Not much is known about what happened to John Kendrick between the
Revolution's end and his voyage to the
Pacific Northwest. William Lytle Schurz asserts that John Kendrick served the Spanish on the
Manila galleon which sailed between the Philippines and Acapulco (New Spain) by way of California. A syndicate led by
Boston merchant
Joseph Barrell financed the Columbia Expedition in 1787. The vessels included were the ship and the sloop . The command of the larger
Columbia was given to Captain Kendrick, then 47 years old, and 32-year-old one-eyed
Robert Gray was given
Washington. Overall command of expedition was given to Kendrick. The combined crews of the two ships numbered about 40 men, most hailing from Cape Cod, Boston, Rhode Island, and the
North Shore of Massachusetts. Many were veterans of the Revolutionary War. The first officer of the
Columbia was Simeon Woodruff, the oldest man on the voyage. Woodruff had sailed as a gunner's mate with
James Cook aboard the consort ship on his famous
third voyage around the world. As such, Woodruff had already been to the Pacific Northwest, Hawaii, and China. Later, Ingraham became captain of the , which sailed in 1790 to compete in the fur trade. Unlike Gray and Haswell, Ingraham was an admirer and supporter of Kendrick. Ingraham kept a journal of the voyage, but it has been lost. He wrote a separate journal describing Nootka Sound in 1789, which has survived. The third officer of the
Columbia was 19-year-old
Robert Haswell, who kept an account of the voyage that came to serve as the main chronicle of the first two years. He also kept a journal during Gray's second voyage without Kendrick. A Spanish captain passing by the islands offered to take Woodruff to
Madeira. He eventually returned to America and lived in
Connecticut most of the remainder of his life. This incident deepened Haswell's dislike of Kendrick, as Haswell had been friendly with Woodruff and held him in high esteem. In his journal Haswell complained bitterly, describing Woodruff as "an officer under the Great Captain James Cook on his last Voyage". Haswell was mistaken: Woodruff was a gunner's mate under Cook, not an officer. While at Cape Verde Kendrick unpacked and reorganized the hold of the
Columbia, hoping to improve its handling under sail. The hold of
Columbia contained most of the expedition's provisions for the next two years, as well as a large assortment of trade goods hoped to be useful for acquiring
sea otter pelts on the Pacific Northwest coast. These trade goods included such things as tin mirrors, beads,
calico,
mouth harps, hunting knives, files, and bar metal that could be worked into chisels or other tools. Despite the reorganization of the hold,
Columbia continued to handle poorly. Kendrick continued the journey on December 21, 1787, and reached Brett Harbour on
Saunders Island in the western
Falkland Islands on February 16, 1788. Here they collected water and made final preparations for the voyage around
Cape Horn. Kendrick considered wintering in the Atlantic, but decided to leave the Falklands on February 28, 1788. They sailed south toward Cape Horn. Five days later they passed
Isla de los Estados (Staten Island), the eastern extremity of
Tierra del Fuego. A storm was approaching from the west. Kendrick continued south, trying to skirt the edge of the storm. Other ships had escaped storms near Cape Horn by sailing farther south, a plan that Kendrick used. He evaded the worst of the storm by sailing to nearly
62° south latitude, about south of Cape Horn. Through March the ships struggled through cold and heavy weather, dealing with frost, sleet, twenty foot swells, high winds, and icebergs. About a month later
William Bligh tried rounding Cape Horn in but was forced back. On March 22, the ships were about south-southwest of Cape Horn. They had passed west of the cape and so changed course toward the northwest. But during the night of April 1 the winds shifted, indicating dangerous weather. Kendrick had the
Columbia adjust course in an attempt to race ahead. A signal gun was fired and the
Washington followed. But in the morning light, with the storm still approaching, the two ships had lost sight of each other. Over three more days of heavy seas and blizzard-like conditions, they were entirely lost to one another. The
Columbia, badly damaged, was driven back eastward, while the crew made what repairs they could. For ten days
Washington continued on through a series of violent squalls, culminating in a gale that Haswell described as "greatly sirpassing [sic] any thing before I had aney [sic] Idea of." Once the storm cleared Gray was pleased to be separated and saw a chance to free himself from Kendrick's command. Kendrick had written orders for Gray in the event they were separated. They would rendezvous at
Alejandro Selkirk Island (then known as Más Afuera), the westernmost island of the
Juan Fernández Islands, west of the coast of Chile. Gray made his way there, arriving on April 22, 1788. He brought the
Washington to within a few miles of the island, then waited over night. In the morning Gray scanned the horizon and saw no sign of the
Columbia, unsurprisingly since
Washington was a faster vessel. Nevertheless, Gray figured he had fulfilled Kendrick's order and was now free to continue on alone. Gray was in need of water and wood, but there was no place to land at Alejandro Selkirk Island, so he headed north to Ambrose Island (Isla San Ambrosio), part of the
Desventuradas Islands. Arriving on May 3, Gray sent men ashore. Spending the day on the island they did not find water but returned to the ship with a catch of fish, seals, and sea lions. Then Gray continued on, passing far west of the
Galápagos Islands by May 24. Kendrick reached the rendezvous at Más Afuera about a month after Gray had left it. Kendrick had been instructed by Joseph Barrell "not to touch at any part of the Spanish dominions...unless driven there by some unavoidable accident". With
Columbia badly in need of repairs and running out of water and wood, and Kendrick's eagerness for any news of
Washington, he decided to risk visiting Más a Tierra, today known as
Robinson Crusoe Island, where there was a small Spanish settlement. Kendrick had the
Columbia approach the harbor, stopping about a mile offshore, unsure what sort of treatment he might receive. The Spanish governor of the island, Don Blas Gonzales, recognized a ship in distress. He sent out a fishing boat with a few armed men. The Spanish officer Nicholas Juanes came on board
Columbia. He noted the ten cannons but thought the crew friendly and unthreatening. Kendrick said he needed a safe anchorage for making repairs and to take on water and wood. Juanes took first mate Joseph Ingraham back to shore to request permission to enter the harbor. Don Blas Gonzales was intrigued by this American ship, the first he had ever seen, and granted permission. On August 2, 1788, the crew of
Washington sighted land near the present border of California and
Oregon, near the mouth of the
Klamath River. After a friendly but brief encounter with a group of natives in a large
redwood canoe, they continued north, looking for a safe harbor. They sailed past many native villages and encampments before finding a harbor deemed safe, in the vicinity of
Tillamook Bay. They attracted the attention of many natives who began visiting the sloop for trade, offering, among other things, sea otter skins and fresh food, including baskets of berries, which helped relieve the symptoms of scurvy. Haswell noted that these natives had
smallpox scars and carried steel knives, indicating previous encounters with trading vessels. On August 13, Gray anchored
Washington in a protected inlet near a native village. The sloop remained in this harbor for five days. Many natives came to trade and parties were sent ashore to collect water and wood. After a couple days Gray decided to leave but
Washington grounded on a rocky
reef. While waiting for
high tide one last party was sent ashore where an altercation occurred. In the ensuing chaos crew member Marcus Lopius was killed. Officers Coolidge and Haswell, and another crew member were wounded as they fled into the surf to their
longboat. Native
war canoes tried to capture the longboat and, failing that, positioned themselves between
Washington and the open sea. During the night
Washington was freed from the reef and tried to escape but grounded again, on a
shoal. At high tide the next day, August 18,
Washington was freed again. The sloop's
swivel guns were used to hold off the war canoes and
Washington escaped into the open ocean. Gray set a course for Nootka Sound, still far to the north. Shortly after this the Spanish war frigate
Princesa, under
José Esteban Martínez, and the packet
San Carlos, under
Gonzalo López de Haro, both sailing south from
Alaska, passed but failed to spot
Washington. Two weeks later they passed
Columbia, again without visual contact. The next year Martínez and Haro would establish
Santa Cruz de Nuca at Nootka Sound and, with Kendrick and Gray present, trigger events leading to the
Nootka Crisis.
Nootka Sound 1788–1789 in 1792. From volume I, plate VII from:
A Voyage of Discovery to the North Pacific Ocean and Round the World by
George Vancouver. '
Voyages (Naples 1796).
Washington arrived at
Friendly Cove in
Nootka Sound on September 16, 1788, finding another ship already there:
Felice Adventurer, under
John Meares, a British vessel but flying a Portuguese
false flag to avoid paying for an
East India Company licence, required of British merchants in China. Two more vessels arrived,
Iphigenia Nubiana under
William Douglas, who would later partner with Kendrick, and
North West America under Robert Funter. The
North West America was built at Nootka Sound and launched on September 20. All three vessels were part of a fur trading venture under Meares. After a few days Meares left, and shortly after, on September 22, Kendrick's
Columbia arrived. Kendrick re-assumed command of both ships and the expedition as a whole. On October 26, 1788, the remaining two British ships left for Hawaii and China. Once they were gone Kendrick announced that the expedition would spend the winter in Nootka Sound. They would befriend the native
Nuu-chah-nulth people and gain an advantage in the fur trade over the competing British ships. During the winter Kendrick met and established friendly relations with the Nuu-chah-nulth chiefs
Maquinna and
Wickaninnish. Kendrick knew Meares's ships would return after the winter. By staying at Nootka Sound he hoped to preempt the British by getting an early start. Kendrick had moved
Columbia to a cove known as Mawina or Mowina, today called Marvinas Bay, about deeper into Nootka Sound. He had fortified a small island and built an outpost on it, with a house, gun battery, blacksmith forge, and outbuildings. Kendrick called it Fort Washington. It was the first US outpost on the Pacific coast. Kendrick intended it to be the foundation of an American presence on the Pacific Northwest coast, and as a headquarters for controlling the fur trade. Over the summer Kendrick used the outpost and his friendship with the Nuu-chah-nulth to collect hundreds of furs from the region. Kendrick had decided that
Columbia was too unwieldy for close sailing on the Pacific Northwest coast. The smaller, more maneuverable
Washington was better suited for trading. Therefore, almost immediately after arriving
Washington was readied for another trading voyage. The British captains Douglas and Funter had discovered that Kendrick had control of the fur trade around Nootka Sound and that Gray had been trading in the south. Therefore the
North West America set off northward to seek furs and
Iphigenia prepared to do likewise. On May 2, days after
North West America had left, Gray took
Washington north as well. While sailing away from Nootka Sound Gray encountered
Princesa, under Spanish naval officer
Esteban José Martínez, who had come to take possession of Nootka Sound for Spain. Martínez informed the officers of the
Washington that they were trespassing in Spanish waters and demanded to know their business. Gray and his officers showed him a passport and made weak excuses for being on the Northwest coast. Martínez knew they were dissembling but let them go, knowing that the command ship
Columbia was trapped in Nootka Sound. Martínez anchored in Friendly Cove, Nootka Sound, on May 5, 1789. Within the day Douglas and Francisco José Viana, the nominal captain of the
Iphigenia, were meeting with Martínez on
Princesa. Kendrick soon arrived and joined them. When questioned about his presence at Nootka Sound Kendrick dissembled, saying
Columbia had been badly damaged and the crew suffering from scurvy. They had put into Nootka for repairs and recovery. Kendrick told Martínez that, expecting to have to winter at Nootka, he had built a house for the crew, a blacksmith forge, and a gun emplacement for protection. He said he had sent
Washington north to look for material for barrel hoops. Kendrick readily acknowledged Spanish authority in the region and said he would leave as soon as
Columbia was repaired. Douglas gave similar excuses for
Iphigenia and gave over the ship's papers which, being in Portuguese, Martínez held for translation. On May 12, 1789, the Spanish vessel
San Carlos arrived. With this reinforcement in place, Martínez seized
Iphigenia and arrested the crew. This alarmed Chief Maquinna, who moved his Nuu-chah-nulth people from Friendly Cove to a village deeper into Nootka Sound. After a couple weeks Martínez, in a tricky diplomatic situation, decided to let
Iphigenia go after Douglas agreed to certain conditions. Kendrick and Ingraham acted at witnesses to the agreements. Among the conditions Martínez required Douglas to promise to leave the Pacific Northwest and never return—a promise he broke immediately upon leaving Nootka Sound as he sailed north to cruise the coast for furs. Douglas sailed from Nootka Sound around the start of June. On June 8, 1789, the
North West America returned. Martínez confiscated the vessel as security for payments Douglas owed for repairs and supplies given to
Iphigenia. On June 15, 1789, Meares's small sloop , under Thomas Hudson, arrived at Friendly Cove. Needing repairs and in no condition to resist, Hudson readily accepted Martínez's authority. Robert Gray returned to Nootka Sound on June 17, finding the Spanish in control,
Fort San Miguel built,
North West America captured and
Princess Royal detained. Gray sailed
Lady Washington directly to Kendrick's outpost at Marvinas Bay. While Gray had been away Kendrick's friendship with the natives had resulted in his collecting of hundreds of furs. Thinking they would soon depart, Kendrick took
Columbia and
Washington to Friendly Cove, anchoring there on June 28. On July 2, Martínez let the
Princess Royal depart. Within hours Meares's command ship
Argonaut under
James Colnett arrived. Martínez and Colnett clashed right away, each claiming Nootka Sound by authority of their respective kings. Despite his misgivings, Colnett allowed
Argonaut to be brought into Friendly Cove and tied to
Princesa and
Columbia. As tensions rose while Martínez and Colnett continued to argue, Kendrick, knowing that Martínez was planning to seize
Argonaut, prepared for the possibility of violence. The next day the arguments between Martínez and Colnett nearly turned violent, and Martínez had Colnett arrested. Martínez had ''Princesa's
cannon loaded and ready, and asked Kendrick to do the same with Columbia
, which he did. Seeing Argonaut'' trapped between the two ships as well as the cannon of Fort San Miguel, Colnett realized that resistance was futile. The events set in motion during the summer of 1789, especially the seizure of
Argonaut, lead to the
Nootka Crisis. It took time for the news to reach Europe, but when it did it nearly resulted in war between Britain and Spain.
Northwest Coast 1789 On July 13, 1789, the day after Martínez seized
Princess Royal, the Nuu-chah-nulth leader, Callicum, the son of Maquinna, went to Friendly Cove. He called angrily to Martínez, who shot him dead with a musket. Sources differ over the details of the event, but whatever the case it deepened the rift between the Spanish and Nuu-chah-nulth. Maquinna fled to
Clayoquot Sound. The next day Kendrick decided it was time to leave Nootka Sound. Kendrick asked Martínez if he would be allowed to return to Nootka Sound the next year. Martínez agreed, with certain conditions and requests, to which Kendrick agreed. Martínez asked Kendrick to take the prisoners from
North West America to Macau, offering 96 sea otter skins to cover expenses. He also asked Kendrick to sell 137 prime sea otter skins in Macau for him. Martínez also offered to deliver letters from the Americans. Kendrick wrote to Joseph Barrell, but knowing the letter would probably be read by the Spanish, kept his message short. He said he would cruise north then proceed to China, where he expected to receive instructions from Barrell. He also wrote a letter to his wife Huldah. While at Clayoquot Sound, Kendrick and Gray switched vessels. Kendrick ordered Gray to take
Columbia to China, and Kendrick would take
Washington north, trading for furs. Kendrick recognized that with the British driven off out of the trade due to the Nootka Crisis the Americans had a window of opportunity on the Northwest coast. All the furs in
Washington were transferred to
Columbia and the crews were divided so Kendrick would have a full complement of experienced sailors on
Washington. On July 30 Gray sailed
Columbia out of Clayoquot Sound, making for Hawaii and China. The reason for this exchange of ships remains unknown, but one reason could be that Kendrick thought
Washington was easier to handle because she was smaller. Whatever the reason, Gray returned to Boston via Canton, later taking a second expedition in
Columbia that would
enter the Columbia River on the modern
Washington-
Oregon border, and result in its naming for the ship. Kendrick's movements after leaving Clayoquot Sound are unknown. The next confirmed report dates to September, about a month after leaving Clayoquot. Kendrick encountered
Thomas Metcalfe's Fair American near
Dundas Island and
Dixon Entrance. Metcalfe continued to Nootka Sound and told Martínez about meeting Kendrick. Martínez wrote that Kendrick was in "one of the mouths of the
Strait of Fonte". How Kendrick got from Clayoquot to Dixon Entrance is not known. There is some evidence that he might have entered the
Salish Sea, passing east of
Vancouver Island. After his meeting with Metcalfe, Kendrick sailed across
Hecate Strait to
Haida Gwaii. His activities there are not known in detail but he likely stopped at several
Haida villages such as
Skidegate and
Skedans. At
Anthony Island, or SG̱ang Gwaay, he traded with the Haida village of
Ninstints, under Chief
Koyah, or Coyah. Ninstints had been visited by
George Dixon in 1787, and by Robert Gray in June, 1789, when Kendrick sent him north to trade. Robert Haswell's account of Ninstints during Gray's visit is the earliest written description. Kendrick arrived at Ninstints about three months after Gray's visit. While Kendrick trading at Ninstints minor thefts from the ship caused some tension. One day Kendrick's clothes, which had been hung out to dry, were stolen. Kendrick had Chief Koyah and Chief Skulkinanse held as hostages until the stolen goods were returned. The clothes and most other missing items were returned. Knowing that trading would be over once the chiefs were released Kendrick demanded all the remaining furs be brought for trade. Some accounts say Kendrick paid for these furs at the same rate he had been paying,
Hawaii 1789 Kendrick went to the
Hawaiian Islands, arriving in November, 1789.
Lady Washington was the 15th Western ship known to have visited Hawaii after
James Cook. Kendrick sailed around the
Island of Hawaii and anchored in
Kealakekua Bay, not far from where Cook had been killed in 1779.
Native Hawaiians came aboard to trade. Kendrick asked for Chief
Kaʻiana, who had been on the
Iphigenia at Nootka Sound and was friendly to Kendrick and other traders. Kaʻiana brought Kendrick a letter from Richard Howe, the clerk of
Columbia, which had been in Hawaii in August. The letter warned of native duplicity and told of an attack on
Iphigenia that summer. Kendrick also learned of the complicated and changing political situation in Hawaii. Chief
Kamehameha I and his sub-chiefs, such as Kaʻiana were expanding their power and eager to acquire firearms, which they had been obtaining from other traders. Kendrick was reluctant to trade firearms, fearing his own safety, but probably provided a few in trade for provisions. During his stay at Kealakekua Bay Kendrick recognized
sandalwood. Knowing that sandalwood was prized in China he asked Kamehameha for permission to leave a man to harvest sandalwood for later pickup. Kamehameha wanted assistance training his men in the use of firearms. The details of the deal are not known, but whatever the exact terms Kamehameha agreed and Kendrick left his carpenter Isaac Ridler and two others, James Mackay and Samuel Thomas.
Macau 1790–1791 Kendrick anchored about a mile offshore of
Macau on January 26, 1790. Gray had arrived in November and by January had made it to
Whampoa, a trading center near
Guangzhou (Canton), about up the
Pearl River. Both captains found trading difficult under the
Canton System. Kendrick sent a letter to Gray, telling of his arrival and asking for advice on how to proceed. Gray sent a letter back along with letters from Joseph Barrell, the owner of their venture. Gray described his difficulties with the Canton System and suggested Kendrick go to a smuggling area called Dirty Butter Bay on the west side of Montanha Island (today part of
Hengqin). Gray also provided the names of buyers who would assist in smuggling. The letters from Barrell were friendly and reaffirmed Kendrick's command of the venture and broad authority to continue as he judged best. Kendrick took
Lady Washington to Dirty Butter Bay on January 30, 1790. He found it rife with smuggling and illegal activity. There were two
East India Company hulks acting as floating warehouses full of
opium. Kendrick received another letter from Gray, who suggested Kendrick sell his cargo to Gray's agent in Whampoa, and that Gray would take the money himself. Kendrick refused, saying he might bring
Washington up to Whampoa. To this Gray replied, warning of the difficulties involved and suggesting Kendrick remain where he was. As spring progressed Kendrick found himself stuck in Macau. The Chinese refused to give him permission to leave port and the Portuguese
Governor of Macau, Lazaro da Silva Ferreira, would not intervene. The reason for this is unclear. Stuck in Macau, Kendrick asked
William Douglas for assistance. Douglas had been captain of
Iphigenia but had left Meares's company and taken command of the American schooner
Grace, sailing under a US flag. Kendrick's first mate, Davis Coolidge, became Douglas's first mate. Kendrick and Douglas formed a loose partnership. Douglas was about to sail to the Pacific Northwest. He agreed to stop in Hawaii on the way back and pick up Kendrick's sandalwood. On August 9, 1790, Gray returned to Boston with
Columbia. There were large celebrations of this first US circumnavigation and Gray became a national hero. However, the venture was a failure financially. Gray and Haswell blamed Kendrick for the failure. Some were skeptical of Gray's claims about Kendrick, such as the clerk John Hoskins and Joseph Barrell himself. In addition, questions were raised about the total number of furs Gray sold in China. Gray said they sold 700 skins, with Haswell's records as evidence. Barrell's agent at Canton said there were at least 1,215 furs, and perhaps more than 1,500. The discrepancy was never resolved. Gray proposed another venture in which he would have command of
Columbia, with Haswell as first mate, and without Kendrick's overall command. While
Columbia was being made ready controversy grew over Kendrick's role in the first venture. Newspapers published articles condemning Kendrick and calling him a rogue and a cheat. He was also held responsible for the Nootka Crisis and the looming war.
John Quincy Adams wrote about Kendrick's "egregious knavery and unpardonable stupidity". During all this time Kendrick remained at Dirty Butter Bay, unable to leave due to the restrictions that had been placed upon him. In late 1790 a new governor of Macau, Vasco Luis Caneiro de Sousa de Faro, was appointed, and Kendrick's restrictions were lifted. By this time Douglas had returned with a cargo of furs, Kendrick's Hawaiian sandalwood, and Kendrick's men James Mackay and Samuel Thomas. After selling the furs and sandalwood the two captains decided to sail together to Japan in an attempt to open trade there. They left China on March 31, 1791. Kendrick and Douglas approached the
Kii Peninsula of Japan on May 6. Seeking shelter from an approaching typhoon Kendrick and Douglas sailed into the channel between the mainland and the island of
Kii Ōshima, near the fishing villages of
Kushimoto and
Koza. Both villages immediately sent messages to the
daimyō at
Wakayama Castle. After the storm passed a few Japanese fishermen visited the ships. Kendrick offered food and drink, and a few of the fishermen went on board. None of the ships' crew members spoke Japanese, but the Chinese crewmen were able to communicate via writing. Kendrick and Douglas learned that there was no market for sea otter furs in Japan, contrary to the rumors they had heard in Macau. The fishermen also persuaded Kendrick and Douglas not to go to
Osaka, where they would have faced certain arrest. While they waited for favorable weather, five men were sent ashore on Oshima Island to collect water and wood. They fired a warning musket shot at a local farmer who tried to stop them. In the meantime, the messages from the villages reached Wakayama Castle and the daimyō sent a force of
samurai. On May 17, Kendrick and Douglas departed, perhaps having heard that troops were coming. The samurai arrived two days later. The result of this first visit of Americans to Japan was largely symbolic for the United States. For Japan, it resulted in a new system of alarms and coastal patrols, increasing Japan's isolation under
sakoku. A few days after leaving the Kii Peninsula, Kendrick and Douglas came across some islands that weren't on any charts they had. Possibly part of the
Nanpō Islands, they named them the "Water Islands". Here, they decided to separate. Douglas sailed to Alaska, perhaps by way of Hawaii, while Kendrick made for the Pacific Northwest Coast. ==Northwest Coast 1791==