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HMS Endeavour Small Captain Line | Fully Assembled
HMS Endeavour Small Captain Line | Fully Assembled
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HMS Endeavour Construction and Early Years The HMS Endeavour, originally launched as the merchant collier Earl of Pembroke in 1764, was built by Thomas Fishburn in Whitby. Designed as a "Whitby Cat," a flat-bottomed ship ideal for shallow waters, she was robust, featuring a deep hold and a broad, flat bow. Her construction used durable materials like white oak for the hull and elm for the keel. In February 1768, the Royal Society purchased her for a scientific expedition, prompted by the need to observe the 1769 transit of Venus. The ship was extensively refitted, including copper sheathing and additional cabins to accommodate the crew and scientific parties. Voyage of Discovery Commissioned by the Royal Navy and renamed HMS Endeavour, she set sail under the command of Lieutenant James Cook in August 1768. Her journey was part of a dual mission: to record the transit of Venus in Tahiti and to explore the speculated Terra Australis Incognita. Endeavour sailed southwards, rounding Cape Horn and reaching Tahiti. After the observations, Cook claimed several islands for Great Britain and then ventured to New Zealand and Australia's east coast, marking the first European contacts with these regions in over a century. Shipwreck and Legacy After mapping parts of Australia and narrowly escaping disaster on the Great Barrier Reef, Endeavour limped into Batavia for repairs. She returned to England in 1771, completing a nearly three-year voyage. Post-discovery, she was used as a troop transport and cargo ship until 1775, when she was sold and renamed Lord Sandwich. During the American War of Independence, she was scuttled in 1778 at Newport, Rhode Island, to block French reinforcements. Preservation and Commemoration Relics of the Endeavour, including an anchor and six cannons, are displayed in maritime museums worldwide. A replica was launched in 1994, harbored at the Australian National Maritime Museum in Sydney. The Endeavour's historical journey contributed significantly to the expansion of geographic knowledge and remains a celebrated chapter in naval history, immortalized in various memorials and namesakes, including geographical features and spacecraft.
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