)?? VOL. 3-No. 10. rOHTLAXD, OREGON, JUNE. 1878. VmMj SJItttt, irr Urn, n Ac ) ninut mMm HnuiliW KUUIoh, ft Annum l Ml f n i u A CRUISE TO ALASKA, IN 1875. BY JAMES G. SWAN, V. S. SPECIAL CENTENNIAL COMMISSIONER. On the 26th day of May, 1S75, 1 re ceived a dispatch from Washington informing me that I had been ap pointed by the Secretary of the Interior as a special commissioner to procure articles of Indian manufacture for the National Museum, to be exhibited at Philadelphia during the Centennial Ex position of 1S76, and that arrangements had been made for me to go to Alaska, on the U. S. Rev enue steamer Ol iver Wolcott, 1 0 make collections among the Indians of the Northwest Coast. According ly, after having made due prepar ation, we left Port Townsend on the 7th of June for Vic toria, U. C., for some necessary sup plies, and at mid night found o u r selves under way for a cruise to the North. The officers 0 f the Wolcott were : Captain, Charles M. Scammon ; First Lieutenant, Henry Wi Harwoodj Sec ond Lieut., W. P. K i 1 g o r e; Third Lieut., W. K. Or cutt; Chief Engi neer, J a m c s T. Way son; First As sistant, Horace Has sel; Second Asst., A. L. Broad bent; crew, 28, including firemen, coal pass era, and boys. The Wolcott was under sailing orders to proceed to Sitka, touching at Fort WrangeU and Ton gass, and from Sit ka to proceed west to the Aleutian Islands; and as there were no coal supplies at Sitka, we had to take on board an unusual quantity at Nana imo, B. C, where WC arrived on the 8th. Our course was to the east of Vancouver's Island, affording us quite as good a view of the shores on both sides, as may be seen while cruising on Puget Sound. From Victoria, we passed through Haro Strait and through Trincomalie Channel, til! we reached Dodd Nar rows, on Northumberland Channel, west of Gabriola Island. Through these narrows the tides rush with great velocity, except at high and low water, when, for a short time, they are quiet. We passed through easily, and soon were at Nanaimo, where we rilled ev ery available space, even to covering the quarter deck and the waist of the I Cutter, making her look more like a ' coal barge than a revenue steamer. We left N maimo the next afternoon, I and pissed up the Strait or Gulf of MATERNAL HAPPINESS From a Painting by Cahi. Hiimik. tieorgia, reaching Seymour Narrows at 4 a. m. June 10th, and passing through that turbulent passage at slack high water, which was so quiet as lo calise those officers who had never passed it before, to regard the stories of its terrors as a myth, Hut before we returned all hands were satisfied that Seymour's Narrows are fraught with groat dangers, and it was in this very passage w here but n few days after W v h a d g o n e through safely, the Ui n. steamship Sarattac struck on a sunken rock and Was totally lust, sinking in nearly 100 fathoms of water. Seymour Narrows lie be tween V aides Is land and the cast const of Vancouv er's Island, in about 50 dug, j min. north. The temperature of the water, as re pelled by the engi neer, was (O deg. in Fuca Strait,6odeg. in the Strait of Georgia off Nana imo, and 50 deg. after passing Sey mour N a r ro w s, which is to be ac counted for in the following manner : The temperature ol 50 deg. was that ol (he Pacific ocean, brought in by Fuca Strait on the south, and from Queen Charlotte's Sound through Johnston's Strait on the north. The temperature ol' 60 deg in the Strait of Georgia was oc casloned, undoubt edly, by the frcsli waters of the many sluggish st reams, and the llats on the east side of Van eoiiver's Island be coming heated by the summer sun, which at that time was at 90 degrees. The warm, fresh w.iter flowing on the surface of the sail water of the Georgian strait or gulf, was what was dipped up by the engineer.