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Did Captain Cook Sight and Draw the “Small Round Rock or Island” now known as Nobbys Whibayganba on 10th May 1770?

Cook's Journal entries for May 10th to 11th, 1770 recording "small round rock, or island" now known as Nobbys and naming of Point Stephen and Port Stephens (Courtesy of the National Library of Australia)
Cook’s Journal entries for May 10th to 11th, 1770 recording “small round rock, or island” now known as Nobbys and naming of Point Stephen and Port Stephens (Courtesy of the National Library of Australia)

Cook sights the “small round rock or island”

According to the 1790 published account of Captain Cook’s Voyages Round the World, around noon on the 10th May 1770, Cook sights the “small round rock or island” later to be known to Europeans as “Nobbys” and to the Aboriginal people of Newcastle Mulubinba as “Whibayganba”. At 4pm he passed a “low rocky point” that he named “Point Stephens”, and the inlet, he named “Port Stephens”.

Cook’s Journal also appears to state that he sighted the “small round rock or island” on Thursday the 10th May 1770.  He then sighted and named Point Stephens and Port Stephens on the following day; 11th May 1770.

There is probably an explanation to this, relating to how naval officers reckoned time.

Thanks to Mark Metrikas, who has directed us to an explanation posted on the Captain Cook Society site:

“When Joseph Banks recorded events in his journal, he used civil time, meaning that each day begins at midnight. So 10 am comes before 2 pm on the same day. However, in the eighteenth century, naval officers used nautical or ship’s time rather than civil time. Ship’s time means that each day begins at noon. So 2 pm comes before 10 am. Hence, Cook’s journal entries begin with the events of the afternoon, followed by midnight, followed by those of the morning, and end with noon.” – Civil Time, Ship’s Time and the Date Line by Ian Boreham (Editor)

Cook’s Endeavour Journal at the National Library of Australia

Cook’s entire Endeavour Journal is here:

Did Cook draw the position on the “small round rock or island”?

Captain Cook’s original charts were published between 1988-1997 by the Hakluyt Society in association with the Australian Academy of the Humanities, in The charts & coastal views of Captain Cook’s voyages / chief editor, Andrew David ; assistant editors for the views Rüdiger Joppien and Bernard Smith.

The chart of most interest to us, is 1.273 as it appears to record the position of Nobbys in close proximity to Port Stephens. The “finished” version, Chart 1.272, appears to omit Nobbys at that location.

 

Chart 1.273 (Unfinished Version)

[A chart of the east coast of Australia from Point Hicks to Smoky bay] [April-May 1770] 1° of Longitude = 4 in. (approximately 1:910,000 in 34° S), ink and east, 643 x 975 mm (whole sheet), squared in pencil. Inscribed on verso in ink ‘New Holland’ and in pencil in a later hand ‘(A Chart of part of the Sea Coast of NS Wales on the E Coast of N. Holland from Point Hickes to Smoaky Cape by Lieut J Cook 1770) See Add MS 7085 fol. 35 another copy.’. An unfinished version of 1.272, with additional soundings of Smoky Cape. (David, 1988-1997, 271)

[1.273 James Cook/Issac Smith. A chart of the east coast of Australia from Point Hicks to Smoky Bay] [April-May 1770] 1° of Longitude = 4 in. (approximately 1:910,000 in 34° S), ink and east, 643 x 975 mm (whole sheet), squared in pencil. (Click to see it up close)

And for comparison, Chart 1.272 (Finished Version)

1.272. James Cook/Issac Smith. A chart of the East Coast of New Holland from Point Hickes to Smoaky Bay] [April-May 1770] 1° of Longitude = 4 in. (approximately 1:910,000 in 34° S), ink and wash, 544 x 906 mm, pasted down on a sheet of paper exhibiting the w/m CHARLES WISE 1819. Inscribed in ink ‘A Chart of part of the Sea Coast of New South Wales on the East Coast of New Holland From Point Hickes to Smoaky Cape by Lieut.t J. Cook Commander of His Majestys Bark the Endeavour 1770′ (u.c.). For an unfinished version of this chart see 1.273. Reproduced in Hist. Records of NSW (1893), pl. 3; Rienits, p.66. B:, Add MS 7085, f.35 (David, 1988-1997, 270)

1.272. James Cook/Issac Smith. A chart of the East Coast of New Holland from Point Hickes to Smoaky Bay] [April-May 1770] 1° of Longitude = 4 in. (approximately 1:910,000 in 34° S), ink and wash, 544 x 906 mm, pasted down on a sheet of paper exhibiting the w/m CHARLES WISE 1819 (Click to see it up close)
You can never have too many maps and charts. This “unfinished version” provides us with an early European representation of Nobbys Whibayganba, a feature, that the “finished” version appears to have omitted.

James Cook – A Journal of the proceedings of His Majesty’s Bark Endeavour on a voyage round the world, by Lieutenant James Cook, Commander, commencing the 25th of May 1768 – 23 Oct. 1770 (State Library of NSW)

 

The James Cook Heritage Trail Identifications

The James Cook Heritage Trail site provides identifications of the geographical features along the East Coast that Cook identified in his journal and logs.

Consult the following with regards to the Central Coast and Hunter Region coastlines:

Cape Three Points http://www.jamescookheritagetrail.com.au/Cape%20Three%20Points.html

Nobbys Head and Mount Sugarloaf 
http://www.jamescookheritagetrail.com.au/Nobbys%20Head%20and%20Mount%20Sugarloaf.html

Point Stephens, Port Stephens and Black Head
http://www.jamescookheritagetrail.com.au/Point%20Stephens.html

Log of H.M.S. Endeavour, 1768-1770 [manuscript] MS 3

Mr Mark Metrikas has directed us to these additional entries.

To be found in the log of events in holographic sequence, as it was kept by the watch keeper – usually Cook by day.  Page 168, 9th May 1770 is important. Log of H.M.S. Endeavour, 1768-1770 [manuscript]. (nla.gov.au)

Cook, James, 1728-1779. Log of H.M.S. Endeavour, 1768-1770 [manuscript MS 3] Entries 9 May 1770 to 11 May 1770 (Courtesy of the National Library of Australia)
Cook, James, 1728-1779. Log of H.M.S. Endeavour, 1768-1770 [manuscript MS 3] Entries 12 May 1770 to 14 May 1770 (Courtesy of the National Library of Australia)
Mark Metrikas notes on the above logs:

 

Gionni Di Gravio, OAM
University Archivist & Chair, Hunter Living Histories

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