Captain 'George Dixon'
RN (
1755? –
1800) was an
English sea captain and explorer. He served under
Captain Cook in his third expedition, where he learned about the commercial possibilities along the northwest coast of
North America. After the end of Cook's expedition, Dixon became a captain in the
Royal Navy. History has not served Dixon well; for he is the least known of those who served and or were taught by Captain Cook and is only rarely mentioned in history books and when he is; he is relegated to a minor figure who is overshadowed by Bligh and Cook. Bligh is not only well known for the Mutiny but also members of his crew got the American Revolution underway by firing the first shots at Lexington and Bligh himself became a Governor of Australia.
In
1785 Dixon became a partner in Richard Cadman Etches and Company, commonly called the King George’s Sound Company with the purpose of developing the fur trade in present day
Canada. In the autumn of
1785 Dixon commanded the exploration ship ''Queen Charlotte''. In the summers of
1786 and
1787 Dixon explored the shores of present-day
British Columbia. He spent the intervening winter in the
Hawaiian Islands, where he became the first European to visit the island of
Molokai. His chief discoveries were the
Queen Charlotte Islands and
Queen Charlotte Sound, Port Mulgrave, Norfolk Bay, and the
Dixon Entrance.
After visiting
China and selling his cargo, he returned to England in 1788 and published, in 1799, ''A Voyage Round the World, but More Particularly to the North-West Coast of America''. The book was a collection of descriptive letters by William Beresford, his cargo officer, and valuable charts and appendices by Dixon.
There was a controversy between Dixon and
John Meares, another explorer who had published a book claiming credit for discoveries Dixon thought were made by others. This controversy resulted in three pamphlets by Dixon and Meares denouncing each other. In retrospect, history seems to support Dixon's view that Meares was dishonest in his claims.
There was a George Dixon who taught navigation at
Gosport,
England and wrote a treatise entitled ''The Navigator's Assistant'' in 1791. This may or may not be the same George Dixon.
External links
★
Biography at the ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online''