HMS Endeavour replica

HMS Endeavour replica
The Australian replica of HMS Endeavour sailing from Whitby Harbour in June 2000
History
Australia
NameHMS Endeavour
Owner
Laid downOctober 1988
Launched9 December 1993
Completed16 April 1994
HomeportAustralian National Maritime Museum, Sydney
Identification
StatusActive as of 2012
NotesReplica of the original HMS Endeavour
General characteristics
TypeBark, museum ship
Length43.6 m (143 ft), bowsprit to stern
Beam9.28 m (30.4 ft)
Height28 m (92 ft) mainmast
Draught3.4 m (11 ft)
Propulsion
  • Auxiliary: 2 × Caterpillar 3046 B diesels
  • 404 hp (301 kW)
Sail plan
  • 3 Masted Ship
  • 25 duradon sails
  • Sail area: 1,461 to 1,511 square metres (15,730 to 16,260 sq ft)

HMS Endeavour replica is a replica of HMS Endeavour, the bark commanded by Lieutenant James Cook when he charted New Zealand and the eastern coast of Australia.

The initial idea of recreating Endeavour for use as a museum ship was born during the establishment of the Australian National Maritime Museum in the 1980s; the vessel was to be funded by the Bond Corporation and gifted to the nation upon completion.[1] A specialist shipyard was established, complete with viewing platform and guided tours for the public, and construction of the vessel commenced in 1988. Two years later, work stopped because the Bond Corporation hit financial trouble; the Japanese company Yoshiya Corporation stepped in but was also forced to withdraw support because of financial problems.

Volunteers maintained the incomplete vessel until the HM Bark Endeavour Foundation was established as a charitable trust in 1991. The Endeavour replica was launched at the end of 1993 and completed in 1994. After sea trials, the replica sailed from Fremantle to Sydney where she arrived at the end of 1994. During 1995, the ship recreated Cook's voyage along eastern Australia, then visited New Zealand at the end of the year. In late 1996, the Endeavour replica set out on a circumnavigation of the world, visiting ports in South Africa, the United Kingdom, and America before returning to New Zealand in late 1999. The vessel returned to Sydney in mid-2000. In 2001, the replica was used for filming of the BBC documentary The Ship, then sailed to England in 2002. She spent the next two years visiting ports in the United Kingdom and Europe before sailing back to Sydney in 2005, completing a second round-the-world voyage. On arrival in Australia, the HM Bark Endeavour Foundation transferred ownership of the vessel to the Australian National Maritime Museum. During 2011 and 2012, the replica circumnavigated Australia.

  1. ^ Stannard, Bruce (2021). "The Origins of the Australian Endeavour Replica". Cook's Log. 44 (3): 31–35 – via Captain Cook Society.