in one of his last discoveries in a monumental career, James Cook set foot
upon a small atoll in the northern Pacific that he dubbed "Bligh Island"
after a junior officer on the expedition, though it would ultimately be
renamed "Midway".
The small island was nearly missed as the flagship HMS Resolution had
cracked its foremast, which a full break
Please
click the
icon to follow us on Facebook.would have prompted a return to the
recently discovered Sandwich Islands for repairs. Instead, Cook set forth
continually northwest, pressing again to discover the elusive Northwest
Passage. Again, the Bering Strait proved impassable, and he begrudgingly
ordered a return to London for his crews on the verge of mutiny. They
sailed past Nippon, attempting trade but being shooed by the Sakoku
policy, and successfully traded with the Chinese, Javanese, and Africans
around the Cape of Good Hope.
Upon his return up the Thames, Cook was lauded as a hero. His was an
impressive climb from being the second child of a farm laborer in northern
Yorkshire. Cook had become an apprentice in the merchant navy as a young
man and learned the skills of navigation that would make him famous.
During the arms race leading to the Seven Years' War, Cook volunteered for
the Royal Navy and served as Mate aboard HMS Eagle. After successful
battles with the French, Cook continued to climb the ranks and was sent to
the New World, where his skills in navigation proved also to include
cartography. Recognized for his maps of the Saint Lawrence River and
Newfoundland, Cook was given a position by the Royal Society to command an
expedition to the Pacific for charting the transit of Venus across the Sun
in 1766. Along with his astronomical records, Cook would also explore New
Zealand and put Britain into contact with the Aborigines of Terra
Australis. Cook lost several crewmen to native diseases such as malaria
but not a single one to scurvy. His techniques of scurvy prevention would
become a model for ships throughout the Navy.
Arriving back to much acclaim in 1771, he left again in 1772 to explore
more of the South Pacific. Although what would become known as Australia
was located, many members of the Royal Society believed a much larger (and
wealthier) continent must lie even further south. Cook explored nearly
reached Antarctica, but he turned north again for need of supplies.
Instead of a great continent, he discovered numerous small islands in
Polynesia such as Easter Island, New Caledonia, and Vanuatu as well as
explorations in the southern Atlantic. Again hailed as a hero upon his
return in 1775, he set out to explore the North Pacific the next year.
There he would discover the Sandwich Islands, explore much of the
northwest coast of North America, and travel north through the Bering
Strait. When they came upon a twelve foot wall of ice across the whole
horizon, the expedition was forced to turn south with the Northwest
Passage proven a myth. They explored the eastern coast of Russia before
wintering in the Sandwiches, where they had once been welcomed and Cook
practically venerated as the god Lono. As the festival season of Lono had
now passed, however, the Hawaiians were increasingly hostile, and Cook
left, deciding even not to return despite his damaged foremast.
Cook pursued a Northwest Passage across Russia, but the Arctic proved too
icy for wooden ships. He returned to London in 1780, finding the world
turned upside-down by the riotous Americans. After serving for three years
as admiral until the end of the war, Cook retired from his life at sea and
set upon a new life's project to restore Britain's glory. The American
revolt had left them without a great deal of wealth and possibilities for
westward expansion, but the whole of the Pacific lay beyond practically
unconquered. While Captain Arthur Phillip led the colonization of
Australia, Cook campaigned for small outposts on every island available,
conquering the sea lanes for Britain. Using his own fortune from the sales
of his popular journals, he funded missionaries, farmers, and merchants
alike to form small colonies that would meet with varying luck.
As the Industrial Revolution took hold, however, each of these colonies
suddenly sprang to life as coaling stations. Needed by the Royal Navy as
well as the vast merchant fleet of Britain, the Pacific colonies became
key bases and transformed international trade. Tahiti, which would later
be contested by the French, became a key British station. Gradually,
native populations that were devastated by plagues would come under
British rule and become colonies themselves, such as the Royal House of
Hawaiians, who would be taken in as part of British aristocracy.
In the Second World War, the powerful Japanese Navy would sweep out over
the British Pacific, conquering millions of square miles as the stretched
Royal Navy struggled to fight back. The Japanese sneak-attack at Luzon in
the Philippines would bring the United States into the war, and intensive
island-hopping campaigns would go for years as dug-in Japanese were rooted
out by Allied Marines. After the war, Britain would decolonize many of the
islands into the Commonwealth, while others such as Hawaii and Tahiti
would gain independence.