In 1776 Cook sailed in a
repaired Resolution (July) to search for the North West Passage
and to return Omai to his home on Huahine in the Society Islands.
 |
The Resolution
Link to pop-up enlargement |
He sailed via the Canary Islands and was joined
at Cape Town, South Africa, by the Discovery, commanded by
Charles Clerke.
The Discovery was the smallest of Cook’s
ships and was manned by a crew of sixty-nine. The two ships
were repaired and restocked with a large number of livestock
and set off together for New Zealand ( December).
 |
View of Christmas
Harbour
Link to pop-up enlargement |
Cook sailed across the South Indian Ocean
and confirmed the location of Desolation Island, later known
as Kerguelen Island. Cook wrote of Christmas Harbour where
he first anchored on 25th December 1776:
“I found the shore in a manner covered with Penguins
and other birds and Seals…so fearless that we killed
as ma(n)y as we chose for the sake of their fat or blubber
to make Oil for our lamps and other uses… Here I display’d
the British flag and named the harbour Christmas harbour as
we entered it on that Festival”
(Cook, Journals III, i, 29-32)
 |
The Hippah
Link to pop-up enlargement |
Cook sailed east, arriving at Van Diemen’s
Land/Tasmania (January 1777) and Queen Charlotte’s Sound,
New Zealand (February). The Maori were wary at first, expecting
Cook to take revenge for the killing of members of the Adventure’s
crew in 1773, but instead Cook befriended the leader of the
attack.
The ships stayed for nearly two weeks in New Zealand, restocking
with wild celery and scurvy grass and trading with the local
Maori who set up a small village in Ship Cove. Cook set off
around the islands of the south Pacific (February), visiting
the Cook Islands (April); Tongan Islands (July); and Tahiti
(August-December 1777)
 |
An Inland View
at Waimea
Link to pop-up enlargement |
In 1778 Cook visited the Hawaiian islands,
or Sandwich Islands as he named them, for the first time.
Cook wrote:
“We no sooner landed, that a trade was set on foot
for hogs and potatoes, which the people gave us in exchange
for nails and pieces of iron formed into some thing like chisels….At
sun set I brought every body on board, having got during the
day Nine tons of water….about sixty or eighty Pigs,
a few Fowls, a quantity of potatoes and a few plantains and
Tara roots.”
(Cook, Journals III, i. 269 & 272)
 |
Habitations
in Nootka Sound
Link to pop-up enlargement |
In February 1778 Cook sailed from the Hawaiian
Islands across the north Pacific to the Oregan coast of North
America. He travelled up the coast in bad weather until he
found a safe harbour, Nootka Sound, Vancouver Island, Canada.
There he refitted the ships, explored the area and developed
relations with the local people.
Cook described a village there, probably Yoquot:
“….their houses or dwellings are situated
close to the shore…Some of these buildings are raised
on the side of a bank, theses have a flooring consisting of
logs supported by post fixed in the ground….before these
houses they make a platform about four feet broad…..so
allows of a passage along the front of the building: They
assend to this passage (along the front of the building) by
steps, not unlike some at our landing places in the River
Thames.”
(Cook, Journals III, i, 306)
 |
Two Chukchi
Link to pop-up enlargement |
Cook left Nootka Sound in April 1778 and
sailed north along the Alaskan coast looking for inlets that
might lead to the Northwest passage but was then forced to
turn south. By July he had rounded the Alaskan Peninsula and
was able to sail north again, visiting the Chukotskiy Peninsula,
Russia, before heading out into the Bering Sea.
Cook described the summer huts, or yarangas, of the Chukchi
people as:
“pretty large, and circular and brought to a point
at the top; the framing was of slight poles and bone, covered
with the skins of Sea animals…About the habitations
were erected several stages ten or twelve feet high, such
as we had observed on some part of the American coast, they
were built wholly of bones and seemed to be intended to dry
skins, fish &ca. upon, out of reach of their dogs.”
(Cook, Journals III, I, 413)
 |
Sea Horses
Link to pop-up enlargement |
After entering the Bering Sea on 11th August
1778, Cook crossed the Arctic Circle and went as far north
as latitude 70 degrees 41’ North before being forced
back by the pack ice off Icy Cape,
|