The island was first named Juan Fernandez Island after
Juan Fernández, a Spanish sea captain and explorer who was the first to land there in 1574. It was also known as Más a Tierra. From 1681 to 1684, a
Miskito man known as
Will was
marooned on the island. Twenty years later, in 1704, the sailor
Alexander Selkirk was also marooned there,
living in solitude for four years and four months. Selkirk had been gravely concerned about the seaworthiness of his ship,
Cinque Ports (which ended up sinking very shortly after), and declared his wish to be left on the island during a mid-voyage restocking stop. His captain, Thomas Stradling, a colleague on the voyage of privateer and explorer
William Dampier, was tired of his dissent and obliged. All Selkirk had left with him was a musket, gunpowder, carpenter's tools, a knife, a Bible, and some clothing. The story of Selkirk's rescue is included in the 1712 book
A Voyage to the South Sea, and Round the World by Edward Cooke. In an 1840 narrative,
Two Years Before the Mast,
Richard Henry Dana Jr. described the port of Juan Fernandez as a young prison colony. The penal institution was soon abandoned and the island again uninhabited before a permanent colony was eventually established in the latter part of the 19th century.
Joshua Slocum visited the island between 26 April and 5 May 1896, during his solo global circumnavigation on the sloop
Spray. The island and its 45 inhabitants are referred to in detail in Slocum's memoir,
Sailing Alone Around the World.
World War I During
World War I, German Vice Admiral
Maximilian von Spee's
East Asia Squadron stopped and re-coaled at the island 26–28 October 1914, four days before the
Battle of Coronel. While at the island, the admiral was unexpectedly rejoined by the armed merchant cruiser
Prinz Eitel Friedrich, which he had earlier detached to attack Allied shipping in Australian waters. On 9 March 1915 , the last surviving cruiser of von Spee's squadron after his death at the
Battle of the Falklands, returned to the island's Cumberland Bay, hoping to be interned by the Chilean authorities. Caught and fired upon by a British squadron at the
Battle of Más a Tierra on 14 March, the ship was scuttled by its crew.
2010 tsunami On 27 February 2010, Robinson Crusoe Island was hit by a tsunami following
a magnitude 8.8 earthquake. The tsunami was about high when it reached the island. Sixteen people were killed and most of the coastal village of San Juan Bautista was washed away. The only warning the islanders had came from 12-year-old girl Martina Maturana, who noticed the sudden
drawback of the sea that forewarned of the arrival of a tsunami and saved many of her neighbours from harm. ==Geography==