allow them to settle in Cibola^vJ which was a pleasant and agreeable country. To this request,-] however, Coronado would not assent ; and he could only be pre- vailed on to continue the march northward for some time longer, in search of other rich countries, which were said by the people of Cibola to lie in that direction. Of the remainder of their jour- ney after quitting Cibola, we have a very imperfect account. It appears that they rambled for two years through the region be- tween the Pacific and the great dividing chain of mountams, de- riving their subsistence chiefly from the flesh of the buffaloes, which were there found in large numbers. The northern limit 1541. of their wanderings was a country called by them Quivii-a^ near the ocean, and under the 40th degree of latitude, inhabited by a kind and intelligent people, from whom the Spaniards learned that the coasts were occasionally visited by ships laden with rich goods and adorned with gilded images.* With information of 1542. this nature the adventurers returned to Mexico in 1542, to the great disappointment of Mendoza, who doubtless expected more real results from the labor and expense bestowed by him on the equipment and pay of the body. 1541. Before the return of Coronado's party from the northwest,! the Viceroy had prepared another naval armament, which was to pro- ceed in that direction, from one of the ports on the Pacific, under the command of Pedro de Alvarado, one of the most celebrated he- roes of the conquest. But, just as it was about to depart, a rebellion broke out among the Indians of the province of Jalisco ; and the forces which had been assembled for the expedition on the ocean were all required to re-establish the Spanish authority in the dis- turbed territories. In the course of the campaign which ensued, Al- varado was killed by a kick from his horse ; and the difficulties in Jalisco continuing, Mendoza could not carry into effect his views with regard to the countries northwest of Mexico until the fol- lowing year. J542 ^h.Q disturbances in Mexico having beenj at length quieted, two of the vessels which had been prepared for the expedition to the North Pacific were placed under the command of Juan Ro- driguez de Cabrillo, a Portuguese navigator of considerable rep- June 27. utation at that day. These vessels sailed together from the port * In this account there is nothing improbable. Japanese vessels have been found upon the northwest coasts of America twice since 1814. tHerrera, decade 7, book 2, chapter 11. tHerrera, decade 7, book 5, chapter 3. 31 of Navidad, in Jalisco ; and, after a short passage, reached the har- 1542. bor of Santa Cruz, whence they proceeded around Cape San Lu- Jw^y2. cas, in order to explore the west coast of California, which had been discovered two years before by Francisco de Ulloa. With- out attempting to trace minutely the progress of Cabrillo along this coast, or to enumerate the various bays, capes, and islands dsited by him, scarcely any of which can now be identified, suf- fice it to say that, by the middle of November, he had advanced Nov. 15, IS far north as the 40th degree of latitude ; having been, like Ul- oa, incessantly opposed by violent northwesterly winds. From :his height the Spaniards were driven back to a harbor, which ;hey had before entered and named Port Possession, supposed to be n the small island of San Bernardo, near the main land under the Mth parallel. Here Cabrillo sunk under the fatigues to which he 1543. lad been subjected, and died, leaving the command of the ships "" ' Jj X) the pilot, Bartolome Ferrer, or Ferrelo.] .. i The new commander, being no less enterprising than his prede- '.essor, resolved, if possible, to attain some of the objects of the expedition before returning to Mexico. He accordingly sailed rem Port Possession ; and, after having been several times driven )ack, at length, on the 1st of March, he found himself, by obser- March 1. nation, in the 44th degree of latitude. Here the crews of both vessels were suffering from cold, fatigue, and want of proper nour- shment; in consequence of which, it was resolved that the at- empt to proceed farther northward should be abandoned. Agree - .bly to this resolution, the navigators directed their course to- vards the south, and arrived in safety at Navidad on the 14th of iipril, 1543. It is not easy, from the accounts which we possess, to ascertain ffecisely what was the most northern point on the American -oast seen by the Spaniards in this expedition. Navarre te,* after xamining the journals and other papers relating to the voyage, irhich are still preserved in the Archives of the Indies, pronounces hat the 43d parallel of latitude is to be considered as the north- rn limit of the discoveries made by Cabrillo and Ferrelo. The ame ^\a'iter has also remarked, that the latitudes assigned in those locuments to all the places visited by the ships, which can now le identified, are about a degree and a half too high. Conforma- bly with this observation, it would appear that a promontory, lamed by Ferrelo the Cape of Risks, ( Cabo de FortunasJ in ommemoration of the perils encountered in its vicinity, may be hat situated in the latitude of 40 degrees 20 minutes, which after- guards received the name of Cape Mendocino. While the expeditions thus made under the authority of the 153S ''iceroy Mendoza were in progress, Hernando de Soto and his •and of adventurers were performing their celebrated marchf lirough the region north of the Mexican Gulf, which was then nown by the general name of Florida. Without attempting to to 1543. * Introduction to the Journal of the Sutil and Mexicana, page 34, tThere are several accounts of this expedition ; among which, the best known are lose by Garcilasso de la Vega, and by an anonymous Portuguese, 32 1538 delineate the course of their wanderings, suffice it to say that ^p they traversed, in various directions, the vast territories now com- ' posing the southern and southwestern States of the American Union, and then descended the Mississippi from a point near the mouth of the Ohio to the Gulf, over which they made their way in boats to Panuco. From the * accounts of the few who survived the fatigues and perils of this enterprise, added to those of Alvaro Nunez and Yasquez de Coronado respecting the countries which they had severally visited, it was considered absolutely certain that neither wealthy nations nor navigable passages between the Atlantic and the Pacific oceans were to be found north of Mexico, unless beyond the 40th degree of latitude. Having arrived at this conclusion, the Spaniards desisted from their efibrts to ex- plore the northwest division of America, and did not renew them until nearly fifty years afterwards. In the mean time, circum- stances had occurred which served to show that the discovery of any means of facilitating the entrance of ships from Europe into the Pacific would be deleterious to the interests of Spain in the New World. Before the middle of the sixteenth century, the Portuguese had established their dominion over a large portion of the coasts and islands of the East Indies, between which and Europe they were carrying on an extensive and valuable trade by way of the Cape of Good Hope. The Spaniards, in the mean time, viewing with feelings of jealousy and vexation this advancement of the power and wealth of their rivals, had endeavored likewise to obtain a footing in southern Asia, for which purpose naval armaments had been despatched thither from Spain, through the straits of Magel- lan, and also fiom the ports of Mexico on the Pacific. These expeditions had, however, proved unsuc-cessful. The squadron 154o_ sent fi:om Mexico in 1542, under Admiral Villalobos, crossed the Pacific in safety, and reached the group of islands, since called the Philippines, of which possession was taken for the King of Spain. The forces of Villalobos were, however, soon dispersed, and none of his vessels returned to Mexico. 1564. In 1564 the Spaniards made another efi'ort to establish them- selves in the East Indies, the issue of which was more fortunate. The Philippine islands were in that year entirely subjugated by Miguel de Legaspi, who had been sent for the purpose with a squadron from the port of Navidad, on the west coast of Mexico; moreover, a discovery was effected during this expedition, which proved highly important, and without which, indeed, the other results Avonld have been of little value. Until that period, no one had ever crossed the Pacific fi:om Asia to America ; all who had at- tempted to make such a voyage having endeavored to sail di- rectly westward, through the part of the ocean lying between the tropics, where the winds blow constantly from eastern points. Three of Legaspi's ships, however, by taking a northeastern course from the Philippines, entered a region of variable winds, and were thus enabled to reach the vicinity of the Californian coast, about the 40th parallel of latitude, from which the prevail- ing northwesters soon carried them to Mexico. The Spaniards thus gained — what they had so long desired — 1^64 a position in the East Indies ; and all doubts as to the practica- j^^g bility of communication with those countries, by means of the Pacific, were completely dissipated. Various other obstacles to the navigation of that ocean being in like manner removed about the same period, the commercial intercourse between the Spanish provinces in America and in Asia rapidly increased. Large ships sailed regularly from Acapulco, laden with precious metals and European merchandise, for Manilla and Macao, from which places they brought back the silks and spices of the Indies, either for consumption in Mexico, or for transportation to Spain; while an extensive trade in articles no less valuable was carried on be- tween Panama and the ports of Chili and Peru. The voyages made for these purposes were in general long, but comparatively safe; and as the Pacific was for some years free from all intru- sion on the part of other nations, little care or cost was bestowed upon the defence of the vessels, or of the towns on the coast. The ships proceeding from Acapulco to Manilla were carried, by the invariable easterly or trade winds, directly across the ocean, to their port ; in returning, they frequently made the land on the northwest coast of America, the most prominent points of which thus became, in the course of time, tolerably well known. The accounts of two or three of these return voyages have been pre- served ; but the information obtained from them is of little use, in consequence of their want of exactness. In Hakluy t's Collection may be found a letter,* addressed in 1584 to the Viceroy of Mex- I584, ico, by Francisco Gali, or Gualle, containing a description of his passages from Acapulco to Macao, and thence back to Acapulco; on which letter great stress is laid by Navarrete and other wri- ters, as showing the extent of Spanish discoveries in the North Pacific during the sixteenth century. Gali there relates that he left Macao on the 24th of July, 1584, and, proceeding by the usual northern route, reached the American coast, in sight of which he sailed for a long distance before arriving at Acapulco. Where he first saw the land of America, the letter does not pre- cisely state. After describing his course from the vicinity of Ja- pan, east and east-by-north, he says: "Being by the same course, upon the coast of New Spain, under seven-and-thirty degrees and a half, we passed a very high and fair land, with many trees, wholly without snow, &c. From thence, we ran southeast, southeast-by-south, and southeast-by-east, as we found the windj to the point called el Cabo de San Lucas, which is the beginning of the land of California on the northwest side, lying under two and twenty degrees, being five hundred leagues distant from Cape Mendocino." No mention is made of any land seen north of 37^ degrees ; Navarrete, and after him Humboldt, however, insist that Gali reached the vicinity of the American continent, under the parallel oi fifty -seven and a half degrees; and that the first land * Vol. iii, page 526, of the reprint. The letter is "translated out of Spanish into Dutch, verbatim, by John HuyghenVan Linschoten," and from Dutch into English. 34 1584. seen by him was the western side of the largest island of King George the Third's group. This assertion is supported by no ev- idence ; and is irreconcilable with the account given by the nav- igator in his letter, the genuineness of which is not denied.* 1595. Torquemada, in his History of the Indian Monarchy, (vol. i, page 717,) mentions the voyage of a ship called the San Augus- tin along the western side of California, in 1595, under the com- mand of Sebastian Rodriguez Cermenon, who had been directed to examine the coast in search of a place suitable for the estab- lishment of a colony and marine depot; nothing, however, is stated respecting the course of the ship, except that she was lost in the bay of San Francisco. We have accounts of two or three other visits made by Europeans to this part of America during the sixteenth century, which will be noticed hereafter. 1560 While the commerce of the Spaniards in the Pacific was thus to increasing, their Government was adopting those measures of re- 1578. striction and exclusion, which were maintained with so little re- laxation during the whole remaining period of its supremacy in the American continent. The great object of its policy was to secure to the monarch and people of Spain the entire and perpet- ual enjoyment of all the advantages which could be derived from the territories claimed by them in virtue of the Papal cession of 1493; and, with that view, it was considered absolutely necessary, not only to prevent the establishment of foreigners in any part of those territories, but also to discourage the rapid advancement of the Spanish provinces themselves in population, wealth, or other resources. Agreeably to these ideas, the settlement, and even the exploring of new countries in America, were restrained ; colonies were rarely allowed to be planted near the coasts, unless they might serve for purposes of defence; and when voyages or jour- neys of discovery were made, the results were generally concealed by the Government. The subjects of all foreign nations were prohibited, under pain of death, from touching the section of the New World supposed to belong to Spain, or from navigating the seas in its vicinity. Against these excluding regulations, the English, after they had thrown off their allegiance to the head of the Roman Catholic church, began first to murmur,, and then to act. Their Govern- ment required from that of Spain an acknowledgment of their rights to occupy vacant portions of America, and to trade with such as were already settled ; and these demands having been re- flised, Queen Elizabeth did not hesitate to encourage her subjects, openly as well as secretly, to violate laws which she declared to ^ * The only authorities with regard to Gali's voyage, cited by Navarrete, in addi- tion to the letter from the navigator contained inHakluyt, are two letters addressed by the Viceroy of Mexico to the King of Spain in 1585'; the originals of which are preserved in the Archives of the Indies. These two letters are merely mentioned in a note. The account of the voyage given by Navarrete is, however, with the ex- ception of the difference as to the highest degree of latitude reached by Gali, pre- cisely the same as that contained in Hakluyt. Humboldt, as usual, copies Navar- rete in all thmgs relating to the discovery of the northwest coast. The question is of no importance at present. 35 he unjustifiable and inhuman. The Gulf of Mexico and the West 1560 Indian seas were, in consequence, soon haunted by bands of da- ^^^^^ ring English, who, under the equivocal denominations of free- traders and freebooters, set at defiance all prohibitions with re- gard to commerce or territorial occupation, and fi-equently plun- dered the ships of the Spaniards, as well as the towns on their coasts. About the same time, the French Protestants began their attempts to form settlements in Florida; and the revolt in the Netherlands, which terminated in the freedom of the Dutch prov- inces, shordy after produced a formidable increase in the number of these irregular foes to the supremacy of Spain. The Pacific was for some years preserved fi-om such hostile invasions by the dread of the difficulties and dangers of the pas- sage through the straits of Magellan ; and the Spaniards began to regard as bulwarks of defence those obstacles to communication between Europe and the western side of America, which they had previously been so desirous to remove or counteract. The reports of the extent and value of the trade in the Pacific, and of the riches accumulated at various places in its vicinity, did not, however, fail in time to overcome all apprehensions on the part of the English,* whose ships at length, in 1578, appeared upon 1578. that ocean, under the command of the most able and adventurous naval captain of the age. It is scarcely necessary to say that this captain was Francis Drake. As he is generally supposed to have, during the voyage here mentioned, eflfected important discover- ies on the northwest coasts of America, it will be proper to notice his movements in that quarter of the world particularly ; and to determine, if possible, how far such suppositions are based upon authentic proofs. The most material facts on the subject, as col- lected from the only original evidencef Avhich has yet been made public, are the following : Francis Drake sailed from Plymouth in December, 1577, with 1577. ^ve small vessels, which had been procured and armed by him- ^^^' ^^' self and other private individuals in England, ostensibly for a voyage to Egypt, but really for a predatory cruise against the do- minions and subjects of Spain. The Governments of England and Spain were then, indeed, at peace with each other; but mu- tual hatred, arising fi-om causes already alluded to, prevailed be- tween the two nations, and the principles of general law or mor- als were not at that period so refined as to prevent Q,ueen Eliz- abeth fi:om favoring Drake's enterprise, with the real objects of which she was doubtless well acquainted. For some months after leaving England, Drake roved about the l^'^S. Atlantic, without making any prize of value ; and then, having refitted his ships on the eastern coast of Patagonia, he succeeded * The first attack made by the English on the Spaniards, in the Pacific, took place in 1575. In that year, a party of freebooters, headed by their captain, John Oxen- ham, crossed the isthmus of Panama, and built a vessel on the south side, in which they made several valuable prizes; they, however, at length fell into the hands of their enemies, and were all, with the exception of five boys, put to death at Panama. t See Appendix A to this memoir. 36 1578. in conducting three of them safely through the dreaded straits of ^P^' • Magellan, into the Pacific. Scarcely, however, was this accom- plished, ere the little squadron was dispersed by a storm; and the chief of the expedition was left with only a schooner of a hun- dred tons burden, and about sixty men, to prosecute his enter- prise against the power and wealth of the Spaniards on the west- ern side of America. December. Notwithstanding these disheartening occurrences, Drake did not hesitate to proceed to the parts of the coast occupied by the Spaniards, whom he found unprepared to resist him either on land or on sea. He accordingly plundered their towns and ships with little difficulty ; and so deep and lasting was the impression pro- duced by his achievements, that, for more than a century after- wards, his name was never pronounced in those countries with- out exciting feelings of horror and detestation. 1579. At length, in the spring of 1579, having completed his visita- April. tion of the American coast by the plunder of the town of Guatul- co, near Acapulco in Mexico, Drake considered it most prudent to direct his course towards England ; and, fearing that he might be intercepted by the Spaniards if he should attempt to repass the straits of Magellan, he determined to cross the Pacific to the East Indies, and thence to continue his voyage around the Cape of Good Hope, to his country. With this view, he left Guatulco on the 16th of April; but, instead of proceeding directly westward, which would have been his true line of navigation, he, for some reason not clearly shown in the accounts of his expedition, sailed towards the north, and on the 2d of June following had reached the 42d parallel of latitude. There his men began to suffer from cold ; and his farther progress appeared to be difficult, if not im- possible, on account of the violence and constancy of the north- west winds. Under these circumstances, (whether from accident or intentionally is not certain,) he fell in with the American coast, and anchored near it. The place, however, proving insecure, he quitted it without landing, and sailed along the shore to the south, until he found a safe and commodious harbor about the 38th degree of latitude, in which he remained with his vessel June 17 ^^^^ ^^® -'-^^^ ^^ June to the 23d of July, to This period was spent by the English in repairing their vessel July 23. and making other arrangements for the long voyage in prospect. The natives of the surrounding country, who came in crowds to the shore of the harbor, at first exhibited signs of hostile inten- tions. They were, however, soon conciliated by the kind and forbearing conduct of the strangers ; and their respect for Drake increased to such an extent, that, when they saw him about to de- part, they earnestly entreated him to remain among them as their king. The naval hero, though not disposed to undertake in per- son the duties of sovereignty over a tribe of naked savages, nev- ertheless " thought meet not to reject the crown ; because he knew not what honor and profit it might bring to his own country. Wherefore, in the name and to the use of her Majesty Queen ^Elizabeth, he took the sceptre, crown, and dignity of the country into his hands ; wishing that the riches and treasure thereof might , I 37 so conveniently be transported for the enriching of her kingdom 1579. at home." The investiture accordingly took place with due cer- emony; Drake bestowing upon the country thus legitimately added to the English dominions the name of New Albion ^ and erecting on the shore of the bay a monument with an inscrip- tion commemorative of the transfer. The preparations for continuing the voyage having been com- pleted, Drake quitted his new made fellow- subjects, to their great regret, on the 23d of July, and, steering directly across the Pa- July 23. cific, reached the vicinity of the Philippme Islands in sixty-eight Sept. 30. days ; thence he pursued his course through the Indian seas, and around the southern extremity of Africa into the Atlantic, and arrived in England, with his booty undiminished, on the 25th of 1580. September, 1580. ^ Sept. 25. With regard to the harbor on the northwest coast of America, in which the English repaired their vessel, nothing can be learned from the original accounts of their expedition, except that it was situated between the 38th and the 39th parallels of latitude ; and that a group of small islands was found in the ocean, at a short distance from its mouth : whence we are led to conclude that it was either the Bay of Scm Francisco, or another bay a few miles farther north, now called Port Bodega, to each of which this description applies. As to the extent of the portion of that coast seen by Drake, the accounts are at variance. In the earliest and apparently the most authentic relations and notices of his voyage, the 43d degree of latitude is given as the northern limit of his course in the Pacific; while in others, of later date, and more questionable authority, it is maintained that he examined the whole shore of the continent from the 48th parallel to the 38th. Burney, in his History of Discoveries in the Pacific, (vol. i, page 356,) has devoted several pages to the subject. He there pro- nounces that " the pari of the American coast discovered by Drake is to be reckoned as beginning immediately north of Cape Mendo- cino, and extending to the 48th degree of north latitude ;" and this opinion has been since almost universally adopted. There are, how- ever, strong reasons for rejecting the decision of Burney, whose re- view of the evidences in this, as in all cases in which his coun- trymen were concerned, is entirely ex parte. An exposition of these reasons would require more space than could be with propri- ety allotted to it in the body of this history ; it has therefore been consigned to the Appendix, [A,] and the conclusion onlywill be here presented, which is : that in all probability, the English un- der Drake, in 1579, saio no part of the loest coast of America north of the 43c^ degree of latitude, to luhich parallel it had been discov- ered by Cabrillo and Ferrelo, in 1543. The success of Drake's enterprise encouraged other English li>80. adventurers to attempt similar expeditions through the Strait of Magellan ; and it likewise served to stimulate the navigators of that nation, in their efforts to discover northern passages of com- munication between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. Of their predatory excursions, none appear to have been attended with success, except that of the celebrated Thomas Cavendish, or Can- 4 S8 1587. dish, who, during his circumnavigation of the globe, rendered his name almost as terrible to the Spaniards as that of Drake, by his ravages on the western coasts of America. In this voyage, Candish lay for some time near Cape San Lucas, the southern- Nov. 15. most point of California, and there captured the Sa7ita Anna, a Spanish ship, richly laden, on her way from Manilla to Acapulco, which he set on fire after plundering her and landing her crew on the coast. The miserable persons, thus abandoned in a des- ert country, must soon have perished, had not the hull of their vessel, after the extinction of the fire by the waves, been driven on shore in their vicinity ; this carcass they contrived to repair, so as to render it sea- worthy, and, embarking in it, they succeeded in reaching a Mexican port. Among them was Juan de Puca, a Qreek pilot, of whose subsequent discoveries on the northwest coast of America an account will be given in the next following chapter. 89 CHAPTER ir. Fabulous or uncertain accounts of voyages in the north Pacific — Apprehensions of the Spanish Government with regard to the discovery of northern passages be- tween the Atlantic and ihe Pacific — Voyages of Fuca in 1592, and Vizcaino, in 1602— Establishmenis of the Jesuits in California — First colonies planted by the Spaniards on the western side of California, between 1769 and 1774. During the latter years of the sixteenth and the first of the sev- 1575 enteenth centuries, the navigators of England were engaged in ^^^ exploring the northwestern coasts of the Atlantic, in hopes of dis- covering some passage through which they might enter the Pa- cific, with less difficulty and loss of time than by sailing around the southern extremity of America. The Spanish Government was, as the historians of that period fully testify, much alarmed by these efforts of its most hated and most dangerous enemies to facilitate communications between the two seas ; and the unea- siness thus occasioned was from time to time increased by rumors of the successful issue of voyages made for that purpose by sub- jects of various European nations. The earliest of these rumors related to the discovery supposed to have been made by the celebrated Portuguese, Gaspar de Cor- tereal, in 1500, of a passage called the Strait of Anian, uniting the two oceans, north of that part of America which was, and still is, known by the general name of Labrador. Cortereal did cer- tainly, about the year last mentioned, explore the coasts of New- foundland and those of the continent in its vicinity ; and it is pos- sible that he may also have penetrated through Hudson's Strait into Hudson's Bay, which he would then most naturally have considered as a western ocean. Whatever may have been the ori- gin or basis of the rumor respecting the discovery of the Strait of Anian,* the Spaniards and other European nations long continued to be persuaded of its truth. Expeditions Avere made in search of the passage ; and nearly all of those who pretended to have accomplished northern A^oyages between the Atlantic and the Pacific, asserted that they had sailed by way of the Strait of Anian. The number of persons who claimed the merit of discovering navigable passages through or around the northern parts of Amer- * The Strait of Anian was said to have been so named by Cortereal, after two brothers who sailed with him. The author of an article in the London (Quarterly for October, 1816, conceives that the passage was more probably thus denominated, be- cause the navigator " deemed it to be the eastern extremity of a strait, whose western end, opening into the Pacific, had already received that name." In order to show the value of this conception, it is only necessary to observe that Cortereal's voyage took place in 1500, and that the ocean on the western side of America was not dis^ covered until thirteen years afterwards. ws 40 1575 ica at the period here referred to, appears to have Keen consider- to^ able. The chroniclers of the time have preserved the names of several ; and although their stories are now known to have been as false as those respecting the acquisition of the philosopher's stone, or the elixir of life, yet some of them should be noticed, on account of the influence which they exerted upon the progress- of research in the northwestern part of the New World. The most celebrated fable of this class, is the one of which a Portuguese, named Lorenzo Ferrer de Maldonado^ is the hero.. He is said to have sailed from the Atlantic, in 1588, through a strait communicating with that sea near the 62d degree of north latitude, into the Pacific, which he entered by a very narrow opening situated under the 60th parallel ; having, in the course of this navigation, been obliged to proceed as far north as the T5th degree. This supposed voyage is mentioned by several Spanish authors of the seventeenth century. It was however forgotten, and remained in oblivion, until 1790, when it was again brought before the world by an eminent French geographer, M. Buache, who endeavored to establish the truth of the most mate- rial parts of the statement, in a memoir read by him before the Academy of Sciences of Paris. In consequence of his observa- tions, the Spanish Government ordered the commanders of the vessels which were in that year sent to explore the northwest coasts of America, to search for the western extremity of the strait. They did so, but in vain ; and it is now certain that no such pas- sage exists. With regard to the origin of the story, Navarrete in- forms us that a person named Maldonado, an unprincipled ad- venturer, who had written some works on geography, presented to the Council of the Indies, in Spain, a narrative or memoir of a voyage which he pretended to have made at the time, and in the manner above related, accompanied by a petition that he might be rewarded for his discovery, and intrusted with the command of forces, in order to occupy and defend the passage against other nations. Navarrete adds, that this proposition was rejected by the Council, but that the papers respecting it were retained, and are still preserved among the Archives of the Indies. In 1812, Signer Carlo Amoretti, of Milan, found in the Ambrosian library a Spanish manuscript, purporting^ to be a copy of this same narra- tive or memoir, and published a translation of it in French, with notes and commentaries in support of the assertions of the writer. Whether the said manuscript be indeed a copy of that presented by Maldonado to the Spanish Government, or not, is a question as yet unsolved; and it is, moreover, a question which may as well remain without solution, as the subject no longer possesses any claim to attention. Equally useless is it at the present day to inquire whether or not this Maldonado* made a voyage in the * The question as to the truth of the story of Maldon ado's voyage is discussed in the introduction to the account of the expedition of the Sutil and Mexicana, and in the London duarterly Review for October, 1816. The article in the Review is well written, but filled with inaccuracies in all that relates to the Pacific. The writer considers the account translated by Amoretti to be the fabrication of some German. 41 north Pacific as far as Beering's Strait, the discovery of which 1575 has been ascribed to him, upon evidence the most slender, sup- to ported by presumptions the most gratuitous.* ^^^*- No less destitute of tiiith is the story of the expedition of Ad- miral Pedro Fonte^ from Peru to the Atlantic, through northern seas and rivers; which is, however, to be referred to a much later date than that of the voyage of Maldonado, as it first appeared in a periodical work entitled " Monthly Miscellany^ or Memoirs of the Curious,^'' published at London in June, itOS.f According i64a, to this story, the admiral sailed from Callao in April, 1640, to the north Pacific, where he discovered a group of islands near the American continent, named by him Islas de San Ltazaro. Among these islands he proceeded 260 leagues, and then, in the latitude of 53 degrees, he entered a river called by him Rio de los Reyes ^ which he ascended in a northeasterly direction, penetrating the interior of America, until he reached a great lake containing many islands. There he left his ships, and going (in boats, we are to infer) down another river which flowed from the lake eastwardly , he at length came to a sea, where he found a large ship at anchor. She. proved to be a trading-vessel from Boston, in Massachu- setts ; and her commxander, Shapley, informed the admiral that he had arrived at his actual position by a northern course from that port. Being thus convinced of the existence of an uninterrupted connexion by water betv/een the two oceans, across the northern section of Ainerica, the Spaniards returned to their ships, and then sailed back to Peru, through the Rio de los Reyes and the Pacific. The above sketch of the supposed expedition of Admiral Fonte will be sufficient for present purposes. The original account is long, and is filled with confused and trifling details, the incon- sistencies in which should have prevented it from receiving any credit. It was, however, for some time generally believed to be true, or partly true ; and its probability was maintained so lately as in 179T, by the scientific Fieurieu,in his Introduction to the Nar- rative of Marchand's Yoyage. The fact of the existence of a num- ber of islands in the situation assigned to the Archipelago of San Lazaro, indeed, affords some reason for the assumption that the story may have been founded on discoveries really made in that part of the Pacific. Navarre tej treats the whole account as an absurd fabrication ; and takes the opportunity to defend the Gov- ernment of his country from the charge brought against it by * Viz: upon a passapfe in the Ribliotheca Hispana-Nova, of Nicolas Anlonio, published in 1G72, to the eftect that the auihor had seen in the possession of a bishop, a manuscript account of the discovery oftkc Strait of Anian, by Lorenzo Ferrer de Maldonado, in 1588. This passage, and an abstract of the rehition of Maldonado, taken from Amorelli's publication, maybe found in Burney's History of Voyages in the Pacific, vol. v, page 16(r. the abstract is in the appendix [B] to this memoir. t The whole accoun' of this preiended voyage may be found in Burney's Hisioiy of Voyages in the Pacific, vol. iii, page 185: and in Hohbs's Hisiory of Hudson's Bay. The story belongs to the class of fictions now commonly called hoaxes. t Introduction to tlie Narrative of the Voyage of the Sutil and Mexicana, page 76. 42 Fleurieu, of concealing the results of attempts made by its orders to explore unknown seas and regions. One other account of a supposed voyage from the Pacific to the Atlantic remains to be noticed ; which should not, however, be classed with those above mentioned, although it is certainly er- roneous as regards the most material point, and was probably known to be so by the original* narrator. All the information as yet obtained respecting this voyage may be found in a note* or declaration written by Michael Lock, an English merchant or agent in the Levant trade, and published under his name, in 1625, in the celebrated geographical and historical collection called " the Pilgrims," by Samuel Purchas. 1593. From Mr. Lock's declaration, it appears that, in 1596, he met at Venice an aged Greek, calling himself Apostolos ValerianoSy who stated, that he had been employed for more than forty years, under the name of Juan de Fuca^ as seaman and pilot in the Spanish service ; that he had been one of the crew of the Ma- nilla ship Santa Anna, plundered by Cavendish near the coast of California, in 1587, on which occasion he had lost property of his own to the value of sixty thousand ducats ; and that he had subsequently, in 1592, acted as pilot in a voyage, made by order of the Viceroy of Mexico, in search of ''the Straights of Anian, and the passage thereof into the North sea." In this voyage, as he said, " he followed his course west and northwest, along the coasts of Mexico and California, as far as the 47th degree of latitude ;" be- tween which parallel and the 48th, he entered " a broad inlet of the sea, and, sailing therein more than twenty days, he found the land trending some time northwest and northeast, and north, and also east and southeast, and very much broader sea than was at the entrance ; and he passed by divers islands in that sailing. Being entered thus far into the said straight, and being come iiito the North sea [the Atlantic] already^ and finding the sea wid® enough everywhere, it being about thirty or forty leagues broad at the mouth of the straights where he entered, he thought he had well discharged his office, and, not being armed to resist sav- ages, he set sail, and returned homeward again to Acapulco." The Greek added, that neither the Viceroy of Mexico nor the Spanish Government had rewarded him for this service, " and - understanding of the noble mind of the Q,ueen of England, and of her wars maintained so valiantly against the Spaniards, and hoping that her Majesty would do him justice for his goods lost by Captain Candish, he would be content to go to England and serve her Majesty in a voyage for the perfect discovery of the northwest passage into the South sea, and would put his life into her Majesty's hands, to perform the same, if she would furnish him with only one ship of forty tons burthen, and a pinnace ; and *" A note made by me, Michael Lock the elder, touching the strait of sea com- monly called Fretum Anian, in the South sea, through the northwest passage of Meta Incognita." — Purchas'^ Pilgrims: London, lGi25, vol. iii, p. 849. The whole accoiint will be found in ihe appendix [ C] to this memoir. 43 that he would perform it, from one end of the straights to the 1592. other, in thirty days time." Mr. Lock goes on to say that he had endeavored, in conse- quence, to interest the Government of his country in the affair ; and had held correspondence on the subject with various eminent persons in England, as also with Juan de Fuca, from whom he gives the copy of a letter stating his readiness to engage in the proposed enterprise. The English Government, however, showed no willingness to favor the project ; considering the whole story, - probably, as a fabrication on the part of the old Greek for the pur- pose of advaaacing his own interests. The hundred pounds re- quired in order to bring him to London could not be raised ; and when Mr. Lock last heard of him, he was dying in the island of Cephalonia, in 1602. These are the most material circumstances relative to Juan de Fuca, and his supposed discoveries in the northern seas, as re- corded by Mr. Lock, and transmitted to us with the respectable endorsement of Purchas. Several English writers of the same period allude to the subject, but they afford no additional particu- lars ; and nothing whatsoever has hitherto been obtained from any other source, tending to prove directly that such a voyage was made, or that such a person as Juan de Fuca ever existed. The account appears to have obtained no credit in England; and to have been almost unknown out of that kingdom, until after the publication of the journals of the last expedition of Cook, (1785,) who conceived that he had, by his examinations on the northwest coast of America, ascertained its entire falsehood. Sub- sequent discoveries in that part of the world have, however, served to establish a strong probability in favor of the general correctness of the old Greek's assertions ; inasmuch as they show that his geographical descriptions are as nearly conformable with the truth as those of any other navigator of his day. Thus Fuca says that between the 4Tth and 48th degrees of latitude he entered a broad inlet of sea, through which he sailed for twenty days, the land trending northwest and northeast, and north, and east and southeast ; and that in his course he passed by nu- merous islands. Now the fact is, that, between the 48th and 49th parallels, a broad inlet of sea extends from the Pacific eastward, apparently penetrating the American continent, to the distance of about one hundred miles ; after which, it turns northwest by-west, and, continuing in that direction about two hundred and fifty miles farther, crossed and divided by many islands, it again coiii- municates with the Pacific. The discrepancies here to be observed are few and slight, and are certainly all within the limits of supposable error on the part of the Greek, especially when his advanced age, and the circum- stance that he spoke only from recollection, are considered; while, on the other hand, the coincidences are too great and too striking to be fairly attributable to chance. Of those who have examined the subject, some have rejected the whole account given by the pilot as false; others, on the contrary, maintain not only that he performed the voyage as stated, but that he was even convinced of 44 1592. his having reached the Atlantic in the course of it. A mean be- tween the two opinions* seems to be the most reasonable con- clusion. It should be admitted that Fuca entered the strait now bearing his name, and that he may have passed entirely- through it; but that he, an experienced navigator, should have conceived that by sailing thirty leagues east^ and then eighty leagues northwest-by-west^ he had arrived in the Atlantic, is wholly incredible. This will suffice with regard to the voyage of Fuca, the truth or falsehood of which is, at the present day, a question of little or no moment. Some reports of the discovery of a northern passage between the Atlantic and the Pacific, and of the existence of rich nations in that direction, induced the Spanish Government, about the year 1595. 15^5, to order that measures should be taken to ascertain the facts on those subjects. The Count de Monterey, Viceroy of Mexico, accordingly fitted out three vessels, which were despatched from 159G. Acapulco in the spring of 1596, under the command of Sebastian Vizcaino, a soldier well acquainted with marine affairs. Nothing important, however, was gained by this expedition. Vizcaino did not proceed beyond the limits of the Gulf of California; and, ,11 being disappointed in his attempts to form establishments on the i shores of that sea, he returned to Mexico before the end of the same year. 1599.^ Other and more peremptory orders for the immediate survey Sf;p(. 27. ajj(j settlement o.f the western coast of California were received by the Viceroy of Mexico, from Madrid, in 1599 ; and he, in con- sequence, began preparations for an expedition, on a greater and more complete scale of equipment than any of those previously made in that direction. Two large ships and a small vessel were provided for the purpose at Acapulco, and furnished with all the requisites for a long voyage of discovery ; and, in addition to their regular crews, a number of pilots, priests, draughtsmen, and other proper persons, were engaged, composing, together, says Torque- I mada,t '' the most enlightened corps ever raised in New Spain.'^ '" The navigation was placed under the direction of Toribio Gomez de Corvan, as admiral ; but the command of the whole force was intrusted to Sebastian Vizcaino, who bore the title of Captain . General of California. 1002^ 'Phe vessels sailed from Acapulco on the 5th of May, 1602, and, "^ ^Y ->• having reached the western side of California before the middle June 1^. of the following^ month, the survey was immediately commenced from Cape San Lucas, the southern extremity of the peninsula. * It is needless to quote the opinions of Forster or Fleurieu, as they both wrote be- fore the publication oi'the Journals of Vancouver, by whom the pa.ssage now called the Strait of Fuca was explored. Navarrete considers the account of the pilot's voyage false, because he can find no mention ol it ainong the Archives of the Indies, or in the old Spanish historians ; and Humboldt, as usual, contents himself with adopting the conclusions of Navarrete. t Monarquia Indiana, vol. i, page ()94. Torquemada's account is abridged from the journal of Friar Antonio de la Ascension, the chaplain of the admiral's ship. It contains little respecting the movements of the other two vessels. 45 The prosecution of the undertaking was attended with great dif • i620. ficulties ; the scurvy soon appeared in the squadron, and the Spaniards had their perseverance put to the test by the northwest winds, which ahuost constantly opposed their progress along the coast. Vizcaino, however, made the best use of the time which he was obliged to spend in harbors, by examining the shores and the adjacent inland territories ; and he thus collected a large amount of valuable information on those subjects, in the form of notes, plans, and sketches, which are said to lie still mouldering among the archives of the Spanish Government.* By the beginning of December, after their departure from Aca- Dec. pulco, the ships had advanced no farther north than the 32d de- gree of latitude, near which a good harbor was found, and named Port San Diego, Proceeding onwards, they reached another har- bor under the 37th parallel, combining, in the opinion of Vizcai- no, every requisite for the maintenance of a colony, and for the supply and repairs of vessels on their way from India to Mexico. On this place he bestowed the name oi Monterey ^ in honor of the Viceroy, to whom he immediately sent letters by one of his ships, urging the establishment of colonies and garrisons at several points indicated. From Monterey, the remaining ship in which Vizcaino sailed IG03. with the admiral, and the small vessel commanded by ensign Martin de Aguilar, departed on the 3d of January, 1603, and by the 7th they had reached the vicinity of Cape Mendocino, when they were driven back by a violent gale, during which they were separated. The ship took refuge in the Bay of San Francisco, Jan. 10. where search was made in vain for the wreck of the San Augus- tin, which had been lost there while on her voyage from Manilla, in 1595 ;t she, however, soon got to sea again, and, passing be- Jan. 13. yond Cape Mendocino, was for several days tossed about at ran- dom by the storms. On the 20th of January she was opposite a Jan. 20. high white promontory, which received the name of Cape Blanco de San Sebastian^ and was found by a solar observation to be in the latitude of 42 degrees. By this time there were but six per- sons on board capable of doing duty ; and as the small vessel did not appear, Vizcaino, with the assent of the other officers, resolved to direct his course towards the south. This was accordingly done, and the ship entered Acapulco on the 21st of March, with only three effective men among her crew. The small vessel, after her separation from the ship, sailed Jan. 19- northward for some distance along the coast, as far as the latitude of 43 degrees, " where," says Torquemada, " the land forms a cape or point, which was called Cape Blanco^ and from which the coast begins to run to the northwest ; and near it was found a rapid and abundant river, with ash trees, willows, brambles, and * Introduction to the Journal of the Sufil and Mexican a, page 08. A chart of the west coast of CaliiOrnia, as far north as Cape Mendocino, w^as compiled frora these documents, of wliich a copy may be found in the atlas of the work above mentioned. t As before mentioned at page 34. 46 1603. Other Castilian trees, on its banks ; but it could not be entered on account of the strength of its current." From this point Aguilar turned to the south ; his vessel reached Acapulco, but he and all the other officers, and many of the men, died of scurvy on the voyage thither. Considerable doubts have been cast, and not without reason, upon the accuracy of the account of Aguilar's discoveries beyond Cape Mendocino. It is certainly incorrect on one point, for we know that the coast does not " begin to turn towards the north- west" at the 43d degree of latitude, or at any other point between Cape Mendocino and the 47th degree. Moreover, it is scarcely credible that Aguilar should, at so stormy a season, and with so inefficient a crew, have ventured so near to a lee shore, entirely unknown to him, as to be able to distinguish, without a glass* the species of the trees growing on it. The great river which he is said to have found about the 43d degree of latitude has not yet been identified ; although several streams, none of them large, do certainly enter the Pacific near that parallel. The account of the discovery of this river has attracted much more attention than it merited, or than the unfortunate Aguilar (if he actually saw such a stream) could have anticipated, in consequence Of an idle opin- ion expressed, or rather recorded, by Torquemada, that it might prove to be the long-sought Strait of Anian, or might lead to the wealthy city of Q,uivira, believed to exist in that part of the world. The Cape Blanco mentioned as the northern limit of Aguilar's progress along the coast, is supposed by Cook to be a remarkable promontory, situated under the 43d parallel, to which the English navigator, however, did not scruple to apply the name of Cape Gregory. In like manner, Vancouver has bestowed the appella- tion of Cape Orford u^on another great projection from the con- tinent, near the 42d degree, although he considered it to be identical with the Cape Blanco de San Sebastian of Vizcaino. Upon comparing the accounts of this expedition with those of the voyage of Cabrillo, in 1542-'3, it will be seen that the same, or nearly the same, portions of the west coast of America, were observed on both occasions; and that Vizcaino, consequently, did no more than survey minutely what had been already discovered by his predecessors. Vizcaino endeavored, after his return to Mexico, to prevail upon the Viceroy to establish colonies and garrisons at San Diego, Mon- terey, and other points on the coast which he had surveyed, for the purpose of facilitating the trade with India, as well as to pre- vent the occupation of that coast by other nations. His effi^rts being unavailing in Mexico, he went to Spain, where he finally 1606. obtained from King Philip III. royal orders for the execution of his projects. He, however, unfortunately died in Mexico in 1609. 1609, while engaged in preparing for the enterprise ; and no farther measures were taken, either by individual Spaniards or by their * The inv^entioii of the tel scope took place in 1609. 47 Government, to settle the west coast of California, or to extend the iCG9. limits of discovery in that direction, until 1 60 years afterwards. This part of America remained, in the mean time, almost for- gotten, except by persons engaged in the navigation from India to Mexico, who were obliged to make themselves acquainted with the situation of the principal headlands and islands* south of Cape Mendocino. One of these navigators brought to Mexico, in 1620. 1620, an account of a channel which he pretended to have dis- covered near the 43d parallel of latitude, connecting the Gulf of California with the Pacific ; and, as this statement corresponded with that of the discovery of a great river at the same position by Martin de Aguilar, it was readily received as true. Accordingly, in all maps of this part of the world, published during the re- mainder of the seventeenth century, California is represented as an island, separated from the continent by a strait.f The error was corrected in 1700 by Father Kuhn, (or Kino, as the Spaniards write his name,) a German Jesuit, who explored the region about the northern extremity of the gulf. Shortly after the period of Vizcaino's expedition, the French, 1607. the English, and the Dutch, successively established colonies on the Atlantic side of North America, as well as in the West Indies, where the English and French already held some possessions ; and geographical discoveries were also about the same time made by the navigators of those nations, which were, or appeared to be, seriously prejudicial to the interests of Spain in the New World. Thus, Henry Hudson ascertained the existence of the great in- 1600. terior sea north of Canada, from which it was confidently ex- I pected that some passage to the Pacific would be speedily found ; and Lemaire and Yan Schouten entered that ocean through the open sea, south of the promontory, which, in honor of their native city in Holland, they called Cape Horn. The navigation between the Atlantic and the Pacific was so much facilitated by the latter * 111 a work printed at Manilla in 1712, called "Navegacion Especulativa y Prac- tica," minute directions are given for sailing along this part of the American coast, t In ihe curious map of North America, at page 854 of the 3d volume of Purchas's Pilgrimage, published in 16-35, the sea is represented between California and the con- tinent, as far north as the 45th degree. On this map are laid down, by name, Cape Blanco, Cape San Sebastian, and many other points discovered by Vizcaino. In the geographical and historical atlas of Mitchell and Senex, published at London in 1721, California appears as an island, extending from Cape San Lucas to the 45th degree of latitude ; the northernmost part of the island is called Nova Albion. North of it are placed a num.ber of small islands, near the continent, with the names of Clnisiento, Colubra, Wanguino, Maquino, &c., affixed to them. Whence were these names derived'? A veteran buccanier, Captain Coxton, who flourished in the latter part of the 17th century, asserted that he had, in 1688, discovered a river emptying into the Pa- cific from the American con'ment, north of Cape Mendocino, up which he had sailed into a great interior sea called the LoJce of Thoyaga, containing many islands, in- habited by a numerous and warlike population This lake may be found on several old maps of that part of North America, for instance, in the atlas of Mitchell and Senex, above mentioned, Noithwest America was indeed at that time the terra incoguUissima. Bacon laid the scene of his Allcmiis there; a.-nd Brobdignag, ac- cording to the very exact account of its discoverer, Captain Lemuel Gulliver, was ntuated immediately north of the Strait of Fuca, about the 50th parallel of latitude. The position of Utopia (or no where) ]ii not clearly expressed in the narrative of Master Ralph Hythloday; but it seems to have been near California. 46 1600. discovery, that voyages to the western side of America were no longer considered as dangerous enterprises ; and the Spanish com- merce on those coasts was ahnost ever afterwards harassed by pirates, or quasi pirates, of various classes and denominations. The Gulf of California was, during the seventeenth century, the principal resort and rendezvous for these depredators, especially for those from Holland, who, under the name of Pichilmgs,keipX the inhabitants of the southern coasts of Mexico in constant anx- iety. For the purpose of protecting these coasts from such inflictions, as well as of obtaining advantage from the pearl-fishery on the eastern side of California, several attempts were made by the Gov- 1616 ernment, as well as by individuals and companies in Mexico, to ^o establish garrisons, colonies, and trading-posts in that peninsula.* ' Of the expeditions thus made, it is needless here to relate the par- ticulars, as they are unconnected with the principal subject of this memoir ; suffice it to say, that they all terminated unfortu- nately, from want of funds, from the barrenness of the country and the hostility of its inhabitants, and, above all, from the indo- lence and viciousness of the persons sent out as colonists. The last of these expeditions made by command of the Spanish Gov- ernment was under the direction of Don Isidro de Otondo, who, in 1683, conducted from Mexico a number of soldiers, settlers, and priests, of the order of the Jesuits, and distributed them at various points on the western side of the Californian gulf; the colonies, however, all disappeared within a few months after they had been planted, and it was then resolved by a council of the principal au- thorities of Mexico that the reduction of California by such means was impracticable. 1685. The Jesuits who had accompanied Otondo in his expedition, while concurring with the council in its opinion, nevertheless in- sisted that the object might be attained by another course, viz : by the conversion to Christianity and civilization of the natives of that part of America, which task they offered themselves to undertake. Their proposition met with little encouragement from the heads of the government in Mexico. Being, however, not dis- heartened, the fathers perambulated the whole kingdom, preach- ing and exhorting the authorities and the people to aid them in the prosecution of an enterprise so pious and so politic. By such means, and by the co-operation of their brethren in Spain, they 1G97. raised a small fund, and finally, in 1697, procured royal warrants authorizing them to undertake the reduction of California /or the Kingy and to do every thing which might be necessary for that purpose, at their^ own expense. On receiving these warrants. Father Oct. Salvatierra, the principal missionary, sailed with a few soldiers and laborers to the land which was to be the scene of their oper- ations, where he was soon joined by Fathers Kuhn, (or Kino, as * Accounts of these expeditions maybe found in the History of California, by Father Venegas; and in Navarrete's Introduciion to the Journal of the Sutil and Mexicana. 49 the Spaniards call hiai,) Picolo, Ugarte, and others, all men of 1097 education and courage, zealously devoted to the business before them. On arriving in California, the Jesuits had to encounter the same obstacles and difficulties which had rendered vain all previous attempts to form establishments in that region. They were at- tacked by the natives, to whose enmity several of the fathers fell victims ; their own men were insubordinate, and were generally more inclined to fish for pearls, than to engage in the regular la- bors required for the support af settlers in a new country ; and their operations were for some time confined within the narrowest limits, by the want of funds. Their brethren and friends in Spain occasionally obtained orders for small sums from the Government for their use ; but the Mexican treasury, on which these orders were drawn, was seldom able to meet them when presented, "*' and the value of the assistance thus aff'orded was in all cases much diminished before it reached those for whom it was intended. By perseverance and kindness, however, the Jesuits triumphed 1(597 over all these difficulties. Within a short time after their entrance to into California, they founded several stations or missions ; and be- ^"^^ fore the middle of the last century, their establishments extended, at short distances apart, along the whole eastern side of the pen- insula, from the mouth of the Colorado in the north, to Cape San Lucas. Each of these stations contained a church, a small fort, and a storehouse ; and it formed the centre of a district, in which the Indians were induced, by the most gentle means, to labor regularly for their own support, to live at peace among themselves, and to receive instruction in the doctrines of the Roman Catholic religion. To these ends were the efiforts of the fathers exclu- sively directed, immigration from other countries being always discouraged by them. That their exertions in this way were cal- culated to produce temporary good, cannot be denied, as the in- dividual objects of them must have been rendered more happy and comfortable than they Avould have otherwise been ; but it ap- pears to be equally certain, that neither the Jesuits nor any other missionaries have ever succeeded in fitting a Californian Indian to become a useful member of society. These missionaries, likewise, exerted themselves assiduously in acquiring a knowledge of the geography, natural history, lan- guages, with the American continent, which, after having been doubted ' or denied for almost a century, was completely established by Father Kuhn, an indefatigable German, in 1700. The results of these researches were communicated to the world, from time to time, through the medium of a periodical publica tion, entitled " Lettres Edifiantes et Curieuses, ecrites des Missions Etrangtres^'' (Edifying and Curious Letters written from the For- eign Missions,) which was conducted at Paris by Jesuits, for seve- ral years, from 1716. But the most complete account of Califor- nia,* to 1750, is to be found in the Natural and Civil History of that country, generally attributed to Father Miguel Yenegas, though now known to have been composed chiefly by another priest of the order, named Andres Marcos Burriel. Respecting this work, which appeared originally at Madrid in 1757, and has been since translated into all the principal European languages, it may be here observed, that the portions dedicated to the labors of the Jes- uits are highly interesting, and that they bear with them the marks of truth ; but that the notices of events which occurred prior to the entrance of the missionaries into the country are often at variance with those given by the older writers, and sometimes evidently erroneous. The observations of the author upon the J policy of the Spanish Government towards its American domin- ions are replete with wisdom, and indicate more liberality, as well as boldness on his part, than could have been reasonably expect- ed, considering the circumstances under which he wrote and pub- lished. The Jesuits received, as before mentioned, little assistance from the Spanish Government in the prosecution of their plans with regard to California. That Government, indeed, was not only at all times disinclined to favor projects from which no immediate increase of its revenues or political strength could be anticipated, but was also particularly jealous and mistrustful as to the pro- ceedings of the Jesuits in the New World. Suspicions were en- tertained at Madrid that those proceedings were not dictated sole- ly by philanthropic and religious motives; but that the body as- pired to the separation and exclusive control of many portions, if not of the whole, of the Spanish, empire in America. These sus- picions became stronger as the influence of the Jesuits increased ; the power possessed, or believed to be possessed, by their order, however, preserved them for some time from any direct open at- 1767. tack on the part of the Government. At length, in 1767, a royal decree was issued by King Charles III. for their expulsion from his dominions ; it was executed without difiiculty,t and the * " Noticia de la California y de su Conquista, sacada de la kistoria manuscrita del Padre Miguel Venegas, y de otras noticias." (" Account of California, and of its con- quest, drawn from the manuscript history of Father Miguel Venegas, and from other sources.") The English translation, published in 1759, is miserable. t A large military force was sent from Mexico, for the purpose of dislodging the Jesuits in California. Gaspar de Portola, the commander of this expedition, is said to have been much ashamed and mortified on finding that his efforts were directed only against a few old priests, and their half-starved simple Indian converts. to 1769. SI missionaries in California were obliged, at a moment's warning, i7G7, to quit forever the establishments which they had so long and so sedulously been engaged in rearing. In 1769, immediately after the expulsion of the Jesuits from 1769, California, the Spaniards established the first colony and garrison on the western coast of that territory. This measure was effected in prosecution of a scheme of reform and defence, which had been devised at Madrid, with the view of rendering the trans-At- lantic dominions of Spain more profitable to the mother country, and more dependent upon its authority ; as Avell as of securing them against apprehended encroachments of foreign nations. Since the days of Sebastian Vizcaino, who had so strenuously 1603 recommended the settlement of this part of America, the Spanish power had, from a variety of causes, been constantly declining. On the Atlantic side of the New World several valuable territo- ries, which had long been occupied by the subjects of his Cath- olic Majesty, as well as others to which his claims were less ob- vious, had passed into the hands of his bitterest foes; and al- though his authority was still undisputed on the western side of the continent, yet his pretensions to the exclusive dominion of the Pacific had become obsolete. The buccaneers had led the way into that ocean. They were followed by the armed squadrons of Great Britain and Holland, with one or other of which nations Spain was almost incessantly at war; and, during the short inter- vals of peace, came the exploring ships of those Powers and of France, whose voyages of discovery were always regarded by the Court of Madrid as ominous of evil to its American colonies. The results of these exploring expeditions were communicated to the world without delay, and in the most full and authentic man- ner possible ; the journals of the respective navigators being pub- lished immediately after their return, illustrated by charts, tables, and drawings, affording accurate ideas of the objects and events described. New channels of commercial intercourse were thus opened to all ; and new principles of national law, adverse to the subsistence of the monopolies enforced by Spain, were gradually introduced and adopted by the other maritime Powers of Europe.* After the peace of 1763, the exploring voyages of the French and British were more frequent, and were conducted in a man- ner which gave to them distinctly the characters of political move- ments. The irritation and jealousy which they occasioned at Madrid were still farther increased upon the establishment of col- 1764 onies, by each of the abovementioned nations, among' the islands of the Falkland group, at the very threshold of the Pacific. The French Government, indeed, soon withdrew its subjects from to 1766. ♦" Sir Benjamin Keene, one of the ablest foreign ministers this country ever had, [he was ambassador from Great Britain to the Court of Madrid from 1754 to 1757,) ttsed to say, that if the Spaniards vexed us in the first instance, we had means enough to vex them without infringing upon treaties; and the first step he would re- commend would be, to send out ships of discovery to the South seas." — Lord Lans- iowne^s speech in Parliament on the Convention with Spain; delivered December 13, 1790. Parliarnentary History, vol. xxvii, page 944. to 17GG 1768. 52 1764 those islands, at the request of the King of Spain; the British cabinet, however, disregarded all hints and remonstrances respect- ing its alleged encroachments upon the territories of his Cath- olic Majesty, and there were strong indications of designs on its part to invade other portions of those territories in a similar man- 1763 ner. The exploring ships had confined themselves to the south- to^ ern and intertropical parts of the ocean ; there was, however, no reason for expecting that they would not in time advance towards the shores of the north Pacific, where their presence could not but be injurious to the interests and security of the Spanish do- minions. Serious grounds for apprehensions on the part of the Spanish Government were also afforded by the Russians, whose dis- coveries and settlements on the northernmost coasts of the Pacific were about that time beginning to attract the attention of other European nations. Of these proceedings little was known with certainty, except that the Russians had built vessels on the east- ern side of Asia, and had discovered extensive territories beyond the sea which bathes those shores. Whether the territories thus found were islands, or parts of Asia or of America, and whether those continents were or not united in the north, were questions then undetermined. The fact that this ambitious and enterpri- sing Power had formed establishments on the Pacific, was suffi- cient to create alarms at Madrid; which were rendered more seri- ous by the knowledge, afterwards obtained, that new armaments on a large scale were in preparation at Kamschatka. 1765. In order to avert the evils thus supposed to be impending, the Spanish Government devised a series of measures, which were to be successively applied as circumstances might seem to indicate or to allow. Of these measures, one of the principal objects was the occupation and settlement of the vacant territories of Amer- ica bordering upon the ocean ; to effect which, endeavors were made without delay. In the beginning of 1768, orders were given to the Viceroy of Mexico to have those coasts explored as far northward as it might be practicable to advance ; and at the same time to establish colonies upon them, sufficiently near each other for mutual support, in case of need, against savages or foreigners. The execution of these orders was committed chiefly to Don Jose de Galvez, a high officer of the Council of the Indies, who had been sent to Mexico in 1765 to superintend the application of the new measures in the northern section of Spanish America. 1768, Tlie west coast of America had at that time been discovered only as far north as the 43d degree of latitude — that is to say, as far north as Sebastian Vizcaino had sailed in 1603; and all the information concerning it, being derived from the accounts of the old navigators, amounted to little more than descriptions of har- bors and promontories south of that parallel. Upon examining the manuscripts of Vizcaino relating to his voyage, notices and charts were found of several places upon this coast, which he considered well adapted for settlements ; and, in consequence of his recommendations, it was determined by the Viceroy and Gal- vez that the first establishments should be made at the spots^ 53 which had received from this discoverer the names of San Diego nes. and Monterey. Great difficulties were to be overcome in order to carry this de- termination into effect. Few persons could be found in Mexico willing to subject themselves to the fatigues and privations at- tending the settlement of a new country ; and it was not easy to procure on the Pacific side of the kingdom such vessels as would be required for the transportation of men and materials to the de- signated points on the northwest coast. At length, however, be- fore the close of the year, a small number of persons, consisting of priests, soldiers, and colonists, were assembled at one of the missionary stations on the eastern coast of California, called La Paz^ from which place they began their march through the pe- ninsula, for San Diego, in two parties, respectively conducted by Gaspar de Portola, the governor of the new province, and Fer- nando de Rivera, a captain in the army. The arms, ammunition, provisions, and materials for the colo- 1769. nies were sent around to San Diego in two vessels, one of which, the San Antonio, reached that place on the 11th of April, 1769; April 11. the other vessel, the San Carlos, was driven far out to the westward, and was unable to enter her destined port until the end of the same April 29. month. Of a third vessel, the San Jose, which had also been despatched for the west coast, nothing was ever heard. The par- ties of emigrants who had proceeded by land from La Paz, under Portola and Rivera, successively arrived during May ; and a con- May. venient spot having been selected on the shore of the harbor, a ?| town was laid out and buildings were commenced. .'I Portola, being anxious in like manner to found a settlement at ,^| Monterey before the winter, set off for that place in June, with a June 14. ,| portion of the emigrants and soldiers ; leaving directions at San I Diego that a vessel, which was expected with supplies from Mex- 1 ico, should be despatched to meet him at the other harbor. This I expedition was not successful. The Spaniards, marching along ] or near the coast towards the north, overshot Monterey, and at the end of October found themselves on the shores of the Bay of Oct. 30. jj San Francisco, which they recognised by means of the high ]\ white cliffs at its entrance. Turning towards the south, they ,j] found a port corresponding with that described by Vizcaino 3»i under the name of Monterey ; but the cold weather had set in, Nov. 38. ,ji|and, the vessel not appearing with the supplies, they were ob- j jj liged to retrace their steps to San Diego, where they arrived on ^'i| tlie 24th of January, 1770.* In the spring of 1770 the San Antonio returned to San Diego 1770. I ♦ An acconnt of the establishment of the first colonies on the west coast of Cali- fornia was drawn up by Don Miguel Costanso, the engineer of the expedition, and published at Mexico in the latter part of 1770 ; but it was immediately suppressed i by the Government. Fortunately, however, a copy of the work was carried to Hngland, where a translation was made from it and published in 1790. This trans- lation is accompanied by other useful articles with regard to the northwest coast, and by several maps and plans of harbors in that part of America. The work is m the library of Congress. Much information on the same subject is also afforded by Father Francisco Palou, in his Life of Fathe r Junipero Serra, a Franciscan friar , ,who was the chief of the missionaries to California in 1768. 5 ^4 1770. with supplies from Mexico, in consequence of which Governor Portola determined to make another effort to form an estabUsh- ment at Monterey. He accordingly marched for that place, where he was joined by the vessel with the supplies before the end of May ; and having succeeded in completing the most necessary arrangements for the shelter and support of the settlers during the winter, he himself proceeded to Mexico to superintend the despatch of emigrants to the colonies. It was in prosecution of this plan for securing the unsettled territories of America adjoining the Spanish dominions from occupation by foreigners, that Don Francisco Bucareli, the Gov- June IX). ernor of Bnenos Ayres, in June, 1770, forcibly expelled the Brit- ish colonists from their establishment, called Port Egmont, in the Falkland Islands. This event occasioned serious difficulties be- tween the Governments of Great Britain and Spain, and prepara- tions for war were made upon both sides ; negotiations were, however, at the same time carried on, and the affair was at length arranged without recourse to arms, in a manner not wholly un- satisfactory to Spain. The history of these transactions has never yet been fully communicated to the world. From what has been published officially, added to the information obtained from vari- ous* other sources, the circumstances appear to have been as fol- lows : As soon as the news of the expulsion of the settlers reached Sept. 12. London, the British Secretary of State, Lord Weymouth, ad- dressed to the Court of Madrid demands for the immediate disa- vowal on its part of the acts of the Governor of Buenos Ayres, and for the restitution of the islands in the condition in which they were before those acts took place. To these demands the Span- ish Government at first gave evasive answers, endeavoring to change the question at issue into one respecting the right of sov- ereignty over the islands ; but the British ministry refused to treat upon this subject until the disavowal and restitution had been made as required; and preparations for large armaments were begun throughout Great Britain. The Spanish ambassador at London next declared himself empowered by his Sovereign to state that no particular orders had been given to the Governor of Buenos Ayres with uegard to the Falkland Islands, although that .K' officer had acted agreeably to his general instructions and oath in expelling the British ; and that Port Egmont should be restored as demanded. This offer was, however, also rejected as unsatis- Dec. factory by Lord Weymouth ; and war appeared inevitable. In this conjuncture, the King of Spain applied to his cousin Louis XV. of France for aid, agreeably to the Family Compact, in order that he might resist the demands of Great Britain. France was, however, at that time in a very disturbed state ; in * Parliamentary History, vols, xvi and xxviii; Dodsley's Annual Register for 1771, page 248 ; Belsham's History of Great Britain, vol. v, pages 3li8 to 371— par- ticularly a note at fehe last cited page. The account given by this writer is perhap- the clearest which has yet been presented. See also an article on the Character oj Lord Chatham, in the Edinburgh Review, No. 136, for July, 1838, page 448. consequence of which, Louis declined entering as a party inio 1770. the dispute, though he at the same time tendered his good offices as a mediator between the two Powers.* To this offer the Span- ish Government acceded ; and the King of France was thereupon immediately requested to take the whole matter under his charge, and to make any arrangement which he might consider proper for the interests and honor of Spain. In the mean time, a change had occurred in the composition and views of the British ministry. Lord Weymouth, being unwilling to recede from his first demands, and finding his colleagues averse to a war with Spain, had retired from office, and his successor, Lord Rochford, Dec. 18. was ready to compromise the affair. The offer of mediation on the part of France was, therefore, accepted by the Court of Lon- don ; and a definiti\^e arrangement of the dispute was effected on 1771. the day of the meeting of Parliament. Jan. 22. On that day the Spanish ambassador at London, Prince Mas- serano, presented to Lord Rochford a Declaration, in the name of the King of Spain, to the effect that his Catholic Majesty, being desirous to maintain peace with Great Britain, disavowed the acts of violence committed by the Governor of Buenos Ayres, and en- gaged to restore to his Britannic Majesty and his subjects ''the port and fort of Egmont in the Falkland Islands, with all the ar- tillery, stores, and effects, precisely as they were before the 10th of June, 1770 ;" but at the same time it was declared that this di«- . avowal and engagement '■'■ cannot nor ousrht in anyivise to affect the question of prior right of sovereignty of the Falkland Islands^ The Earl of Rochford, in return, presented an Acceptance, in which, after recapitulating the paragraph of the Declaration rela- ting to the disavowal and engagements to make restitution, he stated that " his Britannic Majesty would look upon the said dec- laration, together with the performance of said engagement, as a t satisfaction for the injury done to the Crown of Great Britain ;" he, J however, made no allusion whatever to the reservation respecting i the right of sovereignty to the territory restored. I In execution of this engagement, the British colonists were re- I placed at Port Egmont, as soon as it had been restored to the con- idition in which it was before the seizure; they were, however, I withdrawn in 1774, by order of their own Government, and $be 1774. [Falkland Islands having thus been freed from the presence of all [other Europeans, were occupied by the Spaniards, who retained .them until South America became independent. This abandon- * The celebrated treaty between the Monarchs of France and Spain, called the Facte de Famille, was signed at Paris on the 15th of August, 176i. By the first arti- cle, their Majesties declare that "the two Crowns will henceforth consider erery Power as their common enemy, which shall become the enemy of either of them;" by the second article, they " reciprocally guaranty, in the most absolute and authen- tic manner, all the estates, lands, islands, and places which they possess in any part of the world," Other articles fix the amount of" the first succors which the Power 'requested shall be obliged to furnish to the Power requesting," This treaty was •virtually annulled by the National Assembly of France, in August, 1790; having 'been almost a dead letter during the whole period in which it was supposed to ^Bve been in force. 56 1774. naent by Great Britain of a territory which had formed the subject of such serious difficulties between her Government and that of Spain, was justified by the British ministry on the ground that no advantages were derived or expected from the colony suffi- cient to compensate the costs of maintaining it. The Spaniards, however, have always asserted, and their assertion is supported by the opinions of distinguished British historians and statesmen, that the evacuation of the islands took place in execution of an ex- press though secret engagement to that effect^ eyitered into by Lord Rochford at the time of the arrangement of the dispute.^ The Spanish Government considered the result of this dispute as advantageous, upon the whole, to the security of its American possessions ; regarding the concessions made by itself as more than compensated by the indirect admission of its assumed rights of sovereignty over the unsettled territories adjoining those do- minions. Indeed, those concessions were little else than diplo- matic courtesies. The spot occupied by the British colonists was restored only to be soon after abandoned ; and Bucareli, not- withstanding the censure cast upon him in the disavowal of his conduct, was continued in command at Buenos Ayres until that evacuation took place, after which he was raised to the lucrative and dignified station of Viceroy of Mexico. The same opinions with regard to the concessions of the Span- ish King prevailed very generally in Great Britain, as soon as they were made known. The arrangement was severely criti- cised, and the ministry were reprehendedf for concluding it, both in and out of Parliament ; and the consciousness that these opin- ions were just, rendered the British Government more severe and uncompromising in its exactions from Spain upon the occasion of the dispute respecting Nootka Sound in 1790, The similarity of the circumstances which led to these two disputes, and the identity of the principles maintained by each party at both peri- ods, rendered it proper to introduce the foregoing accounts and observations respecting the difficulties between Spain and Great * Governor Pownal, in the debate in Parliament, March 5th, 1771, (see Parlia- mentary History, vol. xvi, page 1394,) on his motion for censuring the ministry on account of the arrangement with Spain, says: "Without some such idea as this, namely, that as soon as reparation i» made to our honor for the violent and hostile manner in which we v;ere driven off the island^ and as soon as we are put in a situa- tion to evacvMte it on our own motion, it is tacitly understood we are to cede it — with- out some such idea as this, the whole of the negotiation is inexplicable and unintel- ligible." To this no reply was made on the part of the ministry. t In the debate in the House of Peers upon the address approving the arrange- ment with Spain, Lord Chatham used this language: "There never was a more odious or more infamous falsehood imposed upon a great nation. It degrades the Xing; it insults the Parliament. His Majesty has been advised to affirm an abso- lute falsehood. My Lords, I beg your attention ; and I hope to be understood when I repeat that it is an absolute falsehood. The King of Spain disowns the thief, while he leaves him unpunished and profits by his theft." In the protest against the arrangement entered into in the House of Lords by Lords Chatham, Lansdownc, and other eminent members, it is averred that in the declaration and acceptance " no claim on the part of his Majesty to the right of sovereignty to any part of the island ceded to him has been advanced ; and any assertion whatsoever of his Majes- ty's right of sovereignty has been studiously avoided from the beginning to the end,** &c. See Junius's letter of January 30, 1771 ; and Johnson's Defence of the Ministry, which is generally supposed to hare been dictated by Lord North. Britain in 1770 ; otherwise they would have been out of place in i774. this memoir. The issue of this dispute served to impress the Spanish Gov- it/I ernment still more strongly with the conviction of the necessity to of occupying the vacant coasts adjoining its American provinces, ^^^* either effectively, or in such a manner as to afford at least the semblance of right to the exclusive possession of them. Efforts with this view were accordingly made on the shores of Texas, Mosquito, Patagonia, and California; and were continued at a great expense, though with little success, until 1779, when the war between Spain and Great Britain occasioned their suspension. The settlements of the Spaniards on the west coast of Califor- nia were, and continued to be until within a few years past, lit- tle more than missionary stations under the direction of Francis- can friars ; some of them were, however, styled Presidios, in vir- tue of their possessing mud forts garrisoned by a few miserable soldiers. The most northern of these establishments was that on the Bay of San Francisco, founded in 1776 ; the residence of the Governor was, and still is, at Monterey.* The British Government, on its part, although abandoning the Falkland Islands, still persevered in endeavoring to have the Pa- cific minutely explored. For this purpose. Captain Cook was despatched on his second voyage around the World, from Avhich '^'^^ he returned in 1775 ; having in the mean time made many im- portant discoveries, and completely disproved the rumors, based upon the declarations of the Spanish navigator Gtuiros in 1607, respecting the existence of a habitable continent south of the Pa- cific and Indian Oceans. In 1774 and 1775 the northwest coast of America was explored ^^J^ by Spanish navigators between the 43d degree of latitude, the limit 1779. of preceding discoveries from the south, and the 58th; and in 1778 and 1779 the remaining portions, as far north as the Arctic Sea, were examined by the British, under Cook and his successors in command. Before relating these important occurrences, it will be convenient to present a view of the discoveries which had been made by the Russians in the northernmost parts of the Pacific, as the objects and movements of the other two nations, with re- gard to this section of the world, will thereby be rendered more easily intelligible. * For statistical accounts of these establishments, as they existed at the beginning of the present eentur)'^, see Humboldt's Essay on New Spain. 58 CHAPTER III. Voyages of discovery and trade in the northernmost parts of the Pacific made bj ihe Russians from Kamschatka and Ochotsk, between 1728 and 1779 — Voyages of Beering and Tschirikoif— Establishment of the far trade between Asiatic Russia and the opposite coasts and islands of America — Voyages of Synd, Kren- itzin, Levasheff, and Benyowsky, Before the beginning of the eighteenth century, the coasts of Asia bordering upon the Pacific, north of the 40th degree of lati- tude, were as Kttle known as those of America beyond the same parallel. At that time, the only information respecting the former territories was derived from the reports of Martin Geritzen de Tries, a Dutch navigator, who had in 1643 explored the seas north of Japan as far as the 48t?i degree, and had doubtless entered the gulf bounded by the Kurile Islands and Kamschatka on the east, which is now called the Sea of Ochotsk. In the best maps,* published as lately as 1T20, Jesso, the most northern of the Jap- anese islands, is represented as part of the continent of Asia ; while the Kurile group are laid down as a continuous territory, under the name of the Company^ s land^ separated from Jesso by a passage called the Strait of Vries. IQQQ Such was the state of geographical knowledge with regard to the northeastern coasts of Asia in 1696, when the Cossacks, who had been sent by Peter the Great, Czar of Russia, to explore and conquer the northern parts of that continent, discovered Kam- schatka, and penetrated to the shores of the Pacific. Within the ensuing fifteen years, Kamschatka and the whole region interve- ning between it and Europe were definitively attached to the Russian empire. From these conquests the Russians acquired, among other ad- vantages, an extension of their commercial intercourse with Chi- na, which thus in a short time became very important. The principal articles of export to that country were the skins and fiirsf of animals, which were obtained either in Siberia and Kam- schatka, or by way of England from Hudson's Bay; in return, the Russians brought from China its teas, silks, porcelain, and other precious commodities. This commercial intercourse was effected by means of caravans passing over land to and from certain points * See historical and geogra^ical atlas of Mitchell and Senex, published at London in 1620. t Furs have been at all periods highly prized in China as objects of comfort and luxury. In the northern provinces they are used as defences against cold ; while throughout the empire they constitute an important part of the dress of every rich noble or ostentatious person. " With the least change of air," says Krusenstern, "the Chinese immediately alter their dress; and even at Canton, which is undw: the tropic, they wear furs in the winter." m in each empire ; and when we consider the immense distance, i696. and the difficulties of the journey between the commercial cities of European Russia and those of China, it becomes evident that none but objects of great value, in comparison to their bulk, could have been thus transported with profit to those engaged. The possession of these vast regions only served to inspire the nn. ambitious Czar with designs for the extension of his authority over other portions of the earth. Finding his dominions limited by the ocean in the east, he was anxious to know what territories lay beyond that barrier, and whether it would not be possible for him to invade from that quarter the establishments of the French, the British, or the Spaniards in America. Influenced by such views, he ordered that vessels should be built in Kamschatka, and equipped for voyages of discovery to be made agreeably to instructions which he himself drew up ; while, in the mean time, other vessels should proceed from Archangel eastward, to explore the Arctic or Icy Sea and the northern coasts of Asia. At the period when this plan was arranged by Peter the Great, it was not known whether Asia and America were united by land in the north, or were separated by means of a connexion between the Pacific and the Icy Sea ; nor had it indeed been ascertained that the waters which bathed the shores of Kamschatka commu- nicated directly with the Pacific, although this was considered most probable fi:om the traditions that large ships had been wrecked upon those shores. The solution of these great geo- graphical questions was the first object proposed by the Czar in the expeditions ; the next being to discover the most practicable means of reaching the possessions of other European nations in America. Yarious circumstances prevented the execution of any of these projects during the lifetime of Peter. His widow and successor, 1725. Catherine, however, resolved to carry them into fulfilment ; and a small vessel was at length, in 1728, built and equipped at the 1728. mouth of the river of Kamschatka, on the eastern side of that peninsula, for a voyage agreeably to the instructions of the Czar. The command of the expedition was intrusted to Vitus Beering, a Dane, who had been selected for the purpose by Peter on ac- count of his approved courage and nautical skill ; his lieutenants were Alexei Tschirikof, a Russian, and Martin Spanberg, a Ger- man, both of whom afterwards rose to eminence as navigators. Beering sailed from Kamschatka on the 14th of July, 1728, Jnly 14. and took a northward course along the Asiatic shore, which he traced as far as the latitude of 67 degrees 1 8 minutes. There he found the coast turning almost directly eastward, and presenting August 15. nothing but rocks and snow as far as it could be perceived, while no land was visible in the north or the east. From these circum- stances, the navigator concluded that he had reached the north- eastern extremity of Asia, and that the waters in which he was then sailing were those of the Icy Sea. Conceiving, therefore, that he had attained the objects of his voyage in this direction, and fearing that if he should proceed farther he might be obliged to winter in this desolate region, for which he was unprepared. 60 1728. he returned to Kamschatka, where he arrived in safety on the Sept. 2. 2d of September. In this voyage Beering had twice, without knowing it, passed within a few miles of the American continent, through the narrow strait upon which his name was, fifty years afterwards, generously bestowed by Cook. 1729. In the succeeding year Beering sailed again from Kamschat- June 5. ka, and, taking an eastward course, endeavored to find the Amer- ican continent. Ere he had advanced far in that direction, how- July 23. ever, he was assailed by violent adverse winds, which forced him around the southern extremity of the peninsula into the Sea of to Ochotsk. After this repulse, he went to St. Petersburg, and en- 1741. gaged in no other expedition of discovery for twelve years. While Beering was thus remaining inactive at the Russian capital, the existence of a direct communication between the Pa- cific and the sea which bathes the shores of Kamschatka was as- 1729. certained, first by the shipwreck of a Japanese vessel on the to eastern side of that peninsula in 1729, and ten years afterwards by ^^ the voyages of two Russian vessels, under the command, respec- tively, of Martin Spanberg and William Walton, through the pas- sages between the Kurile Islands to Japan. Within the same pe- riod, also, the continuity of the Pacific with the Atlantic through the Icy Sea, which the discoveries of Beering had given reason to suspect, was readered nearly if not absolutely certain by means of expeditions, partly by land and partly by sea, along the northern coasts of Europe and Asia ; all the attempts, however, made at that time, and since, to pass with vessels around those coasts, from ports in Europe to the Pacific, proved abortive. Moreover, a Russian, 1732. named Krupisheff", had sailed, in 1732, from Kamschatka north- ward, as far as the extreme point of the Asiatic shore reached by Beering in his first voyage ; thence he had been driven by storms towards the east, upon the coast of an extensive and mountainous territory which was supposed to be, and undoubtedly was, a part of America. Thus the great geographical questions proposed by the Czar Peter were determined, and the practicability of a com- munication by sea between the Russian dominions in Asia and the Spanish possessions in America was satisfactorily proved. 1740, These discoveries encouraged the Empress Anne, who occupied the throne of Russia when they were completed, to persevere in endeavoring to extend her authority farther eastward ; and she accordingly commissioned Beering in 1740 to superintend anoth- er expedition fi'om Kamschatka in search of America. For this purpose two vessels were built in the Bay of Avatscha, on the southeast side of Kamschatka, which had been selected for the establishment of a marine depot ; they were larger and more fully equipped than any of those employed in preceding voyages of discovery in that quarter, and scientific men were engaged in France and Germany to accompany Beering, so that precise in- formation might be obtained on all points connected with the seas and territories to be explored. Before the preparations were all made, the Empress Anne died; but her successor, Elizabeth, the^ daughter of Peter the Great, immediately declared in favor of the' enterprise, and, no delays being experienced, the vessels were' both ready for sea by June, 1741. On the 4th of that month they 1741. sailed from the Bay of Avatscha ; the larger being commanded by Beeringj and the other by Tschirikof, who had accompanied the Dane in his other voyages. On leaving the harbor, the vessels took a directly eastern course, and thus continued in company until the 21st of June ; on that day they were separated during a storm, after which they never again met. The only regular accounts which we have of Beering's voyage, after his separation from Tschirikof, are contained m the Journal of Steller, the surgeon and naturalist of the ship.* This journal is by no means sufficiently precise upon points of navigation and geography; in consequence of which, it has been impossible to identify many of the spots described by him as discovered during the voyage, although the general course of the vessel may be traced. From these accounts we learn that Beering, after parting with Tschirikof, continued on his course eastward, without meeting with any thing worthy of note until the 15th of July ; on which July 15. day, land was seen in the north, near the 60th degree of latitude. The part first descried was the summit of a mountain, the ex- traordinary elevation of which may be surmised from the fact that it became visible at the distance of more than eighty miles. As they sailed towards this point, the Russians perceived succes- sively other lofty peaks, and then ridges of mountains, all covered with snow, and stretching along the coasts, as well as into the interior of the country, to the utmost limits of the view ; and, upon drawing nearer to the land, they found a large river emptying into the sea, the current of which was felt several miles from its mouth, t These evidences of the extensiveness of the territory, toge- ther with its geographical position, were sufficient to convince the Russians that they had at length reached the American con- tinent. Many of the officers immediately expressed to the com- mander their wishes that he would pursue the discovery to- wards the southeast, in which direction the coast appeared to turn ; but Beering was then laboring under severe illness, and was anxious to arrive in Kamschatka before the winter, in conse- j^jy 13. quence of which he gave orders that they should take a west- ern course. On the 20th of the month they anchored in a nar- July 20. row passage between the continent and a small island, on which latter they landed in search of water. There they found sev- eral huts, Avhich appeared to have been recently abandoned by their occupants, and various implements similar to those used in Kamschatka; none of the natives, however, were to be seen, and the Russians, having obtained a supply of water, set sail again on July 21. the following day. * Steller's Journal was first published in the original German by Professor Pallas in 1795; before which time, all that was known of Beering's voyage to America was contained in a meagre and incorrect abstract of this Journal in Muller's Collec- tions of Russian Histoiy. A translation of the most material parts of the account may be found in Coxe's History of Russian Discoveries, page 20. t No such river has been since found in that part of America. 62 1741. According to Steller, the name of St. Elias was bestowed by the Russians on the most prominent point of this island, in honor of the patron of the day on which they reached it. The old ac- counts of the expedition, however, state that Beering gave that name to the lofty mountain which had first attracted his attention. Steller is more probably correct, as the 20th of July is the day of Saint Elias, agreeably to the calendar of the Greek church. The stupendous peak rising on the northwest coast of America, near the 60th degree of latitude, and distinguished on our maps as Mount Saint Elias ^ received that appellation in 1778 from Cook, who considered it to be, as it doubtless was, the same observed by Beering in 1741. Yancouver, who examined this coast mi- nutel}^ in 1794, was convinced that the place in which the Rus- sians first anchored is on the eastern side of the entrance to a bay, now generally known as Beering'^s^ and sometimes called Admi- ralty Bay. July 21. From the island on which they had first touched, the Russians proceeded towards the west ; frequently seeing land in the north, but seldom going near enough to enable them to distinguish its Aug. 3. character. On the 3d of August, in the latitude of 56 degrees, a chain of high mountains appeared ahead, stretching across the horizon ; and as they knew that Kamschatka was still far dis- tant, they concluded that the land before them was either a great island, or a peninsula extending southward from the American continent. They in consequence altered their course to a south- ern one, in order thus to reach the latitude of 53 degrees, where they were sure of finding the sea open on the west as far as Avat- scha. The distance was short, but they were so much impeded in their progress by contrary winds and currents, as well as by their fears of running upon shoals and small islands, that by the Aug. 29. end of the month they had scarcely advanced fifty miles upon their way. By this time the crew began to suffer from sickness and fatigue, and, in order to give them rest and to procure fresh water, Beering again anchored near some islands, on which they remained ashore for several days. While they were lying at this Aug. 31. place, the first death occurred among them ; in commemoration of which, the group of islands received the name of the deceased sailor, and have ever since been known d.s Schumagin''s Isles.^ Here, also, natives of America were first seen by the Russians; they resembled the Tschutzki, or aboriginals of northeastern Asia, in their features and habits \ and it was remarked that they used implements of iron, which have since been found to be com- mon among all the inhabitants of Northwest America. Sept. After leaving Schumagin's Islands, the Russians discovered others,! extending in a chain westward, nearly in the course of the 53d parallel of latitude, which they passed without landing on them, being anxious to reach Kamschatka before the begin - * They are in number twelve, and are situated near the latitude of 55^ degrees, on the eastern side, and not far trom the southern extremity of the great peninsula of Aliaska. t The Fox Islands, called Unalashka, Uniraak, &c. 63 ning of the stormy season. In this expectation they were dis- 1741, appointed. About the middle of September they were assailed Sept. by a furious tempest, and for several weeks were driven over the sea at random, while famine, disease, and despair were daily les- sening their numbers. At length, on the 5th of November they again saw land in the latitude of 55 degrees ; it proved to be an island, and on it they resolved, at all hazards, to pass the winter. With this view, they landed their stores and other necessaries, Nov. 7. and began to construct habitations out of sails and spars ; they soon, however, had an abundant supply of building materials from the wreck of their vessel, which was driven ashore and dashed to pieces by the waves. On the 8th of December Beering expired, worn down by sick- Dec. 8. ness and fatigue ; and thirty of his men were successively con- signed to their graves on the island before the ensuing summer. 1742. Nearly all these deaths were occasioned by scurvy, with which the whole crew were affected when they landed ; the survivors were restored to health by the free use of fresh water, and sup- ported themselves chiefly on the meat of sea and land animals, of which they killed great numbers during their stay. Upon the return of mild weather, they began to build a small vessel out April. of the pieces of the wreck, which they got ready for sea in Au- gust. On the 14th of that month they departed in their frail boat Aug. 14. from the Avestern side of the island ; two days afterwards they Aug. 16. made the coast of Kamschatka ; and on the evening of the 21st Aug. 21. they landed, forty-six in all, at the place from which they had sailed in the Bay of Avatscha. The island, where they had thus passed more than nine months, is a long and narrow slip of land, situated between the parallels of 55 and 56, about eighty miles from the east coast of Kamschatka ; it has ever since been called Beering^s Isle. Such were the occurrences of Beering's last voyage. The 1741. other vessel employed in this expedition under Tschirikof, like- wise pursuing an eastward course, came upon land on the 15th Julj 15. of July, in the latitude of 56 degrees. The territory thus discov- ered extended on the ocean from north to south; it was covered with high mountains, and its coasts were steep and rocky. As the weather was unfavorable for approaching the land, Tschirikof cast anchor at the distance of some miles from it, and sent ten men in a boat to make examinations ; after some time, these men not returning nor making any signals from the shore, a second boat with six others of the crew was despatched in the same di- rection. Neither of these parties ever returned, nor was any thing learned respecting their fate ; although their commander remained for several days cruising near the coast, in hope that they would make their appearance. This hope having entirely vanished, Tschirikof quitted the coast which he had discovered, and set July 27. sail for Kamschatka. His voyage homeward was attended with great difficulties, from constant storms, and from the sickness of his crew; at length, on the 8th of October, he reached the Bay Oct. 8. of Avatscha, having lost twenty one men by scurvy, in addition to the sixteen whose fate was not determined. to 1764 64 1741. The land discovered by Tschirikof in 1741 must have been, agreeably to his statement of its latitude and bearings, the west- ern side of one of the islands contiguous to the American con- tinent, which are now called on English maps the Prince of Wales^s Archipelago. The inhabitants of these islands are fierce and treacherous, and have always displayed the most uncom- promising animosity against foreigners ; it is therefore most prob- able that the men sent ashore by Tschirikof were murdered as soon as they landed. 1741 The discoveries effected by Beering and Tschirikof in this ex- pedition were not considered by the Russian Government of suffi- cient importance to justify the immediate despatch of other vessels towards the American coasts ; and accordingly no farther attempts were made by its orders to explore the north Pacific until 1766. In the mean time, however, accidental circumstances connected with Beering's voyage had turned the attention of private indi- viduals in Kamschatka to the islands seen by that navigator on his return, and the part of the ocean in which those islands are situated had been thoroughly searched. 1742. It has been mentioned that the crew of Beering's vessel had, during the period passed by them on an island near Kamschatka, subsisted chiefly on the flesh of the land and sea animals which they found there in great numbers. The skins of these animals, particularly of the foxes and sea -otters, were preserved by the men, and carried in their boat to Kamschatka, where they were sold for such high prices that many persons were induced imme- diately to go to the island and procure farther supplies. In the course of the voyages made for this purpose, other islands were discovered, ofiering the same advantages ; and the number of per- sons engaged in the search for furs was increased. 1741 The trade thus commenced was for some time carried on by to individual adventurers, each of whom, acting only for his own ^'^^' benefit, was alternately a seaman, a hunter, and a merchant. At length, however, some capitalists in Siberia employed their funds in the pursuit ; and the expeditions to the islands were in conse- quence made on a more extensive scale, and were conducted with greater regularity and efficiency. Trading stations were estab- lished at particular points, where the furs were collected by per- sons left there for the purpose ; and vessels were sent at certain periods, from the ports of Asiatic Russia, to carry the articles re- quired for the use of the agents, or for barter with the natives of the islands, and to bring away the skins which had been pro- cured. The aborigines of the islands were a bold and savage race, whom it was found almost impossible to subdue or to conciliate ; they attacked and murdered the strangers whenever an opportu- nity was offered, and the Russians appear to have treated them, in return, with great cruelty and oppression. In the smaller islands, the natives were soon extirpated or reduced to absolute slavery by the traders, who employed every means to force them to hunt and fish for the animals yielding the furs. The poor sav- ages were required by their taskmasters to procure a certain num M ber of skins during each season ; for the delivery of which, and 1741 for their quiet behavior in the mean time, they were obhged to to give up their children as hostages. In the larger islands, where ^''^*- the mountains afforded facilities for retreat or defence to the in- habitants, wars were constantly going on between them and the strangers. In addition to the miseries and loss of human life thus occa- sioned, a large proportion of the persons engaged in the collection and conveyance of the furs were annually destroyed by cold, star- vation, shipwreck, and especially by scurvy. The history of the first establishment of the Russians in this quarter of the world is, indeed, little else than a series of accounts of dreadful disasters and sufferings ; and whatever may be our opinions with regard to the humanity of the adventurers, or the morality of their enter- prises, we cannot but admire the courage and perseverance which they displayed in struggling against such appalling difficulties.* The islands thus discovered and conquered by the Russian fur- traders were those between the 53d and the 55th parallels of lat- itude, extending in a regular line or chain from the vicinity of Kamschatka, eastward across the sea, to the extremity of the op- posite American peninsula of Aliaska. They were at first known by the general name oi Aleyutsky^ or Aleutian Islands; at pres- ent, however, they are considered as divided into three groups, the most western of which retains the name oi Aleutian, the mid- dle group being called the Andreanowsky , and the most eastern the Fox Islands. The latter division includes Unalashka, Umnak, and Unimak, the largest and most important islands of the chain ; at a short distance northeast from these are the Schumagin Islands, discovered by Beering, and named after one of his crew ; and still farther in the same direction is Kodiak or Kuktak, the largest island in this part of the Pacific. Kodiak was the extreme point to which the fur- traders had penetrated in 1778; before that time the only portion of the American continent frequented by them was the coast of Aliaska, which they believed to be an island. As the traders had no instruments for determining latitudes or longitudes with precision, their ideas of the relative situations of places in the north Pacific were exceedingly vague and incor- rect. Their navigation was conducted in the most inartificial manner possible. A vessel sailing eastward from the Bay of Avat- scha, or the southern extremity of Kamschatka, could not pro- ceed far without falling in with one of the islands of the Aleutian chain, which would serve as a mark for her course to another; and thus she might go on from point to point, until she reached the place of her destination. In like manner she would return to Asia ; and, if her course and rate of sailing were observed with tol- erable attention, there could seldom be any uncertainty whether she were north or south of the line of the islands. A great number * The narratives of many of these expeditions of the Russian fur-traders may be found in Coxe's interesting " Account of Russian Discoveries." Krusenstern, in the narrative of his voyage t-o the north Pacific, stales that at least one-third of the vessels employed in this trade were lost every year. See po-itea, chapter viii. 66 1741 of vessels were, however, lost every year, in consequence of this to^ want of knowledge respecting the coasts, and want of means to *'"*• ascertain positions at sea. The Russian Government remained for some time unacquaint- ed Avith the extent of this trade, and, indeed, with the existence 1764. of the islands discovered by its subjects. At length, in 1764, the Empress Catherine II. ordered that measures should be taken to procure exact information upon these points, as also with regard to the general direction of the west coasts of America, and their distance from those of her own dominions in Asia. This ambi- tious Sovereign had then just ascended the throne, and seemed determined to carry into fulfilment the designs of Peter the Great for the extension of the Russian empire beyond the Pacific. 1786. The first voyage made by order of Catherine II. for these pur- poses was that of Lieutenant Synd, who in 1766 and 1767 sailed through the seas northeast of Kamschatka. Very few particulars concerning his expedition have been published, from the cir- cumstance, probably, that they were not calculated to reflect cred- it on the nation. By the accounts which have transpired, it ap- pears that he proceeded northwardly, along the Asiatic shore, into the Arctic Ocean ; and that he may have seen the American continent, about the 64th degree of latitude, as he was returning. 1768. In the following year, 1768, another expedition was com- menced, for the purpose of surveying the islands discovered by the fur-traders. With this view, Captain Krenitzin and Lieutenant July23. Levashef sailed from the mouth of Kamschatka river, each in July 27. command of a small vessel ; and, after examining Beering's Island, and some others nearest the coast of Asia, they stretched across to the Fox Islands, among which they passed the winter. Before the ensuing summer nearly half the crews of both vessels had perished from scurvy ; and when the navigators returned to 1769. Kamschatka in the autumn of 1769, they had only ascertained ap- proximately the positions of afewpoints in the chain of islands be- tween that penin sula and Aliaska. It is, indeed, said that Krenitzin employed himself entirely in trading for furs, with which his ves- sel was laden when she came back from her voyage. The only valuable information derived by the Russian Government from this costly expedition was respecting the mode of conducting the fur ti-ade in the islands ; upon this subject the reports of Levashef were curious and interesting, and they served to direct the Gov- ernment in its first administrative dispositions with regard to these countries. The expedition of Krenitzin and Levashef was the last made by the Russians in the north Pacific, for purposes of discovery or 1771. investigation, before 1783. In 1771, however, took place the first voyage from the eastern coast of the Russian empire, to a port firequented by the ships of European nations; and, strange to say, this voyage Avas conducted under the Polish flag ! In the month of May of that year, a small number of persons, chiefly Poles, who had been exiled to Kamschatka, succeeded in overpowering the garrison of Bolscheretsk, a place situated on the southwest May 11. side of that peninsula, in which they were detained, and escaped to sea in a vessel then lying in the harbor. They were directed 1771. in their enterprise by Count Maurice de Benyowsky, a Hunga- rian, who had been in the Polish service, and who afterwards wrote a history of his own life.* From his accounts, it appears that the fugitives, upon entering the Pacific, were driven north- wardly along the coast of Asia, as far as the 66th degree of lat- itude, during which part of their voyage they also saw the American continent. At Beering's Island, which they visited, june. they found a number of fugitives like themselves, established in possession, under the command of a Saxon named Ochotyn ; they also landed on several of the Aleutian Islands, where they discovered crosses with inscriptions, which had been erected by Krenitzin while on his expedition. Proceeding towards the south, they touched in succession at various places in the Ku- rile, Japanese, and Loochoo Islands, and in Formosa, and at length arrived in September at Canton. Benyowsky's accounts Sept. 28, were at first discredited; they have, however, been since con- firmed as regards the m.ost material circumstances. In 1774, a work entitled " A Description of the New Archipel- 1774, ago of the North, discovered bi/ the Russians, beyond Kamschatka, by J. L. StrcEhlin, Councillor of State to the Empress of Russia,^'' was published at St. Petersburg, under the immediate direction of the Government. Accounts coming from such a source were universally considered as authentic and accurate ; the work was translated into all the principal languages of Europe, and it served as the basis for all maps and descriptions of the north Pacific Ocean until 1785. According to Stroehlin, the American coast extended on the Pacific, from the southern extremity of Califor- nia, in a line nearly due northwestward, to the 70th degree of latitude. Between the most northern part of this coast and the opposite shores of Asia were placed on his map a number of is- lands, several of which correspond in name with those of the Aleutian chain; but the positions there assigned to them were very different from those now known to be correct. Aliaska was represented as an island lying beyond the 55th parallel, and sep- arated fi:'om each of the adjacent continents by a strait. In the large and beautifully engraved Latin map of the Russian Empire, by Treschot and Schmidt, published in 1776, on which the coasts of Asia are all laid down with great apparent precision, no land except the Aleutian Islands appears east of Kamschatka, within 25 degrees of longitude. The errors of latitude in these maps amounted, in many cases, to ten degrees, and those of longitude were, as might have been expected, much greater. Indeed, until 1778, when Cook made his voyage through the north Pacific, the differences in longitude between places in that part of the ocean had never been esti- mated, except by the dead reckoning,! which, however carefully * Memoirs and Travels of Count Mauritius Augustus de Benyowsky, written by himself. 2 vols, octavo: London, 1790. t That is, " by keeping an account of the distance run by the log, and of her course steered by the compass, and rectifying these data by the usual allowances for drilt, lee- way, &c., according to the ships known iiim.^— Falconer's Marine Dictionary. 68 1774. observed, cannot afford accurate results; nor had any relation, which could be considered as nearly correct, been established be- tween the meridians of a point on the Atlantic and of one on the north Pacific. The above remarks on the extent of the informa- tion with regard to the northwest coast of America possessed in 1774, by those who had taken the greatest pains to procure it, will serve to show more clearly the value of the discoveries ef- fected by the Spanish and British navigators during the five years immediately succeeding that period. It may be added, that no further attempts were made by the Russians to increase their knowledge of this part of the world until 1783. I I 69 CHAPTER IV. Voyages of discovery in the north Pacific, made by the Spaniards and the British, between 1774 and 1779 — Voyages of Perez, Heceta, Bodega, and Cook— Journeys through the northern parts of America, made by Hearne and Carver. In the preceding pages, it has been shown that, before 1774, the Spaniards had examined the western coast of America as far north as the 43d degree of latitude; and the Russians, saihng east- ward across the Pacific, from their dominions in Asia, had dis- covered beyond the 55th degree many islands, as well as other territories, which were supposed to be parts of the first mentioned continent. Respecting the portion of the American coast in- cluded between these two parallels of latitude, no definite ac- counts had been obtained, although it was probably visited by European navigators during the latter years of the sixteenth cen- tury. The discoveries of the Russians had served to prove that the two great continents were entirely separated from each other by the ocean, but they had afforded little information as to the extension and limits of America in the northwest ; and few of the conjectures based upon them have been confirmed by subse- quent observations. In 1774, the Spaniards attempted, for the first tiliie since the 1774. days of Vizcaino, to explore this coast beyond the 43d degree of latitude. For that purpose, the corvette Santiago was despatched by the Viceroy of Mexico from San Bias, under the command of Juan Perez, an ensign in the Spanish navy, with Estevan Jose Martinez as pilot. They were ordered to proceed, if possible, as far as the 60th degree of latitude, and thence to examine the shores southward to Monterey. Of this expedition a very imperfect account only can be pre- sented. The Spanish Government carefully concealed all in- formation respecting it until 1802, when a short sketch of the principal occurrences appeared in the Introduction to the Narra- tive of the Voyage of the Schooners Sutil and Mexicana, which was in that year published at Madrid, by authority of the King. In addition to this ofl^icial notice, a few particulars have been communicated by Baron Humboldt, in his Essay on New Spain, as derived fi^om the original Journal of Fathers Crespi and Pena, the chaplains of the Santiago, which he was permitted to inspect at Mexico. From these, the only sources of knowledge on the subject, the following account of the voyage of Perez has been drawn. From San Bias, Perez sailed first to Monterey, and thence Con- Jan. 25. tinned his voyage towards the north, keeping at a distance from the coast, in order to reach a high latitude before the cold weather should commence The land next seen by him was near the 6 70 1774. 54th parallel, and must have been the northwestern part of Queen July 20. Charlotte's Island. After a cursory examination of this coast, he proceeded towards the south, occasionally seeing the land ; and Aug. 9. at length, in the latitude of 49J degrees, he discovered and en- tered a bay, to which he gave the name of Port San Lorenzo.^ Here he traded with the natives, who surrounded his vessel in great numbers, offering the skins of animals in return for articles of iron, with which metal they were already acquainted. From this bay Perez sailed on the 10th of August ; and as he arrived at Monterey on the 27th of the same month, it is not probable that he examined very minutely the coast lying between the two places. Martinez, the pilot of the ship, however, in 1789, asserted that a passage extending eastwardly between the 48th and 49th parallels had been found, and entered by his commander soon after quitting Port San Lorenzo ; upon the strength of which as- sertion, Navarrete assigns to Perez the discovery of the arm of the sea now called the Strait of Fuca, and in his map bestows the name of Point Martinez on the cape at the southern side of its entrance. From this account of the voyage of Perez, it will be seen that little information was obtained by him with regard to the north- west coast of America. If the latitude of Port San Lorenzo be correctly reported in the accounts of the expedition, (and we have no reason for supposing otherwise,) that bay must have been the same to which Cook, four years afterwards, gave the name of King George's Sound^ and which is now known as Nootka Sound. The Spanish Government, however, by concealing all accounts . of the voyage of Perez until long after the publication of the jour- nals of Cook, deprived itself of the means of establishing the claims of its subjects to the merit of the discovery, which is al- most universally attributed to the British navigator. 1775, Immediately after the return of Perez, the \iceroy of Mexico, Don Antonio Bucareli, ordered that another expedition should be made to the north Pacific, for the purpose of examining the whole shore of the continent, from Cape Mendocino as far, if possible, as the 65th degree of latitude. With this view, the Santiago was placed under the command of Captain Bruno Heceta, Juan Perez going in her as ensign ; and she was to be accompanied by the Sonora, a schooner of not more than thirty tons burden, of which Juan de Ayala was the chief officer, and Antonio Mauielle the pilot. From the Journal of Maurelle, as translated into English by the honorable Daines Barrington, and published at London in 1781, nearly all that is known respecting the expedition has been derived. This Journal is confined almost entirely to the occur- rences on board of the schooner; concerning the movements of the Santiago, we have only a few indistinct notices, in the Intro- duction to the Narrative of the Voyage of the Sutil and Mexicana. The most material facts collected fi-om these sources are the fol- lowing : * The 10th of August is the day of San Lorenzo, (St. Lawrence,) accordiDg to the Roman Catholic Calendar. ^1 The two vessels having been provisioned for a voyage of a 1775. year, sailed together from San Bias, in company with the schooner Mar. 16. San Carlos, which was bound for Monterey. Ere the latter ves- sel had proceeded far from the land, her captain became delirious; in consequence of which, Juan de Ayala was ordered to take his place. Lieutenant Juan Francisco de la Bodega succeeding to the command of the Sonora. This circumstance is here mentioned, because, in nearly all the accounts of the voyage, Ayala is repre- sented as the principal officer in command, whereas he in fact only accompanied the exploring vessels to the vicinity of Mon- terey.* The exploring vessels, after parting with the San Carlos, made Cape Mendocino on the 7th of June, and on the 10th cast anchor June 7. in a small cove just beyond that promontory, in the latitude of 41 degrees 3 minutes. At this place, which was named Port Trin- idad, the Spaniards remained nine days, employed in refitting their vessels and taking in water. During this time, they held communications with the natives of the country, who appeared to be a mild and tractable race ; and on their departure, they erected a cross near the shore, with an inscription setting forth the period of their visit, and the rights of their Sovereign to the surround- ing territory, founded upon the discovery. This cross was seen standing by Vancouver, who landed there in 1793 ; the English navigator did not, however, consider the place as meriting the name of Si port. On leaving Port Trinidad, the Spaniards kept at a distance June 19. fi-om the land, beating against contrary winds, until the 9th of July, when, finding themselves in the latitude in which Juan de Fuca was said to have discovered a strait leading eastward July 9. through the continent, they sailed to the coast in order to ascer- tain the truth of the account. Proceeding in that direction, they July ii. soon saw the land, which, from its situation as described, must have been the southwest side of the great island of Vancouver and Gluadra, at the entrance of the passage now called Fuca's Strait. They were, however, unable to examine this part of the coast, and were driven southward, to within eighty miles of the mouth of the Columbia, where they anchored, between the con- juiyis. tinent and a small island. Here they met with a severe misfor- tune ; several of the crew of the schooner, who had been sent on shore in search of water, were surrounded by savages, and mur- dered immediately on landing ; and the vessel was herself ex- July 14. * Barrington's Miscellanies, which contains the translation of MaurelJe's Journal, is a rare work; and the notices of this expedition, contained in the various memoirs, reports, and reviews, concerning the northwest coasts of America, are nearly ail taken directly or at second-hand from the abstracts of the Journal by Fleurieu, in the Introduction to the Narrative of Marchand's Voyage around the World, and in the instructions to La Perouse. In these papers, Fleurieu has displayed much geo- graphical knowledge, yet he has committed numberless errors; and his contempt for the Spaniards has led him, whenever an opportunity presented itself, or could be contrived, to disparage their proceedings. His accounts and criticisms with regard to the expedition, described by Maurelle, are filled with inaccuracies, and with un- just or illiberal charges against the Spaniards. Of his mistakes, the least important is his assignment of the command to Ayala. ii 72 1775. posed to danger from the attacks of the barbarians, who appeared in great numbers in canoes, and were with difficulty prevented from boarding her. In commemoration of this event, the island was called Ma de Dolores^ (Isle of Grief) Twelve years after- wards it received from the commander of the Austrian ship Impe- rial Eagle the name of Destruction Island^ in consequence of the massacre of some of his men near the spot where the Spaniards had been cut off. July 15. After the occurrence of this disaster, as many of the crews of both vessels were moreover disabled by sickness, it was debated among the officers whether they should endeavor to proceed to the north , or return to Monterey. The commander, Heceta, was anxious to return; Bodega andMaurelle, however, notwithstand- ing the miserable condition of their little schooner and crew, in- sisted that they should persevere in their efforts to reach a higher latitude ; and their opinion having been unwillingly adopted by their superior, the voyage was resumed on the 20th of July. On Aug. 4. the 4th of August the vessels were separated, and Heceta seized the opportunity of going to Monterey, while the schooner con- tinued her course towards the north. Aug. 14. Ten days after leaving the schooner, Heceta, while sailing along the coast of the continent towards the south, discovered a promontory, called by him Cape San Roque^ and immediately south of it, under the parallel of 46 degrees 16 minutes, an open- ing in the land, which appeared to be a harbor or the mouth of some river.* This opening, represented in Spanish charts printed before 1788 by the names oi Entrada de Heceta^ Entrada de Asun- cion^ and Rio de San Roque^-f was, without doubt, the mouth of the Columbia river, which was thus, for the first time, seen by the natives of a civilized country. Bodega and Maurelle, in their schooner, after parting with He- Aug. 18. ceta, proceeded towards the north as far as the latitude of 57 de- grees, before they again saw the land. Under that parallel they discovered a lofty mountain in the form of a beautiful cone, rising from the ocean, and occupying nearly the whole of what appeared to be a peninsula, projecting westward from the coast of an ex- tensive territory. In the angles between the supposed peninsula and the main land, were two bays, the northernmost of which was called Port Refnedios, and that on the southern side Port Guadalupe^ in honor of the two most celebrated places of pilgri- mage in Mexico, situated near the capital. The mountain over- hanging these bays received the name of San Jacinto^ the saint on whose day it was discovered ; and the appellation of Cape En- gano (Deception) was bestowed on its western extremity. There is no difficulty in identifying these spots, from the descriptions given by Maurelle, although they are distinguished on our Eng- lish maps by other names ; they are on the western side of the * Journal of the Sutil and Mexicana, page 153; and Introductioa to the same, page 94. + The I5th of August is the day of the Assumption ; and the I6th is St. Roqije's (or St. Roch's) day, according to the Roman Catholic Calendar. 73 largest island of King George the Third's group, a httle north- 1775. ward of the place where the Russian navigator, Tschirikof, saw the land, and where his men were lost in 1741. Mount San Ja- cinto is now generally known as Mount Edgecumh^ and Cape Engano as Cape Edgecumb ; Port Remedies is the Bay of Islands ; and Port Guadalupe is Norfolk Sounds called also by the Rus- sians the Gulf of Sitca. These two bays communicate with each other by a narrow passage behind the mountain, which is thus completely insulated. The Spaniards landed on the shore of Port Remedies, where Aug. I9. they took possession of the country for their Sovereign with re- ligious formalities, obtained some fresh water, and fought and traded with the natives, who appeared to have very distinct ideas of their own rights of property in the soil. The voyage was then continued towards the north, as far as the 58th degree. When the vessel had reached that latitude, nearly the whole of her crew Aug. 22. were incapable of duty, while the increasing violence of the winds rendered additional exertions absolutely necessary. Under such circumstances, the officers found that it would be imprudent to persevere in their endeavors to advance, and they accordingly turned towards the south, resolving, however, to explore the coasts minutely in that direction. Having taken this course, they searched along the shores as they went, for the passage or strait called the Rio de los Reyes, through which Admiral Fonte was said to have sailed into the Atlantic in 1640. " With this intent," writes Maurelle, " we searched every bay and recess of the coast, and sailed around every headland, lying to during the night, in order that we might not lose sight of this entrance ; after which exertions, we may safely pronounce that no such strait is to be found." This ' conclusion was certainly correct, yet it was as certainly not es- tablished by the discoveries of the Spaniards in 1775. On that occasion, the search was confined to the part of the coast north of the 55th parallel; whereas, according to the account of Fonte's voyage, the Rio de los Reyes entered the Pacific under the 53d. Moreover, had the observations been as minute as Maurelle rep- resents them, several passages would have been found leading towards the north and east, for the examination of any one of which more tmne would have been required than was devoted by the Spaniards to the whole search. In the course of this examination, a bay, affording excellent harbors, and well secured against the ocean by islands, was dis- covered in the latitude of 55^ degrees, which, in compliment to the Viceroy of Mexico, was called Port Bucareli. It is situated Aug. 24. on the southwestern side of the largest of the Prince of Wales's Islands, and is one of the few places on the northwest coast of America which still retain on our maps the names originally bestowed by their Spanish discoverers. From Port Bucareli the schooner sailed slovvdy southward, along the shores of the great islands which border the American continent, and were long after supposed to form part of it ; and on the 19th of Sep- Sept 19. tember she reached the spot where her men had been murdered 74 1775. two months before by the savages. Thence her voyage was con- Sept. 19. tinned, at some distance from the land, past the mouth of the Cohimbia; a httle south of which she again approached the con- tinent, and her officers endeavored to find the entrance of the great river said to have been seen by Martin de Aguilar, the pilot of one of Yizcaino's vessels, in 1603. The examinations with this view were commenced near a promontory, "resembling in form a round table," which* received the appellation of Cape Mezari, situated about thirty miles from the mouth of the Columbia ; and were prosecuted to the vicinity of Cape Mendocino, without suc- cess. The Spaniards then bore away for the bay of San Fran- cisco ; and, while looking for it, they entered a smaller bay, situ- ated farther north, to which Captain Bodega thought proper to give his own name. There they remained long enough to sur- vey the shores; after which, they took their departure, and ar- Oct. 7. rived at Monterey on the 7th of October. The expeditions of the Spaniards in the north Pacific, during the years 1774 and 1775, have been made the subjects of severe reflections and sarcasms by French and English writers ; espe- cially by Fleurieu, in his Introduction to the Account of Mar- chand's Yoyage around the World, and his Notes to the Instruc- tions given to La Perouse. It must be acknowledged that little exact information respecting the northwestern side of America was derived by means of these expeditions ; yet their results might have been important, by affording useful hints for the or- ganization and conduct of future voyages. The great questions of the extension of the continent towards the north and west were left unsettled, and the delineation of the coasts, founded upon the journals and tables of the navigators, was imperfect and inaccurate ; on the other hand, the eastern boundaries of the Pa- cific were approximately ascertained, as far north as the 58th degree of latitude; and several harbors were found, the posi- tions of which were determined with tolerable precision. Perez and Heceta, indeed, displayed a cautiousness of disposition ap- proaching to pusillanimity ; but Bodega and Maurelle certainly vindicated the character of their nation for courage and perseve- rance, by their struggles to advance under the most appalling dif- ficulties. 1777. In order to complete the examination of the northwest coast of America, the Viceroy, Bucareli, obtained from his Government the use of two small corvettes, which he was anxious to despatch in 1777 ; the funds required for their equipment were, however, so slowly collected that they were not ready for sea until two 1773. years afterwards. In the mean time, that coast had been visited by Captain James Cook, whose discoveries now claim our atten- tion. Before proceeding to consider them, it should be observed that the Spanish Government carefully concealed from the world every circumstance relating to its establishments and researches * This promontory is minutely described by Captain Clarke, who ascended il in January, 1806, See Lewis and'Clarke's Travels, chapter 22. 75 on the shores of the north Pacific ; and it was not until 1781 , when 1773. Mr. Barrington pubhshed his translation of Maurelle's Journal, that any thing was known in Europe upon those subjects, except the fact that a voyage had been made about 1774 from Mexico to that part of the ocean. This should be borne in mind, in order that a just estimate may be formed of the value of the labors of Cook and his successors in command ; none of whom were aware that any discoveries had been made by the Spaniards on the west coasts of North America, since those of Vizcaino in 1603. Mention has been frequently made in this memoir of the efforts of the British to discover a northern passage for ships between the Atlantic and the Pacific oceans. These efforts were all di- rected towards the northwestern extremities of the Atlantic ; and, in prosecution of them, the two great seas called Hudson^s Bay and Baffin^s Bay were first explored, about the beginning of the sixteenth century, by the navigators whose names they bear. It was soon afterwards ascertained, satisfactorily, that the desired communication could only be realized through the medium of one or the other of these bays; and, in order to encourage perseve- rance in the search for it, the whole region surrounding Hud- son's Bay was granted by King Charles II., in 1669, to a society i669. of London merchants, entitled the Hudson^s Bay Company ^vji\h the understanding that they should endeavor to effect the discov- ery. As an additional means of promoting the attainment of this end, the British Parliament, in 1745, offered a reward of twenty 1745. thousand pounds to those of ^^his Majesty^ s subjects who might Jind, a passage for ships from Hudson^ s Bay to the Pacific^'' Without presenting a detailed account of the various expedi- tions* made in consequence of these engagements and induce- ments, suffice it to say that, in 1768, nothing had been learned 1768. respecting the portion of the American continent and the adjacent seas west of the immediate vicinities of Hudson's and Baffin's Bays. Hudson's Bay had been explored completely by the fur- traders, as far north as the 67th degree of latitude, beyond which, however, it was known to extend ; and although Baffin's Bay had been navigated to the 77th parallel, yet its shores had been but imperfectly examined. A channel for the passage of ships, be- tween one of these bays and the Pacific, might therefore exist; or the Pacific, or some large river emptying into it, might be found within a short distance of places on the Atlantic side, ac- cessible to vessels from Europe. The acquisition of Canada by Great Britain, in 1763, had rendered the determination of these questions more interesting to that Power, as there was no longer any danger that such discoveries could be employed to its dis- advantage. In order to arrive at some definite conclusion on those points, 1759. as well as for other purposes connected with commercial interests, the directors of the Hudson's Bay Company, in 1769, commis- * A concise, thnug^h clear, and doubtless just accounl of these expeditions, and of their resulis, may be found m the Introduciion to the Journals of Captain Cook's Third and Last Vujage, written by Doctor Douglas, Bishop of Salisbury. 76 1769. sioned Mr. Samuel Hearne, one of their agents, to explore the re- gion westward and northward of Hudson's Bay, so as to ascer- tain, if possible, how far the land extended without interruption in those directions, and, consequently, how far a ship would ne- cessarily have to pass in a voyage between the Atlantic and the Pacific. Agreeably to his instructions, Hearne set out^ from Fort Prince of Wales^ situated at the westernmost extremity of Nov. 6. Hudson's Bay, in the latter part of 1769; between which period and July, 1772, he made three journeys on foot and in canoes, 1769 through the designated territories, examining them in various ,^^2 lines of march, to the distance of nearly a thousand miles from the place of his departure. In these expeditions, he discovered the Great Slave Lake, and many other similar collections of fresh water, from the most western of which issued streams flowing to- wards the north. One of the largest of these streams, called Copper- mine River, was traced by him for a considerable distance, down to its termination, near the 68th degree of latitude, in a sea, which was certainly a division of the ocean, for the tides were observed in it, and the relics of whales in abundance were strewed on its shore. The traveller, moreover, assured himself that the portion of the continent which he had thus examined was not traversed by any channel or uninterrupted line of water forming a commu- nication between the seas on its eastern and its western sides; and that, consequently, no passage could be effected from the Atlantic to the Pacific, in that direction, without sailing north of the mouth of the Coppermine. The discoveries of Hearne were considered in Great Britain as highly important. The sea into which the Coppermine river emptied was supposed to be the Pacific ;t and, as that ocean thus appeared to extend much farther towards the northeast than had been previously imagined, the hope of finding a direct communi- cation between its waters and those of Baffin's Bay were propor- tionally increased. Before relating what was done by the British Government in consequence of the information afforded by Hearne, it will be proper to notice another journey in the interior of North America, performed a short time previous, by Captain Jonathan Carver, of June, Connecticut. This gentleman set out from Boston in June, 1766; ^J^ ' and, proceeding by way of Michilimackinac, passed the two follow- October, ing years in exploring the region west of the Great Lakes, which 1768. is watered by the upper Mississippi. Beyond this region he did not advance ; and the only reason for mentioning his expedition here is, that, in the narrative of his adventures,;}; allusions are sev- * The discoverits made by Hearne were communicated to the directors of the Hudson's Bay Company, and by them to the British Admiralty; no account of them was, however, given to the world until the publication, in 1784, of the Journals of Cook's Last Voyage, in the Introduction to which they are noticed. Hearne's Jour- nals and Maps were finally published in 1795, after his death. t Hearne estimated the latitude of the mouth of the Coppeimine to be 72 degr^es. We now know, from the observations of Franklm. that this river enters the Arctic Sea under the parallel of 67 degrees 51 minutes. t Published at London in 1778. It attracted much attention at that lime, and soon went through several editions. The work has been lately reprinted at New York. 77 eral times made to a great ?'iver flowing westwardly into the Pa- 1766 cific from the central part of the continent. ^^^^ In the Introduction to his Narrative, Carver states that his objects were, "after gaining a knowledge of the manners, cus- toms, languages, soil, and natural productions of the different na- tions that inhabit the back of the Mississippi, to ascertain the breadth of the vast continent (North America) which extends from the Atlantic to the Pacific ocean, in its broadest part, be- tween the 43d and 46th degrees northern latitude. Had I been able to accomplish this, I intended to have proposed to the Govern- ment to establish a post in som.e of those parts about the Strait of Aniaii^ which, having been discovered by Sir Francis Drake, of course belong to the Enghsh. This, I am convinced, would greatly ficilitate the discovery of a northwest passage, or commu- nication between Hudson's Bay and the Pacific Ocean." This ex- tensive plan he was, however, unable to effect; having been ob- liged to turn back after having advanced as far as the St. Peter's River, and just as he was preparing to pursue his journey "6y * way of the Lakes Du Pluye^ Dubois^ and Oumipiqiie^^ to the head of the Great River of the West, which falls into the Strait of An- ian, the termination of his intended progress^ In summing up the information which he presents to the public, he lays great stress upon his "account of the heads of the four great rivers that take their rise within a few leagues of each other, nearly about the centre of the great continent, viz : " the River Bourhon, (Red River,) which empties itself into Hudson'' s Bay; the ivaters of the St. Lawrence ; the Mississippi ; and the River Oregon, or River of the West, that falls into the Pacific Ocean at the Strait of Anian^ This account is certainly incorrect, so far as regards the head waters of any stream flowing into the Pacific; and as Carver, though he frequently mentions the Oregon, gives no information concerning it more particular than that it rises among the Shining Mountains, west of the source of St. Peter^s River, and, falls into the Pacific at the Strait of Anian, he cannot in justice be consid- ered as having thrown any light upon the geography of the western division of North America. As to the derivation or mean- ing of the word Oregon, he says nothing ; and nothing satisfac- tory is, indeed, known about it. No such word is to be found in any vocabularies of Indian languages which have been examined in search of it; and there is little probability that it comes either from the Oregano oi the OreJ on of the Spaniards, or the O^ Regan of the Irish. In fact, there is reason to suspect that Carver in- vented the name himself, and that he derived his idea of the river not from the Indians, but from the maps of the day, in most of which such a stream is laid down running from the vicinity of the Mississippi. It is certain that he copied the greater part of his accounts of the manners and customs of the Nadowessie In- dians, (now called the Sioux,) as well as their terms, from those given by Lahontan, nearly a century previous, respecting the sav- * Rainy Lake, Lake of the Woods, and Lake Winnipei 78 1766 ages of Canada ; as may be seen by comparing the chapters on .i!^g marriage, on burial, on hunting, and on many other subjects in the two works, although he merely mentions the French travel- ler once or twice incidentally, and then in a very disparaging manner.* Carver concludes his narrative by stating that a project had been formed in England, in 1774, by Richard Whitworth and other persons, of whom he himself was one, to cross the Ameri- can continent with a large party, by way of the Oregon and Mis- souri Rivers to the Pacific, and then to examine the coasts of that ocean towards the north, in search of some passage leading to the Atlantic ; but that the Revolution in America had caused the scheme to be abandoned. 1774. The British Government, however, soon afterwards endeavored to obtain a solution of the interesting question as to the existence of a northern passage between the two oceans ; for which purpose it was arranged that ships should be sinmltaneously despatched ' to the north Pacific and to Baffin's Bay. Captain Cook, who about this time returned from his second circumnavigation of the earth, volunteered to conduct the expedition to the north Pacific; his offer was joyfully accepted, and he accordingly sailed from 1776. Plymouth on the 12th of July, 1776, in his old ship the Resolu- July 12. tion, accompanied by the Discovery, under the command of Cap- tain Charles Clerke. Captain Cook was instructed to proceed by way of the Cape of Good Hope and Otaheite, " to the coast of New Albion^ endeavor- ing to fall in with it in the latitude of 45 degrees." He was there "to put into the first convenient port to recruit his wood and water and procure refreshments, and then to sail northward along the coast to the latitude of 65 degrees, or farther if not obstructed by lands or ice, taking care not to lose any time in exploring riv- ers or inlets, or upon any other account," until he had reached that parallel. At the 65th degree he was to begin his examination of the coast, in search of " a water passage pointing towards Hud- son's or Baffin's Bays ;" if he should find such a passage, he was to endeavor to make his way through it; should he, however, be- come convinced that no such communication existed, he was to visit the Russian establishments in that quarter, and to explore the seas north of them as far and as completely as he could. The direction not to commence the search for a passage to the Atlan- tic south of the 65th parallel, was founded on the proofs afforded by Hearne that the American continent extended uninterrupted beyond that latitude, and that, consequently, the stories of the voyages of Puca and Fonte from the Pacific to the Atlantic were entitled to no credit. The application of the name of New Albio?i to the western por- tion of North America showed that the British Government had * In the intetesting Account of Major Long's Expediiion through the country of the upper Mississippi in 1823, vol. i, chapter 7, M'ill be found some observations calculated to show that no dependence is to be placed on Carver's statements respect- ing that pirt of America, particularly as regards the St. Peter's River, which it is probable that he never ascended. 1^ 79 no intention to resign the rights supposed or pretended to have 1776. been acquired by Drake's visit to that region. In order to revive and fortify these claims, Cook was instructed, ''with the consent of the natives, to take possession^ in the name of the King of Great Britain^ of convenient situations in such countries as he might discover, that had not been aheady discovered or visited by any other European Power, and to distribute among the inhabitants such things as will remain as traces of his having been there ; but if he should find those countries uninhabited, he was to take possession of them for his Sovereign, by setting up proper marks and inscriptions as first discoverers and possessors." He was " strictly enjoined not to touch upon any part of the Spanish dominions on the western continent of America, unless driven thither by some unavoidable accident; in which case, he was to stay no longer than should be absolutely necessary, and to be care- ful to give no umbrage or off'ence to any of the inhabitants or subjects of his Catholic Majesty." With reference to the Rus- sians he was directed, "if in his farther progress northward he should find any subjects of any European Prince or State upon any part of the coast, not to disturb them or give them any just cause of offence, but, on the contrary, to treat them with civility and friendship." The preceding extracts from the instructions given to Cook in 1776 will be sufficient to explain the objects of his voyage to the north Pacific, and the views of the British Government with re- gard to the part of America bordering upon that division of the ocean. It should be observed, in addition, that those views were in every respect conformable with justice, with the existing trea- ties between Great Britain and other Powers, and with the princi- ples of national law, then generally admitted in civilized coun- tries. When Cook sailed from England on this his last voyage, he July 12. expected to reach the north Pacific early in the summer of 1777; he was, however, detained by his researches in other parts of the ocean during the whole of that year, and did not arrive upon the northwest coast of America until the 7th of March, 1778, when r he made the land about a hundred miles north of Cape Mendo- cino. For several days afterwards he was prevented by violent stOKXLS from advancing as he wished towards the north, and was driven along the coast to some distance in the contrary di- rection. The wind then becoming favorable, he took the desired Mar. 13. course, and on the 22d of the month his ships were opposite a Mar. 22. projecting point of the continent, situated a little beyond the 48th parallel, to which he gave the name of Ca.pe Flattery in token of his improved prospects. In this part of his voyage he recognised the Cape Blanco of Aguilar, near the 43d parallel, but he thought proper to bestow on it the name of Cape Gregory. The mouth of the Columbia was passed by him, without its being noticed, du- ring a stormy night. The coast immediately south of Cape Flattery was carefully examined in search of the strait through which Juan de Fuca was said to have sailed from the Pacific to the Atlantic in 1592. In the account of that voyage, the entrance of the strait is placed Mar. 7. 80 1778. between the 47th and 48th degrees of latitude; and the land be- ing found by Cook to extend uninterruptedly across that space, he did not hesitate to pronounce that no such passage existed. This assertion has been subsequently confirmed ; had the Eng- lish navigator, however, traced the outline of the coast on the othei^ side of Cape Flattery, he would there have discovered an arm of the ocean, apparentl}^ penetrating the continent towards the east, through which he might have proceeded with his ships for many days ere he could have been assured that the story of the Greek pilot's voyage was not true in all its most essential partic- ulars. This arm of the sea was passed unnoticed by Cook, who con- tinued his voyage from Cape Flattery, northward across its en- trance, and along the shore of what he supposed to be the con- tinent, as far as the latitude of 49^ degrees. Under that parallel he found a spacious and secure bay offering every facility for the repair of his vessels and the refreshment of his men, in which he Mar. 29. cast anchor on the 29th of March, bestowing upon it, at the same time, the name oi King George^ s Sound. This name he shortly after changed to that of Nootka Sound, under the impression (which appears to have been incorrect) that Nootka^ was the term employed to distinguish the bay, by the natives of the surround- ing territory. April. The English remained at Nootka Sound four weeks, engaged in preparations for the difficulties which they expected to encoun- ter. During this period they communicated freely with the na- tives of the country, Avho, though universally represented as the most thievish, treacherous, and ferocious of the human race, were upon this occasion rendered useful, and even obliging, by the kind and conciliatory conduct of the strangers. A regular inter- change of commodities was also established between the parties, the seamen giving their old clothes, buttons, knives, and other trifles, in return for the skins of sea-otters and seals, which were found in abundance on those coasts. Cook has recorded in his Journal many curious particulars il- lustrative of the character and habits of these savages, and he has also noticed some circumstances which appeared to show that they had held intercourse with Europeans before his arrival among them. Thus he remarks that they manifested no surprise at the sight of his ships, and were not startled by the reports of his guns ; they had tools and weapons of iron, and ornaments of brass, which latter, at least, could not have been made by per- sons unacquainted with the arts ; and one of their chiefs had hanging around his neck two silver tablespoons of Spanish man- ufacture. Yet the navigator was convinced, from inquiries, that no ships besides those under his command had been seen at Nootka, and that none of the inhabitants had ever communicated directly with the Spaniards or any other civilized people. Their indifference with regard to his ships he attributed to their '-natu- * The name of Uqiiot, or Yucuatl, applied. by the natives of this resrion to a part of the sound called Friendly Cove, is the only word in their language which resembles Nootka. 81 ral indolence of temper and want of curiosity ;" and he concluded 1778. that they obtained their iron and other metals from the European colonies in America, through the agency, "perhaps, of several in- termediate nations." Under these circumstances, Cook finally considered himself justified in claiming the merit of the first discovery of Nootka Sound, and it has since been almost universally conceded to him. The Spanish Government and writers, however, insist that this place is no other than the Port Smi Lorenzo^ entered and so named by Juan Perez, during his voyage along this coast, four years previous to the arrival of the English in the north Pacific. In the account of that voyage, at page TO, we have shown upon what evidence this assertion is founded ; and it cannot be denied that many of the facts observed by Cook, at Nootka, tend to con- firm the probability of its correctness. To attempt to determine the question satisfactorily in favor of the Spanish navigator, would be at the present day an unprofitable employment. Cook sailed from Nootka Sound on the 26th of April, with the April 26. intention of proceeding as speedily as possible to the 65th degree of latitude, where he was to begin the examination of the Amer- ican coasts, in search of a passage to the Atlantic. The land next seen by him was the beautiful peak which he called Mount May 2. Edgecwnh^ but which had received from Bodega and Maurelle in 1775 the name of Mount San Jacinto ; and two days afterwards May 4. he beheld rising from the shore two stupendous piles of rocks and snow, on the southernmost of which the appellation of Mount Fairioeather was bestowed, while the other, lying nearly under the 60th parallel, was recognised as the Mount Saint Elias de- scribed in the accounts of Beering's last voyage. From the foot of Mount Saint Elias the coast was observed to turn to the west, instead of continuing in a northward direction, as it was repre- sented in the latest charts of the Russians. Cook thereupon re- solved to commence his survey at that point, hoping that he should soon find some strait or arm of the ocean, through which his ships might pass around the northwestern extremity of the continent into the sea discovered by Hearne. With this view the English advanced slowly along the shore from Mount Saint Elias to a considerable distance westward, and thence southward as far as the 55th degree of latitude; minutely June, exploring in their way the two great gulfs called Prince Wil- lia?n/s Sound and Cook^s River ^ and every other opening through which they supposed it possible to effect a passage. Their ex- pectations, however, were in each instance disappointed ; and the land was found extending continuously on the right of the whole line thus surveyed by them, over a vast space, which in the charts and accounts of the Russians, was represented as occupied by the ocean. That this land was a part of the American continent Cook entertained no doubt, although the fact had not then been established ; and he therefore saw with regret that the probability of his being able to accomplish the grand object of his voyage was materially lessened, if not entirely destroyed. While this survey was going on, the ships were fi-equently vis- ited by the natives of the adjacent territories, none of whom ap- 82 1778, peared to have held any previous intercourse with civiKzed per- June 19. sons ; and it was not until they had passed the southwestern extremity of the land, near the 55th parallel of latitude, that traces of the Russians were perceived. From this point they June 27. proceeded towards the west, and at length, on the 27th of June, they reached an island which proved to be Unalashka one of the largest of the Fox group, well known as a place of resort for the fur-traders from Asia. None but savages were found upon it at that time ; yet, as its position with reference to tlje other islands and to Kamschatka was supposed to be expressed with some ap- proach to accuracy on the charts published at St. Petersburg, its discovery was considered important for the regulation of future movements. j^jiy o From Unalashka Cook proceeded northward through the part of the Pacific usually distinguished as the Sea of Kamschatka^ into the Arctic Ocean, examining the American coast in search of a Aut'. 9. passage around the continent towards the east. On the 9th of August, he reached a point situated near the 66th parallel of lati- tude, and called by him Cape Prince of Wales ^ which has been ascertained to be the western extremity of America; and thence, Aug. 10. crossing a channel of only fifty-one miles in breadth, he arrived at the opposite extremity of Asia, since known as East Cape. Upon the channel which there separates the two great continents he generously bestowed the name oi Beering^s Strait/m. honor oi the navigator who had first, though unknowingly, passed through it fifty years before. Beyond Beering's Strait the American coast was found extend- ing upon the Arctic Sea towards the east, and was traced in that direction to Icy Cape^ a point situated in the latitude of 70 J de- grees, where the progress of the ships was arrested by the ice. In like manner the Asiatic shore was examined as far westward as it was possible to proceed ; and the warm season having by this time passed away, Cook judged it prudent to return to the south, deferring the prosecution of his researches until the ensu- ing summer. Oct. 2, On the 2d of October the ships again arrived at Unalashka, where fortunately some Russian traders were found. The chief of these men, Gerassim Ismyloff, was an old and experienced seaman, who had accompanied Benyowsky in his adventurous voyage to China in 1771, and had been for many years engaged in the trade between Kamschatka and the islands. He readily exhibited to Cook all the charts in his possession, and commu- nicated what he knew respecting the geography of that part of the world. The information thus received from him, however, was only so far valuable to the English navigator, as it proved the inaccuracy of the ideas of the Russians with regard to the American continent. Oct, 26. Leaving Unalashka after some days, the English ships contin- Nov. 26. ued on their course towards the south, and on the 26th of No- vember reached Owyhee, one of the Sandwich Islands. There 1779. they remained during the winter, and there, on the 16th of Fefe- Feb, 16. ruary, 1779, the gallant and generous Cook was murdered by the natives. 83 Captain Charles Gierke, upon whom the command of the ex- 1779. pedition devolved in consequence of this melancholy event, en- deavored in the following summer to effect a passage to the At- lantic through the Arctic Sea. With this view he sailed from Mar. 13. Owyhee to Petro-Paulowsk^^~ the principal port of Kamschatka, in the Bay of Avatscha, and thence through Beering's Strait; be- May 1. yond which, however, his ships were prevented by ice from ad- vancing as far in any direction as they had gone in the previous year. His health declining, he was obliged to return to the south before the end of the warm season, and on the 22d of August he Aug. 22, died near Petro- Paulo wsk. Captain John Gore, a native of New England, next assumed the direction of the enterprise ; and the ships being considered by the officers unfit, from the bad condition of their rigging, to en- counter the storms of another year's voyage in this part of the ocean, it was determined that they should direct their course homeward. Accordingly, in October they sailed from Petro-Paul- Oct, owsk, where they had been treated with the utmost hospitality by the Russian authorities ; and in December following they an- l>ec. 18. chored at the mouth of the River Tygris in China, near the city of Canton. With the stay of the ships at Canton are connected circum- stances which gave additional importance to the discoveries made in the expedition. During their voyage along the northwest coasts of America, the officers and seamen had obtamed from the natives of various places which they visited a quantity of the finest furs, in ex- change for knives, buttons, and other trifles. These furs were collected without any reference to their value as merchandise, and were used on board as clothes or bedding ; in consequence of which the greater portion of them had been entirely spoiled, and the remainder were much injured before the ships reached Petro- Paulowsk. At that place a few of the skins were purchased by the Russian traders, who were anxious to obtain the whole on the same terms ; but the officers, having in the mean time ac- quired information respecting the value of furs in China, pre- vailed upon the seamen to retain those which they had still on hand, until their arrival at Canton, where they were assured that a better market would be found. In this expectation they were not disappointed. The furs car- ried by them to China were the first which entered that empire by sea, all those previously used in the country having been brought by land though the northern frontiers. The supplies thus received had never been equal to the demands ; no sooner, therefore, was it reported in Canton that two cargoes of these highly prized objects of comfort and luxury had arrived in the Tygris, than the ships which contamed them weje surrounded by persons all eager to buy for their own use or upon speculation. The Chinese, according to custom, began by proposing prices far * Called also Pdro-Paulski, and the Harbor of Saint Peter and Saint Paul. The Russians write it Peiropawlowskaia. S4 1779. below those which were then current ; but the Enghsh refusing to accede to such terms, they gradually increased the amount of their ©ffers, and in the end the whole stock of furs was purchased by them for money and goods, the value of which was not less than ten thousand dollars. The business for which the English stopped at Canton having been despatched, they sailed from that place in January, 1780, and, passing around the Cape of Good Hope, arrived at the mouth of the Thames on the 4th of October following. The results of Cook's researches in the north Pacific were cer- tainly far more important than those obtained by any or all of the navigators who had previously explored that part of the sea. The positions of a number of points on the western side of America were for the first time accurately determmed, and means were thus afforded for ascertaining approximately the extent of the continent in that direction. The existence of a northern channel of communication between the two oceans, passable by ships, seemed to be entirely disproved ; but, in recompense, a vast field for the exercise of industry was opened to the world, by the de- monstration of the advantages which were to be derived from the collection of furs on the northern shores of the Pacific, and the sale of them in China. With regard to the novelty of Cook's discoveries on the north- west side of America, it appears, on comparing his course with those taken by the Spaniards four years previously, that until he had passed the 58th parallel of latitude he saw no land, (with the exception possibly, though not probably, of Nootka Sound,) which had not been already seen by Perez, Bodega, or Heceta; it must be repeated, howev^er, that he had no knowledge of the discov- eries effected by either of those navigators. After passing the 58th degree, he was, as he frequently acknowledges, aided, and in a measure guided, by the information gleaned from the accounts of the expeditions of Beering and other Russians who had explored that part of the Pacific before him. This is said without any de- sire to detract from the merits of the gallant English commander, whose skill and perseverance were as extraordinary as his hon- esty and magnanimity ; but merely to show with what degree of justice his Government could advance claims to the exclusive possession of any part of Northwest America on the strength of his discoveries. While the British ships under Gierke and Gore were, after the death of Cook, on their second tour through the northernmost parts of the Pacific, the Spaniards were engaged in another at- tempt to extend their knowledge of the west coasts of America. For this purpose two vessels, called the Princesa and the Favor- Feb, 11. ita, sailed from San Bias on the 11th of February, 1779, under the command, respectively, of Lieutenants Ignacio Arteaga and Juan Francisco de la Bodega y Q,uadra. The latter was the same officer who had in 1775 explored the Pacific to the 5Sth degree of latitude, as before related ; and he was again accompanied by Antonio Maurelle as ensign, from whose journal nearly all the information respecting the expedition in question has been de- rived. S6 Of this voyage a very short account^ will be sufficient. From 1779. San Bias the Spaniards sailed directly for Port Bnoareli, the bay Peb. ii. which had been discovered by Bodega and Maujelle near the May 4, 56th degree ©f latitude. This bay, as well as the shores in its vi- cinity, they surveyed with care ; after quitting it, the point which July i. they next saw was Mount Saint Elias, whence they proceeded July 9. along the coast towards the west, frequently landing -and trading with the natives. In the beginning of August they entered a Aiig. 1. large gulf containing many islands, and surrounded by high mountains, which, from the descriptions given by Maurelle, must have been the same called by Cook Prince William's Sound. Here their researches terminated, for what reason we do not learn. La Perouse says that Arteaga supposed himself to have then reached the coast of Kamschatka, and that he was fearful to pro- ceed farther, lest he should be attacked and overpowered by the Russians. The ships departed from the great gulf on the 7th of Ai*- Aug. 7. gust, and on the 21st of November following they arrived at San -Nov. 21. Bias, '' where," says Fleurieu, with some justice, " they might have remained without our knowledge in geography having sustained any loss by their inaction." The voyage, in fact, produced little benefit in any way ; it was the last made by Spaniards to the northwest coast of America before 1788. * The greater part of MaurelJe's journal of this voyage may be found in the first volume of the Narrative of La Perouse's Voyage. La Perouse obtained it from Maurelle himself at Manilla in 1787, and has made some observations respecting the conduct of the Spaniards as therein related, which, though possibly just, are by no means generous. Fleurieu, the editor of La Perouse's Journal, did not omit the opportunity of casting ridicule upon the Spaniards, whose efforts during this voy- age were, in truth, not calculated to redeem their character for perseverance. 86 CHAPTER y. Voyages and discoveries in the north Pacific, between 1779 and 1790— Comrnenee- ment of the direct trade in furs from the northwest coasts of America to Can- ton — Voyage of La Perouse— First voyages of citizens of the United States to the noriliwest coasts — Discovery of the Strait of Fuca — Attempt made by John Led- yard to cross the northern part of the American continent. 1776 Whilst Cook was engaged in his last expedition, Great Brit- jo ain became involved in wars with the United States of America, 1/85. France, and Spain; and as there was no prospect of a speedy termination of the contests at the time when the ships sent out un- der that commander returned to Europe, the British Government considered it prudent to withhold from the world all information respecting their voyage. The regular journals of the ships, togeth- er with the private notes and memoranda of the officers and men which could be collected, were in consequence placed under the charge of the Board of Admiralty, and thus remained concealed until peace had been restored. Notwithstanding this care, how- ever^ many of the occurrences of the expedition became known, the importance or the novelty of which was such as to raise to the highest degree the curiosity of the public, not only in Eng- land, but in all other civilized countries. 1785, The wars having been at length concluded, the journals of the expedition were published at London in the winter of lT84-'5, under the care of a learned ecclesiastic, in three quarto volumes, accompanied by charts, tables, and all other illustrative appli- ances ; and it is scarcely necessary to add, that the anticipations which had been formed with regard to the importance of their contents were fully realized. The statements contained in this work respecting the great abundance of animals yielding fine furs in the vicinity of the north Pacific, and the high prices paid for their skins in China, did not fail immediately to arrest the attention of enterprising men; and preparations were commenced in various parts of Eu- rope, in the East Indies, and in the United States of America, to profit by the information. At that period the trade in those arti- cles was conducted almost wholly by the Russians and the Brit- ish, between which nations, however, there was no competition in this particular. The Russians procured their furs chiefly in the northern parts of their own empire, and exported to China by land all which were not required for their own use. The British fur market was supplied entirely from Hudson's Bay and Canada ; and a great portion of the skins there collected were sent to Rus- sia, whence many of them found their way to China, though none had ever been shipped directly for the latter country. That the furs of Canada and Hudson's Bay could be sold advanta- 87 geously at Canton, appeared to be certain, even allowing for a 1785 considerable diminution of prices at that place in consequence of the increase in the supply ; and it was supposed that still larger profits might be secured by means of a direct intercourse between China and the northern coasts of the Pacific, where the finest furs were to be obtained in greater quantities and more easily than in any other part of the world. There could be no- doubt that this diminution of prices at Canton would take place immediately after the establishment of the trade, and it was probable that the expenses and difficulties of procuring the fitrs would also be aug- mented ; therefore it was material that those who wished to reap the fullest harvests upon this new field, should commence their labors as speedily as possible. The first expedition made to the northwest coasts of America from the south, for the purpose of collecting furs, was conducted by James Hanna, an Englishman, who sailed in a small brig from Canton in April, 1785, and arrived at Nootka Sound in August following. The natives of the surrounding country were in the beginning entirely opposed to all intercourse with the strangers, whom they endeavored to destroy ; after a few combats, however, a trade was established between the parties, and the brig returned to Canton before the close of the year, with a cargo of the most valuable furs in place of the old iron and coarse manufactures which she had carried out in the spring. In the same year an association of merchants, called the King George\s Sound Company^ was formed in London for the prose- cution of this trade, by means of vessels sent directly fi'om Eng- land to the northwest coasts, for which an exclusive license was granted to them by the South Sea Company ; the furs there col- lected were to be carried for sale to Canton, and from that place, in virtue of a special permission conceded by the East India Com- pany, cargoes of tea were to be brought back to London. This association immediately despatched to the north Pacific two ships, the Q^ueen Charlotte, commanded by Captain Dixon, and the King George, by Captain Portlock, who arrived together in Cook's Riv- er in July, 1786. In the course of this and the two following 1788 years vessels were also sent to be employed in the fur trade of the Pacific — from Bombay and Calcutta by the East India Com- pany ; from Macao and Canton by various individuals, English and Portuguese ; and from Ostend, by the Austrian East India Company, or rather under its flag. All these vessels appeared to have been owned and equipped wholly or principally by British subjects. The French made no commercial expeditions for the same purpose before 1790 ; their great navigator. La Perouse, however, on departing for the last time from his country, in August, 1785, was instructed '* particu- larly to explore those parts of the northwest coast of America which had not been examined by Captain Cook, and of which the Russian accounts gave no idea," with the view of obtaining in- formation relative to the fur trade, as well as of learning " whether in those unknown parts some river or internal sea may not be found communicating with Hudson's or Baffin's Bay." The to 1788. S8 1780. multiplicity of the affairs in every department of knowledge, to which La Perouse was required to attend during this voyage^ June 24 prevented him from devoting more than three months to the ob- ^^ jects above specified ; and of that time he passed one-third at an- ^^ ' chor in a bay named by him Port des Frangais, near Mount Saint Elias, wher© he first made the land on the northwest coast of America. From the Port des Fran^ais he sailed along the western shores of the continent and of the great islands in its vi- cinity, which were then supposed to be parts of the main land, Sept. 16, as far Monterey; and thence, after a few days spent in making Sept. 24. observations and inquiries, he departed for the East Indies. The remarks and opinions of the gallant and accomplished French navigator, upon many subjects relative to the northwest coast, display great sagacity, and have been since generally con- firmed ; he, however, made no important discoveries, and the whole value of the information acquired by him was lost to the world in consequence of the delay in publishing it. The jour- nals of his expedition did not appear in print until 1797, at which period the Pacific coasts of North America were almost as well known as those of its Atlantic side. 178(5, The Spanish Government endeavored also to secure for itself a portion of the advantages to be derived from the fur trade. Agreeably to its usual policy in such cases, an agent was sent from Mexico to the western side of California, where he was charged to collect all the furs procurable at the different settle- ments, and thence to carry them for sale to Canton. The adven- ture, however, proved unprofitable. A few skins only, and those of inferior quality, could be collected in California; and ere the agent arrived with them in Canton, which was in the spring of j 1787. 1787, the price of furs had been so much lowered that scarcely enough could be obtained from the sale of his stock to cover the expenses of its transportation. The Canton market was, indeed, already glutted with furs, which were, according to La Perouse, actually cheaper there in that year than in Kamschatka. The Russians were in the mean time extending their inter- course with the American coasts and their establishments upon them; even before the publication of Cook's journals, they had begun to avail themselves of the information respecting his dis- coveries, which had been obtained while the English ships were at Unalashka and Petro-Paulowsk, and an association had been formed among the principal fiir-merchants of Eastern Russia for 1783 the more eflfectual conduct of their affairs. In August, 1783, three vessels which had been equipped by this association for a long voyage sailed for America from Ochotsk, under the direction of Gregory Shellikof, one of the chiefs of the company. Their expedition lasted four years, during which period the shores of the continent and islands between the southern extremity of Ali- aska and Prince William's Sound were explored, and several col- onies and factories were established, particularly on the large Island of Kuktak, or Kodiak, situated near the entrance of Cook's Inlet. This Shellikof was a man of great intrepidity and perse- verance, well acquainted with the business in which he was en- to 1787, 89 gaged, and never troubled by any scruples with regard to the hu- 17&7 manity of measures after their expediency had been demonstrated. He is said to have exhibited the most barbarous disposition in his treatment of the natives on the Am.erican coasts, of whom he often put to death whole tribes upon the slightest prospect of ad- vantage.* In 1788 two other vessels were sent out by this association, 1788 under Gerassim Ismyloff, one of the traders whom Cook had found at Unalashka, and Demitri Betschareff. They proceeded as far eastward as Mount San Jacinto, or Mount Edgecumb, tra- ding with the natives and taking possession of the country in the name of the Empress of Russia. The Russian Government became also desirous to have a sci- entific expedition made through these seas, for which purpose the Empress engaged Captain Joseph Billings, one of Cook's lieutenants, and some other English and Germans, as officers, as- tronomers, and naturalists. These persons were sent in 1786 to Ochotsk, where two vessels were being built for their voyage. The preparations were, however, conducted so slowly, that Bil- lings did not get to sea until May, 1790, he and his party having been in the interval engaged in exploring the northern coasts of Siberia. An account of their expedition will be presented here- after. The citizens of the United States of America appeared in the 1788 north Pacific to claim a share of the advantaa^es of the fur trade, to within a short period after its commencement in that quarter of the ocean. All the accounts hitherto published of their early expe- ditions for this purpose are defective, and in general erroneous ; very little information concerning them is, indeed, to be obtained at the present day, and that little must be in part collected from the journals of British and Spanish navigators, upon whose state- ments we cannot always rely. From the authorities here indica- ted, as well as from some others more worthy of credit,t have been compiled the slender notices of American voyages and dis- coveries in the Pacific, between 1786 and 1793, contained in this and the two next succeeding chapters. The first voyages from the United States to the northwest 1789. coasts of America were made by the ship Columbia^ of 220 tons, and the sloop Washington^ or Lady Washington^ of 90 tons, under the command, respectively, of John Kendrick and Robert Gray. They were fitted out by an association of merchants at Boston, * Sailer's Account of the Russian Expedition, under Billings. t Tlie principal authorities to which reference will be made in these notices are: the statement of Charles Bulfinch, one of the owners of the Columbia and Washing- ton, appended to the report of the Committee of Foreign Relations to the House of Representatives of the United Stares on ihe 4th of January, 1839, and published m many newspapers both before and since; the Journal of the-Voyages of Captain John Meares in the North Pacific in 1788, and his memorial aiul (hocuments ad- dressed to the British Parliament in the following .year; the Journal of the Voyage of Captain George Vancouver in the Pacific from 1791 to 1795; Ihe Journal of the Voyage of the Sutil and Mexicana; and ihf manuscript Journal of the Voyage of the Brig Hope of Boston, commanded by Joseph lnc;vaham, from 1790 to 1793, a^hich is preserved in the library of the Department of Stale at Washington. 90 1787. and, having^ been furnished with sea-letters from the Federal Gov- ernment, and passports from the authorities of the State of Massa- chusetts, they sailed together from Boston on the 30th of Sep- Sept. 30. tember, 1787.* The two vessels proceeded first to the Cape Verd Islands, where they obtained refreshments, and thence to the Falkland Islands, among which they passed a fortnight. They then doubled Cape Horn, and were immediately afterwards separated during a violent gale. The Washington, continuing her course northward, 1788. arrived at Nootka on the ITth of September, 1788. The Colum- Sept. 17. i^jg^ received some damage in the storm, in consequence of which May 24. she on the 24th of May put into the principal harbor of the Island of Juan Fernandez, where she was treated with hospitality by the Spanish commandant, Don Bias Gonzales. f The damage having been repaired, Captain Kendrick set sail again on the May 28. 28th, and joined the Washington before the end of September at ^^^" Nootka Sound, where both vessels spent the winter. Nootka was, indeed, the place to which vessels sailing for the northwest coasts of America from the south generally directed their course at that time, and from which they took their depar- ture on returning; as it appeared to offer greater facilities for ob- taining water and provisions, as well as for repairs, than any oth- er harbor in that part of the ocean. The sound is easily entered and quitted with the prevailing winds, and it affords secure and convenient anchorage for ships of any size, particularly in a small bay on the northwest side, called by the natives Uquot or Uquatly and by the English Friendly Cove. Although it lies between the 49th and 50th parallels, and thus corresponds in latitude with, the mouth of the St. Lawrence, its climate appears from all ac- counts to be much milder, and more nearly resembling that of Halifax in Nova Scotia, which is situated five degrees farther southward. The grains, fruits, and vegetables, as well as the do- mestic fowls and quadrupeds of England and the northern States of the American Union, thrive there and produce plentifully ; the surrounding country is covered with the finest timber, and the waters abound in fish, and in the animals yielding the most pre- cious furs. The aborigines of this part of North America are certainly among the most savage and treacherous of the v/hole human family ; they are of a race entirely distinct from any of those which were found occupying the middle and eastern sections of the continent, and probably belong to that of the Tschutzkyy * The owners of these vessels were Joseph Barrell, Samuel Brown, Charles Bul- finch, John Darby, Crowel Hatch, and John M Pinlard ; one of whom, C. Bulfinch,. is still (1840) living at Boston. Each vessel took out, for distribution among the na- tives of the places which she might visit, a number of coins, struck for the purpose^ bearing on one side a ship and a sloop under sail, with the words " Columbia oMd Washington commanded by John Kendrick,''' and on the reverse, ^^ Fitted mil at Bos- ton, North America, for the Pacific Ocean btf' —encircling the names of the propri- etors. A fac-simiie of this medal will be found on the map. t This officer was soon after deprived of his command and arrested, by his superi- or, the captain general of Chili, for thus disobeying the law of the Indies prohibiting the entrance of foreigners under any pretext into the American dominions of Spaia. 91 inhabiting the northernmost regions of Asia. These barbarians 1785 evinced, at first, the utmost hostihty to the fur-traders ; they, ^1^^ however, soon acquired a taste for blankets, knives, and other foreign articles, to gratify v^^hich they became willing not only to tolerate the presence of the strangers, but also to hunt, fish, cut wood, and labor for them in various other ways. The king, or principal chief, of the tribes residing in the vicin- ity of Nootka Sound at that period, was named Maqui?ina or Ma- quilla ; his relation Wiccamdsh ruled over the districts next ad- joining on the southeast, and bordering upon the Bays of Clifo- quot or Port Cox, and Nittinat or Berkley Sound. They were both courageous, artful, and ferocious savages, as was amply de- monstrated by their many acts of blood and perfidy against each other, and against the foreigners who frequented their territories. From Nootka, the shores of the continent, and those of the western sides of the outermost great islands in its vicinity, were explored by the English and American fur-traders northward as far as Cook's River, and southward nearly to Cape Mendocino. The vessels thus employed were in general commanded by ex- perienced and intelligent mariners, well acquainted with the sci- ence of navigation, and provided with the best instruments for ascertaining geographical positions ; and it being material for each, in order to obtain a cargo of furs speedily and cheaply, to find as many places as possible which had not been previously visited by the others, a great deal of tolerably precise information relative to these coasts was collected during the five years immediately following the commencement of the trade. This information was, indeed, in most cases, kept secret by those who had acquired it ; interchanges of charts and notes, however, occasionally took place among them, and at length, in the course of 1789 and 1790, complete narratives of three commercial expeditions to the north Pacific were published in London by those who had respectively commanded in them.* These works are all tedious, on account of the minuteness of the details of personal and trifling matters, and the statements are often erroneous or false ; they, however, afford the means of tracing with sufficient exactness the progress of discovery, and what may be called the history of the north- western portion of xlmerica, within the abovementioned period. It will be proper here to give a sketch of some of the most re- markable discoveries eff'ected by the British and American fur- traders between 1785 and 1790. In the summer of 1787 Captain Berkely,in the ship Imperial 1787. Eagle, from Ostend, while examining the coast southeast from Nootka, entered a broad arm of the sea,t between the 4Sth and 49th degrees of latitude, which appeared to penetrate the Amer- ican continent in an easterly direction ; and as it corresponded almost exactly with the mouth of the passage through which the * Portlock, Dixon, and Mearrs. The narrative of the last meniioned person will be frequently referred to in the sequel. t It issingular that this important discovery should have been made under the flag- of Austria. 92 1787. Gireek pilot, Juan de Fuca, declared that he had sailed into the Atlantic in 1592, it immediately received the name of the Strait of Fuca. Berkely did not, however, explore it to any considerable 1788. distance from the Pacific. Captain Meares in 1788 sent one of his mates in a boat up the passage, who reported, on returning, that he ^' had sailed thirty leagues in it from the sea, and that it was there about fifteen leagues broad, with a clear horizon stretch- ing to the east about fifteen leagues farther." Captain Gray, in the Washington, in 1789, proceeded fifty miles in the same pas- sage, and found it nowhere more than five leagues in width. An exaggerated account of this part of Gray's voyage was carried to Europe by Meares in 1790, and it contributed materially to in- duce the Governments of Spain and England to order those ex- peditions, which were so successfully conducted during the three following years by the navigators of each nation. It was said that the Washington had sailed through the strait into an interior sea, from which she passed again into the Pacific about the 56th degree of latitude. The account that such a voyage had been made was incorrect; but Captain Gray collected infor- mation from the natives of the coasts, which left no doubt on his mind that the passage communicated, northward of Nootka, with the Pacific, by an opening to which he had in the summer of 1789 given the name of Pintard's Sound, but which is nov/ gen- erally called Queen Charlotte's Sound. This opinion was veri- fied in 1792 by Vancouver, and Galiano and Valdes. 1787. About the time of the discovery, or rather the re-discovery, of the Strait of Fuca, Captain Dixon, of the Queen Charlotte, from London, conceived that the land which had been seen by the Spaniards in 1774 and 1775, between the 51st and the 54th par- allels of latitude, was separated from the American continent by sea, and he accordingly bestowed upon it the name of Queen Charlotte\s Island. This supposition was confirmed in the sum- May. iKtei- of 1789, first by Captain Gray of the Washington, and after- July- wiaerds by Captain Douglass of the Iphigenia, who s-eparately cir- cumnavigated the island. Gray, believing himself to be the origi- nal discoverer of the territory, called it Washington'' s Isle ; under which appellation, as well as the other and more common one, it will be found laid down on the map accompanying this memoir. In the same summer a group of small islands were found near the continent, between it and the eastern side of Queen Charlotte's Island, by Captain Duncan, of the Princess Royal, from London, who in like manner applied to them the name of his vessel ; Fleu- rieu considers them as the same which were seen in 1786 by La Perouse, and were called by him Isles de Pleurieu. The discovery of these islands, together with other circum- stances, led to the suspicion that the whole of the territories ex- tending on the Pacific, between the Strait of Fuca and the vi- cinity of Mount Saint Elias, which had previously been consid- ered as parts of the American continent, might be really a col • lection of islands ; and, as this suspicion gained strength, the old account of the voyage of Admiral Fonte to the Atlantic be- gan to receive some credit. The islands and reputed islands in 93 question were supposed to be the Archipelago of San Lazaro, 1788. which were described in that account as situated near the 53d degree of latitude ; and this apparent confirmation of a part of the story gave encouragement for the hope that the Rio de los Reyes^ and the other waters through which the Admiral was said to have sailed on his way to the Atlantic, in 1640, would also be found. At this period, moreover, an attempt was made by Captain July. John Meares, in the Felice, from Macao, to discover a harbor or river, which was represented on the Spanish maps as communi- cating Avith the Pacific near the 46th degree of latitude, immedi- ately south of a cape called San Roque. This opening had been first seen by Bruno Heceta in August, 1775, and was called on the maps Entrada de Heceta^ or Entrada de Ascencion, and in some instances Rio de San Roque. The account given by Meares of his search is worthy of particular attention. Meares says that he discovered a headland in the latitude of 46 degrees 47 minutes, which he called Cape Shoahoater ; sail- ing thence along the coast, towards the south, "an high bluff proiTiontory bore off us southeast* at the distance of only four July 6. leagues, for which we steered to double, with the hope that be- tween it and Cape Shoalwater we should find some sort of har- bor. We now discovered distant land beyond this promontory, and we pleased ourselves with the expectation of its being Cape Saint Roc of the Spaniards, near which they are said to have found a good port. By half-past eleven we doubled this cape at the distance of three miles, having a clear and perfect view of the shore in every part, on which we did not discern a living crea- ture, or the least trace of habitable life. A prodigious easterly swell rolled on the shore, and the soundings gradually decreased from forty to sixteen fathoms over a hard sandy bottom. After we had rounded the promontory, a large bay, as we had imagined, opened to our view, that bore a very promising appearance, and into which we steered with every encouraging expectation. " The high land that formed the boundaries of the bay was at July 7. a great distance, and a fiat level country occupied the intervening- space ; the bay itself took rather a westerly direction. As we steered in, the water shoaled to nine, eight, and seven fathoms, Avhen breakers were seen from the deck right ahead, and from the mast-head they were observed to extend across the bay ; we, therefore, hauled out, and directed our course to the opposite shore, to see if there was any channel, or if we could discover any port. " The name of Cape Disappointment was given to the promon- tory, and the bay obtained the title of Deception Bay. By an in- different meridian observation, it lies in the latitude of 46 degrees 10 minutes north, and in the computed longitude of 235 degrees 34 minutes east. We can noiv with safety assert that there is no such river as that of Saint Roc exists^ as laid doivn in the Spanish charts. ^"^ This assertion, though somewhat ungram.matically expressed, * Meares's Account ol his Voyage, printed at London in 1790, page 167. 94 1788; is yet sufficiently clear and explicit. Captain Meares was con- vinced by his observations that no great stream entered the Pa- cific from the American continent near the latitude and places described by him. How far this conclusion was correct will be shown hereafter. In addition to the discoveries and examinations here specified, the British and American fur- traders, during the period between 1785 and 1T90, explored many other parts of the American coast which had been seen by the Spaniards or by Cook, and made numerous corrections in the charts of those navigators ; much, however, remained to be done in that way before the western shores of the continent could be accurately known, as may be seen by merely comparing the charts and accounts of Portlock and Meares with those of Yancouver published in 1797. The fur trade between the northwest coasts of America and Canton was, for some years after its establishment, upon the whole, less profitable than had been anticipated, in consequence doubtless of the difficulty of forming new channels of commer- cial communication in China. Whilst the market at Canton was overstocked with those articles, they were in great demand in the northern parts of the empire, which continued to be, as formerly, supplied directly from Russia. The first adventure of the citizens of the United States in this trade was entirely unprofitable. The skins collected by the Columbia and Washington during the summer of 1789 did not exceed in number eight hundred; they were carried in the autumn of that year to Canton, by Captain Gray in the Columbia, (Kendrick remaining on the coast in the Washington,) and were there exchanged for teas to the value of about sixty thousand dollars, with which the ship arrived, by way of the Cape of Good Hope, at Boston, on the 9th of August, 1790. The proceeds of the sale of the teas did not cover the ex- penses of the outfit and voyage, and some of the owners, in con- sequence, sold out their shares ; the others, however, determined to persevere, and the Columbia was accordingly soon after sent back to the Pacific. It would be improper to omit to notice here the attempt made in 1788 by John Ledyard, a native of Connecticut, to traverse the northern portion of the American continent. Ledyard had accom- panied Cook, in the capacity of sergeant of marines, in the last voy- age made by that navigator; and, after its conclusion, he went to Paris in order to obtain the means of engaging in the fur trade of the north Pacific. Failing in that object, he undertook, at the sug- gestion of Mr. Jefferson, then Minister Plenipotentiary of the Uni- ted States in France, to make the attempt above mentioned, for which purpose it was arranged that he should go by land to Kam- schatka, thence by sea to Nootka, or some other place on the north- west coast of America, and thence across the continent to the Uni- ted States. With this view, permission was obtained by Mr. Jef- ferson from the Empress of Russia for Ledyard to pass through her dominions; and, thus protected, he advanced on his way as far as Irkutsk in Siberia, near Ochotsk, where he expected to embark for America. At that place, however, he was arrested by order of 95 the Empress on the 24th of Febmary, 1788, and, having been put 1788. into an open carriage, he was thence conveyed, without being allowed to stop, to the frontiers of Poland, where he was liberated with a warning not again to enter the Russian territory. On the 15th of November following he died at Cairo, just as he was pre- paring to set out on a journey in search of the source of the river Nile. In the latter part of the period to which the present chapter relates, events occurred upon the northwest side of America, which rendered those territories for the first time the subject of dispute between the Governments of European nations. The seizure of two British trading vessels by a Spanish commandant at Nootka, in the spring of 1789, was near occasioning a general war in Europe ; and the storm was only averted by the abandon- ment on the part of Spain of her claims to the exclusive naviga- tion of the Pacific, and to the possession of the unoccupied terri- tories of America bordering upon that ocean. The circumstances connected with ' this dispute will be detailed in the ensuing chapter. 96 I CHAPTER VI. Jealousy and alarm of the Spanish Government at the proceedings of the fur-tra- ders in the north Pacific — Voyage of observation by Martinez and Haro in 1788— Remonstrances of the Court of Madrid to that of St, Petersbargh — Voyages of Meares and Colnett — Occupation of Nootka, and seizure of vessels at that place by the Spaniards in 1789 — Dispute between Great Britain and Spain ended by a treaty between those Powers relative te the navigation of the Pacific and the pos- session of the vacant coasts of America. 1785. The movements of the fur-traders in the north Pacific were from the beginning regarded with uneasiness by the Spanish Government. The estabhshment of foreigners upon the coasts of that ocean adjacent to Mexico, the evil so long dreaded at Madrid, appeared imminent ; and there were no means which could with prudence be employed to arrest it. Remonstrances upon such points, addressed to the Courts of London and St. Petersburgh, would most probably be unavailing, while any attempt to enforce the exclusive regulations upon the coasts might involve Spain in wars which it was then material to avoid. Under such cir- cumstances, all that could be done for the time was to watch the progress of the evil, in order that the most proper measures might be adopted for counteracting it, whenever opportunities should occur. 1788. In consequence of instructions to this effect, the Yiceroy of March 8. j^jgxico despatched from San Bias, in the spring of 1788, two armed vessels, the Princesa and the San Carlos^ under the com- mand of Estevan Jose Martinez, who was ordered to examine the northwest coasts of the continent, and to procure as accurate in- formation as possible with regard to the views of the Russians and other foreigners in that quarter. These vessels sailed direct for Prince William's Sound, where they arrived in the latter part May 25. of May, and were received with civility by the superintendents of the Russian Trading Company's establishments. The summer was passed by Martinez in visiting the different factories and forts of that association on the continent, and islands between the sound and Unalashka ; and the crews of his vessels beginning to Dec. 5. suffer from scurvy as the cold season approached, he returned, by way of Monterey, to San Bias, without having seen any other parts of the northwest coast. According to the report* addressed to the Viceroy of Mexic.o * Of this report, Humboldt says: "I found in the archives of the Viceroyalty of Mexico a large volume in folio, bearing the title of Reconocimiento de los quatro Eslablecimientos Rusos al norte de la California, hecho en 1788. The historical ac- count of the voyage of Martinez contained in this manuscript furnishes, however, very few data relative to the Russian colonies in the new contment. As no person among his crew understooii a word of the Russian language, they could only com- municate with the people of that nation by signs." 97 by Martinez, the Russian establishments in America were four in 1738, number, all of them situated west of Prince William^s Sound ; and their population, including soldiers and hunters, amounted to four hundred. Beyond (that is, eastward of the sound) they had not advanced; but it was understood that a large force was about to be sent from Asia, for the purpose of occupying Nootka Sound in the name of the Empress of Russia. The latter part of this account doubtless bore reference to the expedition of Ismy- lofF and BetscharefF, which was commenced in the summer of that year. Upon receiving this information of the intentions of the Rus- sians with regard to Nootka, the Yiceroy of Mexico determined to anticipate them, if possible, by immediately taldng possession of the place for his own Sovereign. With this view he ordered Mar- tinez to sail thither, with his vessels well armed and manned, and to occupy and defend the sound as a part of his Catholic Majesty's dominions; .in case any British or Russian vessels should present themselves there, tt^y were to be treated with ci- vility and friendship, but their commanders were at the same time to be informed of the establishment of the Spanish authority over the territory.* With these instructions, Martinez quitted San Bias in February, 1789, and arrived at Nootka on the 6th of May following. The report concerning the projected seizure of Nootka by the I'^S^- Russians was at the same time communicated by the Viceroy to his Government, and it was thereupon determined at Madrid that a memorialf should be addressed to the Empress of Russia, re- monstrating against the encroachments of her subjects upon the territories of his Catholic Majesty. It is to be remarked, that in this memorial Prince William^s Sound is assumed as the limit be- tween the dominions of the two Sovereigns; the first instance of an admission by the Spanish Government of the right of any other Power to occupy a part of Annerica bordering upon the Pacific. The Empress of Russia answered, that orders had been already given to her subjects to make no settlements in places belonging to other nations, and if those orders had been violated with regard to Spanish America, she hoped his Catholic Majesty would arrest the encroachments in a friendly manner. With this answer, which was more courteous than specific, the Spanish minis- ter professed himself content; observing, however, that "Spain could not be responsible for what her officers might do at places so distant, while they were acting under general orders not to allow any settlements to be made by other nations on the Span- ish American continent." While this diplomatic correspondence was passing between the Courts of Madrid and St. Petersburgh, events were occurring on May, * For the instructions given to Martinez, see the Introduction to the Narrative of the Voyage of the Sutil and iVlexicsna, Avhith may be considered as an official work. t See the memorial addressed by the Court of Spain to that of Great Britain on the 13th of June, 1790, in the London Annual Register for that year, page 294. 98 nso. the northwest coast of America, from which the most material consequences resuUed. These events have been variously rep- resented, or rather misrepresented, by the historians* to whom we usually look for information respecting them. It may, indeed, be asserted, without fear of disproof, that in all the accounts hitherto published of the immediate causes of the controversy between Great Britain and Spain in 1790, relative to the navigation of the Pacific and Southern Oceans, and the unoccupied portions of America bordering upon those seas, the most important circum- stances are exhibited in a form and light entirely different from those which would be produced by a full and impartial review of the evidences. With the object of endeavoring to correct these errors, a narra- tive of the events above mentioned will here be presented, drawn entirely from the original sources of information.f Many of the * Viz: Bissett's Continuation of Hume and Smollett; Belsham's History of Great Britain ; VV^ade's Chronological History of England ; the History of Spain and Por- tugal, by Busk, published under the direction of the Society for the Diffusion of Use- ful Knowledge ; the Introduction to the Narrative of the Voyage of the Sutil and Mexicana; the History of Maritime and Inland Adventure and Discovery, form- ing part of Lardner's Encyclopasdia • Brenton's Naval History of Great Britain; Gifford's Life of William Pitt ; &c. The accounts of these British writers have been generally admitted and stated as correct in the reports respecting the northwest coast, presented by committees to the Congress of the United States; and no at- tempt seems to have been made to controvert or question them in the course of any negotiations between the United States and Great Britain. t These sources of information are: I. Journal of Voyages in the Pacific Ocean in 1788 and 1789, by John Meares. In the Appendix to the Journal of Meares is the II. Memorial addressed to the House of Commons of Great Britain on the 13th of May, 1790, by John Meares, in behalf of the owners of certain vessels seized atNootka Sound in 1789 by the Spanish commandant Martinez, praying that measures might be taken to obtain indemnification for those losses, as also for the seizure of certain lands and houses on the northwest coast of America, claimed by the petitioners as their property. An abstract of this memorial, carefully composed so as exclude all circumstances which might weaken the claims of the petitioners, may be found in the Annual Register for 1790, page 287. The journal of the voyages of Meares re- lates, in part, to the circumstances which form the subject of the ratmorial ; on com- paring the two, it will be found that they are frequently at variance. III. Account of Voyages m the Pacific, made between 1790 and 1794 by Captain George Vancouver of the British navy, who had been sent by his Government to explore that ocean, and aho to superintend the delivery by the Spanish authorities of certain territories at and near Nootka Sound, in virtue of the treaty of Octo- ber, 1790. IV. Account of a Voyage in the Pacific, made in 1793 and 1794 by Captain James Colneit. The only parts of this work relating to the affairs in question are the In- troduction and a note at page 96. V. The Introduction by Navarrete to the Narrative of ihe Voyages of the Span- ish Schooners Sutil and Mexicana in 1791-2; which is here cited only to show that it has been consulted. Iq addition to the abovementioned printed works, is the following, as yet unpub- lished : VI. Letter written at Nootka Sound in August, 1792, by Joseph Ingraham, mas- ter of the American merchant brig Hope, and signed by himself and Rubert Gray, master of the Ship Columbia, respecting the events at Nootka in 1789, of which one or both of them were wntnesses; it was written in compliance with a request from Don Juan Francisco de la Bodega y Gluadra, the Spanish commandant at Nootka, by whom a copy of it was tlelivered" to Vancouver. In the first volume of the Nar- rative of Vancouver, page 389, may be found a synopsis of this letter, in which the evidence of the Americans is carefully garbled to suit the purposes of the British commander. A copy of the letter in full, extracted from the original Journal of In- graham, is given intiie appendix [ D] to this memoir. 99 details may at first appear trifling and unworthy of note ; it is be- 1789. lieved, however, that none have been introduced which are not indispensable for the attainment of the end proposed, while no circumstances have been omitted which might, if related, have led to different conclusions. This narrative must be preceded by some observations and statements, which are necessary in order that proper judgments may be formed upon the circum- stances. In the first place, it is certain that, before the arrival of the Span- ish commander Martinez at Nootka^ in May^ 1789, no settlement^ factory^ or commercial or military establishment whatsoever, had been founded or even attempted; aiid no jurisdiction had been exer- cised by the subjects or authorities of any civilized nation in any part of America bordering upon the Pacific^ bettoeen Port San Francisco and Prince William^ s Sound. The Spaniards, the British, the Russians, and the French had landed at various places on these coasts, where they had displayed flags and erected crosses and monuments in token of the claims of their respective sovereigns to the surrounding territories ; but such acts are, and were then, generally regarded as idle ceremonies, securing no eflectual rights to those who engaged in them. Nor does it appear that any portion of the soil within these limits had become the prop- erty of a foreigner, notwithstanding that the British Government did in 1790 demand, and Spain engaged by treaty to restore, sev- eral pieces of land and buildings in the vicinity of Nootka Sound, which were claimed as belonging to John Meares and other Brit- ish subjects at the time of the occupation of that place by the forces of his Catholic Majesty. Although this demand was thus formally urged and admitted, many circumstances, which will be related in the sequel, combine to prove conclusively that it was entirely destitute of foundation. The right of sovereignty over this vast region was claimed by the King of Spain, and no other Power had formally contested his pretensions, notwithstanding the Russians were advancing upon the continent in the north, and the British ministry had, it is said, a short time previously deliberated upon the question whe- ther New Albion or New Holland should be selected for the es- tablishment of their contemplated penal colony. That the Span- iards were the first discoverers of the west coasts of America as far north as the 58th degree of latitude, with the exception x)f the small portion near the 56th parallel seen by the Russians in 1741, has been already demonstrated ; the fact is as indisputable as that the Portuguese discovered the south coasts of Africa. To assume that Spain thereby acquired the right of excluding all other na- tions from these coasts, whether her subjects settled on them or not, would be absurd ; but it would, at the same time, be unjust to deny that her title to occupy them was better than that of any other nation, not only in virtue of priority of discovery, but also from their continuity with her own undoubted possessions. It is unnecessary to indicate the various modes in which this better right might have been exercised by Spain without giving just cause of complaint to other Powers ; the object of these observa- 100 1789. tions being merely to show that her occupation of Nootka in 1789 was, per se, conformable with justice, and with the recognised principles of national law. 1788. In order to present a satisfactory view of the events attending Jan. 1. ^^^^ occupation, the account must commence from the month of January, 1788, when two vessels, the Felice and the Iphigenia, sailed from Macao,* for the northwest coast of America, to be em- ployed in the fur trade, under the direction of John Meares, a lieu- tenant in the British navy, then on half-pay, who went in the Felice. The Iphigenia also carried a British subject, William Douglas, as supercargo ; both vessels, however, were commanded by Portu- guese, they were both furnished with Portuguese passports and other papers, showing them to be the property of Juan Cavallo, a Portuguese merchant of Macao, and they quitted that place under the flag of Portugal. The instructionsf for the conduct of the voyage were written in the Portuguese language, and contained nothing whatsoever calculated to afford a suspicion that any other than Portuguese subjects Avere engaged in the enterprise. These instructions conclude with the following injunction to the com- manders of the vessels : " Should you meet with any Russian, English, or Spanish vessels, you will treat them with civility, and allow them, if they are authorized, to examine your papers; should they, however, attempt to seize you, or to carry you out of your way, you Avill prevent it by every means in your power, and repel force by force. In case you should in such conflict have the superiority, you will take possession of the vessel that at- tacked you, as also of her cargo, and bring both, with the oflicers and crew, to China, that they may be condemned as legal prizes, and the crew punished as pirates." Notwithstanding all these evidences of ownership and national character, it is asserted by Mr. Meares, in the memorial addressed by him to the British Government in 1790, that the Felice and the Iphigenia were actually and bona fide British property, em- ployed in the service of British subjects only ; that Cavallo had no concern or interest in them, his name being merely used for the purpose of obtaining permission from the Governor of Macao to navigate under the Portuguese flag, and thus to evade the ex- cessive port charges demanded by the Chinese from all other Eu- ropean nations ; and that Messrs. Meares and Douglas were real- ly the commanders of the vessels, instead of the two Portuguese who appeared as such in their papers. These assertions may have been, at least in part, true ; but the documents attached by Meares to his memorial amply prove that the deception was con- tinued at Nootka, where there were no Chinese authorities, al- though no hint is given, in his account of the voyages of the ves- * Macao is situated on the southern extremity of an island near the mouth of the River Tygris in Chma, about sixty miles below Canton. It was granted to the Por- tuguese by the Emperor of China in 1518, and has ever since remained in their pos- session, although the Chinese Government exercises considerable control over all their proceedings. t Appendix, No. 1, to Meares's Account of his Voyage to the Pacific. li 101 sels, that either of them was, or ever appeared to be, other thaen 1788. British. Greater discrepancies, positive as well as negative, be- tween the journal and the memorial, remain to be noticed. The truth with regard to the vessels probably was, that they were actually and bona fide Portuguese property, though some of the persons in whose service they were then employed might have been British subjects. The Portuguese flag at that time of- fered peculiar advantages for the prosecution of the fur trade, be- sides the freedom from the port charges of the Chinese ; for no British vessel could engage in the business without becoming li- able to confiscation, except those of the King George's Sound Company, which had obtained a privilege to that effect from the South Sea Company of London. The instructions to the com- manders of the Felice and the Iphigenia, to seize and bring to Ma- cao for trial any English vessels which might attempt to interrupt them in their voyage, were doubtless levelled at those of the King George's Sound Company, Avhich were then expected in the Pa- cific, with orders and materials for establishing forts and factories on the northwest coast of America. With regard to these in- structions it should be added, that, although they are remarkably precise and minute, no allusion whatsoever is made in them to the acquisition of land or the erection of buildings in America. From Macao the Iphigenia sailed for Cook's River, while Meares in the Felice proceeded to Nootka Sound, which he en- tered on the 13th of May. There he immediately began to build May 13, a small vessel for coasting, and, being desirous during the prog- ress of this work to take a trip to the southward, he made ar- rangements with King Maquinna, who, as related in Mr. Meares's Journal of the Voyage, page 114, "most readily consented to grant us a spot of ground in his territory, whereon an house might be built for the accommodation of the people we intended to leave behind, and also promised us his assistance and protec- tion for the party who were destined to remain at Nootka during our absence. In return for this kindness, and to insure the con- tinuance of it, the chief was presented with a pair of pistols, which he had regarded with an eye of solicitation ever since our arrival. Upon this spot a house sufficiently spacious to contain all the party intended to be left at the Sound was erected; a strong breastwork was thrown up around it, enclosing a considerable area of ground, which, with one piece of cannon placed in such a manner as to command the cove and village of Nootka, formed a fortification sufficient to secure the party from any intrusion." That this spot of ground was granted by Maquinna, and was to be occupied by the strangers only for temporary purposes, is clear from the above statement, and Meares nowhere in the jour- nal of his voyage pretends that he acquired permanent posses- sion of it, or of any other land in America ; on the contrary, he expressly states, page 130, "that, as a bribe to secure Maquinna's attachment, he was promised that when we finally left the coast he should enter into full possession of the house and all the goods thereunto belonging." In his memorial to Parliament , however, he declares that " immediately on his arrival at Nootka Sound, he 8 102 1768. purchased from Maquilla, the chief of the district contiguous to ^^y- and surrounding that place, a spot of ground whereon he built a house for his occasional residence, as well as for the more conve- nient pursuit of his trade with the natives, and hoisted British colors thereon." Among the documents attached to the memo- rial, no mention is made of this purchase, except in the informa- tion of William Graham, a seaman of the Felice, taken in London after the date of the memorial^ who declares that " he saw Mr. Meares deliver some articles of merchandise to Maquilla, the sovereign Prince of the s^aid sound, which he then understood and believed were given as consideration for lands required by Mr. Meares for an establishment on shore."* The British Gov- ernment, as will be seen, went still farther, and claimed the whole territory surrounding Nootka as included within the terms of this asserted purchase. Such is the evidence upon which the British historians of that period insist that Meares purchased a large tract of land at Noot- ka^ and established on it a factory defended by a fort under the British flag. Having completed his arrangements, Meares sailed in the Fe- lice towards the south, leaving a part of his crew at Nootka, to which place he did not return until the latter part of July. Du- ring this period he endeavored to explore the Strait of Fuca, and to find the mouth of the great River San Roque, near the 46th degree of latitude, in both of which attempts he was, as before related, unsuccessful. He declares in his memorial that he like- wise " obtained from Wiccanish, the chief of the district surround- ing Port Cox and Port Effingham, (places thus named by him- self, but otherwise known as Clyoquot and Nittinat,) situated in the latitudes of 48 and 49 degrees, in consequence of considera- ble presents, the promise of a free and exclusive trade with the natives of the district, as also permission to build any storehouses or other edifices which he might judge necessary ; and that he also acquired the same privileges of exclusive trade from Ta- tootche,the chief of the country bordering upon the Strait of Fu- ca, and purchased from him a tract of land within the said strait, which one of his officers took possession of in the King's name, calling the same Tatootche, in honor of the chief" Of these purchases and cessions of territory there is no other evidence than the declaration of JMr. Meares in his memorial ;^ for * The only statement besides this declaration, tending to confirm the assertion of Meares in his memorial, is that (hereafter noticed) made to Vancouver in 1792 at Nootka, by Robert Duffin, who had also been one of the crew of the Felice in 1788. He is represented by Vancouver (vol. i, page 405) as declaring that he witnessed the purchase by Meares " of the whole of the land which forms Friendly Cove, Nootka Sound, in his Britannic Majesty's name, for eight sheets of copper and some trifles." t It is probable, from the numerous discrepancies between Meares's Journal of his Voyage and his memorial, that the former was written and printed before the latter was drawn up. We may also suspect, from the silence of all the documents brought to London with regard to the purchases of lands on the northwest coast, that the idea of setting up this claim suggested itself, or was suggested, to Meares after his arrival m England. 103 they are not noticed either in the documents attached to that me* ^'^^^'^• morial, or in the Journal of his Voyage, which is tediously minute as to this trip, or any where else ; yet his claim, based solely upon his own statement, was supported by his Government and admit- ted by that of Spain. After the return of Meares to Nootka Sound, the sloop Washing- S,e{>t. 17. ton. Captain Gray, arrived there from Boston ; the small vessel which had been commenced by the crew of the Felice in the spring was completed, and received the name oi Northwest America; and the Iphigenia came in from the northern coasts laden with furs. Sept. 24. As a number of skins had also been obtained by the Felice during the summer, Meares determined to transfer to that vessel all those in the Iphigenia, and to sail with them immediately for Macao ; which he accordingly did, leaving the sound on the 28th of Sep- Sept. 28. tember. In the course of the following month the Ship Colum- Oct. bia, Captain Kendrick, arrived from Boston, and the Iphigenia and Northwest America departed for the Sandwich Islands, leav- ing the two American vessels to winter at Nootka. Meares reached Macao in the Felice early in December, and Dec. soon afterwards two vessels, the Princess Royal and the Prince of Wales, belonging to the King George's Sound Company, arrived at that place under the command of James Colnett, an officer of the British navy on half pay. In the latter vessels also came an agent of the said company, between whom and the proprietors of the Felice and Iphigenia an arrangement was made for uniting the interests of both parties. In consequence of this arrangement, the Felice was sold or dismissed, and the Princess Royal, toge- 1789. ther with a ship called the Argonaut, bought for the purpose by the association, were despatched to Nootka, under the direction of Colnett, who sailed in the Argonaut. These vessels appear to April. have been navigated under the British flag ; Cavallo could not have acted as their owner, for he had become a bankrupt, and his failure was probably the cause of the formation of the new com- pany. The management of the affairs of the association at Macao ap- pears to have been committed entirely to Meares, who drew up the instructions for Colnett. From these instructions, of which a copy is appended by Meares to his memorial, it is evident that there was really an intention to found a permanent establish- ment on some part of the northwest coast of America, although no spot is designated as its site, and no hint is given of any ac- quisition of territory having been already made at or near Nootka Sound; indeed, the only reference to that place, in the whole pa- per, is contained in the words "we recommend you, if possible, to form a treaty with the various chiefs, particularly at Nootka.'^ Yet Meares, in his memorial, strangely enough says : "Mr. Col- nett was directed to fix his residence at Nootka Sound, and, with that view, to erect a substantial house on the spot which your memorialist had purchased in the preceding year, as will appear by a copy of his instructions hereunto annexed.''^ While the Argonaut and Princess Royal were on their way to Nootka, the Iphigenia and Northwest America returned to that AyiA 20. 104 1789. place from the Sandwich Islands in a most distressed condition. April 20. rpj^g Iphigenia was, indeed, a mere wreck. Her supercargo, or captain, Douglas, declares in his journal, attached to the memo- rial, that "she had like to have foundered at sea for want of pitch and tar to stop the leaks ; she had no bread on board, and noth- ing for her crew to live on but salt pork ; she was without cables," and, on attempting to secure her in the sound, " every rope gave way, so that we were obliged to borrow a fall from the American sloop Washington," which with the ship Columbia were found lying there. The Washington had already made a cruise to the southward, in the course of which she advanced some distance April 25. up the Strait of Fuca ; a few days after the arrival of the other vessels, she took her departure for the north, and was immediate- April 28. ly followed by the Northwest America, which had been hastily equipped and provided with articles for trade on a short voyage. The Columbia remained at Nootka the whole summer, and we are indebted to her mate, Joseph Ingraham, for the only account of the occurrences at the sound, during that period, proceeding from a disinterested witness. May 6. On the 6th of May Martinez arrived at Nootka in the corvette Princesa, and immediately informed the officers of the Columbia and Iphigenia that he had come to take possession of the country for the King of Spain ; he then examined the papers of the two vessels, and, appearing to be content with them, he landed artil- lery and materials, and began to erect a fort on a small island at the entrance of Friendly Cove. With this assumption of authori- ty no dissatisfaction was expressed or entertained by either of the other parties present ; on the contrary, the utmost good feeling seemed to subsist on all sides for several days. The officers of the different vessels visited and dined with each other ; and Mar- tinez readily supplied the Iphigenia, at the request of her com- mander, with articles of which she was in need, in order that she might go to sea immediately, accepting in return for them bills drawn upon Cavallo of Macao as her owner. It is proper to remark here, that, on the arrival of the Spaniards at Nootka, no vestige remained of the house built, or said to have been built, by Meares, or of any other preparation for a settlement near the sound. This is expressly stated by Gray and Ingraham, who, moreover, declare their conviction that no house was ever erected by Meares at Nootka ; and it is corroborated by the entire silence, on that head, of Douglas, Colnett, and every other per- son whose testimony is cited in conjunction with the memorial to Parliament. May 13. Things remained thus at Nootka for a week, at the end of which time the other Spanish vessel, the San Carlos, arrived, under the May 14. command of Lieutenant Haro. On the following day, Martinez invited Yiana and Douglas, the chief officers of the Iphigenia, to come on board the Princesa, where he immediately told them that they were prisoners, and that their vessel was to be seized; alleging in justification of his proceedings that their instruction's contained a clause directing them to seize and carry to Macao any English, Russian, or Spanish vessels which they could overcome. 1 105 Douglas insisted that the instructions had been misinterpreted, 1789. and that, although he did not understand Portuguese^ in which ^^^ ^^' they were written, he had seen a copy of them at Macao^ and knew their sense to be otherwise. Martinez, however, adhered to his resolution ; the Iphigenia was in consequence boarded by the Spaniards ; her men, with her charts, journals, and other pa- pers, were transferred to the ships of war, and preparations were commenced for sending her to San Bias. While these preparations were in progress, the Spanish com- mandant altered his intentions, and proposed to release the Iphi- genia and her crew, on condition that her officers would sign a declaration to the effect that she had not been interrupted, but had been kindly treated and supplied by him during her stay at Nootka. This proposition was at first refused ; negotiations, how- ever, took place, through the medium of Captain Kendrick of the Columbia, the results of which were that the declaration was signed by the officers of the Iphigenia, and she and her crew were liberated on the 26th of May. Messrs. Yiana and Douglas, May 26. at the same time, engaged for themselves, as ^'•captain and super- cargo respectively J and, for Juan Cavallo of Macao^ as oioner of the said vessel,^^ to pay her value, on demand, to the order of the Vice- roy of Mexico, in case he should pronounce her capture legal. The vessel having been completely equipped for sea by the Span- iards, she sailed on the 2d of June for the northern coasts, where June 2. seven hundred sea-otter skins were collected, by trading with the natives, before her departure for the Sandwich Islands and China. "This trade was so brisk," says Meares in his Journal of the Voyage, that " all the stock of iron loas soon expended^ and they were under the necessity of cutting up the chain-plates aiid hatch-hars of the vessel^^ in order to find the means of purchas-r ing the skins offered. In the memorial, however, not only is all notice of this part of the Iphigenia's voyage omitted, but it is im- plicitly declaredf that she sailed directly from Nootka to the Sand- wich Islands. Meares insists that the conduct of the Spaniards towards the Iphigenia and her men was violent and rapacious ; on the other hand, Messrs. Gray and Ingraham declare that her detention was in every respect advantageous to the owners, as she was completely repaired and supplied for her voyage, and she would otherwise have been obliged to remain inactive at Nootka, for at least two months longer, during the best season for trading. The seizure of the Iphigenia by Martinez can scarcely be con- sidered as unjust or unmerited, when it is recollected that if, m * Extracts from the Journal of Douglas, annexed to the memorial of Meares. t "During the time the Spaniards held possession of the Iphigenia, she was stripped of all the merchandise which had been prepared for trading, as also of her stores, provisions, nautical instruments, charts, &c., and in short of every article, except tvjelve bars of iron, which they could conveniently carry away. * * * On leaving Nootka Sound, the Iphigenia, though in a very unfit condition for such a voyage, proceeded from tkence to the Sandwich Islands, and, after obtaining there such supplies as they were enabled to procure with the iron before mentioned, returned to China, and an- chored there in the month of October, 1789." — Memorial addressed to Parliament by Meares. 106 1'789. attempting to enforce, with regard to her, the orders of his Gov- June, ernment, (orders perfectly conformable with the principles of na- tional law, as universally recognised, and with treaties between Spain and all other Powers,) he had been resisted and overcome, he, with his officers and men, would have been carried as prison- ers to Macao, to be tried for piracy. Moreover, he had been in- formed that Meares was daily expected to arrive at Nootka, with other vessels belonging to the same concern; and it was his duty to provide against the possibility of being overpowered, and of having his flag insulted, by lessening the forces of those from whom he had every reason to apprehend an attack. Indeed, the only ground upon which he could have excused himself to his Government for releasing the Iphigenia must have been, that at the time when the instructions to her officers were written, it was not anticipated that Spain would take possession of any part of the northwest coast of America. June a At the end of a week from the departure of the Iphigenia, the Northwest America returned to Nootka, and was immediately seized by Martinez. On what grounds or pretexts this seizure was based, there are no means of ascertaining. Gray and In- graham understood that it was in consequence of an agreement between the Spanish commandant and the officers of the Iphige- nia; this is, however, expressly denied by Douglas, who declares that both threats and promises had been used in vain to induce him to sell the small vessel at a price far below her value. A few days afterwards, the Princess Royal (one of the vessels sent from jBiie m. Macao by the associated companies) arrived in the sound, under the command of William Hudson, and was received and treated, duringher stay, with respect and attention by the Spaniards. She brought information of the failure of Juan Cavallo, the Portu- guese merchant, upon whom, as owner of the Iphigenia, the bills given by the commander of that vessel in payment of the sup- plies were drawn; and upon learning this, Martinez announced his determination to hold the Northwest America, which belonged to the same concern, in satisfaction for the amount of those bills. She was, in consequence, immediately equipped for a trading- voyage, and sent out under the direction of one of the mates of the Columbia; her officers and men being set at liberty, and re- ceiving nearly all the furs found on board of her at the time of her capture. July 2, The Princess Royal, after remaining some days at Nootka un- disturbed by the Spaniards, sailed from that place on a cruise. As she was leaving the sound, her companion, the Argonaut, came in from Macao under the command of Captain Colnett, who had been, as before stated, charged by the associated companies with the direction of all their affairs on the American coasts, and with the establishment of a fort and factory for their benefit. What followed with regard to this vessel has been variously repre- sented, or rather has been represented under various colors, for the principal facts are admitted by all to have been these : J'jij 4, As soon as the Argonaut appeared at the entrance of the sound, she was boarded by the Spanish commandant, who invited her 107 captain to come into the port, and supply the ships of war with 1*789. some necessary articles ; presenting, at the same time, a letter from ^^^^ ^' Hudson, in which the good treatment of the Princess Royal and her crew were acknowledged in flattering terms ; Barnett, the mate of the Northwest America, Ingraham, the mate of the Co- lumbia, and some other persons, likewise came on board, and communicated what had occurred with regard to the Iphigenia juiy 3. and the small vessel. Colnett, upon this, informed Martinez that he had come to take possession of Nootka, and to erect a fort there under the British flag. The Spaniard replied, that the place was already occupied by the forces of his Catholic Majes- ty ; but that if the Argonaut should enter the sound, she should be treated with civility and attention, and be allowed to depart without hindrance. After some debate, the Englishman agreed to go into the harbor ; and before midnight, his vessel was anchored in Friendly Cove between the Princesa and the San Carlos. On the following day, Colnett, having supplied the Spanish juij 4. ships with some articles, announced his intention to go to sea in the evening ; whereupon, Martinez requested him first to come on board the Princesa and exhibit his papers. The captain ac- cordingly went, in uniform and with his sword, to the cabin of the commandant, where an altercation took place between the parties; the results of which were, the arrest of Colnett, and the seizure of the Argonaut by the Spaniards. From the moment of his arrest, Colnett was delirious or insane, and Robert Duffin, the mate of the Argonaut, became in consequence the representa- tive of the owners of that vessel. On the 13th of July the Princess Royal appeared at the mouth of the sound, and her captain, Hudson, having entered Friendly Cove in a boat, was there arrested with his men; after which, the vessel was boarded and brought in as a prize by the Spaniards. On the following day the Argonaut sailed for San Bias, carry- ing nearly all the British subjects taken at Nootka as prisoners, under the charge of a Spanish lieutenant and crew. Those who were captured in the Northwest America were, however, em- barked as passengers in the Columbia for Macao ; one hundred of the otter skins found in the Princess Royal being allowed by Martinez in payment of their wages and transportation. The Columbia left Nootka in August ; soon afterwards she met the Washington, which had just returned from her voy- age up the Strait of Fuca ; and it was agreed between the cap- tains, that Gray should take command of the ship, and proceed to China and the United States, with all the furs which had been collected, while Kendrick should remain on the coast in the Washington. Finally, in November, Martinez quitted Nootka Sound, and sailed with all his vessels for Mexico, leaving Ma- quinna again in quiet possession of his dominions. If the statements of Meares,in his memorial, and of Colnett, in the account published by him- respecting the capture of the Ar- gonaut and Princess Royal, and the treatment of their officers and men by the Spaniards, be admitted as conveying a full and cor- rect view of the circumstances, the conduct of Martinez must be 108 1789. considered as nearly equivalent to piracy. From these state- ments it would appear that the vessels were treacherously seized, without any reasonable grounds, or even pretexts, and with the sole premeditated object of plundering them; and that the most cruel acts of violence, insult, and restraint, were wantonly com- mitted upon the officers and men, during the whole period of July 4. their imprisonment. Colnett relates* that when he presented his papers to Martinez in the cabin of the Princesa, the command- ant, without examining them, pronounced them to be forged, and immediately declared that the Argonaut should not go to sea ; that, upon his " remonstrating (in what terms he does not say) against this breach of good faith and forgetfulness of word and honor pledged ^^^ X\iQ Spaniard rose in apparent anger, and intro- duced a party of armed men, by whom he was struck down, placed in the stocks, and then closely confined; that he was after- wards carried from ship to ship like a criminal, threatened with instant execution as a pirate, and subjected to so many injuries and indignities, as to throw him into a violent fever and deliri- um, which were near proving fatal; and that his officers and men were imprisoned and kept in irons, fi-om the time of their seizure until their arrival at San Bias, where many of them died in con- sequence of ill treatment. Meares, in his memorial, confirms the assertions of Colnett ; and he adds, with regard to the capture of the Princess Royal, that her commander, Hudson, after his arrast at Friendly Cove, was forced (by means of threats of immediate execution) to send written orders to his mate, to deliver up the vessel without resistance to the Spaniards. Many of these statements are supported by the deposition of the officers and seamen of the Northwest America, taken in Chi- na, which is appended to the memorial ; some of them, however, are directly contradicted, while the greater part are invalidated, not only by the declarations of Gray and Ingraham, but even by the admissions of Duffin, the mate of the Argonaut, in his letters, also attached to the same petition. Thus the American cap- tains understood, " from those whose veracity they had no reason to doubt," that Colnett, at his interview with Martinez in the cab- in of the Princesa, denied the right of the Spaniards to occupy Nootka, and endeavored to impose upon the commandant by rep- resenting himself as empowered by his Government to erect a fort and settle a colony at that place under the British flag, and that he afterwards insulted the Spaniard by threatening him and draw- ing his sword. Colnett himself says that he attempted to draw his sword on the occasion, but that it was in order to defend him- self against those who assailed him ; and it must be allowed to be very difficult to " remonstrate''^ with a man upon " his breach of faith ^ and forgetfulness of his word and honor pledged,^^ with- July 14. out insulting him. Duffin, writing to Meares from Nootka, ten days after the seizure, gives nearly the same account of the inter- view, adding that the misunderstanding was most probably oc- * See Colnett's Account of a Voyage in the Pacitic in 1793 ; note at page 96. 109 casioned by the interpreter's ignorance of the Enghsh language. 1789. He says that Martinez appeared to be very sorry for what had happened, and had " behaved with great civiUty, by obhging his prisoners with every hberty that could be expected ;" and he complains of no violence, either to the feelings or to the persons of any of the crews of the vessels seized, although he charges the Spaniards with plundering both openly and secretly. More- over, Duffin declares, and Meares repeats in his memorial, that the disease with which Colnett was afflicted after his arrest was a fit of insanity occasioned by fear and disappointment operating upon a mind naturally weak and hereditarily predisposed to such alienation. This assertion is indignantly repelled by Colnett, in his account of the affair, to which he annexes a letter of apology and retraction from Meares. No other evidence has been presented on the part of Spain, re- specting these proceedings, than what is contained in the notes and memorials addressed by the Court of Madrid on the subject to various European Governments in 1790, and in the Introduc- tion to the Narrative of the Voyage of the Sutil and Mexicana; all of which statements, though made officially, are, without doubt, erroneous on many of the most material points. Upon reviewing all the circumstances as they are presented to us, there is little doubt that Colnett acted towards the Spanish commandant in a manner so extravagant and intemperate as to render his arrest perfectly justifiable ; the detention of his vessel, however, cannot be defended on the same grounds, and the seiz- ure of the Princess Royal appears to have been totally unauthor- ized and inexcusable. The commanders of Spanish American posts were, indeed, ordered by their general instructions to seize all foreign vessels entering or cruising in the vicinity of the terri- tories under their control ; and the enforcement of these orders was directly or tacitly admitted by all the nations with which Spain had made treaties relating to those dominions. But it could not have been reasonably intended by the Spanish Gov- ernment, or allowed by other Powers, that such regulations should be enforced at a new settlement, in a region so remote, before the people of any other country could be informed of the fact of the establishment. We know, moreover, from the highest authority, that Martinez was specially instructed to treat all Brit- ish or Russian vessels which might arrive at Nootka with civili- ty ; and, although he might have with propriety disarmed Col- nett's ships, if he apprehended any attack from them, he certainly had no right to take possession of them, and to appropriate their cargoes, as he did, to his own uses, merely because their com- mander had refused to recognise the supremacy of Spain in that region. Meares, Vancouver, and other British writers, in alluding to these occurrences, endeavor to cast blame on the commanders of the two American vessels, which were at the time in or near Nootka Sound, by representing them as aiding and supporting the Spaniards in their oppressive proceedings. Upon examining the facts, we find that the Americans never pretended to ques- 110 1789. tion the right of Spain to the country ; and the conduct of the British towards them was not such, if we may judge from the expressions of Meares, as to excite any friendly feeUngs on their part. All that can be alleged against Captains Kendrick and Gray seems to be that they profited, as they were entitled to do, by the quarrels between the other two parties, naturally inclining towards that which seemed to be the more friendly disposed to- wards themselves. Upon the arrival of the Argonaut at San Bias, Colnett was lib- erated from confinement, and he proceeded to the city of Mexico, where he was received with kindness by the Viceroy, Count de Revillagigedo. The cases of the Argonaut and Princess Royal having been then examined, it was decided* — that the conduct of Martinez had been entirely conformable with the laws and ordi- nances of Spain, and with the terms of treaties existing between that kingdom and other nations, by which it is understood that aliens frequenting, trading, or endeavoring to establish them- selves "on the coasts of the South Sea in either America" shall be regarded and treated as enemies, without any presumable breach of faith on the part of Spain ; that consequently the said two vessels might be retained as lawful prizes ; but that, in con- sideration of the apparent ignorance of their owners and officers respecting the rights and laws of Spain, as well as for the sake of preserving peace and harmony with Great Britain, they should be released, on condition of their not entering any bay or port in Spanish America without pressing necessity. I'm. In virtue of this decision, Colnett returned to San Bias, where he found that several of his men had died, during his absence, of the fever endemic on those coasts. With the remainder he sailed in the Argonaut to Nootka, for the purpose of reclaiming the Princess Royal ; but the sound had been, long before he ar- rived there, evacuated by Martinez and his forces, who from some cause, however, did not reach Mexico until after the departure of Colnett. From Nootka the Argonaut, having taken in a car- go of furs, sailed for the Sandwich Islands, where the Princess Royal was found lying ; Colnett there received possession of her, and arrived with both vessels at Macao in the latter part of 1790. The Columbia, under the command of Gray, reached Macao in December, 1789, bringing as passengers the officers and crew of the Northwest America, who first communicated the news of the seizure of the Argonaut and Princess Royal to their owners. The latter immediately resolved to apply to the British Govern- ment for redress ; and Meares accordingly departed for London, where he arrived in March, 1790, carrying with him various de- positions and other papers in substantiation of the claims. Meanwhile the Court of Spain, having been informed of what had occurred at Nootka in the summer of 1789, addressed a note Feb. 10. to the British ministry, stating the circumstances, and requiring that the parties who had planned the expeditions should be pun- ♦ Vancouver's Account of his Voyages, vol. iii, page 497; Memorial of the Court of Spain, Annual Register for 1790. Ill ished, in order to deter others from making settlements on terri- 1790. tories occupied and frequented by the Spaniards for a number of years. The British ministers answered, that they had not re- Feb. 26, ceived exact information as to the facts stated by the Spanish Government, but that the acts of violence towards British subjects and property, mentioned in the communication from the latter, necessarily suspended any discussion of claims which either party might advance to the possession of the northwest coasts of America, until adequate atonement should have been made for those outrages against the flag of Great Britain ; the answer was concluded by a demand for the immediate restoration of the vessels seized at Nootka. Simultaneously with the despatch of this answer, orders were issued at London for the armament of two large fleets ; and the Spanish Government, taking alarm at this measure, caused similar preparations to be commenced in all the naval arsenals of the kingdom. Several weeks after the receipt of this answer, the Court of April. Madrid informed the British ministry that one of the vessels seized at Nootka (the Argonaut) had been released, and orders had been given by the Viceroy of Mexico for the restitution of the other, in consideration of the ignorance of their owners and captains with regard to the rights and laws of Spain ; that the af- fair might, therefore, be regarded as at an end, and that his Cath- olic Majesty would be satisfied if the King of England would re- strain his subjects from trespassing upon the Pacific coasts of America, to which the Crown of Spain had indubitable right, founded upon treaties and immemorial possession. Ere the cor- respondence proceeded farther, the matter had been submitted by the British ministry to the nation; and a fever had, in conse- quence, been excited throughout the kingdom, which was not to be easily allayed. This measure was the result of the presenta- tion by Meares of his Memorial, praying that reparation should be obtained for himself and his associates for their losses, actual and probable, occasioned by the seizure and detention of their vessels at Nootka ; the amount of which was estimated at no less a sum than six hundred and fifty -three thousand dollars. The correspondence above noticed was kept profoundly secret by both parties until the 5th of May, when the circumstances were communicated by the King of England, through a message addressed to Parliament. In this message, it is stated that " two May 5. vessels belonging to his Majesty's subjects, and navigated under the British flag," (meaning the Argonaut and Princess Royal,) " and two others," (the Iphigenia and Northwest America,) " of which the description is not hitherto sufficiently ascertained, have been captured at Nootka Sound by an officer commanding two Spanish ships of war; that the cargoes of the British vessels have been seized, and their officers and crews have been sent as pri- soners to a Spanish port." That, in reply to a demand for safTs- faction, addressed to the Court of Madrid, it had been declared that one of the British vessels was liberated by the Viceroy of Mexico, " on the supposition that nothing but ignorance of the rights of Spain encouraged the individuals of other nations to 112 1790. come on those coasts, for the purpose of making establishments May 5. or carrying on trade ;" but that " no satisfaction was given or of- fered, and a direct claim was asserted by the Court of Madrid to the exclusive right of sovereignty, navigation, and commerce, in the territories, coasts, and seas of that part of the world." In consequence of all which, " his Majesty had directed his minis- ter at Madrid to make a fresh representation on the subject, and to claim such full and adequate satisfaction as the nature of the case evidently required. And under these circumstances, his Majesty, having also received information that considerable arma- ments were carrying on in the ports of Spain, had judged it ne- cessary to give orders for such preparations as might put it in his power to act with vigor and effect in support of the honor of his Crown and the interests of his people; and he recommended that Parliament would therefore enable him to take such meas- ures, and to make such augmentations of his forces, as might be eventually requisite for that purpose." In this message, it will be remarked that no mention is made of the seizure of any lands or buildings belonging to British sub- jects at Nootka ; and it will be found, on examining the docu- ments attached to the memorial of Meares, that no notice of such possessions is contained in any of them, except in " the informa- tion of William Giaham^^ one of the seamen of the Felice, taken at London, on the very day in which the message was read in Parliament, five days after the date of the memorial. It may also be observed, in anticipation, that the reports of the debates in Parliament, and the published correspondence between the two Governments, prior to the signature of the treaty by which the dispute was terminated, are equally free from allusions to any claims of British subjects to territories or houses on the north- west coast of America. The recommendations in the King's message were received with every demonstration of concurrence in Parliament, and throughout the British dominions ; and the supplies required May 5. were immediately voted. On the day in which the message was read, a note was addressed by the ministry to the Spanish Court, insisting upon immediate satisfaction for the outrages complained of; and declaring that, until it were received, the question of the rights of Spain would not be discussed. The British represent- May 16. ative at Madrid also presented formal demands to the Government for restitution of the other vessel (the Princess Royal) seized at Nootka — for complete indemnification of all losses sustained by British subjects trading under the British flag, from the acts of Spanish officers on the northwest coast of America — and for " a distinct acknowledgment that British subjects have an indis- putable right to the enjoyment of free and uninterrupted com merce, navigation, and fishery, and to the possession of such establishments as they might form, with the consent of the na- tives, on any part of the American coasts not previously occupied by some European nation." June. To these demands, the Spanish minister. Count de Florida Blanca, gave an evasive reply on the 13th of June ; after having 113 addressed a circular, protesting against them, to all the other 1790. Courts of continental Europe. He likewise solicited the French monarch to comply with the terms of the Family Compact of 1761, by which the Sovereigns of France and Spain were bound to support each other, in cases similar to that actually existing. These measures, however, producing no favorable results, he was obliged to yield to the demand of Great Britain for indemnifica- tion to her subjects; which was promised* on the 24th of July, June 24. with the understanding that the concession was not to affect, in any way, the question as to the right of his Catholic Majesty to form an exclusive establishment at Nootka. The negotiation had thus far proceeded in a course almost pre- cisely like that of the dispute between the same parties respecting the Falkland Islands, twenty years previous; and the Spanish minister probably expected that it would end there. But Mr. Pitt, who then directed the affairs of Great Britain, had ulterior objects in vicAV, which induced him to persist in his exactions relative to the unoccupied coasts of America ; and as naval arma- ments on the most extensive scale were in progress of equipment in both countries, a rupture of the peace between them was daily . anticipated. In the mean time, the National Assembly of France was de- Aug. liberating upon the solicitation for aid addressed by Charles lY. of Spain to his cousin, Louis XYL, which had been referred by the latter to that body, then all-powerful in his kingdom. The resolutions,! finally adopted in the Assembly, as proposed by the Aug. 26. celebrated Mirabeau, were very vague Avith regard to Spain, while they were very clear and positive as to the necessity of immedi- ately arming a vast naval force for the security of the French do- minions. That these resolutions must have materially affected the nature of the negotiation between the Courts of London and Madrid there can be no doubt, although no means have been as yet afforded of learning in what manner and to what precise extent. It, however, appears probable that the warlike attitude assumed by the National Assembly, together with the rapid ad- vance of revolutionary anti-monarchical principles at the same period, rendered the disputing parties willing to compromise their differences, in order that they might, if there should be need, act in unison against their dangerous neighbor. Possibly, indeed, the exactions of the British minister were, from the commence- ment, intended for no other purpose than to secure such co-oper- ation. Certain it is, that the conditions subscribed by the two Powers, at the conclusion of their dispute, were far less onerous Oct. 28. or humiliating to Spain, than those upon which the Court of Lon- don had at first announced its determination to insist. * See declaration, by Connt de Florida Blanca, and couvoter- declaration, by Mr, Fitzherbert, the British envoy at iViadnd, in the Annual Register for 1790, pa^e 300. It may be here mentioned, that the amount payable by Spain as indemnification was finally settled in February, 1793, by agreement between the commissioners of the two Governments, at two hundred and ten thousand dollars. See Macpherson's Annals of Commerce, vol. iv, page 209. t See Annual Register for 1790, page 303. The resolutions in the original, and the interesting debates in the Assembly, may be found in the Moniteur, 114 1790. The conditions above mentioned are contained in a treaty, signed at the Palace of San Lorenzo, or the Escurial, in Spain, on the 28th of October, 1790, and ratified on the 22d of the fol- lowing month ; of which it will be proper here to insert all the ar- ticles without variation from the original text.* "Article 1. The buildings and tracts of land situated on the northwest coast of the continent of North America, or on the islands adjacent to that continent, of which the subjects of his Britannic Majesty were dispossessed about the month of April, 1789, by a Spanish officer, shall be restored to the said British subjects. "Art. 2. A just reparation shall be made, according to the na- ture of the case, for all acts of violence or hostility which may have been committed subsequent to the month of April, 1789, by the subjects of either of the contracting parties against the sub- jects of the other; and, in case any of the said respective subjects shall, since the same period, have been forcibly dispossessed of their lands, buildings, vessels, merchandise, and other property, whatever, on the said continent, or on the seas and islands adja- cent, they shall be re-established in the possession thereof, or a just compensation shall be made to them for the losses which they have sustained. "Art. 3. In order to strengthen the bonds of friendship, and to preserve in future a perfect harmony and good understanding, between the two contracting parties, it is agreed that their re- spective subjects shall not be disturbed or molested, either in navigating, or carrying on their fisheries, in the Pacific Ocean or in the South Seas, or in landing on the coasts of those seas in places not already occupied, for the purpose of carrying on their commerce with the natives of the country, or of making settle- ments there ; the whole subject, nevertheless, to the restrictions specified in the three following articles. "Art. 4. His Britannic Majesty engages to take the most ef- fectual measures to prevent the navigation and the fishery of his subjects in the Pacific Ocean or in the South Seas from being made a pretext for illicit trade with the Spanish settlements ; and, with this view, it is moreover expressly stipulated that British subjects shall not navigate, or carry on their fishery, in the said seas, within the space of ten sea-leagues from any part of the coasts already occupied by Spain. "Art. 5. As well in the places which are to be restored to the British subjects, by virtue of the first article, as in all other parts of the northwestern coasts of North America, or of the islands adjacent, situate to the north of the parts of the said coast already occupied by Spain, wherever the subjects of either of the two Powers shall have made settlements since the month of April, 1789, or shall hereafter make any, the subjects of the other shall have free access, and shall carry on their trade without any disturbance or molestation. * See Annual Register for 1790, page 304; Parliamentary History for same year, page 916 ; Hersllett's Collection of British Treaties, vol. ii, page 357. 115 " Art. 6. With respect to the eastern and western coasts of lim. South America, and to the islands adjacent, no settlement shall be formed hereafter, by the respective subjects, in such part of those coasts as are situated to the south of those parts of the same coasts, and of the islands adjacent, which are already occupied by Spain : provided that the said respective subjects shall re- tain the liberty of landing on the coasts and islands so situated, for the purposes of their fishery, and of erecting thereon huts and other temporary buildings, serving only for those purposes. " Art. 7. In all cases of complaint or infraction of the articles of the present convention, the officers of either party, without permitting themselves previously to commit any violence or act of force, shall be bound to make an exact report of the affair, and of its circumstances, to their respective Courts, who will termi- nate such differences in an amicable manner. "Art. 8. The present convention shall be ratified and con- firmed in the space of six weeks, to be computed fi:om the day of its signature, or sooner if it can be done." This treaty was submitted to Parliament by Mr. Pitt on the 3d of December, and became the subject of discussion in both Dec. c Houses. By the friends of the ministry it was extolled and de- fended in general terms, as vindicating the honor of the na- tion, as securing reparation for injuries committed against British subjects, and as affording important advantages to them in fu- ture, by opening the navigation of the Pacific and South Seas, and establishing the question of the southern fisheries on such grounds as must prevent all dispute. The opposition, on the other hand, contended that the advantages derivable from it were in no respect commensurate with the costs at which it had been ob- tained ; nay, it was insisted by Fox, Grey, Lansdowne, and other eminent whigs, that the rights of British subjects had been mate- rially abridged by the new stipulations. They observed that, whereas the British formerly possessed the right, " whether admit ted or contested by Sjjain was of no consequence^^ to navigate and fish in any part of the Pacific or South Seas, and " to settle loher- ever the subjects of no other civilized nation had previously settled^'' they were by this treaty prohibited from going nearer than thirty miles to a Spanish territory, and from establishing themselves on a large portion of South America, as well as from forming any permanent or useful settlement on the northwest coast of the northern continent. " In every place in which we might set- tle," said Grey, "access was left for the Spaniards. Where we might form a settlement on one hill, they might erect a fort upon another. A merchant must run all the risks of a discovery, and all the expenses of establishment, for a property, which was lia- ble to be the subject of continual dispute, and which could never be placed upon a permanent footing." Mr. Fox denied "that the southern whale fishery was of the great importance it was stated to be," and declared that it was mere " dross" in compari- son with what had been renounced in order to obtain it. " To remove all possibihty," said that gentleman, " of our ever form- ing a settlement to the south of her American colonies^ was an 116 1790. object for which Spain would have been wilHng to pay a hberal price." Of the truth of this assertion, there was sufficient proof in the eJfforts made by the Government of Spain to prevent other nations from planting colonies in the Falkland Islands ; from which islands, it may be remarked, both parties to the conven- tion appear to have been excluded by the terms of the sixth ar- ticle. It was also noticed by Mr. Fox, as a curious and inexplicable incongruity in the treaty, that " about the month of April ^ 1789," should have been inserted as the date of what was known to have taken place, agreeably to all the evidence produced, in May of the same year; and that although, by the first article, the lands and buildings declared to have been taken from British subjects by a Spanish officer ^^ about the month of April ^ 1789," were to be restored, yet, by the second article, the lands, build- ings, and other property, of which the subjects of either party had been dispossessed '■'■subsequent to the month of April, 1789," were t@ be restored, or compensation was to be made to the own- ers for the losses which they might have sustained. Now, as the Spaniards did not arrive upon the northwest coast of America until May, 1789, it is clear that their Government might, at its own option, either restore the lands and buildings claimed by British subjects, or make compensation for the loss of them to their owners. Upon this point it will be seen, that if the word or in the con- cluding part of the second article were replaced by and, the in- congruity would disappear; but then, also, the first article would become entirely superfluous. It would, however, be idle to sup- pose that any error could have been committed, with regard to matters so essential, or that the want of accordance between the different provisions of the convention, noticed by Mr. Fox, should have been the result of accident or carelessness. The ministers, when pressed for explanations on this head, answered indirectly that the Spanish Government would make the restitutions as agreed in the first article ; to the other objections raised against the convention, they gave only general or evasive replies. By means of their majorities in both Houses of Parliament, which were so great as to render any expenditure of argument unne- cessary, they negatived every call for papers relative to the nego- tiation ; and, having triumphantly carried their address of thanks to the Sovereign, they were left at liberty to execute the new stipulations agreeably to their own constructions, for which ani^ pie space had been certainly provided.* * An analysis of the convention will be found in the ninth chapter of this memoir, among the observations on the Florida Treaty. 117 CHAPTER Yir. Execution of the first article of the treaty of 1 790, between Great Britain and Spain- Surrender of Nootka to the British — Voyages and discoveries of the Spanish nav- igators, Fidalgo, JMalaspina, Caamano, Galiano, and Valdes; of Billings, in the service of Russia; of Marchand; of Vancouver; and of the American fur- traders, Ingraham, Gray, and Kendrick' — Discovery of the moulh of the Columbia, by Gray — Examination of the Strait of Fuca, and of the great Northwest Archipel- ago — Formation of the Northv/est Fur-trading Company — Expeditions of Rod- man and Mackenzie through the interior of the North American continent. The convention of 1790 having been thus concluded, the Brit- 1791, ish Government prepared immediately to assume possession of the lands and buildings on the northwest coast of America, which were to be surrendered by Spain agreeably to the first article. For this purpose, it was determined that two frigates should be sent to Nootka, under the command of Captain Trowbridge ; the ministry, however, afterward,s committed the business to Captain George Vancouver, who had been one of Cook's lieutenants, and I who was then about to sail to the Pacific with two ships, on a voyage of discovery. There were, doubtless, some difficulties between the parties to the convention respecting this surrender, for the order of the Spanish Minister of State to that effect was not delivered at Madrid until the 12th of May, 1791, more than May 12. a month after the departure of Yancouver, to whom it was des- patched by a store-ship. The order was addressed to the Com- mandant of the port of San Lorenzo, of Nootka, directing him '' to deliver to his Britannic Majesty's commissioner the build- ings and tracts of land which were occupied by the subjects of that Sovereign in April, 1789, as well those in the port of Nootka, as also those in the other, called Port Cox, said to be situated about sixteen leagues further southward."* The same order was communicated, with the convention, to the Viceroy of Mexico, who was charged with its execution on the part of Spain; but it Idoes not appear that any means were afforded to the commission- ers, by either of the Governments, for ascertaining precisely what lands or buildings were to be surrendered. Vancouver was instructed to proceed directly to Nootka, and, after having completed the business of the transfer there, to com- mence the examination of the American coasts included between the 35th and the 60th parallels of north latitude. The objects of these researches were especially to acquire accurate information with regard to the nature and extent of any water communica- tion, which might tend to facilitate commercial intercourse be- tween the northwest coasts and the territories on the opposite * Introduction to the Journal of Vancouver's Voyage. 9 118 1790. Mar. 4. 1791. side of the continent, inhabited or occupied by British subjects, and to ascertain with precision the number, extent, and situation of any settlements made by civihzed nations within those hmits. He was directed particularly " to explore the supposed Straits of Fuca, said to be situated between the 48th and 49th degrees of latitude, through which the American sloop Washington was re- ported to have passed in 1789, and to have come out again north of Nootka;" after which, he was, if there should be time sufficient, to survey the Sandwich Islands and the southernmost coasts of America. With these instructions, Vancouver sailed from Eng- land on the 1st of April, 1791, and just a year afterwards he ar- rived on the northwest coast, in sight of Cape Mendocino. In the mean time, Nootka had been again occupied by Span- ish forces, which were sent for that purpose from Mexico, in the spring of 1790, under the command of Don Francisco Elisa; and Spanish navigators were again exploring the northwest coasts of America, in order to observe the proceedings of the Russians, and also to determine the question as to the practicability of a north- ern voyage between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. That ques- tion was then exciting considerable attention in Europe, where every thing relating to it was carefully studied, and the old stories of the discovery of northern passages were dragged forth from ob- scurity, and subjected to critical analyses, by scientific individu- als and commissions. Three of these stories, of which Maldonado, Fuca, and Fonte, were severally the heroes, were pronounced, after such trials, to be not wholly destitute of probability; and the commanders of all the expeditions to the north Pacific were instructed to endeavor to ascertain. how far each statement might be confirmed or disproved. The Spaniards were, indeed, beginning seriously to direct their efforts to the security of their dominions northwest of Mexico ; and with this view, a special branch of the administration in that kingdom had been created, under the title of the Marine Depart- ment of Sa?i Bias, which was charged with superintending and fostering the establishments on the coasts of the north Pacific. The port of San Bias in Mexico, situated near the entrance of the Galifornian Gulf, was made the centre of the operations for these purposes; arsenals, ship-yards, and warehouses were construct- ed at that place ; all expeditions for the northern coasts were made from it; and all orders relative to the abovementioned objects passed through the chief of the department, who resided there. Of the voyage of Lieutenant Salvador Fidalgo to the northern- most coasts of the Pacific, in the summer of 1790, it is unneces- sary here to present the details. The geographical information obtained by him was of little value, although he thought proper to affix Spanish names to a number of points between Mount St. Elias and Cook's Inlet, nearly all of which had been long before known and described. 1791. Those coasts were in the following year more minutely exam- June 23 ined by Captain Alexandro Malaspina, in the course of his voy- ^° age around the world, with the Spanish corvettes Atrevida and Descubierta under his command. He, however, made no dis- Auff. 13. 119 coveries worthy of mention at present, and he effected nothing 1791 of greater importance than the determination of the positions of some places already known. Navarrete, in his Introduction to the Journal of the Sutil and Mexicana, gives a long account of this expedition, and bestows the utmost praise on those who con- ducted it ; yet, will it be believed that the name of Malaspina does not appear in that work? Such is, nevertheless, the fact. The unfortunate navigator, an Italian by birth, having fallen under the displeasure of the Spanish Government, or rather of Godoy, was arrested immediately after his return to Europe, in 1794, and was for seven years kept closely confined in a dungeon at Corunna. Navarrete, writing under the eye of that Govern- ment, and for its purposes, did not dare inscribe on his pages the name of the unhappy victim of its injustice. While Malaspina was thus engaged on the coasts north of Noot- ka, Elisa, the commandant of that port, endeavored to explore the Strait of Fuca; he, however, penetrated only a few leagues with- in it, and was then forced to return by the appearance of scurvy among his crew. One of his lieutenants, Quimper, had previous- ly attempted, with little better success, to trace this passage to its termination ; from the slight account given of his voyage by Navarrete, it appears that he examined the whole southern shore, at the eastern extremity of which he discovered a harbor called by him Port Quadra^ probably the same afterwards named Port Discovery by Vancouver. The visit made to the northwest coast of America, in 1791, by August Captain Etienne Marchand, in the French merchant ship Solide, ^^^ is here mentioned, only because the Introduction, by Fleurieu, to ^^^'^' the Journal of his Voyage, has been already several times quoted. Marchand landed on one of the islands of the group now called King George the Third's Archipelago, near Mount San Jacinto or Edgecumb, and remained there a fortnight engaged in trading with the natives ; after which, he sailed along the coasts south- ward to the entrance of Clyoquot bay, a little east of Nootka, oc- Sept. 7. casionally landing and making observations, and thence took his departure for Chma. Respecting the places thus seen, or any other places, indeed, very little information is to be obtained from this journal, although hundreds of its pages are devoted to philosophical speculations on the origin and capabilities of the northwest Americans, their languages, and political and religious institutions, and on languages and institutions in general. In the course of this year, also, no less than seven vessels from the United States arrived in the north Pacific, in search of furs. Among them were the ship Columbia, which returned from Bos- ton under Captain Gray, and the brig Hope, commanded by Jo- seph Ingraham, the former mate of the Columbia.* The Journal of Captain Ingraham, to which reference has been so often made, contains minute accounts of occurrences and observations, which * The others were, the Washington, Captain Kendrick, which had remained in the Pacific since 1788; the Eleonora, Captain Metcalf; the Margaret, Captain Ma- gee j the Hancock, Captain Crowellj and the Jefferson, Captain Roberts. 120 1791. are recorded in a clear and simple manner ; and it is illustrated by many charts and drawings, all serving to prove that the world indebted to the efforts of the American fur-traders for much is information relative to the northwest coasts, which is usually sup- posed to have been procured originally by the British and Span- ish navigators. Of Captain Gray's second voyage to the Pacific, we know but little ; that little, however, comes from authentic sources, and is worthy of being carefully preserved. Ingraham sailed from Boston on the 16th of September, 1790; in January following he doubled Cape Horn, after stopping at So- ledad or Port Egmont, in the Falkland Islands, where he found a Spanish garrison ; and, in April, he discovered the group of six small islands, situated nearly in the centre of the Pacific, which are now called the Washington Islands by all geographers except May 20. the British. On the 20th of May the Hope reached Owyhee, and on the 29th of June she was anchored in a harbor on the southwest side of Q,ueen Charlotte's Island, to which Ingraham gave the name of Magee^s Sound. About this island, and the coasts of the continent immediately east of it, he remained du- ring the whole summer ; and having collected a large cargo of furs, he carried them to Canton in the autumn. The Columbia quitted Boston on the 27th of September, 1790, May. and in May of the ensuing year she reached the northwest coast of America, a little northward of Cape Mendocino. Sailing along the coast towards Nootka, Captain Gray observed an opening, in the latitude of 46 degrees 16 minutes, from which issued a current so strong as to prevent his entrance, although he remained nine days in its vicinity endeavoring to effect that object. Being at length fully convinced that he had discovered the mouth of a great river, he continued his course towards the north, and on the 5th of June arrived in the harbor of Clyoquot, near Nootka. From this place the Columbia soon sailed for Queen Charlotte's Island, near which she fell in with the Hope, on the 23d of July. On the 15th of August she entered an inlet under the parallel of 54J degrees, up which she proceeded more than eighty miles towards the northeast ; the passage was found to be wide and deep throughout this whole distance, and appeared to extend much farther in the same direction. Gray, however, was unable to pursue the examination of it, and returned with the persuasion that he had discovered the Riode los Reyes^ through which Ad- miral Fonte was said to have sailed on his way to the Atlantic, in 1640. The passage is that now called the Portland Canal. On Sept. leaving it, the Columbia returned to Clyoquot, at the entrance of which she met the French ship Solide, commanded by Captain Marchand, just as the latter was shaping her course for China. Here Gray and his crew passed the winter in a fortified habita- tion on the shore, to which he gave the name of Fort Defiance. Here, also, he built and launched a schooner, called the Enter- prise, the first vessel constructed on the northwest side of the continent by citizens of the United States. While remaining at this place, " Wiccannish, the chief of that district, had concerted a plan to capture his ship, by bribing a native of Owyhee, whom 121 Gray had with him, to wet the priming of all the fire-arms on 179 1, board, which were constantly kept loaded ; upon which the chief would easily have overpowered the ship's crew by a number of daring Indians assembled for the purpose. This project was happily discovered ; and the Americans being on their guard, the fatal effects of the plan were prevented."* Captain John Kendrick, who commanded the Columbia in her first voyage to the Pacific, had remained in that ocean with the sloop Washington since 1789. In x4.ugust of 1791, while lying Angus in Nootka Sound, he had reason to suspect that the Spaniards would seize his vessel, in case he should endeavor to proceed to sea; and under this impression, he determined to make his way, if possible, through a passage which he believed to exist, from the extremity of the harbor northwestward into the Pacific. His effort proved successful; and he bestowed upon the channel thus found the name of Massachusetts Sound. This passage, called by the natives Ahasset^ is not laid down upon Vancouver's maps ; an account of it, however, appears ui the Journal of the Sutil and Mexicaua, where it is called the Passage of Buena Esperanza^ and its discovery is attributed to the officers of Malaspina's ships, who surveyed it in the latter part of the same month, after Kend- rick had passed through it. About the same time, Kendrick purchased from Maquinna, Wiccannish, and other chiefs, several large tracts of landf near Nootka Sound, for which he afterwards exhibited deeds signed, or rather marked^ by the savages, and witnessed by many of the officers and ciew of the Washington. These deeds were authen- ticated by a notary at Macao ; and attempts were made at Lon- don, in 1795, to sell the lands supposed to have been thus legally acquired. So lately, indeed, as 1838, a memorial was presented to the Congress of the United States by the representatives of the owners and captain of the Washington, praying that their title to these territories might be confirmed or purchased by the Govern- * Vancouver's Journal, vol. i, pao:e 215. t The purchase of these lands is mentioned b}^ Wadstrom, in his work on Colo- nization, published at London in 1795 ; and by Macpherson, in his Annals of Com- merce. The circular issued by Messrs. Barrell & Co., in 1795, (of which one of the originals is now before the writer,) is a curious document; it is in four language^, and is couched in terms the most unspecific which could have been chosen. Tlit inhabitants of Europe are informed that, "in 1787, Captain J. Kendrick, while pros- ecuting an advantageous voyage with the natives for furs, purchased of them, for the owners, a tract of delightful country comprehending four degrees or latitude, or 240 miles square f and " that such as may be inclined to associate for settling a com- monwealth, on their own code of laws, on a spot of the globe nowhere surpassed in delightful and healthv climate and fertile soil, claimed by no civilized nation, and purchased under a sacred treaty of peace and commerce, and for a valuable consid- eration, of the friendly natives, mav have the best opportunity of trying the result of such an enterprise." "Where these four degrees of latitude, or 240 miles square, are situated, is no otherwise stated than that they are in America. The deeds for the lands are declared in tlie circular to have been registered in the office of the Ameri- cnn consul in China. These deeds, or some of ihem, which have been recently pub- lished, relate only to the territories about Nooika and Clyoquot; and although they embrace the whole of the dominions of Maquinna and Wiccannish, they do not amount to one twenty-fourth part of -240 miles square. Moreover, the whole island in which those territories are situated extends through only two and a half degrees of latitude; so that other lands must have been purchased by Kendrick. 122 1791. ment; and the same claim is now being urged before Congress. That the transactions here described between Kendrick and the savage chiefs did really take place, there is no reason to doubt ; it is, however, scarcely probable that the validity of the purchases will ever be recognised by the civilized nation which may here- after possess the country adjacent to Nootka Sound. After purchasing these lands, Kendrick sailed to the Sandwich Islands, and there engaged in a new branch of commerce, of which he was the originator. It was the collection and trans- portation to China of the odoriferous wood called sandal^ which grows in all the islands of the centre of the Pacific, and is in great demand throughout the Celestial Empire. Vancouver con- sidered the scheme chimerical ; the result, however, has proved that it was founded on just calculations, as the trade thus opened has ever since been prosecuted, and at the present day affords employment to many vessels. Kendrick did not live long to profit by it; he was killed at Owyhee, in 1793, by the natives. 179a. The Russians likewise endeavored, at this time, to carry into effect their long contemplated voyage of discovery through the north Pacific. After four years of preparations, one of the ships, built for the purpose at Petro-Paulowsk, sailed from that place in May, 1T90, under Captain Joseph Billings, an Englishman, who had accompanied Cook in his last voyage, and had been engaged by the Empress to direct this expedition. Billings advanced no farther than the vicinity of Mount Saint Elias, which he reached in the latter part of July ; there his provisions began to fail, and he was in consequence obliged to return to Kamschatka. In the 1791. following year, two vessels were sent fi^orn Petro-Paulowsk, with the same objects, under Captains Hall and Saretschef; neither of which proceeded beyond Unalashka. A melancholy picture of the sufferings experienced in these vessels has been presented by Martin Sauer, a German, who acted as secretary to the expedi- tion, in his narrative published ten years afterwards. Another account of these voyages has been given by Saretscheff, who im- putes the failure of the undertaking to the incapacity of Billings. 1792. In 1792, many discoveries were made on the northwest coasts of America by the British, the Spaniards, and the citizens of the United States. May 13. In the spring of that year Captain Jacinto Caamano, com- manding the corvette Aranzazu^ and Lieutenants Dionisio Alcala Galiano and Cayetano Valdes, with the small sloops Sutil and Mexicana^ arrived at Nootka from Mexico, with orders to exam- ine certain parts of the coast which had not been visited by Mal- aspina. Galiano and Yaldes soon after departed together for the Strait of Fuca, of which their survey will be hereafter described ; while Caamano proceeded to examine the numerous openings in the land, which had been observed immediately north and north- east of Q,ueen Charlotte's Island. May 23 In the discharge of this duty, Caamano displayed great skill to and activity, as appears from the account of his voyage* given by * Introduction to tlie Journal of the Sutil and Mexicana, page 123. 123 Navarrete, and as indirectly testified by Vancouver. Without 1792. presenting the details of his researches, suffice it to say that he explored many of the bays and intricate channels which lie be- tween the 52d and the 56th parallels of latitude, and minutely surveyed the northern side of Queen Charlotte's Island. Some of these channels were traced by him to their terminations in the land ; others being ascertained to be straits, separating islands from each other and from the continent. From his observations, added to those of the fur traders and of the natives, little doubt was left of the existence of many other islands in that part of the Pacific, occupying the position assigned to the Archipelago of San Lazaro^ in the story of Admiral Fonte's voyage. It should be observed, however, with regard to the accounts of Caamano's expedition, that several of the places visited and named by him had been surveyed in the preceding year, by the fur-traders of the United States, who had also bestowed appella- tions upon them. Thus the ports oi Estrada and Mazaredo^ on the northern shore of Queen Charlotte's Island, were already fa- miliarly known to the Americans frequenting those coasts as Hancock^s river and CrafVs Sound. Ingraham has inserted charts and descriptions of both harbors in his journal, where he pronounces Hancock's river to be better adapted for a settlement than any other place on the northwest side of America. An attempt was likewise, about this time, made by the Span- iards to form a settlement on the southern side of the Strait of Fuca, near its mouth, at a place to which they gave the name of Port Nunez Gaona ; but they were soon obliged to abandon it, in consequence of the insecurity of the anchorage and the diffi- culty of obtaining provisions. This place and Nootka Sound were the only spots north of Port San Francisco on which any establishment was formed or attempted by the Spaniards; and, as each settlement was founded after the month of April, 1789, Port San Francisco, in the latitude of 37 degrees 49 minutes, be- came, by virtue of the fifth article of the convention of 1790, the northern limit of the section of the American coast exclusively belonging to Spain. In the middle of April Captain Vancouver arrived on the coast, April 18. near Cape Mendocino, with his two ships, the Discovery^ com- manded by himself, and the Chatham^ by Lieutenant William Broughton. Proceeding northward along the shore of the conti- nent, he carefully observed the part near the 43d degree of lati- tude, where Martin de Aguilar was said to have found a large river in 1603, and that near the 46th, where an opening was laid down on the Spanish charts, bearing the names of Rio de San Roque and Entrada de Heceta, Under the parallel of 42 degrees and 52 minutes hi: passed a promontory, which he ungenerously called Cape Orford^ although it corresponds precisely in situa- tion with the Cape Blanco of Aguilar ; the river* which that navi- * The Umqua and the Klanaet, which enter the ocean near the position assigned hy Torquemada to the mouth of Aguilar's river, are both inconsiderable streams. 124 1792. gator was supposed to have seen could not be found by the En- glish, and there is now little doubt that the account of its dis- covery, given by Torquemada, is erroneous. Vancouver was equally convinced that no great stream entered the Pacific in the position assigned to the mouth of the San Roque ; in describing his search for it he says, (vol. i, page 209:) April 27. "On the 27th of April, noon brought us up with a very con- spicuous point of land, composed of a cluster of hummocks, moderately high and projecting into the sea. On the south side of this promontory was the appearance of an inlet or small river, the land not indicating it to be of any great extent ; nor did it seem accessible for vessels of our burthen, as the break- ers extended from the above point two or three miles into the ocean, until they joined those on the beach nearly four leagues farther south. On reference to Mr. Meares's description* of the coast south of this promontory, I was at first induced to believe it was Cape Shoalwater ; but, on ascertaining its latitude, I pre- sumed it to be that which he calls Cape Disappointment^ and the opening south of it Deception Bay. This cape was found to be in latitude 46 degrees 19 minutes, longitude 236 degrees 6 minutes. The sea had now changed from its natural to river- colored water, the probable consequence of some streams falling into the bay, or into the ocean north of it, through the low land. Not considering this opening worthy of more attention^ I contin- ued our pursuit to the northwest, being desirous to embrace the advantages of the now prevailing breeze and pleasant weather, so favorable to an examination of the coasts." April 29. He accordingly sailed onwards, and, on the afternoon of the next day but one, he met at the entrance of the Strait of Fuca the American ship Columbia, which had just quitted her winter- ing place at Clyoquot; her captain, Gray, informed the English " of his havingt entered an inlet to the northward, in latitude of 54J degrees, in which he had sailed to the latitude of 56 without discovering its termination;'' and, also, of "his having been off the mouth of a river, in the latitude of 46 degrees 10 minutes, where the outset, or reflux, was so strong as to prevent his enter- ing for nine days. This was probably," continues Vancouver, " the opening passed by us on the forenoon of the 27th, and was apparently inaccessible, not from the current^ but from the break- April 30. ers that extend across it." On the following day, after parting with the Columbia, he writes in his journal : " We have now ex- plored a part of the American continent, extending nearly two hundred and fifteen leagues, under the most fortunate and favora- ble circum^stances of wind, and weather. So minutely has this ex- tensive coast been inspected, that the surf has been constantly seen to break on its shores^ from the mast-head ; and it was but in a few small intervals only where our distance precluded its being visible from the deck. It must be considered as a very singular * See Meares's Journal, page 1G7; and page 93 of this memoir, t Vancouver's Journal, vol. i, page 215. 125 circumstance, that, in so great an extent of sea-coast, we should 1792. not until now have seen the appearance of any opening i?i its ^^^ shores, which presented any certain prospect of affording shelter; the whole coast forming one compact, solid, and nearly straight barrier against the sea. The river mentioned by Mr. Gray should, from the latitude he assigned to it, have existence in the bay south of Cape Disappointment. This we passed in the forenoon of the 27th ; and, as I then observed, if any inlet or river should be found, it must be a very intricate one, and inaccessible to ves- sels of our burthen, owing to the reefs and broken water, which then appeared in its neighborhood. Mr. Gray stated that he had been several days attempting to enter it, which at length he was unable to effect, in consequence of a very strong outset. This is a phenomenon difficult to account for, as in most cases, where there are outsets of such strength on a sea-coast, there are corres- ponding tides setting in. Be that, however, as it may, I was tho- roughly convinced, as loere also most persons of observation on board, that loe could not possibly have passed any safe navigable openhig, harbor, or place of security for shipping, on this coast, from Cape Mendocino to the promontory of Classet, [Cape Flatte- ry, at the entrance of the Strait of Fuca;] nor had we any reason to alter our opinions, notwithstanding that theoretical geographers have thought proper to assert in that space the existence of arms of the ocean communicating with a mediterranean sea, and ex- tensive rivers with safe and convenient ports." From the above extracts, it is evident that Captain Vancouver placed no reliance on the correctness of Gray's account of the discovery of a great river immediately south of Cape Disappoint- ment; being satisfied, from his own observations, that no such stream emptied into the ocean, and that no harbor or place of se- curity for shipping would be found between Cape Mendocino and the Strait of Fuca. The British commander was, moreover, as his work abundantly shows, always disinclined to regard with credit or favor any thing which might be calculated to advance the reputation or interests of the people of the United States. Under these impressions, he commenced his survey of the Strait of Fuca ; while Gray, confident that he had not been mistaken, was on his way to the mouth of the great river, which he re- solved, if possible, to enter with his ship. While proceeding* southward along the coast, after parting * Extract from the log-book of the ship Columbia, Captain Robert Gray, taken from, the originalby Charles Bulfi7ich, one of the owners of the Columbia. May 7, 1792, a. m. — Being within six miles of ihe land, saw an entrance in the same, which had a very good appearance of a harbor; lowered away the jolly-boat, and went in st-arch of an anchoring place, the ship standing to and fro, with a very strong weather-current. At 1 p. m. the boat returned, haviDg found no place where the ship could anchor with safety; made sail on the ship ; stood in for the shore. We soon saw, from our mast-head, a passage in between the sand-bars. At half- past 3, bore away, and run m northeast by-east, having from four to eight fathoiris, sandy bottom ; and, as we drew in nearer between the bars, had from ten to thirteen fathoms, having a very strong tide of ebb to stem. iMany canoes came alongside. At 5 p. M. came to in five fathoms water, sandy bottom, in a safe harbor, well shel- 126 1792. with Vancouver, the captain of the Columbia found and en- May 7. tered, on the 7th of May, a harbor near the 47th degree, which he pronounces to be " safe, and well sheltered from the sea by long sand-bars and spits." Here he remained four days, and, on leaving the place, he bestowed on it the name of ButfincJi's Harbor, in compliment to one of the owners of the ship. It is generally distinguished on maps by the appellation of Gray^s Harbor; Arrowsmith and other British geographers, with their usual injustice towards citizens of the United States, call it Whidbey^s Harbor, because it was afterwards, as will be shown, surveyed by Lieutenant Whidbey, the commander of one of Yancouver's vessels. May 11. From Bulfinch's Harbor the Columbia departed on the 11th, and, after a few hours sail, she arrived opposite the Deception Bay of Meares, immediately south of his Cape Disappointment. tered from the sea by long sand-bars and spits. Our latitude, observed this day, was 4H degrees 58 minutes north. May 10.— -Fresh breezes and pleasant weather; many natives alongside; at noon, all the canoes left us. At 1 p. m. began to unmoor, took up the best bower-anchor, and hove short on the small bower-anchor. At half-past 4, (being high water,) hove up the anchor, and came to sail and a beating down the harbor. Maij 11. — At half-past 7 we were out clear of the bars, and directed our course to the southward, along shore. At 8 p. m. the entrance of Bulfinch's harbor bore north, distance four miles ; the southern extremity of the land bore south-southeast half east, and the northern north-northwest ; sent up the main top-gallant yard and set all sail. At 4 a. m. saw the entrance of our desired port bearing east-southeast, dis- tance six leagues; in steering-sails, and hauled our wind in shore. At 8 a, m., be- ing a little to windward of the entrance of the harbor, bore av/ay, and run in east- northeast between the breakers, having from five to seven fathoms of water. When we were over the bar, we found this to be a large river of fresh, water, up which we steered Many canoes came alongside. At 1 p. m. came to with the small bower, in ten fathoms, black and white sand. The entrance between the bars bore west- southwest, distant ten miles; the north side of the rivera hali mile distant from the ship; the south side of the same two and a half miles distance; a village on the north side of the river west-by-north, distant three-quarters of a mile. Vast num- bers of natives came alongside ; people employed in pumping the salt water out of our water-casks, in order to fill with fresh, while the ship floated in. So ends. May 12. — Many natives alongside; noon, fresh wind; let go the best bower-an- chor, and veered out on both cables; sent down the main topgallant yard; filled up all the water-casks in the hold. The latter part, heavy gales and rainy dirty weather. May 13.— Fresh winds and rainy weather ; many natives alongside; hove up the best bower-anchor; seamen and tradesmen at their various deparments. May 14. — Fresh gales and cloudy; many natives alongside; at noon weighed and came to sail, standing up the river northeast by-east ; we found the channel very narrow. At 4 p. m. we had sailed upwards of twelve or fifteen miles, when the channel was so very narrow that it was almost impossible to keep in it, having from three to eighteen fathoms water, sandy bottom. Ai half-past 4 the ship took ground, but she did not stay long before she came off, without any assistance. We backed her off", stern foremost, into three fathoms, and let go the small bower, and moored ship with kedge and hawser. The jolly-boat was sent to sound the channel out, but found it not navigable any further up ; so, of course, we must have taken the wrong channel. So ends, with rainy weather ; many natives alongside. Tuesday, May 15.— Light airs and pleasant weather; many natives from different tribes eame alongside. At 10 a. m. unmoored and dropped down with the tide to a better anchoring- place; smiths and other tradesmen constantly employed. In the afternoon Captain Gray and Mr. Hoskins, in the jolly-boat, went on shore to take a short view of the country. May 16. — Light airs and cloudy. At 4 a. m. hove up the anchor, and towed down about three miles with the last of the ebb tide ; came into six fathoms, sandy bottom, the jolly-boat sounding the channel. At 10 a. m. a fresh breeze came up river. With the first of the ebb-tide we got under way and beat down river. At I, (from its be- The breakers extending across this bay presented, as they always 1792. do, a formidable appearance ; Gray, however, dashed undaunted- ly forward, and soon found himself on a broad and rapid river, the water of which was so perfectly fresh that the casks of the ship were filled within ten miles of the Pacific. On the 14th he May 14. ascended the stream by a channel near its northern bank, to the distance of about twenty miles from its mouth, beyond which the Columbia could not advance on account of the shallowness of the water. At this point he anchored, and remained employed in trading with the natives and making repairs until the 18th; May 18. he then sailed down the river, and on the 20th passed the break- May 20. ers, at its entrance, by beating through them, against a head wind, into the ocean. On leaving the river. Captain Gray bestowed upon it the name of his ship; the extremity of the land, at the southern side of its entrance, was called by him Cape Adams ^ and the appellation of Cape Hancock was substituted for that of Cape Disappointment, which had been given by Meares to the opposite promontory, in token of the unsuccessful result of his own search. Neither Cape Adams nor Cape Hancock is to be found on our maps at present; and the Columbia is not unfrequently termed the Oregon^ ing very squally,) we came to, about two miles from the village, {Chinouk,) which bore west-southwest; many natives alongside; fresh gales and squally. May 17. — Fresh winds and squ-ally ; many canoes alongside ; calkers calking the pinnace ; seamen paying the ship's sides with tar; painter painting ship ; smiths and carpenters at their departments. May 18. — Pleasant weather. At 4 in the morning began to heave ahead; at half- past came to sail, standing down river with the ebb tide; at 7 (being slack water and the wind fluttering) we came to in five fathoms, sandy bottom; the entrance be- tween the bars bore southwest-by west, distance three miles. The north point of the harbor bore northwest, distant two miles ; the south bore southeast, distant three and a half miles. At 9 a breeze sprung up from the eastward ; took up the anchor and came to sail, but the v/ind soon came fluttering again ; came to with the kedge and hawser; veered out fifty fathoms. Noon pleasant. Latitude observed, 46 de- grees 17 minutes north. At 1 came to sail with the first of the ebb-tide, and drifted down broadside, with light airs and strong tide; at three-quarters past, a fresh wind came from the northward; wore ship and stood into the river again. At 4 came to in six fathoms ; good holding-ground about six or seven miles up ; many canoes alongside. Mo.y 19. — Fresh wind and clear weather. Early a number of canoes came along- side ; seamen and tradesmen employed in their various departments. Captain Gray gave this river tlie name of Columbia's River, and the north side of the entrance Cape Hancock ; the south, Adams's Point. May 20. — Gentle breezes and pleasant weather. At 1 p. m. (being full sea) took up the anchor and made sail, standing down river. At 2 the wind left us, we being on the bar with a very strong tide which set on the breakers ; it was now not possi- ble to get out without a breeze to shoot her across the tide , so we were obliged to bring up in three and a half fathoms, the tide running five knots. At three-quarters past 2 a fresh wind came in from seaward; we immediately came to ^ail and beat over the bar, having from five to seven fathoms water in the channel. At 5 p. m. we were oat, clear of all the bars, and in twenty fathoms water. A breeze came from the southward ; we bore away to the northward ; set all sail to the best advan- tage. At 8 Cape Hancock bore southeast, distant three leagues ; the north extrem- ity of the land m sight bore north-by-wesc. At 9 m steering and top-gallant sails. Midnight, lighi airs. May 21. — At 6 A. M. the nearest land in sight bore east-southeast, distant eight leagues. At 7 set top gallant sails and light stay-sails. At 11 set steering-sails fore and aft. Noon, pleasant agreeable Aveather. The entrance of Bulfinch's Harbor bore southeast-by east half east, distant five leagues. 128 1792. upon the strength of some vague and erroneous rumors which Captain Carver collected, or pretended to have collected, in 1766, among the Indians near Lake Superior, respecting a river Oregon, rising in the vicinity of the sources of the Mississippi and Red Rivers, and emptying into the Pacific near the Strait of Fuca. It must, however, be acknowledged that Oregon is, in all re- spects, a more convenient and distinctive name than the other; and it has, moreover, the merit of euphoniousness. Such were the principal circumstances attending the discovery of the great river of Northwest America, a discovery far more im- portant in its results than any other one relating to that part of the world, inasmuch as it has afforded the means of communica- tion between the ocean and every section of one of the most fer- tile and valuable regions west of the Rocky Mountains. It has already been shown that the opening in the coast, by which Gray entered the stream, was first seen in 1775 by the Spanish naviga- tor Heceta; that it was examined in 1788 by Meares, who quit- ted it with the conviction that no river passed through it into the ocean ; and that this last opinion was adopted without quali- fication by Vancouver, after he had minutely explored that part of the coast, " under the most favorable conditions of wind and weather." Had not Gray returned to the search, after meeting with the English ships, the existence of the great river would doubtless have remained unknown for a much longer time, as the assertions of Vancouver that no openings harbor ^ or place of refuge for vessels, toas to be found between Cape Mendocino and the Strait of Fuca, and that the coast loithiii those limits ^formed one compact, solid, and nearly straight barrier agamst the sea,^^ would have prevented any attempt from being made to examine the shores, or even to approach them. With regard to the originality of Gray's discovery, Mr. Irving says, in his Astoria : * " The existence of this river, however, was known long before the visits of Gray and Vancouver; but the in- formation concerning it was vague and indefinite, being gathered from the reports of the Indians. It was spoken of by travellers as the Oregon, and as the Gr^at River of the West. A Spanish ship is said to have been wrecked at its mouth, several of the crew of which lived for some time among the natives." Upon these as- sertions no remark will be made, except by expressing a hope that they may be omitted in futilre editions of Astoria, or that the author will state more particularly what traveller before 1792 has described a great river in Northwest America, which can be identified with the Columbia; and when the Spanish ship was wrecked at the mouth of that stream. The plenipotentiaries of the British Government, in a State- mentf presented by them to the minister of the United States, 'during a negotiation relative to Northwest America in 1826, have endeavored to secure the merit of the discovery of the Columbia * Vol. i, page 35. t See documents in relation to the boundary of the LTnited Slates west ofjhe Rocky Mountains, accompanying the President's message of December 12, 1827. 129 to — Meares ! Their account of the circumstances is worthy of 1792. being extracted, as affording a specimen of the manner in which facts are related, and deductions are drawn from them. In that statement the plenipotentiaries say : "Great Britain can show that in 1788, that is, four years be- fore Gray entered the mouth of the Columbia River, Mr. Meares, a lieutenant of the royal navy, who had been sent by the East India Company on a trading expedition to the northwest coast of America, had already minutely explored that coast, from the 49th to the 45th degree of north latitude ; had taken formal possession of the Straits of De Fuca, in the name of his Sovereign; had pur- chased land, trafficked, and formed treaties with the natives ; and had actually entered the Bay of the Columbia, to the northern headland of which he gave the name of Cape Disappointment — a name which it bears to this day. "Dixon, Scott, Duncan, Strange, and other private British tra- ders, had also visited these shores and countries several years before Gray ; but the single example of Meares suffices to quash Gray's claim to prior discovery. To the other navigators above mentioned, therefore, it is unnecessary to refer more particularly. " It may be worth while, however, to observe, with regard to Meares, that his account of his voyages was published in Lon- don in August, 1790 ; that is, two years before Gray is even pre- tended to have entered the Columbia. " To that account are appended, first, extracts from his log- book ; secondly, maps of the coasts and harbors which he visited, in which every part of the coast in question, including the Bay of the Columbia, (into which the log expressly states that Meares entered,) is minutely laid down, its delineation tallying in almost every particular with Vancouver's subsequent survey, and with the description found in all the best maps of that part of the world, adopted at this moment; thirdly, the account in question actually contains an engraving, dated in August, 1790, of the en- trance of De Puca's Straits, executed after a design taken in June, 1788, by Meares himself " With these physical evidences of authenticity, it is as need- less to contend for, as it is impossible to controvert, the truth of Meares's statement. "It was only on the 17th of September, 1788, that the Wash- ington, commanded by Mr. Gray, first made her appearance at Nootka. " If, therefore, any claim to these countries, as between Great Britain and the United States, is to be deduced fi:om priority of the discovery, the above exposition of dates and facts suffices to establish that claim in favor of Great Britain on a basis too firm to be shaken. " It must, indeed, be admitted, that Mr. Gray, finding himself in the bay formed by the discharge of the waters of the Colum- bia into the Pacific, was the first to ascertain that this bay formed the outlet of a great river ; a discovery which had escaped Lieu- tenant Meares, when in 1788, four years before, he entered the same bay." 130 1792. In reply to which, it will be unnecessary to do more than refer to the words of Meares himself, as contained in his Journal, and as previously quoted in this memoir, page 93, where he declares that he sought for the River Saint Roc, laid down on the Span- ish maps as entering the Pacific about the latitude of 46 degrees 10 minutes ; that he entered a bay in that latitude, and became convinced from his examinations that no such river existed ; and that, in token of the unsuccessfulness of his search, he had called the bay Deception Bay^ and the headland on its northern side Cape Disappointment. That " Mr. Gray was the first to ascer- tain that this bay formed the outlet of a great river," is all that is claimed for him; for that ascertainment constituted the dis- covery of the Columbia, which had undoubtedly " escaped Lieu- tenant Meares, when in 1788, four years before, he entered the same bay." May. From the Columbia river. Gray sailed to the part of the sea between Queen Charlotte's Island and the continent, the coasts of which were then much frequented by the fur-traders, particu- larly by those fi'om the United States. In the northern part of this sea, his ship suddenly struck upon a rock, while she was under full sail, and was near foundering in consequence; she, however, succeeded in reaching Nootka Sound on the 21st of July, where the damage was soon repaired. At Nootka, Gray found in command of the Spanish establishment Don Juan Francisco de la Bodega y Quadra, who had arrived fi:om Mexi- co in the capacity of commissioner, to surrender to Vancouver the lands and buildings designated in the first article of the con- vention of October, 1790. To this officer the American captain immediately communicated the results of his examinations, which were substantiated by charts of Bulfinch's harbor and of the Co- lumbia river ; and he thus fortunately secured an unimpeachable witness in support of his claims to the discovery of those places. Meanwhile the surveys of the Strait of Fuca were in prog- ress. From Cape Flattery, the point at the southern side of its May 1. entrance, Vancouver took his departure on the 1st of May, and sailed along its southern shore eastward, to the distance of about a hundred miles, where he found a secure harbor, named by him Port Discovery^ and a little farther on a wide bay, with passages extending from it in various directions. He first entered a pas- sage opening towards the south, which he named Admiralty In- let ^ and explored it to its termination, about a hundred miles from the strait, in a bay called by him Pugefs Sound, in compliment to one of the lieutenants of the Discovery. After surveying this arm completely, the officers of both ships landed at a spot near its entrance, on the 4th of June, the birthday of their Sovereign, and in his name took possession, " with the usual formalities, of all that part of New Albion, from the latitude of 39 degrees 20 minutes south, and longitude 236 degrees 26 minutes east, to the entrance of the inlet of the sea, said to be the supposed Strait of Juan de Fuca, as also of all the coasts, islands, . 25. tired on the approach of cold weather to the Sandwich Islands, where Vancouver contrived to obtain from King Tamahamaha the cession of the sovereignty of Owyhee to his Britannic Majes- ty, with the understanding, however, that the native chief and his officers, as well as the priests, " were to continue to officiate in their respective stations, and that no alteration in those partic- ulars was in any degree thought of or intended." In return for the present, the British navigators built a vessel of war for the King, by the aid of which he soon after brought several other islands of the group under his dominion.* Mar. l^ Fn the spring of 1794 Vancouver sailed from the Sandwich Islands to the bay called Cook's River, which he minutely ex- plored ; and having ascertained that no considerable stream emp- tied into it, as had been previously supposed, he changed its name to Cook^s Inlet. Thence he proceeded to Prince William's Sound, which he also examined carefully; and from that place he continued his survey eastwardly, until he reached the Archi- pelago discovered by him in 1793. Through this Archipelago he again sailed for the purpose of completing his observations ; and on the 2d of August he arrived at Nootka, satisfied that " the precision with which his survey of the coast of Northwest Amer- ica had been conducted, would remove every doubt, and set aside every opinion of a northwest passage, or any water communica- tion navigable for shipping between the north Pacific and the interior of the American continent, within the limits of his re- searches." We now know that no such communication exists east of Beering's Strait; but when we take into consideration the intricate character of the shores between Mount Saint Elias and the southern part of the Strait of Fuca, it must be admitted that many passages by which vessels could thus penetrate the conti- nent might have long escaped the notice of the most careful nav- igators. In fact, a river called the Stikine, which is three miles wide at its mouth, and a mile wide at the distance of thirty miles from the sea, has been, within a few years, discovered emptying into the Pacific, in the latitude of 56 degrees 50 minutes. Sept: 2'. ^t Nootka the Spaniards were found still in possession, under the command of Colonel Alava, who had been, moreover, appoint- ed commissioner of his Government, in place of Captain Quadra^ lately deceased. No orders had been received from Europe rela- tive to the surrender of the territory, and the British ships accord- ingly proceeded to Monterey, where the long expected instruc- tions arrived during their stay. The Court of Madrid had agreed to abandon Nootka; and on the part of Great Britain, another * This justly celebrated man died in 1819, having some years previous established his authority over ail the islands of the group. 139 commissioner was despatched to the Pacific to receive possession 1794. of the place, if Yancouver should have quitted that ocean. Under these circumstances Vancouver resolved to return to England, 1795. where he arrived in August, 1795. The Journals of Vancouver's voyage were published in 1798, before which period the navigator had sunk into the grave. The work is invaluable, notwithstanding the illiberal spirit which pervades its pages. In none other can be found so much clear and precise information with regard to the northwest coasts of America ; and it is only to be lamented that one endowed with such courage, capacity, and professional skill, as the author evi- dently possessed, should have been so far governed by unworthy prejudices as he evidently was. Towards the Spaniards he ap- pears to have been inclined, generally, to act with justice, or at least with courteousness ; but against all citizens of the United States, and their country, he cherished the most bitter animosity, which was in many instances too powerful to be controlled by his sense of honor. Whenever an opportunity presented itself, or could be contrived, for exhibiting the character or conduct of Americans in an unfavorable light, it was eagerly seized by Van- couver; and that which he would have pardoned or commended in an Englishman or a Spaniard, became criminal in his eyes when committed by a citizen of the hated Republic. The observations of Vancouver form the basis of our best maps of the west coast of America, from the 30th degree of latitude to the northern extremity of Cook's Inlet, as also of those of the Sandwich Islands, which he surveyed with care. The maps contained in the atlas annexed to the Journal of the Voyage of the Sutil and Mexicana, are nearly all copied from those of the British navigator. Whilst these surveys of the Pacific coasts of North America 1789. were in progress, Alexander Mackenzie, a Scotchman in the ser- vice of the celebrated fur-trading association, called the North- west Company^ was exploring the unknown regions of the conti- nent bordering upon that part of the ocean. The association by which he was employed had been formed in 1787, among the principal fur-merchants of Canada, for the purpose of carrying on the trade between the posts of that country and such of the Brit- ish territories of the interior as were supposed to be not included in the grant to the Hudson^ s Bay Company ; and within two years afterwards, its establishments had been advanced as far as Lake of the Hills, or Athabaska Lake, near the 59th parallel of latitude, about eight hundred miles beyond Lake Superior. From Fort Chipewyan, the trading-station on this lake, Mac- kenzie departed on his first journey in June, 1789, and proceeded in a boat down the ^lave River, which flows out of the lake, di- rectly northward, into the Great Slave Lake, discovered by Hearne in 1770. Thence he continued north Vvrestward, down another and much larger stream, on which he bestowed his own name, to its termination in a sea near the 69th degree of latitude ; and having thus fulfilled the objects of his expedition, he returned to Fori; Chipewyan. The mouth of the Mackenzie was situated 140 1789. much farther west than that of the Coppermine^ which Heanie had reached ; and the probabiUty of the existence of a northern navigable communication between the Pacific and the Atlantic, east of Beering's Strait, was thus considerably lessened; while, on the other hand, sti'onger grounds were aiforded for the belief that the northernmost parts of America were bathed by an open sea. VW>. In his second expedition, begun in October, 1792, Mackenzie Oet. 10. ascended the Unjigah^ or Peace Biver, (which empties into the Athabasca Lake,) westward to its sources, among the Rocky 1793. Mountains. Having crossed this chain, he embarked upon ano- ther large stream called the Tacoutchee^ which he descended to a short distance; and then marching directly westward, he reached July 22. the Pacific on the 22d of July, 1793, at the mouth of one of the in- Aug, 24, lets near the Princess Royal Islands, in the latitude of 52 degrees and 20 minutes/* By this second journey, he ascertained that no passage existed through the North American continent, opening into the Pacific south of the parallel above mentioned ; which fact had been already, though less decisively, proved by Vancouver in the preceding year. The Tacoutchee was for some time sup- posed to be the principal branch of the Columbia; it has, how- ever, been subsequently found to be a much smaller stream, emptying into the Strait of Fuca, and it is now known as Fra- zer^s River. The journals of Mackenzie's two expeditions were published together, at London, in 1802, accompanied by a history of the Canada fur trade, and by observations on the mode of conducting the commercial intercourse between America and China advan- tageously to the interests of Great Britain. He there recommends that the Hudson's Bay and the Northwest Companies, which had been at war with each other ever since the formation of the latter, should be united ; that the British Government should favor the establishment of communications across the continent, for which the Tacoutchee, supposed by him to be the Columbia, would aiford great facilities ; and that the East India Company should throw open to their fellow-subjects the trade between the north- west coasts and Canton, which was then, as he says, "left to the adventurers of the United States, acting without regularity or capital, or the desire of conciliating future confidence, and look- ing only to the interest of the moment." Experience has proved the justice of Mackenzie's observations ; and nearly all his sug- gestions have been adopted, to the manifest advantage of Great Britain. It is proper to notice here an account of an expedition across the American continent, made between 1791 and 1794, by a party of citizens of the United States, under the direction of Julius Rodman, whose journal has been recently discovered in Virginia, and is now in course of publication in a periodical magazinef at * On the day of Mackenzie's arrival on the shore of the Pacific, Vancouver was examining another inlet situated about one hundred and My miles farther north. t Burton's Magazine and American Monthly Review, edited by William E. Bur- ton and Edgar A. Poe. Mr. Rodman's journal is commenced in the number for January, 1840, and is continued m those for the next following months. 141 Philadelphia. The portion which has yet appeared relates only 1792. to the voyage of the adventurer up the Missouri during the sum- mer of 1791 ; and no idea is communicated of their route beyond that river, except in the Introduction by the editor, where it is stated that they traversed the region ''west of the Rocky Moun- tains, and north of the 60th parallel, which is still marked upon our maps as unexplored, and which, until this day, has been al- ways so considered.'' From what has been published, it is im- possible to form a definitive opinion as to the degree of credit which is due to the narrative, or as to the value of the statements, if they are true; and all that can be here said in addition is, that nothing as yet appears, either in the journal or relating to it, cal- culated to excite suspicions with regard to its authenticity. To conclude with regard to the delivery of Nootka. 1795. The commissioner appointed by the British Government to re- ceive possession of that place, provided Vancouver should have left the Pacific, was Captain Robert Broughton, the former com- mander of the Chatham. He sailed from England in the ship Providence in October, 1794, and in April, 1796, he reached 1796 Nootka, which he found occupied only by the natives. He there learned from a letter, presented to him by Maquinna, dated March, 1795, that " the Spaniards had delivered up the port of Nootka, &c., to Lieutenant Pierce, of the marines, [who had been des- patched from England, by way of Mexico, in order to hasten the termination of the business,] agreeably to the mode of restitution settled between the two Courts."* This is the account given by Broughton.f On the other hand, Belsham, an historian whom no one can suspect of want of at- tachment to the honor and interests of his country, says : J " It is nevertheless certain, from the most authentic subsequent infor- mation, that the Spanish flag flaying at the fort and settlement of Nootka loas never struck^ and that the whole territory has been virtu- ally relinquished by Great Britain ; a measure, however politically expedient, which involves in it a severe reflection upon the min- ister who could permit so invidious an encroachment upon the * In the library of Congress at Washington is an interesting Spanish manuscript, presented by General Tornel, during his residence in the United States as minister from Mexico, entitled Instruccion Reservada delReyno de Nueva Espana que el Exmo. Senor Virrey Conde de Revillagigedo did a su sucesor el Exmo. Senor Marques de Branciforte en el am de 1794; that is to say — Secret Instructions, or rather notes on the Kingdom of New Spain, given in 1794 by the Viceroy, Count de Revillagigedo, to his successor, the Marquis de Branciforte. This work, which abounds in curi- ous details relative to the administration of affairs in Mexico, has been carefully examined, with reference to the objects of the present memoir. Nothing, however, has been collected from it, except in confirmation of statements elsewhere made. The paragraphs from 703 to 713, inclusive, are devoted to the Marine Department of San Bias, to which, as already mentioned, the care of the Spanish colonies in Cali- fornia was committed. The Count recommends to his successor the maintenance of those colonies, as the best means of preserving Mexico from foreign influences; advising him, at the same time, however, not to extend the establishments beyond the Strait of Fuca. With regard to Nootka, it is merely stated, in paragraph 713, that orders had been sent to the commandant to abandon the place^ agreeably to a royal d.ictamen. + Broughton's Journal of his Voyage, page 50. t Belsham's History of Great Britain, vol. viii, page 337. 142 1796, ancient and acknowledged rights of the Crown of Spain." The probability is, that the Spaniards merely abandoned the place. Since that period, no attempt has been made by any civilized nation to form an establishment at Nootka or in its vicinity, al- though the sound continued to be, and probably still is, occasion- ally visited by the fur-traders. The most recent accounts of it which have been published, are of no later date than 1S07, when King Maquinna was enjoying the fulness of health and of power; and although his manners appeared to have then become more refined, he was still at heart a cruel and treacherous savage.^ In this and the next preceding chapters, an endeavor has been made to present an impartial view of the circumstances connected with the occupation of Nootka by the Spaniards in 1789 ; and it is believed that the erroneousness of the statements of the British political and historical authorities respecting those circumstances has been conclusively demonstrated. It has been shown that — No part of " the northwest coasts of the continent of North Amer' ica, or of the adjacent islands,''^ was, or ever had been, occupied by British subjects prior to the formation of the Spanish post at Nootka, in 1789: That, consequently, no " huildijigs or tracts of land'^^ in that quarter were " to be restored to British subjects^'' agreeably to the convention of October 28,1790: and, as a farther consequence, That the abandonment of Nootka by the Spaniards, in 1795, gave to Great Britain no other rights at that, or any other place in Northwest America, than those derived from the third and fifth articles of the abovementioned convention, by which her sub- jects were at liberty to navigate and fish in the north Pacific, to trade or settle in unoccupied parts of its American coasts north of the parts occupied by the Spaniards before April, 1789, (that is to say, north of the Bay of San Francisco;) and to have free access to any Spanish settlement on the coasts thus designated, * Narrative of the Destruction of the ship Boston, of Boston, and of the murder of all her men except two, by the savages at Nootka Sound, in March, 1803, with ac- counts of ihat country and of its inhabitants: by John R. Jewitt, one of the survivors of the crew, who remained three years in captivity among the Indians — a simple and unpretending narrative, which will, no doubt, in after centuries, be read with inter- est bj the enlightened people of Northwest America. 143 CHAPTER Till, Comprehending the period between 1796 and 1815 — Commerce between the north- west coasts of America and Canton conducted exclusively by vessels of the Uni- ted Stales — Formation of the Russian American Company ; account of its system and establishments— Complaints of the Russians against the traders of the United States — Cession of Louisiana to the United States ; supposed extent of Louisiana in the north and northwest— Expedition of Lewis and Clarke to the mouth of the Columbia — First enterprises of British and American fur-traders in Northwest America — Astoria enterprise — Mouth of the Columbia occupied by the Ameri- cans, who are dislodged by the British. In October, 1796, Spain declared war against Great Britain ; 1'706. and, for nearly twenty years afterwards, the Governments and people of both nations were too much engrossed by events daily occurring in their immediate vicinity to have any leisure to be- stow on matters so comparatively unimportant as those connect- ed with the northwest coasts of America.. During this whole period, the direct trade between those coasts and Canton was carried on exclusively by the vessels, and under the flag, of the United States. The British merchants were pre- vented from engaging in this commerce by the refusal of their own East India Company to allow it ; the Russians were not ad- mitted into the Chinese ports, and few ships of any other nation were seen in the north Pacific. Until 1811 the Americans had formed no establishment on the western shore of the continent. Their vessels sailed from the United States, or from Europe, to the north Pacific, laden with spirits, wine, sugar, tobacco, fire-arms, gunpowder, iron, and coarse manufactures of various sorts, which were exchanged for furs with the natives on the coasts, or with the Russians at their settlements ; or sometimes the American captain would hire from a Russian agent a number of hunters and fishermen, with their boats and implements, for the season, and would thus obtain a cargo. The furs were thence carried to Canton, where the pro- ceeds of their sale were invested in teas, porcelain, silks, and nankeens, for the markets of the United States or of Europe. When a sufficient quantity of furs could not be collected in the north Pacific, their place was supplied by sandal-wood, pearl shells, and tortoise shells, which were procured at little expense in the Sandwich and other islands, and always commanded high prices at Canton. The persons engaged in this trade were constantly exposed to the most dreadful hardships and dangers, against which nothing but extraordinary courage and skill on their parts could have enabled them to struggle successfully. These circumstances were not calculated to soften the feelings or to improve the mor- als of the traders ', and as they were actually subject to no other 144 1796. laws or restrictions, during their voyages in the Pacific, than such as they themselves chose to adopt or observe, it could not have been expected that their conduct should at all times be con- formable with the principles of justice. They have been charged by British reviewers and British naval officers — authorities always to be distrusted on matters pertaining to the United States or its citizens — with practising every species of fraud and violence to- wards the natives of the coasts and islands of that ocean. It does not, however, appear, upon examining the facts brought forward in support of these accusations, that the American fur- traders were guilty of other or greater improprieties than have ever been , and must ever be, committed by shrewd and intelligent civilized people, when unrestrained by laws, in their transactions with brutal, ignorant, and faithless savages. These latter, in their turn, availed themselves of every occasion to rob and murder the strangers who came to their shores. More than one American ship has been seized, and all on board massacred by the na- tives of the Pacific coasts ; and seldom, indeed, did a vessel from the United States complete her voyage in that ocean, with- out losing some part of her crew by the treachery of those with whom they were dealing. Thus in March, 1803, the ship Bos- ton, of Boston, commanded by John Salter, was surprised at Noot- ka, by Maquinna and his followers, and all her men were put to death except two, who, after remaining in slavery three years, efiected their escape.* In like manner, the Tonquin, Captain Thorn, of New York, fell into the hands of Wiccanish and his subjects at Nittinat, or Berkely Sound, in June, 1811 ; nearly the whole of her crew perished in a moment, under the clubs and knives of the assailants, and the remainder, with the exception of the Indian interpreter, were soon after destroyed, together with a large number of savages, by the explosion of the powder maga- zine, which was fired probably by one of the officers. f In the mean time the Russians, though excluded from the di- rect trade with Canton, were continually increasing and enlarging their establishments in America. J The association formed in 1785, among the merchants of eastern Siberia, for carrying on the fur * Narrative of John R. Jewitt, already mentioned at page 142, t A minute and graphic account of the destruction of the Tonquin, collected from the evidence of the interpreter, who afterwards found his way to the Columbia River, is given by Ross Cox, in his account of his residence on the Columbia River, and has been thence transferred by Mr. Irving to his Astoria. t The following sketch of the Russian establishments in the north Pacific, during the first years of the present century, is derived chiefly from — I. Narrative of a Voyage around the World, in the years 1803-1800, in the Rus- sian ships Nadeshda and Neva, under the command of Captain A. J. Von Krusen- stern. The original edition of this work is accompanied by a large atlas, contain- ing charts and other engravings. II. Narrative of a Voyage around the World in the Ship Neva, by her captain, Urey Lisiansky. III. Narrative of a Voyage in the Pacific, by G. H. Von Langsdorf, the physician of the Russian ship Nadeshda. IV Narrative of a Voyage around the World, in 1815 and 1816, in the Russian ship Kiirick, commanded by Lieutenant Otto Von Kotzebue. And from — V. Various documents existing in the archives of the Department of State, at Washington. 145 trade of the north Pacific, was protected and encouraged by the 1796. Empress Catherine, who bestowed upon it many valuable privi- leges. Her son and successor, Paul, Avas, at the beginning of his reign, inclined to withdraw these advantages, and even to break up the association, on account of the cruel conduct of its agents towards the natives and the Russians who were employed in its service. Reasons of state, however, induced him to abandon this resolution; and he at length, by a decree of the 8th of July, 1799, 1799. granted to the united merchants a charter, assuring to them, under J^^Y ^• the title of the Russian American Company^ the exclusive use and control, for twenty years, of all the coasts of America on the Pacific, and the islands in that ocean, from Beering's Strait to the 55th degree of south latitude, together with the right of occupy- ing any other territories not previously possessed by some civil- ized nation. The residence of the directors of the company was at first fixed at Irkutsk, in Siberia, the great depository of the China trade ; it was afterwards transferred to St. Petersburgh, and their affairs were placed under the superintendence, or rather the directors were placed under the surveillance^ of the Imperial De- partment of Commerce. The privileges thus accorded by Paul, were confirmed and ex- 1800, tended by Alexander; and, under these favorable auspices, the power and influence of the Russian American Company rapidly advanced. In 1803, its establishments on the north Pacific coasts 1803. extended eastward, as far as Port Guadelupe, or Norfolk Sound, called by the Russians the Gulf of Sitca^ which separates the small Island of Mount San Jacinto, or Edgecumb, or Krooze, from Baranqff^s Island^ the largest of the group named by Vancouver King George the Third's Archipelago. The settlement on the Gulf of Sitca was destroyed by savages in 1804; another was, ^^*^4. however, soon founded in the vicinity of the same spot, which received the appellation of New Archangel, and has ever since been the capital of Russian America. In 1806 preparations were made for occupying the mouth of i806. the Columbia River, but the plan was abandoned ; although that part of the coast, and all north of it, was then, and for many years afterwards, represented on the maps of the Russian Ameri- can Company as included within the limits of its possessions. The Government of Russian- America was arranged and conduct- isoo. ed in the most despotic manner possible, nearly resembling that of a Turkish Pashalik ; each factory was superintended by a Russian overseer, who, with the aid of a small number of Russians, main- tained absolute control over all the natives in his district, com- pelling them constantly to labor for the benefit of the company. The overseers were under the superintendence of agents, one of whom resided in each group of settlements ; and all were subject to the authority of a chief agent, or governor-general, appointed by the directors, whose powers, though nominally defined and limited by regulations drawn up at St. Petersburgh, were, in fact, absolute and unrestricted. The person who filled the office of governor- general at the beginning of this century, and for many years afterwards, was Alexander Baranoff", a bold, shrewd, enter- 146 ISOO. prising, and unfeeling man, under whose iron rule the affairs of the company prospered, and its stock rose proportionally in value ; his proceedings were, therefore, always approved by those to whom he was accountable, and complaints against his tyranny were al- ways disregarded. The Russians engaged in the service of the company, under the direction of the overseers, were distinguished by the general name of Proim',schleniks^ (meaning speculators^ and were em- ployed as hunters, fishermen, seamen, soldiers, or mechanics, as their superiors might command. In the best of these situations, their lot appears to have been more wretched than that of any other class of human beings, with the exception, perhaps, of the natives, whom they aided in keeping under subjection ; and it therefore is not surprising that none but vagabonds and adven- turers should ever have become promuschleniks. The gallant and humane Krusenstem, in the narrative of his expedition to the Pacific in 1804 and 1805, presents a number of dreadful pic- tures of the sufferings of these unfortunate persons fi-om want of food, from the severity of the climate, and from too much labor. According to the most recent accounts, it appears that their situa- tion, while they are on land at least, has not been materially im- proved.* The greater part of the furs collected on the northwest coasts of America continued to be, during the period mentioned at the beginning of this chapter, transported to Petro -Paulo wsk and Ochotsk, from which places were brought nearly all the articles required for the use of the settlements; the remainder of the sup- plies being obtained from American vessels in the manner al- ready described. The Russian Government, however, soon be- came desirous to exclude the vessels of the UnUed States from the north Pacific, not only from a wish to monopolize the fur trade, but also in order to prevent the natives of the coasts from procuring arms and ammunition, with which they were fur- nished by the Americans, to the great detriment of the authority and interests of the Russian company. For this purpose, it would be necessary to maintain a naval force in the vicinity of the settlements, and to establish regular communications, by ships, between them and Europe ; and, with the view of inqui- ring how those measures might be best executed, as well as of opening, if possible, some intercourse with Japan and the ports of China, it was determined that a scientific and political expedi- tion should be made to the north Pacific. 1803. Two ships, the Nadeshda, commanded by Captain Krusen- stem, and the Neva, by Captain Lisiansky, were accordingly despatched from Cronstadt in August 1803, carrying out the chamberlain, Yon Resanoff, as ambassador to Japan, and pleni- potentiary of the Russian -American Company, together with a large body of ofiicers and men of science. These were the first vessels, under the Russian flag, which crossed the equinoctial * It will be recollected that these accounts are derived from Russian authorities. 147 Ime ; they passed around Cape Horn, and, touching at the Wash- 1803, ington and the Sandwich Islands, they reached the coasts of the north Pacific in the summer of 1804. Without detaihng the sub- sequent occurrences of the expedition, which lasted until the summer of 1806, it will be sufficient to say, that none of the po- litical or commercial objects proposed were attained. The Jap- anese, as usual, refused peremptorily to allow any intercourse to be carried on between their dominions and those of Russia ; nor would the Chinese admit the commercial ships of the latter Power into Canton. The plans of Von Resanoff (who appears to have been a ridiculous and incompetent person) for the man- agement of the affairs of the company proved wholly inapplica- ble ; and the propriety of immediately expelling the Americans from the north Pacific, even could it be done, was rendered very questionable by the fact that the garrison and inhabitants of Sitca would have all infallibly perished from famine, in the win- ter of 1805-'6, had they not been fortunately supplied with pro- 1806. visions by the ship Juno from Rhode Island.* Finally, what- ever may have been the conclusions formed upon the informa- tion acquired during the expedition, as to the practicability of maintaining a direct commercial intercourse, by sea, between the Russian ports in Europe and their settlements on the Pacific, certain it is that no attempt for that purpose was again made until 1814. The expedition above mentioned was, however, in all respects, highly honorable to those who conducted it. The accounts sepa- rately published by Krusenstern, Lisiansky, and Langsdorf, par- ticularly those of Krusenstern, are among the most instructive works which have appeared relating to the north Pacific and its coasts. They exhibit, indeed, fi-ightful pictures of the misery en- dured by the persons in the service of the Russian -American Com- pany; but they, at the same time, present instances of fortitude, perseverance, and good feeling, on the part of the Russians, cal- culated to counteract any unfavorable impressions which might otherwise have been formed with regard to the general charac- ter of that people. After the return of Krusenstern's ships, representations were 18G8. addressed by the Russian Government to that of the United States, with regard to the improper conduct of American citizens in trading in arms and ammunition with the natives on the coasts of the north Pacific ; and endeavors were made to procure the passage by Congress of some act, or the conclusion of some con- vention between the two nations, by the efiect of which such commerce might be prevented. These representations producing no results, Count Romanzofi", the Russian Minister of Foreign Aflfairs, proposed to Mr. Adams, the American Envoy at St. Pe- 1810. tersburgh, an arrangement by which the vessels of the United States should be allowed to transport furs from the Russian set- tlements to China, on condition that they should abstain from all * Langsdorf, vol. ii, page 148 1810. trade with the natives on the northwest coasts. Mr. Adams, in his answer to this proposition, desired to know — within what lati- tudes the restriction would be expected to be observed? and the reply being, that the Russian-American Company claimed posses- sion of the whole coasts extending from Beering's Strait to the southward of the Columbia River, the correspondence was not continued. An arrangement conformable with the views of the 1812. Russians was, in 1812, concluded between their American com- pany and a citizen of the United States, but circumstances pre- vented it from being carried into execution. Before 1812, Sitca was the most southern portion on the Vs'est- ern side of America occupied by the Russians. In that year they formed an establishment in California, Avhich deserves particular notice. The chief agent, Baranoff, obtained from the Spanish Governor of Monterey permission to erect some houses, and to leave a few men on the shore of the small Bay of Bodega, near Port San Francisco, in order to procure and salt the meat of the wild cattle, which overrun that country, for the supply of the set- tlement at New Archangel. In the course of two or three years after this permission v/as granted, the number of the persons thus employed had become so great, and their dwelling-place had as- sumed so much the appearance of a fortress, that the Governor thought proper to remonstrate on the subject; and his represent- ations being disregarded, he formally commanded the Russians to quit the territories of his Catholic Majesty. The command was treated with as little respect as the remonstrance ; and when it was repeated, the Russian agent, Kuskoff, replied by denying the right of the Spaniards over the country, which he asserted to be vacant and open for occupation by the subjects of any civil- ized Power. The Governor was unable to enforce his orders ; 1815. and as no assistance could be afforded to him from Mexico, which was then ravaged by civil wars, the intruders were left in undis- turbed possession of the ground, where they have ever since re- mained, in defiance alike of the Spaniards and of their republican successors.* The Russian-American Company, about the same period, made another effort to create a direct commercial intercourse by sea be- tween its settlements on the Pacific and the European ports of the Empire. With this object, the American ship Hannibal was purchased from Mr. Astor, of New York ; and her name having been changed to the Suwarrow^ she was despatched from Saint Petersburgh, in 1814, under the command of Lieutenant Lazaref, laden with goods for New Archangel. She returned in 1816 with a cargo of furs, valued at a million of dollars ; and the adventure having been pronounced successful, others of the same nature were undertaken. In 1815 Baranoff endeavored to obtain possession of Atooi, one * The Russians have now several establishments in that part of California, of ■which the principal, called Ross, is situated immediately on the Pacific, in latitude of 38 degrees and 33 minutes, about thirty miles north of Port Bodega, or Port Ro- manzoff. as the Russians have named it. 149 of the Sandwich Islands. For that purpose about a hundred 1815. men, nearly all Aleutians, were sent in two vessels from Sitca, under the direction of Dr. Sheffer, a German, who had arrived in the Pacific as surgeon to the ship Suwarrow. They landed on the island, which they ravaged, without subduing it, for more than a year, and were then obliged to depart for Owyhee, where they entered the service of some American whalers, by whom they were finally restored to their country. The Russian Gov- ernment appeared to disapprove this act of Baranoff; and no at- tempt has been since made by subjects of that or any other foreign nation to invade those islands. The Government of the United States had before this period begun to assert claims to the possession of the territory drained by the Columbia river, the origin and extent of which claims will now be traced. The discovery of the Columbia by Gray attracted very little 1792 attention in the United States for more than ten years after it had ^ been effected. None but persons concerned in the fur trade of the north Pacific, and the curious in geographical matters, were acquainted with the fact; and no one imagined that any thing connected with that river would ever be considered important to the Americans in a political point of view. The territories of the United States were then bounded on the west by the river Mis- sissippi, and on the north by the dominions of Great Britain; be- yond the Mississippi lay the vast region called Louisiana, stretch- ing fi-om the Gulf of Mexico northward and northwestward to an undefined extent ; so that all communication, except by sea, be- tween the Federal Republic and the Pacific side of America, was completely barred by the intervention of countries belonging to foreign and rival Powers. Louisiana, originally settled by the French, had been ceded, in 1762, to Spain, which held it until October 1, 1800, and then retroceded it to France, "the same in extent," says the treaty of retrocession, "as it now is in the hands of Spain, as it was when France formerly possessed it, and as it should be, according to the treaties' subsequently made between Spain and other nations." Under such circumstances, any claims of the United States to territories bordering upon the Pacific, would have been nominal and barren, and all attempts to realize them must have proved abortive. But the position of the Americans, and the views of 1§0S. their Government towards the northwestern section of the conti- -^P^^^ ^ nent, were materially changed after the 30th of April, 1803, when Louisiana came into their possession by purchase fi*om France, "with all its rights and appurtenances, as fully, and in the same manner, as it had been acquired from Spain" in 1800. Before relating the dispositions made in consequence of this cession, some observations will be necessary respecting the northern and northwestern limits of the country which thus became the prop- erty of the United States. The earliest attempt, either real or ostensible, to define the boundaries of Louisiana, was made by Louis XIV, in 1712, in the patent by which he granted to Antoine Crozat the exclusive 11 150 ISOS, trade of that country. The patent declares it to be the will of the King, that " all the territories by him possessed, bounded by New Mexico, and by the lands of the English in Carolina, and all the establishments, ports, harbors, rivers, especially the port and harbor of Dauphin Island, formerly called Massacre Island, the river Saint Louis, formerly called the Mississippi, from the seacoast to the Illinois country, together with the rivers Saint Philip, formerly called the Missouri, and the Saint Jerome, for- merly called the Wabash, [the Ohio,] with all the lands, coun- tries, lakes in the land, and the rivers fallins^ directly or indirectly into that part of the river Saint Louis, shall be and remain com- prised under the name of the Government of Louisiana, which shall be subordinate to the General Government of New France; and that all the lands by him possessed on this side of the Illi- nois, shall be reunited to, and form part of, the General Govern- ment of New France ; the King, nevertheless, reserving to himself the privilege of increasmg the extent of Louisiana, as he may judge proper." Agreeably to this exposition of its limits, Louis- iana extended, in 1712, northward to about the 42d parallel of latitude, and westward to New Mexico ; between which latter country and the Pacific, California intervened. What portion of the continent northAvard of that parallel, and west of the great lakes, the Illinois country thus attached to New France was sup- posed to comprehend, there are no means of ascertaining. The French maps of the early part of the last century represent as in- cluded in New Prajice many rivers flowing towards the Pacific, none of which, however, exist as there described ; while the Spaniards, on the other hand, regarded the whole unoccupied re- gion northwest of New Mexico as forming part of their own Cal- ifornia ; and the British geographers recorded the claims of their nation to the same territory, by constantly applying to it the name of Neiv Albion. In 1713 the celebrated peace of Utrecht was concluded. In the tenth article of the treaty between Great Britain and France^ " it is agreed on both sides to determine within a year, by com- missaries to be forthwith named by each party, the limits which are to be fixed between the said Bay of Hudson," (then secured, with its adjacent territories, to Great Britain,) "and the places appertaining to the French : which limits both the British and French subjects shall be wholly forbid to pass over, or thereby to go to each other by sea or by land. The same commissaries shall also have orders to describe and settle, in like manner, the boundaries between the other British and French colonies in those parts." That commissaries were appointed agreeably to this provision, there is reason to believe; but there is no suffi- cient evidence that any boundaries were determined by them. Two distinct lines may, however, be found traced on different maps published in the last century, each purporting to be the limit between the Hudson's Bay territories on the north, and the French possessions on the south, fixed by commissaries according to the treaty of Utrecht. One of these lines follows the course, or supposed course, of the highlands which separate the waters 151 flowing into Hudson's Bay from those emptying into the great 1803, lakes and the Saint Lawrence. The other is drawn irregularly from the Atlantic to a point in the 49th parallel of latitude, south of the southernmost part of Hudson's Bay, and thence westward along that parallel to Red River; and in some maps still farther west. This latter line is generally considered in the United States, and has been assumed by their Government,* as the true boundary settled by the commissaries* agreeably to the treaty above mentioned; but this opinion is at variance with the most accredited authorities, as will be seen by reference to the Appen- dix, [E,] containing a review of all the works from which exact information could be expected. In 1717, Crozat relinquished his exclusive privileges with re- gard to Louisiana ; after which, the Illinois country was added to that province by a royal arret, and the whole territory was granted to the Cotnpagnie d? Orient^ generally known as liaw's Mississippi Company. In 1763, France gave up to Great Britain all her possessions east of the Mississippi, except a small tract near New Orleans, having, a short time previous, ceded the re- mainder of Louisiana to Spain. f By these arrangements, the middle of the Mississippi, from its source, to the river Iberville, near New Orleans, became the dividing-line between the British possessions on the east and those of Spain on the western side, nothing being fixed with regard to territories north of the said source; and from that period to 1803, when Louisiana became the property of the United States, its extent towards the north or northwest could not have been aifected by any treaty hitherto made public, unless by the convention of October, 17y0, between Spain and Great Britain, which applied to all American territories claimed by Spain upon the Pacific, north of the 38th degree of latitude. From the preceding review, it will be seen that history fur- ♦ The earliest ofScial asserlion to this effect, on the part of the Government of the United States, which has been found, is contained in the following sentence ex- tracted from a letter addressed by Messrs. Monrue and Pinckney, at Madrid, on the 20th of April, 1805, to Don Pedro Cevallos, the Spanish Minister of Stale: "In con- formity with the tenth ariicle of the first- mentioned treaty, [treaty of Utrecht,] the boundaiy between Canada and Louisiana, on the one side, and liie Hudson's Bay and Northwestern Companies on the other, was established by commissaries, by a line to commence at a cape or promontoiy on the ocean m 58 degrees 31 minutes north latitude; to ran thence south westwardly to latitude 49 north from the equator, and along that line indefinitely westward." t The act by which France ceded Louisiana to Spain was signed at Fontaine- blean by the French minister, the Due de Choiseul, and the Spanish ambassador^ the Marques de Grimaldi, on the 3d of November, 1762. It was ratified by the King of Spain on the I3th of the same month, and by the King of France on the i^Sd. These documents were kept secret until 1836, when copies of them were obtained from the Departments of Foreign Affairs of France and Spain, by the late J. M. White, of Florida; and translations of them by the writer of this memoir were sub- mitted to the Senate of the United States, and published by its order, in 1837. The act of cession throws no light on the question as to the limits of Louisiana. The words of the original, describing the territory ceded, are: "Sa Majeste tres Chreiienne cede en toute propriete, purement et simplement, et sans aucune excep- tion, a sa Majeste Catholique, et a ses succe.«;seurs, a perpetuite, lout le pays connu sous le nom de la Louisiane, ainsi que la Nouvelle Orleans, et Tile dans laquelle cette ville est situee." 152 1803. nishes no means of determining what were the precise limits of Louisiana on the north or northwest, when that country came into the possession of the United States. The customs of civil- ized nations in such cases, however, authorize the assumption that those limits comprehended the whole region west of the Mis- sissippi drained by that river and its tributary streams ; while the same customs prohibit the supposition that any territory west of the Rocky Mountains shguld be considered as part of Louisiana. Even before the cession of Louisiana to the United States had been completed, the prompt and sagacious Jefferson, then Presi- dent of the Republic, was preparing to have that part of the con- tinent examined by American agents. On the 18th of January, 1803, he addressed to the Congress of the United States a confi- dential message, recommending that means should be taken for that purpose without delay ; and his suggestions having been ap- proved, he commissioned Captains Meriwether Lewis and Wil- liam Clarke to carry his plan into execution. Those ofiicers were instructed to explore the river Missouri and its principal branches to their sources, and then to seek and trace to its termi- nation in the Pacific, some stream, "whether the Columbia, the Oregon, the Colorado, or any other, which might offer the most direct and practicable water communication across the continent, for the purposes of commerce."* A few days after the delivery of these instructions to Lewis, as commander of the expedition, the news of the cession of Louis- iana reached the United States, and he immediately set off for the west. Some difficulties, however, prevented his party from crossing the Mississippi in that year; and it was not until the 1604, 14th of May, 1804, that they entered the Missouri, and began its ascent in boats. Their progress was necessarily slow ; yet, before the end of October, they arrived in the country of the Mandan In- dians, where they remained until the following April, encamped at a place situated sixteen hundred miles from the mouth of the 1805. Missouri. In the summer of 1805, they explored that river to its head -waters, among the Rocky Mountains, and, having crossed the great dividing-ridge, they found immediately beyond it a number of streams flowing westward. Upon one of these they embarked in canoes on the 7th of October, and were soon carried by its current into a river, which they called the LewiSy and which proved to be a principal branch of the Columbia. In a few days they reached the confluence of the Lewis with the other great branch named by them the Clarke; and on the 15th of Novem- ber they landed at Cape Disappointment, or Hancock's Point, on the northern side of the entrance of the Columbia into the Pacific, after a journey of more than four thousand miles from their place of departure. 1806, The winter of 1805-'6, was passed by Lewis and Clarke, and * These instructions may be found at length in the biographical sketch of Captain Lewis, written by Mr. Jefferson, and prefixed to the journal of the expedition, printed at Philadelphia in 1814. The message above mentioned is contained in the execu- tive proceedings of the Senate, vol. i, page 439. 153 their followers, in an encampment on the south side of the Co- 180G. himbia, near its mouth, which they called Fort Clatsop. The savages, who were already accustomed to the presence of stran- gers, conducted themselves peaceably; and there was no want of food, such as could be procured from the river or sea. On the 13th of March, 1806, the Americans began their return to the United States, in canoes, which they rowed up the Columbia to its falls, situated about one hundred and twenty -five miles from the Pacific. Thence they continued their journey by land to the Rocky Mountains, which they crossed in two bodies by separate Ju]y. routes ; the one under Lewis striking directly eastward to the falls of the Missouri, while the other, conducted by Clarke, made a southern march to the sources of the Yellow Stone, and de- scended that river to the Missouri. The parties were again united Ang. 12. just below the point of junction of those streams, and on the 23d of September they arrived at Saint Louis. The above sketch will serve to show the general course of the expedition of Lewis and Clarke ; a more extended account of which would be either insufficient or superfluous. With regard to the priority of their discoveries, the plenipotentiaries of Great Britain, in the statement presented by them to the American minister, during the negotiation in 1826, make the following ob- servations : " In reply to the allegations, on the part of the United States, that their claim to the country in question is strengthened and confirmed by the discovery of the sources of the Columbia, and by the exploration of the course of that river to the sea, by Lewis and Clarke, in 1805-'6, Great Britain affirms, and can distnictly prove, that, if not before, at least in the same and subsequent years, her Northwest Trading Company had, by means of their agent Mr. Thompson, already established their posts among the Flat-head and Kootanie tribes, on the head-waters or main branch of the Columbia, and were gradually extending them down the principal stream of that river ; thus giving to Great Britain in this particular, as in the discovery of the mouth of the river, a title of parit]^ at least, if not of priority of discovery, as opposed to the United States. It was from these posts that, having heard of the American establishment forming in 1811 at the mouth of the river, Mr. Thompson hastened thither, descending the river to ascertain the nature of that establishment." As the words '^ in the same and subsequent years'^'' are rather indefinite, the dates of the occurrences above mentioned will be stated somewhat more exactly. Lewis and Clarke reached the Pacific Ocean, after exploring the Columbia River from one of its most eastern head-waters in the Rocky Mountains to its mouth, on the 15th of November, 1805. In the spring of 1806, as will hereaf- ter be shown, Mr. Simon Frazer, and other persons in the employ- ment of the Northwest Company, crossed the Rocky Mountains, through the great gap near the 56th degree of latitude, and es- tablished the first British trading-post west of that chain, on Frazer's Lake, about two degrees farther south ; but no evidence has been obtained that British subjects had ever visited any part 154 1806. of the country drained by the Columbia, above the falls of that river, before the summer of 1811. In that year, Mr. Thompson, astronomer of the Northwest Company, and his party, on their way down the stream, for the purpose of anticipating the Amer- icans at its mouth, did build some huts on the northern branchy and did there open trade with the Flat-head and Kootanie In- dians ; and from those posts Mr. Thompson did indeed hasten down to the ocean, where he, however, found the citizens of the United States in full possession. 1807. Soon after the return of Lewis and Clarke, an effort was made by the Governments of the United States and Great Britain to fix the boundary between the possessions of the two Powers in America west of the Mississippi and the lakes. By the fifth ar- ticle of the convention, agreed on at London in April, 180T, be- tween Messrs. Monroe and Pinckney, on the one part, and the Lords Holland and Auckland, on the other, it was stipulated that " a line drawn due north or south (as the case may require) from the most northwestern point of the Lake of the Woods, until it shall intersect the 49th parallel of north latitude, and, from the point of such intersection, due Avest, along and with the said parallel, shall be the dividing-line between his Majesty's territo- ries and those of the United States, to the westward of the said lake, as far as their said respective territories extend in that quar- ter; and that the said line shall, to that extent, form the south- ern boundary of his Majesty's said territories and the northern boundary of the said territories of the United States : Provided^ That nothing in the present article shall be construed to extend tp the northwest coast of America, or to the territories belonging to or claimed by either party on the continent of America to the westward of the Stoney Mountains.'^ This article was approved by both Governments ; President Jefferson, nevertheless, wished that the proviso respecting the northwest coast should be omitted, as it *" could have little other effect than as an offensive intima- tion to Spain that the claims of the United States extend to the Pacific Ocean. However reasonable such claims may be, com- pared with those of others, it is impolitic, especially at the present moment, to strengthen Spanish jealousies of the United States, which it is probably an object with Great Britain to excite, by the clause in question." The convention, however, was not con- cluded; and no other negotiation, relative to boundaries west of the great lakes, took place between the British and American Governments until 1814. A narrative of the expedition of Lewis and Clarke, compiled from the journals of those officers and of some of their men, was pubhshed at Philadelphia in 1814; the most material circum- stances and discoveries, however, became generally known im- mediately after the return of the exploring party, and the infor- mation led to commercial enterprises on a large scale in the Uni- ted States and in British America. Before noticing these t^nter- * Letter of July 30th, 1807, from Mr. Madison, then Secretary of State of the United States, to Messrs, Monroe and Pinckney. 155 prises more particularly, it should be mentioned, that ever since 18(W. the conclusion of the treaty of commerce and navigation of 1794, between the United States and Great Britain, a considerable trade had been carried on by Americans with the Indians inhabiting the countries about the Upper Mississippi and Lake Superior. The returns from this traffic were made exclusively in furs, which were transported to New York, and thence shipped for London or Canton ; the business was conducted chiefly under the direction and by means of the funds of John Jacob Astor, a German merchant of large capital residing in New York ; though many individuals in the western States and Territories of the re- public were engaged in it on their own account, especially after the acquisition of Louisiana, which opened a much wider field for their exertions. Still, the greater portion of the furs sent from America were those collected by the British trading companies, which were continually extending their establishments west- ward, and even southward, within the supposed limits of the United States, to the annoyance of the citizens of that republic. To all these individuals and associations the discoveries of Lewis and Clarke presented new views of advantages, which each endeavored without delay to appropriate. The British fur-traders made their first establishment beyond 1806. the Rocky Mountains in 1806. An expedition* for this purpose had been contemplated by them in the preceding year, in conse- quence of information respecting the views of the American Gov- ernment, obtained while Lewis and Clarke were spending the winter of 18G4-'5 at the Mandan town on the Mississippi ; but it * The statements in this paragraph are derived principally from D. W. Harmon's Journal of his Voyages ar\A 'Tmvels in the northern parts of America, published at Andover, in Vermont, in 18-20. Harmon was first a clerk, and afterwards a partner, in the Northwest Company, and for several years presided over all its establishments west of ihe Rocky Mountains. Some extracts from his journal may be here inserted. Saf.urday, November 24, 1801 — Some people have just arrived from Montague Ja B=-ts-^e, with a letter Irom Mr. Chaboillez, who informs me that two captains, Clarke and Lewis, with one hundred and eighty sohiiers, have arrived at the Man- dan village, on the Missouri River, which place is situated about three days' distance from the residence of Mr. Chabdillez. They have invited A'lr. Chaboillez to visit them, his s?im that, on their arrival, they hoisted the American flag, and informed the natives that their object was not to trade, but merely to explore the country; and that, as soon as the navigation shall open, they 'design to continue their route across 4he RDcky Mountains, and thence descend to the Pacifi'^ Ocean. Vlednesdmf^ April 10, 180.5.— While at Montagne la Basse, Mr. Chaboillez induced me to eons'^nt to undertake a long and arduous tour of discovery. I am to leave that place about the beginning of June, accompanied by six or seven Canadians and two or three Indians. The first place at which we shall stop '#ill be the Mandan villag-e, on the Missouri River; thence we shall steer our course towards the Rocky Mountains, accompanied by a number of the Mandan Indians, who proceed in that direction every spring, to meet and trade with another tribe of Indians, v/ho reside on the other side of the Rocky Mountains. [This journey I never undertook; a Mr. La Roque attempted to make this tour, but went no faither than the Mandan village.] * At page 281 he says: ''The part of the country west of the Rocky Mountains, with which I am acquainted, has ever since the Northwest Company first made an establishment there, a-hich was in I80i;, gone by the name of New Caledonia," &.c. In manv parts of his work he speaks of Mr. Simon Fiazer as having led the first party of traders beyond the RocKy Mountains in 180G. A review of the work may be found m the London Quarterly Review for Janua- ry, 18-2-2. 156 1806. was not carried into effect until the spring of 1806, when Mr. Si- mon Frazer, a partner of the Northwest Company, estabhshed a trading-post on Frazer^s Lake^ near the 54th parallel, in the country since called Neio Caledonia. The earliest attempts made by citizens of the United States, for similar purposes, were those of an association formed at St. Louis in 1808, called the Missouri Fur Company ; at its head was an enterprising Spaniard, named Manuel Lisa, through whose exertions, chiefly, several trading-posts were, within the two ensuing years, established on the Upper Missouri, and one beyond the Rocky Mountains, on the head- waters of the Lewis, the southern branch of the Columbia. The post on the Lewis appears to have been the first ever formed by white men in the country drained by the Columbia; the enmity of the savages in its vicinity, and the difficulty of procuring a regular supply of food, however, obliged Mr. Henry, the superintendent, to aban- don it in 1810. 1810. Another association, for the prosecution of the fur trade on the northwestern side of the continent, w^hich was formed at New York in 1810, requires particular notice, as the transactions con- nected with it have assumed a character decidedly political. This association was called the Pacific Fur Company.^ Its originator was John Jacob Astor, the German merchant above mentioned, on whose commercial sagacity and efficiency it would be needless to dilate. He was, in fact, the company ; one-half of its shares were held, nominally at least, by other persons, but every meas- ure was dictated by him, and carried into effect by means of his capital. His plan was to establish trading-posts on the Colum- bia and its branches, as well as on the Pacific coasts and the head-waters of the Missouri, which were to be supplied with the necessary articles, either by way of the latter river, or from a principal factory, to be founded at the mouth of the Columbia, whither all the furs collected at the other places were, at stated periods, to be brought. The principal factory was to receive goods by ships sent out annually from New York, which, hav- ing discharged their cargoes at the mouth of the Columbia, were to be reladen with furs for Canton, whence they would carry back to New York teas, silks, and other Chinese produc- tions. It was also contemplated that the Russian settlements on ♦ The sketch of the history of the Pacific Company, which follows, has been de- rived from — I. Letter from J. J. Astor to Mr. Adams, then Secretary of State, dated January 23, 1823, with documents annexed, published with President Monroe's message to Congress, of the 27th of the same month, Oiher letters, unpublished, from Mr. As- tor, have also been examined, and many curious details have been received from him verbally. II. Astoria, or Anecdotes of an Enterprise beyond the Rocky Mountains : by Washing-ton Irving; compiled chiefly from the papers of Mr. Astor. The work is too well known to require farther observations respecting- it. III. Adventures on the Columbia River : by Ross Cox. The author had been em- ployed as a clerk in the Pacilic Company, -w'hich he quitted for a similar situation tinder the Northwest Company ; his book contains many details relative to the fur trade and its establishment in the region of the Columbia. 157 the Pacific should be furnished by the company's vessels with 1810. such foreign articles as they required, furs being taken in ex- change ; and, in order to eifect this more completely, as well as to prevent the occurrence of difficulties, which might otherwise be anticipated, an agent was despatched to St. Petersburgh, who concluded an arrangement securing to the Pacific Company, under certain conditions, the exclusive privilege of trading with the Russian American possessions. For the execution of these plans, Mr. Astor engaged, as part- ners in the concern, a number of persons, nearly all Scotchmen, who had been long in the service of the Nortiiwest Company, together with some Americans and Canadians, who were ac- quainted with the fur trade. These partners were to conduct the business in the west, under the direction of a general agent, cho- sen by them for five years ; and they were to share among them- selves one half of the profits, the other half being retained by Mr. Astor, who advanced all the funds, and superintended the affairs at New York. The persons required for the inferior offices and employments having been also engaged, the first party quitted New York for the Columbia in September, 1810, in the ship Tonquin, commanded by Jonathan Thorne ; in January follow- ing, the second detachment set out fi:om St. Louis, on its way across the continent, under the direction of Wilson Price Hunt, of New Jersey, who had been appointed general agent by the board of partners. The ship Enterprise, Captain Ebbetts, had also been sent in 1809 to the North Pacific, to make prepara- tory researches and inquiries among the Russian settlements, and on the coasts which were to be the scenes of the new com- pany's operations. The Tonquin arrived at the mouth of the Columbia in March, 1811, 1811; and, her goods and passengers having been there landed, ^^^ch 23. she sailed towards the north in search of furs. Before her de- parture, a spot was chosen on the south bank of the river, eight miles from the ocean, as the site of the principal factory, which, in compliment to the originator of the enterprise, was named Astoria. In the course of the ensuing summer, the most essen- tial buildings were erected, gardens were planted, trade was be- gun with the natives, a small vessel was built and launched, and every thing appeared to promise success to the establishment. In July a detachment of persons in the service of the North- July, west Company arrived at Astoria, under the direction of Mr. Thompson, the astronomer of that association, who had left Mon- treal in the previous year, with the object of anticipating the new company in occupying the mouth of the Columbia. On their way down, they built huts and hoisted flags, and bestowed names on various spots, by way of taking possession, as they considered it, of the territory for their sovereign. They, however, arrived too late at the most important point ; and were obliged to retrace their course to the northward, having been received and treated with great attention at the factory by their old friends, Messrs. McDougall, Mackay, and Stuart, the partners of the Pacific Company, then directing its affairs in the west. From the in- 158 1811. formation which has been obtained, it appears to be certain that by this party were established the first British trading posts on the Columbia ; and that they were, indeed, the first white men who ever navigated the northern branch of that river. In the course of this summer, also, several trading-posts were established by the Pacific Fur Company in the- interior of the country; of which, the principal was one situated at the conflu- ence of a river, called the Okanagan, with the Columbia, about four hundred miles from the mouth of the latter. During the winter which followed, the people of Astoria were subjected to many discomforts, but nothing occurred calculated to lessen their hopes as to the ultimate success of the undertaking. Meanwhile, the other party of the Pacific Company's men, proceeding from St. Louis, under Mr. Hunt, ascended the Mis- souri, to the country of the Arickara Indians, near the Great Bend of the river, and thence pursued their journey by land to the Rocky Mountains. After passing this ridge, near the 45th de- gree of latitude, they descended one of the branches of the Lewis, (probably that now called Salmon Rive?\) to the Columbia, and reached Astoria in the spring of 1812, having undergone innumerable difficulties from cold, fatigue, and want of food. Scarcely had they arrived at the factory, when news was received of the destruction of the ship Tonquin and her whole crew, with the exception of the Indian interpreter, at one of the inlets near Nootka Sound ; the crew were overpowered by the savages, who killed the greater part of them immediately, and the vessel was then blown up by the clerk, and others who had taken refuge in the hold. This disaster was calculated to depress the hopes of the persons engaged in the enterprise ; their courage, however, appears to have been undiminished, and they pursued their la- bors diligently, being confident that the company (that is to say, Mr. Astor) could bear much heavier pecuniary losses without in- jury to its credit. 1812. In May, 1812, the Astorians were still farther encouraged, by May 9. the arrival of the ship Beaver from New York with supplies and reinforcements ; and it was determined (unfortunately for the cause, as will afterwards appear) that Mr. Hunt should sail in her to the northern coasts, and visit the Russian settlements, in order to see what commercial intercourse could be carried on with them. He accordingly took his departure in that vessel in Aug. August, leaving the aff'airs of the factory under the direction of Mr. Duncan McDougall, one of the Scotch partners, who had been so long in the service of the Northwest Company. 1813. In January, 1813, the news of the declaration of war by the January. United States against Great Britain reached Astoria, where it was brought by persons sent for the purpose from New York ; and, in the course of June following, Mr. McTavish, one of the partners of the Northwest Company, arrived at the factory from Canada, bringing rumors of the approach of a British naval force to take possession of the mouth of the Columbia. These announce- ments appear to have been received with satisfaction by Mr. McDougall and his brother Britons, three of whom (including 159 Ross Cox, the author of Sia: Years on the Columbia) immedi- 1813. ately quitted the service of the Pacific Company, and entered that of the rival association ; while the others almost unanimously agreed to abandon the enterprise, unless they should speedily re- ceive assistance and supplies from New York. From New York, however, nothing came. The ship Lark had been despatched by Mr. Astor with articles and men for Astoria; but she was wrecked near the coast of one of the Sandwich Islands, in the latter part of 1813. The Government of the Uni- ted States had also determined, in consequence of Mr. Aster's representations, to send the frigate Adams to the north Pacific, for the protection of the infant settlement; but, just as she was about to sail from New York, it became necessary to transfer her crew to Lake Ontario, and the blockade of the American ports by British fleets rendered all farther efforts to convey succors to As- toria unavailing. Soon after the partners of the Pacific Company had formed the resolution, as above mentioned, to abandon the concern unless they should receive assistance, Mr. Hunt, the chief agent, re- Aug. 20. turned to Astoria in the siiip Albatross. He had spent the sum- mer of 1812 in visiting the Russian settlements at Sitca, Una- lashka, and Kodiak, and had collected a valuable cargo of furs, which were carried to Canton in the Beaver. Hunt, however, accompanied that ship no farther than to the Sandwich Islands, where he was informed of the war between the United States and Great Britain ; and, being anxious to convey the news with- out delay to Astoria, he chartered the ship Albatross of Boston, which was then lying at Wahoo, and proceeded in her to the Columbia. .He was at first astounded at the resolution adopted by the other partners, but he was at length induced to concur with them as to its propriety; and, after remaining a few days, he again sailed to the south Pacific, in the Albatross, for the pur- Aug. 26. pose of finding some ship to convey the furs, then stored in the factory, to Canton. At Nooahevah, (one of the Washington Islands, discovered by Ingraham in 1791,) he learned that a Nov. British squadron, under Commodore Hillyer, was on its way to the Pacific, in order to occupy the mouth of the Columbia; upon receiving this news, he hastened to the Sandwich Islands, and, having there chartered the American brig Pedlar, he sailed in her for Astoria, where he arrived on the 2Sth of February, 1814. The fate of the Pacific Company, and of its establishments in Northwest America, had, however, been decided ere the arrival of the Pedlar in the Columbia. On the Tth of October a body of men in the service of the Oct. 7. Northwest Company came down the river to Astoria, under the direction of Messrs. McTavish and Stuart. They arrived with- out either ammunition or provisions, while the people of the factory, who nearly equalled them in number, were well sup- plied in every respect, and their fortifications and heavy guns would have enabled them to withstand any attacks which might have been anticipated under ordinary circumstances. The new comers, however, brought information, upon which the partners 160 1813. at Astoria could depend, and which proved to be perfectly correct, that a large armed ship, the Isaac Todd^ had been fitted out at London, by the Northwest Company, and was on her way to the Columbia, under convoy of a frigate, ivith the object of taking and destroying every thing American in that quarter. Messrs. McTavish and Stuart, on communicating this news, to which they added accounts of the complete blockade of the coasts of the United States by British squadrons, at the same time proposed to purchase the whole of the establishments, furs, and other proper- ty of the Pacific Company, in the territory of the Columbia, at prices to be fixed by common consent; they also offered to engage in the service of the Northwest Company any of the persons at- tached to the American concern, at the same wages which they were then receiving, and to send back to the United States such as might not choose to be thus employed. To these propositions the partners at Astoria resolved to assent ; and an agreement was accordingly signed, between them and the chiefs of the other Oct. 16. party, on the 16th of the month, by which " all the establish- ments, furs^ and property, ^^ above mentioned, were sold to the Northwest Company, for about forty thousand dollars, given in the shape of bills on Montreal.* The business appears to have been managed, on the side of the Pacific Company, almost entirely by Mr. McDougall, whose conduct on many occasions, during the transaction, as well as afterwards, was such as to induce suspicions that he was actu- ated by improper motives of self-interest. It is, however, diffi- cult to determine what other course ought to have been pursued by him and the other partners, under existing circumstances. They might, indeed, have held out their stockaded fort against the enemy, or have effected a retreat with their property to some place in the interior ; but this would have been to no purpose, while they could expect neither to receive supplies of goods for trading from the United States, nor to send their furs for sale to Canton. Mr. Astor declares that he would have preferred the loss of the place and property by a fair capture to a sale which he considered disgraceful ; and those who know him well are con- vinced that he speaks as he feels. But mercantile men are, in general, supposed to consider discretion among their agents as the better part of valor; and MtDougall may have reasonably considered himself bound to act rather for the interests than for the glory of the Pacific Company. Dec. 1. While the business of the transfer of the furs and merchandise at Astoria was in progress, the British sloop of war Racoon en- tered the Columbia, under the command of Captain Black, who had hastened thither in hope of securing a rich share of plunder by the capture of the fort and magazines of the Pacific Com- pany. He found the flag of the United States waving over the * This contract may be found at length in the American State Papers, edited by Lowrie and Franklin, (Miscellaneous,) vol. ii, page 1011. The fourth article con- tains a complete list of all " the establishments, furs, and stock on hand" with their respective valuation; the buildings are valued at £200. 161 factory, which was surrendered, immediately on his appearance, 1813. by the chief agent McDougall ; but the furs and goods which were to reward himself and his crew for their exertions, had be- come the property of their own fellow-subjects, and were then floating up the river in the barges of the Northwest Company. The captain of the Racoon could, therefore, only lower the flag Dec. 12, of the United States, and hoist that of Britain over the factory, the name of which he at the same time, and with due solemnity^ changed to Fort George. These duties being completed, he took his departure for the south.* Three months afterwards, (that is, on the 28th of February, 1814. 1814,) Mr. Huntf arrived at the Columbia in the brig Pedlar, ^^b. 28. which he had, as already stated, chartered for the purpose of con- veying the property of the Pacific Company to Canton. He found Mr. McDougall in charge of the factory, not, however, as an agent of that company, but as a partner of the Northwest Company, into which he had been already admitted ; and Hunt * It will be interesting, if not useful, here to insert the account of the capture of Astoria, as related by Ross Cox, who received his information at the place, shortly- after the event. " Captain Black took possession of Astoria in the name of his Britannic Majesty, and rebapiized it by the name of ' Fort George.' He also msisted on having an in- ventory taken of the valuable stock of furs, and all other property purchased from the American company, with a view to the adoption of ulterior proceedings in Eng- land for the recovery of the value frem the Northwest Company; but he subsequent- ly relinquished this idea, and we heard no more about his claims. The Indians at the mouth of the Columbia knew well that Great Britain and America were dis- tinct nations, and that they were then at war, but were ignorant of the arrangement made between Messrs. McDougall and McTavish, the former of whom siill con- tinued as nominal chief at the fort. On the arrival of the Racoon, which they quickly discovered lo be one of 'King George's fighting ships,' they repaired armed to the fort, and requested an audience of Mr. McDougall. He was somewhat sur- prised at their numbers and warlike appearance, and demanded the object of such an unusual visit. Comcomly, the principal chief of the Chinooks, (whose daughter McDougall had married,) thereupon addressed him in a long speech; in the course of which he said that King George had sent a ship full of warriors, and loaded with nothing but big guns, to take the Americans and make them all slaves, and that, as they (the Americans) were the first white men who settled in their country, and treated the Indians like good relations, they had resolved to defend them from King George's warriors, and were now ready to conceal themselves in the woods close to the wharf, from whence they would be able wich their guns and arrows to shoot all the men that should attempt to land from ihe English boats, while the people in the fort could fire at them with their big guns and rifles. This proposi- tion was uttered with an earnesmess of manner that admitted no doubt of its sin- cerity ; two armed boats from the Racoon were approaching, and, had the people in the fort felt disposed to accede to the wishes of the Indians, every man in them would have been destroyed by an invisible enemy. Mr. McDougall thanked them for their friendly offer ; but added, that notwithstanding the nations were at war, the people in the boats would not injure him or any of his people, and, therefore, requested them to throw by their war-shirts and arms, and receive the strangers as their friends. They at first seemed astonished at this answer; but, on assuring them in the most positive manner that he was under no apprehensions, they consented to give up their weapons for a few days. They afterwards declared they were sorry for having complied with Mr. McDougall's wishes; for when they observed Cap- tain Black, surrounded by his officers and marines, break the bottle of port on the flagstaff, and hoist the British ensign after changing the name of the fort, they re- marked that, however we might wish to conceal the fact, the Americans were un- doubtedly made slaves; and they were not convinced of their mistake until the sloop of war had departed without taking any prisoners." t Mr. Hunt is now the postmaster at St, Louis. 162 1S14. had, therefore, merely to close the concerns of the former associa- tion in that part of America, and to receive the bills given in pay- ment for its effects. Having done this, he re-embarked in the Pedlar ; and, taking with him three of his former companions in trade, he sailed for the United States, by way of Canton. Of the other persons who had been connected with this enterprise, some engaged in the service of the Northwest Company, and some returned across the continent to the United States. Such was the termination of the Astoria enterprise, for no at- tempt has been since made by the Pacific Company, or by any of its members, to form a trading establishment on the north- west coast of America. The scheme was most wisely projected, and its failure can scarcely be attributed to any circumstances, the occurrence of which might have been anticipated when its execution was begun. That ships might be lost at sea, and that the adventurers might suffer from cold, or hunger, or the attacks of savages— casualties such as those were to be expected, and provision was made against them ; but in 1810, when the Ton- quin sailed from New York, no one anticipated that before the end of two years the United States would have been at war with the most powerful maritime nation in the world. The war trav- ersed every part of the plan. Communications between the ports of the United States and the Columbia by sea, were rendered difficult and uncertain ; while those by land were of little advan- tage, and were liable to interruption by the Northwest Company; besides which, the furs could no longer be transported with safety to Canton^ Moreover, all the most active and skilful persons in the employment of the Pacific Company, except Mr. Hunt, were British subjects, whose feelings of attachment for their native land and its cause naturally rendered them discontented, when they were thus placed, in a manner, conspicuously among the ranks of its enemies. If Mr. Astor may be considered as having acted imprudently in any part of his arrangement, it was certain- ly in engaging so large a proportion of persons unconnected with the United States by birth, citizenship, or feelings, in the forma- tion of establishments which were so essentially American in character and objects. That those establishments should have fallen, must be a subject of regret to every American, as there can be little if any doubt that, had they been maintained until the termination of the war, the enterprise would have succeeded, and the whole region drained by the Columbia would now be in the quiet and undisputed possession of the people of the United States. 163 CHAPTER IX. Restoration of the settlement at the mouth of the Columbia to the United Slates, agreeably to the treaty of Ghent, and subsequent assertions ol ihe British Govern- ment with regard to that act — Convention of October, 1818, between Great Briiain and the United States, relative to the countries west of the Rocky Mountains — Florida treaty between Spain and the United Stales, concluded in 1819 — Remarks on the convention of 1790 — Proceedings in the Congress of ihe Unjted States rel- ative to the northwest coasts, in the year 18-20 and in subsequent years — Measures adopted by Great Britain with regard to those territories, m 1821 — Act uf Pari iament estab,ish)ng jurisdiction of British courts throughout the Indian countries of North America — Coalition of the Hudson's Bay and the Northwest Companies — Decree of the Russian Emperor m 1821, and negotiations beiwe n the Governments of the United States, Great Britain, and Russia, for the settlement of their several claims— Conventions of 1824 between Russia and the United Slates, and of 1825 between Russia and Great Britain — Renewal, in 1827, of the convention of 1818 between Great Briiain and the United States — Negotiation between the American and the Russian Governments relative to the renewal of the fourth article of the convention of 1824. The capture of Astoria was not known to the plenipotentiaries 1814. of the United States at Ghent, when they signed the treaty of December 24, 1814. That treaty contained no allusion to boun- daries west of the Lake of the Woods; the subject, however, had been discussed during the negotiation, and the American minis- ters were instructed by their Government to consent to no claim on the part of Great Britain to the post at the mouth of the Co- lumbia, or to any other territory south of the line forming the northern boundary of the United States, which was considered as running along the 49th parallel of latitude. The representa- tives of the Republic at Ghent accordingly proposed that the said parallel should form the dividing-line between the British terri- tories on the north and those of the United States on the south, to the westward of the Lake of the Woods, ''as far as the said re- spective territories extend in that quarter: Provided, That nothing in the present article shall be construed to extend to the north- west coast of America, or to the territories belonging to, or claim- ed by, either party on the continent of America, to the westward of the Stoney Mountains." The British accepted the proposi- tion ; but they insisted on adding to it a stipulation, that their subjects should at all times have access through the territories of the United States to the Mississippi, and the right of navigating that river; which being rejected by the Americans, the subject of boundaries west of the Lake of the Woods was dropped. * By the first article of the treaty of Ghent, it was nevertheless agreed, " that all territory, places, and possessions lohatsoever, * See President Monroe's message to Congress of April 11, 1815, with the docu- ments annexed; also, the statement presented by the Buti.^h ministers at London to Mr. Gallatin, on the 26th of December, 1826, among the documents accompanying President Adams's message to the House of Representatives of March 15, 1828. 164 1815. taken by either party from the other during or after the war^^ ex- cept certain islands in the Atlantic claimed by both, " should he restored vnthout delay f^ and Mr. Monroe, then Secretary of State of the United States, accordingly announced to the British charge d'affaires at Washington, in July, 1815, the intention of the Pres- ident to cause the post at the mouth of the Columbia to be re- occupied immediately. No measure for that purpose was, how- 1817. ever, taken until the latter part of 1817, when Mr. J. B. Prevost and Captain J. Biddle, the commander of the sloop of war Onta- rio, were jointly commissioned to proceed to the mouth of the Columbia, and there to assert the claim of the United States to the sovereignty of the country, in a friendly and peaceful man- ner, and without the employment of force. Mr. Astor had, in the mean time, made several applications to the Government for its aid towards the re-establishment of his factories in that quarter; and it was chiefly in consequence of his solicitations that these measures were adopted. The Ontario sailed from New York for the Pacific on the 4th of October, 1817, under the command of Captain Biddle, carrying out also the other commissioner, Mr. Prevost. In the following month Mr. Bagot, the British envoy at Washington, addressed to the Secretary of State some inquiries respecting the destination of that ship, and the objects of her voyage; and having been in- formed on those points, he, in a succeeding communication, re- Nov. 26. monstrated against any attempt by the United States to occupy the country adjacent to the Columbia, contending that the whole region belonged to Great Britain, " having been early taken pos- session of in his Majesty's name, and been ever since considered as part of his Majesty's dominions ;" and that the establishment there made by American citizens had been voluntarily abandon- ed, '' under an agreement with the Northwest Company, which had purchased their effects, and had ever since retained peaceable possession of the coast." 1818. As soon as the news of the departure of the Ontario and of the objects of her voyage reached London, Lord Bathurst, the British Secretary for the Colonial Department, despatched an order to the agents of the Northwest Company at the mouth of the Columbia, directing them to give due facility for the re-occupation of that Jan. 26. settlement by the officers of the United States, in pursuance of the first article of the treaty of Ghent ; and a similar order was sent fi:om the Admiralty to the commander of the British naval Feb. 1. forces in the Pacific. About the same time. Lord Castlereagh proposed to Mr. Rush, the American envoy at London, that the question respecting the possession of the post on the Columbia should be referred to commissioners. To this Mr. Rush objected, on the simple grounds that the spot was in the possession of the United States before the war, and that it fell by belligerent cap- ture into the hands of Great Britain during the war; which facts being notorious, there could be no doubt that it should be re- stored agreeably to the treaty. Lord Castlereagh, upon this, ad- mitted the full right of the Americans to be reinstated, and to be the party in possession while treating of the title ; although he I 165 expressed his regret at the manner adopted by the United States 1818. to obtain the restitution, which he feared might occasion some dif- February, ficuity. Mr. Rush assured him that the intentions of the Ameri- can Government were in every respect amicable, and that partic- ular care had been taken to avoid all cause of ill feeling. * The Ontario entered the Pacific early in 1818; and it was agreed between the two commissioners, that Captain Biddle should proceed in her to the Columbia, and take possession of the territory, while Mr. Prevost should remain in Chili to attend to some other business. Conformably with this arrangement. Bid- die sailed to the Columbia, which he entered in August; and on the 19th of that month he, without any opposition, displayed the flag of the United States, and asserted their claims to the river and the surrounding territory; after which ceremonies, he re- turned to the South Pacific. In the mean time Commodore Bowles, commanding the Brit- ish naval forces in the river of La Plata, received an order from his Government to aid in the surrender of the post on the Co- lumbia to any American officer who might be commissioned to receive it. This order was transmitted, with directions to see it July, executed, to Captain Sheriff, the senior ofiicer of the British ships in the Pacific, who detached Captain P. Hickey in the frigate Blossom for that purpose ; and the latter gentleman, meeting Mr. Prevost at Valparaiso, offered him a passage to the northwest coast, with the object of effecting the proposed transfer. The American commissioner accepted the offer, and embarked in the Blossom in August. On the 1st of October the ship entered the Columbia; and on the 6th, the settlement of Port George, or As- toria, was surrendered to Mr. Prevost, in due form, by Captain Hickey, and James Keith, the superintendent for the Northwest Company at this place. That no reservation of rights on the part of Great Britain was made on this occasion, the following copies of the acts of delivery and acceptance, the only documents which passed, will fully show. The act of delivery is as follows : " In obedience to the commands of his Royal Highness the Prince Regent, signified in a despatch fi-om the right honorable the Earl Bathurst, addressed to the partners or agents of the Northwest Company, bearing date the 27th of January, 1818, and in obedience to a subsequent order, dated the 26th of July, fi*om W. H. Sheriff, Esq., captain of his Majesty's ship Andromache, we, the undersigned, do, in conformity to the first article of the treaty of Ghent, restore to the Government of the United States, through its agent, J. B. Prevost, Esq., the settlement of Port George, on the Columbia River. Given under our hands, in trip- licate, at Port George, (Columbia River,) this 6th day of October, 1818. — P. Hickey, Captain of his Majestt/s ship Blossom. J. Keith, of the Northwest Company^ * The following account of the restoration of the settlement at the mouth of the Columbia to the united States, is taken from Mr. Prevost's letter to the Secretary of State, written from Monterey, November 11, 1818, and published with President Monroe's message to Congress of April 17, 1822. 1(4 166 1818. To which Mr. Prevost returned this acceptance : ^' I do hereby acknowledge to have this day received, in behalf of the Government of the United States, the possession of the settlement designated above, in conformity to the first article of the treaty of Ghent. Given under my hand, in triplicate, at Fort George, (Columbia River,) this 6th of October, 1818. "J. B. Prevost, Agent for the United States.^' It was nevertheless maintained by the British plenipotentiaries at London, in 1826, during the negotiation between their Gov- ernment and that of the United States relative to the northwest territories — that the restitution of Astoria could not have been demanded as a right by the Americans, agreeably to the treaty of Ghent, because the place was not a national possession, nor a military post, and it was not taken during war ; but that, in order to prevent any imputation on the good faith of Great Britain, the most liberal extension had been given to the terms of the treaty ; and, in 1818, the purchase which the British company had made in 1813, was restored to the United States ; but that particular care was talcen, on the occasion of this restitution, to prevent any misapprehension as to the extent of the concession. Whether or not Astoria were a national possession, according to the rules of civilized nations in general, it is unnecessary to inquire, as there can be no doubt that it was such, agreeably to the principles al- ways supported by Great Britain. In proof of this, nothing more is necessary than to repeat, that the chief cause of the dispute between that Power and Spain, in 1790, was the occupation by Spain of a territory on the northwest coast, which was supposed to have previously become the property of British subjects. Whether the establishment of the Columbia were a military post ^ or not, was of no consequence, as the treaty provided for the res- toration of " all territory, places, and possessions, whatever, taken by either party from the other during the loar ;^^ and that the said establishment was so taken by the British from the Americans, has been already sufficiently shown. The flag of the United States was flying over the fort at Astoria, on the 12th of Decem- ber, 1813, when the British ship Raccoon appeared in the Colum- bia ; and it was hauled down by the commander of that vessel, after the surrender of the place by the chief agent, McDougall. The sale of the efiects of the Pacific Fur Company to the British traders, at a moment when an overpowering force was daily ex- pected, cannot be, in justice, regarded in any other light than as a capitulation, such as are frequently made during war, for the pur- pose of preserving lives or property, which might otherwise be destroyed. Circumstances precisely similar might have occurred, if Astoria had been situated in Virginia or Maine ; but would the British have been thereby justified in retaining the sovereignty of the place ? In proof of the assertion that particular care had been talien on the occasion of this restitution " to prevent any misapprehension as to the extent of the concession made by Great Britain," the British plenipotentiaries cited— first, a despatch from Lord Castle- 167 reagh to the British envoy at Washington, dated February 4, 181§, I8I8. in which he says : " Yon will observe, that whilst this Govern- ment is not disposed to contest with the American Government the point of possession, as it stood in the Columbia River, at the moment of the rupture, they are not prepared to admit the valid- ity of the title of the Government of the United States to this set- tlement. In signifying, therefore, to Mr. Adams the full acqui- escence of your Government in the re-occupation of the limited position which the United States held in that river at the break- ing out of the war, you will, at the same time, assert in suitable terms the claim of Great Britain to that territory, upon which the American settlement must be considered an encroachment." The plenipotentiaries add, that " this instruction was executed verbally by the person to whom it was addressed ;" and they next cite the despatch from Earl Bathurst to the partners or agents of the Northwest Company, mentioned in the act of delivery, of which the following copy is taken from their statement : " Downing street, January 27, 1818. " Intelligence having been received that the United States sloop of war Ontario has been sent by the American Government to establish a settlement on the Columbia River, which was held by that State on the breaking out of the last war, I am to acquaint you that it is the Prince Regent's pleasure, (without, however, admitting the right of that Government to the possession in ques- tion,) that, in pursuance of the first article of the treaty of Ghent, due facility should be given to the re-occupation of the said set- tlement by the officers of the United States ; and I am to desire that you would contribute, as much as lies in your power, to the execution of his Royal Highness's commands. I have, ^d under a bank of earth that fell in upon him, and another being crippled at the same lime. Of the mules, we lost but one by fatigue, and two horses stolen by tht- Kansas Indians; the grass being, along the whole rouie, going and coming, suf- ficient for the support of the hoises and mules. The usual weight in the wagons was about one thousand eight hundred pounds. The usual progress of the wagons was from fifteen to twenty five miles per day. The country being almost all open, level, and prairie, the chief obstructions were ravines and creeks, the banks of which required cutting down ; and, for this purpose, a few pioneers were generallv kept ahe d of the caiavan. This is the first lime that wagons ever went to the Rocky Mountains, and the ease and safety with which it was done prove the facility of communicatmg over land with the P'a^^ific Ocean ; the route from the Sduthern Pass, where the wagons slopped, to ihe Great Falls of the Columbia, being ta<5ier and belter than on this si'le of the mountains, with gr£LSS enough for horses and mules, but a scarcity of game for the support of men." 196 1832. Spirit of the North American Pur Company, which also extended its operations to the countries beyond the Rocky Mountains ; and several independent parties of adventurers have, from time to time, made expeditions in the same direction. In 1832 Captain Bonneville, of the United States army, while on a furlough, led a band of more than a hundred men, with twenty wagons and many mules and horses, carrying goods from Missouri to the Far West ; and remained with them two years, employed in tra- ding, hunting, and trapping, chiefly in the country drained by the Lewis and its branches.* About the same time, Mr. Nathaniel Wyeth, of Massachusetts, endeavored to establish a direct trade in American vessels, be- tween the ports of the United States and the Columbia; from which latter, the returns were to be made in salmon and furs. With these views, he led two expeditions across the continent; and having also sent a vessel around to the west coast, he formed two trading-stations — one called Fort Hall, near the junction of 1834. the river Portneuf with the Leivis, in the southeast angle of Ore- gon ; and another on Wappatoo Island, at the entrance of the Wal- lamet into the Columbia, sixty miles from the Pacific. He Avas, however, forced to abandon his attempts, chiefly in consequence of the opposition indirectly exerted by the Hudson's Bay Com- pany. Captain Wyeth 's expeditions, though thus unprofitable to himself, have been rendered very advantageous to his country- men, by means of tlie information which he has afforded respect- ing the territories of the Columbia. His short memoir, printed by order of the House of Representatives at Washington, in Feb- ruary, 1839,t conveys more exact and useful instruction as to the climate, soil, configuratiofi of the surface, and agricultural and commercial capabilities of those countries, than any other work yet published. 1838. The posts of the Americans west of the Rocky Mountains are few, and those are on a very limited scale. Nearly all their furs are procured directly by themselves, as they trade but little with the Indians, whom the agents of the Hudson's Bay Company take care to keep at enmity with them. The hunters and trap- pers who remain constantly in that country are about three or four hundred in number, nearly all of them white men. In the summer of each year they repair (carrying their furs on pack- horses, or on their backs) to certain places of rendezvous, where they meet the caravans from the United States ; and the trade is there conducted without the use of money, each article, however, bearing a nominal value,| expressed in dollars and cents. The * The adventures of this officer and his party have been made generally known by Mr. Washington Irving, who has compiled from Captain Bonneville's notes a pleasant narrative, somewhat in the vein of Fray Antonio Agapida's Chronicle. + Report of the committee of the House of Representatives relative to the Oregon Terriiory. Mr, Townsend, a naturalist of Philadelphia, who accompanied Captain Wyeth in his second journey across the continent, has published a Narrative of his Adventures. Wyeth's movements are also related incidentally in the account of Capiam Bonneville's expedition. t T hese nominal values are curious. We find, among the prices current on the Colo ado, whiskey quoted at three dollars a pint; tobacco at five dollars a pound; gunpowder at six dollars a pint; dogs (for eating) at fifteen dollars each, &c. 197 principal places of rendezvous are on Green Biver, a branch of 1839. the Colorado, at the foot of the Rocky Mountains, on the western side, near the 42d degree of latitude ; and Pierre^s Hole, a valley about one hundred miles north of the other, from which issues one of the easternmost head-waters of the Snake, or Lewis River, emptying into the Columbia. Both these places are near the sources of a branch of the Platte, there called the Sweet Water, along which lies the route of the caravans from and to Missouri. To conclude with regard to the trade in peltries, for which the countries on the northwest side of America have been hitlierto principally used by the people of civilized nations. It appears to be certain that the business is declining in every part of the con- tinent, but particularly in the territories drained by the Colum- bia, in consequence of the disappearance of the animals yielding the furs and skins. The Hudson's Bay Company successfully endeavor to prevent this decrease on the eastern side of the Rocky Mountains, by allowing the districts in which it is perceived to remain undisturbed for some time. On the Columbia, however, where the control of that body is less absolute, and its tenure is uncertain, such precautions are not used ; and every part is yearly ransacked by traders and trappers, both British and American. How long the fur trade may yet be profitably pursued beyond the mountains, it is impossible to judge from the imperfect data obtained ; there is, however, reason to believe that those regions must soon be abandoned by the Hudson's Bay Company, unless some other mode of employing its capital there can be devised, or the entire possession of the territory can be secured to it. In what other pursuits besides the fur trade British capitalists may advantageously employ their funds in Northwest America, is therefore an interesting question at present. From what has been hitherto learned of those countries, they do not offer pros- pects of a speedy return for the investment of capital in any other way. They contain lands in detached portions, which will immediately yield to the industrious cultivator the means of subsistence, and enable him, perhaps, to purchase some foreign articles of luxury or necessity-. But this is all; they produce no precious metals, or commodities, no gold nor silver, nor coffee, nor cotton, nor opium; nor are they, like India, inhabited by a numerous population, who may be easily forced to labor for the benefit of a few. Such is the state of the fur trade in the interior of Northwest America, according to the most recent accounts. In the north Pacific, this business is no longer carried on by vessels of the United States, which have been completely excluded from the coasts, by the prohibitory measures of the Russians, and the ac- tivity of the Hudson's Bay Company. The only North American furs which now enter China by sea, are brought thither direct from New York or from London ; but, in compensation for the loss of that trade, the Pacific is now traversed in all parts, by nu- merous American whaling vessels, giving employment to nearly fo\ir thousand seamen. For these vessels, the Sandwich Islands form the principal place of resort, although they often enter the 14 198 1839, Bay of San Francisco, in California, in order to obtain water and fresh provisions. The Sandwich Islands* are now under the au- thority of a native Sovereign ; the Bay of San Francisco still con- stitutes a part of the Mexican possessions. How long will these two important places remain in their present political condition? Great Britain has pretensions to the sovereignty of Owyhee; and it is rumored that her Government has made propositions to that of Mexico for the purchase of California. Should the British de- termine to take possession of Owyhee, there is no probability that they could be prevented from so doing. With regard to Califor- nia, however, it is not to be supposed that they would occupy the country without authorization from its present possessors ; and it is scarcely possible that any Mexican administration will venture to sanction such a measure, as it would undoubtedly bring imme- diate ruin upon the Republic. With regard to colonization in Northwest America, it has al- ready been shown that the Hudson's Bay Company is adverse to the existence of a free population in its territories. The only settlement which appears to have been made under its auspices, beyond the Rocky Mountains, is that on the Wallamet, where a few old Canadian voyageurs are permitted to reside, with their Indian wives and half-breed families, on condition of remaining faithful to their liege lords of the company. In the neighborhood of each large factory, indeed, a portion of ground is cleared and cultivated, and dwelling-houses, mills, and shops for artisans are * These islands have been so frequently mentioned in the course of this memoir, that a short geographical notice of them may be usefully inserted here. They are in number ten, situated in the north Pacific, just within the limits of the torrid zone, between 18| and 22^ degrees of latitude, about three thousand miles, or twenty days' sail southwest from the mouth of the Columbia, and about twice that distance from Canton, which lies nearly due west from them. The largest of the islands, Owyhee^ (or Hawaii^ as it is also sometimes written,) is about four thousand miles in superficial extent, and is supposed to contain eighty thousand inhabitants. The principal port is Honoruru, in the island of Woo.hoo, or Oahu, said to be the most fertile and agreeable of the group. They were discovered by Cook in 1*78, and surveyed by Vancouver, who, in 1794, obtained from Tamahamaha, King of Owyhee, the cession of that island to Great Britain, as related at page 138. Tama- •hamaha died in 1819, after having reduced all the Sandwich Islands under his au- thority; and they are at present governed by his reputed grandson, Kauikeaouli, or, as he styles himself, Tamahamaha III. The Christian religion was established, or rather the ancient religion was over- thrown, after the death of Tamahamaha; and several missionaries, nearly all of them Americans, of the Presbyterian church, are at present engaged in propagating their doctrines among the people. Some time since, two French Catholic priests entered the same field as missionaries; but they were persecuted, branded as idola- ters, and at length driven from the islands by the Government, at the instigation,, it is supposed, of the Protestants. The affair was forgotten until last year, when the French frigate Artemise arrived at Honoruru, and retribution was exacied for the alleged outrages, in a manner entirely conformable with the honor and glory of the Grande Nation. The value of these islands to the commerce of the north Pacific is incalculable. They form, indeed, a hotel and storehouse for the refreshment and supply of ves- sels, situated in the most convenient position, immediately (>n the hijjhway between Asia and America. Their importance as a place of resort for the whaling vessels of the United Slates maybe estimated from the fact, that during the months of Sep- tember, October, and November, 1839, they were visited by thirty-three ships, four brigs, and one schooner, all American, employed in that branch of fishery. It is scarcely necessary to add, that, for the peace and freedom ol navigation of the Pa- cific, the Sandwich Islands should continue politically independent. This is, how- ever, scarcely to be expected. 199 erected ; but these improvements are all entirely subservient to 1839. the uses and objects of the company ; all proceedings not strictly connected with its pursuits being discouraged, and all persons not under its authority being treated as intruders. Of the per- sons in the employment of the association, a small number only are white men ; and rarely is a white woman to be seen in its territories. The half-breed voyageurs, trappers, and hunters, are better, and less expensive, than any others who could be obtain- ed; and the Indian and half-breed women are the most useful helpmates, with whom all ties may, moreover, be easily dissolved. There is, in consequence, little prospect of the diffusion of the pure Anglo-Saxon race through countries possessed by the Hud- son's Bay Company, The first emigrations from the United States for the purpose of settlement, without any special commercial views, in the coun- tries of the Columbia, appear to have been made in 1832. Three years afterwards, a small colony of Americans was established on the VVallamet, about seventy miJes from its mouth, under the direction of Mr. Jason Lee, and other Methodist clergymen; and since that period, the number of citizens of the United States per- manently residing beyond the Rocky Mountains has been much increased. With regard to the condition of these settlements, no information has been recently obtained. In 1837 they were all prospering ; and it may be supposed that they are continuing to do well, inasmuch as a large number of emigrants sailed for the Columbia from New York in the autumn of last year, under the superintendence of one of the founders of the Wallamet colony ; and other persons are said to be now in that city preparing for a similar expedition. It is not, however, by means of such long and dangerous voy- ages that citizens of the United States are to effect settlements in Northwest America; and it will doubtless be the care of their Government to render smoother and more secure the routes across the continent to those countries, lying entirely within the undis- puted limits of the Republic, In the possession of these routes, the Americans have infinite advantages over the British, and all other nations, for occupying the regions in question ; and nothing more is required to render the journey through them safe and easy, than the establishment of a few posts, at convenient dis- tances apart, on a line between the Missouri and the passes of the Rocky Mountains, which may serve as forts to overawe the savages, and as caravanserais for the repose, and possibly even for the supply, of travellers. When this has been done, the Amer- ican settlements on the Columbia will soon acquire that degree of extent and stability, which will render nugatory all claims on the part of other nations to the possession of those countries. Within the last five or six years the Government as well as the people of the United States have begun to devote their at- tention seriously to matters connected with the northwest regions of this continent. Numerous petitions have been presented, and motions have been made and discussed, in both Houses of the Federal Legislature, for the annulment of the existing arrange- mo 1839, ment with Great Britain, the miUtary occupation of those territo- ries, and the extension of American jurisdiction over them ; and the Executive has been sedulously engaged in collecting the in- formation which may be necessary in order to place the subject in a proper light, and to render movements effective at the proper time. These proceedings are all so recent, and so well known, that details respecting them would be needless. Suffice it to say, that no resolution has been taken on any of the plans pro- posed ; and that the position of the American Government with regard to the territories claimed for the United States on the Pa- cific, continues as fixed by its conventions with Great Britain, Russia, and Mexico.* The writer has now completed the task assigned to him, by presenting an exposition of the most important circumstances rel- ative to the discovery and occupation of the northwest coasts and territories of North America, by the people of various civilized nations, and of the pretensions advanced by the Governments of those nations in consequence. To indicate farther the course which should be pursued on the part of the United States with re- gard to their claims, lies not within his province. To conclude: he has, as he conceives, demonstrated that the titles of the United States to the possession of the regions drained by the river Colum- bia^ derived from priority of discovery and priority of occupation^ are as yet stronger^ and m^ore consistent with the principles of na- tional rights than those of any other Power, from whatsoever source derived. That those regions must be eventually possessed by the people of the United States only, no one acquainted with the progress of settlement in the Mississippi valley during the last fifteen years will be inclined to question ; but that Great Britain will, by every means in her power, evade the recognition of the American claims, and oppose the establishment of an American population on the shores of the Pacific, may be confidently ex- pected, from the dispositions evinced by her GJovernment in all its recent discussions with the United States. * That the British Government observes its engagements with equal strictness^ there is some reason to doubt; inasmuch as it is said that a large tract in the angle formed by the Pacific and the Strait of Fuca, north of Bulfinch's Harbor, has been recently granted in full possession to th^ Hudson's Bay, or some other company, which lis actually engaged in dividing and selling the lands. Wl APPENDIX A. EXTENT OF THE PART OF THE WEST COAST OF NORTH AMERICA SEEN BY FRANCIS DRAKE IN 1579. All that is known respecting Drake's visit to the northwest coast of America, has been derived from two narratives of his expedition, which are — 1. " The Famous Yoyage of Sir Francis Drake into the South Sea, and there hence, about the lohole globe of the earth; begun in the year of our Lord 1577: by Francis Pretty f published in London by Hakluyt, in 1589, in his " Voyages and Navigations of the English f^ and — 2. '^ The World Encompassed by Sir Francis Drake, collected out of the Notes of Mr. Francis Fletcher, Preacher in this employment, and compared loith divers others^ Notes, that icent in the same voyage.'^'' It was published in 1652; the name of the compiler is not known. Fletcher's Journal is still preserved in manuscript in the British Museum ; Burney, who con- sulted it, could, however, gather nothing from it, in addition to what is published. The Famous Yoyage is undoubtedly one of the '' divers others* notes''^ mentioned in the title, as whole sentences, and even paragraphs, are the same in both narratives.* The Famous Yoyage is a plain and succinct account, in general suffi- ciently clear, of what the writer saw, or believed to have taken place, during the voyage. With regard to the extent of coast observed by Drake on the northwestern side of California, he says only what is contained in the following paragraph : " The 5th day of June, being in 43 degrees of the pole arctic, being speedily come out of the extreme heat, we found the air so cold that our men, being pinched with the same, complained of the extremity thereof; and the further we went, the more the cold increased upon us. Where- upon, we thought it best for that time to seek the land, and did so, finding it not mountainous, but low plain land, and we drew back again without landing, till we came within 38 degrees towards the line; in which height it pleased God to send us into a fair and good bay, with a good wind to enter the same. In this bay we anchored on the ITth of June." After which, the writer goes on to describe the occurrences on shore. Nothing is here said of the latitude, or of the day of the month, in which the land was first seen ; it is, however, to be inferred from the context, that they did not advance far towards the north after the 5th of June, on which they were in the latitude of 43. Such was the opinion of Hak- * The part of the Famous Voyage relating to the northwest coast may be found in the third volume of the reprint of Hakluyi's Collection, pag^e 523. The World Encompassed is contained in the second volume of Osborne's Collection of Voyages, page 434. 202 luyt, who, in many parts of his works, says that Drake sailed northwest of Cahfornia to the 43d degree. Purchas, in his Pilgrims, published in 1617, (page 52, vol. i,) relates that " Sir Francis Drake sailed on the other side of America to 43 degrees of northerly latitude, and with cold was forced to retire." And of all the other accounts and notices of this voyage, written before 1750, three only have been found, in which it is asserted that the English proceeded north of the 43d parallel in the Pacific. The famous navigator, John Davis, in his World's Hydrographical Dis- covery, published in 1595, (Hakluyt, vol. iv, page 459,) says : " And after that Sir Francis Drake was entered into the South Sea, he coasted all the western shores of America, until he came into the septentrional latitud.e of 48 degrees." To this assertion, however, no credit can be given, inas- much as it is nowhere else pretended that Drake saw any part of the western side of America, between Guatulco and the 38th degree. Admiral Sir William Monson, in his Naval Tracts^ first published in 1712, also declares, that " from the 16th of April to the 15th of June, Drake sailed without seeing land; and arrived in 48 degrees, thinking to find a passage into our seas, which land he named New Albion." Unfortu- nately for the admiral's consistency, he remarks, in many other parts of his Tracts^ that Cape Mendocino, which is near the 40th parallel, is " the farthest land discovered^'' and " the furthermost known part of America.'''* The World. Encompassed is the only work, besides the two above men- tioned, published before the middle of the last century, in which it is maintained that Drake advanced along the west coast of America beyond the 43d degree of latitude ; and upon the statements there given Burney founds his assertion, that the whole western shore of the continent be- tween the 42d and the 48th parallels, was first discovered by the English navigator. A few extracts from the narrative, with observations upon them, will serve to show that this decision is not warranted by sufficient authority. * " From Guatulco," says the Rev. Mr. Fletcher, " we departed April 15, setting our course directly into the sea; whereupon we sailed five hundred leagues in longitude to get a wind, and between that and the 3d of June one thousand four hundred leagues in all, till we came into the latitude of 42 degrees north, where, in the night following, we found such an alteration of the heat into extreme and nipping cold, that our men in general did grievously complain thereof # # # # it came to that extremity, that in sailing but 2 degrees farther to the northward in our course, # * # # ^^^ meat, as soon as it was removed from the fire, would presently, in a manner, be frozen up; and our ropes and tackling, in a few days, were grown to that stiffness, that what three men before were able to perform, now six men, with their best strength and utmost endeavor, were hardly able to accomplish. # * * * The land in that part of America bearing farther out into the west than we before imagined, we were nearer on it than we were aware ; and yet, the nearer still we came unto it, the more extremity of cold did seize upon us. The 5th day of June we were forced by contrary winds to run in with ♦ The part of the World Encompassed, devoted to Drake's Voyage in the north Pacific, is spread over a number of pages, the greater part of which are occupied with the speculations (of the compiler, no doubt) on the causes of the great coldness of the atmosphere in that quar- ter, and with accounts of the ceremonies of the natives; ail of which are here omitted. 203 the shore, which we then first descried ; and to cast anchor in a bad bay, the best road we could for the present meet with, where we were not with- out some danger, by reason of the many extreme gusts and flaws that beat upon us. # # * * In this place was no abiding for us, and to go farther north the extremity of the cold would not permit us ; and the winds directly bent against us, having once gotten us under sail again, commanded us to the southward, whether we would or no. From the height of 48 degrees, in which we now were, to 38, we found the land, by coasting along it, to be but low and reasonably plain ; every hill, whereof we saw many, but none very high, though it were in June, and the sun in his nearest approach unto them, being covered with snow. In 38 de- grees 30 minutes, we fell in with a convenient and fit harbor ; and June 17 came to anchor therein, where we continued till the 23d of July ; during all which time, notwithstanding it was the height of summer, and so near the sun, yet we were constantly visited with like nipping colds as we had felt before. * # * # Neither could we, at any time, in whole fourteen days together, find the air so clear as to be able to take the height of sun or star. * # * * How unhandsome and deformed appeared the face of the earth itself, showing trees without leaves, and the ground without greenness, in those months of June and July ! * * # For the causes of this extremity, * * the chiefest we conceive to be, the large spreading of the Asian and American continents, which, (some- what northward of these parts,) if they be not fully joined, yet seem to come very near one to another; from whose high and snow-covered moun- tains, the north and northwest winds, the constant visiters of these coasts, send abroad their frozen nymphs. * * * # ^nd that the north and northwest winds are here constant in June and July, as the north wind alone is in August and September, we not only found it by our own ex- perience, but were fully confirmed in the opinion thereof by the continued observations of the Spaniards. * # * # Though we searched the coast diligently, even unto the 48th degree, yet found we not the land to trend so much as one point in any place towards the east, but rather run- ning on continually northwest, as if it went directly to meet with Asisu" Upon examining these statements, given in the World Encompassed, we find that on the third of June, Drake's vessel was in the latitude of forty -tiDo degrees; and that on lYiQ fifth of the same month she anchored near the American coast, in a bay situated under th.Q forty-eighth parallel ; that is to say, in the course oi sixty hours at furthest^ she advanced at least three hundred and sixty miles, ivith the winds blowing violently against her. Such a rate of sailing, under such circumstances, could not be attained by any vessel at the present time; and when we, moreover, take into con- sideration the constant obscurity of the heavens, and the constant agitation of the English ship by the waves, which must have rendered it impossi- ble to observe the height of the sun, with the best instruments then in use, we may safely conclude that the account of the latitudes is erroneous. This incongruity is not noticed by Captain Burney, who bases his decis- ion entirely upon the authority of the World Encompassed. He considers as perfectly " explicit upon the subject the statement in that narrative, that the English " searched the coast diligently, even unto the 48th de- gree, yet they found not the land to trend so much as one point in any place towards the east." He, however, omits the remainder of the sen- tence — "but rather running on continually northwest, as if it went directly 204 to meet with Asia," although he must have known that it destroys the value of the first part of the evidence, inasmuch as the coast nowhere between the 41st and the 47th parallels trends so much as one point to- wards the west. Burney, moreover, being desirous to establish the character of the World Encompassed for correctness, scrupulously abstains from remarks upon the accounts given in that work, of the extreme coldness of the air in the north Pacific during the summer. That persons coming suddenly from the torrid zone into a region 20 degrees farther north should find the change of temperature disagreeable, is quite natural ; but that " meat, as soon as it was removed from the fire, should presently be frozen up," and the ropes and tackling of a vessel be stiffened by ice, during the month of June, in any part of the ocean between the 40th and 44th degrees of lati- tude, is wholly incredible. The opinion that Drake discovered the northwest coast of America as far as the 48th degree of latitude was not countenanced by any other writers than the three above cited before the year 1750, when it was adopted by the compilers of the Biographia Britannica, in their life of the hero. Among those who considered the 43d parallel as the northern limit of that navigator's course in the Pacific, are De Laet, in his Histoire du Nouveau Monde; Ogilby, in his History of America; Heylin, in his Cos- mography; Locke, in his History of Navigation ; and last, not least, Dr» Samuel Johnson, in his Biography of Drake. In the maps of America, contained in Heylin's Cosmography,* printed in 1708, and in the curious Historical Atlas of Mitchell and Sen ex, published in 1720, California is represented as an island extending from the 23d parallel to the 44th, in the northern part of which New Albion is located. These authorities will serve at least to show which of the two opinions may be regarded as an innovation. The question is of little importance. The British Government has, however, on many occasions, evinced, indirectly, a desire to found some claim to the possession of the northwestern side of America upon the sup- posed discoveries of Drake in that quarter. The name New Albion will be generally found occupying a large space on all maps of America published in Great Britain. In the chart attached to the Journal of Vancouver's ex- pedition, the whole of California is thus designated ; and as recently as 1827, it has been insisted on the part of the British Government that Great Britain had obtained grants of territory on the northwest coast of America, from the inhabitants, before the existence of the United States as a nation. To conclude : there is no absolute evidence that Drake did not discover the northwest American coast as far north as the 48th degree ; but, on the other hand, the assertion that he did is not supported by adequate testi- mony, and, where originally made, it is accompanied by statements irre- concilable with the results of experience. It may be admitted that the English did, in 1579, see the part of that coast included between the 38th and the 43d parallels ; but it is equally certain, if not more so, that such part had been already discovered by the Spaniards, under Cabrillo and Ferrelo, in 1543. * It may be here remarked, that in Heylin's map of America, the northwest coast beyond California to the extremiiy of Aliaska, is laid down almost accurately. Yet we have no ac- Gounts of any discoveries in that part of the Pacific of a date earlier than 1741. 205 B. PRETENDED DISCOVERY, BY MALDONADO, OF A NORTHERN PASSAGE BE- TWEEN THE ATLANTIC AND THE PACIFIC IN 1588. The Spanish manuscript discovered by ilmoretti in the Ambrosian Library at Milan, and of which he pubhshed a French translation in 1812, (see page 40,) is entitled : " A Relation of the Discovery of the Strait of A7iian, made by me, Captain Lorenzo Ferrer de Maldonado, in the year 1588, in which is written the order of the navigation, the situation of the place, and the manner of fortifying it^ It consisted of thirty-five para- graphs, the most material of which are presented by Burney in his His- tory of Voyages in the South Sea, vol. v, page 167 ; they are as follows : " By means of this strait, the King would render himself sole master of all the spices, and make a profit of five millions annually, by constrain- ing other nations to send to Spain to procure them. Spain, therefore, ought immediately to set about securing and fortifying this strait. But it is necessary that I should show the route which must be taken, the ports that will be found, and that I add thereto a narration of my voyage. ^'Departing from Spain or Lisbon, the course is to the northwest four hundred and fifty leagues, by which you will arrive to 60 degrees north latitude, where you will have sight of Friesland. Thence, the route must be to the west, keeping in the said latitude one hundred and eighty leagues to the land of Labrador, at the place where begins the Strait of Labrador. Here are two channels: one leading to the northeast, and the other to the northwest. The course must be in that to the northwest, to 64 degrees, where the channel changes its direction; and you will have to sail north one hundred and twenty leagues, to the latitude of 72 de- grees. The channel then again turns to the northwest, and you run in it to 75 degrees. You then entirely quit the Strait of Labrador, and be- gin to lower your latitude, steering west-by-south three hundred and fifty leagues, to latitude 71 degrees. It was at this place in our voyage that we discovered a high land, but we could not discern if it was island or con- tinent. Nevertheless, we concluded that if it was the main land it would be joined to New Spain. From seeing this land, you steer west-south- west four hundred and forty leagues, to 60 degrees latitude, where should be found the Strait of Anian. In this manner they will make the same navigation which I have made, at least from Friesland to this place. The distance to be sailed, from Spain to the Strait of Anian, is one thousand seven hundred and ten leagues. "When we went out from the Strait of Labrador, which was at the beginning of the month of March, we had much to sufi"er from the dark- ness, the cold, and tempests. Those who think this sea can be entirely frozen over are in an error ; for, by reason of its extent, of the great currents which are in the strait, and the high waves which keep the sea continu- ally in motion, it cannot be frozen ; but on the shores, and in the places where the sea is tranquil, I think it may be frozen. " When we were on our return, in the month of June, and in part of July, we had continual light, and the sun never descended below the horizon, till we were the second time in the middle of the Strait of Labra- dor. Whilst the sun remained continually above the horizon, the air was so warm that we had to suffer as much from the heat as in the hottest time in Spain. 206 " The strait which we discovered in 60 degrees north latitude appears to be that which, from an ancient tradition, the cosmographers in their charts call the Strait of Anian ; and, if it is true that such a strait exists, it ought, necessarily, to leave Asia on one side, and America on the other. When we went out of the strait into the Great Sea, [the Pacific Ocean,] we navigated along the coast of America more than one hundred leagues, having our prow to the southwest till we found ourselves in 55 degrees latitude. We then left this coast, which we saw prolonged itself towards the south, and directed our prow to the west four days, at thirty leagues per day, and discovered a large land and great chains of mountains. We navigated along it, keeping at a distance, sometimes to the northeast, sometimes to the northwest, and sometimes to the north, but in general to the northeast. We could not know particular things of this coast, be- cause we kept far off from the land. I can only affirm that the country is peopled, because in many places we saw men ; and we judged that these lands were the lands of the Tartars, or of Catay. At length, fol- lowing this same coast, we again found ourselves in the Strait of Anian, from which we had gone fifteen days before into the Great Sea, which we knew to be the South Sea, where lie the countries of Japan, China, the Moluccas, and New Guinea, with the discovery of Captain Quiros, and all the western coast of New Spain and Peru. " At the mouth of the strait by which you enter the South Sea, on the American side, is a port capable of containing five hundred ships. The country is pleasant ; the temperature agreeable ; the cold of the winter not rigorous, though in 59 degrees north latitude, to judge by the kinds of firuits which were found. Here are very high trees, some producing good fruits like to those in Spain, and others not before known to us. " The strait has fifteen leagues of extent, in which it makes six turns or angles, and the two entrances are north and south from each other. The breadth of the northern entrance is less than half a quarter of a league. The southern entrance, which is near the port, is more than a quarter of a league in breadth ; and in the middle is a great rock or islot, about two hundred paces in diameter, of a circular form, and of the height of three stades. The channel, on one side of this islot, is so shallow as to be navigable only for boats ; but the channel between the islot and the land of America, though not quite half a quarter of a league in breadth, has deep water for ships. The borders are low ; and forts might be built both on the main land and on the islot, which would straiten the passage to within musket shot. The passage might also be shut or locked up with a chain across, which with industry might be formed strong enough to stand against the currents. " It is difficult to know the entrance of the strait on the northern side, because the two shores interlock, reciprocally hiding each other. In fact, when we first arrived there, we were some days without perceiving it, al- though we had already entered, being guided by a good narrative of Juan Martinez, pilot-mayor, who was a Portuguese, a native of Algarva, a very old man and of much experience. But I have taken marks by the moun- tains, to enable me to make another navigation if I should have occasion. " In the port where we cast anchor, we lay from the begiiming of April to the middle of June. At this epoch, we saw come from the South Sea to enter the strait a great ship of eight hundred tons, which made us take to our arms ; but we reciprocally came to know each other as peaceable 207 voyagers. The sailors had the generosity to give us some of the mer- chandise of their cargo, which resembled the things which come to us from China, as brocades, silks, porcelain, and other effects of value, as precious stones and gold. These people appeared to us to be Moscovites, or Hanseatics ; that is to say, those who make their residence in the Port of Saint Michael, [Hamburg.] They said they came from a large town, which was distant from the strait a little more than one hundred leagues, where they had left another vessel of their country. We could not ob- tain much information from these people, because they spoke to us with little confidence and much circumspection ; and, for that reason, we soon separated, and, having left them near the strait and in the North Sea, we took the route for Spain." The London Quarterly Review for October, 1816, contains an exposi- tion of the numerous falsehoods and blunders contained in this relation, and pronounces "the pretended voyage of Maldonado to be the clumsy and audacious forgery of some ignorant German, from the circumstance of fifteen leagues to the degree being used in some of the computations." The reviewer avows his belief that Maldonado did make a voyage in the north Pacific, about the end of the 16th century, and that he may possi- bly have reached Prince WiUiam's Sound or Cook's Inlet, either of which might have been then at first mistaken lor a strait separating Asia from America. C. ACCOUNT OF THE VOYAGE OF JUAN DE FUCA IN 1592. [Extracted fram Purchas's Pilgrims, vol. iii, page 849.*] "^ Note made by me, Michael Lock^ the elder ^ touching the strait of sea, commonly called Pretum Anian, in the South Sea, through the northwest passage of Meta Incognita. " When I was at Venice, in April, 1596, happily arrived there an old man, about sixty years of age, called commonly Juan de Fuca, but named properly Apostolos Valerianus, of nation a Greek, born in Gephalonia, of profession a mariner, and an ancient pilot of ships. This man, being come lately out of Spain, arrived first at Leghorn, and went thence to Flo- rence, where he found one John Douglas, an Englishman, a famous mar- iner, ready coming for Venice, to be pilot of a Venetian ship for England, in whose company they came both together to Venice. And John Dou- glas being acquainted with me before, he gave me knowledge of this Greek pilot, and brought him to my speech ; and in long talks and confer- ence between us, in presence of John Douglas, this Greek pilot declared, in the Italian and Spanish languages, thus much in efi'ect as folio weth : " First : he said that he had been in the West Indies of Spain forty years, and had sailed to and from many places thereof, in the service of the Spaniards. * The orthography of the English is modernized; the letters are, however, given in their original Spanish- Italian lingua franca. 208 "Also, he said that he was in the Spanish ship which, in returning from the Islands Philippirtas^ towards Nova Spania^ was robbed and taken at the Cape California by Captain Candish, Englishman, whereby he lost sixty thousand ducats of his own goods. " Also, he said that he was pilot of three small ships, which the Yiceroy of Mexico sent from Mexico^ armed with one hundred men, under a cap- tain, Spaniards, to discover the Straits of Anian, along the coast of the South Sea, and to fortify in that strait, to resist the passage and proceed- ings of the English nation, which were feared to pass through those straits into the South Sea ; and that, by reason of a mutiny which hap- pened among the soldiers for the misconduct of their captain, that voyage was overthrown, and the ship returned from California to Nova Spania^ without any thing done in that voyage; and that, after their return, the captain was at Mexico punished by justice. " Also, he said that shortly after the said voyage was so ill ended, the said Viceroy of Mexico sent him out again in 1592, with a small caravel and a pinnace, armed with mariners only, to follow the said voyage for the discovery of the Straits of Anian, and the passage thereof into the sea, which they call the North Sea, which is our northwest sea ; and that he followed his course in that voyage, west and northwest in the South Sea, all along the coast of Nova Spania, and California^ and the Indies, now called North America, (all which voyage he signified to me in a great map, and a sea card of mine own, which I laid before him,) until he came to the latitude of 47 degrees ; and that there finding that the land trended north and northeast, with a broad inlet of sea, between 47 and 48 degrees of latitude, he entered thereinto, sailing therein more than twenty days, and found that land trending still sometime northwest and northeast, and north, and also east and southeastward, and very much broader sea than was at the said entrance, and that he passed by divers islands in that sail- ing; and that at the entrance of this said strait, there is, on the northwest coast thereof, a great headland or island, with an exceeding high pinnacle, or spired rock, like a pillar thereupon. ^' Also, he said that he went on land in divers places, and that he saw some people on land clad in beasts' skins; and that the land is very fi*uit- ful, and rich of gold, silver, pearls, and other things, like Nova Spania. " And also, he said that he being entered thus far into the said strait, and being come into the North Sea already, and finding the sea wide enough everywhere, and to be about thirty or forty leagues wide in the mouth of the straits, where he entered, he thought he had now well discharged his oifice ; and that not being armed to resist the force of the savage people, that might happen, he therefore set sail, and returned home- wards again towards Nova Spania-, where he ^yysnq^^X Acapulco, anno 1592, hoping to be rewarded by the Viceroy for this service done in the said voyage. " Also, he said that after coming to Mexico, he was greatly welcomed by the Viceroy, and had promises of great reward ; but that having sued there two years, and obtained nothing to his content, the Viceroy told him that he should be rewarded in Spain, of the King himself, very greatly, and willed him therefore to go to Spain ; which voyage he did perform. " Also, he said that when he was come into Spain, he was welcomed there at the King's court ; but after long suit there also, he could not get any reward there to his content ; and, therefore, at length he stole away 209 out of Spain, and came into Italy, to go home again and live among his own kindred and countrymen, he being very old. "■ Also, he said that he thought the cause of his ill reward had of the Spaniards, to be for that they did understand very well that the EiUglish nation had now given over all their voyages for discovery of the north- west passage ; wherefore they need not fear them any more to come that way into the South Sea, and, therefore, they needed not his service therein any more. ^' Also, he said that, understanding the noble mind of the Queen of England, and of her wars against the Spaniards, and hoping that her Majesty would do him justice for his goods lost by Captain Candish, he would be content to go into England, and serve her Majesty in that voy- age for the discovery perfectly of the northwest passage into the South Sea, if she would furnish him with only one ship of forty tons burden and a pinnace ; and that he would perforin it in thirty days time, from one end to the other of the strait ; and he willed me so to write to England. " And upon conference had twice with the said Greek pilot, I did write thereof accordingly to England, unto the right honorable the old Lord Treasurer Cecil, and to Sir Walter Raleigh, and to Master Richard Hak- luyt, that famous cosmographer, certifying them hereof And I prayed them to disburse one hundred pounds, to bring the said Greek pilot into England with myself, for that my own purse would not stretch so wide at that time. And I had answer that this action was well liked, and greatly desired in England ; but the money was not ready, and therefore this action died at that time, though the said Greek pilot perchance liveth still in his own country, in Cephaloyda, towards which place he went within a fortnight after this conference had at Venice. '' And in the mean time, while I followed my own business in Venice, being in a lawsuit against the company of merchants of Turkey, to re- cover my pension due for being their consul at Aleppo, which they held irom me wrongfully ; and when I was in readiness to return to England, I thought 1 should be able of my own purse to take with me the said Greek pilot ; and, therefore, I wrote unto him from Venice a letter, dated July, 1596, which is copied here under : * " ^/ Mag*^^- Sig'^- Capitan Juan de Fuca, Piloto de India, amigo md& char^" en ^efalonia. "MuY HoNRADo Senior: Siendo yo para buelvermoien Inglatierra den- tre de pocas mezes, y accuerdandome de lo trattado entre my y V. M. en Yenesia sobre el viagio de las Indias, me ha parescido bien de scrivir esta carta aV. M. para que se tengais animo de andar con migo, puedais escri- * To the Magnificent Captain Juan de Fuca, Pilot of the hidies; my most dear friend in Cephar Ionia. Most Honored Sir: Being about to return to England in a few months, and recollecting what passed between yon and myself at Venice respecting ♦he voyajje to the Indies, Ihave thougtit proper to write you this letter, so that if you have a mind to "go with me, you can writ« me word direcily how \\ e are to arrange. You may send me your letter with this English ves- sel, which is at Zanie, (if you should find no better opportunity,) directed to the care of Mr. Eleazer Hyckman, an English merchant, Saint Thomas street, Venice. God preserve you, sir. Your friend, MICHAEL LOCK, of England. Venice, Jidy 1, 1596. 210 birme presto en que maniera quereis consertaros. Y puedais embiarmi vuestra carta con esta nao Ingles, que sta al Zante (sino hallais otra coi- untura meior) con el sobrescritto que diga en casa del Sennor Eleazar Hycman, mercader Ingles, al tragetto de San Tomas en Venisia. Y Dios guarde la persona de V. M. Fecha en Yenesia al primer dia de Julio, 1596 annos. " Amigo de V. M., "MICHAEL LOCK, /w^/e5. " And I sent the said letter from Venice to Zante in the ship Cherubin ; and shortly after I sent a copy thereof in the ship Minion ; and also a third copy thereof by Manea Orlando, patron de nave Venetian. And unto my said letters he wrote me answer to Venice by one letter, which came not to my hands ; and also by another letter, which came to my hands ; which is copied here under : * '^Al 111'^°- Sig°^- Michael Lock, Ingles, iji casa del Sig°^- Lasaro, merca- der Ingles, al tragetto de San Tomas en Venesia. " MuY Illustre Sigo«- : La carta de V. M. recevi a 20 dias del mese di Settembre, por loqual veo loche V. M. me manda. lo tengho animo de complir loche tengo promettido a V. M. y no solo yo, mas tengo vinte hom- bres para lievar con migo, porche son hombres vaglientes ; y assi estoi esperando por otra carta che avise a V. M. parache me embiais los dinieros che tengo escritto a V. M. Porche bien save V. M. como io vine pover, porque me glievo Captain Candis mas de sessenta mille ducados, como V. M. bien save ; embiandome lo dicho, ire a servir a V. M. con todos mis compagneros. I no spero otra cosa mas de la voluntad e carta de V. M. con tanto nostro Sig'^'f- Dios guarda la illustre persona de V. M. muchos annos. De CefFalonia a 24 de Settembre del 1596. " Amigo y servitor de V. M., "JUAN FUCA. " And the said letter came into my hands in Venice, the 16th day of November, 1596; but my lawsuit with the company of Turkey was not ended, by reason of Sir John Spenser's suit, made in England at the Queen's court to the contrary, seeking only to have his money dis- charged, which I had attached in Venice for my said pension, and thereby my own purse was not yet ready for the Greek pilot. "And, nevertheless, hoping that my said suit would have shortly a good ♦ To the Illustrious Michael Lock, Englishman, at the house of Mr. Lazaro, English merchant, in Saint Thomas street, Venice. Most Illustrious Sir: Your letter was received by me on the 20th of September, by which I am informed i/f what you communicate. I have a mind to comply with my promise to you; and have not only myself, but twenty men, (brave men, too,) whom I can carry with me; so, I am waiting for another letter trom you, about the money which I asked you to send me. For, you know well, sir, how I became poor, in consequence of Captain Candish's having taken from me more than sixty thousand ducats, as you know. If you will send me what I asked, I will go with you, as well as all my companions, I expect no more from your kindness, or from the tenor of your letter. God preserve you, most illustrious sir, for many years. Your friend and servant, JUAN FUCA. Cephalonia, September 24, 1596. 211 end, I wrote another letter to this Greek pilot from Venice, dated the 20th of November, 1596, which came not to his hands; and, also, another letter, dated the 24th of January, 1596, which came to his hands. And thereof he wrote me answer, dated the 28th of May, 1597, which I received the 1st of August, 1597, by Thomas Norden, an English merchant, yet living in London, wherein he promised still to go with me unto England, to perform the said voyage for discovery of the northwest passage into the South Sea, if I would send him money for his charges, according to his former writing, without which money he said he could not go, for that as he was undone utterly when he was in the ship Santa Anna, which came from China, and was robbed at CaUfornia. And yet again afterward I wrote him another letter from Venice, whereunto he wrote me answer by a letter written in his Greek language, dated the 20th of October, 1598, the which I have still by me, wherein he promiseth still to go with me into England, and perform the said voyage of discovery of the northwest passage into the South Sea by the said straits, which he calleth the Strait of Nova Spania, which he saith is but thirty days' voyage in the straits, if I will send him the money formerly written for his charges ; the which money I could not yet send him, for that I had not yet recovered my pen- sion owing me by the company of Turkey aforesaid ; and so, of long time, I staid any further proceeding with him in this matter. " And yet, lastly, when I myself was at Zante in the month of June, 1602, minding to pass from thence for England by sea, for that I had then recovered a little money from the company of Turkey, by an order of the Lords of the Privy Council of England, I wrote another letter to this Greek pilot to Cephalonia, and required him to come to me to Zante, and go with me into England, but I had no answer thereof from him ; for that, as I heard afterward at Zante, he was then dead, or very likely to die of great sickness. Whereupon, I returned myself by se^ from Zante to Venice, and from thence I went by land through France into England, where I arrived at Christmas, anno 1602 ; safely, I thank God, after my absence from thence ten years' time, with great troubles had for the com- pany of Turkey's business, which hath cost me a great sum of money, for the which I am not yet satisfied of them." D. OCCURRENCES AT NOOTKA SOUND IN 1789 AND 1792. Translation of a letter from Don J. F. de la Bodega y Quadra^ the Span- ish commandant at Nootka Sound^ to Captains Gray and Ingrahamy com^manding the American 'merchant vessels Colum^bia and Wa^hingtoUy then lying in that harbor, Nootka, August 2, 1792. In order to satisfy the Court of England, as is just, for the injury, dam- ages, and usurpation, which it conceives itself to have sustained at this port in the year 1789, 1 have to request of you, gentlemen, the favor to inform me, with that sincerity which distinguishes you, and which is 212] conformable with truth and honor, wherefore Don Esteban Jose Martinez seized the vessels of Colnett, the Iphigenia and the Northwest America? What establishment or building did Mr. Meares have, on the arrival of the Spaniards? What territories are those which he says that he pur- chased from Maquinna, Yuquiniarri, or any other chief of these tribes ? With what objects were the crew of the Northwest America transferred to the Columbia ; and were ninety-six skins placed on board that ship ? Finally, what was the whole amount of skins carried by you to China, and to whom did they belong?* Your most obedient and assured servant, JUAN FRANCISCO DE LA BODEGA Y QUADRA. To Captains Robert Gray and Joseph Ingraham. (2.) Reply to the preceding letter.^ NooTKA Sound, August 3, 1792. Sir: Your esteemed favor was handed to us yesterday, requesting from us information relative to the transactions between the English and Span- iards in this sound in the year 1789, which we will do with great pleas- ure, and impartially, as you request. On the 5th of May, 1789, when Don Estevan Jose Martinez arrived in Friendly Cove, he found riding at anchor there the Iphigenia only; the ship Columbia being at MahAvhinna, five miles up the sound. The sloop Washington and Northwest America (schooner) were on a cruise. This information is n^scessary in order to regulate the sequel of the present. After the usual ceremonies of meeting were over, Don Martinez requested the papers of each vessel, and demanded why they were at anchor in Nootka Sound, alleging it belonged to his Catholic Majesty. Captain Viana, who passed as commander of the Iphigenia, answered, they had put in, being in distress, having but little provisions, and in great want of every necessary, such as cables, anchors, rigging, sails, &c. ; that they were in daily expectation of the arrival of Captain Meares from Macao to supply them, when they should departj Captain Meares was expected to return in the same vessel he sailed in from hence in the year 1788, which was under the Portuguese colors, and had a Portuguese captain on board ; this vessel with the Iphigenia were said to belong to one Cravalia, or Ca- vallo, a merchant of Macao, in whose name the Iphigenia's papers were made out. Seeing the Iphigenia was in such want, Don Martinez gav^e Ihem a temporary assistance, by supplying them with such articles as they were most in want, till the vessel before mentioned should arrive. At this * The original letter is attached to the Journal of Captain Ingraham, which is now in the of- fice of the Secretary of State, at Washington. t Copied from Ingraham's Journal. This letter is now for the first time published. An incor- rect synopsis of it may be found in the Journal of Vancouver's Voyage, vol. i, page 389. Some of the discrepancies between which and the letter will be here indi< ated by the notes. t Vancouver renders this passage as follows: " Captain Viana, of the Portuguese vessel, an- .-swered, that he had put in there m distress, to await the arrival of Captain Meares from Ma- .cao.;" omitting, as he does throughout his synopsis, all the particulars calculated to show the miserable condition of the Iphigenia, and the extent of the assistance afforded by the Spaniards. 213 time there was not the least suspicion of any misunderstanding or disturb- ance among us, as Don Martinez was apparently satisfied with the an- swers each vessel had given to his request. However, on the 10th of May, the San Carlos, Captain Arrow, [Haro,] arrived. The same day the American ojfficers came to Uquot, or Friendly Cove, to welcome them in, and the next morning, the 11th of May, Don Martinez captured the Iphigenia, and his reason, as we understood, was, that, in their Portuguese instructions, they had orders to capture any English, Spanish, or Russian subjects they met on the northwest coast of America. This, at the time, seemed improbable, as she was a vessel of small force, and it was afterwards found to have been a mistake, ow- ing to their want of a perfect knowledge of the Portuguese language. However, after the vessel was taken, the officers and seamen were di- vided, some on board the Princesa, and some on board the San Carlos, where they were treated with all imaginable kindness and every attention paid them. * On the 24th of May the abovementioned mistake being discovered, the Iphigenia was returned again and the Portuguese flag hoisted on board her; the same day. Captain Douglas, with the Portuguese captain and sea- men, repaired on board. The Iphigenia, while in possession of the Span- iards, from being a wreck was put in complete order for sea, being calked, rigging and sails repaired, anchors and cables sent from the Princesa, &c. On the 26th Don Martinez supplied them with every kind of provisions they were in need of, for which Captain Douglas gave him bills on Cra- vallia, the beforementioned merchant of Macao. On the 31st the Iphi- genia sailed, and was saluted by the Spanish fort ; and the commodore ac- companied them out of the harbor, giving every assistance with boats, :^V:V;:^v >..;'■>■';•: "Ill » r» 1 1 •