In 1696, de Vlamingh commanded the rescue mission to Australia's west coast to look for survivors of the
Ridderschap van Holland that had gone missing two years earlier, and had admiral Sir James Couper on board. There were three ships under his command: the frigate
Geelvink, captained by de Vlamingh himself;
Nijptang, under Captain Gerrit Collaert; and the
galiot Weseltje, under Captain Cornelis de Vlamingh, son of Willem de Vlamingh. The expedition departed
Texel "strictly incognito" on 3 May 1696 and, because of the
Nine Years' War with France, sailed around the coast of Scotland to
Tristan da Cunha. In early September the three ships arrived at
Cape of Good Hope, where they stayed for seven weeks because of scurvy among the crew. There, Cornelis de Vlamingh took command after Laurens T. Zeeman died. They left on 27 October, using the
Brouwer Route across the Indian Ocean from the African
Cape of Good Hope to the
Dutch East Indies. On their way east they checked
Île Saint-Paul and
Île Amsterdam, in the southern Indian Ocean, but no wreckage or survivors were found. On 5 December they sailed on. On 29 December 1696, de Vlamingh's party landed on
Rottnest Island. He saw numerous
quokkas (a native marsupial) and, thinking they were large rats, he named the island (). He afterwards wrote of it in his journal: On 10 January 1697, de Vlamingh and his crew ventured up the
Swan River and are believed to have been the first Europeans to do so. However, they were not the first Europeans to see
black swans because, in 1636, Dutch mariner Antonie Caen had observed black swans at sea off
Bernier Island. De Vlamingh named the river () after the large number of swans they observed there. The crew split into three parties, hoping to catch an
Aboriginal person, but about five days later they gave up their quest to catch a "South lander". On 22 January, they sailed through the
Geelvink Channel. The next day they saw ten naked Aboriginal people. On 24 January, they passed Red Bluff. Near Wittecarra they went looking for fresh water. On 4 February 1697, de Vlamingh landed at
Dirk Hartog Island, Western Australia, and
replaced the pewter plate left by
Dirk Hartog in 1616 with a new one that bore a record of both Dutch visits. The original plate is preserved in the
Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam. De Vlamingh, with his son and Collaert, commanded a return fleet from the Indies on 3 or 11 February 1698, which arrived in his hometown, Amsterdam, on 16 August. However, it is not certain that de Vlamingh was still alive at that point, and burial records from Vlieland around this time do not exist. On an earlier retourship, de Vlamingh had sent
Witsen a box with seashells, fruits and vegetation from
New Holland (now called
Australia), as well as eleven drawings that Victor Victorsz had made on the expedition. De Vlamingh also included some black swans, but they died on the voyage. Witsen offered the drawings to
Martin Lister. Witsen, who had invested in the journey, was disappointed the men had been more interested in setting up trade than in exploring. In 1699,
William Dampier would explore the coast of Australia and New Guinea. ==Notes==