The most thorough analysis of the interaction between European explorers and the Yahgan is probably ethnologist
Anne Chapman's book
European Encounters with the Yamana People of Cape Horn. Magellan came upon the area around Tierra del Fuego in the early 16th century, but it was not until the 19th century that Europeans became interested in the zone and its peoples. The Yahgan were estimated to number 3,000 people in the mid-19th century, when Europeans started colonizing the area. The Yahgan left strong impressions on all who encountered them, including
Ferdinand Magellan,
Charles Darwin,
Francis Drake,
James Cook,
James Weddell, and
Julius Popper.
Royal Navy officer
Robert FitzRoy became captain of in November 1828, and continued her first survey voyage. On the night of 28 January 1830, the ship's
whaleboat was stolen by
Fuegians. During a month of fruitless searching to recover the boat, FitzRoy took guides and then prisoners - who mostly escaped - eventually taking hostage a man known as York Minster, estimated age 26, and a young girl known as
Yokcushlu, estimated age nine. A week later, he took another Fuegian hostage, known as Boat Memory, estimated age 20, and on 11 May captured
Jemmy Button, estimated age 14. As it was not possible to easily put them ashore, he decided to bring them back to England instead. He taught them "English..the plainer truths of Christianity..and the use of common tools" and took them on the
Beagles return trip to England. Boat Memory died of smallpox soon after arriving in Britain but the others briefly became celebrities in England and were presented at court in London in the summer of 1831. On the famous
second voyage of HMS Beagle, the three Fuegians returned to their homeland along with a trainee missionary. They impressed
Charles Darwin with their behaviour, in contrast to the other Fuegians Darwin met when the
Beagle reached their native lands. Darwin described his first meeting with the native Fuegians in the islands as being: In contrast, he said of the Yahgan Jemmy Button: A mission was set up for the three Fuegians. When the
Beagle returned a year later, its crew found only Jemmy, who had returned to his tribal ways. He still spoke English, assuring them that he did not wish to leave the islands and was "happy and contented" to live with his wife, described by Darwin as "young and nice looking". The Yahgan were eventually
decimated by the infectious diseases introduced by Europeans. The Yahgan suffered disruptions to their habitat starting in the early-to-mid 19th-century when European whalers and sealers depleted their most calorie-rich sources of food, forcing them to rely on mussels chopped from rocks, which provided significantly fewer calories for the effort needed to gather and process them. The Yahgan had no concept of property; in the late 19th century when waves of European immigrants came to the area for the nascent
gold rush and boom in sheep farming, the Yahgan were hunted down by ranchers'
militias for poaching sheep in their former territories. In
Sailing Alone Around the World (1900),
Joshua Slocum wrote that when he sailed solo to Tierra del Fuego, European-Chileans warned him the Yahgan might rob and possibly kill him if he moored in a particular area, so he sprinkled tacks on the deck of his boat, the
Spray. In the 1920s, some Yahgan were resettled on
Keppel Island in the
Falkland Islands by
Anglican missionaries in an attempt to preserve the tribe, as described by
E. Lucas Bridges in
Uttermost Part of the Earth (1948), but they continued to decline in population. The second-to-last full-blooded Yahgan, Emelinda Acuña, died in 2005. The last full-blooded Yahgan, "Abuela" (grandmother)
Cristina Calderón, who lived in Chilean territory, died in 2022 age 93 due to complications of
COVID-19. ==Yahgan today==