What is now known as Burrard Inlet has been home to the
Indigenous peoples of the
Musqueam,
Squamish and
Tsleil-waututh Bands, who have resided in this territory for thousands of years. In 1791, the first European explorers in the region,
Juan Carrasco and
José María Narváez, sailing under orders of
Francisco de Eliza, entered the western part of the inlet in their ship,
Santa Saturnina. They failed to find the
Fraser River, mistaking the lowland of the river's delta as a major inlet of the sea, which they named Canal de Floridablanca. This led to one of the prime objectives of the 1792 expedition of
Dionisio Alcalá Galiano, which was to determine the exact nature of the Canal de Floridablanca. Galiano spent many days exploring the general area, realizing that there was a great river there and sighting Burrard Inlet itself on June 19, 1792. Just days later, the inlet was again named by Captain
George Vancouver, after his friend and former shipmate Captain
Harry Burrard Neale. In 1888, the inlet was described in
The British Columbia Pilot published by the
British Admiralty as follows. == Geography ==