The Eleanora, arriving at Kealakekua Bay in…
March 1790 CE
The Eleanora, arriving at Kealakekua Bay in March 1790, sends its boatswain, a British sailor ashore named John Young, to determine if its sister ship, the schooner Fair American, has arrived for its planned rendezvous.
When Kamehameha learns about the capture of the Fair American, he prohibits further contact between the natives and the Eleanora.
Young is captured, and Metcalfe is puzzled by the sudden silence.
He waits two days for Young to return, firing guns in hope that the sound will guide Young back.
Finally, sensing danger or becoming frustrated, Metcalfe leaves and sets sail for China, not knowing that his son had been killed not far away.
He never learns about the attack on the Fair American or the fate of his son, for which he is indirectly responsible.
These events mark a turning point in Hawaiian history.
John Young and Isaac Davis are to prove instrumental in Kamehameha's military ventures and his eventual conquest and unification of the Hawaiian Islands.