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Ship’s boy Nicholas Young received a gallon of rum and had Young Nick’s Head named in his honour for being the first aboard the Endeavour to spot land. It was 127 years since Abel Tasman’s Dutch expedition made the first recorded European sighting of New Zealand.
Captain James Cook noted in his journal that ‘at 2 p.m. saw land from the masthead bearing W by N, which we stood directly for, and could but just see it of the deck at sun set.’ When leaving Poverty Bay on 11 October 1769, he wrote that the ‘south west point of Poverty Bay … I have named Young Nicks head after the boy who first saw this land.’ Research suggests that the land that young Nick sighted was most likely the mountains to the south of Poverty Bay and not the landmark with which he was famously linked.
Little is known of Nicholas Young. He was about 12 years old and was the personal servant of the Endeavour’s surgeon, William Brougham Monkhouse. On his return to England he became the servant of the botanist Joseph Banks, who had also accompanied Cook on the voyage to New Zealand. In 1772 Young joined Banks on an expedition to Iceland, but no more is known of his later life.
Image: Young Nick’s Head (Te Ara)