Led by Boston merchant Joseph Barrell, a…
November 1787 CE
Led by Boston merchant Joseph Barrell, a syndicate financed the Columbia Expedition of 1787.
The two vessels, Columbia Rediviva and Lady Washington, set sail for the Pacific Northwest in search of furs to trade.
Captain John Kendrick, aged forty-seven, was entrusted with commanding the larger Columbia, while the thirty-two-year-old Robert Gray, known for his missing eye, took charge of the Lady Washington.
The combined crew consisted of around fifty men, including nineteen-year-old Robert Haswell, the sole recorder of the voyage whose account survives to this day, and who developed a distaste for Kendrick.
Another crew member was twenty-five-year-old Joseph Ingraham, an admirer of Kendrick and a self-proclaimed navy veteran of the Revolution, who would later captain the Hope in the 1790 fur trade competition.
Simeon Woodruff, the oldest member on the voyage, had previously sailed with James Cook aboard the HMS Resolution during his renowned third voyage around the world.
After a brief send-off celebration with their families and friends, the Columbia Expedition departed Boston Harbor on the morning of October 1, 1787.
They reached the Cape Verde Islands on November 9, where a clash with Kendrick led Woodruff to leave the Columbia and settle on the islands, embarking on a journey that would eventually bring him back to Connecticut for the remainder of his life.