- Raymond Aker
Raymond Aker (
March 10 ,1920 –January 4 ,2003 ) was a U.S.historian who was noted as an authority on the voyages ofFrancis Drake in the late 16th century. Aker served as president of theDrake Navigators Guild inCalifornia , which promotes Drake and his explorations. It was the work of Aker that helped ensure that Drake received credit for the discovery ofCape Horn , at the southern tip ofSouth America .Biography
Aker was born in
Yonkers, New York and grew up inAtherton, California . He was interested in sailing from an early age, and developed a hobby of making models and paintings of ships. He continued this hobby throughout his life, making detailed drawings and models of ships.At age nineteen in 1939, he enrolled in the
California Nautical School . After theattack on Pearl Harbor , he left early in 1942 he left early to become a deck officer on troop transport ships. AfterWorld War II , he worked for 29 years at Westinghouse on projects that include thePolaris missile and shippropeller design.He also continued to develop his skills as a
navigator and mariner. He developed a fascination with Drake and used his own nautical skills to reconstruct Drake's 1577–1580circumnavigation of the globe, during which Drake landed on the west coast ofNorth America and founded a temporary colony ofNew Albion at a still undetermined spot, possibly in NorthernCalifornia . Like many in the Drake Navigators Guild, Aker was a proponent of the theory that Drake landed at what is now calledDrakes Bay in Marin County,California , north of San Francisco. To support his theory, Aker spent many years analyzing the variation in the tides in thecove calledDrakes Estero . Critics of the Drakes Estero theory have maintained that the geography of the cove does not match the descriptions in the journals of those on the voyage, or the map made from voyage accounts byJodocus Hondius . Aker maintained that the cove geography was cyclic over decades, and in 2001 he correctly predicted the reemergence of a spit in the cove which he claimed closely matched the contemporary accounts of Drake's landing spot. He led a longtime effort to lobby theNational Park Service to designate Drakes Bay as aNational Historic Landmark .As part of his study of Drake's circumnavigation, Aker became convinced that Drake was the true discoverer of Cape Horn, rather than Dutch explorer
Willem Schouten , who was thought to have discovered it in 1616. Most historians at the time believed that Drake landed on Henderson Island northwest of Cape Horn. In 1997 theAmerican National Maritime Historical Society accepted Aker's argument that it Drake who first discovered Cape Horn. The argument was also accepted by theNational Geographic Society .Aker also became convinced that the partial remains of Drake's ship the "
Golden Hinde ", are buried at the old Deptford Navy Yard along theThames in eastLondon .External links
* [http://www.rin.org.uk/pooled/articles/BF_NEWSART/view.asp?Q=BF_NEWSART_49897 Royal Institute of Navigation obituary of Raymond Aker]
* [http://www.timesonline.co.uk/printFriendly/0,,1-45-551743,00.html Raymond Aker: Obiruary] , at [http://www.timesonline.co.uk/ "The Times"] , January 23, 2003
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