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United States Exploring Expedition

The United States Exploring Expedition of 1838–1842 was an exploring and surveying expedition of the Pacific Ocean and surrounding lands conducted by the United States. The original appointed commanding officer was Commodore Thomas ap Catesby Jones. Funding for the original expedition was requested by President John Quincy Adams in 1828; however, Congress would not implement funding until eight years later. In May 1836, the oceanic exploration voyage was finally authorized by Congress and created by President Andrew Jackson.

The USS Vincennes at Disappointment Bay in early 1840

The expedition is sometimes called the U.S. Ex. Ex. for short, or the Wilkes Expedition in honor of its next appointed commanding officer, United States Navy Lieutenant Charles Wilkes. The expedition was of major importance to the growth of science in the United States, in particular the then-young field of oceanography. During the event, armed conflict between Pacific islanders and the expedition was common and dozens of natives were killed in action, as well as a few Americans.

Preparations edit

Through the lobbying efforts of Jeremiah N. Reynolds,[a] the United States House of Representatives passed a resolution on May 21, 1828, requesting President John Quincy Adams to send a ship to explore the Pacific. Adams was keen on the resolution and ordered his Secretary of the Navy to ready a ship, the Peacock. The House voted an appropriation in December but the bill stalled in the US Senate in February 1829. Then, under President Andrew Jackson, Congress passed legislation in 1836 approving the exploration mission. Again, the effort stalled under Secretary of the Navy Mahlon Dickerson until President Martin Van Buren assumed office and pushed the effort forward.[2][3]

Originally, the expedition was under the command Commodore Jones, but he resigned in November 1837, frustrated with all of the procrastination. Secretary of War Joel Roberts Poinsett, in April 1838, then assigned command to Wilkes, after more senior officers refused the command. Wilkes had a reputation for hydrography, geodesy, and magnetism. Additionally, Wilkes had received mathematics training from Nathaniel Bowditch, triangulation methods from Ferdinand Hassler, and geomagnetism from James Renwick.[4]

Personnel included naturalists, botanists, a mineralogist, a taxidermist, and a philologist. They were carried aboard the sloops-of-war USS Vincennes (780 tons), and USS Peacock (650 tons), the brig USS Porpoise (230 tons), the full-rigged ship Relief, which served as a store-ship, and two schooners, Sea Gull (110 tons) and USS Flying Fish (96 tons), which served as tenders.[5]

On August 18, 1838, the vessels left the naval port of Hampton Roads, Virginia.[6] The fleet then headed to Madeira, taking advantage of the prevailing winds.[7]

Ships and personnel edit

The expedition consisted of nearly 350 men, many of whom were not assigned to any specific vessel. Others served on more than one vessel.[8]

Ships edit

Command edit

  • Charles Wilkes – Expedition commander and commandant of Vincennes
  • Cadwalader Ringgold – Lieutenant commandant of Porpoise
  • Andrew K. Long – Lieutenant commandant of Relief
  • William L. HudsonCommandant of Peacock
  • Samuel R. Knox – Commandant of Flying Fish
  • James W. E. Reid – Commandant of Sea Gull

Naval officers edit

Scientific corps edit

[10]

History edit

Expedition edit

First part edit

 
First Part of Voyage Route: 1. Hampton Roads – 2. Madeira – 3. Rio de Janeiro – 4. Tierra del Fuego – 5. Valparaíso – 6. Callao – 7. Tahiti – 8. Samoa – 9. Sydney – 10. Antarctica – 11. Sandwich Islands (via Fiji)
 
Andes near Alparmarca, Peru: Sketched from an Elevation of 16,000 Feet, an illustration by Alfred Agate

Wilkes was to search in the Atlantic for various vigias or shoals, such as those reported by John Purdy, but failed to corroborate those claims for the locations given.[12] The squadron arrived in the Madeira Islands on September 16, 1838, and Porto Praya on October 6.[13] The Peacock arrived at Rio de Janeiro on November 21, and the Vincennes with brigs and schooners on November 24. However, the Relief did not arrive until the November 27, setting a record for slowness, 100 days. While there, they used Enxados Island in Guanabara Bay for an observatory and naval yard for repair and refitting.[14]

The Squadron did not leave Rio de Janeiro until January 6, 1839, arriving at the mouth of the Río Negro on January 25. On February 19, the squadron joined the Relief, Flying Fish, and Sea Gull in Orange Harbor, Hoste Island, after passing through Le Maire Strait. While there, the expedition came in contact with the Fuegians. Wilkes sent an expedition south in an attempt to exceed Captain Cook's farthest point south, 71°10'.

The Flying Fish reached 70° on March 22, in the area about 100 miles (160 kilometers) north of Thurston Island, and what is now called Cape Flying Fish, and the Walker Mountains. The squadron joined the Peacock in Valparaiso on May 10, but the Sea Gull was reported missing. On June 6, the squadron arrived at San Lorenzo, off Callao for repair and provisioning, while Wilkes dispatched the Relief homewards on June 21.[15] Leaving South America on July 12, the expedition reached Reao of the Tuamotu Group on August 13, and Tahiti on September 11. They departed Tahiti on October 10.[16]

The expedition then visited Samoa and New South Wales, Australia. In December 1839, the expedition sailed from Sydney into the Antarctic Ocean and reported the discovery of the Antarctic continent on January 16, 1840, when Henry Eld and William Reynolds aboard the Peacock sighted Eld Peak and Reynolds Peak along the George V Coast. On the January 19, Reynolds spotted Cape Hudson. On January 25, the Vincennes sighted the mountains behind the Cook Ice Shelf, similar peaks at Piner Bay on January 30, and had covered 800 miles (1,300 kilometers) of coastline by February 12, from 140° 30' E. to 112° 16' 12"E., when Wilkes acknowledged they had "discovered the Antarctic Continent." Named Wilkes Land, it includes Claire Land, Banzare Land, Sabrina Land, Budd Land, and Knox Land. They charted 1,500 miles (2,400 kilometers) of Antarctic coastline[17] to a westward goal of 105° E., the edge of Queen Mary Land, before departing to the north again on February 21.[18]

The Porpoise came across the French expedition of Jules Dumont d'Urville on January 30. However, due to a misunderstanding of each other's intentions, the Porpoise and Astrolabe were unable to communicate.[19] In February 1840, some of the expedition were present at the initial signing of the Treaty of Waitangi in New Zealand.[20] Some of the squadron then proceeded back to Sydney for repairs, while the rest visited the Bay of Islands, before arriving in Tonga in April. At Nuku'alofa they met King Josiah (Aleamotu'a), and the George (Taufa'ahau), chief of Ha'apai, before proceeding onwards to Fiji on May 4. The Porpoise surveyed the Low Archipelago, while the Vincennes and Peacock proceeded onwards to Ovalau, where they signed a commercial treaty with Tanoa Visawaqa in Levuka. Edward Belcher's HMS Starling visited Ovalau at the same time.[21] Hudson was able to capture Vendovi, after holding his brothers Cocanauto, Qaraniqio, and Tui Dreketi (Roko Tui Dreketi or King of Rewa Province) hostage. Vendovi was deemed responsible for the attack against US sailors on Ono Island in 1836.[22] Vendovi was taken back to the US, but died shortly after his arrival in New York.[23] His skull was then added to the expedition collections and put on display in the Patent Office building in Washington, D.C.[22]

In July 1840, two members of the party, Lieutenant Underwood and Wilkes' nephew, Midshipman Wilkes Henry, were killed while bartering for food in western Fiji's Malolo Island. The cause of this event remains equivocal. Immediately prior to their deaths, the son of the local chief, who was being held as a hostage by the Americans, escaped by jumping out of the boat and running through the shallow water for shore. The Americans fired over his head. According to members of the expedition party on the boat, his escape was intended as a prearranged signal by the Fijians to attack. According to those on shore, the shooting actually precipitated the attack on the ground. The Americans landed sixty sailors to attack the hostile natives. Close to eighty Fijians were killed in the resulting American reprisal and two villages were burned to the ground.[24]

Return route edit

 
Return route: 1. Puget Sound – 2. Columbia River – 3. San Francisco – 4. Polynesia – 5. Philippines – 6. Borneo – 7. Singapore – 8. Cape of Good Hope – 9. New York
 
Narrative of the United States Exploring Expedition, an 1841 map of the Oregon Territory
 
The Peacock after hitting the bar of the Columbia River near Cape Disappointment in Washington state

On August 9, after three months of surveying, the squadron met off Macuata. The Vincennes and Peacock proceeded onwards to the Sandwich Islands, with the Flying Fish and Porpoise to meet them in Oahu by October. Along the way, Wilkes named the Phoenix Group and made a stop at the Palmyra Atoll, making their group the first scientific expedition in history to visit Palmyra.[25] While in Hawaii, the officers were welcomed by Governor Kekūanaōʻa, King Kamehameha III, his aide William Richards, and the journalist James Jackson Jarves. The expedition surveyed Kauai, Oahu, Hawaii, and the peak of Mauna Loa. The Porpoise was dispatched in November to survey several of the Tuamotus, including Aratika, Kauehi, Raraka, and Katiu, and then proceeded to Penrhyn before returning to Oahu on 24 March.

On April 5, 1841, the squadron departed Honolulu, the Porpoise and Vincennes for the Pacific Northwest, the Peacock and Flying Fish to resurvey Samoa, before rejoining the squadron. Along the way, the Peacock and Flying Fish surveyed Jarvis Island, Enderbury Island, the Tokelau Islands, and Fakaofo. The Peacock followed this with surveys of the Tuvalu islands of Nukufetau, Vaitupu, and Nanumanga in March, followed by Tabiteuea in April. Also in April, the Peacock surveyed the Gilbert Islands of Nonouti, Aranuka, Maiana, Abemama, Kuria, Tarawa, Marakei, Butaritari, and Makin, before returning to Oahu on June 13. The Peacock and Flying Fish then left for the Columbia River on June 21.[26]

In April 1841, USS Peacock, under Lieutenant William L. Hudson, and USS Flying Fish, surveyed Drummond's Island, which was named for an American of the expedition. Lieutenant Hudson heard from a member of his crew that a ship had wrecked off the island and her crew massacred by the Gilbertese. A woman and her child were said to be the only survivors, so Hudson decided to land a small force of marines and sailors, under William M. Walker, to search the island. Initially, the natives were peaceful and the Americans were able to explore the island, without results. It was when the party was returning to their ship that Hudson noticed a member of his crew was missing.

After making another search, the man was not found and the natives began arming themselves. Lieutenant Walker returned his force to the ship, to converse with Hudson, who ordered Walker to return to shore and demand the return of the sailor. Walker then reboarded his boats with his landing party and headed to shore. Walker shouted his demand and the natives charged for him, forcing the boats to turn back to the ships. It was decided on the next day that the Americans would bombard the hostiles and land again. While doing this, a force of around 700 Gilbertese warriors opposed the American assault, but were defeated after a long battle. No Americans were hurt, but twelve natives were killed and others were wounded, and two villages were also destroyed. A similar episode occurred two months before in February when the Peacock and the Flying Fish briefly bombarded the island of Upolu, Samoa following the death of an American merchant sailor on the island.[27]

The Vincennes and Porpoise reached Cape Disappointment on April 28, 1841, but then headed north to the Strait of Juan de Fuca, Port Discovery, and Fort Nisqually, where they were welcomed by William Henry McNeill and Alexander Caulfield Anderson. The Porpoise surveyed the Admiralty Inlet, while boats from the Vincennes surveyed Hood Canal, and the coast northwards to the Fraser River. Wilkes visited Fort Clatsop, John McLoughlin at Fort Vancouver, and William Cannon on the Willamette River, while he sent Lt. Johnson on an expedition to Fort Okanogan, Fort Colvile and Fort Nez Perces, where they met Marcus Whitman.[28] Like his predecessor, British explorer George Vancouver, Wilkes spent a good deal of time near Bainbridge Island. He noted the bird-like shape of the harbor at Winslow and named it Eagle Harbor. Continuing his fascination with bird names, he named Bill Point and Wing Point. Port Madison, Washington and Points Monroe and Jefferson were named in honor of former United States presidents. Port Ludlow was assigned to honor Lieutenant Augustus Ludlow, who lost his life during the War of 1812.

The Peacock and Flying Fish arrived off Cape Disappointment on July 17. However, the Peacock went aground while attempting to enter the Columbia River and was soon lost, though with no loss of life. The crew was able to lower six boats and get everyone into Baker's Bay, along with their journals, surveys, the chronometers, and some of Agate's sketches. A one-eyed Indian named George then guided the Flying Fish into the same bay.

There, the crew set up "Peacockville", assisted by James Birnie of the Hudson's Bay Company, and the American Methodist Mission at Point Adams. They also traded with the local Clatsop and Chinookan Indians over the next three weeks, while surveying the channel, before journeying to Fort George and a reunion with the rest of the squadron. This prompted Wilkes to send the Vincennes to San Francisco Bay, while he continued to survey Grays Harbor.[29]

From the area of modern-day Portland, Wilkes sent an overland party of 39 southwards, led by Emmons, but guided by Joseph Meek. The group included Agate, Eld, Colvocoresses, Brackenridge, Rich, Peale, Stearns, and Dana, and proceeded along an inland route to Fort Umpqua, Mount Shasta, the Sacramento River, John Sutter's New Helvetia, and then onwards to San Francisco Bay. They departed September 7, and arrived aboard the Vincennes in Sausalito on October 23, having traveled along the Siskiyou Trail.[30]

Wilkes arrived with the Porpoise and Oregon, while the Flying Fish was to rendezvous with the squadron in Honolulu.[31] The squadron surveyed San Francisco and its tributaries, and later produced a map of "Upper California".[32] The expedition then headed back out on October 31, arriving Honolulu on November 17, and departing on November 28.[33] They included a visit to Wake Island, and returned by way of the Philippines, Borneo, Singapore, Polynesia, and the Cape of Good Hope, reaching New York on June 10, 1842.

The expedition was plagued by poor relationships between Wilkes and his subordinate officers throughout. Wilkes' self-proclaimed status as captain and commodore, accompanied by the flying of the requisite pennant and the wearing of a captain's uniform while being commissioned only as a Lieutenant, rankled heavily with other members of the expedition of similar real rank. His apparent mistreatment of many of his subordinates, and indulgence in punishments such as "flogging round the fleet" resulted in a major controversy on his return to America.[24][34] Wilkes was court-martialled on his return, but was acquitted on all charges except that of illegally punishing men in his squadron.

Significance edit

 
Nukufetau man, an 1841 portrait by Alfred Agate

The Wilkes Expedition played a major role in the development of 19th-century science, particularly in the growth of the American scientific establishment. Many of the species and other items found by the expedition helped form the basis of collections at the new Smithsonian Institution.[35][36]

With the help of the expedition's scientists, derisively called "clam diggers" and "bug catchers" by navy crew members, 280 islands, mostly in the Pacific, were explored, and over 800 miles (1,300 kilometers) of Oregon were mapped. Of no less importance, over 60,000 plant and bird specimens were collected. A staggering amount of data and specimens were collected during the expedition, including the seeds of 648 species, which were later traded, planted, and sent throughout the country. Dried specimens were sent to the National Herbarium, now a part of the Smithsonian Institution. There were also 254 live plants, which mostly came from the home stretch of the journey, that were placed in a newly constructed greenhouse in 1850, which later became the United States Botanic Garden.

Alfred Thomas Agate, an engraver and illustrator, created an enduring record of traditional cultures such as the illustrations made of the dress and tattoo patterns of natives in the Ellice Islands in present-day Tuvalu.[37]

A collection of artifacts from the expedition also went to the National Institute for the Promotion of Science, a precursor of the Smithsonian Institution. These joined artifacts from American history as the first artifacts in the Smithsonian collection.[38]

Published works edit

For a short time Wilkes was attached to the Office of Coast Survey, but from 1844 to 1861 he was chiefly engaged in preparing the expedition report. Twenty-eight volumes were planned, but only nineteen were published.[39] Of these, Wilkes wrote the multi-volume Narrative of the United States exploring expedition, during 1838, 1839, 1840, 1841, 1842, Hydrography, and Meteorology.

The Narrative concerns the customs, political and economic conditions of many places then little-known. Other contributions were three reports by James Dwight Dana on Zoophytes, Geology, and Crustacea. In addition to shorter articles and reports, Wilkes published Western America, including California and Oregon,[40] and Theory of the Winds. The Smithsonian Institution digitized the five volume narrative and the accompanying scientific volumes. The mismanagement that plagued the expedition prior to its departure continued after its completion. By June 1848, many of the specimens had been lost or damaged and many remained unidentified. In 1848 Asa Gray was hired to work on the botanical specimens, and published the first volume of the report on botany in 1854,[41] but Wilkes was unable to secure the funding for the second volume.[42][43]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Reynolds had previously lobbied for a U.S. expedition to the north pole and an alleged entrance to the hollow Earth, a petition which received 25 Congressional votes in favor.[1]

References edit

  1. ^ Fjågesund, Peter (2014). "The Closing Circle: 1880–1920". The Dream of the North: A Cultural History to 1920. Brill. pp. 331–412. JSTOR 10.1163/j.ctv2gjwzhs.9.
  2. ^ Stanton 1975, pp. 13–17.
  3. ^ Dupree 1988, pp. 59–65.
  4. ^ Stanton 1975, pp. 19, 35, 56–61.
  5. ^ Stanton 1975, pp. 43, 63–68, 73–76.
  6. ^ "United States Exploring Expedition, 1838-1842". www.sil.si.edu. Retrieved April 6, 2023.
  7. ^ Stanton 1975, pp. 71–76.
  8. ^ "The Crew and Vessels of the U.S. Exploring Expedition, 1838–1842". Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Libraries. 2004. Retrieved October 12, 2018.
  9. ^ Wilkes 1845, p. xxxvi, Volume 1.
  10. ^ Wilkes 1845a, p. xxx, Volume 1.
  11. ^ Philbrick 2004.
  12. ^ Wilkes, Charles (1861). United States Exploring Expedition Vol. XXIII Hydrography. Philadelphia: U.S. Congress. pp. 41–46.
  13. ^ Stanton 1975, pp. 86–87.
  14. ^ Stanton 1975, pp. 88–89.
  15. ^ Stanton 1975, pp. 91–96, 103–111.
  16. ^ Stanton 1975, pp. 114–116, 123–131.
  17. ^ Philbrick 2003, p. xix.
  18. ^ Stanton 1975, pp. 132, 142–149, 155–159, 171–175.
  19. ^ Stanton 1975, pp. 176–177.
  20. ^ Wilkes 1845, p. 376.
  21. ^ Stanton 1975, pp. 180–195.
  22. ^ a b Adler 2014.
  23. ^ Stanton 1975, pp. 199–201.
  24. ^ a b Philbrick 2003.
  25. ^ Wilkes, Charles (1942). "Excerpt from United States Exploring Expedition, Vol XXIII". Palmyra Atoll Digital Archive.
  26. ^ Stanton 1975, pp. 212, 217, 219–221, 224–237, 240, 245–246.
  27. ^ Ellsworth 1934, pp. 172–174.
  28. ^ Stanton 1975, pp. 253–256.
  29. ^ Stanton 1975, pp. 247–253, 259.
  30. ^ Stanton 1975, pp. 259–265.
  31. ^ Stanton 1975, p. 267.
  32. ^ "Map of "Upper California"". Retrieved February 18, 2018.
  33. ^ Stanton 1975, pp. 269–272.
  34. ^ Stanton 1975, pp. 219–220.
  35. ^ Adler 2010.
  36. ^ Adler, Antony. "From the Pacific to the Patent Office: The US Exploring Expedition and the origins of America's first national museum." Journal of the History of Collections.V. 23 (May): 49–74.
  37. ^ Wilkes 1844, pp. 35–75, Volume 5, Chapter 2, 'Ellice's and Kingsmill's Group'.
  38. ^ . Smithsonian Institution Archives. Archived from the original on August 3, 2009. Retrieved January 2, 2010.
  39. ^ "The Publications of the U.S. Exploring Expedition, 1844–1874, Smithsonian Institution Libraries Digital Collection" (PDF). Retrieved February 18, 2018.
  40. ^ Wilkes, C. (1849). Western America, including California and Oregon. Philadelphia: Lea and Blanchard. ISBN 9781297717482.
  41. ^ Gray 1854.
  42. ^ Harvard 2009.
  43. ^ Dupree 1988, pp. 185–195.

Bibliography edit

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  • Adler, Antony (2014). "The Capture and Curation of the Cannibal 'Vendovi': Reality and Representation of a Pacific Frontier". The Journal of Pacific History. 49 (3): 255–282. doi:10.1080/00223344.2014.914623. S2CID 162900603.
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  • Bertrand, K. J. (1971). Americans in Antarctica, 1775–1948. American Geographical Society.
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  • Perry, F. (2002). Bremerton and Puget Sound Navy Yard. Perry Publishing.
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External links edit

  Media related to United States Exploring Expedition at Wikimedia Commons

united, states, exploring, expedition, 1838, 1842, exploring, surveying, expedition, pacific, ocean, surrounding, lands, conducted, united, states, original, appointed, commanding, officer, commodore, thomas, catesby, jones, funding, original, expedition, requ. The United States Exploring Expedition of 1838 1842 was an exploring and surveying expedition of the Pacific Ocean and surrounding lands conducted by the United States The original appointed commanding officer was Commodore Thomas ap Catesby Jones Funding for the original expedition was requested by President John Quincy Adams in 1828 however Congress would not implement funding until eight years later In May 1836 the oceanic exploration voyage was finally authorized by Congress and created by President Andrew Jackson The USS Vincennes at Disappointment Bay in early 1840The expedition is sometimes called the U S Ex Ex for short or the Wilkes Expedition in honor of its next appointed commanding officer United States Navy Lieutenant Charles Wilkes The expedition was of major importance to the growth of science in the United States in particular the then young field of oceanography During the event armed conflict between Pacific islanders and the expedition was common and dozens of natives were killed in action as well as a few Americans Contents 1 Preparations 2 Ships and personnel 2 1 Ships 2 2 Command 2 3 Naval officers 2 4 Scientific corps 3 History 3 1 Expedition 3 1 1 First part 3 1 2 Return route 4 Significance 4 1 Published works 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksPreparations editThrough the lobbying efforts of Jeremiah N Reynolds a the United States House of Representatives passed a resolution on May 21 1828 requesting President John Quincy Adams to send a ship to explore the Pacific Adams was keen on the resolution and ordered his Secretary of the Navy to ready a ship the Peacock The House voted an appropriation in December but the bill stalled in the US Senate in February 1829 Then under President Andrew Jackson Congress passed legislation in 1836 approving the exploration mission Again the effort stalled under Secretary of the Navy Mahlon Dickerson until President Martin Van Buren assumed office and pushed the effort forward 2 3 Originally the expedition was under the command Commodore Jones but he resigned in November 1837 frustrated with all of the procrastination Secretary of War Joel Roberts Poinsett in April 1838 then assigned command to Wilkes after more senior officers refused the command Wilkes had a reputation for hydrography geodesy and magnetism Additionally Wilkes had received mathematics training from Nathaniel Bowditch triangulation methods from Ferdinand Hassler and geomagnetism from James Renwick 4 Personnel included naturalists botanists a mineralogist a taxidermist and a philologist They were carried aboard the sloops of war USS Vincennes 780 tons and USS Peacock 650 tons the brig USS Porpoise 230 tons the full rigged ship Relief which served as a store ship and two schooners Sea Gull 110 tons and USS Flying Fish 96 tons which served as tenders 5 On August 18 1838 the vessels left the naval port of Hampton Roads Virginia 6 The fleet then headed to Madeira taking advantage of the prevailing winds 7 Ships and personnel editThe expedition consisted of nearly 350 men many of whom were not assigned to any specific vessel Others served on more than one vessel 8 Ships edit USS Vincennes sloop of war 780 tons 18 guns flagship USS Peacock sloop of war 650 tons 22 guns USS Relief full rigged ship 468 tons 7 guns USS Porpoise brig 230 tons 10 guns USS Sea Gull schooner 110 tons 2 guns USS Flying Fish schooner 96 tons 2 guns USS Oregon brig 250 tons 2 guns Command edit Charles Wilkes Expedition commander and commandant of Vincennes Cadwalader Ringgold Lieutenant commandant of Porpoise Andrew K Long Lieutenant commandant of Relief William L Hudson Commandant of Peacock Samuel R Knox Commandant of Flying Fish James W E Reid Commandant of Sea Gull Naval officers edit James Alden Lieutenant Daniel Ammen Passed midshipman Thomas A Budd Lieutenant and cartographer Simon F Blunt Passed midshipman Augustus Case Lieutenant George Colvocoresses Midshipman Edwin De Haven Acting Master 9 Henry Eld Midshipman George F Emmons Lieutenant Charles Guillou Assistant surgeon William L Maury Lieutenant William Reynolds Passed midshipman Richard R Waldron Purser Thomas W Waldron Captain s clerk Scientific corps edit 10 Alfred T Agate Artist Joseph Drayton Artist 11 William Brackenridge Assistant botanist Joseph P Couthouy Conchologist James D Dana Mineralogist and geologist Horatio Hale Philologist Titian Peale Naturalist Charles Pickering Naturalist William Rich BotanistHistory editExpedition edit First part edit nbsp First Part of Voyage Route 1 Hampton Roads 2 Madeira 3 Rio de Janeiro 4 Tierra del Fuego 5 Valparaiso 6 Callao 7 Tahiti 8 Samoa 9 Sydney 10 Antarctica 11 Sandwich Islands via Fiji nbsp Andes near Alparmarca Peru Sketched from an Elevation of 16 000 Feet an illustration by Alfred AgateWilkes was to search in the Atlantic for various vigias or shoals such as those reported by John Purdy but failed to corroborate those claims for the locations given 12 The squadron arrived in the Madeira Islands on September 16 1838 and Porto Praya on October 6 13 The Peacock arrived at Rio de Janeiro on November 21 and the Vincennes with brigs and schooners on November 24 However the Relief did not arrive until the November 27 setting a record for slowness 100 days While there they used Enxados Island in Guanabara Bay for an observatory and naval yard for repair and refitting 14 The Squadron did not leave Rio de Janeiro until January 6 1839 arriving at the mouth of the Rio Negro on January 25 On February 19 the squadron joined the Relief Flying Fish and Sea Gull in Orange Harbor Hoste Island after passing through Le Maire Strait While there the expedition came in contact with the Fuegians Wilkes sent an expedition south in an attempt to exceed Captain Cook s farthest point south 71 10 The Flying Fish reached 70 on March 22 in the area about 100 miles 160 kilometers north of Thurston Island and what is now called Cape Flying Fish and the Walker Mountains The squadron joined the Peacock in Valparaiso on May 10 but the Sea Gull was reported missing On June 6 the squadron arrived at San Lorenzo off Callao for repair and provisioning while Wilkes dispatched the Relief homewards on June 21 15 Leaving South America on July 12 the expedition reached Reao of the Tuamotu Group on August 13 and Tahiti on September 11 They departed Tahiti on October 10 16 The expedition then visited Samoa and New South Wales Australia In December 1839 the expedition sailed from Sydney into the Antarctic Ocean and reported the discovery of the Antarctic continent on January 16 1840 when Henry Eld and William Reynolds aboard the Peacock sighted Eld Peak and Reynolds Peak along the George V Coast On the January 19 Reynolds spotted Cape Hudson On January 25 the Vincennes sighted the mountains behind the Cook Ice Shelf similar peaks at Piner Bay on January 30 and had covered 800 miles 1 300 kilometers of coastline by February 12 from 140 30 E to 112 16 12 E when Wilkes acknowledged they had discovered the Antarctic Continent Named Wilkes Land it includes Claire Land Banzare Land Sabrina Land Budd Land and Knox Land They charted 1 500 miles 2 400 kilometers of Antarctic coastline 17 to a westward goal of 105 E the edge of Queen Mary Land before departing to the north again on February 21 18 The Porpoise came across the French expedition of Jules Dumont d Urville on January 30 However due to a misunderstanding of each other s intentions the Porpoise and Astrolabe were unable to communicate 19 In February 1840 some of the expedition were present at the initial signing of the Treaty of Waitangi in New Zealand 20 Some of the squadron then proceeded back to Sydney for repairs while the rest visited the Bay of Islands before arriving in Tonga in April At Nuku alofa they met King Josiah Aleamotu a and the George Taufa ahau chief of Ha apai before proceeding onwards to Fiji on May 4 The Porpoise surveyed the Low Archipelago while the Vincennes and Peacock proceeded onwards to Ovalau where they signed a commercial treaty with Tanoa Visawaqa in Levuka Edward Belcher s HMS Starling visited Ovalau at the same time 21 Hudson was able to capture Vendovi after holding his brothers Cocanauto Qaraniqio and Tui Dreketi Roko Tui Dreketi or King of Rewa Province hostage Vendovi was deemed responsible for the attack against US sailors on Ono Island in 1836 22 Vendovi was taken back to the US but died shortly after his arrival in New York 23 His skull was then added to the expedition collections and put on display in the Patent Office building in Washington D C 22 In July 1840 two members of the party Lieutenant Underwood and Wilkes nephew Midshipman Wilkes Henry were killed while bartering for food in western Fiji s Malolo Island The cause of this event remains equivocal Immediately prior to their deaths the son of the local chief who was being held as a hostage by the Americans escaped by jumping out of the boat and running through the shallow water for shore The Americans fired over his head According to members of the expedition party on the boat his escape was intended as a prearranged signal by the Fijians to attack According to those on shore the shooting actually precipitated the attack on the ground The Americans landed sixty sailors to attack the hostile natives Close to eighty Fijians were killed in the resulting American reprisal and two villages were burned to the ground 24 Return route edit nbsp Return route 1 Puget Sound 2 Columbia River 3 San Francisco 4 Polynesia 5 Philippines 6 Borneo 7 Singapore 8 Cape of Good Hope 9 New York nbsp Narrative of the United States Exploring Expedition an 1841 map of the Oregon Territory nbsp The Peacock after hitting the bar of the Columbia River near Cape Disappointment in Washington stateOn August 9 after three months of surveying the squadron met off Macuata The Vincennes and Peacock proceeded onwards to the Sandwich Islands with the Flying Fish and Porpoise to meet them in Oahu by October Along the way Wilkes named the Phoenix Group and made a stop at the Palmyra Atoll making their group the first scientific expedition in history to visit Palmyra 25 While in Hawaii the officers were welcomed by Governor Kekuanaōʻa King Kamehameha III his aide William Richards and the journalist James Jackson Jarves The expedition surveyed Kauai Oahu Hawaii and the peak of Mauna Loa The Porpoise was dispatched in November to survey several of the Tuamotus including Aratika Kauehi Raraka and Katiu and then proceeded to Penrhyn before returning to Oahu on 24 March On April 5 1841 the squadron departed Honolulu the Porpoise and Vincennes for the Pacific Northwest the Peacock and Flying Fish to resurvey Samoa before rejoining the squadron Along the way the Peacock and Flying Fish surveyed Jarvis Island Enderbury Island the Tokelau Islands and Fakaofo The Peacock followed this with surveys of the Tuvalu islands of Nukufetau Vaitupu and Nanumanga in March followed by Tabiteuea in April Also in April the Peacock surveyed the Gilbert Islands of Nonouti Aranuka Maiana Abemama Kuria Tarawa Marakei Butaritari and Makin before returning to Oahu on June 13 The Peacock and Flying Fish then left for the Columbia River on June 21 26 In April 1841 USS Peacock under Lieutenant William L Hudson and USS Flying Fish surveyed Drummond s Island which was named for an American of the expedition Lieutenant Hudson heard from a member of his crew that a ship had wrecked off the island and her crew massacred by the Gilbertese A woman and her child were said to be the only survivors so Hudson decided to land a small force of marines and sailors under William M Walker to search the island Initially the natives were peaceful and the Americans were able to explore the island without results It was when the party was returning to their ship that Hudson noticed a member of his crew was missing After making another search the man was not found and the natives began arming themselves Lieutenant Walker returned his force to the ship to converse with Hudson who ordered Walker to return to shore and demand the return of the sailor Walker then reboarded his boats with his landing party and headed to shore Walker shouted his demand and the natives charged for him forcing the boats to turn back to the ships It was decided on the next day that the Americans would bombard the hostiles and land again While doing this a force of around 700 Gilbertese warriors opposed the American assault but were defeated after a long battle No Americans were hurt but twelve natives were killed and others were wounded and two villages were also destroyed A similar episode occurred two months before in February when the Peacock and the Flying Fish briefly bombarded the island of Upolu Samoa following the death of an American merchant sailor on the island 27 The Vincennes and Porpoise reached Cape Disappointment on April 28 1841 but then headed north to the Strait of Juan de Fuca Port Discovery and Fort Nisqually where they were welcomed by William Henry McNeill and Alexander Caulfield Anderson The Porpoise surveyed the Admiralty Inlet while boats from the Vincennes surveyed Hood Canal and the coast northwards to the Fraser River Wilkes visited Fort Clatsop John McLoughlin at Fort Vancouver and William Cannon on the Willamette River while he sent Lt Johnson on an expedition to Fort Okanogan Fort Colvile and Fort Nez Perces where they met Marcus Whitman 28 Like his predecessor British explorer George Vancouver Wilkes spent a good deal of time near Bainbridge Island He noted the bird like shape of the harbor at Winslow and named it Eagle Harbor Continuing his fascination with bird names he named Bill Point and Wing Point Port Madison Washington and Points Monroe and Jefferson were named in honor of former United States presidents Port Ludlow was assigned to honor Lieutenant Augustus Ludlow who lost his life during the War of 1812 The Peacock and Flying Fish arrived off Cape Disappointment on July 17 However the Peacock went aground while attempting to enter the Columbia River and was soon lost though with no loss of life The crew was able to lower six boats and get everyone into Baker s Bay along with their journals surveys the chronometers and some of Agate s sketches A one eyed Indian named George then guided the Flying Fish into the same bay There the crew set up Peacockville assisted by James Birnie of the Hudson s Bay Company and the American Methodist Mission at Point Adams They also traded with the local Clatsop and Chinookan Indians over the next three weeks while surveying the channel before journeying to Fort George and a reunion with the rest of the squadron This prompted Wilkes to send the Vincennes to San Francisco Bay while he continued to survey Grays Harbor 29 From the area of modern day Portland Wilkes sent an overland party of 39 southwards led by Emmons but guided by Joseph Meek The group included Agate Eld Colvocoresses Brackenridge Rich Peale Stearns and Dana and proceeded along an inland route to Fort Umpqua Mount Shasta the Sacramento River John Sutter s New Helvetia and then onwards to San Francisco Bay They departed September 7 and arrived aboard the Vincennes in Sausalito on October 23 having traveled along the Siskiyou Trail 30 Wilkes arrived with the Porpoise and Oregon while the Flying Fish was to rendezvous with the squadron in Honolulu 31 The squadron surveyed San Francisco and its tributaries and later produced a map of Upper California 32 The expedition then headed back out on October 31 arriving Honolulu on November 17 and departing on November 28 33 They included a visit to Wake Island and returned by way of the Philippines Borneo Singapore Polynesia and the Cape of Good Hope reaching New York on June 10 1842 The expedition was plagued by poor relationships between Wilkes and his subordinate officers throughout Wilkes self proclaimed status as captain and commodore accompanied by the flying of the requisite pennant and the wearing of a captain s uniform while being commissioned only as a Lieutenant rankled heavily with other members of the expedition of similar real rank His apparent mistreatment of many of his subordinates and indulgence in punishments such as flogging round the fleet resulted in a major controversy on his return to America 24 34 Wilkes was court martialled on his return but was acquitted on all charges except that of illegally punishing men in his squadron Significance edit nbsp Nukufetau man an 1841 portrait by Alfred AgateThe Wilkes Expedition played a major role in the development of 19th century science particularly in the growth of the American scientific establishment Many of the species and other items found by the expedition helped form the basis of collections at the new Smithsonian Institution 35 36 With the help of the expedition s scientists derisively called clam diggers and bug catchers by navy crew members 280 islands mostly in the Pacific were explored and over 800 miles 1 300 kilometers of Oregon were mapped Of no less importance over 60 000 plant and bird specimens were collected A staggering amount of data and specimens were collected during the expedition including the seeds of 648 species which were later traded planted and sent throughout the country Dried specimens were sent to the National Herbarium now a part of the Smithsonian Institution There were also 254 live plants which mostly came from the home stretch of the journey that were placed in a newly constructed greenhouse in 1850 which later became the United States Botanic Garden Alfred Thomas Agate an engraver and illustrator created an enduring record of traditional cultures such as the illustrations made of the dress and tattoo patterns of natives in the Ellice Islands in present day Tuvalu 37 A collection of artifacts from the expedition also went to the National Institute for the Promotion of Science a precursor of the Smithsonian Institution These joined artifacts from American history as the first artifacts in the Smithsonian collection 38 Published works edit For a short time Wilkes was attached to the Office of Coast Survey but from 1844 to 1861 he was chiefly engaged in preparing the expedition report Twenty eight volumes were planned but only nineteen were published 39 Of these Wilkes wrote the multi volume Narrative of the United States exploring expedition during 1838 1839 1840 1841 1842 Hydrography and Meteorology The Narrative concerns the customs political and economic conditions of many places then little known Other contributions were three reports by James Dwight Dana on Zoophytes Geology and Crustacea In addition to shorter articles and reports Wilkes published Western America including California and Oregon 40 and Theory of the Winds The Smithsonian Institution digitized the five volume narrative and the accompanying scientific volumes The mismanagement that plagued the expedition prior to its departure continued after its completion By June 1848 many of the specimens had been lost or damaged and many remained unidentified In 1848 Asa Gray was hired to work on the botanical specimens and published the first volume of the report on botany in 1854 41 but Wilkes was unable to secure the funding for the second volume 42 43 See also editEuropean and American voyages of scientific explorationNotes edit Reynolds had previously lobbied for a U S expedition to the north pole and an alleged entrance to the hollow Earth a petition which received 25 Congressional votes in favor 1 References edit Fjagesund Peter 2014 The Closing Circle 1880 1920 The Dream of the North A Cultural History to 1920 Brill pp 331 412 JSTOR 10 1163 j ctv2gjwzhs 9 Stanton 1975 pp 13 17 Dupree 1988 pp 59 65 Stanton 1975 pp 19 35 56 61 Stanton 1975 pp 43 63 68 73 76 United States Exploring Expedition 1838 1842 www sil si edu Retrieved April 6 2023 Stanton 1975 pp 71 76 The Crew and Vessels of the U S Exploring Expedition 1838 1842 Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Libraries 2004 Retrieved October 12 2018 Wilkes 1845 p xxxvi Volume 1 Wilkes 1845a p xxx Volume 1 Philbrick 2004 Wilkes Charles 1861 United States Exploring Expedition Vol XXIII Hydrography Philadelphia U S Congress pp 41 46 Stanton 1975 pp 86 87 Stanton 1975 pp 88 89 Stanton 1975 pp 91 96 103 111 Stanton 1975 pp 114 116 123 131 Philbrick 2003 p xix Stanton 1975 pp 132 142 149 155 159 171 175 Stanton 1975 pp 176 177 Wilkes 1845 p 376 Stanton 1975 pp 180 195 a b Adler 2014 Stanton 1975 pp 199 201 a b Philbrick 2003 Wilkes Charles 1942 Excerpt from United States Exploring Expedition Vol XXIII Palmyra Atoll Digital Archive Stanton 1975 pp 212 217 219 221 224 237 240 245 246 Ellsworth 1934 pp 172 174 Stanton 1975 pp 253 256 Stanton 1975 pp 247 253 259 Stanton 1975 pp 259 265 Stanton 1975 p 267 Map of Upper California Retrieved February 18 2018 Stanton 1975 pp 269 272 Stanton 1975 pp 219 220 Adler 2010 Adler Antony From the Pacific to the Patent Office The US Exploring Expedition and the origins of America s first national museum Journal of the History of Collections V 23 May 49 74 Wilkes 1844 pp 35 75 Volume 5 Chapter 2 Ellice s and Kingsmill s Group Planning a National Museum Smithsonian Institution Archives Archived from the original on August 3 2009 Retrieved January 2 2010 The Publications of the U S Exploring Expedition 1844 1874 Smithsonian Institution Libraries Digital Collection PDF Retrieved February 18 2018 Wilkes C 1849 Western America including California and Oregon Philadelphia Lea and Blanchard ISBN 9781297717482 Gray 1854 Harvard 2009 Dupree 1988 pp 185 195 Bibliography editAdler Antony October 6 2010 From the Pacific to the Patent Office The US Exploring Expedition and the origins of America s first national museum Journal of the History of Collections published May 2011 23 1 49 74 doi 10 1093 jhc fhq002 Adler Antony 2014 The Capture and Curation of the Cannibal Vendovi Reality and Representation of a Pacific Frontier The Journal of Pacific History 49 3 255 282 doi 10 1080 00223344 2014 914623 S2CID 162900603 Bagley C B 1957 History of King County Washington S J Clarke Publishing Company Barkan F B 1987 The Wilkes Expedition Puget Sound and the Oregon Country Washington State Capital Museum Bertrand K J 1971 Americans in Antarctica 1775 1948 American Geographical Society Borthwick D E 1965 Outfitting the United States Exploring Expedition Lieutenant Charles Wilkes European assignment Lancaster Press Brokenshire D 1993 Washington State Place Names From Alki to Yelm Caxton Press Colvocoresses G M 1855 Four years in the government exploring expedition J M Fairchild Dupree A H 1988 Asa Gray American Botanist Friend of Darwin Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 9780801837418 Ellsworth H A 1934 One Hundred Eighty Landings of United States Marines 1800 1934 Vol 1 2 Washington D C U S Government Printing Office ISBN 9781499740578 Goetzmann W H 1986 New Lands New Men America And The Second Great Age Of Discovery Viking ISBN 9780670810680 Gray Asa 1854 United States Exploring Expedition Botany During the years 1838 1839 1840 1841 1842 Under the command of Charles Wilkes U S N Vol XV Botany Phanerogamia Part 1 With a Folio Atlas of One Hundred Plates Philadelphia C Sherman Gurney A 2000 The Race to the White Continent Voyages to the Antarctic Norton Haskell D C 1968 The United States Exploring Expedition 1838 1842 and Its Publications 1844 1874 Greenwood Press Haskett P J 1974 The Wilkes Expedition in Puget Sound 1841 State Capitol Museum Henderson C 1953 The Hidden Coasts A Biography of Admiral Charles Wilkes William Sloane Assoc Jenkins J S 1852 Voyage of the U S Exploring Squadron Commanded by Captain Charles Wilkes Alden Beardsley amp Co Jenkins J S 1853 United States Exploring Expeditions Voyage of the U S Exploring Squadron Kerr Doughty amp Lapham Jenkins J S 1856 Explorations and Adventures in and about the Pacific and Antarctic Oceans New York Hurst amp Company Kruckeberg A R 1995 The Natural History of Puget Sound Country University of Washington Press Mitterling P I 1957 America in the Antarctic to 1840 Morgan M Wilkes D 1981 Puget s Sound A Narrative of Early Tacoma and the Southern Sound University of Washington Press Perry F 2002 Bremerton and Puget Sound Navy Yard Perry Publishing Philbrick N 2003 Sea of Glory America s Voyage of Discovery the U S Exploring Expedition 1838 1842 Viking Adult ISBN 0 670 03231 X Philbrick N January 2004 Learn More About the U S Exploring Expedition Smithsonian Libraries Retrieved August 14 2020 Pickering C 1863 The geographical distribution of animals and plants Trubner and Company Poesch J P 1961 Titian Ramsay Peale And His Journals of The Wilkes Expedition 1799 1885 American Philosophical Society Reynolds W Philbrick N 2004 The Private Journal of William Reynolds United States Exploring Expedition 1838 1842 Penguin Classics Ritter H 2003 Washington s History The People Land and Events of the Far Northwest Westwinds Press Schwantes C A 2000 The Pacific Northwest An Interpretive History University of Nebraska Press Sellers C C 1980 Mr Peale s Museum W W Norton amp Company ISBN 9780393057003 Stanton W R 1975 The Great United States Exploring Expedition of 1838 1842 Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 9780520025578 Tyler D B 1968 The Wilkes Expedition The First United States Exploring Expedition 1838 1842 American Philosophical Society Viola H J Margolis C 1985 Magnificent Voyagers The U S Exploring Expedition 1838 1842 Smithsonian Wilkes C 1844 Narrative of the United States Exploring Expedition Vol 1 5 Philadelphia C Sherman Archived from the original on September 20 2003 Wilkes C 1845 Narrative of the United States Exploring Expedition during the years 1838 1839 1840 1841 1842 Vol 1 5 Philadelphia Lea and Blanchard OCLC 1055695672 Retrieved December 31 2020 Wilkes Charles N 1845a Narrative of the U S Exploring Expedition Vol 1 Retrieved August 14 2020 via Smithsonian Libraries Wilkes C 1851 Voyage round the world Embracing the principal events of the narrative of the United States Exploring Expedition G P Putnam United States Exploring Expedition 1838 1842 Records of the United States Exploring Expedition Harvard University Herbaria Botany Libraries Archives Gray Herbarium June 2009 Retrieved May 7 2020 External links edit nbsp Media related to United States Exploring Expedition at Wikimedia Commons Alfred Agate Collection at Naval History and Heritage Command US Exploring Expedition at Smithsonian Institution Libraries Digital Collections Video of Dr Adrienne Kaeppler discussing the Smithsonian Institution Anthropology collections from the expedition Charles L Erskine s Panorama Lecture at Dartmouth College Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title United States Exploring Expedition amp oldid 1197799858, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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