Inaccessible Island was discovered in January 1656 during a voyage by the
Nachtglas ("the night glass"), a
Dutch ship under the command of
Jan Jakobszoon. It was discovered 146 years after Tristan da Cunha was first sighted by Portuguese sailors. Jakobszoon originally named it "Nachtglas" island. There are two explanations for the name "Inaccessible" Island. One is that the Dutch crew who landed were not able to reach its interior. The other claims that French captain d'Etcheverry renamed the island in 1778 after not being able to land. In 1803, US sailors led by Amasa Delano made landfall on the island during a voyage to the
Cape of Good Hope. The South African author
Eric Rosenthal chronicled the Stoltenhoffs' adventure in 1952. The nearby
Stoltenhoff Island is named for the brothers. In 1997, Inaccessible Island's territorial waters out to were declared a nature reserve under the Tristan da Cunha Conservation Ordinance of 1976. Currently, only guides from Tristan are allowed to take visiting cruise ships to Inaccessible; most trips to the island are now made at the request of
expatriates. In 2004 Inaccessible Island was added to the
UNESCO World Heritage Site of Gough Island to create a new site of
Gough and Inaccessible Islands.
Shipwrecks At least three confirmed shipwrecks have occurred off the coast of the island. The first was , a British ship which set sail in 1821 with 54 passengers and crew aboard, her destination
Bombay. Captain Alexander Grieg intended to sail past
Saint Helena, but adverse currents carried her to Tristan da Cunha. She got caught in seaweed, and on 22 July, drifted aground on Inaccessible Island. All but two of those aboard survived the shipwreck. They managed to build a boat some months later. The first attempt to sail to Tristan failed, resulting in the loss of six people; the second attempt alerted the Tristanians to their plight. The remainder were then brought to Tristan, where the
brig Nerina arrived about two months later and took most to
Cape Town, South Africa. The other two shipwrecks are the wreck of
Shakespeare at Pig Beach in 1883, and
Helenslea at North Point in 1897. == Flora and fauna ==