Vancouver's Discovery of Puget Sound: Portraits and Biographies of the Men Honored in the Naming of Geographic Features of Northwestern AmericaMacmillan, 1907 - 344 sider |
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Side 5
... northern possessions and , in the process , Vancouver was but a tool in the hands of the British govern- ment . To discuss the original dispute would be out of place here . It is enough to say that up to 1788 honors were about even ...
... northern possessions and , in the process , Vancouver was but a tool in the hands of the British govern- ment . To discuss the original dispute would be out of place here . It is enough to say that up to 1788 honors were about even ...
Side 8
... northern shores of Asia to those of America . To those great discoveries the exertions of Cap- tain Vancouver will , I trust , be found to have added the com- plete certainty , that , within the limits of his researches on the ...
... northern shores of Asia to those of America . To those great discoveries the exertions of Cap- tain Vancouver will , I trust , be found to have added the com- plete certainty , that , within the limits of his researches on the ...
Side 23
... northern shores of America are concerned , the Spanish record is almost a blank for the seventeenth and the first three - quarters of the eighteenth century . Then there came a sudden awakening in the voyage of Perez and those that ...
... northern shores of America are concerned , the Spanish record is almost a blank for the seventeenth and the first three - quarters of the eighteenth century . Then there came a sudden awakening in the voyage of Perez and those that ...
Side 24
... northern shores were visited in 1775 and in 1779 by Spanish expeditions of which Bodega y Quadra was one of the officers in command . The work of explora- tion was then suspended on account of the American War for Independence into ...
... northern shores were visited in 1775 and in 1779 by Spanish expeditions of which Bodega y Quadra was one of the officers in command . The work of explora- tion was then suspended on account of the American War for Independence into ...
Side 32
... NORTHERN 20 Longitude Eaft of Greenwich . 530 PART OF MEARES'S FAMOUS MAP . M Lake Flowey Search L Juleyang Fran River and TF Clear 250 Great Falquis Cumberland R The f belt kynd L Woerd From his " Voyages " published in London in 1790 ...
... NORTHERN 20 Longitude Eaft of Greenwich . 530 PART OF MEARES'S FAMOUS MAP . M Lake Flowey Search L Juleyang Fran River and TF Clear 250 Great Falquis Cumberland R The f belt kynd L Woerd From his " Voyages " published in London in 1790 ...
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Vancouver's Discovery of Puget Sound: Portraits and Biographies of the Men ... Edmond Stephen Meany Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1915 |
Vancouver's Discovery of Puget Sound: Portraits and Biographies of the Men ... Edmond Stephen Meany Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1907 |
Vancouver's Discovery of Puget Sound: Portraits and Biographies of the Men ... Edmond Stephen Meany Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1907 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
Admiralty America anchor Anvil island appeared April August boats breeze British Broughton canoes Cape Cape Flattery Captain channel chart Chatham coast command continental shore Desolation sound direction Discovery distance ditto eastern shore England entrance expedition explored extending fathoms water Friendly Cove Fuca George Vancouver gulf gulf of Georgia half a league honored Indians inlet island Jewitt Johnstone July June land Lieutenant London longitude longitude 235 Lord Maquinna Martinez Meares miles morning mountains Mudge natives navigation navy nearly Nootka sound north point North West America northern shore northward officers Original Journal Pages passage passed Peter Puget point Roberts port port Discovery Puget returned rocks rocky islets sailed sandy Señor Quadra September ship side situated in latitude sound southward Spaniards Spanish station straits tide tion Vancouver Vancouver's vessels village visited voyage weather westward Whidbey whilst wind Zachary Mudge
Populære avsnitt
Side 25 - It is in this very latitude where we now were, that geographers have placed the pretended strait of Juan de Fuca. But we saw nothing like it; nor is there the least probability that ever any such thing existed.
Side 244 - The Earl of Chatham, with his sword drawn Stood waiting for Sir Richard Strachan ; Sir Richard, longing to be at 'em, Stood waiting for the Earl of Chatham.
Side 89 - ... perpendicular cliffs, or on beaches of sand or stone, rose here in a very gentle ascent, and was well covered with a variety of stately forest trees. These, however, did not conceal the whole face of the country in one uninterrupted wilderness, but pleasingly clothed its eminences, and chequered the valleys; presenting, in many directions, extensive spaces that wore the appearance of having been cleared by art, like the beautiful island we had visited the day before.
Side 68 - Voyage, for discovery of the same Straits of Anian, and the passage thereof, into the Sea which they call the North Sea, which is our North-west Sea. And that he followed his course in that Voyage West and North-west in the South...
Side 128 - The serenity of the climate, the innumerable pleasing landscapes, and the abundant fertility that unassisted nature puts forth, require only to be enriched by the industry of man with villages, mansions, cottages, and other buildings, to render it the most lovely country that can be imagined; whilst the labor of the inhabitants would be amply rewarded, in the bounties which nature seems ready to bestow on cultivation.
Side 206 - I cannot avoid acknowledging that, on this occasion, I experienced no small degree of mortification in finding the external shores of the gulph had been visited, and already examined a few miles beyond where my researches during the excursion, had extended; making the land, I had been in doubt about, an island; continuing nearly in the same direction, about four leagues further than had been seen by us; and, by the Spaniards, named Favida.
Side 43 - He was the instigator of the capture the ship Boston, of Boston in North America, John Salter captain, and of the murder of twenty-five men of her crew, the two only survivors being now on shore — Wherefore I hope you will take care to confine him according to his merits, putting in your dead lights, and keeping so good a watch over him, that he cannot escape from you. By so doing we shall be able to obtain our release in the course of a few hours.
Side 93 - Leaving his vessels there to repair, he explored what we now call Admiralty Inlet and Puget Sound in small boats. As the little fleet rounded the long sand point and coasted down into Port Townsend Bay, Vancouver records that a " very remarkable high, round mountain, covered with snow, apparently at the southern extremity of the distant range of snowy mountains before noticed, bore S. 45 E.
Side 12 - It is agreed that the buildings and tracts of land, situated on the north-west coast of the continent of North America, or on Islands adjacent to that continent, of which the subjects of His Britannic Majesty were dispossessed, about the month of April, 1789, by a Spanish officer, shall be restored to the said British subjects.
Side 312 - Spain, wherever the subjects of either of the two powers shall have made settlements since the month of April, 1789, or shall hereafter make any, the subjects of the other shall have free access, and shall carry on their trade, without any disturbance or molestation.