In 1696 the Honourable Directors of
the Dutch Chartered Company trading to the Dutch East
Indies decided to send an expedition for the purpose
of searching for missing vessels, especially for the
Ridderschap van Hollandt, of which no news
had been received for two years. The local Board
of Directors of the Amsterdam Chamber of the Company
was charged to carry out this resolution, and it equipped
three vessels which were placed under the command
of Willem de Vlaming. The Commander was directed
to search for missing vessels or for shipwrecked sailors
at the Tristan da Cunha Islands, the Cape of
Good Hope, and the Islands of Amsterdam and St. Paul
in the Southern Ocean. Thence he was to proceed
to the ‘Onbekende Zuidland,’ by
which name, or by that of Eendragts Land, Australia
was designated in whole or in part in the official
dispatches of the Dutch East India Company in the seventeenth
century.
On the 29th of December, 1696, the
vessels under the command of De Vlaming lay at anchor
between Rottnest Island and the mainland of Australia.
The island was searched for wreckage with little result.
One piece of timber was found which, it was conjectured,
might have been deck timber, and a plank was found,
three feet long and one span broad. The nails
in the wreckage were very rusty. The search for
shipwrecked sailors on the adjacent mainland was unsuccessful.
On the 20th and on the 31st of December, and on the
1st of January, 1697, De Vlaming notes in his journal
that odoriferous wood was found on the mainland.
Portions of it were subsequently submitted to the
Council of the Dutch East Indies at Batavia, and from
these portions an essential oil was obtained by distillation.
It may well be supposed that this experiment was the
first in the manufacture of eucalyptus oil, which,
however, in our day is obtained not from the wood
but from the leaves of the tree. On the 13th
of January De Vlaming records that a dark resinous
gum resembling lac was seen exuding from trees.
In a narrative of the voyage published
under the title Journaal wegens een Voyagie na
het onbekende Zuid-land, we read that on the 11th
of January nine or ten Black Swans were seen.
In a letter from Willem van Oudhoorn, Governor-General
of the Dutch East Indies, to the Managers of the East
India Company at the Amsterdam Chamber, it is stated
that three black swans were brought alive to Batavia,
but died soon after their arrival.
Several boat expeditions were made,
and Swan River was entered and ascended. During
these expeditions the author of the Journaal
mentions that the song of the ‘Nachtegael’
was heard. There are no nightingales in Australia,
but the bird to which the writer of the Journaal
alludes may have been the Long-billed Reed Warbler,
the Australian representative of the Sedge Warbler
and a denizen of the reed-beds of the Swan River.
Two species of geese are also mentioned by the same
writer under the names of European geese. It is
somewhat difficult to determine to which geese the
author of the Journaal alludes under the names
‘Kropgans’ and ‘Rotgans.’
When English-speaking Dutch are asked
to translate ‘kropgans,’ they do so by
‘Christmas goose’ or ‘fat goose.’
Dictionaries are silent respecting ‘kropgans,’
or render it by ‘pelican.’ I am inclined
to think that this rendering arises from a confusion
between ‘kropgans’ and the German word
‘kropfgans,’ and that ‘kropgans’
was formerly applied to domestic geese in general
which were being fed for the market, and also, as
in the present instance, to the wild goose from which
they were derived, namely to the Grey Lag Goose (Anser
ferus). If this be so, the Australian bird
with which the kropgans is compared in the Journaal
may be the Cape Barren Goose (Cereopsis novae-hollandiae),
which is found sparingly in Western Australia.
The ‘Rotgans’ is the Brent Goose (Branta
bernicla) and the Australian bird which most resembles
it is the Musk Duck (Biziura lobata), which
also is found in the west of Australia, although more
sparingly there than in the south of the island continent.
Other birds which were seen at the
same part of the Australian coast were ‘Duikers,’
by which name Cormorants are probably designated,
Cockatoos and Parrakeets. It is said that all
the birds were shy and flew away at the approach of
human beings. No aborigines were seen, although
smoke was visible.
On the 15th of January De Vlaming
quitted the anchorage near Rottnest Island, and followed
the coast until 30 deg. 17’ S. lat. was
reached. Two boats were there sent to the shore
and soundings were taken. The country near the
landing-place was sandy and treeless, and neither human
beings nor fresh water were to be seen. But footmarks
resembling those of a dog were seen, and also a bird
which the Journaal calls a ‘Kasuaris’
and which must have been one of the Émus.
On the 30th of January, 26 deg.
8’ S. lat. was observed, which is approximately
that of False Entrance. On the 1st of February
the pilot of the Geelvink left the ships in
one of the Geelvink’s boats in order
to ascertain the position of Dirk Hartog’s Anchorage,
and the captains of two of the vessels made an excursion
for a distance of six or seven miles inland.
They returned to the ships on the following day, bringing
with them the head of a large bird, and they imparted
the information that they had seen two huge nests
built of branches.
The pilot of the Geelvink returned
to the ship on the 3rd of February, and reported that
he had passed through a channel probably
that which is now known as South Passage and
had followed the coast of Dirk Hartog’s Island
until he reached the northern extremity of the island.
There, upon an acclivity, a tin plate was found on
the ground. Certain words scratched upon the
metal indicated that the ship Eendragt, of
Amsterdam, of which Dirk Hartog was master, had anchored
off the island on the 25th of October, 1616, and had
departed for Bantam on the 27th day of the same month.
The pilot brought the metal plate a flattened
tin dish with him, and also two turtles
which had been caught on the island. The squadron
anchored in Dirk Hartog’s Reede on the 4th of
February, and remained there until the 12th day of
that month.
The anonymous author of the Journaal
relates that on the 6th of February many turtles were
seen, and also a very large nest at the corner of
a rock; the nest resembled that of a stork, but was
probably that of an osprey, which places its nest
on a rock often on a rock surrounded by
water.
De Vlaming quitted the Australian
coast at 21 deg. S. lat., and proceeded to
Batavia, where he arrived on the 20th of March, 1697.