Search for Captain Cook's famous ships the Endeavor
and Resolution at Newport, Rhode Island. November, 1985.
On April 27, 1781, a force of British soldiers covertly
positioned themselves on a rise overlooking a bend in
the James River and attacked a fleet of Virginia Navy
ships. They were led by Benedict Arnold after he deserted
the American cause and threw his lot with the English.
The attack was a complete surprise and all nine American
warships were either captured or burned.
While on book tour in New Zealand I wandered into a
marine museum near the Bay of Islands. Their main exhibit
was a giant model of the ship that carried Captain Cook
on his first round the world voyage of discovery, the
Endeavor. On one wall was a plaque describing the ship,
her service, and her final disposition as a derelict
in Newport harbor, Rhode Island in the late 1770s.
The fact that her bones lay in the U.S. was more than
enough to send me on a research probe.
She was built in 1764 as a cat-built bark and originally
named the Earl of Pembroke. In 1768 the ship was purchased
by the Admiralty for scientific research to make astronomical
observations and chart then unknown regions of the Pacific.
Upon completion of Cook's epic voyage, the Endeavor
was refitted and carried naval stores to several destinations
including the Falklands.
In 1790 she was purchased by an American, a Captain
William Mather, to carry whale oil for the firm of Gibbs
& Channing and rechristened the La Liberte. A cargo
of barreled oil was taken on board and she sailed for
Newport, Rhode Island where she arrived safely and lay
alongside the wharves for several months before receiving
a cargo. Loaded at last, she ran aground on leaving
the harbor. Refloated, she returned to dock where she
was surveyed and found not worth repairing, her old
timbers severely rotted and sprung.
She was sold to Captain John Cahoone, who was building
a packet called the Concord. He salvaged what materials
he could from the Endeavor's upper works and used them
on the packet under construction.
For many years the Endeavor's lower hull lay in view
until the gale of 1815 when what was left of her above
the silt was badly battered, reportedly on Cahoone's
shore at the south end of the town. Sometime in the
early 1820s the rotting hulk was pointed out by Mr.
Gibbs to John Gilpin, the British consul. Gilpin then
certified the wreck and removed pieces of it which he
sent to England. What was left of the wreck was soon
torn apart by souvenir hunters who made canes, snuff
boxes and other knick knacks out of the timbers.
The remains of the lower hull and keel were then covered
over by silt and the famous ship was soon forgotten,
her final resting place lost in the past.
Some historians think the ship disintegrated at Gibb's
lower wharf where she was surveyed after the grounding.
This prospect is entirely possible as it was Gibbs who
pointed out the wreck to Gilpin. However, this was a
busy docking area and it seems more logical for Cahoone
to have towed the derelict down to his dock so his carpenters
could remove whatever they needed and transfer to the
new packet on the spot rather than haul it almost a
mile from the Gibbs wharf. Gibb's wharf, by the way,
was located slightly to the north of Mary Street.
Petersen's History of Rhode Island (1853) also puts
the wreck on "Cahoone's shore".
Now our search turned to Cahoone's beach. This was
a tough nut to crack. All we knew in the beginning from
the Newport Historical Society was that Cahoone's beach
was at the south end of Thames Street before the turn
toward what is now King's Beach.
There were no records of Cahoone's property, but the
breakthrough came when it was discovered that Captain
Cahoone sold his waterfront beach and wharf to a Captain
Waite, whose name is depicted on any number of later
maps of Newport.
An on site search by a NUMA team traced the alley that
was Waites Wharf. The area has been heavily filled in
and is now a large parking area surrounded by a small
restaurant and fish market on the west end, a slip for
the excursion boat SS Newport on the north, old buildings
to the east, and apartments and condominiums on the
south.
I'm the first to admit it's a wild guess and a long
shot, but there is a remote chance the few remains of
the Endeavor lie beneath this parking lot.
It must also be noted that there are some historians,
mostly Australian, who suggest that Captain Cook's other
ship, the Resolution, is the one that came and died
in Newport in 1793. Who can say with any certainty?
Are a few bits and pieces of the Endeavor buried under
silt and landfill somewhere around Gibb's & Channing's
old lower wharf, or is she truly under the parking lot
over what was once Cahoone's beach? Is it indeed the
Endeavor or Cook's equally famous ship, the Resolution?
Perhaps someday, someone will find a clue hidden away
in an archive and an excavation can be launched with
fair hope of success.
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