enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. History of Hawaii - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Hawaii

    On February 14, 1779, Capt. James Cook was killed on the island of Hawaii. Between 1768 and 1779, Captain James Cook led three voyages to chart unknown seas for Great Britain. [78] While crossing the Pacific on his third voyage, he serendipitously encountered the Hawaiian Islands on January 18, 1778, the first documented contact by a European ...

  3. Atahualpa (ship) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atahualpa_(ship)

    Atahualpa was a United States merchant ship that sailed on four maritime fur trading ventures in the early 1800s. In 1813, in the Hawaiian Islands, Atahualpa was sold to the Russian-American Company (RAC) and renamed Bering or Behring.

  4. Pearl and Hermes Atoll - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pearl_and_Hermes_Atoll

    The atoll is named for the ships Pearl and Hermes, which were wrecked upon it in 1822. [10]The Hawaiian-language name for the atoll, Holoikauaua, was established in the late 1990s by the Hawaiian Lexicon Committee following an effort to restore traditional Hawaiian names which had been lost, misspelled, or replaced with foreign names. [11]

  5. Ancient Hawaii - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Hawaii

    This first European contact with the Hawaiian islands marked the beginning of the end of the Ancient Hawaiʻi period. After Cook's visit and the publication of several books relating his voyages, the Hawaiian Islands attracted European and American explorers, traders, and whalers, who found the islands to be a convenient harbor and source of ...

  6. Third voyage of James Cook - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Third_voyage_of_James_Cook

    The vessels left for the Sandwich Islands on 24 October, sighting Maui on 26 November 1778. The two vessels sailed around the Hawaiian Archipelago for some eight weeks looking for a suitable anchorage, until they made landfall at Kealakekua Bay, on the west coast of Hawaii Island, the largest island in the group, on 17 January 1779. During ...

  7. Necker Island (Hawaii) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Necker_Island_(Hawaii)

    The first people to set foot on Necker Island in modern times appear to have been the British seaman John Turnbull of the ship Margaret, who visited the Hawaiian Islands between December 17, 1802, and January 21, 1803, and two Hawaiian pearl divers in his employ; the three men landed on the island during an expedition to find pearls on a reef ...

  8. Pearl Harbor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pearl_Harbor

    Pearl Harbor is an American lagoon harbor on the island of Oahu, Hawaii, west of Honolulu. It was often visited by the naval fleet of the United States , before it was acquired from the Hawaiian Kingdom by the U.S. with the signing of the Reciprocity Treaty of 1875 .

  9. Cook Landing Site (Waimea) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cook_Landing_Site_(Waimea)

    The Cook Landing Site in Waimea on Kauaʻi island in Hawaii, is where Captain James Cook landed at the mouth of the Waimea River on January 20, 1778. Cook was the first European reported to have sighted the Hawaiian Islands, [4] and the January 20 landfall on southwestern Kauaʻi was his first arrival upon Hawaiian soil.