Part 16 (1/2)
30 do. In the morning I took the sun's azimuth: between 9 and 10 degrees to northward, the rise being 16 degrees, remains 7 degrees. At noon Lat.i.tude 24 47'. Course held North by west, with a southerly wind; sailed 18 miles; in the evening it fell calm...
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XVIII.
(1627) DISCOVERY OF THE SOUTH-WEST COAST OF AUSTRALIA BY THE s.h.i.+P HET GULDEN ZEEPAARD, COMMANDED BY PIETER NUIJTS, MEMBER OF THE COUNCIL OF INDIA, AND BY SKIPPER FRANcOIS THIJSSEN OR THIJSZOON.
A.
_Dail Register of what has happened here at Batavia from the first of January, 1627 [*]._
[* On p. 307 of my edition of the Daily Register of 1624-1629.]
...On the 10th [of April] there arrived here from the Netherlands the s.h.i.+p t' Gulden Seepaart fitted out by the Zealand Chamber [*], having on board the Hon. Pieter Nuyts, extraordinary Councillor of India, having sailed from there on the 22nd of May, 1626...
[* The Register of outgoing vessels of the E.I.C. shows that the skipper's name was Francois Thijssen or Thijszoon.]
B.
_Hessel Gerritsz-Huydecoper Chart (No. 5.--VII D)._
This chart has 't land van Pieter Nuijts (discovered January 26 [*], 1627) and the islands of Sint Francois and Sint Pieter.
[* Some of the charts have February, but most of them January. This month is also mentioned as the time of the discovery in the instructions for Pool (1636, see _infra_) and for Tasman (1644). Cf. my Life of Tasman, pp. 97f.]
XIX.
(1627) VOYAGE OF THE s.h.i.+PS GALIAS, UTRECHT AND TEXEL, COMMANDED BY GOVERNOR-GENERAL JAN PIETERSZOON COEN.
FURTHER DISCOVERY OF THE WEST-COAST OF AUSTRALIA.
A.
_Letter of Jan Pieterszoon Coen to the Directors of the E.I.C._
Most n.o.ble Wise Provident Very Discreet Gentlemen,
The present is a copy of our letter written from Illa de Mayo on the 15th of April last...On July the 22nd we sailed from the Tafelbay with the s.h.i.+ps Galias, Utrecht and Texel. When coming out to sea we got the wind from the south, so that we could not sail higher than the Cape, and lost eight days during which we made no progress. Then getting a favourable wind we remained together in 37 degrees Southern Lat.i.tude up to the 10th of August; the following night, however, the rudder of the Galias broke in a strong wind, so that the s.h.i.+p became ungovernable, and the sails were dashed to pieces, in consequence of which she got separated from the other two s.h.i.+ps, who had failed to observe the accident of the Galias owing to the darkness; {Page 52} the next day, the rudder having been repaired, we continued our voyage with the Galias, and in the afternoon of the 5th of September in 28 degrees S. Lat. came upon the land of d'Eendracht. We were at less than half a mile's distance from the breakers before perceiving the same, without being able to see land. If we had come upon this place in the night-time, we should have been in a thousand perils with our s.h.i.+p and crew. In the plane charts the reckonings of our steersmen were still between 300 and 350 miles from any land, so that there was not the slightest suspicion of our being near any, although the reckoning of the chart with increasing degrees showed only 120 miles, and the reckoning by the terrestrial globe only 50 miles distance from the land. But to this little attention had been paid. It seems certain now that the miscalculation involved in the plane chart from Cabo de bon' Esperanca to the Southland in 35 degrees lat.i.tude gives an overplus of more than 270 miles of sea, a matter to which most steersmen pay little attention, and which has brought, and is still daily bringing, many vessels into great perils. It would be highly expedient if in the plane charts most in use, between Cabo de bon' Esperanca and the South-land south of Java, so much s.p.a.ce were added and pa.s.sed over in drawing up the reckonings, as is deducible from the correct longitude according to the globosity of earth and sea. We would request Your Wors.h.i.+ps to direct attention to this point, and have such indications made in the plane chart as experts shall find to be advisable; a matter of the highest importance, which if not properly attended to involves grievous peril to s.h.i.+ps and crews (which G.o.d in his mercy avert).
In this plane chart the South-land also lies fully 40 miles more to eastward than it should be, which should also be rectified.
On the 20th of September we struck the South-coast of Java about 50 or 60 miles eastward of its western extremity...