
William Dampier, pirate, navigator and explorer
'William Dampier' (baptised
5 September 1651 – died March
1715) was an
English buccaneer, sea captain,
author and scientific observer. He was the first Englishman to explore or map parts of
New Holland (
Australia) and
New Guinea. He was the first person to
circumnavigate the world twice, and went on to complete a third circumnavigation.
First circumnavigation

Map from "A New Voyage Round the World", published in 1697 by William Dampier, the English sea captain, naturalist, and occasional pirate.
The
Miskito coast is marked with a star. Dampier and his associate, the surgeon and buccaneer
Lionel Wafer describe the
Miskito peoples in the period 1690-1700. These tribal groups, often mixed with runaway slaves, formed a distinct culture in the coastal region, sometimes forming alliances with pirates against Spanish authorities in the 16th-18th centuries.
In 1670s he crewed with
buccaneers on the
Spanish Main of
Central America, twice visiting the
Bay of Campeche. This led to his first circumnavigation: in
1679 he accompanied a raid across the
Isthmus of Darién in
Panama and captured Spanish ships on the
Pacific coast of that isthmus; the pirates then raided Spanish settlements in
Peru before returning to the Caribbean.
Dampier made his way to
Virginia, where in
1683 he engaged with the privateer
John Cook (or Cooke). Cook entered the Pacific via
Cape Horn and spent a year raiding Spanish possessions in Peru, the
Galapagos Islands, and
Mexico. This expedition collected buccaneers and ships as it went along, at one time having a fleet of ten vessels. In Mexico Cook died, and a new leader, Captain
Edward Davis, was elected captain by the crew. Dampier transferred to Captain
Charles Swan's ship, the ''Cygnet'', and on
31 March 1686 they set out across the Pacific to raid the
East Indies, calling at
Guam and
Mindanao. Leaving Swan and 36 others behind, the rest of the pirates sailed to
Manila,
Pulo Condore,
China, the
Spice Islands, and
New Holland (
Australia).
Early in
1688 ''Cygnet'' was beached on the northwest coast of Australia, near
King Sound. While the ship was being
careened Dampier made notes on the fauna and flora he found there. Later that year, by agreement, he and two shipmates were marooned on one of the
Nicobar Islands. They built a small craft and sailed it to
Acheen in
Sumatra. After further adventures Dampier returned to England in
1691 via the
Cape of Good Hope, penniless but in possession of his journals.
Also was a pioneer
The ''Roebuck'' expedition

Map of the area charted in HMS ''Roebuck'' in
1699
The publication of these journals as ''New Voyage Round the World'' in
1697 created interest at the British
Admiralty and in
1699 Dampier was given the command of
HMS ''Roebuck'' with a commission to explore Australia and
New Guinea.
The expedition set out on
14 January 1699, and on 26 July 1699 he reached
Dirk Hartog Island at the mouth of
Shark Bay in
Western Australia. In search of water he followed the coast northeast, reaching the
Dampier Archipelago and then
Roebuck Bay, but finding none he was forced to bear away north for
Timor. Then he sailed east and on
3 december 1699 sighted New Guinea, which he passed to the north. Sailing east, he traced the southeastern coasts of
New Hanover,
New Ireland and
New Britain, discovering the
Dampier Strait between these islands (now the
Bismarck Islands) and New Guinea.
On the return voyage to England, ''Roebuck'' foundered near
Ascension Island on
21 February 1701 and the crew were marooned there for five weeks before being picked up on
3 April by an
East Indiaman and returned home in August 1701.
Although many papers were lost with the ''Roebuck'', Dampier was able to save many new charts of coastlines, trade winds and currents in the seas around Australia and New Guinea.
On his return Dampier was
court-martialled for cruelty. On the outward voyage Dampier had crewman George Fisher removed from the ship and jailed in
Brazil. Fisher returned to England and complained about his treatment to the Admirality. Dampier wrote an angry vindication of his conduct, but he was found guilty, docked his pay for the voyage, and dismissed from the
Royal Navy.
Second circumnavigation
He wrote an account of the 1699–1701 expedition, ''A Voyage to New Holland'' and returned to
privateering.
The
War of the Spanish Succession broke out in
1701 and English privateers were being readied to assist against French and Spanish interests. Dampier was appointed commander of the 26-gun government ship ''St George'', with a crew of 120 men. They were joined by the 16-gun galleon ''
Cinque Ports'' (63 men) and sailed on
April 30 1703.
En-route they unsuccessfully engaged a French ship but captured three small Spaniard ships and one vessel of 550 tons.
However, the expedition was most notable for the events surrounding
Alexander Selkirk. The captain of the ''Cinque Ports'', Thomas Stradling fell out with Sailing Master Selkirk. In October
1704 the ''Cinque Ports'' had stopped at the uninhabited
Juan Fernández Islands off the coast of
Chile to resupply. Selkirk had grave concerns about the seaworthiness of ''Cinque Ports'' and after a disagreement with Dampier, he opted to remain on the island. Selkirk was to remain marooned for four years and 4 months and his experiences were to become the inspiration for
Daniel Defoe's
Robinson Crusoe.
Selkirk's misgivings were fully justified: ''Cinque Ports'' did later sink with the loss of most of her crew.
Dampier returned to England in
1707 and in
1709 his ''A Continuation of a Voyage to New Holland'' was published.
Third circumnavigation
Dampier was engaged in
1708 by the privateer
Woodes Rogers as sailing master on the ''Duke''. This voyage was more successful: Selkirk was rescued on
2 February 1709, and the expedition amassed nearly £200,000 of profit. However, Dampier died in
London in
1715 before he received his share.
Influence
Dampier influenced several figures better known than he:
★ His observations and analysis of
natural history helped
Charles Darwin's and
Alexander von Humboldt's development of their theories,
★ He made innovations in
navigation technology that were studied by
James Cook and
Horatio Nelson.
★
Daniel Defoe, author of ''
Robinson Crusoe'', was inspired by accounts of real-life
castaway Alexander Selkirk, a crew-member on Dampier's voyages.
★ His reports on
breadfruit led to
William Bligh's ill-fated voyage in
HMS ''Bounty''.
★ He is cited over a thousand times in the ''
Oxford English Dictionary''.
★ His travel journals depicting
Panama influenced the undertaking of the ill-fated
Darien Scheme, leading to the
Act of Union of 1707.
★ His notes on the fauna and flora of southeastern
Australia were studied by naturalist and scientist
Joseph Banks who made further studies during the first voyage with Cook. It helped lead to the naming of and colonization of
Botany Bay and the founding of modern Australia.
Works
★ ''A New Voyage Round the World'', (
1697)
★ ''Voyages and Descriptions'', (
1699)
★ #''A Supplement of the Voyage Round the World''
★ #''The Campeachy Voyages''
★ #''A Discourse of Winds''
★ ''A Voyage to New Holland'', (Part 1
1703, Part 2
1709)
Further reading
★ Diana and Michael Preston, ''A Pirate of Exquisite Mind''
★ Anton Gill, ''Devil's Mariner''
★ Riccardo Capoferro, ''Frontiere del racconto. Letteratura di viaggio e romanzo in Inghilterra, 1690-1750'', Meltemi, 2007.
★
Woodes Rogers, ''Cruising Voyage Round the World'',
1712.
★ Clennell Wilkinson, ''William Dampier'', John Lane at the Bodley Head, 1929.
External links
★
★
★
★
★
★ Works by William Dampier: facsimile scans at
Early Canadiana Online, originals held by the National Library of Canada.
★
★ ''
A new voyage round the world''
★
★ ''
Voyages and descriptions''
★
★ ''
A voyage to New Holland''
★
★ ''
A continuation of a voyage to New-Holland''
★
Dampier Bibliography from the
Human and Cartographic History of the Galápagos Islands
★
★ ''
A New Voyage Round the World'' (HTML version)
★
J. Bach, 'Dampier, William (1651 - 1715)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 1,
Melbourne University Press, 1966, pp 277-278. ]