HMS Endeavour

A three-masted wooden ship cresting an ocean swell beneath a cloudy sky. Two small boats tow the ship forward.
HMS Endeavour off the coast of New Holland
by Samuel Atkins
History
Red flag with Union Jack covering the upper left quadrantGreat Britain
NameEndeavour
OperatorThomas Millner, Royal Navy, J. Mather
BuilderThomas Fishburn, Whitby[1]
LaunchedJune 1764
Acquired28 March 1768 as Earl of Pembroke[2]
Commissioned26 May 1768
DecommissionedSeptember 1774
Out of serviceMarch 1775, sold
RenamedLord Sandwich, February 1776
HomeportPlymouth, United Kingdom
FateScuttled, Newport, Rhode Island, 1778
General characteristics [3]
Class and typeBark
Tons burthen366 4994 (bm)[4]
Length97 ft 8 in (29.77 m)[4][a]
Beam29 ft 2 in (8.89 m)[4]
Depth of hold11 ft 4 in (3.45 m)[4]
Sail plan
Speed7 to 8 knots (13 to 15 km/h) maximum
Boats & landing
craft carried
yawl, pinnace, longboat, two skiffs
Complement
  • 94, comprising:[6][7]
    • 71 ship's company
    • 12 marines
    • 11 civilians
Armament10 4-pdrs, 12 swivel guns

HMS Endeavour[b] was a British Royal Navy research vessel that Lieutenant James Cook commanded to Tahiti, New Zealand and Australia on his first voyage of discovery from 1768 to 1771.

She was launched in 1764 as the collier Earl of Pembroke, with the Navy purchasing her in 1768 for a scientific mission to the Pacific Ocean and to explore the seas for the surmised Terra Australis Incognita or "unknown southern land". Commissioned as His Majesty's Bark Endeavour, she departed Plymouth in August 1768, rounded Cape Horn and reached Tahiti in time to observe the 1769 transit of Venus across the Sun. She then set sail into the largely uncharted ocean to the south, stopping at the islands of Huahine, Bora Bora, and Raiatea west of Tahiti to allow Cook to claim them for Great Britain. In September 1769, she anchored off New Zealand, becoming the first European vessel to reach the islands since Abel Tasman's Heemskerck 127 years earlier.

In April 1770, Endeavour became the first European ship to reach the east coast of Australia, with Cook going ashore at what is now known as Botany Bay. Endeavour then sailed north along the Australian coast. She narrowly avoided disaster after running aground on the Great Barrier Reef, and Cook had to throw her guns overboard to lighten her. Endeavour was beached on the Australian mainland for seven weeks to permit repairs to her hull. Resuming her voyage, she limped into port in Batavia in October 1770, her crew sworn to secrecy about the lands that they had visited. From Batavia Endeavour continued westward, rounded the Cape of Good Hope on 13 March 1771 and reached the English port of Dover on 12 July, having been at sea for nearly three years.

The ship was largely forgotten after her Pacific voyage, spending the next three years hauling troops and cargo to and from the Falkland Islands. She was renamed in 1775 after being sold into private hands, and used to transport timber from the Baltic. Rehired as a British troop transport during the American War of Independence, she was finally scuttled in a blockade of Narragansett Bay, Rhode Island, in 1778. Historical evidence indicates the ship was sunk just north of Goat Island in Newport Harbor, along with four other British transports.[9]

Relics from Endeavour are displayed at maritime museums worldwide, including an anchor and six of her cannon. A replica of Endeavour was launched in 1994 and is berthed alongside the Australian National Maritime Museum in Sydney Harbour. Multiple geographic features are named after the ship, including the Endeavour River and Endeavour Reef, as were three spacecraft. The ship is depicted on the New Zealand fifty-cent coin.

  1. ^ Hough 1995, p. 55.
  2. ^ Knight 1933.
  3. ^ Blainey 2008, p. 17.
  4. ^ a b c d Winfield 2007, pp. 354–355.
  5. ^ McLintock 1966.
  6. ^ Beaglehole 1968, p. 2.
  7. ^ Cite error: The named reference ANMM584 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  8. ^ NMRN.
  9. ^ ABC News 2022.


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