In the month of March of the year
1823, I was appointed by his Imperial Majesty Alexander
the First, of glorious memory, to the command of a
ship, at that time unfinished, but named the Predpriatie
(the Enterprise). She had been at first destined
for a voyage purely scientific, but circumstances
having occurred which rendered it necessary to change
the object of the expedition, I was ordered to take
in at Kronstadt a cargo to Kamtschatka, and to sail
from the latter place to the north-west coast of America,
in order to protect the Russian American Company from
the smuggling carried on there by foreign traders.
On this station my ship was to remain for one year,
and then, being relieved by another, to return to
Kronstadt. The course to be followed, both in
going and returning, was left entirely to my own discretion.
On the first of May, the ship, whose
Russian name, Predpriatie, I shall for the future
omit, was declared complete. She was the first
vessel built in Russia under a roof, (a very excellent
plan,) was the size of a frigate of a middling rank,
and, that she might not be unnecessarily burdened,
was provided with only twenty-four six-pounders.
My crew consisted of Lieutenants Kordinkoff,
Korsakoff, Bordoschewitsch, and Pfeifer; the Midshipmen
Gekimoff, Alexander von Moller, Golowin, Count Heiden,
Tschekin, Murawieff, Wukotitsch, and Paul von Moller;
the Mates, Grigorieff, Gekimoff, and Simokoff, eight
petty officers, and one hundred and fifteen sailors.
We were accompanied by Professors Eschscholz and Lenz
as Naturalists; Messrs. Preus and Hoffman as Astronomer
and Mineralogist; and Messrs. Victor and von Siegwald
as Chaplain and Physician; so that, in all, we reckoned
one hundred and forty-five persons.
We were richly stored with astronomical
and other scientific instruments: we possessed
two pendulum apparatus, and a theodolite made expressly
for our expedition by the celebrated Reichenbach.
This valuable instrument was executed with wonderful
precision, and was of the greatest use in our astronomical
observations on shore.
In June the ship arrived at Kronstadt,
and on the 14th of July (old style, according to which
all reckonings will be made in this voyage,) she lay
in the harbour fully equipped and ready to sail.
On that day the cannon of the fortress and of the
fleet in the roads announced the arrival of the Emperor,
whom we had the pleasure of receiving on board our
vessel.
His Majesty, after a close examination
of the ship, honoured us by the assurance of his imperial
satisfaction; the sailors received a sum of money,
and I and my officers a written expression of thanks.
With the gracious cordiality peculiar
to him, the amiable monarch wished us a happy voyage,
and retired followed by our enthusiastic blessings.
We did not then anticipate that we
had seen him for the last time. On our return,
his lofty spirit had ascended to the regions of bliss:
from whence he looks down on his beloved brother,
rejoicing to be even surpassed by him in the virtues
of a sovereign.