1 February. THE WEST SHORE. 87 HISTORICAL ADVENTURES OX THE PACIFIC COAST. BV MRS. F. F. VICTOR. CAFTA1N GRAY S DISCOVERY OF THK COl.VMHIA. The results of the collision between the Spanish and English officers at Nootka, make an important chapter of history, though long since forgotten by any but the educated statesman or the learned historian. First, there was a demand on the part of the English government for redress. This demand Spain resisted. Then there was the arming of two large fleets by England, and the reiterated demand for import ant concessions on the part of Spain. As the quarrel proceeded, the King of France equipped a fleet for the assist ance of Spain, and thereby got himself into trouble at home ; for the National Assembly, taking umbrage at the King's action, passed an act depriving the King of the right to make war without the concurrence of the legisla tive and executive branches of the gov ernment. A large marine force was however raised both by France and by Holland, allies of the contending par ties ; and finally, a conference was held between Great Britain and Spain, the result of which was a convention called the Nootka Treaty. This convention undertook to define the rights of both nations ; but left affairs in so doubtful a shape as to cause the abandonment of Nootka by both parties at that time ; and ultimately led to the renewal of hostilities at a period considerably later. Hanging dreamily over a boat's side, and enjoying the quiet beauty of Noot ka harbor to-day, it seems impossible to believe that less than a century ago the place had so much of a history. Nature, serene and silent, pays no heed to the stormy passions of men the avarice of nation. They conic and go : smilingly she crosses every footprint. Her skies, rocks, mountains nor seas ever betray the secret to later genera tions ; while we, ignorant ami nappy fancy we tread on virgin earth or on unknown seas. Hut we are not quite done with the history of Nootka, because it so hap pened that the American claim to the discovery of the Columbia river had to be sustained by the testimony of the Spanish officers at that place, when it became a matter of dispute between the United States and Great Britain. We have already spoken of the voyage made by Capt. Gray through the Strait of Fuca, and made mention of the fact that Kendrick and Gray exchanged ' vessels when they met at the mouth of the Strait, Gray going in the Columbia to Canton, and' Kendrick remaining to explore the Gulf of Georgia in the Sloop Washington. Capt. Kendrick'l discoveries would never have been made known, as he was accidentally killed at the Sandwich Islands, had it not been that Mr. Mcares, on returning to London, after the occurrences, above related, at Noot ka, was possessed with the ambition to be thought a discoverer of no small merit, and a theorist of great acumen. He started the proposition that this part of the American continent was an immense archipelago, ami to sub stantiate his views gave a highly imag inative account of the voyage of Ken drick, made after parting with Gray, nd before he sailed for China and the various tribes who inhabit the shores of the numerous islands that arc situ ated at the back of Xootka Sound, and speak, with some little variation, the language of the Nootka people. The track of the vessel is marked on the map (Mcares' chart) and is of great moment, (as it is now completely ascer. tamed that Nootka Sound and the parts adjacent arc islands, and comprehended within the great northern archipclego.) The sea also, which is seen to the cast, is of great extent ; and it is from this stationary point, and the most westerly points of Hudson's Hay, that we arc to orm an estimate ot trie distance nc- twecn them." He goes on to state that the Washington sailed "through a sea extending upwards of eight degrees of latitude) and came out at the north ward all of which was written in sup port of a thought that the whole of northwest America was a collection of islands. That an American vessel had passed ' munition through the Gulf of Georgia, and came out at tnc northern end of Vancouvers Island, would never have been heard of, had not Mearcs' account of this sea, and his theory of islands been attacked with ridicule by other captains who hail been on the American coast. Compelled to give his authority, he explained that he got the story from a gentleman of irreproachable character wno nan met with Captain Kendrick in Canton from whom he got the particulars of the voy age, with the track ot the vessel. 1 his :xplanation proves that Gray and Ken- lrick, two American navigators, were the first to explore the Strait of Fuca since the old Greek pilot who gave it his name, and that they discovered the Gulf of Georgia. As Noolka continued to be, up to, and after the discovery of the Columbia , r i r i river, the renaesvuua oi .csscis... nations, it becomes necessary to bear this fact in mind, and also to observe the bearing of the Spanish and Eng i:..i, ili .. who. hefore the Nootka l'M Tl.i f,,rmi'd. continued to meet there. Hi-fore Martinet was removed from the post of commandant, in 1709, ne seized an American vessel, called the Fair American, commanded by a lad of eighteen, named Mctcalf. This act seems, however, to have been a mere pretence of keeping to general instruc tions, for the Fair American was im mediately liberated ; while her consort Elcnora commanded by Captain Mel- rM. senior, was not molested. There seems to have been the best feeling ex isting between the Spanish and Amer ican officers all through the Nootkan trouble ; and in fact, their testimony In each other's behalf, as against the Eng lish, was afterwards of the utmost im nortancc. These two vessels were Irom New York, via Canton, and after a win ter trade on this coast they sailed again vessel. Having collected a cargo of south, on his way to Nootka where furs, and much interesting information about the country, which was minutely detailed in his journal, he left the coast in time to arrive in Canton Dec. 1st, of the same year. On the 2Sth of September, a few lavs after the Dope, the Columbia, Capt. Gray, having made a voyage round the world, left Boston for her second vovage to this coast by the way of Cape Horn, and arrived at Clyoquot, it the entrance to the Strait of uca, as vet Gray had not been, on this voy age and with instructions from the English government to ascertain the numbat1! situation, and extent of the settlements already made by civilized nations; and the nature and direction of any water passage, which might be navigated, between the Pacific and the provinces owned by Great Britain on the Atlantic side of the continent. Before the English commissioner and the American fur-trader meet, let us re- 011 the h of June, making almost the view the position of Spanish afl'aiis for China, by the way Islands, where young Mctcalf was kill ed by the natives, for some indiscretion in dealing with them ; and his father barely escaped the same fate. In 17110 Martinez was superseded by CapUia Francisco F.lisa, who in a wild same sailing time as the Hope. From here Capt. Gray went to Queen Char lotte's or Washington's Island, as it was variously called, and according to his custom, passed a great portion of the summer in exploring the inlets and channels along the coast. In one of these, which he entered in latitude 51 deg. J3 mill., he sailed a hundred miles without coming to the northern ter- Vancouver afterwards named thUftin.lt the Portland Canal. In ex ploring this passage, Gray had two of his men murdered by the natives, soon after this misadventure, he returned to Clyoquot, where he wintered en shore in a fortification which he erected, and called Fort Defiance probably the first American fort on the west coast. Here he built the Adventure, and launched her; and here he came near being treacherously attacked by the followers of Wicanish, chief of the sur rounding country, aided by Tetoocheat- Hem, another chief, and abetted by a Sandwich Islander. Not so, however, was Captain Gray of the Columbia, from Boston, to end his adventurous life. He was destined surely as quietly to put his countrymen in possession of the key to the north west coast to discover and to name the great "River of the est, whose exact location hail so long evaded the longing eyes of explorers of all nations. In the meantime, the Adventurer sailed for Queen Charlotte's Island, and the Columbia cruised along the coast south ward on her destined w ay to an honor able and imperishable renown. The effect of Mr. Mcares' publica- , -e linna. rono ed Willi ne RCCOUUU ui - 1 other Englishmen who had visited the northwest coast of America, stimulated the English government to fit out an exploring expedition to make a survey of the waters that washed these western shores; and the fact that a commission was rendered necessary by the recent treaty with Spain, furnished Hie apology for such a proceeding. Ihcrcloic, while Great Britain dispatched the Discovery, a ship well furnished with the most improved instruments for a scientific survey, commanded by Van couver, a man well qualified for the work, she was not only looking to claiming all her rights to whatever Eivlish propertv might have been left nt Nootka. but also to establishing new of the Sandwich ,,..,. , mAiH ho the riirht of dis covery. There was belonging to this expedition, besides the Discovery, a smaller vessel, the Chatham, com- 1...1 1... 1 Ij.nt HrniitT Hon. and a '.H. Wr. and several I To return to Vancouver officers whose names were given Nootka. When Commandante Elba arrived at that point in the spring of 1790, he brought with him the confis cated vessel, the Princess Royal, and two Spanish vessels, the Prineesa and the San Carlos. The latter he dis patched, under the command of Saint Salvador Fidalgo, to inquire into the progress of the Russian settlements, and to examine the coast in that direc tion. But the expedition lasted only three months, and accomplished very little. I'ho prize ship, the Princess lioyal, was placed in command of Saint Quim- per, who was ordered to explore the Strait of Fuca. This attempt at ex ploration was as feeble as the other, Saint Qulmper proceeding only about one hundred miles, when, seeing that there were channels branching off in every direction, and not being fitly prepared for nil extended or thorough survey, he returned to Nootka, having done nothing more Important than to name some of the passages leading from the eastern end of the Strait as Canal de Htre, and Hosario Strait. That channel now called Admiralty Inlet, was named by Qulmper Canal te Camano; Port Discovery Port Qua dra; the bay next west of it, Port Quimpcr, and Clallam Bay, Port Xttnc: Gamo. The following vear, 1791, another ..... .... 1... .u. u..;i. expedition was sent 0111 oj in ..j., authorities, under an Italian navigator, who began his survey near Mount San Jacinto, and proceeded to examine the shore northward, looking still for the Strait of Anian! After all, it must have been 11 relief not to have found it; for it would have been necessary, with Spanish views of national affairs, to have fortified, and guarded it from use by the rest of the world. For Spain was practicing siill her Immemorial policy of exclusive right, struggling 10 keep her place among the nations as a first-rate power, yet sinking lower all the lime, cursed with a religion that I would not let her soar, but compelled her nt last to crawl. Could Spain have cast olfthe fellers of Romanism in the I 171b century, her people had the talent and the ardor to have risen to any height; failing to do this, they have gone through the valley of humiliation ; and yet arc not so humbled but they show again some signs of awakening power, w hich in the course of another Icenturv may restore them to 111c irom I runk of nation! once more, w hen the I name of Spaniard shall be a glory in stead of a reproach. Tins tab ...-.1 .,,,,1 iharouffhlv eaiunrjed cx- of a Spanish Government at Noolka. In September of this year the Ameri can brig Hope, Captain Ingrabam, left Boston for the west coast of America, by the way, continued to keep up the hc.ion certain localities mat WU. pro.-. , - P . , Eng. ta n them while tnc r.ngiisn st " 1 .-, " - . spoken on this continent. ! Sf As has already Wen -aid, Capt. Gray, I eredit a, a discoverer. Cape lUanco i will, the ship Columbia, arrived a sec the westernmost pom. on ,ne u .1 i-..ll....ft.l .,n ofi.-r i- tie ,.. turn ml Mr ffi.ls III 1 IMJt , I t l 1 1 ' - h'" " " " ... 1 fllll W;0 llll'IIHII nirsJia ftft..v. wj 1 UI.' - - - a IT. . . .1 . . ,. I ... ili. Islands. TheIollow,ng,sa q.,r.r - r-i d wintered near the entrance to the but the change was no. c .s . v IM rr .. ' u. i.nl,;i. small ruse of the cane itsell, ami the name o, ion Cantab) Roberts, a o t notion, am. .-.trail ni r 111.1, - - ,. , Z Z"are , Caption Magee.of New ves-el, , Adventure, and having di.-! Orford only attache. ,0 rr Z. ',, , .. ,,. ..u..i MM to mr.. him- bor to the south of it. Cape Arago ork. 1 he nope amseu v . pais.. ... - . s . , ,,, r a cruise souinwaro, w 1 ; . . .... I-.I...J- . c .1... .;.. .If xmm Rmnu. Captain Ingrabam nam.ng . .cc wha, he eou, - - " , , . ,..e, the coas. ... ..... -- - - , thus cnitagcd, Vancouver was amine me apie.u.s from his " Observations on bit Existence of a Northwest Pass age.1 "The Washington entered the Straits of Tin De Fuca, the knowledge of which she received from u, and pene trating up them, entered into an exten ) sea. where she steered to the north . .1 r I.,. ..tr .... .,.11 for cruise southward, to also sun rei s , ........ 7)i, 11 harbor on the southeast where he anchored, .Magee s aou.m, w- ,... h id said in his narra- in honor of one of the owner, of hi. slowly coming .0 meet h,m from the although Me.re. had ward, and had communication with the