In Oregon it is pronounced "Ha–SEE–Ta" and in Alaska it is pronounced "HECK–ah–Ta." Heceta Island in Alaska, and Heceta Head and the Heceta Head Light on the Oregon Coast, are named after him. He died there in 1807 with the rank of the lieutenant general. Subsequently, Heceta returned to Spain, fighting in various naval battles against France and Great Britain in Europe. On September 8, 1775, the ships rejoined and headed south for the return trip to San Blas. Throughout the voyage, the crews of both vessels endured many hardships, including food shortages and scurvy. Later Spanish maps often showed the Columbia River's estuary with the name Entrada de Hezeta, Rio de San Roque, and other similar variants. He named the entrance bay Bahia de la Asunción and produced a map of what he could discern from outside the Columbia Bar. Later he guessed it to be the Strait of Juan de Fuca. He wrote that the seething currents led him to believe it was the mouth of a great river or a passage to another sea. His crew was so reduced that they could not handle the anchor so he could not easily wait for better conditions.
#ACHOR HECTA FULL#
He tried to sail in but the strong currents prevented it, even under a full press of sails. He was the first European to sight the mouth of the Columbia River. On his return journey south, still with only the larger Santiago and a reduced crew, Heceta discovered a large bay penetrating far inland. Bodega y Quadra named Puerto de Bucareli (present-day Bucareli Bay, Alaska), Puerto de los Remedios, and Cerro San Jacinto, which was renamed Mount Edgecumbe three years later in 1778 by English explorer James Cook. There, and near a Russian settlement on present day Kodiak Island, the Spaniards performed numerous "acts of sovereignty" claiming the territory. The Señora, with second officer Juan Francisco de la Bodega y Quadra at the helm, following its orders continuing further north up the coast, ultimately reaching a position at latitude 59° north on August 15, 1775, entering Sitka Sound near the present-day town of Sitka, Alaska. state of Washington, named by Heceta in response to an attack by the local Quinault Native Americans.īy design, the vessels parted company on the evening of July 30, 1775, with the Santiago continuing north, to what is today the border between Washington and British Columbia, Canada. The two ships sailed together as far north as Punta de los Martires (or "Point of the Martyrs"), present day Point Grenville in the U.S.
In this way the expedition could officially lay claim to the lands of northern New Spain it visited.
The 36-foot-long (11 m) Sonora, with a crew of 16, was to perform coastal reconnaissance and mapping, and could make landfall in places the larger Santiago was unable to approach on its previous voyage. Accompanying Heceta was the schooner Sonora (alias Felicidad, also known as Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe) initially under the command of Juan Manuel de Ayala. Heceta was given command of the Santiago. This expedition was to have two ships, with the second a smaller ship that could explore in shallower waters. Thus in 1775, when a small group of officers from Spain reached the Pacific port of San Blas in the Viceroyalty of New Spain (present day México), the viceroy placed one of them, Bruno de Heceta, in charge of a second expedition. By the late 18th century, however, learning of Russian and British arrivals along the Pacific Northwest and Alaskan coasts, Spain finally grew sufficiently concerned about their claims to the region and set out to both the extent of any Russian and British encroachment.Ī first expedition led by Juan José Pérez Hernández in 1774 with just one ship, the frigate Santiago (alias Nueva Galicia ), did not reach as far north as planned. This action of Balboa further solidified the Spanish claim of exclusive control over the entire west coast of North America.Ĭonfident of their claims, the Spanish Empire did not explore or settle the northwest coast of North America in the 250 years after Balboa's claim. Balboa claimed the Pacific Ocean for the Spanish Crown, as well as all the lands touching it. The first European expedition to actually reach the Pacific coast was led by the Spaniard Vasco Núñez de Balboa, which reached the western coast of present-day Panama in 1513. These two formal acts formed the basis of Spain's claim of the exclusive right to colonize all of the Western Hemisphere (excluding present-day Brazil), including all of the west coast of North America. The Spanish claim to Alaska and the Pacific Northwest had dated back to the 1493 papal bull ( Inter caetera) and rights contained in the 1494 Treaty of Tordesillas.