The 'Rosario Strait' is a
strait in northern
Washington state, separating
Island and
San Juan Counties.
History
In 1791 the Spanish explorer
Francisco de Eliza gave the name ''Gran Canal de Nuestra Señora del Rosario la Marinera'' to what it now the
Strait of Georgia. He named today's Rosario Strait ''Boca de Fidalgo''. In 1792,
George Vancouver explored the region and gave the Strait of Georgia its present name. He did not provide a name for Rosario Strait. In 1847
Charles Wilkes, during the
Wilkes Expedition, gave Rosario Strait the name ''Ringgold Channel'' after one of his officers. Then in 1847 the British Captain
Henry Kellett reorganized the British Admiralty charts, in the process removing the "pro-American" names given by Wilkes and affirming pro-British names and Spanish names. He affirmed the name ''Gulf of Georgia'' (Strait of Georgia) given by
George Vancouver and used a shortened version of Eliza's name for the Strait of Georgia to replace both Wilkes' and Eliza's original names for Rosario Strait.
[1]
Following the Oregon Treaty it was assumed by the British to be the route of the deepest channel to the open sea from the 49th Parallel boundary's terminus in the middle of the
Georgia Strait, and is in fact the shortest shipping route. Haro Strait, west of the San Juan Islands, which is wider though somewhat longer, was the American preference for the boundary and its eventual location following the arbitration of the dispute over the San Juan Islands, known as the
Pig War.
See also
★
Pig War
★
San Juan Islands
★
Haro Strait
★
Oregon Treaty
References
1. Washington State Place Names, , James W., Phillips, University of Washington Press, 1971,
External links