Robert Gray had set out to trade…
June 1789 CE
Robert Gray had set out to trade furs in May 1789, the Columbia Expedition having wintered in the San Juan Fernandez Islands en route from Boston.
John Kendrick makes an odd choice on June 24: he gives Gray command of the Columbia and he takes command of the Lady Washington.
It is as though Kendrick was giving Gray full command.
The reason for this exchange remains unknown, but one reason could be that Kendrick thought the Washington was easier to handle because she was smaller.
Whatever the reason, Gray returns to Boston via Canton; he will later take a second expedition in the Columbia that will enter the Columbia River on the modern Washington-Oregon border, and result in its naming for the ship.
Kendrick remains on the coast.
Kendrick sails up the coast of Vancouver Island at the end of June.
He trades with the Haida and their chief, Coyah, on the Queen Charlotte Islands.
One day, some clothes are stolen from the ship, and Kendrick has Coyah locked up until the clothes are returned.
Coyah is released at the stolen clothes’ return, but he is deeply bitter about the incident, which has been cited as the basis for the hatred of the natives of the "Boston Men" as all American traders will be called.
An account of the incident has it that Kendrick had clamped two chiefs to the base of a cannon and threatened to kill them both unless the natives let him have all of their skins for the price that Kendrick set on the pretext that laundry had been stolen.