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Captain
George Vancouver in a voyage of exploration to the northwest coast
of America ordered by the British Admiralty Office assigned Lieutenant
William Robert Broughton, Commander of H.M.S. Chatham, to explore
the navigable waters of the Columbia River with boat crews from
his ship. This point marks the farthest inland reached by Broughton
who camped overnight on an island within sight of this point on
October 30, 1792. By appropriate ceremonies he took possession of
the observations on the headland which he called Point Vancouver
and on the mountain which he named after Viscount Hood Admiral of
the British Fleet.
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