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See also: English buccaneer, navigator and hydrographer, was See also: born at See also: East Coker, See also: Somersetshire,
See also: DAMPIER
in 1652 (baptized 8th of See also: June)
.
Having early become an See also: orphan, he was placed with the master of a See also: ship at See also: Weymouth, in which he made a voyage to See also: Newfoundland
.
On his return he sailed to See also: Bantam in the East Indies
.
He served in 1673 in the Dutch War under See also: Sir See also: Edward Sprague, and was See also: present at two engagements (28th of May; 4th of June); but then See also: fell sick and was put ashore
.
In 1674 he became an under-manager of a See also: Jamaica estate, but continued only a See also: short See also: time in this situation
.
He afterwards engaged in the See also: coasting See also: trade, and thus acquired an accurate knowledge of all the ports and bays of the See also: island
.
He made two voyages to the See also: Bay of Campeachy (1675-1676), and remained for some time with the logwood-cutters, varying this occupation with buccaneering
.
In 1678 he returned to See also: England, again visiting Jamaica in 1679 and joining a party of See also: buccaneers, with whom he crossed the See also: Isthmus of See also: Darien, spent the See also: year 168o on the Peruvian See also: coast, and sacking, plundering and burning, made his way down to Juan See also: Fernandez Island
.
After serving with another privateering expedition in the See also: Spanish See also: Main, he went to Virginia and engaged with a captain named See also: Cook for a privateering voyage against the Spaniards in the See also: South Seas
.
They sailed in See also: August 1683, touched at the See also: Guinea coast, and then proceeded round Cape See also: Horn into the Pacific
.
Having touched at Juan Fernandez, they made the coast of South See also: America, cruising along Chile and See also: Peru
.
They took some prizes, and with these they proceeded to the Galapagos Islands and to Mexico, which last they fell in with near Cape Blanco
.
While they See also: lay here Captain Cook died, and the command devolved on Captain See also: Davis, who, with several other pirate vessels, English and French, raided the west See also: American shores for the next year, attacking See also: Guayaquil, Puebla Nova, &c
.
At last Dampier, leaving Davis, went on See also: board See also: Swan's ship, and proceeded with him along the See also: northern parts of Mexico as far as See also: southern California
.
Swan then proposed, as the expedition met with " See also: bad success " on the Mexican coast, to run across the Pacific and return by the East Indies
.
They started from Cape Corrientes on the 31st of See also: March 1686, and reached Guam in the Ladrones on the loth of May; the men, having almost come to an end of their rations; had decided to kill and eat their leaders next, beginning with the " lusty and fleshy " Swan
.
After six months'
See also: drunkenness and debauchery in the Philippines, the majority of the See also: crew, including Dampier, See also: left Swan and See also: thirty-six others behind in Mindanao, cruised (1687-1688) from See also: Manila to Palo Condore, from the latter to See also: China, and from China to the Spice Islands and New See also: Holland (the Australian mainland)
.
In March 1688 they were off
See also: Sumatra, and in May off the Nicobars, where Dampier was marooned (at his own See also: request, as he declares, for the purpose of establishing a trade in ambergris) with two other Englishmen, a Portuguese and some See also: Malays
.
He and his companions contrived to navigate a canoe to See also: Achin in Sumatra; but the fatigues and See also: distress of the voyage proved fatal to several and nearly carried off Dampier himself
.
After making several voyages to different places of the East Indies (See also: Tongking, See also: Madras, &c.), he acted for some time, and apparently somewhat unwillingly, as See also: gunner to the English fort of Benkulen
.
Thence he ultimately contrived to return to England in 1691
.
In 1699 he was sent out by the English See also: admiralty in command of the " Roebuck," especially designed for See also: discovery in and around See also: Australia
.
He sailed from the See also: Downs, the 14th of See also: January, with twenty months' provisions, touched at the Canaries, Cape Verdes and See also: Bahia, and ran from See also: Brazil round the Cape of See also: Good Hope See also: direct to Australia, whose west coast he reached on the 26th of See also: July, in about 26° S. See also: lat
.
Anchoring in See also: Shark's Bay, he began a careful exploration of the neighbouring See also: shore-lands, but found no good harbour or estuary, no fresh See also: water or provisions
.
In See also: September, accordingly, he left Australia, recruited and refitted at Timor, and thence made for New Guinea, where he arrived on the 3rd of See also: December
.
By sailing along to its easternmost extremity, he discovered that it was terminated by an island, which he named New Britain (now Neu Pommern), whose See also: north, south and east coasts he surveyed
.
That St See also: George's Bay was really St George's Channel, dividing the island into two, was not perceived by Dampier; it was the discovery
of his successor, See also: Philip
See also: Carteret
.
Nor did Dampier visit the west coast of New Britain or realize its small extent on that See also: side
.
He was prevented from prosecuting his discoveries by the discontent of his men and the See also: state of his ship
.
In May 1700 he was again at Timor, and thence he proceeded homeward by See also: Batavia (4th July–17th See also: October) and the Cape of Good Hope
.
In See also: February 1701 he arrived off See also: Ascension Island, when the vessel foundered (21st–24th February), the crew reaching See also: land and staying in the island till the 3rd of See also: April, when they were conveyed to England by some East Indiamen and warships bound for home
.
In 1703–1707 Dampier commanded two See also: government privateers on an expedition to the South Seas with grievous unsuccess; better See also: fortune attended him on his last voyage, as See also: pilot to Woodes See also: Rogers in the circumnavigation of 1708–1711
.
On the former venture See also: Alexander
See also: Selkirk, the master of one of the vessels, was marooned at Juan Fernandez; on the latter Selkirk was rescued and a profit of nearly £200,000 was made
.
But four years before the prize-See also: money was paid Dampier died (March 1715) in St See also: Stephen's parish, Coleman Street, See also: London
.
Dampier's accounts of his voyages are famous
.
He had a See also: genius for observation, especially of the scientific phenomena affecting a See also: seaman's See also: life; his See also: style is usually admirable—easy, clear and manly
.
His knowledge of natural See also: history, though not scientific, appears surprisingly accurate and trustworthy
.
See Dampier's New Voyage Round the See also: World (1697); his Voyages and Descriptions (1699), a See also: work supplementary to the New Voyage; his Voyage to New Holland in
.
.
.
1699 (1703, 1709); also Funnell's Narrative of the Voyage of 1703–1707 ; Dampier's Vindication of his Voyage (1707) ; Welbe's Answer to Captain Dampier's Vindication ; Woodes Rogers, Cruising Voyage Round the World (1712)
.
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