In
Māori legend, Cook Strait was discovered by
Kupe the navigator. Kupe followed in his canoe a monstrous octopus called
Te Wheke-a-Muturangi across Cook Strait and destroyed it in
Tory Channel or at
Pātea. When Dutch explorer
Abel Tasman first saw New Zealand in 1642, he thought Cook Strait was a
bight closed to the east. He named it ''Zeehaen's Bight
, after the Zeehaen'', one of the two ships in his expedition. In 1769 James Cook established that it was a
strait, which formed a navigable waterway. Cook Strait attracted European settlers in the early 19th century. Because of its use as a
whale migration route,
whalers established bases in the
Marlborough Sounds, based out of Tory Channel and
Port Underwood, and also in the
Kāpiti area. From the late 1820s until the mid-1960s
Arapaoa Island was a base for whaling in the Sounds. Perano Head on the east coast of the island was the principal whaling station for the area from 1911. The houses built by the Perano family are now operated as tourist accommodation. During the 1820s
Te Rauparaha led a Māori migration to, and the conquest and settlement of, the Cook Strait region. In 1822
Ngāti Toa migrated to Cook Strait region, led by
Te Rauparaha. From 1840 more permanent settlements sprang up, first at Wellington, then at
Nelson and at
Whanganui (Petre). At this period the settlers saw Cook Strait in a broader sense than today's ferry-oriented New Zealanders: for them the strait stretched from
Taranaki to
Cape Campbell, so these early towns all clustered around "Cook Strait" (or "Cook's Strait", in the pre-Geographic Board usage of the times) as the central feature and central waterway of the new colony. Between 1888 and 1912 a
Risso's dolphin named
Pelorus Jack became famous for meeting and escorting ships around Cook Strait. Pelorus Jack was usually spotted in Admiralty Bay between Cape Francis and Collinet Point, near
French Pass, a channel used by ships travelling between
Wellington and Nelson. Pelorus Jack is also remembered after he was the subject of a failed assassination attempt. He was later protected by a 1904 New Zealand law. At times when New Zealand feared invasion, various
coastal fortifications were constructed to defend Cook Strait. During the Second World War, two gun installations were constructed on
Wrights Hill behind Wellington. These guns could range across Cook Strait. In addition thirteen gun installations were constructed around Wellington, along the
Mākara coast, and at entrances to the Marlborough Sounds. The remains of most of these fortifications can still be seen. The
Pencarrow Head Lighthouse at the entrance from Cook Strait to
Wellington Harbour was the first permanent lighthouse built in New Zealand. Its first keeper, Mary Jane Bennett, was the only female lighthouse keeper in New Zealand's history. The light was decommissioned in 1935 when it was replaced by the
Baring Head Lighthouse. == Geography ==