used to established a permanent Chilean presence in the strait in 1843 While in exile in Peru
Bernardo O'Higgins, independent Chile's head of state from 1817 to 1823, promoted the colonization of the strait in his correspondence with authorities. Chile's decision to send an expedition to the strait appears to be unrelated to O'Higgin's suggestions and was more of a direct response to an American citizen's request to be allowed to establish a tug boat service for
steamships in the strait. Chilean authorities were supportive of the idea but sought first to establish a permanent Chilean outpost in the strait. As no ship of the
Chilean Navy was available for the expedition the
schooner Ancud was built in
Chiloé for the purpose. In Chiloé
Prussian naturalist
Bernhard Eunom Philippi learned about the expedition and was granted permission by the Chilean government to join it.
Repairs and incident at Puerto Americano On its first attempt to reach the strait in the winter of 1843
Ancud was badly battered by storms reaching
Puerto Americano in the
fjords and channels of Patagonia on June 6. Puerto Americano was a sheltered cove where the Yates cousins had established a trading post. Being a friend of the cousins Chilean-British commander
John Williams Wilson had directed
Ancud there as a first stopover. The expeditionaries spent one month repairing Ancud and exploring the nearby area in a small boat they built on place. The Yates cousins provided the men with lodge, dry
sea lion meat and dry firewood. On August 4, two weeks after the repaired
Ancud had departed for the strait, she was back in port, yet again needing repairs. When entering Puerto Americano a second time the expeditionaries found that
Enterprise had arrived to trade with the Yates cousins. Deeming
Enterprise to be engaging in tobacco contraband with the Yates cousins Williams demanded it to leave by September 5. By one account his mean went as far as boarding
Enterprise to force her to leave.
Enterprise, being a larger ship was well defended against any eviction attempt and refused to follow William's demands. Williams did threaten to report it to Chilean authorities in Chiloé if he found it again. Later Chilean authorities sanctioned the Yates cousins forcing them to provide sea lion meat and dry shellfish free of charge to Chilean supply ships sailing to or from the strait of Magellan. William's men borrowed and repaired the cousin's
chalupa and used it to send men back to Chiloé to obtain repair material for
Ancud. Once the Ancud was repaired a second time it sat sail for the strait again.
Ancud in the Strait of Magellan The whole crew of
Ancud went ashore in the strait on September 21, 1843, and took formal possession of the strait raising the flag of Chile in a ceremony. A few days later the crew of a French ship went ashore near the Chileans promoting William's to complain about the use of the French flag on land. The French complied with the demand and stopped using the flag. After declaring possession the
Ancud and its crew went on to explore the northern shore of the strait in search of a suitable site for establishing a permanent outpost. Reaching as far as
Primera Angostura before having to return in face of bad weather, the expeditionaries had a friendly encounter with indigenous
Tehuelche at
Pecket Bay and discovered fragments of
mineral coal on the beaches of Catalina Bay. A decision was made to establish the outpost at the port of San Felipe given its good harbour and abundance of wood, a resource that was scarce in sites further northeast. From October 12 to November 11 the expeditionaries built the fortress-settlement
Fuerte Bulnes. The first garrison and settlers of Fuerte Bulnes was a contingent of eleven persons, eight of them soldiers, two women and a
maritime pilot. Having named army officer Manuel González Hidalgo as the first governor
Ancud left the nascent colony on November 13 to search for
the source of the coal found on the beaches further north. The crew of Ancud failed to locate coal outcrops and sailed back to Fuerte Bulnes from where they sat sail to Chiloé on December 5. When leaving the sheltered waters of the channels and entering the
Gulf of Penas Ancud discovered the survivors of the wrecked French ship
Fleuris whom they took on board. Unfavourable winds and the load the rescues added made progress north slower than usual. By arriving back to its point of origin in
Ancud's
namesake port on December 5 the expedition had come to an end. ==Penal colony (1843–1852)==