Arthur Johnson Memorial Library

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Captain James Cook

by Hough, Richard Alexand
Edition statement:1st American ed. Published by : W.W. Norton & Company (New York) Physical details: xviii, 398 p. : ill., maps ; 25 cm. ISBN:0393036804. ISSN:978039303 Year: 1995
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title.
Item type Current location Call number Status Notes Date due Barcode
900 - 999 910.92 Hou (Browse shelf) Available Memorial 68200

Includes Source References, Appendix 2, and Index

Illustrations -- Maps and drawings -- Foreward -- Chronology -- The young Yorkshireman -- 'An ambition to go into the Navy' -- 'Mr. Cook's genius and capacity' -- Appointment to the Endeavour bark -- The people and the gentleman -- 'A nursery for desperation' -- Mar del Pacifico -- Venus observed -- ' These people are much given to war' -- ' The first discoverer' -- 'Insane labyrinth' -- Paradise to stinking hell -- 'A voyage such as had never been made before' -- 'Disgracing the country' -- 'Such a long passage at sea' -- Queen Charlotte sound rendezvous -- Horrors of grass cove -- From icebergs to tropical heat -- 'The most horrible coast in the world' -- ' A communication between the Atlantic and Pacific Ocean' -- A stalled departure -- Delays and more delays -- Farewell Omai -- 'Very nice Pilotage' -- The great Island -- Death among the rocks -- A lament for Orono -- ' An everlasing honour to his country' -- Appendix 1 -- Appendix 2 -- Source references -- Index

James Cook, born in 1728, rose from the lowest ranks of the merchant marine, then through the Royal Navy, to become one of the most celebrated men of his time, the last and the greatest of the romantic navigator/explorers. His voyages to the eastern and western seaboards of North America, the North and South Pacific, the Arctic and the Antarctic, brought a new understanding of the world's geography and of the peoples, flora, and fauna of the lands he discovered. Richard Hough's meticulously researched narrative captures all the excitement of this age of discovery and establishes Cook as a link between the vague scientific speculations of the early eighteenth century and the industrial revolution to come. He pioneered the use of new navigational technology, measuring and recording endlessly, producing maps of unprecedented accuracy. He revolutionized the seaman's diet, all but eliminating scurvy. Always seeking the truth of geography Cook was also an exploder of myths, among them that of the great southern continent imagined by earlier geographers and scientists.

68200