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The Enderby Settlement

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by The Enderby Settlement (epub)


  22 Descendant Sam Sampson, Stewart Island, 2001, in response to a ‘Calling all Descendants’ appeal by the late Madelene Ferguson Allen, author of Wake of the Invercauld.

  23 From correspondence with the late Hazel Lane, neé Bromley, of Taradale, great-granddaughter of the Enderby Settlement’s James Bromley.

  24 Des Price (descendant), Article: Auckland Islands settlement was doomed to fail, NZ Genealogist, September/October 1999; Fraser, Conon, Beyond the Roaring Forties: New Zealand’s subantarctic islands, Government Printer, 1986, pp. 127–28.

  25 Information from correspondence between the author and the late Mrs Pauline Goodger, wife of the late Leonard Mateora Goodger of Christchurch, Tom’s great-grandson.

  26 Press, 21 September 1881.

  27 Enderby; letter of 1 June 1868, from 48 Devonshire Street, Queen Square, to Mrs Tom Goodger. The letter was signed ‘Your very sincere friend Chas. Enderby’, with a postscript: ‘Remember me to all your family.’ This letter and other material relating to Tom Goodger is now held by the Canterbury Museum.

  28 Enderby, letter to Sir William Molesworth, Secretary of State for the Colonies, from Great St Helens, London, 20 August 1855, PRO CO 209/134.7895, New Zealand. This letter was sent from the Southern Whale Fishery Company’s offices at 13 Great St Helens. The copy clerk’s handwriting is clear and meticulous, whereas Charles Enderby’s was smaller and less legible, as in his letter to Mrs Goodger (see previous note).

  29 House of Commons Parliamentary Papers No. 369, London, 6 July 1855, p. 15.

  30 As he was the fourth Secretary of State since the Duke of Newcastle, Molesworth could just as easily have referred to his predecessors in the plural. The Duke of Newcastle’s letter, dated 16 April 1853, reached Wellington after Enderby’s departure in July 1853. Molesworth’s immediate predecessor, Lord John Russell, had probably been just as unwilling as Molesworth to go into the matter. After Earl Grey, who held the office from 1846 to 1852, covering the period of the Enderby Settlement, there were numerous changes of Secretary of State for the Colonies. Sir John Pakington succeeded Earl Grey in 1852, to be followed by the Duke of Newcastle, also in 1852, and Sir George Grey (not to be confused with New Zealand’s Governor Grey) in 1854. In 1855, four men held the office: Sidney Herbert was followed by Lord John Russell, then Sir William Molesworth, then Henry Labouchere (pers. comm. Parliamentary Archives, Houses of Parliament, UK). The last four scarcely had time to put their nameplate on the door! It’s no wonder they were unwilling to reconsider a decision already made. The Times, 18 July 1855, summed up Molesworth’s decision to do nothing further as the end of ‘a very prolix and uninteresting correspondence’.

  31 Parliamentary Papers No. 369, 6 July 1855, p. 57.

  32 Ibid., pp. 58–60. Dundas to Sir George Grey 13 November 1854, and Preston to Sir George Grey 25 November 1854.

  33 Ibid., pp. 56–57. Statement of Dr William Ewington.

  34 Enderby, letter to Sir William Molesworth, pp. 320a–21.

  35 Parliamentary Papers, 1855, p. 15.

  36 Ibid., p. 68. One of the Southern Whale Fishery Company’s last attempts to salvage something from its Auckland Islands operations was to suggest that the British government might wish to establish a penal settlement there; in which case, it would be ‘prepared to surrender’ the islands, along with remaining buildings, in the hope that ‘it might seem good to Her Majesty’s government to make such a compensation to this Company for the same, as well as for the cost it has incurred in making roads and a wharf, as might, on investigation, be considered reasonable’ (Parliamentary Papers, 1855, p. 30). The British government accepted the company’s surrender of the islands but, as it had no intention to occupy the islands, turned down the suggestions of a penal settlement and compensation. On comment from the government, the Company then had to admit it had no right to surrender the islands anyway, without ‘the concurrence of the Messrs. Enderby’ (Parliamentary Papers, 1855, pp. 29–31).

  37 Ibid., p. 69.

  38 H.R. Mill, Letter, Royal Geographical Society, London. Archives corr., block 1881–1910. 3/12/1908 f1-2. The Captain Enderby, nephew of Charles Enderby, who told Dr Mill about the Enderby ships’ involvement in the Boston Tea Party, said that when the firm failed, he ‘did not know what became of their books’.

  39 Parliamentary Papers, 1855, p. 67.

  40 The ‘shipwreck era’ was from 1864–1907. Up to June 1868, the wrecks to which Enderby would have been referring were those of the Grafton, the Invercauld and the Minerva, all in 1864, and the General Grant in 1866 (Conon Fraser, Beyond the Roaring Forties, Government Printer, 1986, pp. 109–16).

  41 A.G.E. Jones, who had a biased opinion of the Enderbys, notes in Ships Employed in the South Seas Trade (Roebuck Society, Canberra, 1991) that ‘Charles spent his last years living with his daughter (who had come into some money), in a top back room in Kensington, and to the end of his days it was well understood in the family that he could not be trusted with money.’ Enderby, of course, had never married and had no daughter. As to his daughter’s money, Jones describes Enderby in an earlier letter of 24 April 1969 to a Miss M. Raitt (held at Scott Polar Research Institute, Cambridge University, England) as having died ‘without two halfpennies to rub together – in a top back room off the Fulham Road’. The facts from Enderby’s death certificate (a copy of which is held by the Scott Polar Research Institute, Cambridge University, England) are less sordid, although still depressing. It states that Enderby died at his sister’s home at 12 Neville Terrace in the district of Brompton, Kensington; that his occupation was ‘Gentleman’; the cause of death ‘Heart disease, 8 yrs. Paralysis right side’; and that his sister, Louisa Gambell, was present when he died.

  42 Michael King, Moriori: A people rediscovered, Viking, Penguin Books, Auckland, 1989, p. 86; Buddy Mikaere, ‘Maungahuka: The nearest Maori settlement to the South Pole’, in Tu Tangata 32, pp. 60–61.

  43 Encyclopaedia Britannica: ‘Whale Fisheries’.

  44 Neville Peat, Subantarctic New Zealand: A rare heritage, Department of Conservation, Invercargill, 2006, p. 92.

  45 With ships coming and going over the years, the absence of rats is surprising; they were certainly around at the time of the Enderby Settlement. The Black Dog was smoked for rats on 24 June 1851, and the smoking was found to be effectual the following day (ESD). There are mice on the main island and probably still on Enderby Island, where I photographed them in 1984.

  46 Paul R. Dingwall, Kevin L. Jones & Rachael Egerton (eds), In Care of the Southern Ocean: An archaeological and historical survey of the Auckland Islands, New Zealand Archaeological Association Monograph 27, Auckland, 2009, p. 4.

  47 R.A. Falla, ‘Comments on the Enderby Settlement and the Cemetery at Port Ross, Auckland Islands’, in J.C. Yaldwyn (ed.) Preliminary Results of the Auckland Islands Expedition 1972–1973, Department of Lands and Survey, Wellington, New Zealand, 1975, pp. 395–400.

  Bibliography

  Allen, Madelene Ferguson, Wake of the Invercauld, Exisle Publishing, Auckland, 1997

  Bullen, Frank T., The Cruise of the Cachalot, Macmillan, London, 1906

  Burke’s Peerage and Baronetage, 1959, pp. 1454–55

  Carrick, Robert, Historical Records of New Zealand South, Otago Daily Times & Witness Newspapers, Dunedin, 1903, p. 158

  Cumpston, J.S., Macquarie Island, Antarctic Division, Department of External Affairs, Australia, 1968

  Dana, R.H., Two Years Before the Mast, Harper Bros, New York, 1840

  Debrett’s Illustrated Peerage and Baronetage, C.F.J. Hankinson & A.G.M. Hesilrige (eds), Odhams Press, 1958, p. 565 (Mackworths)

  Enderby Settlement Diaries: Records of a British colony at the Auckland Islands, Diarists William Augustus Mackworth & William John Munce. P.R. Dingwall, C. Fraser, J.G. Gregory, C.J.R. Robertson (eds), Wild Press & Wordsell Press, New Zealand, 1999

  Enderby, Charles, Proposal for re-establishing the British Southern Whale Fishery, through the medium of a Chartered Company, a
nd in combination with the Colonisation of the Auckland Islands, as the site of the Company’s whaling station. 67 pp, Effingham Wilson, London, 1847

  Fraser, Conon, Beyond the Roaring Forties: New Zealand’s Subantarctic Islands, Government Printer, Wellington, 1986

  Grey, George, Journals of Two Expeditions of Discovery in North-West and Western Australia during the Years 1837, 38, and 39, T. & W. Boone, London, 1841

  King, Michael, A Land Apart: The Chatham Islands of New Zealand, Random Century, Auckland, 1990

  ——, Moriori: A people rediscovered, Penguin Viking, Auckland, 1989

  McCormick, Robert, Voyages of Discovery in Arctic and Antarctic Seas and Around the World, Sampson Low, London, 1884

  McLaren, Fergus B., The Eventful Story of the Auckland Islands, A.H. & A.W. Reed, Wellington, 1948

  McNab, R., Murihiku: A history of the South Island of New Zealand and the islands adjacent and lying to the south, from 1642 to 1835, Whitcombe & Tombs, Wellington, 1909

  Malone, R.E., Three Years’ Cruise in the Australasian Colonies, Bentley, London, 1854

  Melville, Herman, Moby Dick, first published as Moby-Dick; or, The Whale, Harper & Bros, New York & Richard Bentley, London, 1851

  Mill, H.R., The Siege of the South Pole: The story of Antarctic exploration, Alston Rivers, London, 1905

  Morrell, Benjamin, A Narrative of Four Voyages, J. & J. Harper, New York, 1832

  Peat, Neville, Subantarctic New Zealand: A rare heritage, Department of Conservation, Invercargill, 2006

  Ross, James Clark, A Voyage of Discovery and Research in the Southern and Antarctic Regions during the Years 1839–1843, John Murray, London, 1847

  Raynal, F.E., Wrecked on a Reef; or, Twenty Months among the Auckland Isles, Nelson, London, 1885

  Russ, Rodney, Galapagos of the Antarctic, Heritage Expeditions, Christchurch, www.heritage-expeditions.com

  Rutherford, J., Sir George Grey: A study in colonial government, Cassell, London, 1961

  Saunders, Alfred, History of New Zealand, Whitcombe & Tombs, Wellington, 1896

  Spears, John R., The Story of the New England Whalers, Macmillan, New York, 1908

  Tucker, Rev. H.W., Memoir of the Life and Episcopate of George Augustus Selwyn, William Wells Gardner, London, 1879

  Williams, Kaye, Munce Mystery: Unrivalled! Ireland 1690 Van Diemen’s Land 1832, privately published, 1999

  Yaldwyn, J.C. (ed.), Preliminary Results of the Auckland Islands Expedition 1972–1973, Department of Lands and Survey, Wellington, New Zealand, 1975

  Reports, papers, articles

  Abstract of Reports from the Commissioner of the Southern Whale Fishery Company to the Directors, Pelham Richardson, London, 1850

  Carrick, Robert, ‘Auckland Islands’, MS qMS0397 Alexander Turnbull Library

  Dingwall, Paul R., Kevin L. Jones & Rachael Egerton (eds), In Care of the Southern Ocean: An archaeological and historical survey of the Auckland Islands, New Zealand Archaeological Association Monograph 27, Auckland, 2009

  Enderby, Charles, The Auckland Islands: a Short Account of their Climate, Soil, & Productions; and the Advantages of Establishing there a Settlement at Port Ross for carrying on the Southern Whale Fisheries. 57 pp, Pelham Richardson, London, 1849

  ——, Description of the Outlying Islands South and East of New Zealand, Hydrographic Office, London, 1868

  ——, A Statement of Facts connected with the Failure of the Southern Whale Fishery Company at the Auckland Islands; a vindication of the measures proposed to be adopted for its success, Richardson Brothers, London, 1854

  Enderby to Sir William Molesworth, Secretary of State for the Colonies, manuscript letter, PRO CO 209/134.7895 New Zealand, 20 August 1855

  First Report of the Directors of the Southern Whale Fishery Company, presented at the Annual General Meeting of the Shareholders, 21 February 1850, 16 pp., W. Lewis & Son, London. Held at Mitchell Library, Sydney, 997.9/S

  Fotheringham, B.I., ‘The Southern Whale Fishery Company, Auckland Islands’, MPhil thesis, Scott Polar Research Institute, Cambridge University, England, 12 June 1995

  Fulton, C.H.E., unpublished autobiography of Mrs James Fulton (née Catherine Valpy), 1915, Hocken Library, Dunedin, MS 846

  Gordon, C.H., ‘The Vigorous Enderbys’, typescript MS, Scott Polar Research Institute, Cambridge University, England

  Grey, Sir George, Ko nga Moteatea, me nga Hakirara o nga Maori, Robert Stokes, Wellington, 1853

  Grey, Sir George, ‘Translations of Waiata’, GNZMMSS 101, p. 645, Auckland City Libraries

  House of Commons Sessional Papers (Parliamentary Papers), Auckland Islands, 14 February 1853 & 6 July 1855

  Lewis, Miles, ‘Prefabrication for the Gold Rushes’, Faculty of Architecture, Building and Planning, Melbourne University, 1998

  Loveridge, D.M., ‘The Settlement of the Auckland Islands in the 1840s and 1850s: the Maungahuka Colony, the Enderby Colony and the Crown’, Department of Conservation, Dunedin and Invercargill, INV 993.89 LOV. (WAI 64), 22 March 1995

  Ludlow, Barbara, ‘Whaling for oil’, Journal of the Greenwich Historical Society, vol. 3, no. 4, 2007

  Mackworth, William A., Letter of 3 March 1850. Hocken Library, Dunedin. Ref MS-0451-011/ 011

  Mikaere, Buddy, ‘Maungahuka: The nearest Maori settlement to the South Pole’, in Tu Tangata 32, quoting Ngatere’s letter to Sir George Grey, Sir George Grey Special Collections, Auckland City Libraries

  New Zealand Spectator and Cook’s Strait Guardian, 30 June 1852

  Official Reports of the Special Commissioners of the Southern Whale Fishery Company to the Court of Directors, from 23 January to 21 February 1852, in House of Commons Parliamentary Papers No. 369, 6 July 1855, London

  Price, Des, ‘Auckland Islands settlement was doomed to fail’, NZ Genealogist, Sept/Oct 1999

  Proceedings at a Public Dinner at the London Tavern on 18 April 1849, 24 pp., Pelham Richardson, London, 1849

  Register of Births, Marriages and Deaths, at Auckland Islands, held by Registrar General, New Zealand

  Shand, A., ‘The occupation of the Chatham Islands by the Maoris in 1835, Part V – The residence at the Auckland Islands ’, Journal of the Polynesian Society, vol. 2, no. 2, June 1893

  Index

  Page numbers in bold refer to illustrations.

  Adam’s Island 23, 53, 54, 55, 72, 107, 111, 112, 113–14, 114, 115; Enderby Settlement gaol 111–13, 119, 122, 133; flora and fauna reserve 114; sealing 140

  agriculture 24

  albatrosses 113; royal albatrosses 132, 190; wandering albatross 114

  alcohol: problems after the departure of Enderby 197–99; restrictions on sale and supply 27, 58, 81, 122–23, 156, 160, 164, 168; settlers 75, 81, 82, 137, 138, 140, 150, 171; ship captains, officers and crews 66, 71, 91, 105, 109, 122–23, 124, 133, 168; see also discipline

  Amazon 138, 143, 144, 145

  American War of Independence 41

  Anisotome 187; latifolia 52, 53, 201

  Anjou 166

  Antarctica 17, 34, 35, 44, 45, 46

  Antarctica (Morrell’s schooner) 56

  Ariel 133, 137

  Artemisia 62, 63, 64, 69, 115

  Auckland (cutter) 66, 69, 76, 80, 82, 94, 97, 117, 118, 140, 205, 206

  Auckland (New Zealand city) 88, 89

  Auckland Island 130; basaltic columnar cliffs 51, 56, 74, 77, 130, 166; Giant’s Archway 180; Mackworth’s west coast expedition 76–78; see also Enderby Settlement; and individual place names

  Auckland Island teal 136

  Auckland Island tit 194

  Auckland Islands: arrival of Samuel Enderby 13; basaltic columnar cliffs 18, 51, 52, 52–53, 56, 68, 74, 77, 110, 130, 132, 154, 166; base for whaling venture 18, 20, 44, 47–49, 63–64, 107, 120, 148–49, 152; Bristow discovers 44; British possession 16, 18; and changes in shipping and routes 129; climate 34; Crown colony status 24, 25, 98–99; Enderby’s 1852 offer to form a settlement 214–15; Grey’s visit 87, 89, 90, 93, 95–97, 98–99; map,
Bristow’s 55; maps, location 14, 15; Matioro’s arrival from Chatham Islands 30; territorially part of New Zealand 98–99; unspoilt environment 215–16; volcanic origins 18, 52, 55, 107, 110, 111; World Heritage status 215

  Auckland Whaling Company 48

  Augusta 62, 63, 66, 115

  aurora australis 33

  Australia 44, 49, 93–95, 123; see also New South Wales; South Australia; Tasmania; Victoria

  Awarru 74

  Balleny Islands 45, 195

  Balleny, John 45

  Banks, Sir Joseph 41

  Barton, Jessie 120, 123, 133, 135, 137

  Barton, Mary 40, 120, 121, 123, 133, 137, 202, 210

  Barton, Mary Louisa Thornley 177

  Barton, Robert 40, 120, 121, 123, 136, 137, 140, 144, 200, 210

  Bay of Islands 22, 30, 44, 127, 129, 130, 201, 212

  Beacon Point 20

  Bell, Ellis 135

  Bell, James 149

  Bell, Mrs 120

  bellbirds 26, 77

  Bellingshausen, Thaddeus 44, 142, 145

  birds 26, 27, 76; see also albatrosses; Auckland Island teal; Auckland Island tit; bellbirds; shags; sooty shearwaters

  births 65, 83, 140, 172, 177

  Biscoe, John 45

  Bishop, Hannah (née Tawerangi) 167, 205

  Bishop, Robert Reuben 148, 167, 205

  Black Dog 103; capture of whale in Wellington Harbour 184; payment to Enderby for, in lieu of salary 189; restraining order to prevent leaving Wellington 186; settlers and goods leaving Auckland Islands on 178, 180, 191; trading and passenger voyages, New Zealand and New South Wales 102, 118, 123, 125, 128, 136, 170, 171, 205; voyage to New Zealand with Enderby, Dundas and Preston 175–76, 180–81, 188

  Bollons Bay 113

  Bond, George 25, 75–76, 80–81, 82, 149

  Boston Tea Party 41

  Botany Bay 113

  Bracegirdle, Fred 36–37, 211, 211

  Bracegirdle, James 211

  Brisk 25, 27, 135; in Antarctic seas 46, 63–64; arrival at Port Ross 16; Cooks’ marriage aboard 21; crew disputes and discipline 58, 66, 110–11, 158, 167, 168, 205; crew sickness 158, 159; Macquarie Island oiling voyage 146, 168, 179, 198; replacement of Tapsell with Bunker 64, 73, 99; transport of settlers and stores from Enderby Settlement 191, 202, 203, 204, 205; voyage to Balleny Islands 195; whaling 28, 31, 33, 34, 63–64, 65–66, 68, 99, 109, 115, 116, 118, 157–58

 

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