b. 1725
d. 1775-11-02
Captain Juan Josef Pérez Hernández, a Spanish officer, was the first European to sight
Nootka Sound, while he captained the
Santiago on a scouting and exploration voyage up the Northwest Coast of North America in 1774.
Born in Majorca, Spain in 1725, Pérez previously commanded the
Príncipe, while the vessel delivered colonists to settlements at San Diego and Monterey in
1769.
In 1774, the viceroy of New Spain, Antonio María Bucareli y Ursúa, ordered Pérez to
command an expedition of the Northwest Coast to a latitude of 60° North, and to claim
all land to the south for Spain, as well as to report on Russian activity in the area.
Due to bad weather, Pérez was not able to sail as far north as he hoped. While on
the voyage, Pérez traded with Haida First Nations off the coast of the
Queen Charlotte Islands, and, on the return, with the Nootka First Nations at
Nootka Sound; however, Pérez never entered
Nootka Sound.
The results of Pérez's voyage displeased the viceroy, and when another expedition
was planned in 1775, Pérez was demoted to second officer. Many of the participants
of this voyage, likely including Pérez, contracted scurvy; shortly after a two month
rest in Monterey, Pérez died at sea.
Although the documented reports from Pérez's expedition were deficient, the voyage
became the basis of Spain's claim to
Nootka Sound, as issues of ownership would arise over the area in following years.