HMS Resolution was a
sloop of the
Royal Navy, and the ship in which Captain
James Cook made his second and third voyages of exploration in the Pacific. She impressed him enough that he called her "the ship of my choice", and "the fittest for service of any I have seen."
Purchase and refitting
thumb|left|HMS Resolution by Henry Roberts.Resolution began her career as the
North Sea collier Marquis of Granby, launched at
Whitby in 1770, and purchased by the Royal Navy in 1771 for £4,151. She was originally registered as HMS
Drake, but fearing this would upset the Spanish, she was soon renamed
Resolution, on 25 December 1771. She was fitted out at
Deptford with the most advanced navigational aids of the day, including a
Gregory Azimuth Compass, ice anchors and the latest apparatus for distilling fresh water from sea water. Twelve light 6-pounder guns and twelve
swivel guns were carried. At his own expense Cook had brass door-hinges installed in the great cabin. It was originally planned that the
naturalist Joseph Banks and an appropriate entourage would sail with Cook, so a heightened waist, an additional upper deck and a raised
poop deck were built to suit Banks. This refit cost £10,080.12.9d. However, in sea trials the ship was found to be top-heavy, and under Admiralty instructions the offending structures were removed in a second refit at Sheerness, at a further cost of £882.3.0d. Banks subsequently refused to travel under the resulting "adverse conditions" and was replaced by
Johann Reinhold Forster and his son,
George.
Cook's voyages
Resolution departed
Sheerness on 21 June 1772 for Cook's second voyage of discovery to the south Pacific.. She joined
HMS Adventure at
Plymouth and the two ships departed English waters on 13 July 1772.
Resolutions complement totalled 112, including 20 volunteers who had sailed on Cook's first voyage in HMS Endeavour
in 1768–1771.
Resolutions first port of call was at
Funchal in the
Madeira Islands, which she reached on August 1. Cook gave high praise to her sailing qualities in a report to the Admiralty from Funchal Roads, writing that she "steers, works, sails well and is remarkably stiff and seems to promise to be a dry and very easy ship in the sea."
[Hough 1994, page 239] The ship was reprovisioned with fresh water, beef, fruit and onions, and after a further provisioning stop in the
Cape Verde Islands two weeks later, set sail due south toward the
Cape of Good Hope. Several of the crew had brought monkeys aboard as pets, but Cook had them thrown overboard to prevent their droppings from fouling the ship.
On his first voyage Cook had calculated
longitude by the usual method of lunars but on her second voyage the Board of Longitude sent a highly qualified astronomer,
William Wales, with Cook and entrusted him with a new
marine chronometer, the K1, recently completed by
Larcum Kendall, together with three chronometers made by
John Arnold. Kendall's K1 was remarkably accurate and was to prove to be most efficient in determining longitude on board
Resolution.
On 17 January 1773,
Resolution was the first ship to cross the
Antarctic Circle and crossed twice more on the voyage. The third crossing, on 3 February 1774, was the most southerly penetration, reaching latitude 71°10′ South at longitude 106°54′ West.
Resolution thus proved
Alexander Dalrymple's
Terra Australis Incognita to be a myth. She returned to Britain in 1775 and was then paid off. She was recommissioned in February 1776 for Cook's third voyage, during which
Resolution crossed the
Arctic Circle on 17 August 1778, and again crossed it on 19 July 1779, under the command of
Charles Clerke after Cook's death. She arrived back in Britain on 4 October 1780.
Later service and loss
In 1780,
Resolution was converted into an armed transport and sailed for the
East Indies in March 1781. She was captured by the
Sphinx and
Annibal of
de Suffren's squadron on 9 June 1782. After the action at
Negapatam on 6 July 1782,
Resolution was sent to
Manila for wood, biscuit and rigging, and to
press any seaman she found there. She sailed on 22 July 1782 and was never seen again.
On 5 June 1783 de Suffren wrote that
Resolution had last been seen in the
Sunda Strait, and that he suspected she had either foundered or fallen into the hands of the English. An item from the Melbourne
Argus, 25 February 1879, said that she ended her days as a Portuguese coal-hulk at
Rio de Janeiro, but this has never been confirmed.
Viscount Galway, a
Governor-General of New Zealand, owned a ship's figurehead described as that of
Resolution, but a photograph of it does not agree with the figurehead depicted in Holman's famous
watercolour of her.
In Martin Dugard's biography of Cook,
Farther Than Any Man, published in 2001, states: "Her fate, by some cruel twist of historical irony, is as incredible as
Endeavour's - she
[Resolution] was sold to the French, rechristened
La Liberte, and transformed into a whaler, then ended her days rotting in Newport Harbor. She settled to the bottom just a mile from
Endeavour." (p.281, Epilogue)