Usually the first contact made with the
native people of a land was when they paddled or sailed out
in their small boats or canoes to meet the ships.
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A View in Prince
William Sound
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At Sandwich Sound, Alaska, Indians in canoes appeared to
greet the men in Cook’s ships. Cook wrote:
“When these people first came to the Ships, they
displayed a white dress and unfolded their arms to the utmost
extent, this we understood to be a sign of friendship and
answered them in the same manner.”
(Cook, Journals III, i, 344)
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Tonga Tabu (Tongatapu)
or Amsterdam
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“While we were in the Passage between the two Isles
we had little wind, which gave time for a large sailing Canoe
which had been chasing us all day to get up with us as well
as several others with Padles which had been thrown a Stern
when the breeze was fresh, several of these people came on
board the Ship, these as also the others along side continued
to exchange articles as usual... Mr H. (Hodges) has made several
drawings of these Vessels which will not only illustrate but
in a manner make the descriptions I have given of them unnecessary”
(Cook, Journals II, p.447-8, 1st July 1774)
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Vessels of the
island of Otaha
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When Cook’s ships arrived at a friendly
island, especially those at which they were already known,
the native peoples sailed out to meet them and to start trading
with the crews. Off Raiatea, one of the Society Islands, Cook
recorded:
“A great number of the Natives came off to us both
last night and this morning and brought with them Hoggs fouls
Plantains &ca. which they parted with at a very easy rate.”
(Cook, Journals I, p.148, 2nd August 1769)
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A double sailing
canoe
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Cook described the different types of canoes
in the Society Islands:
“We likewise saw a great number of large double
Canoes hauld up upon the Shore, they were of different built
from those we had seen and much larger and their awnings supported
on ca(r)ved pillors, there Sterns very high and ornamented
with carving.”
(Cook, Journals I, p.108, 27th June 1769)
“Two Canoes are placed in parallel direction to each
other about three or four feet asunder securing them together
by small logs of wood laid across and lashed to each of their
gunnels, thus the one boat supports the other and are not
in the least danger of over seting…”
(Cook, Journals I, p.130, July 1769)
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View of a canoe
house
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Cook wrote about the Raiatean people of
the Society Islands:
“This people are very ingenious in building their
Proes or Canoes and seem to take as much Care of them having
large Sheds or houses to put them in built for the Purpose.”and
“there is a great number of boathouses all round the
bays built with a Catanarian arch, thatched all over; and
the boats kept in them are very long, bellying out on the
sides, with a very high peaked stern, and are used only at
particular seasons.”
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War Canoes of
Otaheite
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Cook observed a huge gathering of war canoes
in Tahiti:
“When we had got into our boat we took our time
to view this fleet, the Vessels of War consisted of 160 large
double Canoes, very well equip’d, Man’d and Arm’d…The
Cheifs ie all those on the Fighting Stages were drist in their
War habits, that is in a vast quantity of Cloth turbands,
breast Plates and |
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Helmmets…their Vessels were decorated with Flags,
Streamers & ca. so that the whole made a grand and Noble
appearance such as was never seen before in this Sea, their
implements of war were Clubs, pikes and Stones. These Canoes
were rainged close along side each other with their heas a
Skhore and Sterns to the Sea, the Admirals Vesel was, as near
as I could guess, in the centre.”
(Cook, Journal II, p.385, 26th April 1774
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A New Zealand
war canoe
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When Cook first visited New Zealand he found
that the native people were very hostile warlike. They sailed
out in their war canoes to challenge and threaten the crew
of the ships. An encounter with a hostile Maori canoe was
described by Joseph Banks:
“During this time they brandish their spears, hack
the air with their patoo patoos and shake their darts as if
they meant every moment to begin the attack, singing all the
time in a wild but not disagreeable manner and ending every
strain with a loud and deep fetchd sigh in which they all
join in concert. The whole is accompanied by strokes struck
against the sides of the Boats & with their feet, Paddles
and arms, the whole in such excellent time that tho the crews
of several Canoes join in concert you rarely or never hear
a single stroke wrongly placd.”
(Banks Journal II, 29 March 1770)
One of the women in this Maori canoe holds a preserved head.
Parkinson described these heads:
“These skuls had their brains taken out, and some
of them their eyes, but the scalp and hair was left upon them.
They looked as if they had been dried by the fire, or by the
heat of the sun.”
(Parkinson, Journal 116)
Warfare between Maori groups sometimes resulted in the victors
cannibalising their defeated enemies:
“We have every where been told of their eating their
enemies kill’d in battle… the people of Queen
Charlottes Sound who told us but a few days before we arrived
that they had kill’d and eat a whole boats crew…The
heads of these unfortunate people they preserved as trophies:
four or five of them they brought off to shew to us, one of
which Mr Banks bought.”
(Cook Journals I, 31st March 1770)
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A New Zealand
war canoe
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This Maori canoe was described as:
“Built after the model of those at Otaheite, but
carved and decorated according to their own peculiar manner…she
carried a sail of an odd construction, which was made from
a kind of matting, and of a triangular figure; the hypotheneuse,
or broadest part, being placed at the top of the mast, and
ending in a point at the bottom. One of its angles was marled
to the mast, and another to a spar with which they altered
its position according to the direction of the wind, by changing
it from side to side.”
(Cook, Journals I, 190)
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The Head of
a Canoe
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The decorative head of a Maori vessel was
described by Cook:
“I shal give the dimensions of one which I measured
that lay ashore at Tolaga. Length 681/2 feet, breadth 5 feet
and depth 31/2 feet…The head orament projected 5 or
6 feet without the body of the Boat and was 41/2 feet high…The
oraments of both head and stern and the two side boards were
of carved work and in my opinion neither ill designd nor executed.”
(Cook, Journals I, 283)
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Sketch of a
man of Raiatea
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Paddles from
New Zealand
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I had an opportunity this Morng. At Matavai to see the
people in Ten War Canoes go through their exercise in Padling,
they were at the same time properly equip’d for war…I
was present at their landg. And observed that the moment the
Canoe touched the Shore all the padlers jump’d out and
with the assistance of a few people on the shore dragged her
on the Strand…”
(Cook, Journals II, p.390, 30th April 1774) |
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