Monday, February 12, 2007

Murderer's Bay


S WIND 20 TO 25 KT.
EASING TO 10 TO 15 KT BY MIDDAY.
WIND WAVES 5 FT.
SUBSIDING TO 2 FT.
W SWELL 12 FT AT 10 SECONDS.
SUBSIDING TO 10 FT AT 10 SECONDS IN THE AFTERNOON.
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In 1788, the original sloop Washington sailed along the Oregon shores. She was the first American vessel to visit the West Coast of North America, Honolulu, Hong Kong, and Japan, pioneering the trade between the newly independant United States of America and the orient.
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The sloop above, The Lady Washington, was built in Aberdeen, Washington by the Grays Harbor Historical Seaport Authority and was launched on March 7, 1989 on the Chehalis River. The Lady Washington is a full scale reproduction of the original.
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The sloop may seem vaguely familiar as she has made appearances in numerous film projects including "Pirates of the Caribbean - Curse of the Black Pearl".
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Below is text pulled from The Oregon History Project, the link below will pull up Haswell's log from the Washington:

Nineteen-year-old Bostonian Robert Haswell wrote the journal entries reproduced here in August 1788; they were published in the Oregon Historical Quarterly 140 years later. Haswell was third officer of the Washington, an American sloop under the command of Captain Robert Gray that had traveled from Boston to the Northwest Coast in search of sea otter skins.

Haswell’s entry for August 10 begins with a description of two Indian canoes that had come along side the Washington to trade otter skins in the vicinity of presentday Lincoln City. Haswell notes the cautious behavior of the Indians, who were probably Tillamook. He also observes that two or three of them had been scarred by smallpox, a highly contagious disease that was probably introduced by fur traders about ten years earlier. This reference and the reference to iron knives suggest that the Tillamook had previously encountered white trading vessels.

On August 14, a party from the Washington entered what was probably Tillamook Bay looking to buy otter skins. The Tillamook Indians were friendly at first, offering the scurvy-ridden sailors an abundance of berries, crabs, and salmon, as well as otter skins. Things turned sour two days later, though. A young man by the name of Marcus Lopez, a native of West Africa’s Cape Verde Islands, discovered that a Tillamook man had taken his cutlass, a short curved sword often carried by sailors. Lopez chased after the man, but soon found himself surrounded by a group of wellarmed Tillamook warriors, who quickly killed the unfortunate young sailor.


The other crewmen of the Washington, seeing themselves heavily outnumbered, ran to their longboat and paddled as fast as they could for the sloop, narrowly avoiding being cut off by Tillamook war canoes. The fur traders named the place Murderers Harbor in commemoration of what happened to Lopez, who was probably the first person of African descent to set foot in what would later become the state of Oregon.

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