Endeavour replica in Cooktown harbour |
| Career | |
|---|---|
| Built: | Whitby, North Yorkshire. |
| Launched: | 1768 |
| Fate: | Sold in 1775, beyond that, unknown; replica built 1988-1994 |
| General Characteristics | |
|---|---|
| Displacement: | 400 tonnes (397 tons) |
| Length: | 32.3 m (106 ft) |
| Beam: | 8.9 m (29 ft) |
| Draught: | — ft (— m) |
| Type: | Bark |
| Hull: | Wood |
| Propulsion: | Sail |
| Speed: | — |
| Range: | — |
| Complement: | — |
| Armament: | — |
'HMB ''Endeavour''' was a small 18th century
British sailing ship, famous for being the vessel commanded by Lt. (later Captain)
James Cook, on his first voyage of discovery to the
Pacific Ocean.
Construction and statistics
'His Majesty's
Bark ''Endeavour''' was originally a merchant
collier named ''Earl of Pembroke'' (after
the then Earl), whose construction was completed by early 1768 at
Whitby,
North Yorkshire. She was
ship-rigged, and sturdily built with a capacious hold. Despite not being very fast, her flat-bottomed hull was well-suited to sailing in shallow waters and more importantly for her proposed use: she was, like other colliers of the north-east coast of England, designed to be beached. Her overall length was 32.3 m (keel 27.7 m), beam 8.9 m, and she weighed 400
tonnes (397
tons).
Purchased by the Admiralty
In February of
1768 the
Royal Society of London petitioned
King George III to finance a scientific expedition to the
Pacific Ocean. The expedition's ostensible purpose was to study and observe the 1769
transit of Venus across the sun (in concert with several other observations to be made from different locations). However, a more pragmatic reason was to be relayed to her captain by the
Admiralty in
additional instructions; namely, to search out the southern Pacific for signs of the postulated continent, ''Terra Australis Incognita'' (Unknown southern land).
The mission approved, the newly-built ship was purchased by the
Royal Navy for the sum of £2307 5s. 6d. and assigned for use in the Society's expedition. She was renamed ''Endeavour'' after a major refit at
Deptford on the
River Thames in
1768, her improvements including
caulking the hull and adding a third deck to prepare her for her new role as an exploration vessel. Classified by the Navy as a
bark, she was known as ''Endeavour Bark'' to distinguish her from another ''Endeavour'' in the Royal Navy. She transported 94 people on her first voyage. This 18th century use of the term 'bark' should not be confused with the
barques of the later 19th and early 20th century.
Alexander Dalrymple from the
Royal Society was first proposed for command of the voyage,
[1] but he made it a condition that he be given a commission with rank of captain, since otherwise the crew would not be subject to naval discipline under him.
First Lord of the Admiralty Edward Hawke refused, going so far as to say he would rather cut off his right hand than sign a commission trusting one of His Majesty's ships to a non-seaman! Hawke may well have had in mind a recent case of Dr Halley who was given such a commission and the sailors refused to recognise his authority.
The impasse was broken by
Philip Stephens proposing
James Cook who had done good work as a surveyor in
Newfoundland and
Labrador. The admiralty board accepted this and promoted Cook to the rank of
lieutenant on
25 May 1768. (As commander of the ship he was naturally called captain by those onboard.) Dalrymple took this disappointment badly.
Other notable members on the expedition were the
naturalists Sir
Joseph Banks from England, Dr.
Herman Spöring from
Finland,
Daniel Solander from
Sweden (the Oxford University honoured the Swede with a Doctorate of Law after this expedition) and the English astronomer
Charles Green, who was to be in charge of making the astronomical observations.
Cook's voyage
The voyage departed
Plymouth on
August 8,
1768, and took them to the
Madeira Islands, along the west coast of
Africa and across the
Atlantic to
South America, arriving in
Rio de Janeiro on
November 13,
1768. The next leg rounded
Cape Horn into the South Pacific and on to
Tahiti, where she remained for the next three months while preparations were made for observing the transit of
Venus.
Her ostensible mission now completed, she continued with her "unannounced" tasks of charting the Southern Hemisphere. The ''Endeavour'' sailed from
Tahiti to
New Zealand, where she spent the next six months surveying and mapping the coast under constant harassment from the
MÄori population. From
New Zealand she moved west to the coast of
Australia, sighting land on
April 19,
1770. On
April 29, Cook and crew made their first landfall on the continent, at a place now known as
Kurnell. At first Cook bestowed the name ''Stingaree'' (Stingray) ''Bay'' to the inlet after the many such creatures found there; this was later changed to ''Botanist Bay'' and finally ''
Botany Bay'' after the unique specimens retrieved by the botanists
Joseph Banks,
Daniel Solander and
Herman Spöring.

Endeavour replica rigging detail
For the next four months Cook charted the coast of
Australia, until the ship ran aground on the
Great Barrier Reef.
Endeavour Reef
Just before 11pm on the evening of
10 June 1770 the ship struck a reef, today called
Endeavour Reef, within the
Great Barrier Reef. The part they struck stands up steeply from the seabed, so casting the lead had shown 20 fathoms (36 metres) of water right up to the point of striking.
With the sails immediately taken down, the coasting anchor was set out and an attempt made to pull the ship back off the reef, unsuccessfully. Because it was already around high tide the only option was to lighten the ship to float her off, so iron and stone ballast, spoiled stores, and the ships guns were thrown overboard, and the ship's water (drinking water) pumped out. The guns were not simply discarded;
Sydney Parkinson records
[2] buoys were attached with the intention of retrieving them later, but that proved impractical. (The guns and ballast were found in
1969, see
recoveries below.) Parkinson also notes that every man on board took turns on the pumps, including Cook, Banks, and the officers.
With about 40 or 50
tons lightened, by Cook's reckoning, on the high tide the next morning a further attempt was made to pull the ship free, but again unsuccessfully. In the afternoon the longboat carried out the two large bower anchors, and block and tackles were put on a total 5 anchors now set, ready to try again on the evening high tide. The ship started to take on water through the damage from the reef, and though the leak would certainly increase once off the reef Cook decided to risk that. At about 10:20pm the ship floated with the tide and was successfully drawn off. The anchors were retrieved, except for the small bower which could not be freed. (It too was found in 1969; see
below).
The leak increased with the ship off the reef, and the three working pumps were manned. A mistake happened in sounding the depth of water in the hold when a new man took over and measured from the outside plank where his predecessor had used the ceiling (the top of the cross-beams of the hull). The difference was about 18 inches so the new man's call made it seem the leak had gained on the pumps that much in just a short time, sending a wave of fear through the ship. As soon as the mistake was realized the relief acted like a charm and with redoubled efforts the pumps kept ahead of the leak.
The prospects if the ship sank were grim. The typical understatement in the journals of the seamen make it easy to underestimate the danger, only in Banks is there a taste of it. For a start the ship was miles from shore and the boats could not carry everyone (being made for work, not as lifeboats) so many would surely drown. And those who survived would be left unarmed and without food in an unknown land. Banks noted the calm efficiency of the crew in the face of danger, contrary to stories he'd heard of seamen turning to plunder and refusing command in such circumstances.
Midshipman
Jonathon Munkhouse proposed
fothering the ship, having been on a merchant ship which used the technique successfully. He was entrusted with supervising the task, sewing bits of
oakum and wool into an old sail which was drawn under the ship, the theory being suction would draw those material to the leak and plug it. This worked better than any hoped and soon the pumps could be stopped and very little water came in.
They proceeded north looking for a harbour to make repairs and on the afternoon of
13 June came to
Endeavour River, as Cook later named it. Strong winds prevented the ship getting across the bar until the afternoon of
17 June. There they
careened her and made repairs to the hull. A piece of coral the size of a man's fist had sliced clean through the planks of the hull, and broken off, wedged there. It was fortunate it stuck, because (on Parkinson's reckoning at least) an open hole that size would in all probability have sunk the ship.
With repairs made and after a delay waiting for the wind they were able to set off again on the afternoon of
3 August. The careening hadn't got the ship completely out of the water, so only a limited examination of the very bottom had been possible, but it seemed sound enough. When they later reached
Batavia (
9 November) it turned out some planks were damaged to within 1/8 inch (3 millimetres) of being cut through. It was a "surprise to every one who saw her bottom how we had kept her above water" as Cook said (though doing more at Endeavour River may not have been practical anyway).

An 1893 chart showing the ''Endeavour'''s track
Homeward
She turned for home arriving, after several other stops, on
July 11,
1771. Cook's first voyage in ''Endeavour'' is of historical importance because of its contributions to the world's knowledge of seamanship and
navigation, as well as
geography.
Approximately one month after his feted return to England, Lt. Cook was promoted to the Royal Navy rank of
Commander, and by the end of November he was in receipt of Admiralty Orders for a new expedition to the southern hemisphere and search for ''Terra Australis''.
Cook's two subsequent voyages of exploration were made in command of another vessel,
HMS ''Resolution''. The first of these (1771—1776) circumnavigated the globe at a high southern latitude in the
Southern Ocean, and laid to rest any lasting doubts that there was an undiscovered continent at these latitudes. On the second ''Resolution'' expedition (1771—1780), Cook charted the western coastline of
North America, from
California northwards to
Bering Strait. Finding his attempts to sail through the strait frustrated by pack ice, Cook returned southwards through the central Pacific to the
Hawaiian Islands, which he had first encountered in the earlier part of this voyage, naming them the
Sandwich Islands. It was here, after spending some months in the archipelago that Cook met his end— killed in an altercation with the local Hawaiians at
Kealakekua Bay on
February 14,
1779.
Scurvy
Much has been made of Cook's success avoiding
scurvy on the voyage. Although the efficacy of
oranges and
lemons had been known for some 175 years (since
Hawkins in
1593), they could not always be obtained. The disease was not well understood and was a very serious problem on long voyages.
The Admiralty Sick and Hurt Board gave Cook a number of believed
anti-scorbutics, based mainly on ideas of
Dr David McBride. These included
malt (which McBride favoured), concentrated
orange juice, and
sauerkraut. Malt is now known to be ineffective, having barely a trace of
vitamin C; and concentrating juices by heating destroys much of their vitamin C. Sauerkraut is a good source of vitamin C and was apparently new to a shipboard diet.
Sailors of the day were notoriously against innovation, and at first the men would not eat the sauerkraut. Cook used a little trick, one he'd never known to fail. He ordered it served to himself and the officers, and left an option for crew who wanted some. Within a week of seeing their superiors set a value on it the demand was so great a ration had to be instituted. (Cook's journal
13 April 1769.)
Cook's general approach was essentially empirical, encouraging as broad a diet as circumstances permitted, and collecting such greens as could be had when making landfall. All onboard ate the same food, with Cook specifically dividing equally anything that could be divided (and indeed recommending that practice to any commander – journal
4 August 1770).
Two cases of scurvy did occur on board, astronomer
Charles Green and the
Tahitian man Tupia were treated, but Cook was able to proudly record that upon reaching
Batavia he had "not one man upon the sick list" (journal
15 October 1770), unlike so many voyages that reached that port with much of the crew suffering illness.
Later history
In 1773 the British Admiralty fitted out ''Endeavour'' as a store ship and finally sold her in 1775 for £615. After that point there is much doubt as to her fate. One account has her sold to the French in 1790 and renamed ''La Liberté'', finally running aground in
1794, near
Newport, Rhode Island,
USA. Another version has her moored as a hulk on the
River Thames near
Woolwich in 1825. Yet another version has ''Endeavour'' returned to the coal trade in 1775 and grounded at Rhode Island in
1790. There is little hard evidence to support any one of these versions.
A
Reuters article published on May 16, 2006 seems to indicate the possible presence of the ''Endeavour'' within Rhode Island's state waters; it was reportedly sunk in 1778, bearing the later name ''Lord Sandwich'', according to the records of archeologists with the Rhode Island Marine Archaeology Project .
Endeavour Reef recoveries
In
1886 the Working Men's Progress Association of
Cooktown wanted to recover the cannons Cook had left at Endeavour Reef when grounded there, for a proposed memorial. They offered a £300 reward but searches that year and the next failed to find anything. Further later searches in
1966,
1967 and
1968 were unsuccessful too.
In
1969 a search using a sophisticated
magnetometer designed by
Virgil Kaufman from the
Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences found the abandoned cannons, and iron ballast, near the reef. Pinpointing the grounding narrowed down the search for the lost bower anchor too. Seven of the journal keepers had it set to the west, Cook's log and journal put it to the south, but apparently a misreading of Cook's account made the searchers believe it was universally described as westward. An area in that direction was marked out for passes with the magnetometer. By chance while turning it around outside the search area an anomaly was detected, which turned out to be the anchor, to the south, where Cook described.
Conservation work on the cannons was undertaken by the
Australian National Maritime Museum and one is on display there.
[3] The anchor and another cannon are displayed at the
James Cook Historical Museum in
Cooktown[4] Those items are all long-term loans from the
National Museum of Australia.
[5]
Replica vessel
.jpg)
HM Bark Endeavour plaque on board
In January 1988, to commemorate the bicentenary of European settlement in
Australia, work began in
Fremantle,
Western Australia on a replica of ''Endeavour''. The survival of the original drawings from the 1768 refit at Deptford meant that the replica could be made as similar as possible to the original ship. Financial difficulties delayed completion until April 1994. She then embarked on her own world trip, calling at many ports along the way. After a long voyage the ship is alongside at the
Australian National Maritime Museum in
Sydney.
The ship first visited
Whitby, the original Endeavour's home port in England, in
1997 and left in
2003.
Research conducted by Karl Heinz Marquardt has cast interesting doubt on the accuracy of the Mizzen Mast dimensions in replica craft (and scale models). While a number of the original drawings of ''Earl of Penbroke'' and ''Endeavour'' still are in existence, although these do not include a mast plan. One drawing (3814c) has written mast and spar dimensions including that of 16 yards 29 inches for the mizzen. Marquardt compares the dimensions of the masts to those in the Navy Standard (W Sutherland, ''The Ship Builders Assistant'', (London 1711, reprint Rotherfield 1989) and dimensions suggested by other sources for mizzen (specifically J Davis from ''The Seamen's Speculum'', London 1711 reprint N.R.G 1985 and J H Roding (unattributed)). All of the other masts are longer than contemporary standards. The mizzen is however shorter than the standards, unless the length in the drawing 3814(c) is a transcription error and should be 19 yards 29 inches (rather than 16/29). The 16/29 reproduction produces a very truncated looking mast, and is inconsistent with the few contemporary reproductions of ''Endeavour'' (including sketches of the acclaimed Sydney Parkinson who was the draughtsmen on the first voyage).
Details taken from K H Marquardt "Captain Cook's Endeavour" published 1995 (ISBN 9708 85177 8969) from the "Anatomy of the Ship" series by publisher Anova Books, London, pp18-20, Parkinson sketch p32.
References
★
★
★
HM Bark Endeavour
1. , editor Robert Kerr's introduction footnote 3
2. Ray Parkin, ''H. M. Bark Endeavour'', Miegunyah Press, second edition, 2003, ISBN 0-522-85093-6
3. The Vernon Anchors and HMB Endeavour Cannon, information sheet at the Australian National Maritime Museum
4. James Cook Historical Museum page at the National Trust Queensland
5. National Museum of Australia annual reports 2002/3[1] and 2003/4[2] appendix 5 outward loans
See also
★
HMS ''Endeavour'' for other ships of this name.
★
Ship replica (including a list of ship replicas)
External links
★
The Fate of Cook's Ships
★
London Port's Endeavour information
★
Picture of the recovered anchor and team, in ''Great Scot'' newsletter of
Scotch College (Melbourne), April 2004
★
Joseph Banks' Endeavour Journal
★
Endeavour visiting Rotterdam, The Netherlands - Shipyard 'De Delft'
Named after ''Endeavour''
★
Endeavour River, Australia
★
Space Shuttle ''Endeavour''
★ The
Apollo 15 command module.
★
Endeavour Rupes, an escarpment on
Mercury
★
The Endeavour Award, Science Fiction/Fantasy Book Award
★ Space Shuttle Endeavour, in science-fiction book
Rendezvous with Rama by
Arthur C. Clarke
★
DCI Endeavour Morse, from the novels by
Colin Dexter and associated TV series