George Dixon
- Born:
- c. 1755
- Died:
- c. 1800
George Dixon (born c. 1755—died c. 1800) was an English navigator whose exploration of the western coast of North America helped to establish a profitable English fur trade in what is now British Columbia.
Upon returning from Capt. James Cook’s third voyage in search of a northwest passage to the Orient (1776–79), he became a captain in the merchant navy. In 1785 he sailed in the Queen Charlotte, in the service of the King George’s Sound Company of London, to develop the fur trade in western North America. His discoveries there included Queen Charlotte Islands (now Haida Gwaii), part of Queen Charlotte Sound, Port Mulgrave, Norfolk Sound, Dixon Entrance, and Alexander Archipelago. He sold a cargo of furs in China, where he took aboard a cargo of tea with which he returned to England (1788). In 1789 he published A Voyage Round the World; but More Particularly to the North-west Coast of America, which consisted mainly of descriptive letters written by his supercargo, William Beresford. Some doubt exists as to whether he was the same George Dixon as the one who taught navigation at Gosport, Hampshire, and wrote The Navigator’s Assistant (1791).