Showing posts with label Royal Navy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Royal Navy. Show all posts

Friday, 24 May 2024

Bishop George Selwyn, Archdeacon Alfred Brown and the Flying Fish

Among the small missionary schooners like the Herald, Karere and Kukupa that sailed through Tauranga Harbour’s Maunganui entrance during the 1830s and 40s, was the 17 ton Flying Fish. Built at the Bay of Islands for use as an Anglican missionary vessel, it should not be confused with the Pacific Island’s trading schooner Flying Fish, 35 tons, which under Captain Webster, frequently arrived at, and departed Auckland during this decade).1

Two men at work on Flying Fish at her berth at Orakei, Auckland, circa. 1844-1847

After Bishop Samuel Marsden’s death in 1838, the Church Missionary Society in New Zealand was led by the Rev. Henry Williams. A former Royal Navy Lieutenant, Williams who had built built the Flying Fish, wrote that the need for a Bishop was very great. George Augustus Selwyn was selected for the position in 1841, with responsibilities that included oversight of the Church of England’s work in New Zealand, as well as among the islands of Melanesia.2 Selwyn’s first missionary vessel for use in New Zealand waters was the Flying Fish. A swift and most seaworthy vessel, from 1842 he often referred to it as ‘my yacht’, ‘my little schooner’, and greatly enjoyed taking a turn at the tiller.3 Later remodeled with a deck and cabin, the little schooner proved an ideal craft for visiting New Zealand’s North and South Island mission stations, accessible only by sea and often through challenging harbour entrances.

Bishop George Augustus Selwyn

Selwyn had a close relationship with Tauranga’s leading missionary Alfred Brown. In 1843 and 1844 Brown was encouraged in his arduous overland evangelising work when Selwyn trekked from Auckland to visit him at Matamata and Maungatautari, with an earlier visit to Brown at Te Papa in December 1842. He also showed his faith in Brown’s efforts by appointing him Archdeacon of Tauranga on 20th September 1844. Selwyn was to show his confidence in the new Archdeacon still further, as there is on record a letter written by Brown, on 29th February 1848, declining the appointment to a Bishopric which had been offered him by Selwyn.4  

On 9 March 1845, Selwyn recorded that the Flying Fish had made the quickest passage ever recorded for a vessel sailing between Wellington and Auckland. 5 Ably skippered by Captain Champion, the Flying Fish was also known as the ‘college schooner’, as it regularly transported missionaries and Maori ‘college boys’ to and from Thames, Tauranga and other Bay of Plenty mission stations to Selwyn’s St Johns College at Kohimarama, Auckland. During mid-1845, Brown was conveyed by the Flying Fish to Tauranga on an urgent visit to see his wife Charlotte and dying invalid son Marsh who had previously been cared for at St. John’s College.

Archdeacon Alfred Nesbitt Brown

Alfred Brown and William Williams, who arrived overland from the Turanga (Poverty Bay) mission station, sailed to Auckland on the Flying Fish for a meeting of Anglican archdeacons, held on 2 and 3 September 1847. Williams briefly recorded a swift overnight voyage to the College anchorage.

At once we set sail with a light wind & crossed the firth of the Thames. Passed the Island of Pakihi at daylight grounding for a short time on a sandspit. Beat up to Auckland with a strong westerly breeze and at four oclock we landed… 6

Captain Champion and the Flying Fish made additional voyages to Tauranga’s Te Papa mission station during the 1840s. On 26 September 1846, the schooner returned to St John’s College with flax, potatoes, maize and timber from Tauranga.7 In the same year, Selwyn sailed to Tauranga to conduct a confirmation service for some of Brown’s Māori converts at Te Papa.8

Selwyn’s arduous, extended voyages to New Zealand’s scattered CMS coastal mission stations proved, at times, long and lonely experiences. At the Bay of Islands on 9 March 1845, he recorded:

 

I am sitting in my little cabin, in the schooner Flying Fish of seventeen tons burden; with no other companions than my sailing master, Champion, late boatswain of the Government brig Victoria, and my crew of three New Zealanders.9

Captain Champion at the tiller of the Flying Fish

Selwyn did not remain in his cabin for long. On 11 March the ‘rebel’ chiefs Hone Heke Pokai and Te Ruki Kawiti’s warriors attacked Kororareka (Russell) in the first battle of the Flagstaff War. Selwyn, Champion and their Māori crew took some of the terrified settler refugees aboard the Flying Fish, and joined the rescue fleet that transported them safely to Auckland. Initially offered a much larger vessel for his voyages that year, Selwyn, by now an accomplished sailor and commander, declined the offer. Replying by letter to his would-be benefactor he wrote:

In answer to your noble offer of a schooner similar to that given to the Bishop of Newfoundland, I must tell you, that any thing above twenty tons is considered large in our harbours, the greater number of our coasting vessels being about that size; and, if managed by steady men, they perform their voyages with great safety.10

Bishop George Selwyn continued to sail the sea-battered Flying Fish around his coastal diocese until 1848, when the schooner’s leaks began topping the cabin floor. The final straw it was reported, occurred when he stepped out of bed one morning ‘into a salt water bath’.11  In July 1848, Selwyn took command of the larger 20-ton Undine, another Bay of Islands-built schooner. Whether this vessel also became a familiar sight on the waters of Tauranga Harbour during this era is currently under investigation.

References

1Old Mission Ships’, New Zealand Herald, 27 July 1935: 15. 

2 Selwyn, George Augustus, Te Ara, New Zealand biographies

https://teara.govt.nz › biographies › selwyn-george-aug...

3 Tucker, H. W; Memoir of the Life and Episcopate of George Augustus Selwyn. Bishop of New Zealand, William Wells Gardiner, London, 1879: 148.

Tucker, 1879: 148.

4 Waikato Independent, 11 May 1939: 3

5 Tucker, 1879: 187.

6 Porter, Francis, (ed.), The Turanga Journals 1840-1850” Letters and Journals of William and Jane Williams, Missionaries to Poverty Bay. Victoria University Press, 1Wellington, 1974: 442.

7 New Zealander, 26 September 1842: 2.

8 Williams, 1974: 370.

9 Tucker 1879: 187.

10 Ibid.

11 Williams, 1974: 464.

Illustrations

1 Hutton, Thomas Biddulph, 1824-1886. (56) The Flying Fish. Hutton, Thomas Biddulph (Rev), 1824-1886: [Three sketchbooks of New Zealand scenes and people. 1844-1847]. Ref: E-111-1-071. Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand.

2 Mason & Co (Photographers). George Augustus Selwyn. Engraved by W. Hale, 1878-1879 from a photograph by Messrs Mason & Co. [London, 1889]. Curteis, George Herbert, 1824-1894: Bishop Selwyn of New Zealand and of Lichfield ... (London, Kegan Paul, 1889). Ref: PUBL-0148-front. Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand.

3 Hemus & Hanna (Firm). Hemus & Hanna (Auckland) fl 1879-1882: Portrait of Archdeacon A N Brown. Ref: PA3-0103. Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand.

4 Hutton, Thomas Biddulph, 1824-1886. (70) Champion at the tiller. Flying Fish. Hutton, Thomas Biddulph (Rev), 1824-1886: [Three sketchbooks of New Zealand scenes and people. 1844-1847]. Ref: E-111-1-085. Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand.

Friday, 2 February 2024

Mary Humphreys, Photographer: Part 3 – 1902-1904

(continued from Part 2)
By 1902 Mary Humphreys had established herself as one of the two leading Tauranga photographers, although she concentrated more on scenic work than the portraiture which had dominated the output of Thomas E. Price, who had operated a studio on the Strand since 1897.

“Strand, Tauranga (the business street of the town, facing east [sic])”, c. 1901-1902
Mounted half-plate print photographed by Mary Humphreys
Collection of Tauranga City Libraries, Pae Korok
ī Ref. 99-1182

There is evidence that Mary Humphreys sold both loose and mounted half-plate (6” x 4”) prints, presumably from her shop on the Strand, although it is not clear how long that remained open. The photograph shown above, contacted printed from the glass plate negative, is mounted on thick card and signed on the back in her handwriting (below), recognizable from other sources such as a postcard sent to her daughters (TCL Ref. 99-717),[i] but she did not at this stage appear to use any of the pre-printed card mounts or purpose-made stamps with which most established photographers marked their work.

“Mary Humphreys Photo.[grapher]” signature, detail from verso of 99-1182

Tauranga’s First Post Office & Government Building, Willow Street, bef. Oct 1901
Half-plate print mounted on album page, photographed by Mary Humphreys
Collection of Tauranga City Library, Pae Korok
ī Ref. 99-340

This quarter-plate print depicting Tauranga’s first Post Office and Government building (built in 1874), mounted in an album which contains several other photographs identified as having been taken by Mary Humphreys, is identical to the view published in the Weekly Press in October 1901.

The Illuminations & Decorations on the Government Buildings, June-August 1902
Half-plate print mounted on album page, photographed by Mary Humphreys
Collection of Tauranga City Library, Pae Korok
ī Ref. 99-362

She photographed the building again after it had been decorated with plants, the royal seal, several portraits, Union Jacks and a string of illuminations. Two large portraits of King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra appear in the windows above the main doors, suggesting this was in preparation for the intended coronation which was supposed to happen on 26 June 1902. Newspaper reports indicate that, following a suggestion by storekeeper Robert Badger,[ii] and an application by postmaster Mr Northcroft to the Postal Department for “materials for illuminating the Government Buildings”,[iii] funding was allocated and the “necessary devices” were ordered by telegram from Auckland on 21 June.[iv] Due to the King’s sudden illness the coronation was postponed, but it eventually took place on 9 August, when the illuminations were officially switched on at 7 p.m.[v]

“At 7 p.m. the fine building in which are centred all the Government and Local Bodies offices, was handsomely illuminated from within and decorated with fairy lamps outside. The idea was promulgated by Mr E. Northcroft, lately Postmaster … his plans were loyally carried out by the staff here, and the universal verdict was than a very pretty and striking display was made … Portraits of the King and Queen occupied two central windows on the second floor, from which the sashes had been removed, and other windows were filled with transparencies representing the national flags and emblems, royal coat of arms, patriotic pictures, portraits of distinguished generals, etc, etc … the Post Office staff … kept them going till past eleven p.m. … This is the first time that anything of the sort has been attempted in Tauranga …” [vi]

Tauranga Post Office after the fire, 17 November 1902
Half-plate print mounted on album page, photographed by Mary Humphreys
Collection of Tauranga City Library, Pae Korok
ī Ref. 99-341

On the night of 16th November 1902 Mary Humphreys, at that time living in Willow Street, adjacent to the Tauranga Post Office, was woken soon after 11pm by noises and on going outside found the building ablaze.[vii],[viii] The following morning she positioned her camera in the same spot where she had taken her earlier photographs of the building, then took at least three more shots of the still smoking ruins.

“The Government Buildings before the fire” (bef Oct 1901) and “After the fire” (16 Nov 1902)
Photographs by Mary Humphreys, published by New Zealand Graphic 29 Nov 1902
Auckland Libraries Collection, Refs. NZG-19021129-1383-01 and NZG-19021129-1383-02

One of them was published in the New Zealand Graphic on 29 November alongside her photograph of the building before the fire.[ix] She would later document the new Post Office after it was completed in 1906 several times, the images being published as postcards (0166/09).

“Moonlight at the Mount”, c. 1900-1905
Mounted quarter-plate print, photographed by Mary Humphreys
Collection of The Elms Foundation, Pae Korok
ī Ref. 2008.0453

Another format included in Humphreys’ repertoire at this time was a smaller print – roughly quarter-plate – double mounted on a decorative grey card with an embossed, stippled surround. The Elms Foundation collection has several of this type which have both Mary’s characteristically handwritten captions and a monogram “GAW”. While it is conceivable that the photographs marked thus were taken by George Arnold Ward, owner of the Bay of Plenty Times, former mayor and friend of Mrs Humphreys, it is considered more likely that they were commissioned by him.

H.M.S. Lizard anchored in Tauranga Harbour, April 1903
Photograph attributed to Mary Humphreys
Collection of The Elms Foundation, Pae Korok
ī Ref. 2008.0454

A view of the Tauranga waterfront with the warship H.M.S. Lizard at anchor in the harbour is mounted on identical card, and has similar handwriting on the back but no monogram. The ship arrived on 18 April 1903 and stayed for only a few days.[x]

Crew of the H.M.S. Lizard in fancy dress, April 1903
Photographed by Mary Humphreys
Collection of Tauranga City Library, Mary Humphreys Album

The Lizard’s crew appear to have enjoyed their stay in Tauranga. A photograph in an album compiled by Mary Humphreys shows several of them dressed for what appears to be a fancy dress party.

The next article in this series (Part 4) will cover Mrs Humphreys’ entry into the postcard era.

References

[i] Mary Humphreys, Untitled [Postcard View of Daughters Playing Golf], circa 1912, Real photo postcard, circa 1912, Climate controlled room - offsite, Tauranga City Libraries Archive, https://paekoroki.tauranga.govt.nz/nodes/view/3813.

[ii] Robert Badger, “Coronation Illuminations,” Bay of Plenty Times, June 18, 1902, Volume 29 Issue 4311 edition.

[iii] “Untitled [Coronation Preparations],” Bay of Plenty Times, June 20, 1902, Volume 29 Issue 4312 edition.

[iv] “Untitled [Telegram from Postal Department],” Bay of Plenty Times, June 23, 1902, Volume 29 Issue 4313 edition.

[v] “Coronation Day,” Bay of Plenty Times, August 8, 1902, Volume 29 Issue 4333 edition.

[vi] “Coronation Day: The Illuminations,” Bay of Plenty Times, August 11, 1902, Volume 29 Issue 4334 edition.

[vii] “Disastrous Fire at Tauranga, Government Buildings Destroyed,” Bay of Plenty Times, November 17, 1902, Volume 31 Issue 4375 edition.

[viii] “Fire at Government Buildings, Tauranga. Magisterial Enquiry,” Bay of Plenty Times, December 5, 1902, Volume 29 Issue 4383 edition.

[ix] “The Recent Conflagration at Tauranga,” New Zealand Graphic, November 29, 1902, Volume 29 Issue 22 (Supplement) edition.

[x] “Untitled [H.M.S. Lizard Arrives in Port],” Bay of Plenty Times, April 20, 1903, Volume 31 Issue 4437 edition.