Encounter Bay 1836–1837 - The Durrant Family Website
Transcription
Encounter Bay 1836–1837 - The Durrant Family Website
Encounter Bay 1836–1837 Chris Durrant Introduction Encounter Bay 1836–1837 The first years of settlement at Encounter Bay were, to say the least, eventful but appear never to have been adequately chronicled. Worse, many accounts are erroneous. The following account is taken, wherever possible, from original sources. In some cases the source is a secondary publication; these are details that I have been unable to confirm. Introduction The shipping records [26] suggest that the first visit to Encounter Bay by a colonist took place in February 1837. It was made by Samuel Stephens, the Colonial Manager for the South Australian Company in Kingscote, who left there for Encounter Bay via Adelaide on 5 February in the 17-ton ‘Colonial’ cutter William 1 . This boat was built by John Griffiths in Launceston in 1833 and had been sailed since April 1834 by William Wright, a Yorkshireman from Hull, on sealing trips to the Bass Strait islands and, in all likelihood, Kangaroo Island2 , as well as supply runs to the whale fisheries at Portland Bay and Port Fairy. During this period Wright must have become acquainted with John Hart, master of another of Griffiths’s vessels, the 51-ton schooner Elizabeth, which was employed on similar duties. Both would feature in the Encounter Bay story. Wright at some stage may have purchased the William, because he was described as the master and owner3 when he sailed from Launceston on the sealing voyage which took him to Nepean Bay on 21 December 1836. Stephens promptly chartered the vessel, with Wright as master, for twelve months on behalf of the South Australian Company. This is probably the sealing cutter mentioned by Dr John Woodforde as calling at Rapid Bay on 4 December and selling Colonel Light’s survey party one and a half tons of potatoes, some colonial cheese, ‘mutton and bird’s eggs4 ’. Page [22] implies that Wright had good reasons to attach himself to the colonists, claiming that he was suspected of having fled Van Diemen’s Land, where he had smuggled rum and tobacco obtained from American whalers. Wright soon incurred the wrath of the South Australian authorities by going on board the Coromandel when she arrived at Kangaroo Island on 11 January 1837 and informing her master, William Chesser, and the emigrants that the site of the capital had been fixed in the worst spot in the colony, in a country which was a barren waste without tree or shrub, served by an open roadstead exposed to all the prevailing winds and uncertain communication with the shore [30]. Despite his reputation, the small island to the east of the Bluff in Encounter Bay, Wright Island, is much more likely to be named after William Wright than Dr. Edward Wright, who had arrived on the Cygnet in September 1836, or Joseph Wright, the fisherman who arrived on the South Australian in April 1837 (see page 18), since it had acquired this name by April 1837, when the bay was still known only to whalers and Kangaroo Islanders. South Australian Company plans The first fleet of the South Australian Company consisted of whalers, the Duke of York and the Lady Mary Pelham, fully equipped with boats, lines, harpoons, try pots and oil casks. The Duke of York, bearing Stephens, made landfall in Nepean Bay on 27 July and the Lady Mary Pelham three days later. The Company had planned to make whaling one of its major sources of income from its inception since the opportunities were already well-known. one-masted wooden cutter with a square stern, 17 35 tons, 32′ 8′′ × 11′ 8′′ × 5′ 1′′ [23]. 94 voyage in 1835 certainly included Kangaroo Island because Bull[5] later wrote that ‘William Thompson, a seaman, landed on Kangaroo Island from the cutter William, Captain Wright, after he had fulfilled his engagement in a sealing voyage’. Cumpston [8] misidentifies this vessel as the Royal William of Hobart. 3 Though Parsons [23] implies that Griffiths was still the owner when the William was wrecked at Yankalilla in September 1838. 4 Probably the eggs of the mutton-bird, the Short-tailed Shearwater Ardenna tenuirostris, which nests in huge numbers in Bass Strait, are meant here. 1A 2A 2 Version: June 22, 2014 Encounter Bay 1836–1837 South Australian Company plans Southern Right Whales Eubalaena australis, commonly known as Black Whales, appear in the coastal waters of South Australia for the breeding season from May to October, making their way westward throughout the winter. They return eastwards in summer but their path is then some two to three hundred miles off-shore. Reaching up to 50 feet in length and 30 tons in weight, they were hunted for oil and whalebone. The ‘black’ oil extracted from the blubber was used mainly for lamps, though there was some demand as a lubricant. Whalebone or baleen was the name for the massive comb-like plates composed of keratin that the whale uses to strain its food from the ocean water. It was used to stiffen women’s garments and for many other purposed that plastic has now usurped. Bone was, weight for weight, several times more valuable than oil. Whalers from Sydney, Hobart and Launceston, America and France were regular visitors to southern Australia, attracted to the dangerous but lucrative business. A few whales were seen by the settlers in Nepean Bay soon after arrival, but the ships were not ready. Indeed, they were never intended for hunting whales in the bay. The Duke of York and Lady Mary Pelham were equipped for year-round whaling voyages on the high seas, so after discharging their emigrants and stores they sailed on 20 September for Hobart and then the Southern Ocean. By this time, it was too late in the season to contemplate undertaking inshore or bay whaling, as Stephens informed George Fife Angas, the chairman of the South Australian Company in London, on 22 September, but there is some tantalising evidence that it was already being considered. John Wrathall Bull claimed in 1878, from information almost certainly collected much earlier, [6]: ‘On August 4, two large boats with twenty men started on a trip across Backstairs Passage, and a landing was made at Rapid Bay, afterwards named by Colonel Light. From thence they sailed to Encounter Bay, next Port Lincoln was visited, and then the head of St Vincent’s Gulf. On the way back they fell in with the John Pirie, Captain George Martin, who was on the lookout for a whaling station’. In the second edition [5], the second sentence was omitted but another added: ‘It is here proper to mention the fact that Mr. Menge, who had been engaged and sent out by the South Australian Company to examine the country for minerals, was one of the boat party, and pronounced the ranges to be highly metalliferous’. The first version is plausible in the context of sealing and whaling. Sailing west to Port Lincoln would have taken them past the islands of Spencer Gulf where sealing had been conducted by Kangaroo islanders for many years5 . Furthermore, a whaling station had been located in Spencer Gulf for a couple of seasons before being transferred to an equally unsuccessful site on Kangaroo Island in 1832. Since Stephens made no mention of such a voyage in his diary, Bull’s boats could only have been manned by islanders—though it is difficult to imagine that there could have been twenty. It is just possible that they met the John Pirie in mid August before she reached Nepean Bay, and Martin mentioned his interest in whaling to the boatmen. If this was the case, it may have been Martin’s arrival at Nepean Bay in the South Australian Company’s 105-ton schooner John Pirie with passengers and stock on 16 August that prompted Stephens to request permission from Angas for ‘arrangements be made for establishing a bay whaling fishery’ on 22 August. The second version, however, makes it clear that the account cannot be trusted. Johannes Joseph Menge, the South Australian Company’s geologist, did not arrive in South Australia in the Coromandel until January 1837, so the events as described by Bull could not have taken place in 1836. Nevertheless, there is an echo of Bull’s account in the reminiscence written many decades later by William Loose Beare, who was a ten year old boy on the Duke of York with Stephens in 1836, [4]: ‘A few days after our arrival, we were told that Capt. Hart was down at Encounter Bay with a whaling party, and we went down there to interview him, but found that he had left’. John Hart had indeed been involved in both sealing and whaling as master of various vessels belonging to the Launceston merchant, ship-owner and ship-builder, John Griffiths, since 1831. But in 1836 he was in England to collect another vessel for Griffiths, so could not have been present in Encounter Bay that season either. 5 Gangs of sealers had been picked up by vessels from NSW and Van Diemen’s Land and dropped off at good localities all the way from Spencer Gulf to the tip of Western Australia to accumulate skins in anticipation of the vessel’s return. Version: June 22, 2014 3 South Australian Company plans Encounter Bay 1836–1837 What is certain is that the Kangaroo Islanders, some of whom had lived on the island for decades before official settlement, were an invaluable source of knowledge concerning the geography of the seaboard of southern Australia and its industries—sealing and whaling. Stephens’s first priority was to learn the nature of the countryside at the likely places of settlement, foreknowledge of which would have given the Company the competitive advantage that Stephens craved. With disaffection rife in Kingscote, Stephens was obliged to write to Angas on 22 August that ‘I am unable to leave the people [at Kingscote]’, but he went on ‘Captain Martin has kindly offered to examine the places I wish and report to me on his return’. Martin’s mission was not to seek a spot for a whaling station, but to assess the mainland with an eye to moving the Company’s stock. Martin left Nepean Bay in early September with three islanders, one of their Aboriginal women and three sailors in a ‘tiny’ whaleboat, so described by John Woodforde, the surgeon attached to Light’s survey party, who left Nepean Bay on 7 September, and met Martin at Cape Jervis the following day. Woodforde recorded Martin’s return to Rapid Bay from ‘a tour of the gulf [Gulf St Vincent]’ on 15 September. As a result, Stephens informed Angas on 27 September that he had decided to establish an ‘agricultural settlement’ at Yankalilla on Martin’s advice. The following day, Martin took the John Pirie to Hobart for supplies and did not return until 27 November. In the meantime, Stephens finally found time to examine the mainland himself in company with John Morphett6 , who had the same aim in mind on behalf of all the British investors he represented. Stephens wrote in a letter to Angas on 23 December that he had spent fourteen days in an open whaleboat7 but did not succeed in reaching Holdfast Bay. Woodforde noted their appearance at Rapid Bay on 11 October and again on 17 October. A leisurely voyage up the coast would account for the intervening days but not for the two weeks of Stephens’s letter. This seems the only opportunity for Stephens to have become acquainted with Kangaroo island beyond the immediate vicinity of Nepean Bay. He may have visited the seal haunts on the rocky southern coast or on the islands at the mouth of Spencer Gulf. Sealing was another well-established industry along the southern coast of Australia, though seal numbers must have been but a fraction of those present during the heyday of sealing earlier in the century; the dwindling numbers had forced the islanders to spread their efforts further and further westwards along the south coast of Australia. Most prized were the fur seals, the Australian Fur Seal (Arctocephalus pusillus), which breeds in Bass Strait, and the New Zealand Fur Seal (Arctocephalus forsteri ), which breeds on Kangaroo Island. Black seal skins were the most valuable; these might refer to the latter, darker species or to seal pups, which are black at birth. Of much less importance was the so-called ‘hair’ seal, actually the Australian Sea Lion (Neophoca cinerea), which breeds in South and Western Australia. Fur seals haul out on rocks almost anywhere throughout the year, but breeding animals select sheltered boulder-strewn beaches. The males of the New Zealand species start to establish territories on the beaches in October and the females come ashore a few weeks later. The pups are then born, with a peak in mid December. The males depart in January, after mating again, and their place in the rookery is taken by non-breeders. The females remain to feed their pups until August and then all disperse. The Australian species breeds a few weeks earlier. So Stephens would have been in time to harvest the adults in December 1836 and the pups in early autumn 1837. This is confirmed by the South Australian Company accounts which record on 22 December the payment of £1 10s from the sealing account to the crew of the Emma for the ‘trouble connected with sealing trip’. The 161-ton brig Emma was chartered by the South Australian Company to bring passengers and supplies and had arrived at Nepean Bay on 5 October. There is no evidence of her moving from there until 8 December, when George Martin went with her8 up Gulf St Vincent calling at Rapid Bay on 9/10 December and Holdfast Bay on 11 December9 , and returning to Nepean 6 Morphett had earlier reported to Angas that he had hired a whaleboat to take him 30 miles up from Cape Jervis in late September. He was away for eight days and on his return fell in with the John Pirie in Backstairs Passage on her way to Hobart on 28 September [26]. 7 The islander Nathaniel Thomas was paid £2 10s on 21 October for accompanying them in the boat of another islander, Jacob Seaman. 8 Presumably under the command of her master, John Nelson, although Gouger seemed to confuse the two in his diary, writing on 11 December that he had met ‘the Capt. of the Emma & Capt. Nelson of the John Pirie’. 9 The surveyors’ attention was now focused on Holdfast Bay following the discovery of the Port River. Yankalilla had been passed over due to lack of resources. Stephens would have learned this when William Light called at Nepean Bay 4 Version: June 22, 2014 Encounter Bay 1836–1837 Preparations Bay on 18 December. The reason for the voyage, according to Martin’s letter to Angas from Hobart on 5 January 1837, was to land ‘all the Company’s livestock, or they would have all perished had they remained at Kangaroo Island’. By implication, she had also visited sealers, perhaps on the return voyage as Woodforde does not mention her calling again at Rapid Bay. Where the sealers were located can only be guessed at, though the islands between Kangaroo Island and Port Lincoln are possible candidates. This is presumably what Stephens had in mind when continuing his letter to Angas on 23 December: ‘I am also making arrangements for sealing next season (I will have some this season yet and have been one trip myself to learn the nature of it correctly)’. The trip was presumably that made in October since there is little doubt that he did not accompany the Emma 10 . Stephens then struck a conspiratorial note: in order to best serve the interests of the South Australian Company, he was keeping his plans secret because he had ‘a strictly private and confidential source of information’. This was written just two days after Wright appeared at Nepean Bay and Stephens had hired the William, so there is a strong presumption that Wright was this ‘private and confidential source’11 . However, interest in sealing then seemed to wane. In a letter to Angas, Thomas Hudson Beare reported that the South Australian Company had launched its first boat built at Kingscote on 4 January 1837— a sealing boat called the Specimen of Kingscote . There is but one further entry in the sealing account of the South Australian Company. On 1 May 1838, three men—Battie12 , Roach and Freeman—were paid £6 in advance, so presumably some sealing was undertaken in 1837 and 1838. It was unlikely to have been lucrative and sealing must have ceased when the South Australian Company, with David McLaren then in charge, withdrew from active whaling in 1839. Beare’s letter to Angas went on to say that a longboat, to be called the George Martin of Kingscote, would be finished the following month and work would start on no less than twelve whaleboats for use by a shore-whaling station, or fishery as such were then known, and whale ships. This reflects Stephens’s announcement to Angas on 23 December that he had ‘commenced preparation for a 6-boat whale fishery in Encounter Bay next May’ and a 10-boat fishery in another place the following (1838) season. If this were indeed the result of Wright’s advice, Stephens had made some rapid decisions and he proceeded to act on them equally promptly. Preparations Stephens’s source probably told him much the same as William Allen told Angas in a letter dated 12 April 1836, some six weeks after Stephens had left London in the Duke of York and a couple of days after they finally cleared Torbay. Allen described the requirements for a small shore fishery in detail [1]. Whales were hunted from whaleboats, some twenty-seven feet long and six in breadth, but of light construction and with a sharp bow and stern for manoeuvrability13 ; Allen suggested a complement of three or four whaleboats. These were to be equipped with forty oars in total; the boats were normally rowed by five (at most seven) seamen, so a generous allowance for spares was made. at the end of November before heading off to inspect Spencer Gulf. 10 It was Nelson and Martin who conveyed news and letters to Gouger, and it was Martin who sold the sheep that broke its leg on landing at Holdfast Bay. 11 The other possible candidate would be George Martin. The London directors of the Company referred to his ‘rather considerable services by his promptitude and energy in rectifying the state of anarchy and confusion which first existed in the colony, and by proceeding on his exploring trip up Gulf St Vincent’ on 8 May 1837. There is no mention of commercial advice. 12 A William Batty received a ticket-of-leave in Hobart in 1835 and a W. Battye was to lease the site of the South Australian Company’s fishery on Section 6, Encounter Bay, in 1862. The latter’s name is commemorated in Battye Road. Reuben Roach and a Freeman were associated with the Rosetta Cove fishery in 1837. 13 Whaling equipment is described and illustrated explained by Lytle [20] and Giambaba [14]. Version: June 22, 2014 5 Preparations Encounter Bay 1836–1837 Whales were first harpooned and secured by a long line to the boats; the harpoons were most likely made from 12 inch iron bars with an arrow-head cutting edge at one end and fitted to a rough wooden stock at the other, some eight feet in length overall and weighing 10 lb. They were designed for use at close range, no more than 5 yards. The stock was meant to work itself out after the whale was secured and the iron shank of the harpoon would bend with the strain of the line, so harpoons could be used only once successfully and Allen felt that forty were necessary. The line, a three-stranded rope with a breaking strain of some 6000 lb and some 300 fathoms (1800 feet) long, was attached to the shank of the harpoon and the rest coiled in a tub mounted amidships in the whaleboat after passing from chocks at the bows to a post at the stern called a loggerhead; two turns around the loggerhead slowed the rate at which the line could be pulled out as the stricken whale towed the boat at speeds up to twenty miles per hour. After the whale had tired, the boat closed in and the whale was killed with lance thrusts into the lungs; a lance consisted of an iron shank, five or six feet long, mounted on a smooth pole and the end flattened into a 5-inch blade with razor-sharp edges. Allen called for thirty lances. The dead whale was the towed to the shore by the tail; often a hole to receive the rope was made with a boat spade, a roughly triangular flat blade with a chisel edge no more than 4 inches in width mounted on a long pole. If the shore could not be reached in daylight, the whale was anchored. Allen specified ten boat anchors, as ‘we always required a number of boat anchors in the bays’. After the dead whale was brought to shore, it was stripped of its blubber. A cut was are made through the blubber layer on the underside with cutting spades, similar to boat spades but wider edges (some 5 inches in width) and mounted on longer poles (some 12 feet in length: Allen called for a set of these. A hook was passed through the end of the blubber and attached to a ‘cant-purchase’, i.e. blocks and falls operated by a windlass or crab, also specified by Allen. The tension turned or canted the whale’s body as the blubber was cut through with the spades, thereby peeling off strips, or blanket pieces, from around the body. This was the process of ‘cutting in’. Allen suggested that whales awaiting treatment were anchored off the beach with a 10 cwt anchor with 10 fathoms of small chain. The blanket pieces were taken to a blubber room at the fishery, Allen commenting that Aborigines ‘might easy be got there to carry the blubber’. The large pieces of blubber were then sliced thinly, about 1 inch thick, with a mincing knife to enable the oil to be more easily extracted by boiling. This was done in try pots, holding 140 gallons, fired by the blubber scraps left after the previous ‘trying out’. Forks were needed to toss the blubber into the pots, pikes to push it around, skimmers to remove the scraps after the oil was extracted and ladles, or bailers, to remove the oil. Allen called for three try pots and two sets of utensils. The operation of removing the whalebone from the mouth was omitted by Allen. This was included in William Wyatt’s first-hand account of cutting-in at Encounter Bay on 11 August 1837 [31]. This differs in some details from Allen: Saw the process of ‘cutting in’ a whale. A cut is made all round the body, through the blubber, varying from ten to twenty inches thick, and then another six feet below it. By means of another cut along the back and a hole made through the blubber, a rope is inserted forming a loop, and this is fixed to the tackle from the main-yard, so that while the mass is separated from the body it is at the same time hoisted on board, and the huge carcase rolls round in the water, so as to make one complete revolution until the band is entirely disunited; this is called a blanket piece, the blubber from the other parts is then taken off in a similar way; the whale lies on its back, and the tongue and an immense layer of blubber outside are cut off from the under-jaws, the blubber being taken on board, and the tongue towed to the ‘try-works,’ on shore, where the man, called the ‘tonguer,’ takes charge of it to extract its oil; this enormous organ is bigger than the carcase of a bullock, and when it is removed from the mouth there is an excellent view of the layers of whalebone emerging from the gums and palate. 6 Version: June 22, 2014 Encounter Bay 1836–1837 Preparations A similar account was given by William Henry Leigh[18], who visited the Bay shortly before Wyatt: [The whale] was moored alongside the ship, and next day we went aboard to see him cut up. About sixteen men were appointed to the task, which is called “flinching”14 him, and was thus performed:—A man having alighted upon him, with a kind of sharp spade, began cutting lines across, and making a deep longitudinal incision in his back. A hook with pullies was then let down from the yard-arm and fastened to this portion, which was in the form of a belt. As the pulley wound up, the men on the whale kept chopping away, till a piece four feet wide and twenty feet long was suspended. This was then lowered into the sea, and towed by boats to the shore, for the purpose of being boiled. The blubber was eighteen inches thick, and of the consistence of cow’s udder. The blubber, being on shore, and in the house where it is to be converted into oil, is taken up with forks, and chopped into slices, thrown into the coppers, and the oil ladled off. The scratchings, or refuse after boiling, serve for fuel. The entrails, &c. of the whale float to the shore... The whalebone was cut away and cleaned and the rest of the carcase left to rot on the beach, where it provided a feast for both Aborigines and scavenging birds. Although Allen envisaged a small start, several buildings requiring bricks were still necessary. As well as the try works itself, there would be a house for the head ‘harpooner’15 , with outhouses for whalebone and stores, a house for the boat crews, a shed near the try works with space for the cooper and carpenter and a blubber room. A wooden shed would suffice for the boats. The total establishment would comprise about eighteen people, including the carpenter and the cooper, who dealt with the oil casks. Allen estimated that for the first season casks who be needed to receive some eighty to one hundred tuns of oil, based on an average yield of eight tuns of oil from a Right Whale. A tun was the traditional measure for oil and was a volume, rather than weight, of about 250 gallons. In later seasons, though, Allen recommended that the oil be stored in lead-lined tanks after passing through two iron or copper coolers. Allen concluded by offering his services to the South Australian Company, saying he was willing to emigrate with his wife and six-year-old daughter. He was appointed superintendent of the South Australian Company’s fisheries, but did not come out with his wife from London until two years later. Arriving at Port Adelaide on the Winchester with 3 whaleboats and 21 boat anchors on 23 September 1838 [9], he was too late for that season. The South Australian Company amalgamated its operations with those of the Hack consortium the following year, so he was never involved in whaling in South Australia and his connection with the Company was severed acrimoniously (see page 39). The Company did, however, employ Captain Alexander Allen, who was to appear in South Australia in April 1837, just in time for the first whaling season. It is unlikely that Stephens knew of either appointment. William Allen’s letter would have been received by Angas after his departure, and Alexander Allen’s vessel, H.M.S. Swallow, formerly the Marquis of Salibury, was sold to the Company and registered as the South Australian only in October 1836, more than two months after Stephens had arrived in South Australia. So Stephens himself had to organize men, equipment and a site for whaling. Men and equipment could be procured only from a bay-whaling port, the largest of which nearby was Hobart. Within a few days of alerting Angas to his intentions, Stephens despatched both the Emma, on 23 December, and the John Pirie, under Martin, on 27 December, to Hobart Town, as it was then known. Then came the question of a site. Only the choice made in December 1836 is known; the reasons for it are not on record. So we can only guess that the islanders and the Launceston-based Wright 14 Also 15 See flenching or flensing. page 13. Version: June 22, 2014 7 Competition Encounter Bay 1836–1837 had informed Stephens that the 1832 and 1833 seasons, when whaling was conducted from Kangaroo Island, were not a great success—there were certainly none after those. The successful whale fisheries were further east at Portland and Port Fairy on what was to become the Victorian coast in 1851 and foreign ships were regular visitors to these waters. Beare’s memory[4] of the attempt to contact John Hart at Encounter Bay in 1836, suggests that the islanders were aware of whaling activities in the bay, though no other records exist either of them or of Hart being involved—Hart was then only master of the vessels that attended the fisheries. Perhaps the western end of Encounter Bay was the closest point that was logistically possible with Stephens’s very limited resources. Wright’s input into the decision may be unknown but there is no doubt that he was the person at Stephens’s side throughout the whaling season and he was handsomely rewarded with a payment of £50 from the Rosetta fishery account ‘for information and personal assistance’ on 4 November 183716 Stephens sailed with Wright in the William first from Nepean Bay to Holdfast Bay on 5 February, probably to consult with government officials, and then for Encounter Bay on 7 February17 . They returned to Nepean Bay on 19 February. The intervening period would have allowed for an extensive exploration of the bay. The general features of Encounter Bay were well-known, Figure 1. The map published by Charles Sturt in 1833, based on the reports of the ill-fated Collet Barker’s party, shows and names Granite Island and Seal Rock. To the east is Rocky Point. An anchorage was claimed to exist between Seal Rock and the hilly, unnamed promontory to the west. Stephens and Wright would have found quite substantial islands to the east and west of the promontory. Light subsequently noted that Stephens had named the point of the promontory Cape Rosetta (after wife of the Angas, Rosetta née French), mostly likely as a result of this visit in February (see page 27). Martin had returned from Hobart in the John Pirie on 14 February. A week later he was on the way back to Hobart calling at Encounter Bay on the way. By his own account given in a letter of 1 March 1838 and published in [15], it was ‘for the purpose of landing provisions and whaling implements for the South Australian Company’s fishery, and I stayed there four or five days’. The day that Martin left Holdfast Bay, 21 February, Stephens wrote to his brother Edward, newly arrived to be the cashier and accountant of the South Australian Company, that he was going ‘forthwith’ to Encounter Bay as he expected that he ‘should be enabled to place the sheep and also establish a Fishery’. This appears to date the foundation of the fishery. It would have made no sense to drop gear and provisions unless a site had been chosen and there were men to take charge of them. If Stephens accompanied Martin as far as Encounter Bay, as his letter suggests that he intended, he must have returned to Nepean Bay by other means, most likely in the William, whose movements between 19 and 26 February and the weeks after 27 February are unknown. The site of the South Australian Company’s fishery was at Rosetta Cove, a small bay on the eastern side of Cape Rosetta. The cove had a small stream of fresh water running through it—though probably not permanent—and was conveniently located behind the Bluff, the hill forming the promontory, from which vantage point whales could be spotted entering the bay. Competition Before whaling could start, however, Stephens’s plans were upset by the arrival at Kangaroo Island of the 141-ton brigantine Hind 18 from Sydney on 1 March. 16 This was notated ‘amount promised by Samuel Stephens’ because Stephens had by that time been dismissed by the South Australian Company (see page 48). 17 Cumpston [8] claims that Stephens sent the Rapid to Encounter Bay with a sealer to establish communication with the natives there. This is highly unlikely; the Rapid was not at Stephens’s command. This must refer to Light sending William Cooper to Encounter Bay to bring back aborigines to tend his garden. 18 Built in 1818 in Dundee, with two masts and a square stern, she measured 73.3 × 2.5 × 13.1 feet and weighed 141 24 94 tons [23]. 8 Version: June 22, 2014 Encounter Bay 1836–1837 Competition Figure 1: Encounter Bay from the Arrowsmith map of the maritime portion of South Australia of 1840. It is based on Flinders’ chart of 1802, the survey of HMS Victor of April 1837, Light’s sketches of June 1837 and the report of Strangways and Hutchinson of January 1838. The grey outline indicates uncertainty. Soundings by Flinders are omitted. The scale is derived from the longitude scale of the Arrowsmith map. This map is overlaid on a modern map after being shifted about 3◦ to the westward. The modern map shows watercourses, none of which, except the River Murray, are perennial. Areas in light blue are subject to inundation. The point marked ‘Flinders & Baudin’ shows the spot where HMS Investigator met Le Géographe. Note that Wright Island is placed to the south of Rosetta Point, then named variously Cape Rosetta or Cape Victor. The Hind had been sailing in Australian waters under Richard Scott since at least 1831. After returning from New Zealand under Richard Wyatt in mid-November 1836, she sailed again on a whaling cruise on 12 February 1837 under William Jones, Wyatt having died in December. Her destination was ostensibly again New Zealand but her appearance in South Australia would not have been out of the ordinary. Bay-whaling in Australasian waters required opportunism; just when or where whales would be plentiful could not be predicted and ships had to move from ground to ground. If whales were scarce, whalers could always turn to sealing in order to satisfy their paymasters. However, in this case, the ship’s owner, Robert Campbell, junior, a prominent merchant in Bligh Street, Sydney, may have wanted to keep his rivals guessing. In January 1837, the Sydney newspapers carried reports of emigrant activity in Gulf St Vincent and Campbell may have wanted to assess the mercantile opportunities19 . He would have learned of these early in the following month when the Rapid arrived in Sydney on 3 March to order stock and supplies, but he was not to know this in February. It was only on 21 April, when the Hind returned to Sydney, that the Sydney newspapers revealed that she had been to South Australia to establish a bay-whaling station, ‘having taken a whaling gang, boats, tryworks, &c. from this port, for that purpose’. 19 Launceston merchants were doing the same at this time, even though busily engaged in supplying the burgeoning settlement on their doorstep at Port Phillip. Version: June 22, 2014 9 The establishments Encounter Bay 1836–1837 In charge of the expedition was John William Dundas Blenkinsop, who was an experienced seaman, familiar with Australian and New Zealand waters. According to Paton [24], he had ‘married’ the daughter of a relation of a Maori chieftain of the Cloudy Bay region, but this apparently did not deter him from double-dealing in the purchase of land from the native owners in 1831. In 1833 or 1834 he had initiated the first settlement on Lord Howe Island, where he landed three men from the Caroline to harvest mutton-bird feathers [21]. Despite confusing records of one or two Maori ‘wives’, a Jane and a Te Rongo(pamamao), by whom there was at least one surviving child, he married Anna Maria Megoen/McGowan in Sydney in December 1836. Blenkinsop met with Stephens on 5 March, when Blenkinsop proposed a cooperative fishing venture but was rebuffed by Stephens, according to Price [25]. This is consistent with Blenkinsop’s later contention (page 37) that the 1837 season would have been more successful if there had been cooperation (see page 37). Price goes on to say that Stephens tried to preempt him by dispatching a small cutter to Encounter Bay at midnight on 5 March with orders to select a site for a fishery. Sexton [26] cautiously describes this as an allegation, with some justice, since preparations were by then well advanced by the South Australian Company. It is more likely that the cutter was sent to alert the men who must have been at Encounter Bay in February. If the site of the Company’s fishery had not already been occupied, Rosetta Cove would have been quickly secured. Blenkinsop was taken to Encounter Bay in the Hind on 18 March and established his own fishery at Hind Cove, the bay facing Granite Island20 , and built his house nearby at Anna Vale, named after his wife. It was located between two rivulets, identified by Crozier as the Hindmarsh and Kangaroo (now Inman) Rivers. Granite Island could have been used as a lookout: whilst this would not have commanded such as view as the Bluff but Blenkinsop would have been better placed to intercept the whales taking the usual east-to-west path along the coast before the Company’s boats operating from Rosetta Cove. Furthermore, the anchorage in front of Hind Cove—shortly to be called Victor Harbour—was much more protected than that at Rosetta Harbour, a fact that was unpalatable to the Encounter Bay faction until the painful lessons inflicted at the end of the year (see 43). The establishments The economics of a bay whaling station were detailed in the ‘Report on Whaling’ compiled by John Hart, Jacob Hagen and John Baker and published as a Transaction of the Statistical Society at the end of December 1841. It appeared in the South Australian Register of 1 January 1842 and the Southern Australian of 4 and 7 January 1842. The authors based their calculations on a fishery with a party of three boats. When whaling started in South Australia this was the norm. The three boats, each with a headsman in charge, worked as a team under the chief headsman. The crew of each boat consisted of a boat-steerer and four (sometimes six) more oarsmen or pulling hands. The headsman steered the boats in pursuit of the whale by means of a long sweep at the stern until they were close enough for the steersman, who rowed at the bow, to ship his oar and harpoon the whale. After the whale had tired, the headsman exchanged places with the steersman in order to undertake the most skilled part of the hunt: the killing of the whale by plunging a lance into its lungs. The total complement was thus three headsmen, three boat-steerers and some 17 pulling hands, there being an allowance for the accidents and injuries which were common occurrences in such a hazardous profession. The on-shore establishment comprised a cook, a steward and a bullock-driver. A cooper 20 Charles Mann wrote to Robert Gouger [15] from Hobart on 6 March 1838 that Granite Island was equidistant from the fisheries of the South Australian Company and Blenkinsop, about four miles east of the former. Light’s map of June 1837, drawn from his own observations, was more reliable. 10 Version: June 22, 2014 Encounter Bay 1836–1837 The establishments needed to be employed for six months to provide the casks in which the oil was stored. Typical provisions for these men were 12 lb of flour, 12 lb of meat, quarts of spirits (rum) per week. 1 4 lb of tea, 2 lb of sugar and 2 Only the cooper received fixed wages, around £8 a month. The rest of the employees took shares in 1 1 the catch at a rate agreed at beginning of the season. These shares or ‘lays’, varied from 12 to 18 for 1 1 1 the headsmen, depending on skill and experience, 40 for boat-steerers, 50 for the steward and 60 for the pulling hands, cook and bullock-driver. In their calculations, the authors allowed a price of £15 a tun (volume) for oil and £100 a ton (weight) for whalebone and assumed a normal season’s take of 150 tuns of oil and 7 12 tons of whalebone. The largest Black Whale yielded no more than twelve tuns of oil (Allen gave the figure of eight tuns as an average), so some twenty whales would have to be caught to yield an income of £3000. The wage bill would be almost £1000 and the provisions almost £500. Allowing another £500 for depreciation and contingencies, the total outlay would be £2000. Thus the operation should yield a net profit of £1000. Conditions that first season in 1837 were somewhat different. Blenkinsop had a party of two boats, Stephens a double party of five boats based at the shore fishery at Rosetta Cove. To man the boats Stephens had to recruit experienced men. Such were not available in South Australia, so at the same time as dispatching the John Pirie to Hobart for stores, he sent the Company’s other coastal vessel, the Emma, there to pick up whalers. She departed Hobart on 20 February with sixteen passengers, amongst whom were John Gordon Harper, Robert Hayes, John Boyd Thorburn McFarlane, Edward Munday, John Smith and Isaac Nelson, and arrived back at Holdfast Bay on 5 March. McFarlane, who claimed eighteen years’ experience as a seaman [15], had, in his own words, ‘the honour to command the South Australian Company’s whaling establishment there [Encounter Bay] during a season of six months’, i.e., he was the Company’s chief headsman and superintendent of the Rosetta Cove fishery. Harper, Hayes, Munday and Smith were other headsman21 . Nelson was a cooper. There is no mention of lowlier hands, boat-steerers and pulling hands or oarsmen, though Charles Bailey must have been on board because he accepted a payment of £2 in lieu of a passage to Hobart at the end of the season. More whaling gear for the South Australian Company came from Launceston on the Africaine on 19 April. She left there on 28 March and may have brought more whalers since Lewis William Gilles, the Launceston agent for the South Australian Company, wrote to Angas from Launceston on 14 March that: ‘The Manager of the Fishery is here now, he is an active man & in two days has engaged 40 hands for the Bay Fishery’. Just whom Gilles meant is not clear; perhaps McFarlane was dropped off at Launceston on the way back from Hobart, but then it would mean that when he was paid £14 for advances to whalers on 4 March he was in Launceston rather than back in South Australia. Perhaps this was the source of more pulling hands and shore personnel. A complete list of the men stationed at Encounter Bay is impossible to piece together. Forty-one names can be associated with the fishery, thirty-three of whom appear in the account books [28] with payments allocated specifically to the Rosetta Fishery account. These are listed, together with references in other sources, in Table 1. Of these, at least seven would have composed the shore establishment: the boatbuilder, Henry Bushell (although he might have worked at Kingscote and never visited Encounter Bay), the three coopers, Josiah Gibbons, J. Keubler and Isaac Nelson, the steward, Abraham Clegg, the storekeeper, James Walter Fell (perhaps a late appointment in December 1837), and the smith’s assistant, Thomas Tindall. Murphy is included in a payment to the other coopers, so it is likely that he was John Murphy, the cooper who came out in the Sarah and Elizabeth (see page 18). Another employee on shore may be the boatman, George Thompson. Yet another may be Hugh Scott: William Wyatt in his description of the work of a tonguer (page 6) suggests that he worked on shore at the try works. The case of 21 Doubt surrounds the spelling of many names at this time. In the absence of formal signed documents (in at least one case the whaler was illiterate) various phonetic versions appear in the contemporary documents. Here we prefer McFarlane to Macfarlane and Munday to Monday. Version: June 22, 2014 11 The establishments Encounter Bay 1836–1837 William Wood (s) is even more uncertain: he received a substantial advance of £1 10s, which implies that he was an experienced whaler, and in 1838 a William Woods was paid as a tonguer, but what he was engaged for in 1837 is unknown. The ‘Report on Whaling’ also lists a bullock-driver which suggests that a dray was normally found necessary, presumably to move the oil casks and other heavy stores. No such person appears on this list but a payment of £4 14s 6d was made on 27 June to an unidentified Freeman for fetching a bullock dray from Adelaide. Huggins should probably not be included in the establishment for the 1837 season. The late payment from the Rosetta fishery account in March 1838 suggests that he was James Huggins, a seaman from the South Australian, who must have transferred to the Rosetta Cove fishery after her loss. Only Bushell, Tindall and Wood(s) are known to have come out from England, the rest appear to have been recruited in Van Diemen’s Land. This includes the twenty-nine remaining men, all of whom must be presumed to be whalers22 . Five headsmen can be identified from the accounts of whaling that season: John McFarlane, John Harper, Robert Hayes, Edward Munday and John Smith, though Harper received a surprisingly small payment at the end of the season. All warranted mention as passengers on the Emma in the Hobart Town Courier. There must have been five boat-steerers as well and they commanded the second-highest remuneration for their skills, so we can guess that Charles McClure and John Espie were boat-steerers, perhaps Reuben Roach (solely on account of his large advance of £2). Henry Ayers was a boat-steerer in 1838, so he may have been one in 1837. The remaining nineteen would have been oarsmen of pulling hands. They were paid little for hard and dangerous work. Not surprisingly no less than seven of these names appear in list of absconders. Four were reported to the Government by McFarlane in May: Jeremiah Donoho, Richard Pierce, George Robinson and George Turner. Three others were gaoled in Adelaide in June: William Angill, William Power and Samuel Wistock. At least twenty oarsmen would have been required at any one time to man five boats, so it highly probable that several other were hands employed. That they were regarded as too inconsequential for mention is supported by the accounts of the drowning of Jeffcott in December (see page 43): these are the sole source of the names of George Mills and ‘little Punch’. Women were also inconsequential. It is only through the log of the South Australian that we learn of that the wives of Harper, Hayes and McClure were present at Encounter Bay, when they were ferried back at the end of the season. So at least some of the senior men had families with them, as did Blenkinsop (page 24). According to Leigh[18], there were also small children, if not new-born babies, present. He was called upon to perform a christening of ‘a child of a whaler’. His ‘friend, Captain C—’, was a very inebriated godfather. The ceremony took place near the spot where Driscoll was buried (see page 29), which must have been close to Blenkinsop’s fishery at Hind Cove, so the whaler would appear to be one of Blenkinsop’s. Leigh, however, makes no mention of Blenkinsop23 . Why two 22 A J. Brakehill appears as a labourer on the list of employees of the South Australian Company at Kingscote drawn up by Stephens on 19 May 1837; the Thomas Brakehill in the whaling accounts was paid an advance of 10s in March, double what many others received, so he could not have been unskilled and is thus unlikely to be J Brakehill. 23 Leigh’s accounts are usually circumstantial and incomplete. Captain C— cannot be identified. He is not Coffin, since Leigh says that he met his friend later in Sydney at the Parramatta races (4 and 6 October 1837), when he described him as being ‘in search of adventures’. Coffin did not leave South Australia until 26 October. Leigh left South Australia on the Lord Hobart and arrived in Sydney on 19 September 1837, just in time for the Parramatta races (which he says he attended on 10 October). How C— could have found his way from Encounter Bay at the beginning of September to Sydney by mid October except by the Lord Hobart is puzzling as only the Ann sailed there in that period, although three vessels went to Hobart and two to Launceston: no passenger with a name beginning with ‘C’ is listed on any of them. Leigh had left Sydney before 27 November, the date of the North Shore fire which presumably burnt out his friend Captain Leese. Henry Leese was master of the Schah which had called at South Australia before proceeding in July 1837 to Sydney with his wife, Elizabeth, two children—Greville and Charles (though Leigh mentions meeting only one at Kangaroo Island)—and sister-in-law, Augustas Hill. After the loss of his stock, Leese and his family sailed for the Cape in the Gazelle on 3 January 1838, where they met Leigh again. 12 Version: June 22, 2014 Encounter Bay 1836–1837 H.M.S. Victor strangers should have been called upon to perform the ceremony is hard to imagine. Doubt surrounds the whole event. Blenkinsop had brought whalers with him from Sydney in the Hind, but the list is much less complete, since it relies on casual references. Table 2 summarizes these. Blenkinsop, in his deposition in October (see page 24), described Mead as a harpooner, whilst Sylvester Freeman, at the same time, called him a headsman. The seems to confirm that the term ‘harpooner’ was then used synonymously for ‘headsman’, cf. William Allen (page 7), although it was the boatsteerer who wielded the harpoon. Also present at the fisheries were Aborigines. Whalers and sealers had traditionally an evil reputation as brutal, ill-disciplined rabble, especially those that operated beyond the law along the South Australian coast between Van Diemen’s Land and Kangaroo Island and Aboriginal hostility was attributed to their depredations—Charles Sturt blamed them for Collet Barker’s death at Encounter Bay in 1831. However, when the emigrants arrived, the Kangaroo Islanders appeared to have reasonably amicable relations with the mainland Aborigines, despite acquiring women as ‘wives’ from them. The fisheries continued to maintain these mutually tolerant if not harmonious relations, providing employment, food and clothing to local tribes. With all preparations for the coming season made, Blenkinsop returned to Sydney. Perhaps he was due to report to Campbell, perhaps he had to bring more men and supplies to last through the season— perhaps both. For whatever reason, the Hind sailed on 12 April for Sydney, which she reached on 21 April, reportedly from bay whaling at ‘Hind Bay’, Southern Australia. There is no manifest24 in the Sydney archives to confirm Blenkinsop’s presence on this vessel, but return he did and there was no other means available to him. Apparently Thomas Marshall was left in charge, as it was he who was to write to the Governor in Blenkinsop’s absence. H.M.S. Victor On 20 April 20, a week after the departure of the Hind , H.M.S. Victor , a 382-ton brig-sloop under the command of Captain Richard Crozier R.N.25 , arrived at Port Adelaide from the Swan River. In Adelaide he was feted by the governor, John Hindmarsh, who gave a ball at the Government ‘Hut’ for his officers on 24 April. Crozier departed on 25 April and, after being becalmed off the Sturt River, worked his way into Encounter Bay the following afternoon26 . Most likely Crozier interrupted his voyage to his home base at Sydney in order to assess Encounter Bay at the behest of Hindmarsh. Hindmarsh was smarting from his defeat on 10 February when the votes cast by, or on behalf of, the preliminary land purchasers endorsed Colonel William Light’s choice of site for Adelaide, and he continued to fight a rearguard action to move the capital to Encounter Bay. At the whale fishery of the South Australian Company, Crozier found a brig and a schooner at anchor. The brig was the Emma, which had loaded sheep at Holdfast Bay on 20 April, probably those referred to by Stephens on 21 February, and no doubt brought to Encounter Bay to supply the whalers’ contracted ration of meat. The schooner was the John Pirie on her way back from Hobart. She spent some five days landing sheep at Encounter Bay after experiencing heavy gales from westward, according to Martin in Gouger’s book [15]. The sheep were most probably landed only to recover from the rough voyage. 24 The Sydney newspapers reported that Wyatt was master, but this must be erroneous. Wyatt had died the previous December and been replaced by William Jones. 25 Sometimes erroneously identified as Francis Rawdon Moira Crozier, who was in Arctic waters with James Clark Ross at this time. 26 The remark book of H.M.S. Victor records this as 25 April [7]. Version: June 22, 2014 13 H.M.S. Victor Encounter Bay 1836–1837 Table 1: Men engaged at the Rosetta Cove fishery in 1837. References: 1 Passenger list, 2 South Australian Company accounts [28], 3 South Australian Company list of men, 4 Colonial Secretary’s papers [30], 5 Fell’s memoir [13], 6 log of the South Australian, 7 letter of David McLaren, junior [1]. Name John McFarlane Position superintendent & headsman6 William Angill Henry Ayers Charles Bailey William Barrett Thomas Brakehill Henry Bushell boat-steerer? boatbuilder3 George Clark(e) William Clark(e) Abraham Clegg steward2 Jeremiah Donoho John Espie James Fell Thomas Fitzgerald Josiah Gibbons Reference paid £14 for advances to whalers2 came in Emma?1 paid £32 paid £20 on 21 November2 goaled & released as runaway4 paid £2 10s for a log2 paid £8 17s 9d2 paid £2 in lieu of passage to Hobart2 advanced 5s2 advanced 10s2 employee of SA Co.3 paid £15 11s 9d for boats2 advanced 5s2 advanced 5s2 advanced £52 paid £52 paid £59 1s 3d balance2 advanced 5s2 reported as run away4 paid £10 6s 1d2 paid £13 7s wages to date2 storekeeper7 cooper 2 Henry Halbrook John Harper headsman Robert Hayes headsman [James?] Huggins William Jones J. Keubler cooper3 Charles McClure Isaac Nelson cooper3 Edward Munday headsman George Mills oarsman5 paid £5 16s 9d2 advanced 5s2 paid £44 4s 10d2 paid part £27 11s 9d balance2 advanced 5s2 came in Emma 1 paid £23 14s 7d to account2 came in Emma 1 paid £17 14s to account2 paid £10 to account2 paid £10 balance and £50 balance and lay2 paid £17 15s 8d wages to date2 paid £1 4s2 purchased slops 19s at fishery2 paid £8 6s 6d balance2 paid £22 1s 2d2 came in Emma 1 part £27 11s 9d balance2 paid £5 wages2 came in Emma 1 paid £55 18s 6d in full2 paid £5 15s for a gun2 survived drowning5 Date 4 March ’37 5 March ’37 11 November ’37 25 November ’37 June ’37 24 October ’37 20 October ’37 10 November ’37 19 September ’37 20 March ’37 19 May ’37 21 October ’37 18 April ’37 19 September ’37 20 March ’37 February ’38 February ’38 18 April ’37 22 May ’37 20 October ’37 March ’38 December ’37 20 October ’37 6 March ’37 26 October ’37 February ’38 19 September ’37 5 March ’37 21 October ’37 5 March ’37 21 October ’37 26 October ’37 31 October ’37 March ’38 21 October ’37 July ’37 February ’38 20 October ’37 5 March ’37 February ’38 February ’38 5 March ’37 21 October ’37 24 October ’37 December ’37 continued on next page 14 Version: June 22, 2014 H.M.S. Victor Encounter Bay 1836–1837 continued from previous page Name [John?] Murphy Richard Pierce William Powell William Power ‘little’ Punch Reuben Roach Charles Robinson George Robinson Position cooper? oarsman5 Hugh Scott tonguer2 John Smith headsman George Smith George Thompson boatman3 Thomas Tindall George Turner Samuel Wistock William Wood(s) smith’s assistant3 carpenter?3 Reference part £27 11s 9d balance2 reported as run away4 advanced 5s2 paid 10s on account wages2 gaoled & released as runaway4 survived drowning5 advanced £22 advanced 5s2 advanced 5s2 reported as run away4 advanced £52 advanced £12 paid £10 on account and £60 balance of tonguer’s oil2 came in Emma 1 advanced £12 paid £62 17s 1d in full2 advanced £22 paid 5s balance due for service at fishery2 employed by SA Co.3 advanced 5s2 paid £2 8s 11d2 reported as run away4 gaoled & released as runaway4 advanced £1 10s2 Date February ’38 22 May ’37 18 April ’37 29 December ’37 June ’37 December ’37 20 March ’37 19 September ’37 18 April ’37 22 May ’37 20 March ’37 18 May ’37 31 October ’37 5 March ’37 19 September ’37 21 October ’37 20 March ’37 6 May ’37 19 May ’37 19 September ’37 21 October ’37 22 May ’37 Jun ’37 18 May ’37 Table 2: Men engaged at the Hind Cove fishery in 1837. References: 1 Affidavits, 2 Colonial Secretary’s papers [30], 3 Fell’s memoir [13]. Name John Blenkinsop Thomas Brown Henry Brooks John Driscoll Position Sylvester Freeman Thomas Marshall Thomas Mead William Reeves Runaways Michael Smith Thomas Smith Thomas Stacks Webster George Wright headsman? steward? headsman? headsman steersman? oarsmen headsman Reference Date reported as run away2 drowned3 came in Hind 2 murdered2 Freeman & Blenkinsop1 wrote to Hindmarsh2 Freeman & Blenkinsop1 reported as run away2 two overlanders reported as run away2 reported as run away2 came in Hind ? in company with Blenkinsop drowned3 21 May ’37 12 December ’37 end June ’37 21 May ’37 end June ’37 21 May ’37 12 Dec ’37 21 May ’37 21 May ’37 23/24 May ’37 12 December ’37 December ’37 Crozier was unhappy about the safety of his anchorage in Rosetta Harbour so, at 3.50 p.m. on 26 April, he weighed anchor and came to at 5.20 just behind Granite Island. Here shelter was provided by Granite Island, Seal Rock and the reef. He wrote to the Governor in a letter published in the South Australian Gazette & Colonial Record of 20 January 1838 that it was a splendid harbour and that he had named the outer roadstead ‘Capel’s Sound’ after his commander-in-chief, Rear Admiral Sir Thomas Bladen Capel, and the harbour behind Granite Island ‘Victor Harbour’, after his own Version: June 22, 2014 15 H.M.S. Victor Encounter Bay 1836–1837 vessel—which he claimed, with cavalier disregard for the truth, to be the ‘first ship that has been here’. The lie is given to this statement a couple of sentences later: ‘A vessel from Sydney has formed a whaling establishment in this harbour, and has left two boats fishing’. He reported that two rivers ran into Encounter Bay in the neighbourhood of the fishery, although their mouths were blocked by sandbars. They were salty for at least four or five miles inland, but fresh water was obtainable from wells dug close to the shore. He judged the land along the bay to be very good. He went on to note that ‘the water is deep alongside the rocks [of Granite Island], having 2 21 and 3 fathoms. Wharfs might be made to allow of ships going alongside’. He closed by stating his intention to survey the harbour the following day and added that he might be induced to stay for two days ‘for the sake of the colony’. He was, in fact, prepared to remain only one day. The following day was fine with light breezes and at 5 a.m. he dispatched a cutter and a pinnace (the log mentions only a pinnace) under the acting master, William Mill, and a mate, [Robert] Douglas Stupart27 , to make soundings of the bay whilst he and the surgeon, Richard Natt, explored the country. They may well have ascended the ridge behind Victor Harbour because a hilltop named Crozier Hill appears on the 1838 sketch map by Light and Finniss (see Figure 10). It overlooks a river now known as the Inman but on the so-called chart of the harbour in Encounter Bay produced by Crozier28 (State Library of South Australia C735), it is called the Kangaroo River. In reality the chart is no more than a sketch made without any bearings, but it records Wrights Island (now West Island) and Wrights Anchorage between it and the mainland, south of Cape Victor [Rosetta Point]. The Rosetta fishery was placed on the north side of the cape, facing Rosetta Harbour. Beyond the Kangaroo River was Sandy Point with Granite Island and Seal Rock offshore. An anchorage is indicated north and north-west of Granite Island. The second fishery is marked, but not labelled, shortly before the Hindmarsh River is reached. The higher ground inland to the east of this river is marked as a site for a town. Crozier wrote to Commander William Hobson of H.M.S. Rattlesnake in Port Jackson on 6 May that ‘we fixed upon a capital site for a town, on the right bank of the Hindmarsh River’. The coast is then shown trending eastward to Rocky Point, with an unnamed Pullen Island clearly depicted. The shoreline is then roughly indicated trending to the north-west! H.M.S. Victor sailed from Encounter Bay at 5.30 a.m. on 28 April in hazy weather and light breezes. Price [25] claims that Blenkinsop acted as pilot when H.M.S. Victor surveyed Encounter Bay, but this is most unlikely to be true. Crozier states that the Hind had left before he arrived in the bay, Blenkinsop is not mentioned in the Victor ’s Remark Book and, when she reached Port Jackson on 7 May, Blenkinsop does not appear as a passenger on the manifest. The other vessels soon left Encounter Bay as well. The John Pirie continued on to Nepean Bay on 28 April, the day H.M.S. Victor departed Victor Harbour, and the Emma returned to Nepean Bay on 2 May. Crozier expanded his assessment of Encounter Bay in the Remark Book, obviously written after the departure and almost certainly in the knowledge that it was what Hindmarsh wanted to hear: The anchorage round Cape Victor [Rosetta Point] called Rosetta Harbour may be deemed safe for 3 or 4 vessels of two or three hundred tons. But the one under Granite Island is more commodious being capable of containing at least twenty or thirty sail. The best anchorage is with the east point of Granite Island SSW in 4 fathoms. The reef extending from Seal Rocks protects you from southerly winds; and no fear of any consequence arises with easterly ones, they being summer winds. Another anchorage also exists round Rocky Point [Freeman Nob as also one under Wrights [West] Island, making altogether four anchorages within the space of eight miles. These anchorages and the locality altogether of Encounter Bay seem to point it out as a far more eligible situation for the establishment of a new colony than Hold Fast Bay, particularly 27 Stupart is described as a midshipman in the complement published in the Sydney Herald of 25 August 1836. The newspaper prints Mill and Stupart as ‘Miles’ and ‘Hupart’. 28 This chart is attributed to commander John Crozier. 16 Version: June 22, 2014 Encounter Bay 1836–1837 The South Australian its proximity to Lake Alexandrina which seems to have been one [of] the principal objects in preferring Port Adelaide to Port Lincoln. Sturt’s River [Murray], one of the entrances to the Lake, is only 20 miles from the anchorage. The two rivers called Hindmarsh and Kangaroo [Inman] are, after you get passed their bars, navigable for boats. Some very good wells had been dug at Hind’s fishery. Fresh water pools were found at the head of Kangaroo River and as this was the dry season, no doubt abundance was there during the rains. Then follow directions for reaching the anchorage under Granite Island, with warnings that the soundings around the island and the reef between Seal Roc and Granite Island were very irregular and not be be relied upon. Finally, he notes: ‘As to the anchorage under Wrights [West] Island and round Rocky Point [Freeman Nob], our stay being only 24 hours altogether, we had not time to examine them. But the information we received [from the whalers] about was very much in their favor and I have every reason to believe it correct’. In Crozier’s opinion Victor Harbour was commodious enough to be ‘capable of containing as much shipping as any new colony can expect for several years’. By the year’s end, however, reality had prevailed. The South Australian Whilst H.M.S. Victor was in Encounter Bay, the South Australian was preparing to leave Kangaroo Island for the whaling season at the bay. A former naval vessel, this tiny 155-ton barque had been purchased by the South Australian Company and sailed from Plymouth under the command of Alexander Allen29 , arriving in South Australia on 23 April. She brought out David McLaren and his family as well as the South Australian Company employee, Henry Richard Mildred, and the surgeon, William Henry Leigh. McLaren had been appointed Commercial Manager of the South Australian Company, effectively superseding Stephens. The outward voyage was documented in the log book kept by the first mate, John Anthony. The crew were ill-disciplined and there were altercations between them and Anthony and the second mate, David Findlay. The situation was exacerbated by the captain’s refusal to exert his authority on behalf of his officers, which forced McLaren to step in on several occasions. The carpenter, John Cann, was off duty for an extended period due to an injury sustained whilst intoxicated. In what must have been the last straw for MacLaren, Allen refused to heed the pilot on entering Nepean Bay and grounded the vessel on a sand-spit; he then retired to his cabin leaving the pilot to get her off. Anthony, who had had a physical confrontation with Allen during the voyage, left the ship at Nepean Bay and joined the South Australian Company. For some reason, Allen was not removed—perhaps McLaren had no power to—and the South Australian was prepared for removal to Encounter Bay she took on board two bricklayers, a cooper and a boatbuilder. The bricks were brought from Launceston by the Africaine, which returned to Holdfast Bay on 19 April. There were payments on 3 April to Smith of the Africaine 30 for £3 17s, two bills for tobacco and passage of dogs on account of the Rosetta fishery, and £15 15s for bricks. The bricks were unloaded from the South Australian the day after she reached Encounter Bay and were no doubt used to build the try works at Rosetta Cove. The South Australian made up a party of two boats. Most her crew and even some passengers were taken on for the fishery: the crew were Alexander Allen (captain), John Allen, James Anthony, Henry Bailey, William Buchan, John Cann, Alexander Clark, David Findlay, James Huggins, Gilbert Hutchison31 , Maxwell Inston, John Johnston, William Wedger (or Widger) and John Pearce Wyatt, 29 His name is sometimes rendered ‘Allan’, but the official log of the South Australian has ‘Allen’. Benjamin Smith, sawyer for the South Australia Company, came out on the Africaine. 31 Findlay mentions a William Hutchison being ill in the log of the South Australian. There is no other record of William so Findlay most likely mistook the name. 30 A Version: June 22, 2014 17 Land communication Encounter Bay 1836–1837 the passengers, William Prout32 and John Watkins. Clark, Hutchison, Inston and Johnston had all been guilty of insubordination during the voyage out, but it was they who had been chosen as whalers. Findlay was made first mate in the place of John Anthony and John Allen, the captain’s brother, was promoted from third to second mate. Three other passengers were employed at Kingscote by the South Australian Company: another fisherman, John Germein, and his two brothers became members of the William’s crew until they fell out with Wright in November [26]. The complement of the South Australian at Encounter Bay, as far as is known, is listed in Table 3. It might be noted that the occupations given in the passenger and crew lists use the term ‘harpooner’ rather than ‘headsman’. Charles Smith and John Southgate were on board the whaler Sarah and Elizabeth, which arrived from Hull on 26 September 1836. It is possible that ‘Hightam’, of whom there is no other record, is a phonetic rendering of ‘Hutton’: a William Hutton was a shipmate of Smith and Southgate on the Sarah and Elizabeth. The Sarah and Elizabeth was the third deep-sea whaler sent out by the South Australian Company. She arrived at Nepean Bay on 25 April 1837 but did not leave for a whaling cruise until 4 September, so her crew could well have been employed during the Encounter Bay season. Thomas Fitzgerald also received payments from the Rosetta fishery account, so must have done work for both, but in an unknown capacity. Likewise, the fisherman, Joseph Wright , was paid for service up to June 1837 but apparently he did not leave Kangaroo Island. On 22 October 1838 he wrote a letter of bitter complaint to Angas (State Library of South Australia BRG 42/31/9): he had been living in a rotten canvas tent that came in the South Australian with the nets that he sold the company ‘laying in the stores useless and eaten up with rats and mice’. Drift and seine fishing he deemed useless from Kangaroo Island and had been forced to work as a labourer, though he was then in charge of receiving goods and cargoes on the beach and jetty at Kingscote. That leaves John Moore and Slater who received payments on the South Australian account. Slater was paid only for transferring the cargo of the South Australian to the John Pirie at Encounter Bay and may not have been part of the establishment of the fishery. He is probably the boatman, J. Slater, employed by the South Australian Company in May 1837. A seaman named John Moore appears on the departure list of the Isabella from Launceston in March 1837. The Isabella was wrecked at Cape Northumberland on the way to Holdfast Bay but Moore might still have made his way to South Australia, like her master, John Hart. The Isabella on its previous voyage from Launceston in February had brought over another whaler, James Long, who went into service with the South Australian Company. Slater cannot be identified. The log of the South Australian kept by the first mate provides a day-to-day account of the activities on board [2]. David Findlay replaced John Anthony as first mate before they left Nepean Bay, so it was Findlay who kept a detailed record of the whaling season in 1837 [2]. Thus we know that the vessel left Nepean Bay at 5 a.m. on 23 May with Samuel Stephens, George Martin, the master of the John Pirie, and a Mr. Lord, in the company of the brig William, which was bound for Van Diemens Land. At 4 p.m. she came to anchor in Encounter Bay at Rosetta Cove. According to Martin in Gouger [15], he ‘took’ the South Australian to Encounter Bay; this may have been in the capacity of pilot since he had been there before. Lord was probably Edward Robert Lord, the son of the the Van Diemonian pastoralist and merchant Edward Lord. How he arrived in South Australia is unrecorded, but there is little doubt that he had come in search of business. Land communication Martin remained at the Bay for ten days [15], i.e., until early June, and then walked back to Adelaide. He was accompanied by Stephens. Charles William Stuart, manager of the South Australian 32 He was still regarded as a fisherman by the South Australian Company in its list of employees dated 19 May 19 1837 but it more likely that he served as a seaman, i.e., an oarsman, at Encounter Bay. 18 Version: June 22, 2014 Encounter Bay 1836–1837 Land communication Table 3: Men engaged on the South Australian in 1837. References: 1 Passenger and crew list, 2 South Australian Company accounts [28], 3 South Australian Company list of men, 4 log of the South Australian. Name Alexander Allen John Allen Position captain1 headsman?4 3rd mate1 James (H?) Anthony seaman, apprentice1 Henry Bailey seaman, apprentice1 William Buchan seaman1 John Cann carpenter1 Alexander Clark seaman, harpooner1 headsman4 David Findlay 2nd mate1 headsman4 Thomas Fitzgerald Hightam [Hutton?] James Huggins Gilbert Hutchison William Hutchison Maxwell Inston seaman1 seaman, harpooner1 headsman4 seaman, boatswain1 boat-steerer4 Reference crew list paid £8 wages on account2 crew list paid £28 13s 5d wages2 paid £2 9s 10d balance, left 2 May2 crew list paid £4 19s 11d wages2 crew list paid £3 16s 9d premium on oil and bone2 crew list paid £3 1s 8d wages in full to 2 May2 paid £22 10s 11d wages2 paid £4 10s 6d2 crew list paid £2 wages on account2 paid £31 18s 11d wages2 paid £2 wages2 crew list paid £1 14s 2d wages in full to 2 May2 paid £23 1s 8d wages & premium on oil2 crew list paid £2 wages on account2 balance of wages £15 4s2 paid wages £8 12s2 paid £1 2s 6d2 paid £15 4s balance of wages2 paid part of £13 5s 6d2 crew list paid £5 2s 6d wages in full to 2 May2 paid £19 8s 7d wages2 crew list paid £2 7s 8d wages on account2 paid £12 paid £22 19s 2d wages & premium on oil2 paid wages £4 15s 8d2 ill4 crew list paid £2 10s 10d wages in full to 2 May2 paid £12 paid £21 7s 5d wages2 Date 1836 19 May ’37 1836 26 October ’37 26 October ’37 1836 26 October ’37 1836 8 November ’37 1836 19 May ’37 26 October ’37 9 January ’38 1836 19 May ’37 26 October ’37 30 December ’37 1836 19 May ’37 26 October ’37 1836 19 May ’37 9 December ’37 3 March ’38 15 November ’37 9 December ’37 29 December ’37 1836 19 May ’37 26 October ’37 1836 19 May ’37 20 October ’37 26 October ’37 23 March ’38 September ’37 1836 19 May ’37 14 October ’37 26 October ’37 continued on next page Version: June 22, 2014 19 Land communication Encounter Bay 1836–1837 continued from previous page Name Position John Johnston seaman, harpooner1 John Moore William Prout fisherman1 fisherman seaman [J?] Slater Charles Smith John Southgate John Watkins William Wedger seaman1 butcher seaman, cook1 Joseph Wright fisherman1 fisherman John Pearce Wyatt seaman, apprentice1 Reference paid £2 14s transhipping cargo2 paid part of £13 5s 6d2 crew list paid £2 12s 7s wages on account2 paid £1 10s on account2 passenger list employed by SA Co.3 paid £2 9s 4d wages in full to 23 April2 paid £31 0s 3d wages2 paid £3 12s 6d transhipping cargo2 advanced £12 paid £22 8s 5d wages2 paid £2 5s 7d wages2 crew list employed by SA Co.3 paid £6 15s 9d in full2 paid £5 14s 10d for fresh water2 crew list paid £5 14 wages in full to 2 May2 paid £21 7s 7d wages paid £3 13s trans-shipping cargo2 paid part of £13 5s 6d2 passenger list employed by SA Co.3 paid £40 wages to 1 June2 crew list paid £3 15s 9d wages2 Date 26 December ’37 29 December ’37 1836 19 May ’37 7 November ’37 1836 19 May ’37 19 May ’37 26 October ’37 26 December ’37 25 May ’37 26 October ’37 22 November ’37 1836 19 May ’37 25 May ’37 1 December ’37 1836 19 May ’37 26 October ’37 26 December ’37 29 December ’37 1836 19 May ’37 14 November ’37 1836 26 October ’37 Company’s stock, recorded in his diary the return of Stephens and Martin (and presumably Lord) to Adelaide on 3 June [29]. They must have followed in the footsteps of the 207 sheep landed at Encounter Bay from the John Pirie at the end of April. Stuart noted their arrival overland on 1 June and it was presumably for driving these sheep from the Rosetta fishery to Adelaide that Abraham Clegg was paid £5 as expenses by the South Australian Company on 29 June. These appear to have been the first recorded crossings of the Fleurieu Peninsula by settlers, although it is likely that some whalers, lured by the prospect of better wages in Adelaide, had already established an overland route between the bay and Adelaide33 . The route taken by these travellers from Encounter Bay in June is not known. The geography of Encounter Bay was described by John Stephens, the brother of Samuel and Edward, in 1839, when he was still in London [27]: ‘From the [Mootaparinga] river easterly, the land rises abruptly [to Brown Hill?], and for about four miles the shore presents a bold and rocky aspect; but, at this distance, it again sinks to a sandy level, winding round southerly. From this point there is a low sandy sea coast, completely open to the southern ocean’. Stephens adds that ’from this place [the Bluff] the ground slopes gradually down to the sea, and a small and sandy plain, bounded inland by an intricate and hilly country, at a distance varying from a mile to a quarter of a mile, forms the sea-coast easterly 33 Collett Barker had, of course, crossed the Fleurieu Peninsula to Encounter Bay in 1831, but that was from Yankalilla by way of the Inman River. 20 Version: June 22, 2014 Encounter Bay 1836–1837 Rivalries from the Bluff, up to a small bar river which runs into the sea, near Mootaparinga’34 . In July 1837 a place six miles from Encounter Bay and a mile off the track was referred to as Mooteparinga (see page 28). The Arrowsmith map of South Australia, published in London four years later, shows a track from the Horseshoe at Noarlunga35 across the plains to Willunga, then mounting the scarp past Mount Compass, Mount Lonely and Mount Jagged, crossing the headwaters of Currency Creek and then skirting Perulilla Hill down to the Hindmarsh River, and so arriving at the Bay just to the east of Blenkinsop’s fishery (Figure 2). This is route is essentially followed by today’s highway and, being the most direct, was probably sought and followed from the beginning. Confirmation is provided by John Wade in his letter to the editor of the True Colonist in Hobart, quoted in [15]: ‘On my visit to Encounter Bay, I met with land equally good, in every respect, to that described [at Mount Barker], within five miles of the coast. This is called Mootaparinga, and has a river flowing through it. Further on again, between Mootaparinga and Adelaide, after crossing the first mountains, I saw a plain of the same description; that also had a river running through it’. Mootaparinga or Mooteparinga must have been the valley of the Hindmarsh. After climbing the Hindmarsh Tiers, the route dropped down to the extended plain carrying the Myponga River, then rose to the Sellicks Hill Range. At the foot of the steep descent lay the Aldinga Plains and an unencumbered path beside the gulf up to the crossing place of the Onkaparinga River. On 13 June, Stephens, Martin and Lord turned up again at Encounter Bay. Stuart in Adelaide wrote that Stephens ‘started off for Encounter Bay’ on 11 June and the log of the South Australian confirmed that they ‘arrived [at the bay] from Adelaide’. Martin himself [15] stated that he had returned on foot to Encounter Bay after about twelve days in Adelaide, and remained at the bay about a week. While the visitors were there, on 20 June, the Cygnet put in to Encounter Bay after an unbelievably prolonged thirteen-week passage from Hobart. The voyage to Nepean Bay must have been cut short in consideration of the 300 or so survivors of the 1500 sheep put on board. The recuperated sheep were taken on to Nepean Bay by that vessel on 26 June36 . In the meantime, on 21 June, Stephens, Martin and Lord slipped out of Encounter Bay at the dead of night to return to Nepean Bay in Wright’s cutter William after matters came to a head between the rival whale fisheries on Encounter Bay. Rivalries Whatever Stephens and his companions intended when they arrived at the Bay on 13 June, they were detained there by the strong gales which prevented the whale boats from going out between 16 and 19 June and caused the Cygnet to seek shelter, so they must also have witnessed the competition between the boats of the Company’s South Australian and those of another vessel, the Francis Freeling, in securing a whale on 15 June. The presence in the Bay of the 190-ton barque Francis Freeling, master James Williamson, was most likely no coincidence. She was owned by the Sydney merchants [Daniel] Egan & Co., and left Sydney on 15 May, a week after the Hind set off back to Encounter Bay. She called at Victor Harbour and, when chasing their first whale on 4 June, she demonstrated the dangers attending whale fishing. 34 Stephens, writing in London and drawing on Mann in [15], can be confusing. He places, correctly, Blenkinsop’s whaling establishment four miles to the east of the Bluff, but then states, incorrectly, that ‘about equi-distant between these locations, lies a large island, called Granite Island’. 35 A route from Adelaide to the Horseshoe had been explored in February 1837. Stuart’s diary[29] reads: ‘1 February 1837. Started off to Enkeperinga to look for Polly [a horse]’. The party, consisting of the Company employees, Stuart and Henry Alford, and Thomas Allen, ‘botanist and cultivator to the Australian Agricultural Society’ and Hindmarsh’s gardener and ground-workman, was accompanied by a sealer named Nat [Nathaniel Thomas]. They were away three days, reaching the Onkaparinga and following it to the Horseshoe (the site of Old Noarlunga). 36 On 2 August the Rosetta fishery was paid by Henry Sobey £1 for slops obtained from the fishery and £1 advanced to him at Hobart. Sobey was a shepherd attending the stock on the Cygnet. Version: June 22, 2014 21 Rivalries Encounter Bay 1836–1837 Figure 2: The Fleurieu peninsula showing routes between Encounter Bay and Adelaide based on the Arrowsmith map of 1841 A whaleboat and six men were lost. The Sydney Herald of 26 October 1837 described how the ‘unfortunate men were lost sight of by their companions and after a search of three days no tidings of them could be discovered. It is supposed they must have been destroyed by the whale in some way, either by their line becoming foul and dragged into the surf or their boat being stove’. The names of the ‘unfortunate individuals’ also illustrates the cosmopolitan nature of the whaling business: ‘Mr. John Green, chief officer, a native of the Colony, William Mate, boat steerer, a native of Dover, Henry Dubar, a Prussian, John Cole, an American, Joseph Saunders, a man of color, and Robert Williams a native of London, arrived here per Royal Sovereign.’ The latter may be the Peter Robert Williams transported for 14 years on the Royal Sovereign in 1835. While the South Australian’s crew were getting whalebone on board and assisting the Cygnet to an anchorage in Rosetta Harbour on 20 June, the shore party and a party from the American whaler Statesman together took a whale. The 258-ton barque Statesman, master Charles Norris Coffin, arrived at Hind Cove at the end of February, according to Charles Mann[15], having left Salem, 22 Version: June 22, 2014 Encounter Bay 1836–1837 Rivalries Massachusetts, on 22 December 1836, and apparently remained in the neighbourhood of Encounter Bay until the end of the season, the middle of September, again according to Mann. She probably spent some time in Nepean Bay, if Leigh[18] is to be believed. Referring to 26 June, when he was living at Kingscote, he wrote: ‘I have had a temperance ship under my care, for some time past. The crew and vessel are American. The captain, officers, and many men are in a state of emaciation, from, I consider, suddenly abandoning their liquor.’ What constituted a temperance ship could differ widely: one without any alcohol, one without spirits, one in which in which seamen, but not the officers, were denied. There can be little doubt that Leigh was referring to Coffin and the Statesman; if she began as a strict temperance ship, she developed into a lax one. Leigh is cavalier with chronology so his comment might in fact refer to to the time spent in Nepean Bay at the end of the whaling season. She left Nepean Bay on 26 October and put in to Hobart ‘for refreshment’ on 14 January 1838 with 1500 barrels of oil. American whalers had been operating off the south Australian coast since at least 1803, when Baudin met one in King George Sound in Western Australia and directed the Union to Kangaroo Island. Their presence was giving the colonial authorities some concern, and raised the question of what action they could take to protect local interests. Crozier, in his letter to Commander William Hobson of HMS Rattlesnake on 6 May, wrote . . . I enclose two letters from Mr. [Thomas Brooker] Sherratt of King Georges Sound, and my reply, respecting the protection that would be given to a Company who have a Whaling Establishment in Doubtful Island Bay, against Foreign Vessels interfering with their Fishery, and what Laws are in force, as regards Foreigners fishing on the Coast of Australia. The same questions were also put to me at Swan River and in Encounter Bay, as several American Ships are now employed fishing on the West and Southern Coasts. One American Ship I found lying at the Swan River, and another fishing in King Georges Sound. I am not aware myself of any Laws existing, respecting Foreigners fishing for Whale on these Coasts, and neither their Excellencies The Governors of Western or South Australia were able to enlighten me upon this important subject. Yet it was not against the foreigners that the South Australian Company sought to move but the Sydney whalers. Initially, both fisheries had trouble retaining their hands at Encounter Bay. On 21 May, Thomas Marshall of Blenkinsop’s fishery wrote to Hindmarsh: ‘Having lost a number of hands from the fishery established in the Bay and hearing they have proceeded to Adelaide, I take the liberty of requesting you will confine such of them as may be their until further orders are received from Capt[ain] Blenkinsop, whom I expect daily from Sydney. The desertion of these men has left the fishery entirely destitute. The names of such as have proceeded to Adelaide are Tho[ma]s Smith, W[illia]m Reeves, Michael Smith, Tho[ma]s Brown and several others. Mr. Monday37 , who is the bearer of this, will be able to point out such of our men as may be their’ [30]. The Rosetta Cove fishery, where Munday was employed, had similar problems. Samuel Stephens wrote to his brother Edward on 22 May that ‘a boat has just arrived here from Rosetta Cove, Encounter Bay, bringing me a note from Mr. McFarland [McFarlane], the manager of our fishery, with information that four of his men had run away from the fishery and crossed by land to Holdfast Bay or Adelaide and begging that I would take immediate steps to have them punished as he feared otherwise the whole of his hands would follow them’. They were named as George Robinson, Richard Pierce, George Turner and Jeremiah Donoho. Edward Stephens passed this on to the Colonial Secretary, Robert Gouger, apparently with a copy of McFarlane’s note since a letter from John McFarlane, the chief headsman at Encounter Bay, complaining of losing both men and stores is to be found in the Colonial Secretary’s records [30]. 37 Probably Edward Munday of the Rosetta Cove fishery. Version: June 22, 2014 23 Rivalries Encounter Bay 1836–1837 The men had another story, though. Samuel Wistock, William Power and William Angill were sentenced to three month’s imprisonment for absconding from the South Australian Company’s fishery. They were confined to a soldiers’ tent, sleeping on the ground without a blanket. They complained of the conditions to Hindmarsh and claimed that ‘from the repeated threats of our officers to us we did not think our lives safe and therefore we came to Adelaide to seek redress’. Hindmarsh remitted the remaining part of their sentence and they were released on 28 June. The following day, Edward Stephens wrote to Hindmarsh flatly refusing to employ such men in Adelaide [30]. A common war against absconders became a war between the two fisheries after the return of Blenkinsop from Sydney. The anticipated return took place on 23 or 24 May38 , according Thomas Stacks, a whaler at Blenkinsop’s fishery; since Stacks also said that he joined the fishery about this time, he may have accompanied Blenkinsop in the Hind , which left Sydney, under Jones, with stores for the whale fishery on 7 May. This vessel most likely also brought Blenkinsop’s wife, Anna, and daughter, since Blenkinsop refers to the presence of his family in October. Stephens must have become aware of Blenkinsop’s return when the South Australian brought him round to Encounter Bay on 23 May. This may have prompted him to attempt to have Blenkinsop evicted by the government authorities on his return to Adelaide on 3 June, since Charles Mann, the Advocate-General, wrote an opinion for the Governor concerning the fishery on 8 June. According to this, everyone was free to engage in fishing unless the King exercised his prerogative to forbid it. The Governor had the authority to regulate, but he should seek advice from the Colonial Office before using his powers as the Crown’s representative to stop it. Hindmarsh then decided to send James Hurtle Fisher, the Colonial Commissioner, with Colonel Light, the Surveyor-General, and supported by a party of marines to deal with the matter at Encounter Bay. They set off overland on 16 June. Stephens, in the meantime, had preceded them to Encounter Bay. Leaving Adelaide on 11 June, he arrived with Martin and Lord at the Bay on 13 June, where he either found or was shortly joined by Wright in the William. Blenkinsop must then have taken the opportunity one evening to confront the South Australian Company officials about their encouragement of his men to abscond. The only accounts of these events are the depositions of Blenkinsop and his second-in-command, Sylvester Freeman, made to the magistrates, Thomas Bewes Strangways and George Stevenson, in Adelaide on 12 and 13 October. The immediate cause was a report that five of Blenkinsop’s party, after breaking their Articles of Agreement and absconding, were secreted below decks on the cutter, William, to be taken to Kangaroo Island. In his deposition, Blenkinsop stated that ‘on or about’ 23 June, he took two boats to the cutter, boarded it and demanded that Wright deliver up his men. Wright’s reply was to order Blenkinsop back to his boat whilst threatening him with what Blenkinsop and Freeman believed to be a loaded pistol. Blenkinsop alleged that Wright pointed the pistol at his chest and ‘snapped’ it but it failed to discharge. Blenkinsop then informed Wright that he was taking his complaint to the South Australian, which was lying some quarter of a mile off. Freeman claimed that Wright hailed the South Australian, presumably to warn them, then told Blenkinsop that Stephens was on board. So Blenkinsop took his boat, with Freeman, to the South Australian, leaving the other to keep an eye on Wright and the William. As their boat approached the South Australian, it was hailed three times, to which they replied ‘a whale boat’ and, on the second two occasions, stipulated that it belonged to Captain Blenkinsop. By the last time, Blenkinsop was making his way up to the deck of the South Australian as Thomas Mead, his ‘harpooner’ (headsman), stood in the bow of the boat keeping it alongside with a boat hook. At that moment Stephens leant over the side of the South Australian and fired down at the boat, the ball lodging in the woodwork after narrowly missing Mead. Arriving on deck, Blenkinsop was confronted by Stephens with a pistol in each hand. Stephens demanded that he return to his boat, which he did after calling Stephens a ‘coward and no gentleman’ and offering to meet him for a duel on shore ‘on any point he thought proper’. The two depositions then diverge. Freeman stated that Blenkinsop asked Stephens if his men would be returned to him. Stephens denied all knowledge of the matter but ordered out a boat in which he 38 The 24 date of 30 June, as quoted in [26], is surely erroneous. Version: June 22, 2014 Encounter Bay 1836–1837 Rivalries and Martin with an armed crew went to the William, where they denied access to Blenkinsop’s party, although they were close enough to hear Wright say ‘I have taken away your men before and I will do so again whenever I can get them’. After some words, Stephens agreed to meet Blenkinsop aboard the South Australian, to which they then returned. Blenkinsop’s boat was initially ordered to stand off from the vessel, but was later called alongside and the crew treated to wine and coffee. Blenkinsop’s account is disjointed and makes no mention of these events. He confirmed, however, that he met Stephens on the South Australian later that evening. By then Stephens was agitated, alternating between bluster—expressing regret that he had not aimed at the steersman, i.e., Blenkinsop, and at having missed his target—and remorse, offering apologies and compensation in the form of a new boat. Stephens had good reason to panic, for the actions of both Wright and himself constituted capital offences. Blenkinsop testified that Stephens offered to let him search the William the following morning. If his statement were strictly chronological, this would have been after the initial confrontation but it would appear more likely to have been after the second, when Stephens was more contrite. Blenkinsop concludes his account somewhat ambiguously: ‘next morning it blew hard, and the cutter went away the evening of that day with deponent’s men’, none of whom were recovered. The log of the South Australian records the departure of Stephens, Martin and Lord with Wright in the William at 1.30 a.m. on 21 June, and it was this day that there was a strong easterly breeze, though not strong enough to prevent the fishery boats from being on the water [2]. If it is assumed that Blenkinsop was using ship time in which the day began at noon of the previous calendar day, the confrontation would have taken place on the evening of 20 June, Stephens would have fled in the early hours of 21 June before Blenkinsop could return to search the cutter and the strong winds that day prevented him from discovering what had happened until too late. The log of the South Australian throws no light on these events, recording only the coming and going of Stephens. It is also silent on the arrival two days later of Fisher and Light. According to Bull [5]: The first expedition into the bush attempted or entered upon by officials was in the same year (1837), when the Commissioner of Crown Lands (Mr. J.H. Fisher) and the SurveyorGeneral (Colonel Light) started to reach Encounter Bay overland. Mr. Stephen Hack was with them to render his assistance as an incipient bushman; a corporal’s guard of marines was obtained from the Buffalo to act against any hostile natives whom they might encounter. Tents and swag were conveyed in a Government bullock-dray. There was a horse-dray and saddle horses for the officials, who had also in attendance of their own servants and some other men. The first day they made the Messrs. Hack’s sheep station, near the coast, and distant in a direct course from Glenelg about twelve miles. The ground was found to be soft from recent rains. It was now discovered that the outfit of the party was too ponderous for the cattle, and on the following morning Mr. Hack was sent back to secure the services of Mr. John Chambers to bring out drays and some additional requirements, and to convey the marines with their outfit back to their ship. . . Light records the first few days in his journal [19]. He, Fisher and the inevitable John Morphett, together with the marines—a sergeant, a corporal and eleven privates—set out from Adelaide in the afternoon of 14 June. The party left Glenelg at 11 a.m. on 16 June and arrived at ‘a beautiful valley’, not more than 10 or 11 miles from Glenelg at 4 p.m.. The bullocks had proved unmanageable and one of the cars (carts) defective, so Stephen Hack returned to Adelaide for more bullocks and a larger car. He rejoined the party at 1 p.m. on 18 June, the day that Light drew a sketch of Hurtle Vale, and they then decided to send back the marines and the heavy equipment and continue with a smaller party, a small car and just two bullocks39 . This they did on 19 June and, after ‘ascending at first a gradual hill, and traversing afterwards through a most rich and beautiful country’, they reached the Onkaparinga, which they explored on 20 June. They arrived at their destination on 23 June40 . 39 Coincidentally 40 The or not, about this time a bullock dray was ‘fetched’ from Adelaide for the Rosetta fishery (page 12). continuation of Light’s journal was lost in the fire of 22 January 1839 so some writers have claimed that the Version: June 22, 2014 25 Rivalries Encounter Bay 1836–1837 (b) (a) (c) Figure 3: Rosetta Cove and the Bluff: (a) sketch by William Light in June 1837, (b) detail showing the whaling station of the South Australian Company. National Library of Australia, reproduced without permission. (c) the same scene in 2013. The following day Light sketched the bay from the Bluff, marking all the reefs and rocks and showing the Cygnet and the South Australian at anchor in Rosetta Harbour [11]. The drawing in Figure 3 showing the vessels at anchor below the Bluff must have executed at much the same time. The South Australian, with lowered topmasts on fore and mizzen masts, is to the right, and the Cygnet to the left41 . Apparently Blenkinsop was soon able to convince Fisher and Light that he had as much right as the South Australian Company to establish a fishery42 and to await the opportunity to acquire land in Encounter Bay43 ; moreover, he was able to lodge a complaint over the actions of Wright and Stephens. party did not reach Encounter Bay on this occasion, but this has been disproved by Dutton [10]. 41 The main topmast was subsequently lowered as well as it was sent up again on 9 October [2]. The sketch (Figure 7 (b)) after her wreck shows her with no topmasts. Light’s sketch of the Cygnet may be compared with that dating from 1833–34 reproduced in Ewens [12]. 42 It is interesting that the Francis Freeling reported on her return to Sydney (Sydney Gazette & New South Wales Advertiser of 24 October 1837) that ‘The whaler Highlander , [John] Lovett, master and owner, put into Encounter Bay while the Francis Freeling was lying there, but she was sent back to Hobart Town by the authorities in consequence of a regulation prohibting vessels, except in distress, from putting in there.’ Since the Statesman was allowed to remain for the whole season, this smacks more of a local attempt at protectionism than a government one. 43 That he was in earnest is demonstrated by his purchase of a town acre 982 in Adelaide from James Adams, who 26 Version: June 22, 2014 Encounter Bay 1836–1837 Rivalries Fisher and Light then returned to Adelaide, arriving back on the afternoon of 27 June. The return was noted by William Jacob, the junior member of Light’s surveying party (quoted in [11]): Captain Light and Party returned from Encounter Bay about 4 o’clock in the Afternoon, the Captain [Light] very fatigued and looking very unwell after such (a most) wretched excursion, having wet weather almost all the time since they left—Left the Cygnet lying in the Harbour at Encounter Bay. ‘This Spendid Harbour’ as reported by his Majesty’s Ship Victor is not fit for even more than 2 or 3 ships and then only sheltered from the Westward. Light made a sketch map of Encounter Bay (State Library of South Australia C254/C734), based on Crozier’s chart, of which Light was highly critical, and his own observations—the only measurements he made made were the bearings of the two extremities of Granite Island as seen from the Bluff. The positions where the South Australian, Solway and John Pirie were wrecked must have been added later. Light reinstates the name Cape Rosetta, noting that it had been ‘called Rosetta by Mr. S. Stephens long before Captn. Crozier went there’. The island to the south [West Island] is still Wright Island and the island to the north unnamed; the reef joining the latter to Rosetta Cove is noted. The anchorage in Rosetta Harbour is judged, in his opinion, as ‘not fit for anything’. Four buildings are shown in Rosetta Cove as the South Australian Company’s fishery, though rather more are depicted in Figure 3 (a). The main huts were apparently on the flat above the bay, probably near the gulley that would have provided a freshwater stream in winter. It lies between present-day Battye and Jagger Roads on Section 6, which was selected by the South Australian Company after the land had been surveyed in 1839 (see Figure 10). The structure billowing smoke by the shore is probably the try works (though no blubber had been boiled for oil since 11 June). There were probably two try works on Rosetta Cove. In Figure 6 (a), the ‘South Australian’s Tryworks’ is identified in the little cove below the Bluff, which could be approached without crossing the reef. The oil and bone from the two parties, on which their pay was based, would have been assessed separately, so it is plausible that the oil was recovered in separate try works and stored separately. Figure 6 (a) also shows the cooperage where the barrels were prepared conveniently located between the two possible sites for try works. The Kangaroo and Hindmarsh Rivers are not named, but Light noted that ‘The ground here rises all the way to the hills and certainly not adapted for a Capital. The banks above the beach are precipitous, and there is no fresh water within three or four miles and that not very good’. Two buildings are shown just to the north of the point opposite Granite Island; Light apparently distinguishes the northernmost as Captain Blenkinsop’s [house] [Anna Vale] and the southern as the fishery [Hind Cove]. An anchorage is shown directly north of Granite Island with the annotation: Not more than 3 or 4 ships can lay here at the same time, very unsafe in Easterly winds, and always a great swell thrown in by westerly and southerly breezes. Only consider for a moment that this is the very spot, said by Captn. Lipson R.N. to be the finest harbour in the world, is open to the send of the whole Southern Ocean, and it requires not much judgement to imagine what sort of sea there must be in fresh breezes. It is only in one spot under the Island where 3 or 4 ships can anchor. What is to be done with ships coming from England, had this been the capital? They must run for Kangaroo Island and wait there until there should be room enough in Captn. Lipton’s finest harbour in the world for them—or they must put up with some inferior berth and most likely be lost altogether. Finally, Seal Rock and the reef extending towards Granite Island draw the comment that ‘a surf breaks had paid £4 4s for it in the March sales. Version: June 22, 2014 27 Driscoll Encounter Bay 1836–1837 all the way from Seal Rock to Granite Island in blowing weather’. The ‘blowing weather’ gave Fisher and Light a foretaste of things to come. An easterly wind blew up on 25 June and the Cygnet was soon in trouble. Without enough crew to warp his vessel clear of the rocks, the master, John Rolls, requested assistance from the South Australian. As the gale increased, the Cygnet threatened to foul the anchor ropes of the South Australian but she held fast during the night. The following day the wind remained from the east and prevented the South Australian’s boats from towing the Cygnet out of Rosetta Harbour. Findlay went on board the Cygnet and finally managed to get her clear on 27 June. It may be doubted whether the visit of Fisher and Light changed the situation at Encounter Bay, but there is some evidence that personnel from the two fisheries could cooperate on occasion. Driscoll One of the men who defected from Blenkinsop’s fishery during the latter’s absence was John Driscoll44 . Thomas Stacks testified at the end of July that Driscoll had come from Sydney with Blenkinsop but had soon quarrelled with him and been confined on the Hind . After escaping, he went over to the the South Australian Company and was living with William Walker, a sealer from Hog Bay on Kangaroo Island. Stacks added that Blenkinsop ‘objected’ to this, but appeared to take no action. Then, on 29 June, Edward Stephens wrote to Hindmarsh, enclosing another letter from McFarlane; it reported the ill-treatment of natives by whalers at Encounter Bay and stated that ‘two of the parties so charged are now on their way to this town’. This may have prompted Price [25] to conclude that Stephens sent Driscoll off to Adelaide overland when Blenkinsop attempted to regain him, but the later testimonies make no mention of this fact. Instead they suggest that it was well known at Encounter Bay that Driscoll had arranged that an Aborigine, named variously as Elick, Alick, Ronculla, Reppindjeri or Reppeenyere, should guide him to Adelaide. Driscoll was living at Encounter Bay with a wife of Elick, apparently with his consent. They must have left Encounter Bay early in July. About a fortnight later, William Walker was told by his ‘wife’, Kalinga or Sarah, a native of Jervis Bay (and related to the Encounter Bay tribe), that Elick had killed Driscoll and taken a bundle of clothes. This she had learned from her uncle, who had, in turn, been informed by one of Elick’s wives. The next day, Walker took Elick into custody; the log of the South Australian records on 21 July that ‘the stewart’ [steward45 ] of the fishery came on board with Walker, his woman (‘a native of Newholand’) and Thomas Stacks (‘a comrade of Wm Walker’), bringing the alleged murderer [2]. Due to the presence of ‘a great number’ of Aborigines at the Rosetta Cove fishery, Findlay thought it expedient ‘not to secure him openly in the presence of his friends but to entice him on board of the ship [South Australian ]. We succeeded in doing so by pretending that we were going to give him bread, etc. When we got him on board and stated the circumstance to the captain, he assented to his being put in irons, which was done.’ Findlay noted on 22 July that the prisoner was given ‘plenty to eat and drink, also a sail for a bed’. After breaking one of the padlocks fastening him, Elick was chained by the neck on 24 July. Back on the morning of 22 July, Walker, Stacks and Edward Munday, of the South Australian Company, were taken by one of Elick’s wives to the spot where the body was partially hidden by boughs, about a mile off the normal path to Adelaide and about six miles from Encounter Bay, a spot then known as Mooteparinga in the Hindmarsh valley. They found the body so ravaged by birds and 44 He was often named ‘Driscall’ in contemporary documents. There is also some confusion over his Christian name. Subsequent testimony by those who knew him referred to him as John, and this is consistent with his being called ‘Little Jack’ by the Aborigines. The Advocate-General, Charles Mann, apparently made a mistake when he wrote his summary of the case and the name ‘Thomas’ thereafter appeared in government records. 45 Probably Abraham Clegg. 28 Version: June 22, 2014 Encounter Bay 1836–1837 Driscoll Figure 4: Elick secured to the deck of the South Australian. An engraving from a sketch presumably made by William Henry Leigh at Encounter Bay in at the end of August 1837 [18]. animals as to be unrecognizable. However, the feet were covered by American peg-shoes, a type that Driscoll was known to wear. The party buried the body and returned to Encounter Bay. The following day, Blenkinsop went back to the spot, exhumed the body and reburied it at Encounter Bay46 . Towards the end of July, Walker, his wife and Stacks made their way to Adelaide, where they offered their statements on 29 and 31 July. Walker billed the government on August 13 for £9, being expenses incurred in finding the body and travelling to Adelaide with his partner [Stacks] and a native woman [his wife] for 9 days [30]. Stephens in the meantime had transmitted the Governor’s orders to the South Australian that Elick be kept in safe custody. Findlay on 10 August noted that ‘as the Prisoner has repeatedly endeavoured to escape we secured him by a chain round his waist allowing him his hands and feet to be at liberty, it being the easyest way for him that we could confine him. I always pay strickt attention to all his wants and gives him plenty to eat and drink.’ A sketch of ‘the murderer’ chained to the deck of the South Australian was included in Leigh’s book, published in 1839 [18], Figure 4. Leigh must have seen Elick at the Bay at the end of August (he arrived there in the Emma on 26 August) or beginning of September, shortly before he left Nepean Bay for Sydney in the Lord Hobart on 11 September, and he claimed that the prisoner suffered badly from syphilis; as a surgeon, he might be expected to know but he was an unreliable reporter. This case presented the government authorities withe several problems. Mann, who examined the statements as Advocate-General, pointed out that they did not constitute evidence and that Elick’s wife needed to be examined. To be recognized in English law a statement would have to be sworn to by someone with a belief in the after-life, so Elick’s wife’s testimony would be inadmissible. Furthermore, it was feared that her tribe would spirit her away so as to prevent her from giving further information. Still another problem was that the Protector of Aborigines would have to be involved, but the longwinded Walter Bromley had lost the confidence of the Council. Mann later wrote in the Southern Australian of 10 May 1839 that the murder prompted discussions in the Council, which led to the replacement of Bromley by William Wyatt on 1 August. In the meantime, Gouger wrote to Blenkinsop on 1 August requesting him to retain the shoes and other possessions of Driscoll. Strangways, who had replaced Gouger as Colonial Secretary on 22 August, wrote to Mann on 28 August ordering him 46 Leigh[18] claimed to have disinterred the body about a month later and discovered ‘a fracture under the ear, with a hole drilled in the skull by the introduction of the waddie’. The decomposing body was then reburied for the final time. Version: June 22, 2014 29 Driscoll Encounter Bay 1836–1837 with all possible despatch to Encounter Bay to take evidence. He was to be accompanied by Wyatt, who was to look after the interests of the accused. According to Hodder [16], Hindmarsh wrote to Angas on 3 September that ‘we have not yet decided how to proceed, but evidence is being collected’. According to Wyatt’s account of the visit to Encounter Bay in the South Australian Record of 11 July 1838, he, Mann, Thomas Powys, William Cooper (the interpeter) and ‘a man to take care of the horses’, set off on 5 September. Arriving at Encounter Bay they were entertained by Blenkinsop from 8–16 September. There, despite their fears, they were able to interview Elick’s wife. They now learned that Driscoll was given a bottle of rum shortly before departing with Elick and his wives for Adelaide, and no-one doubted that he consumed it immediately. On the way, the two wives trailed Driscoll and Elick until they reached Mooteparinga. Then Driscoll called up the women and started to molest them. Elick objected and hit him with his waddy, breaking his jaw; Driscoll hit back with the bottle, and was killed in the ensuing fight. Mann and Wyatt went on board the South Australian [2] on 9 September and Elick apparently claimed that it was his wives who killed Driscoll. The case against Elick now appearing so doubtful, Mann proceeded no further, but left Elick in custody on board the South Australian. Whilst they were at Encounter Bay, Blenkinsop, Wyatt and Powys took the opportunity to explore the inlet from the mouth of the Murray to Lake Alexandrina by land, following its margin 7 miles towards the lake on 12 September. Mann tried to enter the mouth of the Murray from Encounter Bay with two whaleboats, but failed owing to the ‘immense rollers’. His account was published by Stephens [27]: The whale-boat sailed from the station of Captain Blenkinsopp till we neared this shore, and we then pulled for about three miles towards the Murray. The wind was about N.N.W., and it was far from blowing freshly; yet I could trace an immense surf running upwards of from six to eight feet in height along the whole coast as far as the eye could reach. At from four to five miles distant the entrance to the Murray is rendered strikingly obvious by an immense wall of foam, which appears literally to stretch directly athwart the entrance. I cannot think, from contrasting it with the shore surf, that it could have been less than from ten or twelve feet in height, and this was the opinion of the men with me in the boat. This entrance is, I should say, more than a quarter of a mile in breadth. At a distance of four miles the men became alarmed, and remonstrated; but I induced them to continue their course. When upwards of two miles from the river, an immense roller turned the boat on her beam-ends. On looking along the interval from this spot to the Murray, I could see repeated lines of rollers rising and breaking; and I became convinced that it would be impossible to effect the desired object, and that any further perseverance would uselessly risk the lives of the men, I therefore reluctantly gave the signal of retreat. The land-party were more successful, and Captain Blenkinsopp ascertained that on the south-eastern or right-hand side of the entrance there was a channel of very deep water; this was rendered almost certain by the difference in the number and the force of the rollers on the respective sides. On the left eleven were counted, on the right three only were perceptible. Hence Captain Blenkinsopp was of opinion that if the whale-boat had passed the mouth of the river for about a mile and three quarters, she might, by pulling close inshore, have effected a passage into the river. Blenkinsop, of course, took this opportunity to complain again of the behaviour of Stephens and Wright. But he was not at liberty to travel to Adelaide to make formal representations before a magistrate, as he intended: the whaling season was in full swing. 30 Version: June 22, 2014 Encounter Bay 1836–1837 The whaling season The whaling season The log book of the South Australian not only covers the whole season but is especially valuable because it was kept by the mate, David Findlay, who was also a headsmen and therefore had a stake in whatever whales were caught. Two days after putting in to Rosetta Harbour on 23 May, the topgallant masts and yards of the South Australian were taken down and the fore and mizzen topmasts struck, as shown in Light’s sketch (Figure 3 (a)). By 30 May, Captain Allen’s boat was already on the water and that of the mate, Findlay, was being prepared. The only difference to the operation described by William Allen (see page 5) was that the whales were towed to the South Australian for cutting in, presumably because the shallow, sandy shore was unsuitable. Cutting blocks and falls had been rigged the day before to turn the whale’s body as the blubber was stripped off47 . The blubber was then taken to the shore to the try works. The first record of a whale being killed was on 30 May, when the shore party in Rosetta Cove took one. The ship’s crew assisted the shore party to cut in the whale alongside the South Australian the following day. Over the next few days several whales were spotted, some were chased but none caught. The ship’s boats had their first success on 5 June, when both boats, apparently under Alexander Clark and Findlay, harpooned a whale at 9 a.m. and brought it alongside at 3 p.m. The shore party killed another that day. The next day was spent cutting in and towing the blubber to shore, where the try works was being prepared for boiling out the oil48 . This occupied them until 11 June. Heavy rain on 10 June interrupted the trying out and a heavy swell during the night swept the ship’s long boat from its moorings. It was replaced with a boat from the shore party on 22 June. The strong gales which prevented Stephens from returning to Kangaroo Island also prevented the whaleboats from going out between 16 and 19 June. The gale blew up on 15 June, the day that Findlay lost a whale. At 9 a.m. he harpooned one but the captain [James Williamson] of the Francis Freeling got fast to another and their lines, attached to the harpoons and secured to the boats, fouled one another. The latter cut himself loose and Findlay was forced to do so as well after being towed ten miles out to sea in deteriorating weather. A sharp knife or hatchet was always kept at hand in the bow of a whaleboat to sever the line when the situation became too dangerous. The boats took to the water again on 20 June, when the Company’s shore party took a whale with assistance from the Statesman’s boats, thereby sharing the catch. A lookout was kept on the large island49 on 23 June, whales were seen and chased, but none taken as they were travelling too fast to be overtaken. The Statesman took another whale before the gale of 25 June threatened the Cygnet with disaster. While the South Australian’s crew were assisting the Cygnet, the shore party killed a whale and spent the next couple of days cutting in while the ship’s boats were out without success. Findlay was miffed by the actions of Charles Smith, a headsman in the shore party, on 29 June: ‘Saw one whale. Mr. Smith started it on; we could have got it, ship’s boat being astern of it while he was on one side of it’, which presumably means that Smith, who was to one side of the whale when it surfaced, scared it into diving again before Findlay, who was in a good position to come up unseen from behind, could harpoon it. After a break enforced by ‘thick rainy weather’ on 1 July, both the shore parties, i.e., the Company’s 47 Blenkinsop did not use the Hind. Mann noted in [15] that he had erected shearlegs for that purpose midway along the north side of Granite Island, where there was deeper water. 48 This supports the surmise that the ship and shore parties used different try works: preparations would have been unnecessary if the ships’s party were using the same one as the shore a week before. 49 It is not clear whether Findlay here refers to West Island or Granite Island. If the Statesman was in Victor Harbor, the context suggests that it was Granite Island. If so, it suggests that there was no open hostility between the whalers in Rosetta Cove and Hind Cove. Version: June 22, 2014 31 The whaling season Encounter Bay 1836–1837 and Blenkinsop’s, killed whales on 2 July, the former being towed to the ship for cutting in as the weather deteriorated again. A gale started from the north-west on 4 July and swung round to the north and then back to westwards on 9 July, forcing the South Australian to secure everything on board. No boats were launched. The Francis Freeling broke from her anchor on 5 July and was driven from the Bay almost on to Seal Rock, but managed to regain the anchorage on 9 July. She left on 23 July on a voyage taking in Sleaford Bay, Pirates Bay and Van Diemen’s Land, before returning to Sydney with 1100 barrels (also reported as 140 tons [tuns], which suggests an equivalence of almost 8 barrels to the tun) of black oil and 6 tons of whalebone on 23 October. Operations in the Bay recommenced as the wind moderated. On 10 July, the ‘other Shore party’, i.e., Blenkinsop’s, took another whale. The next day, the South Australian Company’s shore party sent out five boats in addition to the ship’s boats but no whales were seen. The weather turned dirty again on 12 July and Captain Allen was not able to regain the South Australian in his boat and had to beach it on the shore for the night. At 3 p.m. the following day, the John Pirie called at the Bay and was assisted to her moorings by the crew of the South Australian. She discharged her cargo of oil casks, and departed twenty-eight hours later, taking back the cooper and the carpenter, Gregory Cummins50 . For over a week few whales were seen although boats were stationed variously on the ‘island nearest to the Ship’, presumably the small Wright Island, ‘Middle island’, perhaps Granite Island again51 , and the Bluff52 . Finally, on 19 July, five whales appeared. One was killed and towed alongside the South Australian for cutting in. Previously, the blubber strips cut from the whale known as ‘blanket pieces’ had been towed to shore for slicing up preparatory to being boiled for their oil, but it was found that they picked up sand from the shore when being landed and this spoiled the oil. So blubber was now given the preliminary treatment of being cut into ‘horse pieces’, some six feet by one foot in size (the blubber would have been somewhat less than a foot in thickness) on board. These were presumably small enough to carry over the sand to the blubber room on shore, where they were cut into thin slices, forming a ‘book’ or ‘bible leaves’ suitable for the try pots. Findlay was engaged in trying out the oil on 21 July, a process which attracted ‘a great number of natives, men, women and children, all engaged roasting and eating whales’ flesh close by our try works’. Generally fine weather ensued. Both the ship’s party and the shore party took whales on 24 July. The former was brought alongside for cutting in but the latter sank and had to anchored and left. Two lances were lost in the action and one broken. The anchored whale must have been retrieved because cutting in commenced on 26 July, the day that the ship’s party started to try out their blubber. The shore party was again successful on 27 July, but this was overshadowed by the appearance of the William under Wright bringing potatoes and spirits. This drew critical comment from Findlay: ‘the which I think highly improper to be done’. Findlay was soon justified. The following day the crew of the South Australian refused further duty as ‘wine and grog’ had been supplied to the shore party but not to the ship although their contracts specified an allowance of three gills ( 34 pint) per day53 . Findlay must have been promptly despatched to Kangaroo Island to redress the matter because the log entry for 1 August reads: ‘At 10 p.m. mate arrived from Kangaroo [Island], brought 35 gallons of wine’. Only one whale was taken in the interim and that was by the Statesman, but the shore party killed a whale on both 3 and 4 August despite high winds. On board, however, problems were multiplying. The master, Alexander Allen, stood down the second mate, his brother John, for unexplained reasons on 2 August and then took to his bed, where he remained until 12 August. William Prout was also taken ill on 6 August. Whether these incidents 50 Martin [15] says that he delivered the oil casks at the latter end of June, staying only one day. Findlay meant by ‘middle’ can only be surmised. Perhaps, from his standpoint on the South Australian, Wright Island, Granite Island and Seal Rock formed an arc with Granite Island in the middle. 52 Mention is also made later to boats stationed on an island to the westward or southward, presumably West Island. References to whales seen off Freeman’s Knob suggest that a lookout was posted there as well. 53 The Whaling Report gave the spirit allowance as 2 quarts a week or 2 2 gills per day. 7 51 What 32 Version: June 22, 2014 Encounter Bay 1836–1837 The whaling season had anything to do with the departure of Harper in a boat to Kangaroo Island on 7 August, as noted by Sexton [26], is unknown, but Harper was back within three days. Cutting up the whales and towing the blubber to shore occupied the days of variable weather until 9 August. Then further contention arose between the ship’s and the shore parties. At 9 a.m., two whales were seen close to West Island where two boats of the shore party was stationed, the ship’s party being at the Bluff. By Findlay’s account the ship’s boats put off after them but John Smith, a headsmen of the shore party, was there first and harpooned one. The other was harpooned successively by Alexander Clark and Findlay and killed on behalf of the ship’s party. However, Edward Munday claimed a share for having harpooned the whale before Clark. This was disputed in a statement signed by Findlay, Inston, Hutchison and Clark. The following day, the shore party started to cut in their own whale alongside the South Australian and demanded that the ship’s party desist from cutting in their’s until the former had finished. This allowed time for McFarlane, Harper and Munday to come out to the vessel the next day to pursue the claim. Findlay foiled their attempt by getting Munday to specify where his harpoon had struck—‘on the back a little on the left side’. On the whale being rolled over, ‘there was no iron mark to be seen’, actually one, that where Clark’s harpoon had entered. On 13 August, the disputed blubber was finally towed to shore for trying out, Findlay suggesting that the delay was designed to spoil the oil as an act of revenge. Blenkinsop took a whale on 10 August but although several whales were seen in the succeeding days the Company’s parties were without success. Munday harpooned one late on 15 August, but had to cut the line as it was too late to attempt to kill it; the others were too far away. Blenkinsop, on the other hand, was seen towing a whale on 16 August and reportedly took another on the following day ‘close to their place’, i.e., Victor Harbor. Frustration must have increased on 18 August, when the Company had all its boats ready but failed to catch a cow and calf, whilst Blenkinsop took a further two whales, again close to Victor Harbor—though the next day they learned that one of the whales was lost together with two boat lines and that one of Blenkinsop’s boats had been stove in. That day, the boats of McFarlane and Findlay had chances to fasten on to a whale but failed and Smith’s harpoon worked free when chasing a pod of three whales. Things got no better on Monday, 21 August. Two boats of the shore party were posted at West Island and two at Granite Island, while Findlay, Clark and Hutchison were on the Bluff lookout. When a cow and calf were spotted from the Bluff to the westward, the ship’s party put out but the whales surfaced too briefly for Findlay to harpoon one. By this time, Harper and Smith54 had come up from West Island and were alongside the whales when they came up again, whilst Findlay was behind it. Harper, who was nearest the whale, should then have shipped his oars so as not to frighten the whale but, instead, ‘pulled right at her eye and so started her off’. According to Findlay, Harper’s selfishness did not stop there: ‘although that he could have got fast to the calf, he would not allow his boat-steerer to strike it; if he had fastened the calf, some of us would have got the whale. This is the second occurrence of the same kind within these few days with the same person.’ This may refer to the failure of 18 August. Findlay must have been so indignant that he failed to record the killing of a whale, presumably by the shore party because his log entry for the following day recorded two boats’ crews from the fishery cutting in ‘the whale’ while the other three and the ship’s boats were on the water. That day some dozen whales were seen and Blenkinsop’s party took one at Black Reef, the reef between the Bluff and Wright Island. Findlay failed to get fast to one and others were chased but outpaced the boats. Finally late in the afternoon, Munday killed one five miles from the Bluff and left it at anchor. This was towed back to the ship the next day, when squalls of rain interrupted a spell of fine weather. No other whales were spotted. Fine weather returned on 24 August, but Findlay met with an accident. The ship’s boats and two from the shore fishery (the others no doubt engaged in cutting in) were out when two whales were seen two miles south of West Island. Findlay described the subsequent events: 54 Findlay names him as Charles, but must mean John. Version: June 22, 2014 33 The whaling season Encounter Bay 1836–1837 I got fast to one of them [but] it filled my boat with water, in consequence of which I had to slip my line. Shortly after, our other boat got fast, but unfortunately got stove in fastening. By this time, I had my boat dry. I took the lines from the stove boat and 4 of the crew; 2 hands stopped by the boat. I kept by the whale and lanced it and had got it to spout blood, but both my lances broke. I then tried the spade, but as there was so many hands in the boat and no boats in sight I cut, being then 7 or 8 miles from the shore. When I left the whale, it nearly was dead. Mr. McFarlane got fast soon after I did and 2 other of the fishery boats came out. Mr. Harper took in the two men from the stove boat and Mr. [John] Smith towed in the boat when he was returning to the shore. Remainder of this day, shore party cutting in and towing in their whales. Lost two harpoons and part of a line and two oars and spyglass and one boat anchor. So the next day the ship’s hands were putting their boats back in order and half the shore party were cutting in and trying out, the other two boats were out but failed to catch the only whale seen. There was similar lack of success the following day in thick rainy weather, when both Munday and McFarlane harpooned one without securing it. In Findlay’s matter-of-fact words: Saturday, 26th. Commences with thick rainy weather. Keeping a lookout for whales from the Bluff head. One seen. Went out after it. Mr Munday’s boatsteerer darted at it once and Mr McFarlane’s twice, but neither got fast. At 11 am, brig Emma arrived from Kangaroo Island. Wind variable. A passenger on the Emma was Leigh, who came out on the South Australian to visit South Australia rather than settle. His book of Travels & Adventures [18] is loosely based on a diary but it confuses the chronology and embellishes the stories to the point where it is difficult to distinguish fact from fiction. As an example, he wrote: We had scarcely let go the anchor [of the Emma] when an enormous bull whale came, diving and blowing into the Bay, and, in a very few moments, the boats from the shore put off, full of men. They tugged after him, eight boats, all in full chase. The sight was grand; and from my situation, (the tops of the brig,) I had a capital view of the whale, which was invisible to those on deck. The enormous animal came close round the brig several times, and once so immediately under the quarter, that I could discover the lice by which he is infested. Each man was eager to plunge the first harpoon into him; at length, he came up, blowing and spouting, just under a boat. In one instant, a harpoon was buried in his flesh; but he gave a dart, and it lost its hold. For two hours did this monster sail around the Bay, while eight or ten boats were pulling after him; till, at last, a fatal dart entered his vitals, and we had the satisfaction of seeing him towed in by all the boats, with a union-jack stuck to him. This is pure fiction. Leigh was back in Kingscote by 11 September in order to catch the Lord Hobart, which was to take him on the Sydney. How he got to Kangaroo Island is unrecorded, but it must have been in a whaleboat or longboat, probably before the arrival at the Bay on 8 September of Wyatt and Mann, who make no mention of Leigh, or vice versa. Then succeeded days of increasing wind. On Sunday, 27 August, three boats from the shore party took a whale but the ship’s company went on strike again because the Emma had brought no wine for the ship. They resumed duty on the Monday but no whale was seen until sunset. The wind increased to a gale for the next two days, despite which the whaleboats were on the water. A whale was chased, but escaped, on each day. When the wind dropped on the last day of August, the whalers in the bay had their greatest success of the season. Both the shore party and Blenkinsop’s party each took two whales, while the ship’s party chased several without luck. The dead whales were seven to eight miles from Rosetta Harbour, too 34 Version: June 22, 2014 Encounter Bay 1836–1837 The whaling season far to tow that day so they were left at anchor. One was brought in to the South Australian the next day, the other presumably the day after, though Findlay does not mention this. Blenkinsop’s men took another two whales at Black Reef on 2 September, whilst most of the shore party were cutting in their whales. Some ten whales were spotted the next day and two of the shore party’s boats and the ship’s boats gave chase. Robert Hayes harpooned one in the early afternoon, but lost it. Findlay got fast to another at 5 p.m. but could not kill it ‘before dark as the whale run fast and a loose whale along with her, which prevented the boat from getting up to the fast whale and no other boat could keep in sight.’ Only one whale was seen on each of the next two days. McFarlane harpooned the second but the harpoon pulled out and the whale was lost. By this time, stowing the oil already taken was becoming a priority and most hands were engaged in coopering. But on Wednesday, 6 September, Findlay came up with a whale two miles offshore but it had run some ten miles from the ship before it was killed. There was insufficient time to tow it back, so Findlay left it at anchor at 8.30 p.m. By next daybreak the carcase had drifted away but was spotted five miles off from West Island. A strong offshore breeze precluded the two ship’s boats being able to tow it back—the shore party being engaged in an unsuccessful chase after two other whales were sighted—so they waited until the following day to go out for it. At daybreak the two ship’s boats set off and had the whale in tow when, at 2 p.m., more whales were spotted. Findlay dispatched Clark after them. Munday in one of the shore party’s boats beat him to it but requested Clark to assist in bringing it back. Findlay was unable to get his whale back to the boat alone before a violent squall struck at 5 p.m. He had to leave the whale at anchor again and even then had difficulty regaining the ship. A gale raged throughout the night and the following day and no attempt was made to retrieve the anchored whale. The shore party did, however, venture out and took a whale about three miles to the southwest of the Bluff but one boat was upset by the whale and the boat-steerer and a pulling hand injured, so that whale was left at anchor too. Sunday, 10 September, was still squally and Findlay had to enlist aid from the shore fishery, thus entitling them to half the proceeds, to tow in his whale. The ship was not reached until sunset. The following day, whilst the two whales alongside were being cut in—the act witnessed by William Wyatt (page 6)—three boats of the shore party brought in the other anchored whale. For the next five days, all hands—except Maxwell Inston, who was sick—were employed in cutting in, carrying the blubber ashore and trying out, with interruptions for gales with squalls and rain. This weather detained Wyatt and Mann at Blenkinsop’s fishery. There they witnessed whales taken both by Blenkinsop’s party and by boats from the Statesman 55 on 13 September. Boats ventured out again on 16 September but no whales were seen until the next day, when the shore party chased one unsuccessfully and Blenkinsop took another. With the trying out completed, the next task was to clean the whalebone, but this was interrupted on 18 September by the appearance of whale. The ship’s boats and three from the shore party set off in pursuit, killed the whale and had it alongside by 5 p.m. Both the ship’s boats had got fast with harpoons, so both had to be put back ‘in order’, i.e., the lines coiled in the line tub—carefully, because a kink or anything else that prevented the line from running out smoothly was highly dangerous—, new harpoons attached and the lances replaced or sharpened, as necessary. In the evening the John Pirie called in at Encounter Bay for a day, resuming her voyage to Hobart at 9 a.m. on 20 September. This provoked the usual trouble. Inston refused duty on 19 September day because the John Pirie had not replenished the wine allowance of three gills a day, but his protest ended at noon and joined his shipmates in ‘cleaning whalebone, getting water and cutting firewood’. Two boats from the shore party were out, however, and took a whale at Black Reef and apparently left it there, since two boats from the fishery and Findlay’s boat went out to the reef the following morning. A cow and a calf were seen but were not caught, then another cow appeared at noon and was harpooned by both Hayes and Findlay. She was killed and taken in tow but a hard blow came on at 5.30 when they were still ten 55 This suggests that the Statesman was indeed stationed at Victor Harbor. Version: June 22, 2014 35 The whaling season Encounter Bay 1836–1837 miles from the ship, so they anchored the whale. The boats did not reach the ship in the face of the gale until 11 at night. The other whale, in the meantime, had been brought in by sunset. The next day it continued to blow a gale, no whales were seen and no boats were launched. Most hands were occupied in cutting in the two whales caught on 18 and 19 September. The winds moderated on 22 September and Findlay with three boats of the shore party left to bring back the last whale. It took the three boats two days to tow it in the ten miles. They anchored the whale again at 5 p.m. and returned to the boat at 8 p.m. on the first evening, then finally got it alongside at 7 p.m. on the second evening. Cutting in and trying out were completed on 25 September and then all hands were employed cleaning the whalebone. This was effectively the end of the whaling season: no whales were seen again and no further boats sent out. The conclusion was overshadowed, however, by the renewed illness of the Alexander Allen. On 19 September, Findlay wrote that the captain was ‘sick and insane at times’ and he never recovered. David McLaren made no bones about the cause in his letter to the London manager of the South Australian Company on 14 February 1838 (State Library of South Australia BRG 42/31/7): ‘Captain Allan incapacitated himself for taking charge of Ship Fishery or any thing else & hastened his death by intemperance’. Findlay went on shore and fetched the captain’s brother, John Allen, to attend him56 . McFarlane accompanied them back and bled Allen. The next day McFarlane, Blenkinsop and Coffin, the master of the StatesmanStatesman, all came to visit the sick man and prescribed a blister on the back of the neck. This had no effect. By 29 September, Allen was insensible and he died at 6 a.m. on the following day. A boat was immediately sent to the Statesman for wood to make a coffin and the body was shipped to Kingscote in two boats at 6 a.m. the next day, John Allen accompanying it. Findlay appears to have taken charge during Allen’s illness. After Allen’s death, the ship was put back into sailing condition again. Work on the oil casks was completed, as was the cleaning of the whalebone. The ship was thoroughly cleaned and painted. On 9 October, the topmasts and yards were sent aloft again and the rigging installed. Sails were then bent to the yards, the hold ballasted with water and fresh water brought from the shore. All was ready by 12 October, when the William arrived with Stephens and McLaren. They had come to gauge, i.e., measure, the oil obtained during the season. The parties from the South Australian were found to have taken 28 tuns and 26 gallons; their whalebone was later weighed at 2 tons 28 lbs. By the time Stephens and McLaren departed on the evening of 14 October, the ship was taking on board the shore fishery’s whalebone—130 bundles— and fishing stores. Wood had to be cut to protect the oil casks from the sun. There is no mention of casks being transferred from the shore to the ship, so they must have been stored there awaiting a vessel to take them to England for sale. This was the time that Blenkinsop and Freeman found the opportunity to travel to Adelaide and institute proceedings against Stephens and Wright. Work resumed on Monday, 16 October, when a gale blew up. At 7 p.m. it became so violent that a boat was blown from its tackles and stove in its bows when it hit the water. Despite the weather, passengers for Kingscote came on board: Harper, Hayes and McClure and their wives, Bailey, Fitzgerald, Espie, Tindall and Scott. It was still blowing hard the next day when they acquiring a second kangaroo ‘for the ship’, presumably as a pet (the first was on 14 October), and took on the pilot, unidentified but presumably for Nepean Bay. After stowing seven boats the next morning, the ship got under way at midday and anchored in Nepean Bay at 1 p.m. on Thursday, 19 October. It was not intended that the South Australian return to England, so after payment was made for service at Encounter Bay on 26 October, some hands ‘agreed to remain with the ship and some got their discharge’. The London directors of the South Australian Company anticipated that the Hartley, which sailed from London on 11 May 1837 (arriving in South Australia on 24 October), would return with the season’s oil. But when she finally left Kingscote for Launceston on 17 December, it was to return to South Australia with a cargo of provisions and stock. McLaren must have made alternative arrangements for the oil and whalebone to be carried back to London in the Solway, a 337-ton ship 56 What John Allen was doing on shore was not explained. He might have worked there if he was not reinstated after being stood down by his brother at the beginning of August. 36 Version: June 22, 2014 Encounter Bay 1836–1837 The whaling season commanded by Robert Pearson, which had arrived at Nepean Bay with German emigrants from Hamburg on 16 October. The South Australian Gazette & Colonial Register of 11 November 1837 contained an optimistic assessment of the whaling season: If the past season has not been unprecedentedly successful, it has not certainly been owing to the scarcity of fish [whales] in the waters of South Australia. These have been most abundant; and in one instance, no fewer than forty black whales have been counted from the beach at Glenelg at one time. We have been informed by Captain Blenkinsop, who commands a large party at Encounter Bay, and is well known to be an experienced whaler, that the whales in that neighbourhood are very numerous. He states that had not the fishing been interfered with and harassed by the injudicious proceedings of the persons connected with the South Australian Company’s establishment at the bay; and had both parties consented to fish amicably and in concert, they might with great ease have procured 400 tuns each. As it is, Captain Blenkinsop will only ship about 200 tuns. The Siren went from Port Adelaide a few days ago to Sleaford Bay, near Port Lincoln, to take in a cargo of oil from the station there; and our enterprising neighbours, the Henty’s at Portland Bay, have collected upwards of 300 tuns, with only three boats and a small cutter at anchor. There is not a doubt that the waters of South Australia offer the most substantial inducements that can be derived, to a well organized and steadily conducted system of whale fishing; and every thing about us promises that by next year, we shall be enabled to urge, as a further inducement, the great facility in obtaining supplies of fresh meat and vegetables that exists in Adelaide. This is the only mention of whaling at Sleaford Bay in 1837, except for a visit lasting eight days made by the Francis Freeling after leaving Encounter Bay in July. The Siren was reported back from South Australia in Hobart on 3 December with 100 tuns of oil and four passengers—John Maney, John Redgrove, Noland and W. Murray. The reality was somewhat different. The Hind left for Sydney on 5 November57 and reached Port Jackson on 20 November with, according to the manifest, just 100 tuns of black oil and 4 tons of whale bone. McLaren in the South Australian Gazette & Colonial Register of 3 February 1838 suggested that Blenkinsop had shipped less than 100 tuns. The Whaling Report compiled in 1842 (see page 10) claimed that the South Australian Company took 160 tuns of oil in toto. The figures may be compared with the number of whales taken in Table 4. Although there are uncertainties as to the allocation of the whales captured jointly, the total of 24 12 for the South Australian Company’s boats should be quite accurate. The total of 13 for Blenkinsop is probably as underestimate since not all his catches would have been remarked by Findlay. If each whale yielded the nominal average of eight tuns, the two fisheries should have accumulated some 200 tuns and a minimum of 100 tuns respectively. So it seems likely that the average yield was in fact closer to 6 21 tuns, which would give totals of 160 and a minimum of 85 tuns respectively, which makes Blenkinsop’s return plausible. Though why the six whales claimed by the South Australian yielded only 28 tuns, rather than almost 40, remains unexplained. By the calculations in the 1842 Whaling Report, these figure were well below that (150 tuns for a three-boat party) required to make the venture profitable. Again according to the Report, an error in calculation made the situation disastrous for the South Australian Company. With a double party, the amount allowed to each member should have been calculated as if the whales were taken by two 57 Mann, in Gouger [15], implied that the Hind left Encounter Bay in the middle of September, which casts some doubt on the accuracy of his dates. Version: June 22, 2014 37 The whaling season Encounter Bay 1836–1837 Table 4: Summary of whales taken at Encounter Bay in 1837 Date 30 June 5 June 20 June 24 June 26 June 2 July 10 July 19 July 24 July 27 July 30 July 3 August 4 August 5 August 9 August 10 August 16 August 17 August 18 August 21 August 22 August 24 August 27 August 31 August 2 September 6 September 8 September 9 September 13 September 17 September 18 September 19 September 20 September Totals South Australian Company South Australian shore party 1 1 1 Blenkinsop 1 2 Statesman 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1? 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 13 4 12 1 2 1 2 1 1 2 1 2 1 1 2 6 1 2 18 12 parties: ‘The quantity of oil procured by this double party should have been first divided into two, and the lays of the two respective parties calculated each upon one half, whereas, by this mistake of the Company, each man shared in the whole oil taken. By which the amount of the lays became more than the value of the whole oil caught, so that the greater the quantity the greater the loss.’ There were, of course, recriminations. The Whaling Report put the blame on Stephens: ‘These measures [undertaken for whaling] were, however, principally adopted before the Colonial Manager had time to get the least insight into the nature of the undertaking, or to acquire a knowledge of the men he was necessitated to employ from the neighbouring colonies. The persons sent from England were, with very few exceptions, totally unacquainted with the system on which whaling is conducted in these colonies (and of whom some seem to have been engaged for the purpose of systematic imposition). A greater proof of this, and the want of knowledge displayed at home, need not be cited than the appointment of the person who was sent out to fill the office of Superintendent of Whaling.’ At first sight this seems to apply to Alexander Allen. Although never formally referred to as the superintendent (a position that McFarlane later claimed), his inebriation and lack of authority must have disllusioned MacLaren on the voyage out as well the two successive mates, Anthony and Findlay. However, it appears more likely that the jibe was aimed at William Allen. 38 Version: June 22, 2014 Encounter Bay 1836–1837 Repercussions The South Australian Company in Adelaide was informed in a letter from London, dated 8 May 1838, a month before the departure of the Winchester with Allen and received via the Africaine in mid August, that Allen had been appointed for three years to take charge of whale fishing, and might be given command of the South Australian to go sperm fishing. The timing suggests that this was in response to being informed of Alexander Allen’s death at the end of September, but before the news of the loss of the South Australian at the end of December was received. William Allen could not have heard that he had no vessel to command until he arrived in the province in October 1838. If Allen was disappointed, he must have disappointed the officials of the company more: a letter received from the London office and dated 13 May 1839 (State Library of South Australia BRG 42/3/9) contained its approval of the ‘dissolution of Captain Allen’s connections’, saying Allen’s ‘worthless character they were surprized [with], for if any of our whaling captains ever possessed their general confidence it was that individual’, but concluding ‘good riddance to “bad rubbish”’. The Whaling Report hints that the men employed from the ‘neighbouring colonies’ might not have been above reproach. No names are mentioned but James Walter Fell, the storekeeper at the Company fishery at Encounter Bay in December was not reticent in his memoir (written some half a century later), calling McFarlane, then master of the South Australian, a ‘silly conceited fool’ with a ‘demure knowing look’. Blenkinsop also blamed Stephens both for refusing cooperation and then encouraging his men to desert. He wrote to Angas in November, claiming he had lost 54 out of 64 men and demanding compensation of £11,827, a ridiculous figure given that the expected take for a single party in a season would be around £3,000. Blenkinsop presumably remained at Anna Vale with his family after the departure of the Hind because he was in earnest about settling in South Australia. It is not clear, however, if Robert Campbell in Sydney intended to continue whaling there. He had sold the Hind before her return to Sydney, to Daniel Egan for £1400. Egan was a shipping agent and the owner of the Francis Freeling, amongst other vessels. Egan sailed with the Hind, ‘for the benefit of his health’, to Cook Strait, New Zealand, on 26 December 1837 but returned in March 1838 with oil and whalebone. The Hind then set off for South Australia at the end of April 1838, but she carried only sheep and flour and was on her way to Mauritius [26]. She took no further part in whaling. Repercussions Early in November, Elick was transferred to Kangaroo Island. The South Australian Company billed the government for £10 8s, a charge of 2s a day for detaining him from 21 July to 1 November; £6 for damage to 80 yards of topmast studding sail used as bedding; 6s for four broken padlocks; and £10 for the mate and ship’s boys watching and attending him for 15 weeks; a total of £26 14s. Then, on 8 November, another bill was presented for 12s, board and lodging at 3s a day from 1 to 4 November and £2 10s for his passage to Kangaroo Island. On 14 December, the Company reported that he had escaped the previous night, no doubt to the relief of the law officers; no further action was taken over Driscoll’s death. William Walker, who had visited to Adelaide to testify in the Driscoll case at the end of July, came to Adelaide again in early November with exciting news, reported by George Stevenson in the South Australian Gazette & Colonial Record of 18 November: Walker, for some years resident on Kangaroo Island, and who has been an occasional visitant here and at Encounter Bay, arrived from the latter place about ten days ago, and stated that he, in company with another man, had discovered, twenty-five miles to the south-eastward of the river discovered by Sturt [River Murray], a fine harbour, into which a river, leading directly from Lake Alexandrina, empties itself. That ships of any size may enter the harbour; and that vessels might lie close upon the banks of the river in four fathoms of water, and discharge their cargoes. That the land in every direction was beautiful, and the place altogether fit for a capital. Version: June 22, 2014 39 The Murray Mouth Encounter Bay 1836–1837 However, Stevenson then went on to reveal his real reason for reporting a tale he did not really believe. It was an opportunity to criticise Light yet again: Walker, whose story we have narrated, is a sober, and to all appearance, a steady, intelligent person. . . and if his tale cannot be wholly depended on, still it is sufficient to warrant some immediate steps on the part of the Surveyor General to determine a fact of so much importance to the Colony. Light had no doubt of the truth of the matter, writing: ‘This man was here one day, he was drunk the whole time, and said he would not tell anybody where it was, except he was paid £500’ [11]. In the South Australian Gazette & Colonial Record of 6 January 1838, even Stevenson had to declare this report to be fanciful. This had been learned by Sir John William Jeffcott, the province’s almost absentee Judge, while at Encounter Bay in late November. He was there as a result of the embarrassing action initiated by Blenkinsop against Stephens and Wright. The latter had been remanded in custody on 27 October but both were allowed out of custody to consult Mann, who requested bail arguing that Blenkinsop’s absence to prosecute the charge should have led to their discharge. They appeared before Jeffcott on 17 November, with Fisher appearing for Stephens and Mann (who resigned as Advocate General and Crown Solicitor on the same day) for Wright. Blenkinsop had been subpoenoed to attend, but had induced the constable to add the words ‘wind and weather permitting’ to the summons and again failed to turn up. So Jeffcott had no option but to simply bind Stephens and Wright over until the next Court of General Goal Delivery. Jeffcott and the other legal officer, the sheriff, Samuel Smart, quarrelled over the proceedings and Jeffcott decided to seek advice in Van Diemens Land. He obtained leave of absence for this purpose, although Edward Stephens suspected another motive, writing to McLaren on 30 November: It is rumoured that Sir John Jeffcott will not return again. It is known that he is losing his intended, a new suitor has been more successful58 , and Sir John, I opine, is going indeed on very urgent business, but not so urgent to the Colony as he would make the Gov[ernmen]t believe. Fell, writing much latter [13], had no doubts: ‘Sir John’s errand was to get married to a Lady in that Colony & young Mr. Hindmarsh was to accompany him in quality of Bridegrooms man’. True or not, Jeffcott certainly left Adelaide in a hurry on 20 November. Jeffcott sailed to Nepean Bay and then to Encounter Bay so as to join the South Australian for Hobart. He and Hindmarsh’s son, John, junior, were taken by Thomas Lipson, the Harbour Master, in the government-chartered 31-ton cutter Mary Ann. After landing the party on 24 November, Lipson hurried back to Holdfast Bay to deliver his report to Hindmarsh. After the sketchiest examination and on the flimsiest evidence, Lipson told the governor what he wanted to hear: there was a ‘sheltered and good’ anchorage. But he was referring to Victor Harbor, not Rosetta Cove. The Murray Mouth At Encounter Bay, Jeffcott met three men, Edward Stone, John (Jack) Foley and a third, variously named Henry Stanley or Manley59 , with a strange tale. They claimed to have left Port Fairy some six 58 If this is true, the engagement lasted some time. His ‘intended’, Anne Kermode, did not marry George Henry Moore until 9 July 1839. 59 Manley is the name given in a single document, the deposition described below, and the only other references to him are on Foley’s indictment and in Bull’s memoirs [5], where he is referred to as Stanley. Depositions were not without errors in transcription, as was the case with the murdered whaler Driscoll, so the form Stanley is preferred here. 40 Version: June 22, 2014 Encounter Bay 1836–1837 The Murray Mouth weeks previously, with a horse to carry provisions and some dogs to help catch game. They followed the beach mainly, though they struck inland behind Capes Nelson and Bridgewater, thus avoiding Portland. They reached Rivoli and Guichon Bays, where they had their first encounter with a large number of Aborigines. These were threatening but not overtly hostile. Continuing along the coast, the party met another group as they approached Lake Alexandrina. These proved to be friendly and familiar with the Europeans at the Encounter Bay fisheries, which they indicated were not too far distant. Failing to cross the Murray Mouth, even with the assistance of the Aborigines, they turned inland to somewhere close to Point McLeay and constructed a raft of pine trees, which they punted across to Point Sturt, a distance they estimated to be five or six miles, though closer to four in reality. After a further two days, they reached the fishery at Hind Cove. Jeffcott took sworn statements from Stone and Foley on 25 November and 27 November, respectively. They were the first Europeans to have seen the south-east of the province at first hand. Jeffcott was careful to record their impressions of the countryside and its potential, especially as Stone and Foley claimed to have had experience in farming. Foley claimed also to be a sailor engaged in whaling. The story must have been broadly accurate, but it was carefully constructed so as not to incriminate themselves. It is almost certain that they did visit Portland. Foster Fyans, the resident magistrate at Geelong visited Portland in June 1839 and reported that ‘Mr. Henty informs me he has met [at Adelaide] many of the Runaways who passed here—Fahey [Foley] and Davis are supposed to be Runaways from Sydney—they remained near Mr. Henty’s for some months—and departed for Adelaide—the day they left here, two horses were taken from Mr. Henty’s’ [3]. Fyans most probably refers here to Thomas Henty, who, a few months before his death, was settled at Portland Bay with three of his sons, Frank, Edward and Stephen. Henty was correct, at least as far as Fahey was concerned. There is no reason to doubt Foleys own admission that his name was actually Lovett because a thirty-year old John Lovett or Lovatt, a ploughman, was given a life sentence at Bury St. Edmunds in Suffolk on 31 March 1821 and was transported to NSW on the Mary, which departed on 28 August that year. He appears in the NSW musters of the 1820s but not in that of 1837. The identification is confirmed by the report in the English newspaper, Bury and Norwich Post, for 30 October 1833 that Lovatt had escaped from NSW. But the runaways had no reason to misrepresent their journey along the south-east coast. Their evidence gave the lie to Walker: there was but one mouth to the River Murray. The day that Jeffcott took the first deposition, the South Australian appeared back in Encounter Bay to prepare the whale oil for loading on the Solway. McFarlane was now master of the vessel and Harper first mate. David McLaren’s son, David, junior, was probably on board because he wrote to his father from Encounter Bay on 29 November. He described the coroner’s inquest that Jeffcott had had to convene at McLaren and McFarlane’s request. McFarlane, Harper, Charles Powell60 and John Cranfield61 testified that a cooper, Jeremiah Calnan62 , became ill on the passage from Kangaroo Island on Friday, 24 November. According to Fell’s graphic account [13], he was given two glasses of grog and seemed to be recovering, but on landing he worsened and became ‘quite insane’. McFarlane gave him medicine and gruel and bled him. He died at 10.30 on Monday night. The inquest was held the following morning and returned a verdict of death from delirium tremens brought on by excessive drinking. Calnan was buried at Encounter Bay, with Jeffcott officiating. McLaren went on to say that: The oil is not by any means in so bad a state as has been represented, although mostly all the casks have leaked a little. That got by the South Australian is a good deal worse than the other. We now have plenty of help. Having only one cooper, James Fell, the man engaged by Clegg (who has not returned ), I have been obliged to retain as store keeper. He assists Nelson in hammering the casks although not a cooper. 60 A gardener according to the Company’s list of employees in May 1837. bricklayer according to the Company’s list of employees in May 1837. 62 McLaren referred to him as John Calnan, perhaps because that was how he was known to his shipmates. 61 A Version: June 22, 2014 41 The Murray Mouth Encounter Bay 1836–1837 Figure 5: The mouth of the Murray. The chart drawn by Pullen in 1840 is superposed on a modern map. Pullen shows the navigable channel (light blue) within the banks of the eastern arm of the Murray. The site of Goolwa is labelled ‘B’, the boat landing place ‘C’ and the point where Collet Barker was killed in 1831 ‘c’. From the inset on the Plan of New Port Adelaide, South Australia, drawn by William Light, 1841. Here, McLaren must have been comparing the shore parties’ oil at Encounter Bay with that taken by the South Australian, which had already been delivered to Nepean Bay. This paragraph is the first reference to James Walter Fell, who claimed in his memoir [13] that he was ‘in charge of the Company’s Whale fishing station at Encounter Bay’, and it implies that Fell was a late appointment by Clegg, probably acting as steward in Clegg’s absence. Another party arrived at Encounter Bay on 1 December. This consisted of Thomas Bewes Strangways and Young Bingham Hutchinson, members of Hindmarsh’s coterie and recently appointed interim Colonial Secretary and Emigration Agent by Hindmarsh, who had suspended Robert Gouger and John Brown. As enthusiastic supporters of Encounter Bay as the focus of settlement, they were intending ‘to ascertain if there were any other outlet from Lake Alexandrina than the one discovered by Captain Sturt (for which object your Excellency was pleased to grant us leave of absence)’63 . After a difficult overland journey with a bullock cart, they must have been disappointed to learn of the runaways’ experiences, though this is not mentioned in their official report published in the South Australian Gazette & Colonial Register of 20 January 1838. Blenkinsop was absent when Strangways and Hutchinson turned up at his fishery, but he returned with Webster from Adelaide the following day64 and supplied the promised assistance of a manned whaleboat. They took the cart as a boat carriage in case the whaleboat needed to be carried across 63 Dutton and Elder [11] apparently confused their expedition with Lipson’s visit. visit to Adelaide is otherwise unrecorded, so it is likely that Blenkinsop travelled overland. If he had gone to Adelaide in connection with the adjourned court case, he might have missed Jeffcott, but he must have seen Strangways and Hutchinson in order to have offered them assistance. 64 This 42 Version: June 22, 2014 Encounter Bay 1836–1837 The Murray Mouth the peninsular dunes from the ocean to the arm of the Murray flowing around Hindmarsh Island. In the event, it was not needed. Charles Mann, the former Advocate General, who stopped off at Encounter Bay on the way to Hobart in the John Pirie on 15 December described the passage of the whaleboat through the Murray Mouth [27]: On Monday, the 2d December last65 , Captain Blenkinsopp dispatched a whale-boat to the Murray; the men were directed to pass the south-east or right-hand side of the embouchure for the space of a mile, and then to pull up towards the entrance of the Murray, keeping close inshore. Following these orders, the boatmen landed on the south-eastern beach considerably below the mouth of the river. There was scarcely any wind, and the weather was very favourable; notwithstanding this, however, the surf was running on the beach upwards of six feet in height as far as the eye could distinguish the line of shore. Here it became apparent to the men that it was impossible to pull against the current; they therefore determined to track [i.e. tow] the boat on. This they effected, some of the men keeping out to seaward in order to prevent the surf from beaching the boat, whilst the rest tracked her. After great labour and considerable danger, they passed into the river; and, when in smooth water, they stood over to the western side, where they were joined by the land party. The entrance once passed, the embouchure to the lake is reported to present a calm and beautiful sheet of water, varying in depth from four to three and a half and three fathoms. On the south-eastern side it is said to carry this depth of water up to the lake. The current, however, is fearfully rapid, and the boatmen who survived are of one opinion in respect to the impossibility of any vessel making a passage against the united force of the current, and the immense sweep of rollers which rise and break for the distance of from a mile and a half to two miles before the entrance to the river is attained. That day Jeffcott went aboard the South Australian at anchor in Rosetta Harbour, so he was not present when Strangways, Hutchinson and a party of eight (including two natives) set off with the cart to meet the boat at the nearest point of the Murray channel, probably close to the ‘elbow’ at present-day Goolwa. The following day, the boat proceeded up the channel, shadowed by the cart on the western bank. The cart could go no further when the party came across a creek, at the head of which they camped in a ‘fertile, well watered, and sheltered spot’. The creek they called Currency Creek after the whaleboat that had brought them there. A reduced party continued in the whaleboat, exploring the western channel of the Murray around Hindmarsh Island (which they begged to name in honour of the governor) to its furthest point on 6 December. Two of the oarsmen in Blenkinsop’s whaleboat were the runaways, which increases the likelihood that they had been whaling at Port Fairy, and they pointed out the raft and pole used by them in crossing Lake Alexandrina. Strangways and Hutchinson named the point on which they landed Point Sturt and that on the opposite shore of the lake, Point McLeay. On 7 December, a gale blew up which prevented them from leaving camp. Out in Encounter Bay, the South Australian broke loose from her moorings on 8 December. McFarlane described the loss in a letter to Mann from Hobart on 24 February 1838 (quoted in [15]: ‘I saw my fate the moment the first bower [anchor] parted, and was prepared for it; I had lower yards and top-masts on deck to ease the ship from labouring, but frequently the sea broke fore and aft’. The vessel was stranded on the shore. Jeffcott and the young men, Hindmarsh and McLaren, were taken ashore by boat. So Jeffcott had to await the next vessel. To fill in time, Jeffcott decided to join the party examining Lake Alexandrina. On 10 December, when Blenkinsop returned to the fishery for supplies, to took Jeffcott and Hindmarsh, junior, back to the camp on Currency Creek. There was a pause on 11 December when two of the crew absconded, and Blenkinsop had to return again to the fishery for replacements. The following day, 12 December, they rejoined the party near the Goolwa camp, from whence Blenkinsop set off to exit the Murray in the whaleboat. Jeffcott accompanied him. According to Fell[13], ‘the danger was known & apparent’ and Blenkinsop called for volunteers and ‘these were soon obtained form the Common 65 Monday was actually 4 December, as in the report of Strangways and Hutchinson. Version: June 22, 2014 43 The Murray Mouth Encounter Bay 1836–1837 hands, but Blenkinsop a headstrong man taunted two of his headsmen with their pusillanimity, when they reluctantly agreed to go in place of two of the Volunteers’. Fell named the headsmen as George Wright and Harry Brooks, the other three oarsmen being George Mills, ‘little Punch’ and himself. Fell does not mention the fact recorded by Strangways and Hutchinson that, before attempting the Murray Mouth, the party came across ‘some hundreds weight of whalebone’ and loaded it forward in the boat (Jeffcott occupying the stern). The boat negotiated the mouth successfully but it then faced the breakers in Encounter Bay. The heavily-laden boat overturned and Jeffcott, Blenkinsop, Wright and Brooks drowned66 . Fell, Mills and ‘little Punch’ were pulled from the surf by natives, the only witnesses of the event. David McLaren, junior, was taken on 12 December to Kingscote in Wood’s whaleboat, which had been sent to collect him by William Giles. They must have left Encounter Bay before the tragedy because they apparently brought news only of the loss of the South Australian. The vessel Jeffcott had been awaiting put in to Encounter Bay three days too late. The John Pirie had left Nepean Bay on 14 December to assist the stricken South Australian (to save her beef and pork, according to Martin[15]) but carried passengers, including Mann, who were to be taken on to Hobart when she had completed her task in Encounter Bay. Three days later still, the Solway, under Robert Pearson, followed her to Encounter Bay to collect the oil. Both were anchored in Rosetta Harbour when another gale struck on 21 December. Martin described the storm in a letter to Gouger [15] from Hobart on 1 March 1838: a heavy gale from the southeast created tremendous seas rolling into the Rosetta Bay. The Solway broke from her anchors and was driven on to the reefs westward of the John Pirie. Martin had two anchors run out to the full extent of their cables from the bow and had taken down her yards and masts. The gale increased in strength for three to four hours after the loss of the Solway causing seas to break over the John Pirie; Martin expected the vessel to ‘go down at her anchors, or tear her bows out of her’. He let go, hoping that the ship would be forced over the reef under press of sail—Mann, an eye-witness on shore, said that she carried only a jib. Although her bottom was nearly beaten out, this was successful and Martin ran her on to the beach to leeward of the reef. The John Pirie was able to continue on to Hobart on 8 January 1838. On the same day, Pearson left in the longboat of the Solway for Nepean Bay. Before leaving Encounter Bay in the new year, however, Pearson provided a remarkable coda to the events of 1837. Some time in the two weeks following the wreck of his vessel on 21 December 1837, he must have sketched the scene in the Bay from the Bluff. There are two interesting variants of this sketch. The version is a lithograph of unknown provenance in the Rex Nan Kivell Collection at the National Library of Australia (NK7157), entitled ’View of Encounter Bay with the Fishery’ (Figure 6 (a)). The other version was published in London in 1839 as an illustration to Land of Promise by ‘One who is going there’ [John Stephens, the brother of Samuel and Edward], and is entitled ‘View of Encounter Bay with the Fisheries’ (Figure 6 (b)). The latter is based on another lithograph, a copy of which is held by the National Library of New Zealand (A-096-047). Neither of these identifies the artist but a hand-coloured copy of a later state of the same print offered for sale at The Antique Print Room, 455 George Street, Sydney, in 2009 attributes the sketch to R. Pearson. In the original of Figure 6 (a), various features are identified below the picture. They are: 1. The Solway herself stands are the head of the list, as would be natural if Pearson made the sketch. She is facing seawards with anchors stretching out from the bow (Figure 7 (a)). Version (b) shows her on the reef pointing landwards. Both versions show no topmasts; the spars removed from the wreck were auctioned at Holdfast Bay on 9 February 1838. 66 Hutchinson’s 44 diary [17] confirms that the two lost seamen were George Wright and Henry Brooks. Version: June 22, 2014 Encounter Bay 1836–1837 The Murray Mouth (a) (b) Figure 6: Rosetta Cove from the Bluff: The whaling stations of the South Australian Company and Blenkinsop and the wrecks of the South Australian and Solway. The John Pirie, which escaped, is in the foreground. Sketched around New Year’s Day, 1838, by Robert Pearson, master of the Solway. (a) National Library of Australia, reproduced without permission. (b) From John Stephens’ Land of Promise, 1839 (also in National Library of New Zealand). 2. The South Australian is shown close to the shore with topmasts and spars lowered, as McFarlane reported that he done before the gale hit (Figure 7 (b)). The vessel again in shown facing opposite ways in the two versions. 3. The small two-masted John Pirie is depicted in a similar manner in both versions (Figure 8). Both show square spars on fore and main masts, but only (b) shows the fore-and-aft gaff behind the main mast. This rig seems to have led to confusion at the time. In South Australian documents she was described as a schooner. However, on a visit to Sydney in June 1838 she was described as a brigantine. The drawings suggest that she was, in fact, a two-topsail schooner. This had a series of fore-and-aft sails—jibs, foresail and mainsail, the latter two stretched between a gaff and a boom behind the fore-mast and mainmast. There were also square-rigged sails Version: June 22, 2014 45 The Murray Mouth Encounter Bay 1836–1837 (a) (b) Figure 7: The wrecks at Encounter Bay. (a) Solway. (b) South Australian. Details from the National Gallery of Australia print, Figure 6 (a). (a) (b) Figure 8: The John Pirie at Encounter Bay. (a) Detail from the National Gallery of Australia print, Figure 6 (a). (b) Detail from the Land of Promise version, Figure 6 (b). attached to yards in front of the topmasts in topsail schooners, just the foremast in a normal topsail schooner but both masts in a two-topsail schooner. The fore-and-aft sails would have been primarily topsails, but topgallants could have been added to further yards above them, as appears to be the case in both versions. A brigantine differed only in having the foresail behind the foremast replaced by a square-rigged foresail on a spar below the fore topsail67 . 4. The Rosetta fishery is shown arranged much as in Light’s drawing. The building close by ‘4’ has two external chimneys, each with smoke. There was no blubber to be tried at that time of year, so this is likely to be the men’s quarters, the try works being in the buildings closer to the water’s edge (see Figure 3). 5. Blenkinsop’s fishery appears beyond Point Stephen (now Victor Harbor). 6. The canvas structure with casks lined up in front is described as the Solway’s ‘Hutt’, presumably where the oil was stored for ferrying out to the Solway anchored in Rosetta Harbour. 7. The ‘South Australian’s Tryworks’ was located in the little cove below the Bluff, which could be approached without crossing the reef. The indentations of the two coves below the Bluff, from which the view was taken, are accurately portrayed and the one with the try works was the site where two platforms with shearlegs for cutting the blubber from the whales were erected later in the 1840s. 8. The cooperage, where the oil casks were prepared. 9. A longboat which may well be the Solway’s longboat that took Pearson back to Nepean Bay. A comparison with a photograph taken in a similar place (Figure 9) suggests that Pearson took considerable liberties with the scale of the hills and the distance to Granite Island (on the extreme 67 The 46 rig was sometimes changed by the master to suit different voyages. Version: June 22, 2014 Encounter Bay 1836–1837 Epilogue Figure 9: Rosetta Cove from the Bluff in 2013. right), but is accurate enough68 for there to be little doubt that it was based on a sketch made on the spot. Pearson was back in London on 4 October 1838, two months before Stephens wrote the preface to his book on 7 December, so Pearson most likely himself supplied Stephens with his illustration. Whether Pearson produced a revised lithograph to correct what appeared in the book, or whether Stephens had just altered the ships whilst correcting their scale (clearly exaggerated in (a)) is not known. Whatever its topographic failings, the sketch records what concerned Pearson most—the vessels and establishments associated with the whale fisheries in Encounter Bay in 1837. Epilogue Strangways and Hutchinson admitted in their report that the ‘the seat of government’ was located ‘elsewhere’, i.e., irrevocably in Adelaide. They nevertheless concluded that Encounter Bay was ‘the most eligible [site for the first town] that we have yet seen in the colony for the first town’, fulfilling six of the seven criteria given to Light by the Colonization Commissioners. The very first such criterion which they believed to be met in Encounter Bay was ‘A commodious harbour, safe and accessible at all seasons of the year’. Only the most partisan supporters of Hindmarsh could possibly have reached that conclusion after the disasters that unfolded before their very eyes. After 1837, Adelaide remained firmly established not only as the seat of government but also as the commercial capital of the province. Boyle Travers Finniss, assistant surveyor in Light’s team, conducted a more objective evaluation in April 1838 and concluded that ‘the balance of advantages is against the eligibility of that district for the site of the capital; the two great objections being, the want of that means of safely shipping the exports of the Colony essential to prosperity, and the absence of such an area of fertile land in the immediate vicinity as would be required to place the cultivators of the soil in contact with the market and the port.’69 . The dissenting party evaporated 68 The correct depiction of Brown Hill behind Blenkinsop’s fishery in (a) suggests that this is the original and more accurate version. 69 Finniss also addressed the seventh criterion, the one omitted by Strangways and Hutchinson, namely, ‘Distance from the limits of the colony, as a means of avoiding interference from without in the principle of colonization’. He noted that ‘Encounter Bay could not be objected to on this point, because the Commissioners contemplated the possibility of a settlement near the mouth of the Murray’, so it is curious that Strangways and Hutchinson implied that this was the sole criterion not met. Version: June 22, 2014 47 Epilogue Encounter Bay 1836–1837 when Hindmarsh received news of his recall in June 1838. With the drowning of Blenkinsop, the action against Stephens and Wright lapsed. This made little difference to the South Australian Company. Stephens had already suffered demotion with the arrival of McLaren in April and the reports of his management of the initial settlement on Kangaroo Island convinced the London directors to remove him from his position as Colonial Manager. The news reached his brother Edward on 9 October 1837; thereafter McLaren was the sole manager in South Australia. McLaren put Samuel in charge of the bullocks and flocks on the mainland but by December it was clear that he was too irresponsible even for that, spending too much time racing horses with other company employees and indulging in heavy drinking. Edward confronted him on 26 December and refused to sanction his proposed purchases of stock; he accused his brother of having ‘incapacitating himself before dinner for business’, i.e., bring drunk before lunch. Samuel took umbrage and submitted a letter of resignation, which McLaren accepted when he next visited Kangaroo Island in February 1838. McLaren wrote to Edmund Wheeler, the London manager of the South Australian Company, on 14 February 1838 that it was thought that Samuel Stephens might form a partnership with Wright (State Library of South Australia BRG 42/31/7). McLaren had been scathing about Wright, describing him as ‘uneducated and I think unprincipled. . . a self-conceited opinionated man whose worthless character I was not long in discovering’, so it is not surprising that he foresaw little success: ‘if they do not do better for themselves that they have done for the Company, they won’t make much money’. It would take a few years before the geography of Encounter Bay was firmly established. Light and Finniss produced a sketch in 1838, and this was used as the basis for the plan of the sections that were surveyed prior to selection, purchase and occupation in June 1839. It appeared as an insert to Light’s Plan of New Port Adelaide, South Australia in 1841 and was used to construct Figure 10. This shows the site of the township as first planned (1838) in grey and some of the sections from the 1841 map outlined in black. The Hindmarsh River and the mouth of the Inman River are accurately depicted. Place names have become more familiar: Wright Island is where it is today, north-east of Cape Rosetta [Rosetta Point]; Findlay’s ‘Freeman’s Knob’ has become Freeman Nob in place of the earlier Rocky Point. Finally, the point opposite Granite Island has been given the name Point Stephen, probably in reference to George Milner Stephen rather than Samuel Stephens. Stephen was acting governor in 1838 before the arrival of Gawler but was disgraced shortly after, so it is not surprising that the name quickly changed again to Police Point. The events at the end of 1837 did not mark the end of whaling in Encounter Bay. This continued for almost two decades but was to give way progressively to other activities as the settlement laid out in Figure 10 progressed. 48 Version: June 22, 2014 Encounter Bay 1836–1837 Epilogue Figure 10: Encounter Bay from the Bluff to Freeman Nob, based on the inset to William Light’s ‘Plan of New Port Adelaide, South Australia’, 1841. Some of the sections selected in June 1839 are shown in black outline, the site of the township as first planned in light grey. Subsequent whaling stations at Rosetta Harbour, Victor Harbor, Granite Island and Freeman Nob are marked by a star. Version: June 22, 2014 49 References [1] George Fife Angas. South Australian Company Papers 1834–1837. Angas papers in State Library of South Australia, PRG 174/11. [2] John Anthony and David Findlay. Log of the South Australian 1836–37. Manuscript in the State Library of South Australia. [3] Marnie Bassett. The Hentys. Melbourne University Press, Parklike, Victoria, second edition, 1962. [4] William Loose Beare. Reminiscences of W.L. Beare. Typescript in the Royal Geographical Society of South Australia, Ms 10c. [5] John Wrathall Bull. Early Experiences of Life in South Australia and an Extended Colonial History. E.S. Wigg & Son, Adelaide, and Sampson Low, Marston, Searle, & Rivington, London, 1884. [6] J.W. Bull. Early Experiences of Colonial Life in South Australia. Self-published, Adelaide, 1878. [7] Richard Crozier. Remark Book of HMS Victor. Manuscript and microfilm in State Library of South Australia, PRG 185. [8] J.S. Cumpston. Kangaroo Island 1800–1836. Roebuck Society, Canberra, 1970. Second edition 1975. [9] Rachel Deane. Diary. Manuscript and two typed transcripts in State Library of South Australia, D 5711 (L). [10] Geoffrey Dutton. Founder of a City. F.W. Cheshire, Melbourne, 1960. [11] Geoffrey Dutton and David Elder. Colonel William Light. Founder of a City. Melbourne University Press, Carlton, Victoria, 1991. [12] L.J. Ewens. ‘The South Australian Colonizing Ships of 1836’. Pioneers Association of South Australia, Adelaide, 1962. [13] James Walter Fell. Account of the drowning of sir john jeffcott. Reproduction in State Library of South Australia, D 5471 (L). The original is said to be held in the University Archives of the University of Sydney. [14] Paul Giambaba. Whales, Whaling and Whalecraft. Scrimshaw Publishing, Centerville, Massachusetts, 1967. [15] Robert Gouger. South Australia in 1837. Harvey & Darton, London, 1838. [16] Edwin Hodder. History of South Australia from its Foundation to the Year of its Jubilee. Sampson Low, Marston, London, 1893. [17] Young Bingham Hutchinson. Diary. Photostat and transcription in State Library of South Australia, PRG 1013. 50 Encounter Bay 1836–1837 References [18] W. H. Leigh. Reconnoitering Voyages and Travels with Adventures in the new colonies of South Australia. Smith, Elder & Co., Cornhill, London, 1839. Fascimile edition published by The Currawong Press Pty Ltd, Milson’s Point, NSW, 1982. [19] William Light. A Brief Journal of the Proceedings of William Light. Archibald MacDougall, Adelaide, 1839. [20] Thomas G. Lytle. Whalecraft, 2007. www.whalecraft.net. [21] Max Nicholls. A history of Lord Howe Island. Mercury-Walch Pty Ltd, 5–7 Bowen Road, Moonah, Tasmania, 1975. [22] Michael Page. Victor Harbor from Pioneer Port to Seaside Resort. District Council of Victor Harbor, 1987. [23] Ronald Parsons. Tasmanian ships registered 1826–1850. Printed and published by Ronald H. Parsons, Magill, South Australia, 1980. [24] Joan Paton. John William Dundas Blenkinsop. Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society of Australasia, South Australian Branch, 66:69, 1965. [25] A. Grenfell Price. Founders & Pioneers of South Australia. F.W. Preece, Adelaide, 1929. [26] R.T. Sexton. Shipping Arrivals and Departures South Australia 1627-1850. Gould Books–Roebuck Society, Ridgehaven and Aranda, 1990. [27] John Stephens. The Land of Promise. Smith, Elder, London, 1839. [28] Samuel Stephens. Account of cash received and paid on account of the South Australian Company from July 1836 to October 1837. Manuscript in State Library of South Australia, BRG 42/78. [29] Charles W. Stuart. Diaries, 1833–1843. Manuscript in State Library of South Australia, D 6872 (L). [30] Various. Letters and other communications received by the Colonial Secretary, Governor and other Government officials. Microfilm copy in State Records of South Australia, GRG 24/1/1837 and 24/1/1838. [31] William Wyatt. ‘Diary’. South Australian Record, 8 and 11 November 1837, 1837. Version: June 22, 2014 51 Index Encounter Bay itself is not referenced in the in- Brooks, Henry, 15, 44 dex, only locations within it. Brown John (c1801–1879), 42 Thomas, 15, 23 Brown Hill, 47 Aborigines, 13 Buchan, William, 17, 19 Adelaide, 13 Bull, John Wrathall (1804–1886), 2, 3 Alford, Henry (1816–1892), 21 bullock-driver, 12 Allen Alexander (?–1837), 7, 17, 19, 28, 32, 36, 38, Bushell, Henry, 11, 12, 14 39 Calnan, Jeremiah (John), 41 John, 17, 19, 32, 36 Campbell, Robert (1789–1859), 9, 13, 39 Thomas, 21 Cann, John, 17, 19 William, 5, 7, 31, 38, 39 Cape Jervis, 4 Angas, George Fife (1789–1879), 3, 39 Cape Rosetta, 8, 27, 48 Angill, William, 12, 14, 24 Cape Victor, 16 Anna Vale, 10, 27 Capel Sound, 15 Anna vale, 39 Capel, Thomas Bladen, 15 Anthony Chambers, John (1815–1889), 25 James, 17, 19 Chesser, William, 2 John (c1811-1881), 17 Clark(e) Ayers, Henry, 12, 14 George, 14 William, 14 Backstair Passage, 3 Clark, Alexander, 17, 19, 31, 33, 35 Backstairs Passage, 4 Clegg, Abraham, 11, 14, 20, 28, 41 Bailey Coffin, Charles Norris? (1800–1848), 12, 22, 36 Charles, 11, 14, 36 Cole, John, 22 Henry, 17, 19 cooper, 10 Baker, John (1813–1872), 10 Cooper, William, 8, 30 Barker, Collet, 8, 13, 20 Cranfield, John, 41 Barrett, William, 14 Crozier Hill, 16 Battye, William?, 5 Crozier, Richard, 13, 16, 17, 23, 27 Baudin, Nicolas-Thomas (1754-1803), 23 Cummins, Gregory, 32 Beare cutting in, 6, 7 Thomas Hudson (1792–1861), 5 William Loose (1826–1910), 3, 8 Donoho, Jeremiah, 12, 14, 23 bible leaves, 32 Driscoll, John, 12, 15, 28–30, 39 Black Reef, 33, 35 Dubar, Henry, 22 blanket piece, 6 blanket pieces, 32 Egan, Daniel, 21, 39 Blenkinsop Elick (Alick, Reppeenyere, Reppindjeri, Ronculla), Anna Maria (c1817–1850), 10, 24 28, 29, 39 John William Dundas (?–1837), 10, 12, 13, Espie, John, 12, 14, 36 16, 23–26, 28–40, 42, 43, 46 Bluff, The, 8, 10, 20, 26, 32–34, 46 Fell, James Walter, 11, 14, 39, 41–43 boat-steerer, 10 Findlay, David, 17–19, 28, 29, 31–33, 35, 36 book, 32 Finniss, Boyle Travers (1807–1893), 47, 48 Brakehill, Thomas, 12, 14 Fisher, James Hurtle (1790–1875), 24–27, 40 Bromley, Walter (c1768–1838), 29 Fitzgerald, Thomas, 14, 18, 19, 36 52 Encounter Bay 1836–1837 Foley, John (Jack), 40, 41, 43 Freeman (Rosetta fishery), 12 Freeman Nob, 16, 17, 32, 48 Freeman, Sylvester, 13, 15, 24, 36 Fur Seal Australian, 4 New Zealand, 4 Fyans, Foster, 41 Germein, John, 18 Gibbons, Josiah, 11, 14 Giles, William (1791–1862), 44 Gilles, Lewis William (1796–1884), 11 Glenelg, 37 Goolwa, 43 Gouger, Robert (1802–1846), 23, 29, 42 Granite Island, 8, 10, 15–17, 27, 31–33, 46 Green, John, 22 Griffiths, John (1801–1881), 2, 3 Gulf St Vincent, 3, 4 Hack, Stephen, 25 Hagen, Jacob (1805–1870), 10 Halbrook, Henry, 14 Harper, John Gordon (c1807–1847), 11, 12, 14, 33, 34, 36, 41 harpoon, 6, 35 harpooner, 13 Hart, John (1808–1873), 2, 3, 10, 18 Hayes, Robert, 11, 12, 14, 35, 36 headsman, 10 Henty, Thomas (1775–1839), 41 Hightam, 18, 19 Hind Bay, 13 Hind Cove, 10, 17, 27 Hindmarsh John, 40, 43 John (1785–1860), 13, 16, 21, 24, 29, 30, 40, 42, 47, 48 Hindmarsh Island, 43 Hindmarsh River, 10, 16, 17, 21, 27, 28, 48 Hobart, 7, 11 Hobson, William, 16, 23 Holdfast Bay, 4 horse pieces, 32 Huggins, James, 12, 14, 17, 19 Hutchinson, Young Bingham (1806–1870), 42–44, 47 Hutchison Gilbert, 17, 19, 33 William, 17, 19 Hutton, William, 18, 19 Index Johnston, John, 17, 20 Jones William, 13, 14, 24 Jones, William, 9 Kalinga (Sarah), 28, 29 Kangaroo River, 10, 16, 17, 27 Kermode, Anne, 40 Keubler, J., 11, 14 Kingscote, 5, 23, 36 Lake Alexandrina, 39, 43 lance, 6, 32, 35 large island, 31 Launceston, 2, 11 Leese, Henry, 12 Leigh, William Henry, 7, 12, 17, 23, 29, 34 Light, William (1786–1839), 4, 13, 24–27, 40, 47, 48 Lipson, Thomas (1783–1863), 27, 40 Long, James (c1813–1903), 18 Lord, Edward Robert, 18, 20, 21, 25 Lovett, John, 26 Maney, John, 37 Mann, Charles (1799–1860), 10, 22, 24, 28–31, 34, 35, 37, 40, 43, 44 Marshall, Thomas, 13, 15, 23 Martin, George, 3 Martin, George (1778–1842), 4, 5, 8, 18, 21, 25, 44 Mate, William, 22 McClure, Charles, 12, 14, 36 McFarlane, John Boyd Thorburn (1810–1857), 11, 12, 14, 23, 33–36, 38, 39, 41, 43, 45 McLaren David (1785–1850), 17, 36–38, 48 David (1810–?), 41, 43, 44 Mead, Thomas R., 13, 15, 24 Menge, Johannes Joseph (1788–1852), 3 middle island, 32 Mildred, Henry Richard, 17 Mill, William, 16 Mills, George, 12, 14, 44 Moore George Henry, 40 John, 18, 20 Mootaparinga, 20, 21, 28, 30 Morphett, John (1809–1892), 4, 25 Munday, Edward, 11, 12, 14, 23, 28, 33–35 Murphy, John?, 11, 15 Murray Mouth, 30, 41, 43, 44 Murray, W., 37 Inman River, 10, 16, 17, 48 Inston, Maxwell, 17, 19, 33, 35 Natt, Richard, 16 Nelson Jacob, William (1814–1902), 27 Isaac, 11, 14, 41 Jeffcott, Sir John William (1796–1837), 40, 41, 43 John, 4 Version: June 22, 2014 53 Index Nepean Bay, 3, 5, 17 Noland, 37 Pearson, Robert, 37, 44, 46, 47 Pierce, Richard, 12, 15, 23 Point McLeay, 43 Point Stephen, 46, 48 Point Sturt, 43 Police Point, 48 Port Fairy, 40, 43 Port Lincoln, 3 Portland, 41 Portland Bay, 37 Powell, Charles, 41 Powell, William, 15 Power, William, 12, 15, 24 Powys, Thomas, 30 Prout, William, 18, 20, 32 Pullen Island, 16 pulling hand, 10 Punch, ‘little’, 12, 15, 44 Rapid Bay, 3, 4 Redgrove, John, 37 Reeves, William, 15, 23 River Murray, 17 Roach, Reuben (?–1838), 5, 12, 15 Robinson Charles, 15 George, 12, 15, 23 Rocky Point, 16, 17, 48 Rolls, John, 28 Rosetta Cove, 8, 10, 17, 27, 40, 46 Rosetta Harbour, 10, 15, 16, 26–28, 44 Rosetta Point, 16 Sandy Point, 16 Saunders, Joseph, 22 Scott, Hugh, 11, 15, 36 Sea Lion, Australian, 4 Seal Rock, 8, 16, 17, 27, 32 sealing, 3–5 Seaman, Jacob, 4 Sherratt, Thomas Brooker, 23 ships H.M.S. Rattlesnake, 16 H.M.S. Victor, 13, 16 Africaine, 11, 17, 39 Coromandel, 2, 3 Cygnet, 21, 26–28 Duke of York, 2, 5 Elizabeth, 2 Emma, 4, 7, 11–13, 16, 29, 34 Francis Freeling, 21, 26, 31, 32, 37, 39 George Martin of Kingscote, 5 Hartley, 36 Highlander, 26 54 Encounter Bay 1836–1837 Hind, 8, 9, 13, 16, 21, 24, 28, 31, 37, 39 Isabella, 18 John Pirie, 3, 4, 7, 8, 11, 13, 16, 18, 20, 32, 35, 43–45 Lady Mary Pelham, 2 Lord Hobart, 12, 29, 34 Mary, 41 Mary Ann, 40 Rapid, 8, 9 Royal Sovereign, 22 Sarah and Elizabeth, 11, 18 Siren, 37 Solway, 36, 41, 44, 46 South Australian, 7, 12, 17, 18, 21, 24, 26, 28, 30, 31, 39–41, 43–45 Specimen of Kingscote, 5 Statesman, 22, 26, 31, 32, 35, 38 Union, 23 William, 2, 8, 18, 21, 24, 25, 32, 36 Winchester, 7, 39 Slater, J?, 18, 20 Sleaford Bay, 37 Smart, Samuel, 40 Smith Bejamin, 17 Charles, 18, 20, 31, 33 George, 15 John, 11, 12, 15, 33, 34 Michael, 15, 23 Thomas, 15, 23 Sobey, Henry, 21 South Australian Company, 2, 5, 37, 39, 48 Southgate, John, 18, 20 spade, 34 boat, 6 cutting, 6 Spencer Gulf, 3, 5 Stacks, Thomas, 15, 24, 28, 29 Stanley (Manley), Henry, 40 Stephen, George Milner, 48 Stephens Edward (1811–1861), 8, 23, 24, 40, 48 John (1806–1850), 20, 21, 44, 47 Samuel (1808–1840), 2–5, 7, 8, 10, 11, 13, 18, 21, 23–27, 29–31, 36, 38–40, 48 Stevenson, George (1799-1856), 24, 39, 40 Stone, Edward, 40, 41 Strangways, Thomas Bewes (1809–1859), 24, 29, 42–44, 47 Stuart, Charles William (1811–1891, 18, 21 Stupart, Robert Douglas, 16 Sturt, Charles Napier (1795–1869), 8, 13 Sydney, 32 Thomas, Nathaniel (1802–1879), 4, 21 Thompson (also Thomson), William (c1803–1882), 2 Version: June 22, 2014 Encounter Bay 1836–1837 Index Thompson, George, 11, 15 Tindall, Thomas, 11, 12, 15, 36 tonguer, 6 try pot, 6 try works, 7, 17, 27, 31, 46 tun, 7 Turner, George, 12, 15, 23 Victor Harbor, 10, 15, 17, 40, 46 Wade, John, 21 Walker, William, 28, 29, 39, 40 Watkins, John, 18, 20 Webster, 15, 42 Wedger, William, 17, 20 West Island, 16, 17, 27, 31–33, 35 Whale, Southern Right (Black), 3 whaleboat, 5 whalebone, 3, 6 Wheeler, Edmund, 48 Williams, [Peter?] Robert, 22 Williamson, James, 21, 31 Wistock, Samuel, 12, 15, 24 wives, 12, 36 Wood(s), William, 12, 15, 44 Woodforde, John (1810–1866), 2, 4 Wright Edward (c1788–1859), 2 George, 15, 44 Joseph, 2, 18, 20 William, 2, 5, 7, 8, 18, 24–26, 30, 32, 40, 48 Wright Island, 2, 32, 33, 48 Wyatt John Pearce, 17, 20 Richard, 9, 13 William (1805–1886), 6, 11, 29, 30, 34, 35 Yankalilla, 4 Version: June 22, 2014 55