Thomas Humphrey Metcalfe arrives in the Fair…
March 1790 CE
Thomas Humphrey Metcalfe arrives in the Fair American near Kawaihae Bay about five or six weeks later.
By coincidence, the Fair American is the next ship to visit the territory of chief Kameʻeiamoku, who is eager for revenge.
The schooner, manned by only four sailors plus its relatively inexperienced nineteen-year-old captain, is easily captured by the Hawaiians.
Thomas Metcalfe and his crew are killed.
The only survivor is Isaac Davis, who is badly injured but for some reason spared; he is tied to a canoe and left nearly dead.
Kameʻeiamoku appropriates the ship, its guns, ammunition, and other valuable goods, as well as Isaac Davis himself.
No Hawaiian is aware at this time of the family relation between the captain of the Fair American and Simon Metcalfe, whose Eleanora is anchored at Kealakekua Bay, about thirty miles (forty-eight kilometers) away.
The Fair American and Davis are eventually given to Kamehameha.