THE FUR-SEAL ISLANDS OF ALASKA. 123 



to seize him. Our people, however, happily escaped them, though they were many times very near; one of them, which was upward of 

 20 feet long, came close to one of the boats that was watering, ami having seized a large seal instantly devoured it at a mouthful, and I, 

 myself, saw another of about the same size do the same thing under the ship's stern. (Hawks worth: Voyages: London, 177o ; vol. i, pp. 

 87-88.) 



Xo other mention of seals is made hj him here at Masafuera. 



The voyage op Dampier. — Fifty seven years prior to Chaplain Walter's inspection and description of Juan 

 Ferdandez, Capt. William Dainpier stopped here, also, to wood and to water, and to rally his crew from scurvy; 

 he was making a "New Voyage Round the World", sailing from England; he passed two weeks there in these 

 exercises of recuperation and reflttiug. The justly celebrated buccaneer delivers himself in this terse strain: 



These [seals] at John Fcrnandos have fine thick short Furre ; the like I have not taken notice of any where but in these Seas. Here 

 are always thousands, I might possibly say millions of them, either sitting on the Bays, or going and coming in the sea round the Island, 

 which is full of them (as they lie at the tup of the Water playing and sunning themselves) for a mile or two from the shore. When they 

 come out from the Sea they bleat like Sheep for their yonug; and though they pass through hundreds of other's young ones before they 

 come to their own, yet they will not sutler any of them to suck. The young ones are like Puppies and lie much ashore, but when beaten 

 by any of us, they as well as the old ones will make toward the Sea, and swim very swift and nimble; though on shore they lie very 

 sluggishly, and will not go out of our way uuless we beat them, but snap at us. A blow ou the Nose soon kills them. Larue Ships might 

 here load themselves with Seal Skins and Trane oyl; for they are extraordinary fat. (Dainpier: A New Voyage Hound the World, 1683; vth 

 edition, revised, 1703 ; vol. i, pp. 88, 90.) 



Dampiee, not Cook, first to note the fur seal. — This account of Dainpier will be instantly recognized, 

 as far as he speaks of their habits, as an exact portrait of a breeding- rookery of the fur-seal. It is painfully brief, 

 however; but it antedates Steller's contribution to the life and habits of the Callorhinus some 60 years; and is 

 a hundred years nearly in advance of Captain Cook's mention of the same subject on the South Georgian (1771) and 

 the Falkland islands (1774). He, therefore, and not Cook, deserves the credit of being the first man to call the 

 attention of the civilized world to the value and the numbers of the fur-seal as it existed in southern waters, while 

 Steller enjoys the same reputation with respect to those of the north.* 



But, after searching through scores of antique traveler's volumes, and reading the musty records through and 

 through — after extended personal intercourse with several of the very men who were active in fur-sealing throughout 

 the Antarctic forty years ago, I have nothing but a mass of disjointed and conflicting data to show as to the real 

 number of fur-seals slain in the waters south of the equator ; while the record made by these men of the life and 

 habit of Arctocephahts australis is that odd medley of fact and fiction, which destroys the value of the one and the 

 romance of the other. 



The Falkland islands: Their discovery. — Captain John Davies, an Englishman, and a companion of Sir 

 Thomas Cavendish, who made a privateersman's voyage to the South seas in 1592, was the first person who saw 

 the Falkland islands. In 1594, Sir Eichard Hawkins landed upon them and called them in honor of his queen and 

 himself, "Hawkins' Maiden-land"; he said nothing about seals. In 1598 they were seen by a Hutch squadron, 

 Verhagen, and Sebald de Wert commanding ; they touched, and. ignorant of prior discovery, named them "Sebald's 

 islands". Captain William Dam-pier, an Englishman, nearly 100 years after, in 1G80. visited them and styled them 

 '•Sibbet de Wards"; he does not speak of seals there. They were finally called the Falkland islands by Strong, an 

 English navigator in 1089; the manuscript journal of Strong yet remaius unpublished and filed away in the archives 

 of the British Museum. Captain Cook's emphatic mention of the fur-seal at South Georgia in 1771 gradually drew 

 the attention of fur-sealers to a focus, when, from 1801 to 1840, inclusive, the whole Antarctic sealing-grouud was 

 ravaged by them, and the Falkland islands were the head center of all their operations. Great Britain took 

 immediate jurisdiction? for the first time, over the Falkland islands in 1833. 



Extraordinary absence of sealing data. — Such, in brief, are the circumstances that attended the early 

 discovery of these celebrated Falkland islands, which were the rendezvous of a large sealing-flect for a period of 

 nearly 30 years — 1800 to 1820, inclusive; yet, in spite of it, I can find little or no evidence of the extent of the 

 catch thereon, or of the general location of the vast rookeries known to be slaughtered here during that extended 



"William Dainpier was the boldest and clearest-headed navigator, of all who then sailed into unknown seas. He discovered 

 Australia a century before Cook saw it, cruising at that time as a buccaneer; his narrative gave Defoe the idea and supplied the incidents 

 of "Robinson Crusoe", on Juan Fernandez; and there is no question in my miud that he possessed those qualities which distinguished 

 Captain Cook, to the fullest extent : he only lacked the power of the government behind him, to have made a much earlier record, and 

 entirely as meritorious as is the one which Cook left for posterity. 



Although Dainpier gives the first sensible ami positive description of the fur-seal that I can find, yet there is one reference to this 

 animal much earlier; but it requires the reading of an expert to notice that it arose from the sight of a fur-seal. It is found in the account 

 of Henry Braiier, or Brewer, who, in behalf of the Dutch West India Company, lauded on the coast of Staten Land, 9th March, 1C42, en 

 route to Chili. Here, at Valentine's bay, he "saw among the rocks several sea-lions and sea-dogs, about the bigness of a good -European 

 calf; some of a grayish, some of a brownish color, making a noise not unlike our sheep, and at the approach of our men they betook 

 themselves to the sea." [Churchill: Voyages: London, 1700: vol. i, p. 456.] As the fur-seal is the only one of its family that maki 9 a 

 "noise not unlike our sheep", there is no question that Henry Brewer saw a number of female AreUxsejphalns australis, in especial; though 

 males were along, they being so much larger, he deemed different, and termed them sea-lions 



Juan Fernandez, the Spanish navigator and adventurer, who, in 1563-'67, discovered, pre-empted, and colonized the island of LLs 

 name-, died there in 1575, or thereabouts: with his decease, tin- settlement was abandoned. He, probably, was the first of all civilized 

 men to really know what a fur-seal was; but he has left no record, to my knowledge, of the fact. 



