Chapter 7

Abbott, Captain,144,147,257.Abrolhos,11,15,17,38.Adamant, H.M.S.,288.Adams, John,234,240.Addison'sArithmetical Navigation,35.Admiralty Islands,51.Adventure Bay,223.Alexander,247.All Saints, Bay of,34.Amazon,142.Anson,51.Apia Harbour,32.Apollo,287.Arauco,241.Ariadne,76,137.Armstrong Channel,170.Arnhem's Land,184;discovery of,9,16.Arnhem,9.Ascension,39.Assistance,229.Astrolabe,138.Atkin, Mr.,199,203,212.Atkins, Judge-Advocate,261.Australia,59;belief in the existence,2;the Spanish voyages,4;the Dutch,6;discovery of the south coast, in 1627,9;the first English naval expedition,23;first use of the name,184;condition of the navy in 1804,293;in 1898,294;merchant shipping trade,295.Baffin's Bay,65.Bahio de todos los Santos, or the Bay of All Saints,34.Ball, Lieutenant,77,140,279.Banjoewangi,39.Banks, Sir Joseph,53,67,73, 149,154,158,168,182,208,222,223,249,251,252;on establishing a penal colony at Botany Bay,74;letters from Captain Flinders,204-206,212,213;to Governor King,209;to Captain Flinders,210.Barham, Lord,211.Barrallier, Francis Louis,279,280.Barrier Reef,60,63,184,227,284.Barrington, George,164.Barrow, Sir John, hisMutiny of the "Bounty,"218,231,232,238,245.History of Australia,2;History of New South Wales from the Records,87.Barwell,106.Bashee Islands,19.Basilisk,75.Bass, George,95,105,279;his work of surveying,167;early career,169;appointed surgeon to theReliance,169;discovers the coalfields of New South Wales,172;explorations,172-175,177;sails in theVenus,179;last news,179;appearance,181;mysterious fate,181;various reports,181.Bass' Straits,170,178,281,285.Batavia,11,58,64,100,141.Batavia, Wreck of the,10.Bath,89.Bathampton Church,89.Bathurst,292.Baudin, M.,157,286;his expedition to New South Wales,158;letter to Captain King,160.Baye du Cap,198,201.Beagle,291.Bee,282.Belcher, Lady,Mutineers of the Bounty,218,238.Bellerophon,169.Bellona,66.Benevideis, General,241.Bennilong Point,283.Bergeret, Captain,199,212.Bermudas,134.Berwick,77.Besant, Sir Walter,45.Bishop, Charles,179.Blackwood,291.Blaxland, George,291.Blenheim,233.Bligh, Captain,100,163,169,211,277,279;Governor of New South Wales,218,247,252;his first visit to the South Seas,221;in command of theBounty,222;outbreak of the mutiny,224;cast adrift,225;his courage and endurance,226,246;reaches Timor,228;England,229;in command of theProvidence,229;his version of the mutiny,242;responsibility for it,245;defence of his conduct,248-250;instructions,252;administration,254,296;dispute with MacArthur,256;prohibits the distillation of spirits,257;proceedings against MacArthur,259;surrenders to Major Johnston,267;Rear-Admiral,270.Bligh's Passage,227.Blue Mountains,82,157,279,292.Bonaparte,133,note.Bootie,65.Botany Bay,57,58,94;proposal to establish a penal colony at,74;arrival of the fleet,78;its unsuitability,81;state of society,271.51.Bounty, Mutiny of the,218;various books on,218,219;sails for Tahiti,222;fittings,222;crew,223;outbreak of the mutiny,224;trial of the mutineers,232;sole survivor,233;beached and burnt,234.Boussole,138.Bowen, Lieutenant,285;forms a settlement at Derwent,289.Bowles, Captain,240.Bowrey, Captain,37.Brazils, Viceroy of the, treatment of Captain Cook,55.Bremen, Jan de,15.Bremer, Sir Gordon,291.Breton, Cape,125.Bridgewater,186,188;escapes being wrecked,189;deserts the ships,190.Britannia,144.Briton,233.Britton, Mr.,124.Broken Bay,94,174.Broome,39.Brown,183,234.Buccaneer Archipelago,20.Buchan,53.Buffalo,105,293.Bunker, Mr.,242.Bunker's Hill, Battle of,119,124.Burney, Charles,92.Burney, extract from hisVoyages,5.Byron, Mr.,51,66,137;discovers the Falkland Islands,50.Byron, his poem of "The Island,"219.Caen, General de,199,201;his treatment of Captain Flinders,198,202;his report,207.Calcutta,242.Calcutta,289.Callao,4,241,242.Calliope,32.Camden, Lord,252.Campbell, Captain,181.Campbell, Mr.,201.Campeachy, Bay of,19.Camperdown, Battle of,248.Canada,247.Canterbury,40.Carnarvon,39.Carpentaria, Gulf of,16,184.Carteret, Captain,100;in command of theSwallow,50;his discoveries,51.Cascade Bay,123.Castle Hill,152.Castlereagh, Lord,250.Cato,186,293;wreck of the,188-192.Cavendish,24.Celebes,20.Chappell, Captain,217.Charles II.,37.Charnock, hisMarine Architecture,23;illustration of a sixth-rate vessel,26;a man-of-war,27;his scale of provisions,30;dress of sailors,31.Chart-making, the work of,278.247.Chili,180.Christian, Fletcher,224,225,234,242,244,250;mystery of his death,235;accounts of his revolt,236,238.Cinque Ports,42.Circassian,242.Clarke,92.Clarke Island,170.Clerke, Charles,65;his career,66;captain of theDiscovery,66;extracts from his letters,67-71.Coalcliff,172.Cochrane, Lord,241.Coker, East,19.Cole, Mr.,244.Collins, Arthur,119.Collins, General Arthur Tooker,119.Collins, Lieut.-Colonel, on the result ofthe first voyage to Botany Bay,78;the second voyage,79;on the settlers of New South Wales,83;his history of it,118;career,119;appointed Judge-Advocate,119;Governor of Van Diemen's Land,120;appearance,120;character,121;in command of the expedition to colonize Port Phillip,289.Colnett, Captain,164.Convicts, mutiny,152.Cook, Captain James,221,249;his early years,45;appointed master of theMercury,45;marine surveyor of Newfoundland,46;in command of the expedition to the Pacific,46;object of his voyage,52;commander of theEndeavour,52,53;his ship's company,53;food supply,54;order on the treatment of scurvy,54;treatment by the Viceroy of the Brazils,55;at Point Hicks,57;Botany Bay,57;discovers and surveys the east coast,58;sails through Torres Strait,58;takes possession of the continent,58;his difficulties,60;extracts from his entries,60-63;on the number of deaths at Batavia,64;logs of his officers,65;accidental discovery of Australia,71;discovers Norfolk Island,139;report,139.Coombes, Miss,165.Cooper-King, Colonel C, on the punishment of marines,122.Copenhagen,142;battle of,249.Cornelis, Jerome, the mutiny of,11-15.Coupang,198,231.Courageux,66,119.Crescent,241.Crossley,183.Cumberland,159,194,196,201,293.Cunningham, James,140.Curtis, Sir Roger,287,288.Cygnet,19.Cygnet Bay,20.Daedalus,144.Daily Graphic,247;extract from,248-250.Dalrymple,6,52;his jealousy of Captain Cook,52,56;Historical Collection of Voyages,56.Dalrymple Port,271.Dampier, Captain,8,17,51;his voyages,19;slave "Joey,"20;observations on the natives,21;in command of theRoebuck,23;account of his travels,28;dedication to the Hon. C. Mountague,28;his pay,29;ill-disciplined crew,34;scientific results of the voyage,35;on Tasman's draught of the coast,36;in Sharks' Bay,38;at New Guinea,39;foundering of his ship,39;personality,40;summary of his work,41;dedication to the Earl of Pembroke,42;in command of a privateering expedition,42;sails as pilot,43;obscure death,43;hisVoyage,56.Dampier's Monument,21.Davies, Lieutenant,152.Davies, John,24;his work on navigation,35.Dawes,118,279;Battery,118;Point,283.De Quiros discovers various islands,4.Denmark, Matilda, Queen of,119.Deptford,53.Derwent, settlement at,289;River,268.Dewar, Mr. W.,70.Director,248.Dirk Hartog's Road,38.Discovery,66,68.Dixon, Mr.,153.Doggerbank,249.Dolphin,50,51,66,137.Donington,168.Duckett,59.Duff,133.Duke,288.Duncan, Admiral,248.Duncan,214.Dunton, John,A New Discovery of Terra Incognita Australis, or the Southern World, by James Sadeur, a Frenchman,37.Dusky Bay,179.Dutch, their voyages to Australia,6;East India Company, establishment of the,7.Duyphen Point,8.Duyphen, its voyages to New Guinea,7.Eagle,45,93.East Indies,71.Edwards, Captain,229,245;his treatment of the mutineers of theBounty,230-232.Ellis, Mr. W.,70.Elphinstone,229.Encounter Bay,184.Endeavour,48,52,179;sketch of the vessel,53;its condition,60;goes ashore on the Barrier Reef,60.Endeavour River,63.Endragt,8.England, state of the navy,22.Esmeralda,241.Etheridge, Mr.,166.Europe,76,137.Evans,292.Evelyn, John, extract from, on Captain Dampier,18.Everard, Cape,57.Everett, Captain Michael,75.Exmouth Gulf,16.Falconer,92.Falkland Islands, discovery of,50.Fish, Rev. Lancelot J.,90.Fitzmaurice, Lieutenant,181.Fitzroy,291.Flattery, Cape,63.Flinders, Matthew,59,105,279,284,286;his work of surveying,167;early career,168;joins theReliance,169;discoveries,170,176,177,178,184;in command of theNorfolk,177;return to England,178,182;on the circumnavigation of Van Diemen's Land,182;in command of theInvestigator,182;charts of the coast,184;on board thePorpoise,186;wrecked,187-192;reaches Sydney,192;at Wreck Reef,196;his description of theCumberland,197;letter to Governor King on being taken prisoner,198-201;tyranny of General de Caen,202;imprisonment,203;letters to Sir J. Banks,204-206,212,213;to General de Caen,208,209;obtains his freedom,215;arrives in England,216;Account of a Voyage to Terra Australia,216;his daughter,217.Flinders, Samuel,169,183.Flinders, Mrs.,210.Fly,


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