A Voyage Around the World; But More Particularly to the North-West Coast of America: . . . Captains Portlock and Dixon, by Captain George Dixon. - London 1789 This volume published in London by George Goulding in 1789 is from the first edition and is one of a small number of copies published on thick paper with some of the natural history plates colored by hand. The signature of the first owner, John Peachey, dated 1792, is at the top of the title page. Portlock and Dixon continued trading, Portlock working the Alaskan coast and Dixon proceeding south for Nootka Sound, where he named Dixon’s Entrance and the Queen Charlotte Islands. The furs were sold in Canton, China, and both ships, after a most successful voyage, arrived back in England by way of the Cape of Good Hope in the summer of 1788. This account consists of a series of forty-nine letters signed W B. The writer was William Beresford, a Quaker who, says Dixon, “has been totally unused to literary pursuits, and equally so to a sea faring life.” His letters, corrected by Dixon only on nautical points, make good reading and are an excellent source on the early days of fur trading. The title page notwithstanding, Dixon wrote only the introduction and the two appendixes, but he also contributed the large folding frontispiece map and four double-page engraved maps. In addition to the engraved plates there is a page of music recording an “Indian Song as generally sung by the Natives of NORFOLK SOUND previous to commencing trade”.
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