Dirk Hartog
1616.Endragt, outward-bound from Holland to India. He appears to
have first seen the West Coast in latitude about 26°½ south; and to
have sailed northward along it, to about 23°; giving the name
Landt de Endragt, to the country so discovered. An important
part of his discovery was Dirk Hartog's Road (at the entrance of a
sound afterwards called Shark's Bay, by Dampier), lying a little
south of 25°. Upon one of the islands which form the road there
was found, first in 1697, and afterwards in 1801, a plate of tin,
bearing the following inscription.
" Anno 1616, the 25th of October arrived here the ship Endragt of Amsterdam; the first merchant Gillis Miebais of Luik, Dirk Hartog of Amsterdam, captain. They sailed from hence for Bantam, the 27th D°." On the lower part, as far as could be distinguished in 1697, was cut with a knife, "The under merchant Jan Stins; chief mate Pieter Dookus of Bill. A°. 1616."
The Mauritius, another outward-bound ship, appears to have made some further discovery upon the West Coast, in July 1618, particularly of Willem's River, near the North-west Cape; but no further particulars are known.
In Campbell's edition of Harris' Voyages (p. 325), it is said,
Edel.
1619."The next year the Land of Edel was found, and received its
name from the discoverer." The president De Brosses says
nearly the same thing (Tome I. p. 432); whence, combining this
with the Dutch recital and the chart of Eessel Gerritz, it should
appear that J. de Edel commanded an outward-bound ship; and,
in July 1619, accidentally fell in with that part of the West Coast
to which his name is applied. The extent of Edel's discovery
appears, from Thevenot's chart, to have been from about the latitude
29°;, northward to 26½°, where the Land of Endragt commences;
but in a chart of this coast, by Van Keulen, the name is extended
southward to 32° 20', past the island Rottenest, which, according