William Dampier
William Dampier (August,1651 – March,1715) was a controversial English explorer, sea captain, and scientific observer. He was the first Englishman to explore or map parts of New Holland (Australia) and New Guinea.
Dampier was born near Yeovil. After various seafaring adventures, and leading a semi-piratical life, he was in 1688 marooned on one of the Nicobar Islands, but escaped to Acheen, returned to England in 1691.
He captained a voyage of discovery on HMS Roebuck.
Dampier Archipelago off Western Australia is named after him.
He was a crewmember of the pirate ship, the Cygnet, which was beached on the northwest coast of Australia (somewhere near King Sound in Western Australia) in 1699.
In 1701 he was wrecked upon Ascension Island, from which he was rescued by an East Indiaman. He was afterwards court-martialled for cruelty, and wrote an angry but unconvincing vindication.
He had an unusual degree of influence on figures better known than he is :
- His observations and analysis of natural history helped Darwin's and Alexander von Humboldt's development of their theories,
- He made innovations in navigational technology that were studied by Capt. Cook and Adm. Nelson.
- Daniel Defoe, author of Robinson Crusoe, was inspired by accounts of real-life castaway Alexander Selkirk, a crew-member on Dampier's voyages.
- His reports on breadfruit led to Capt. Bligh's ill-fated voyage.
- He is cited over a thousand times in the Oxford English Dictionary.
Works
- A New Voyage Round the World, (1697)
- Voyages and Descriptions, (1699)
- A Supplement of the Voyage Round the World
- The Campeachy Voyages
- A Discourse of Winds
- A Voyage to New Holland, (Part 1 1703, Part 2 1709)
Further reading
- Diana and Michael Preston, A Pirate of Exquisite Mind
- Anton Gill, Devil's Mariner
Categories: 1651 births | 1715 deaths | British explorers | British sailors | Privateers | Explorers of Australia