Vancouver's ships had left Port Althorp a…
August 1794 CE
On the morning of August 2, they had reached a cove on the southeast coast of the latter island, which Vancouver later named Port Conclusion.
Two boat parties under Whidbey and Johnstone were sent out the next morning; both had returned on the 20th "in the midst of a deluge of rain".
While Whidbey proceeded up Stephens Passage and completed the survey of the east coast of Admiralty Island (including Seymour Canal and Glass Peninsula) and the continental shore opposite it, Johnstone charted the west, north, and east coasts of Kuiu Island, proving its insularity; the two met each other off the northeast coast of Kupreanof Island, Whidbey having investigated the channel to the east of the island before being stopped by shoals.
According to the diaries of several officers, with the completion of their survey, they felt great joy at realizing they could return home.
A few days after their return they leave Port Conclusion.
Unfortunately, as they set out for Nootka, Isaac Wooden is lost in a boating accident off Cape Ommaney, one of the few to die on the expedition.
The treacherous rocks off the Cape are accordingly named Wooden Rocks.