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DAMPIER, WILLIAM (1651-1715), voyager,
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was born at East Coker, near Yeovil, Somerset, England, on 5 September 1651,
the son of George Dampier, a farmer, and his wife Ann. The year of birth is
usually given as 1652, but Clennell Wilkinson in his biography gives what appear
to be good reasons for preferring the earlier year. He was probably educated at
a grammar school, it is not unlikely that it was the one at Crewkerne close by.
His parents both died before he left school, and at his own desire he was sent
to sea. After making some voyages he joined the navy in 1672, and was present,
as one of the sick on a hospital ship, at the battle of the Texel. Early in
1674, having left the navy and been offered the position of manager of a
plantation in the West Indies, he sailed to Jamaica and on the voyage began the
journal on which his subsequent writings were based. After a few months at
Jamaica he again went to sea, in 1675 joined a vessel engaged in the logwood
trade, and lived a hard and dangerous life among men who were largely
buccaneers. His journal at this period is full of descriptions of the wild life
of the country. Dampier himself does not say when he became a "privateer" as the
buccaneers were more politely called, but he was with them for at least 12
months, cruising and fighting against the Spaniards. In the beginning of 1678 he
decided to pay a visit to England and arrived there in August. After a short
holiday he returned to Jamaica in the spring of 1679, joined a fleet of
privateers which fought with some success on land near Panama, captured Spanish
ships on the other side of the isthmus, and sailed to the south. Returning in
May 1681 he was cruising for several months in the West Indies, and in July 1682
visited Virginia and stayed there for over a year. He was then comparatively
prosperous but appears to have lost money in Virginia, and in 1683 sailed on a
vessel called the Revenge, captained by John Cook to Africa. At the mouth
of the Sherbro, south of Sierra Leone, they seized a new Danish ship of 40 guns.
They then sailed south-west, rounded Cape Horn, sailed north to the coast of
Peru taking some Spanish prizes, attacked and captured towns, and went as far
north as Panama. Dampier had the post of assistant-paymaster. In August 1685 he
transferred to the Cygnet under Captain Swan and became navigating
officer. They sailed across the Pacific to Guam, from there to the Philippines,
where they stayed for some months, to the Pescadores Islands, and south again to
the Celebes. In January 1688 Dampier actually landed in northern Australia at
King Sound or Collier Bay. From there he sailed to Sumatra and then to the
Nicobar Islands, where early in 1688 Dampier left the ship and put an end to his
buccaneering days.
In May 1688 Dampier set out from Nicobar with seven companions in a kind of
outrigged canoe, and almost miraculously found his way to Sumatra. There he
signed on with a Captain Weldon and went to Tonquin and made other trading
voyages. In January 1691 he took ship to England and arrived in September. He
had been away 12 years and had returned practically penniless. Not much is known
of his life for the next six years, but part of the time must have been spent in
preparing and seeing through the press the account of his travels which appeared
in 1697, A New Voyage Round the World. Its success was immediate and two
years later it was in a fourth edition. It brought him friends, including Sir
Robert Southwell, Sir Hans Sloane and Pepys, who, on 6 August 1698, had him to
dinner to meet Evelyn. Dampier was given a position as a "land carriage man" in
the customs. He suggested to the admiralty that one of the king's ships should
be fitted out to explore the coast of New Holland, and as a result Dampier was
placed in charge of a small ship, the Roebuck, carrying 12 guns, 50 men
and boys, and provisions for 20 months. On 30 November 1698 he got his final
instructions to sail by way of the Cape of Good Hope. In January 1699 he set
sail from the Downs and from the very start had trouble with his second in
command Lieutenant Fisher, who when the ship arrived at Bahia, Brazil, was put
ashore. After a stay to take in stores, a south-easterly course was taken and
the Cape was sighted on 6 June. A favourable wind brought the ship to Australia,
and early in August Dampier landed at Shark's Bay on the west coast, but had
difficulty in finding water. He then turned and followed the coast to the north
and on 21 August reached the Dampier Archipelago. His search for water was still
unsuccessful, and he was obliged to sail to Timor. Thence he went east and
reached the southern coast of New Guinea on 1 January 1700. He explored much of
its western and northern coast, and discovered Dampier Strait dividing New
Guinea from New Britain. He might quite possibly have sailed on and anticipated
Cook's discovery of the eastern coast of Australia, but the Roebuck was
now leaking badly. He made for Batavia where the ship was repaired and sailed
for England on 17 October. It was with great difficulty that the Cape was
reached on 30 December, and St Helena on 2 February 1701. On 22 February the
Roebuck sprang a fresh leak and Dampier was obliged to beach her at the
harbour at Ascension. On 3 April Dampier and his crew were rescued by passing
ships and taken to England. In his absence his ex-lieutenant Fisher had not been
idle and had worked up a case against him. A court-martial was held in 1702 and
the verdict went against Dampier. He was adjudged not to be "a fit person to be
employed as commander of any of Her Majesty's ships". Dampier had a good case
against Fisher, but had probably irretrievably injured it by his leaving Fisher
in gaol at Bahia without means of subsistence. There appears, too, to have been
a good deal of doubt as to the justice of the verdict, as in less than a year
official approval was given to Dampier's appointment as commander of the
privateer St George. He had a roving commission to proceed in warlike
manner against the French and Spaniards. He sailed on 30 April 1703 but met with
a series of misfortunes. Dampier was a great adventurer but he was not a good
disciplinarian, and moreover his vessel again proved to be unseaworthy. He
eventually returned to England towards the end of 1707. Later in the year he was
appointed pilot to the privateers Duke and Duchess, under Captain
Woodes-Rogers. The voyage was very successful, many prizes being taken, and not
the least interesting incident was the rescue of Alexander Selkirk from Juan
Fernandez Island. Dampier arrived in England again on 14 October 1711. He
appears to have received about £1200 on account of his share of the profits of
the voyage, between that date and his death early in March 1715. He married in
1678. We know little of his wife except that her name was Judith, and that she
predeceased him, apparently without children. Dampier's first book has been
already mentioned. In 1700 he published A Supplement to the Voyage round the
World; Two Voyages to Campeachy; A Discourse of Trade Winds.
This was followed by the Voyage to New Holland in the year 1699,
published in two parts in 1703 and 1709.
Dampier was a great voyager. Though in his earlier days a buccaneer, regarded
by some writers as little better than a pirate, he was quiet and modest in
manner and scientifically minded. While his companions were drinking or looting,
he spent his time studying the plants and the living life of the country, and
writing them up in his journals. These formed the basis of his Voyages,
"the best books of voyages in the language" Masefield has called them. To
Australians he has the great interest that he was one of the earliest Englishmen
to land in their country. He explored a good deal of the western and northern
coast, and had his vessel been better found he might quite possibly have been
the discoverer of the eastern shore.
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