Sunday, June 3, 2012

COOK Lt James - TRINITY BAY and COOKTOWN

Endeavour replica sailing into
Cooktown's harbour near the
mouth of the Endeavour River
where the original Endeavour
was beached for 7 weeks in
1770.
Trinity Bay

Lt James Cook named Trinity Bay on Trinity Sunday, 10 June 1770.
Reference: Trinity Inlet, unpublished document by Marjorie Earl

In 1821 it attracted its first fleet of ships when three vessels under Captain Phillip King in the ‘Bathurst’ sheltered from a storm and noted (Trinity) bay as a likely harbor.
Reference: BOLTON, G. K., In Search of a Cannon: Aftermath of Capt. Cook’s epic Voyage, Vince Vlassoff, Cairns, 1969

Cooktown

The site of modern Cooktown was the meeting place of two vastly different cultures when, in June 1770, the local Aboriginal Guugu Yimithirr tribe cautiously watched the crippled sailing ship – His Majesty's Bark Endeavour – limp up the coast seeking a safe harbour after sustaining serious damage to its wooden hull on the Endeavour Reef, south of Cooktown. The Guugu Yimithirr people saw the Endeavour beach in the calm waters near the mouth of their river, which they called "Wahalumbaal".

The captain of the Endeavour, Lieutenant James Cook, wrote: “. . . it was happy for us that a place of refuge was at hand; for we soon found that the ship would not work, and it is remarkable that in the whole course of our voyage we had seen no place that our present circumstances could have afforded us the same relief".

The British crew spent seven weeks on the site of present-day Cooktown, repairing their ship, replenishing food and water supplies, and caring for their sick. The extraordinary scientist, Joseph Banks, and Swedish naturalist Daniel Solander, who accompanied Cook on the expedition, collected, preserved and documented over 200 new species of plants. The young artist Sydney Parkinson illustrating the specimens and he was the first British artist to portray Aboriginal people from direct observation.

After some weeks, Joseph Banks met and spoke with the local people, recording about 50 Guugu Yimithirr words, including the name of the intriguing animal the natives called gangurru (which he transcribed as "Kangaru"). Cook recorded the local name as "Kangooroo, or Kanguru".

The first recorded sighting of kangaroos by Europeans was on Grassy Hill, which rises above the place where the ship was beached. Cook climbed this hill to work out a safe passage for the Endeavour to sail through the surrounding reefs, after it was repaired.

Cook named the river the "Endeavour" after his ship, and, as they sailed north, he hoisted the flag known as the 'Queen Anne Jack' and claimed possession of the whole eastern coast of Australia for Britain. He named Cape York Peninsula after the then Duke of York ("The Grand Old Duke of York").

"In 1886 the people of Cooktown were anxious to recover the brass guns of the Endeavour which were thrown overboard, in order to place them as a memento in their town; but they could not be found, which is not altogether surprising.”
Reference:  http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cooktown,_Queensland  downloaded 12 May 2012

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