Showing posts with label Ships and Captains. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ships and Captains. Show all posts

Captain Edward Goldsmith's vote of support for James Alexander Thomson 1853

J. A. THOMSON, transported convict, arrived Hobart 1825
J. A. THOMSON, building contractor 1835-1857
J. A. THOMSON, Hobart City Alderman and Captain GOLDSMITH 1853
Captain Edward GOLDSMITH's twin ferry Kangaroo, costs and critics 1856

Bridge at New Norfolk

Detail, left image of stereograph of the pile bridge over River Derwent at New Norfolk, with male figure hiding his face seated in immediate foreground on the right of each single image.

Bridge at New Norfolk, stereo by T J Nevin

Pile bridge at New Norfolk built by James Alexander Thomson (1840-41).
Residence of Mr W. Sharland Esq, Woodbridge, visible to the right of bridge in distance across the River Derwent.
Stereograph on arched buff mount by Thomas J. Nevin ca. 1868
Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery Collection
TMAG Ref: Q16826.16

Biography
From: The Australian Dictionary of Biography online
https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/thomson-james-alexander-2733
James Alexander Thomson (1805-1860), architect, engineer and building contractor, was a native of Haddington, Scotland, and at 20, as 'a wild but clever young man', was transported to Van Diemen's Land for theft. With his brothers William and Joseph he had been discovered in a private house, and the three were tried together for the same offence and sentenced on 18 February 1824. William was considered less culpable and pardoned after imprisonment in Newgate; Joseph and James were transported separately; Joseph, who identified the object of the theft as jewellery to the value of £3000, was drowned after two years in the colony. James, who arrived at Hobart Town in the Medway on 14 December 1825, was assigned to public works and was frequently on loan to the colonial architect, David Lambe, and his successor, John Lee Archer, both of whom professed satisfaction with his work as draughtsman. Archer procured for him a small remuneration and towards the end of his assignment he was superintendent of the church building at Richmond (St Luke's 1834-37). He had also acted from 1830 as overseer of the government plumbers, glaziers and painters; indeed his trade was given in convict records as decorative painter. These records imply that at the date of transportation he had a wife and child living in Park Street, Regent's Park, London. By 3 June 1830, however, he had petitioned the lieutenant-governor for permission to marry Eliza Ogilvie, the comfortably endowed widow of a respectable Hobart wine and spirits merchant who had died in 1828 leaving her with three children. A daughter, Alice, appears to have been born on 7 August 1830, although the marriage at Richmond did not take place until 16 October 1832. A son, William, was born on 13 August 1833. By 1859 only one daughter, Fanny, survived, but two sons were living.

Thomson received a conditional pardon on I January 1835 and immediately set up a business in Liverpool Street, which lasted for most of his life, not only as architect, engineer and surveyor, but also as valuer, estate agent, map printer and dealer in machinery. His free pardon became effective on 31 July 1839. Despite his several complaints that officers of the Royal Engineers and public servants used their leisure time in architectural activities and caused unfair competition, Thomson seems to have enjoyed reasonably consistent architectural patronage, particularly during the shortage of architects in the 1840s. In 1841 he was a partner of James Blackburn in at least some contracts, though both worked independently as well. Thomson was also one of the first in Hobart to become interested in lithography both in its artistic and in its commercially reproductive applications. In 1850-51 Thomson had been one of the first to seek gold in Tasmania, investigating without success Frenchman's Cap and other areas. On 5 December 1852 his wife Eliza died, aged 51, and on 6 December 1853 Thomson married Catherine, the widow of the Hobart builder, John Jackson. Thomson moved from Liverpool Street to Elboden Street and later to Melrose in Hampden Road. He owned property in Macquarie Street, and worked professionally from the Stone Buildings later, about 1855-56 operating there under the name of Thomson & Cookney.

In 1853 he yielded to the supplications of a large group of supporters to stand as an alderman on the Municipal Council, a position he held until 1857. One of his great concerns was the Hobart water supply. Architecturally the bulk of Thomson's work appears to be in the domestic context: the designing and sometimes building of workmanlike utilitarian structures such as shops, office buildings, terraces and houses and cottages, none being works of paramount importance. One interesting tender let in 1850 was for fifty timber-framed houses for the Californian goldfields. Thomson was also engaged in contracting for jetties, wharves and harbour improvements in Hobart and, with Blackburn, road-making. His spectacular buildings were few. Unquestionably the most interesting and important work is the Hobart Synagogue (1843-45), the most comprehensive example of the Regency Egyptian style in Australia (felt suitable for this religion), surpassing in quality the first synagogues of Launceston, Melbourne and Sydney. Other churches are of plain and rudimentary village Gothicism, such as St Joseph's, Hobart (1841-43, some alterations), and St Joseph's, Launceston (1838-42, demolished and replaced), little touched by the more scholarly aspects of Gothic Revivalism. A few other works are attributable. Besides the Bridgewater Bridge (1846-49, with Blackburn) Thomson's best known early work was the pile bridge across the Derwent at New Norfolk (1840-41). An association with the stone bridge at Dunrobin (built 1850-56 under William Kay's supervision) is suggested by an obituary of reserved eulogies, which lists also the bridge at Richmond (presumably reconstruction of earlier fabric), the smelting works at Exmouth Bay, the former Hobart Exchange rooms and attorney-general's offices. Thomson had a long record of devoted service as a Freemason and Lodge treasurer, and committee member of the Hobart Mechanics' Institute. He sailed in the Isles of the South on 3 February 1860 for a visit to England, and died of typhoid fever at Helensburgh, near Glasgow, on 15 September 1860, aged 55.

Whatever his merits as architect, and they are relatively minor, Thomson provides a remarkable case of a former convict establishing himself as a successful businessman, despite his small estate, respected in many circles and with a considerable variety of commercial activities and social interests.

Select Bibliography
Hobart Town Advertiser, 21 Nov 1860, Blackburn papers (privately held).
Citation details: Harley Preston, 'Thomson, James Alexander (1805–1860)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/thomson-james-alexander-2733/text3857, published first in hardcopy 1967, accessed online 13 September 2021.
This article was published in hardcopy in Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 2, (Melbourne University Press), 1967
Source: https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/thomson-james-alexander-2733

J. A. Thomson:
Transportation Records - arrival at Hobart, 1825
Born 1805
Occupation: Painter & glazier
Date of Death: 15th September, 1860
Age: 55 years
Crime: Theft
Convicted at: Aberdeen Court of Justiciary
Sentence term: 14 years
Ship: Medway
Departure date: 28th July, 1825
Arrival date: 14th December, 1825
Place of arrival: Van Diemen's Land
Passenger manifest: Travelled with 172 other convicts
References
Primary source: Australian Joint Copying Project. Microfilm Roll 88, Class and Piece Number HO11/5, Page Number 293 (148)
Secondary source: https://convictrecords.com.au/convicts/thomson/james-alexander/108662

Hobart Town Gazette, 15 Sept 1827
List of Runaways
331. Thompson, James, alias Coutts, 5 ft. 4, brown hair, blue eyes, aged 23, flax dresser, tried at Aberdeen, April 1825, sentence 14 years, per Medway 2, native of Kinnear, absconded from service of Mr. French, in January last. Same reward. (£2).

Architecture by or attributed to James A. Thomson
Are they Scottish buildings?
Thomson arrived in Van Diemen’s Land as a convict, found guilty of theft and transported in 1825. In 1827, his qualifications—recorded as a decorative painter—saw him assigned to the Office of the Colonial Architect & Engineer (established in 1827, following the appointment and arrival of the incumbent John Lee Archer) from 1827 to 1832, prior to practicing variously as an architect, engineer, surveyor and builder (independently and in partnerships) through to the 1850s. He was one of a handful of practicing architects in the period. Whilst designing in a range of picturesque styles, the mainstay of Thomson’s practice was an austere Grecian mode realised across a variety of villas, commercial, and ecclesiastical buildings in the 1830s and 1840s (fig. 9). From Haddington, just outside of Edinburgh, and likely trained in the 1820s, Thomson would no doubt have absorbed the consolidation of the Greek Revival as an almost “national style” in Edinburgh as it was being re-imagined as the “Athens of the North” in the 1820s.

Excepting considerations of his impressive Egyptianate Hobart Synagogue (1843-1845), the jury is out on the architectural merits of Thomson’s work and his reputation, historiographically, which falls back to his professional redemption from convictism. One of the problems of the narrative is that it circumvents full consideration of Thomson’s Scottish heritage and its potential implications for his career. Unexamined is the extent to which Thomson’s Scottish background, identity, and associated networks supported his success in practice and, in the process, inflected an emergent architectural discourse in the colony.
Source: Scottish Networks and their Buildings in Van Diemen’s Land and Tasmania
Author: Stuart King
Link:https://journals.openedition.org/abe/5887
Link: https://doi.org/10.4000/abe.5887

1831-1836: Wentworth House, Bothwell, Tasmania

Wentworth House

Wentworth House, Bothwell, Tasmania, built c.1831-36. Photograph by Sir Ralph Wishaw, 1966.
Source: Hobart (Australia), Tasmanian Archives and Heritage Office, Whishaw Collection, NS165/1/31

1841: St Joseph’s Catholic Church, 165 Macquarie St, (cnr Harrington St) Hobart, the oldest Catholic church in Hobart; Gothic Revival style.

St Joseph's Church

Macquarie Street Hobart, looking west to St. Joseph's Catholic Church c. 1870
Photographer: Henry Hall Baily
Source: https://eprints.utas.edu.au/2618/

1843-1845: The Synagogue, 59 Argyle St, Hobart. Egyptian revival style, Australia’s first Synagogue
A single storey building designed by James Thomson, it is the oldest place of Jewish worship in Australia. It is a rare example of Regency Egyptian Revival style.

Hobart Synagogue

Hobart Synagogue, Argyle Street, Hobart, Tas.
Source: https://www.ourtasmania.com.au/hobart/hobart-heritage-walk.html

1846: Tasmania Club, 132 Macquarie St Hobart.

Tasmanian Club

The Tasmanian Club, Macquarie Street, Hobart, Tasmania c. 1880
Photographers: Anson Brothers, Liverpool, Collins and Elizabeth Streets between 1878 and 1891.
Source: https://eprints.utas.edu.au/2655/

This photograph shows the Tasmanian Club, Walch's, Derwent and Tamar Assurance Company, Post Office, Supreme Court, Franklin Square, Town Hall, Museum and Pregnell's butcher shop in Macquarie Street, Hobart ca. 1875. The Georgian style building was designed by architect James Alexander Thomson and built in 1846 for banker and merchant Captain Charles Swanston at the Derwent Bank which went into liquidation during the depression of the 1840's. The Tasmanian Club was established in 1861 in Hobart by seventy men. It was founded on the 'London pattern', that is, election or exclusion of candidates by ballot. The Club relocated to leased premises at Webb's (now Hadley's) Hotel in Murray Street from 1861 until 1873 when they purchased the Macquarie St. building. It is still used as their residence today. In 1891, following outright purchase of the land and buildings, major extensions were made to the Club building, including the main dining room and accommodation. The Tasmanian Club is regarded as the 'senior gentlemen's club' of Tasmania by its interstate and overseas counterparts. It has an upper limit to membership of 400.

Further reading: F Green, The Tasmanian Club, Hobart, 1961.
Source: https://www.utas.edu.au/library/companion_to_tasmanian_history/T/Tas%20club.htm

1847: formerly Franklin Chambers, 105 Macquarie St, Hobart.

Mercantile Mutual Building

Mercantile Mutual Building, Franklin Chambers, 105 Macquarie Street, Cnr. Trafalgar Place, Hobart, Tas. A three storey Victorian era Academic Classical commercial building, designed by J. A. Thomson with a front facade in ashlar, the rest in brick and a hipped iron roof. There are expressed quoins, bracketed cornices to ground floor openings, Ionic pilasters and pediments to second level windows, string courses, a decorative frieze and a cornice to the roof.
Source: https://www.ourtasmania.com.au/hobart/hobart-heritage-walk.html

1848: "Hildern” (St James’ Rectory) 29 August Rd, New Town.

Hildern

'Hildern' was built in the late 1840s for David Heckscher, a watchmaker and jeweller. Heckscher got into financial difficulties and had to sell the property to repay his debts. John James (c1794-1863), a wine and spirit merchant, bought 'Hildern' in 1850 and over the next forty years it was rented out to various tenants. William Gilchrist Watt (c1840-1914) bought the property in 1893. Watt lived at 'Hildern' until his death at which time the property passed to his wife, Catherine. Catherine paid for the construction of St James the Apostle Church which is located a few hundred metres away on the corner of Elizabeth Street and Rupert Avenue. The Church was dedicated in the memory of William Gilchrist Watt by the Bishop of Tasmania in 1918.Catherine died in 1919 and bequeathed Hildern to the Church of England in Tasmania as the Rectory for St James'. Hildern remained the Rectory for St James' for over sixty years until the 1980s when the Church could no longer afford to maintain it. The Tasmanian Government had to pass legislation - the Church of England (Rectory of St James the Apostle) Act 1980 - to allow the Church to sell the property.It would appear that the building and its accompanying stone barn are still in private hands to this day and appears to be undergoing restoration and conservation of the buildings and grounds.
Source: Photo and text G. Ritchie
Link: https://ontheconvicttrail.blogspot.com/2014/05/hildern.html
Main Information & Text Source – Australian Heritage Database

Other buidings possibly by James Thomson:
St Andrew’s Evandale has not previously been attributed to James Thomson. It is proposed here on the basis of connections within the Presbyterian church and the re-iteration of the same pattern book source.



St Andrews Uniting Church, Evandale
Source: Copyright photo and text - G. Ritchie, "no architect has ever been identified..."
Link: https://ontheconvicttrail.blogspot.com/2017/10/st-andrews-uniting-church-evandale.html

1853: Captain Goldsmith's vote for James Thomson
In 1853 ahead of the launch of his twin ferry Kangaroo, Captain Goldsmith foresaw the need for suitable wharves on either side of the River Derwent - at Bellerive (Kangaroo Point) and at Hobart - where carriers could load and unload passengers and cartage safely. Those wharves would be a key factor in the ferry's success. Needing the right candidate in the 1853 Hobart City Council aldermanic elections who could realize the sort of wharf construction he envisaged, he put his support behind building contractor James Alexander Thomson.

TRANSCRIPT
MUNICIPAL ELECTION.

NOMINATION OF CANDIDATES.
THE nomination of candidates to fill the seat in the Municipal Council, rendered vacant by the absence of Mr. Oldham, took place, yesterday, at noon, in the New Market.
Mr. T. J. CROUCH officiated for the Sheriff, and having read the authority under which he noted, called upon some elector to propose Mr. Murphy, who had been first in the field.
Mr. E. H. COLE had " much pleasure" in proposing Mr. Dennis Murphy, as "is fit and proper person," etc.
Mr. JOHN MOORE: seconded the nomination, ASKIN MORRISON, Esq., M.L.C., proposed Mr. J. A. Thompson [sic - Thomson] as a candidate, for the vacant office.
Capt. GOLDSMITH, in seconding the nomination, drew attention to Mr. Thompson's [sic] professional experience, as a qualification of which his opponent could not boast.
Mr. MURPHY, who is no "stump-orator," briefly thanked his supporters, and expressed a hope that by four o'clock next day they would place him at the head of the poll.
MR. J. A THOMPSON [sic] also'briefly'acknowledged the kindness and zeal with which he had been supported. Captain Goldsmith had kindly expressed an opinion that his (Mr. Thompson's [sic - Thomson's] professional knowledge might be serviceable to the city, and he assured them, that if elected, his services should be ever at the command of the corporation. Mr. Thompson [sic] proceeded to show that he had been engaged both by the commissioners and the present corporation to prepare the assessments of the city, and, as a proof of the correctness of his judgment in such matters, he stated that although there were 4000 separate assessments in one case, and 4500 in the other, there had been only 10 appeals in the first instance, and 7 in the second. The electors might therefore place some confidence in his professional knowledge. Having stated that neither his committee nor himself had entered the contest with any ill feeling, he proceeded to allude to some offensive placards which had been issued by his opponent. In one of these it appeared it was insinuated that he would help to increase taxation from self-interested motives ; but he assured them that, having a considerable stake in the city, his " self-interest" consisted in reducing taxation, for in increasing it he taxed himself. He again thanked them for their support hitherto, and asked them for their votes on the morrow.
Mr. Crouch then declared that the poll would be taken in the New Market THIS DAY, Commencing at 9 a.m., and closing at 4 p.m. The meeting then separated.
Source: MUNICIPAL ELECTION (1853, December 13). Colonial Times (Hobart, Tas. : 1828 - 1857), p. 2.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article8774990

1856: Captain Goldsmith's twin ferry "Kangaroo"
Public opinion was divided on the cost and performance of the vehicular steam ferry Kangaroo which was built by Elizabeth Rachel Nevin's uncle Captain Edward Goldsmith in 1854-1855. It was sold to Askin Morrison in 1857, then to James Staines Taylor in 1864 who operated it for the next 40 years. It was still in operation well into the first decades of the 20th century despite the many complaints about its unwieldyness. Bought by the O'May Bros in 1903, its service was terminated in 1925 and replaced by the Lurgerena in 1926.

Twin ferry Kangaroo

Creator Searle, E. W. (Edward William) 1887-1955
Title S.S. Kangaroo, Hobart to Bellerive ferry, Hobart, ca. 1913 [picture] / E.W. Searle
National Library of Australia: Link: https://nla.gov.au:443/tarkine/nla.obj-141891637

This lengthy article published in Tasmanian Daily News, 12 July 1856, was typical of the criticism levelled at Captain Goldsmith and the twin ferry Kangaroo from the very start of its service.

TRANSCRIPT
To the Editor of the. Tasmanian Daily News.

SIR,— Will you allow me a little space in your valuable journal to draw attention to that job of jobs, the Twin Ferry Boat, now plying between Hobart Town and Kangaroo Point. Her proper name is, I believe, the Kangaroo, but she has divers other appellations. She is sometimes called the Malakoff, by others Denison's Folly, and considering that the late Governor was six years in turning out such a rare specimen of engineering, it is to be regretted, that, after an expenditure of nearly £20,000 the concern is such a failure. She won't answer her helm. I crossed in her the other day, and judge of my surprise to find, when she got half way over, a puff of a breeze took her top-hamper, and she luffed right up in the wind, despite the efforts of her helmsman. She was obliged to be backed again, and again, before she could be brought in a line to her wharf. There is a report that she is to go on the patent slip to be cobbled, aud to have rudders of larger size, but the more money spent on her, the more she will want. Her expenses are said to be £15 per diem, and her takings about as many shillings. A profitable Dr. and Cr. account, but then who cares — it is Government. The wise-acres not reflecting that the money comes from the public. How long is this to last ? A private person would be thought insane, if they were to continue, at such a ruinous sacrifice, so expensive a plaything. I understand that the Venus Company have offered to tow the Twins over to town, six times a day for £2000 per annum. Why do not our irresponsible Government accept this offer ? What a saving it would be to the public funds. The small salaries arc docked : the pittance of the poor clerks are reduced, by our paternal rulers, and, at the same time, thousands of pounds are expended on the most wretched specimen of nautical architecture that ever floated on the briny deep, affording a homely illustration of the penny wise, pound foolish policy. We have another outrage on common sense. Not content with building a nondescript vessel, the Government must needs make a worse wharf. The breakwater and drawbridge for the boat at Kangaroo Point, instead of being parallel, as they ought, are at opposite angles, so that almost every time the modern Noah's Ark comes to the jetty, bump she goes against the breakwatcr. She has already knocked away a fourth part of her bulwarks, at a cost of some £38 (more than she has yet taken), from the cause 1 have described. Some say this is the contractor's fault [Ald. Thomson], others that it is a blunder of the Road Department, no inquiry is made. The job microscope was a small affair, a wrongful perversion of the public money in principle, but this twin boat is a wholesale robbery of the people's funds. The expenditure of £30,000 would nearly have completed a tram-way from Kangaroo Point to Richmond: or such a sum spent in town on a Parliament House, would have commemorated the introduction of that distant object — responsible gooverment. It would have afforded proper accommodation to the new Houses, which the patch-work at the Custom House will not, and it would have given employment to our suffering tradesmen and artificers; but our Downing-street nominees think 'otherwise' and venture to try their skill at building a steam bridge, on the plan that existed in days of yore, "when Adam was an oakum boy in Chatham Yard." Connected with this boat, I may call your notice to the 14 Vic. No. 8, which passed the Legislature on the 23rd August, 1850. Sec. 1 enables the Governor, with the advice of the Executive Council, to borrow £5000 for the purchase of suitable ferry boats. Sec. 2 states that actions for damage as ferryman must be brought against the Director of Public Works ; and the last clause states that after the ferryage pays the cost and charges, the residue shall be appropriated to disburse the principal and interest ! The question now is, whether the Kangaroo is "suitable." I think she is not ; and if so, what remedy have the public against a most scandalous mal-appropriation of their money. This should be looked into, and the parties who have attempted to thrust such a nondescript as the Kangaroo on us, on the ground of her being "suitable," should be surcharged for the cost. Warren Hastings was impeached and tried for a less fragrant disbursement of Government money. The 45th section of the Police Act (2 Vic., No. 22) enables the magistrates at Quarter Sessions to determine the ferryage of boats plying on the Derwent; but we have a kind of ukase [Russian - an arbitrary command], signed by Captain King, R.N., fixing the ferry rates for the Twins. Is this legal ? By what authority the respected Port Officer limits the fares I know not; perhaps it is by the usual routine of our rulers — dictation. Connected with this boat, the industry of the hon. member for Hobart Town (Mr. Chapman) caused the correspondence connected with her building to be published. The papers were laid on the Council table on the 11th December last, and they show a most lax way of " Government work." The first letter is from Mr. Kay; dated the 18th September, 1855, which states that the vessel is ready to commence running, whereas it was only within these last few weeks that she did begin to work. No. l is a kind of contract with Captain Goldsmith, surety — "Askin Morrison, merchant, New Wharf" — to build a twin ferry boat at £20 per ton, builders' measurement, with a mem. from Mr. Champ, stating that it would be necessary to have "a proper legal contract" drawn out,— which was never done! No. 2 is a statement of the cost of the boat at that time, amounting to £17,629. The items are curious— salary of engineer, (doing nothing) £492 18s; Captain Goldsmith's claim £9400 on which he took, I am informed £6256. No. 3 is the estimated cost of working the boat £3661 per annum which is now greatly exceeded. The rest of the Council papers are Sir William Denison's voluminous and wordy correspondence with the home Government, on the building of the boat and his statement that the ful [sic fuel] to be consumed — " is a kind of anthracite coal, which burns well, when mixed with wood"— whereas, I am informed the furnances won't burn this said anthracite coal at all.  One of the paragraphs of the Downing-street despatch is very rich : " Although you do not distinctly state from what source the principal of the debt shall be repaid, yet, adverting to the authority given to you by the act, and to your statement of the result of your inquiries into the suffciency of the present traffic at the ferry to bear the costs and charges, as well as the interest of the money raised, I have taken measures without further delay for complying with your requisition, on the assumption that there will be means of paying the principal, as well as the interest, independently of the land fund." [Earl Grey to Sir William Denison, 13th May, 1851. ]
The engineer, Mr. Boden, was engaged on the 11th August, 1853 at £240 per annum; a free passage to the colony, and from it, when his engagement in determined— and £40 for outfit. So that Mr. Boden receives nearly £720, three years pay, before the Twins commences to ply— this is Government red-tapism. From what I have heard, I believe Mr. Boden is an efficient engineer, and the pay is reasonable, but why disburse him three years income for nothing. A private person would not be guilty of conduct so suicidal.
It does not appear in any way, how the £5000 voted by the Legislature, came to be legitimately increased to £20,000. This explanation is necessary and ought to be afforded. Is it a sample of "the secrecy, reserve, and insolence of office," which the President of the Progressive Association, (Mr. Knight) alluded to, in his inaugural address, the other day, on the part of our colonial autocrat— Mr. Champ. The building of the Twins, the correspondence therewith, and the expenditure of thousands of pounds, without authority, is a local specimen of quasi Crimean malversation, which calls loudly for inquiry. It must be remitted to the forthcoming provincial Parliament, but, then that Assembly is postponed until the time of the Greek calends, by our present rulers, who have taken office, and mean to stick to it, according to the laws of meum and tuum: —

"The good rule— the simple plan,
That those should take who have the power,
And those should keep who can."

Yours obediently,
ANTI-HUMBUG
Liberty Plains,
8th July, 1856.
Source: To the Editor of the Tasmanian Daily News. (1856, July 12). The Tasmanian Daily Newsp. 5.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article202388770

RELATED POSTS main weblog

"HOPE": John Nevin's poem on slavery 1863 and the U.S. Proclamation of Emancipation

Family of John NEVIN at Grey Abbey, Ireland 1820s-1850s
Original poetry by John NEVIN written in Tasmania 1860s-1880s
The U.S. Emancipation Proclamation 1863-1866

John Nevin, parish clerk
"Yes, my brother, many did say you made a foolish step but they do not say so now."
Letter from Nevin family, Grey Abbey, Ireland, to John Nevin, Hobart, Tasmania, May 1855.

John Nevin (1808-1887) was born at Grey Abbey, County Down, Ireland to Rebecca (1778-1869) and William Nevin (1770-1824). They lived on the Montgomery estate and were buried in the Greyabbey Church of Ireland graveyard.  William Nevin was the parish clerk for 44 years. Had John Nevin stayed in Ireland, he would have inherited the office of parish clerk from his father. Instead, on arrival at Hobart, Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania) in July 1852 with his wife Mary Ann (Dickson) Nevin and their four children under 12 years old - Thomas James, Rebecca Jane, Mary Anne and William John - he settled his family on land administered by the Trustees of the Wesleyan Church at Kangaroo Valley (now Lenah Valley) near Hobart. The house he built there for his family was celebrated in his poem "My Cottage in the Wilderness" (1868). The one acre site included a small Wesleyan Chapel and schoolhouse.

John Nevin continued the traditions of parish clerk in Tasmania by administering pastoral care as a teacher of  literacy to adult males, and penning verse and epitaphs for the deceased. He wrote at least three laments, and probably more, which he published in the Tasmanian press as "Original Poetry" or as pamphlets.

In these he lamented: -

Grey Abbey ruins Down Irealnd

Along with Inch Abbey, Greyabbey is the best example of Anglo-Norman Cistercian architecture in Ulster and was the daughter house of Holm Cultram (Cumbria). It was founded in 1193 by Affreca, wife of John de Courcy, the Anglo-Norman invader of East Ulster. Poor and decayed in the late Middle Ages, the abbey was dissolved in 1541 but in the early 17th century was granted to Sir Hugh Montgomery and the nave was refurbished for parish worship until the late 18th century. The remains, in the beautiful parkland setting of the nearby grand house of Rosemount, consist of the church with cloister and surrounding buildings to the south.
Source: Official tourism website for Northern Ireland
Link: https://discovernorthernireland.com/things-to-do/grey-abbey-p675361

John Nevin and war
This medal commemorating the fall of Sebastopol, 1855 was passed down from John Nevin to Thomas and Elizabeth Rachel Nevin, and is currently held by descent in the © KLW NFC Private Collection.

>Medal commemorating the fall of Sebastopol, 1855



Photos © KLW NFC 2009 ARR.
Medallion and photos © KLW NFC Imprint & Private Collection 2009 ARR.

The same medallion is held in the following national collections:

Royal Museums Greenwich, London, (UK)
Link: https://www.rmg.co.uk/collections/objects/rmgc-object-40318
Description:
Medal commemorating the fall of Sebastopol, 1855
Medal commemorating the fall of Sebastopol, 1855. Obverse: Naval trophy of flags of the victors, behind this are the scales of justice, laurel wreath and rays; in front a plaque of a ship sinking in front of a town. In exergue: a snake cut in two among grasses. Legend: 'FALL OF SEBASTOPOL SEP 18th 1855'. Exergue. 'SINOPE HANGO'. Reverse: Laurel wreath surround, bound with a ribbon bearing the name of the allies - 'ENGLAND' 'SARDINIA' 'FRANCE' 'TURKEY'. Inscription: 'THE ALLIES GIVE PEACE TO EUROPE MARCH 30TH 1856.'

National Army Museum, London (UK)
Link: https://collection.nam.ac.uk/detail.php?acc=1963-07-37-1
Description:
Medal commemorating the Fall of Sebastopol and the Treaty of Paris, 1856
This commemorative medal, made of white metal, bears on the obverse the inscription: 'The Allies give peace to Europe March 30th 1856', within a circular laurel wreath bearing the names of the allied countries, England, Sardinia, Turkey and France. The reverse depicts a view of Sevastopol, superimposed upon a trophy of flags, above which is a pair of scales. Below is depicted a snake cut in two, with the words: 'Sinope' and 'Hango', which allude to naval engagements during the Crimean War (1854-1856).

Sinope was a sea port in northern Turkey and on 30 November 1853 a fleet of Russian battleships annihilated a force of Ottoman Empire frigates there. It is often considered to be the last great battle of the epoch of sailing and the first battle of the Crimean War. At Hango on 5 June 1855, a boat conveying ashore the crews of captured Finnish ships was fired on by the Russians with nearly every man being killed.

NAM Accession Number
NAM. 1963-07-37-1
Acknowledgement
Donated by Major F G B Wetherall.

SERVICE in the WEST INDIES, 1820s-30s
John Nevin witnessed slavery at close quarters in the 1820s during his service with the Royal Scots in the West Indies as the campaign for the abolition of slavery led by William Wilberforce gathered momentum in England. John Nevin began service on 7 October 1825, and embarked at Newry in Ireland in October 1826, disembarking at Barbados and proceeding to St. Lucia. By 1832, he had served on Barbados, Trinidad, and St. Lucia. His service in Canada - see this article - was rewarded with a Good Conduct Badge, conferred on 28th February 1837.



Source:https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/C8708867



NOTES from original documents:
Served West Indies from Regiment 1st Foot Private 7 Oct 1825 to 6 Oct 1826 underage
ditto 7 Oct 1826 to 31 May 1841 Amount of service 14 years 237 days

Served West Indies from 30 Nov 1827 to 18 Jan 1836
In Canada from 16 June 1838 to discharge at Chatham ex Horse Guards on medical grounds 1841
Service Record for John Nevin for the years 1825-1841 (12 images, served in First, or Royal Regiment of Foot.
Source: Find My Past for UK Archives

IRELAND and the CRIMEA, 1855
From the perspective of John Nevin's family in Ireland, they were ever thankful that their only brother with service in battle at the Canadian Rebellion of 1839, had returned home to Ireland and migrated to the Antipodes rather than serve in war again. One of his four sisters still living at Grey Abbey informed him in a letter dated May 1855, of the consequences of war in the Crimea causing soldiers' wives, widows and children of the parish to go hungry and without warm clothing. Her contribution was knitting two comforters:
May God increase your store and do not be extravagant only think what our poor soldiers are suffering at the Crimea before Sebastopol cold hunger and nakedness the people here with Mr Montgomery at there back begging for the widows and orphans not a house Escaping there ... no matter how poor it is ... something was expected and something was given Ladys and Gentlemen Children and Servants all that could knit any get all knitting anything and .... thing they thought useful I knit 2 comforters so some unknown shall wear my work I got in one of your letters 2 beautiful sprigs of some kind of heath thank you kindly for it but how sorry I am that I cannot write a better Letter to you I am very willing but fault is in my head not in my heart now without I get poor mother to say me one word she just begins to weep when I ask her ...



This letter addressed to John NEVIN (1808-1887) is held in a Tasmanian Archives research file in his son's name at the Archives Office of Tasmania.
Name: Nevin, Thomas
Record Type: Tasmanian Archives research file
Record ID: NAME_INDEXES:1807228
https://stors.tas.gov.au/NI/1807228

Across the top of the letter she wrote - "3 years without my Brother" - in pencil, underlined. Two siblings from this family of seven children born to Rebecca and William Nevin migrated to Tasmania: their only brother John Nevin as a pensioner guard on the Fairlie (1852), and their married sister Eliza (Nevin) Hurst, known to the family as "Betty" on board the Flora McDonald (1855), together with their respective children. As Eliza Hurst was a widow before leaving for Tasmania, it appears from this letter that she was living with John Nevin and his family soon after her arrival with her son and servant at the house he built at Kangaroo Valley (now Lenah Valley, Hobart) in 1854 on property administered by the Trustees of the Wesleyan Church.

John Nevin's poem "Hope" 1863
John Nevin published his poem in five stanzas on the injustice of slavery, titled "Hope" in the Weekly Times, Hobart, Tasmania, 12th September 1863, a few months after Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation, issued 1st January 1863:

HOPE, by John Nevin 1863

Source: Original Poetry, John Nevin, Kangaroo Valley. HOPE. (1863, September 12). The Weekly Times, p. 3.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article233621295

TRANSCRIPT
Original Poetry

HOPE.

Hope, bright ray of heavenly birth,
To toiling mortals given,
To cheer the fainting sons of Earth,
And upwards point to heaven :
It soothes, it checks the rising sigh ;
No creature shares beside,
To man alone the boon is nigh ;
To friends is still denied.

Go ask the fettered galley-slave,
What cheers his manly mind.
To tug and toil through wind and wave,
Yet seems to be resign'd :
He'll tell thee there is still a ray
Of sacred hope, impress'd
(As on he drags from day to day)
Within that aching breast.

Ask him who ploughs the treacherous main,
When wave on wave is hurl'd,
And nought but fearful terrors reign
Upon the watery world;
What nerves his arm amid the gale,
Tho' death his in the blast;
He'll tell thee, he yet hopes to hail
His native home at last.

But what must cheer the Infidel ?
Oh ! where is then his hope ?
Go ask him, but he cannot tell,
What bears his spirits up.
When the pale horse to him appears,
With ghastly rider on ;
To him the awful summons bears,
His earthly race is run.

Then ask the christian where is his ;
He'll point thee to the skies ;
He looks by faith to future bliss,
To which he hopes to rise.
Hope brightens as he nears the tomb,
It whispers soft and sweet;
He looks and longs to be at home,
Where parted friends he'll meet.

J. NEVIN.
Kangaroo Valley.

Source: HOPE. (1863, September 12). The Weekly Times (Hobart Town, Tas. : 1863), p. 3.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article233621295

The Text:
This poem is written in five stanzas. Each stanza has two quatrains, the first separated by a colon, or semi-colon or full-stop from the second. The last word of each line within each quatrain alternates the sounds in the rhyming pattern ABAB; CDCD, eg. in the second stanza, A (slave) B (mind) A (wave) B (resign'd); C (ray) D (impress'd) C (day) D (breast).

John Nevin chose lexis with simple one and two syllable words to compose a rhythm - e.g. da DE da DE da DE da DE (trochaic tetrameter) - that stresses the second syllable in every two syllables per foot, with eight syllables per metre in the first line of the quatrain, and six in the second line of the quatrain - e.g. in the last stanza. The few exceptions are three syllables in the words "heavenly", "treacherous" and "Infidel". His choice of words at the end of line that rhyme - ABAB; CDCD in each stanza - for the most part are clean. Some are "imperfect" or assonant and do not quite rhyme - e.g. "tomb" and "home" in the last stanza, but those differences may not necessarily matter in the dialect spoken by the reader.

The Tenor:
John Nevin was an Irish Wesleyan, a teacher and above all, an optimist. The first stanza of his poem reflects contemporary beliefs in a hierarchy of life on earth, where human beings ranked superior to animals in all capacities of feeling and thought. His assertion and assumption is that "hope" is known only by humans - by "man", not by "creatures." The "friends denied" - who are denied this capacity for hope in the last line of the first stanza must therefore refer to animals - perhaps literally, perhaps not.

The second and third stanzas are devoted to the fear, hardship and injustice of the galley slave far from his native home. His faith is "sacred hope", equal to the "christians" of the last stanza, and ranked above the disbelievers who are without hope in the third stanza. John Nevin poses this as a proposition that is both unreal and yet certain, resolved through the potential of "Hope". These modalities of  the subjunctive mood - as in "if you were to ask him this you will hear him tell you that x=y"  - signal obligation, prediction, probablity, certainty, and potentiality which he deploys repetitively:  the imperative - he tells his addressee "Go ask" each of the three participants - the slave,  the Infidel, and the christian - and the prediction - "he'll tell thee/point thee" - to the answer, "Hope" made concrete through personification: it  "whispers soft and sweet". 

The "Infidel" of the fourth stanza - the metonymic entity signalled by the capital "I" though otherwise not defined by whatever failings John Nevin has in mind - will experience death without hope for future revelation, best understood by his readers through the only metaphor in this poem - the pale horse ridden by the figure of death of apocalypse literature.

The final stanza strongly affirms the christian (not capitalised) belief in an after-life as the home where departed friends await, a state of "future bliss". The christian message is all about optimism: finding and keeping faith in a better future improves one's health, it uplifts one's mood.

The Context:
John Nevin was still a teenager when he was attested into the Royal Scots First of Foot Regiment at Newtonards, the city depot close to his birth place at Grey Abbey, County Down, Ireland. His deployment was to the British West Indies from 1826 to 1835 during the campaign for the abolition of slavery led by William Wilberforce in England. With comrade-in-arms, James William Chisholm, Armorer in the Royal Regiment, he served in the West Indies and at the Canadian Rebellion of 1839. The Slavery Abolition Act came into law on 1st August 1834 when slavery was ostensibly abolished throughout British possessions abroad.

Published in August 1863 just a month prior his poem "Hope", these lines from John Nevin's poem titled "WRITTEN on the much-lamented death of the late JAMES WILLIAM CHISHOLM, of Hobart Town, a native of Edinburgh, aged 61 years" (Weekly Times, 29 August, 1863, p.6), refer to Chisholm's return to the West Indies where by then, there was the  "emancipated slave,"  a sharply contradictory oxymoron. 
Again he cross’d the Atlantic’s wave,
To sultry Indies’ feverish soil.
Where the emancipated slave
Beneath the lash no longer toil.
Read more about this poem by John Nevin in this article here.

Mary Ann Nevin nee Dickson John Nevin Tasmanian 1874

Thomas J. Nevin's portraits of his parents Mary Ann (Dickson) Nevin and John Nevin ca. 1872
Copyright ⓒ KLW NFC Imprint & Private Collection 2007

Manstealing: slavery in the Tasmanian press 1863
Lengthy articles on slavery appeared regularly in the Tasmanian press during 1863. This report on the cajoling, capture and killing of men from the South Pacific Islands of Tahiti, Rapa (French Polynesia), Raratonga and Mangaia (Cook Islands) would pose concern for whaling interests working out of Hobart's harbour. Mrs Phyllis Seal, for example, proprietess of the brig Grecian which was a former slaver and six-gun man-of-war that joined a whaling expedition in 1861, had to deal with the mutiny inspired by its captain Thomas John McGrath. A short time out near the Chatham Islands, he proposed to the crew -
... that they should take the vessel and keep her for themselves, and go on a slaving expedition amongst the South Sea Islands, as he said, that would pay them much better than whaling, and they could dispose of the living freight on the Brazilian coast....
See Addenda 3 below for the full report:(Mercury 3 December 1863, page 2).

Mrs Phyllis Seal ca. 1866 photo by Nevin & Smith

Shipping pioneer Phyllis Seal, (1807-1877) wife of Charles Seal, who managed the operations of their fleet of whaling ships and oil sales on his sudden death in 1852.
Maritime Museum of Tasmania (b & w copy, tinted)
Photographer: Thomas Nevin, of the firm Nevin & Smith, 140 Elizabeth St. Hobart Tasmania, 1866

This photograph of a bemused Phyllis Seal wearing a fabulous taffeta dress threaded in silver was taken by Thomas J. Nevin at his studio, 140 Elizabeth St. Hobart while in partnership with photographer Robert Smith (1866-1868) operating as the firm Nevin & Smith.

Taking islanders into slavery to work on plantations was called "blackbirding" in Australia. The first article (below) published in April 1863 reported atrocities committed on the islanders from Rapa and how they turned the tables on their captors to seize the brig Cora, taking it back to Papeete:



Extract - TAHITI. (1863, April 23). The Mercury (Hobart, Tas. : 1860 - 1954), p. 3.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article8817170

TRANSCRIPT
TAHITI
PIRACY AND MANSTEALING: FRIGHTFUL ATROCITIES
(From the Messager de Tahiti, Feb. 28.)
It would appear upon it that an expedition for manstealing has lately been fitted out from the port of Callao, Peru, ostensibly for the purpose of colonization, virtually for the purposes of slavery. Of this fleet, one brig and one schooner are now in Papeiti Harbour, one captured by the French steamer Latouche Treville, and the other by the natives of Rapa; and a barque which innocently walked into the net by coming in for water. So much of these reports,&c, as are necessary to give some idea of the atrocities that have been enacted are here translated.
The Imperial Commissioner commanding in Society Islands and their dependencies, considers that the greater publicity ought to be given to the intelligence that comes to him from all quarters relative to certain hitherto unheard-of events for which no parallel has been found since the repression and dispersion of the Mediterranean corsaires. It is in consequence of the orders of the commissioner that the following documents are published:
[The documents which follow contain the reports of statements and depositions made by various persons persons of a most extraordinary character for which we cannot find space in our present issue. The nature of the infamous transactions now revealed will be learnt from the subjoined brief official report.]
Report on an enquiry made before the Court of the Procureur Imperial of the Tribunals of the Protectorate of the Society Islands, on the subject of the motives that induced the natives of the Isle of Rapa to seize the Peruvian brig Cora, and conduct her to Papeete.
Papeite, Feb. 21.
" To the Chief of the Judicial Service,
"Sirs - I have concluded the enquiry relative to the Peruvian brig Cora, and I have the honor to report as follows. This enquiry has led to the discovery of the following facts. The Cora sailed from Callao on the 4th December, 1862, with the object of recruiting colonists in Oceanica. Arrived at Easter Island on December 19th. She there met seven other ships of the same nation, all bound upon the same cruise. The captains of these vessels fearing that they would not be able to obtain a sufficient number of natives by persuasion, determined to carry them off by three and on the 23rd December a band of twentyfour of those ruffians, amongst whom were seven or eight men of the Cora, landed armed, under the command of the captain of the Rosa Carmen. The greater part of them concealed themselves in the vicinity, whilst several of those left behind endeavored to attract the natives by showing them articles calculated to excite their cupidity. When the natives had assembled to the number of about 500, the chief of the pirates gave the concerted signal, which was a pistol-shot. To this signal the men replied by a general discharge, and about ten Indians fell, never to rise again. The others, frightened, tried to fly in every direction, some throwing themselves into the sea, others scaling the rocks ; but about 200 were seized, and carefully secured. One witness assured the Court that the Captain of the Cora, Aquire, having discovered two Indians endeavoring to conceal themselves in a crevice of the rocks, and not being able to induce them to come out to him, had the atrocious cruelty to deliberately kill them both. The two hundred Indians carried off were shared between the different vessels, which set sail a few days afterwards. Whilst other atrocities that this inquiry has brought to light were being committed on board the other vessels, the Cora repaired to Rapa, in the hope of committing new acts of plunder and piracy. But the natives of this island took possession in time of the ship and crew, and forwarded them under careful watch to Tahiti. Thus French justice has put her hand upon a band of malefactors of the worst kind, who have violated every right of humanity and nationality, and who cannot fail to meet the just chastisement of their misdeeds.
SAVIGERIE
The above account was published in the Mercury on 23 April 1863. Four months later, this response (below) concerning the Peruvian slavers came from a missionary stationed at Mangaia (Mercury,17 August 1863, page 3).



TRANSCRIPT
PERUVIAN SLAVERS.
Some additional news of the Peruvian pirates is furnished by a letter from one of the missionaries at Mangaia, to his brother, Mr. Gill, of Malmesbury, Victoria. The Rev. Mr. Gill thus describes what took place on his return to Mangaia, after a short absence :-
"We were greatly distressed at finding that the King's favorite son and intended successor and four others, had been stolen away into slavery of the worst kind. Three Callao [Peru] slavers have been here this year, but two of them got nobody here.  But we know that other islands have been depopulated. From the Penrhyn [Cook Islands] upwards of 250 have been carried off and sold in Peru at £20 per head, and yet, as far as I know, no British man-of-war is cruising after these nefarious wretches. Five native evangelists have been trapped, and have doubtless been sold into slavery. Two of the five teachers are natives of Mangaia, and have been laboring with success on a neighboring island for several years. The other three are natives of Raratonga. My blood boils when I think of these things. Within twenty yards of the room where I write lives a pious woman, the mother of a large family. Alas ! for her husband; for he was one of the five stolen away. ' I trust that the British Government will insist upon the restoration of the captives to their respective homes. As we voyaged in the John Williams [missionary ship wrecked Cook Islands May 1864] we traced out upwards of 500 who have been thus carried away into, hopeless captivity. How many hundreds more have been taken away from other islands, it is of course hard to conjecture. And is all this to be allowed by England? I have written to England on the subject, also to H.B.M.'s Consul at Tahiti."
PERUVIAN SLAVERS. (1863, August 17). The Mercury (Hobart, Tas. : 1860 - 1954), p. 3.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article8819995

The U.S. Emancipation Proclamation 1863-1866
Thomas Nast’s "(?) Slavery is Dead (?)" appeared in the January 12, 1867, edition of Harper’s Weekly. Created five years after the Emancipation Proclamation, a year and two months after the ratification of the 13th Amendment and nine months after the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1866, the image depicts the failure of each to fully protect African Americans. Two images, one depicting an African American being sold into slavery as punishment for a crime and a second depicting an African American being whipped as a punishment for a crime, draw attention to the ability of state governments to work around those three legal acts.
TRANSCRIPTION:
https://iowaculture.gov/sites/default/files/history-education-pss-reconstruction-slaverydead-transcription.pdf



Title: (?) Slavery is dead (?) / Th Nast.
Creator(s): Nast, Thomas, 1840-1902, artist
Date Created/Published: 1867.
Medium: 1 print : wood engraving ; page 40 x 27 cm.
Summary: Two illustrations showing: enslaved man being sold as punishment for crime, before Emancipation Proclamation; and an African-American man being whipped as punishment for crime in 1866.
Reproduction Number: LC-DIG-ppmsca-71960 (digital file from original) LC-USZ62-108003 (b&w film copy neg.)
Rights Advisory: No known restrictions on publication.
Call Number: Illus. in AP2.H32 Case Y [P&P]
Repository: Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA https://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print
Notes: Illus. in: Harper's weekly, 1867 Jan. 12, p. 24.



Title: Emancipation Proclamation / del., lith. and print. by L. Lipman, Milwaukee, Wis.
Creator(s): Lipman, L. (Louis),
Date Created/Published: Madison, Wis. : Published & sold by Martin & Judson, c1864 Feb. 26.
Medium: 1 print : lithograph, color ; sheet 88.7 x 53.2 cm.
Summary: Print shows at center the text of the Emancipation Proclamation with vignettes surrounding it; on the left are scenes related to slavery and on the right are scenes showing the benefits attained through freedom; also shows Justice and Columbia at the top center beneath a bald eagle and a portrait of Abraham Lincoln at bottom center above a scene of former slaves giving thanks.
Reproduction Number: LC-DIG-pga-02040 (digital file from original print)
Rights Advisory: No known restrictions on publication.
Call Number: PGA - Lipman (L.)--Emancipation Proclamation (D size) [P&P]
Repository: Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print
https://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/2003671404/

TRANSCRIPT of the Proclamation
Source: The U.S. National Archives and Records Administration
https://www.archives.gov/exhibits/featured-documents/emancipation-proclamation
https://www.archives.gov/exhibits/featured-documents/emancipation-proclamation/transcript.html
January 1, 1863

A Transcription
By the President of the United States of America:

A Proclamation.

Whereas, on the twenty-second day of September, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty-two, a proclamation was issued by the President of the United States, containing, among other things, the following, to wit:

"That on the first day of January, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty-three, all persons held as slaves within any State or designated part of a State, the people whereof shall then be in rebellion against the United States, shall be then, thenceforward, and forever free; and the Executive Government of the United States, including the military and naval authority thereof, will recognize and maintain the freedom of such persons, and will do no act or acts to repress such persons, or any of them, in any efforts they may make for their actual freedom.

"That the Executive will, on the first day of January aforesaid, by proclamation, designate the States and parts of States, if any, in which the people thereof, respectively, shall then be in rebellion against the United States; and the fact that any State, or the people thereof, shall on that day be, in good faith, represented in the Congress of the United States by members chosen thereto at elections wherein a majority of the qualified voters of such State shall have participated, shall, in the absence of strong countervailing testimony, be deemed conclusive evidence that such State, and the people thereof, are not then in rebellion against the United States."

Now, therefore I, Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States, by virtue of the power in me vested as Commander-in-Chief, of the Army and Navy of the United States in time of actual armed rebellion against the authority and government of the United States, and as a fit and necessary war measure for suppressing said rebellion, do, on this first day of January, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty-three, and in accordance with my purpose so to do publicly proclaimed for the full period of one hundred days, from the day first above mentioned, order and designate as the States and parts of States wherein the people thereof respectively, are this day in rebellion against the United States, the following, to wit:

Arkansas, Texas, Louisiana, (except the Parishes of St. Bernard, Plaquemines, Jefferson, St. John, St. Charles, St. James Ascension, Assumption, Terrebonne, Lafourche, St. Mary, St. Martin, and Orleans, including the City of New Orleans) Mississippi, Alabama, Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, and Virginia, (except the forty-eight counties designated as West Virginia, and also the counties of Berkley, Accomac, Northampton, Elizabeth City, York, Princess Ann, and Norfolk, including the cities of Norfolk and Portsmouth[)], and which excepted parts, are for the present, left precisely as if this proclamation were not issued.

And by virtue of the power, and for the purpose aforesaid, I do order and declare that all persons held as slaves within said designated States, and parts of States, are, and henceforward shall be free; and that the Executive government of the United States, including the military and naval authorities thereof, will recognize and maintain the freedom of said persons.

And I hereby enjoin upon the people so declared to be free to abstain from all violence, unless in necessary self-defence; and I recommend to them that, in all cases when allowed, they labor faithfully for reasonable wages.

And I further declare and make known, that such persons of suitable condition, will be received into the armed service of the United States to garrison forts, positions, stations, and other places, and to man vessels of all sorts in said service.

And upon this act, sincerely believed to be an act of justice, warranted by the Constitution, upon military necessity, I invoke the considerate judgment of mankind, and the gracious favor of Almighty God.

In witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed.

Done at the City of Washington, this first day of January, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty three, and of the Independence of the United States of America the eighty-seventh.

By the President: ABRAHAM LINCOLN
WILLIAM H. SEWARD, Secretary of State.



Description: President Barack Obama views the Emancipation Proclamation with a small group of African American seniors, their grandchildren and some children from the Washington, D.C. area, in the Oval Office, Jan. 18, 2010. This copy of the Emancipation Proclamation, which is on loan from the Smithsonian Museum of American History, was hung on the wall of the Oval Office today and will be exhibited for six months, before being moved to the Lincoln Bedroom where the original Proclamation was signed by Abraham Lincoln on Jan. 1, 1863.
Date 18 January 2010
Source The Official White House Photostream [1]
Author White House (Pete Souza) / Maison Blanche (Pete Souza)
Source:https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:President_Barack_Obama_views_the_Emancipation_Proclamation_in_the_Oval_Office_2010-01-18.jpg

ADDENDA

1. The slave ship Cora
THE SLAVE-TRADE; The Bark Cora, of New-York, Captured on the African Coast. SEVEN HUNDRED AFRICANS ON BOARD, History of the Vessel and Her Movements List of Her Cargo. New York Times, 8 December, 1860
Link: https://www.nytimes.com/1860/12/08/archives/the-slavetrade-the-bark-cora-of-newyork-captured-on-the-african.html
Within the last six weeks 2,221 recaptured Africans have been sent to Monrovia, having been captured on board the following vessels by our present African squadron, viz.: The ship Erie, of New-York, captured by the steamer Mohican, Commander S.W. GODON, on the 8th of August, with 997 slaves on board. The brig Storm King also captured on the 8th of August, by the steamer San Jacinto, Capt. T.A. DORNING, and having on board 619 slaves; and the bark Cora, captured by the flagship Consultation, Capt. JOHN S. NICHOLAS, in the vicinity of Manque Grande, with 705. The last-named was amply fitted out for a long voyage, and in her cabin was found every luxury suitable for a tropical climate, consisting of the choicest wines, preserved meats, fruits. &c., &c. Previous to taking her departure for Monrovia, a boatload of these stores was transferred to the Constellation, for the use of the 'ward-room officers,' which is in direct violation of an article of an act for the better government of the Navy. For an offence somewhat similar, five of the crew of the Constellation were tried by a summary court-martial in December, 1859, and their pay taken from them and otherwise punished.

The bark Cora, as already stated, hailed from New-York. She was a fine vessel, of 431 tons register, built in Baltimore in 1851, from which port she was engaged in the South American trade. She was afterwards purchased by E.D. MORGAN & Co., who finally sold her to JOHN LATHAM for $14,000, and on the 4th of May, 1860, a register was issued to him from the New-York Custom house as master and owner. The Cora was immediately taken to Pier No. 52 East River, where important changes were made in her rig, with the evident design of increasing her spead as a sailer. Her hold was stowed with a large number of casks, which were filled with fresh water; and provisions, lumber and other articles in large quantities, such as usually constitute a slaver's cargo, were put on board. These suspicious circumstances were reported to Mr. ROOSAVELT, the United States District-Attorney, and on the 19th of May she was arrested and examined upon a charge of being about to engage in the slave-trade. The proceedings were in the United States District Court, by which appraisers were appointed, who estimated, the value of the vessel at $9,000, and the cargo at $13,128 23 -- total, $22,128 23, and she was accordingly bonded for that amount, ROBERT GRIFFITH and CHARLES NEWMANN becoming joint sureties for the vessel.

On the 27th of May the Cora was recleared at the Custom-house and proceeded on her "trading voyage." The next intelligence we have of the Cora she is overhauled by the United States ship Constellation, on the 25th of September, when eighty miles off the Congo River, having 705 Africans on board, a person giving his name as LORETTO RINTZ, but who is really supposed to be the identical JOHN LATHAM, being in command. The officers who captured the Cora represent her as a very fast sailer, which scarcely any vessel except the Constellation could have outsailed.
Wilburn Hall's long autobiographical piece, "Capture of the Slave-ship Cora" which appeared in the periodical Century, Vol. 48, 1894, pp 115-129, is a comprehensive account of the chase by the US ship Constellation, engravings included. Available for download at Victorian Voices.



The sloop Constellation capturing the slaver bark Cora in 1860. Artwork by Arthur L. Disney, Sr.
Courtesy of the Navy Art Collection.   NHHC Photograph Collection, NH 55353-KN (Color).
National Museum of the US Navy
Link: https://www.history.navy.mil/content/history/museums/nmusn/explore/prior-exhibits/2020/anti-slave-trade-patrols.html

2. Penrhyn and the Callao slavers
In the early 1860s, Penrhyn was almost completely depopulated by Peruvian blackbirding expeditions. In 1862 the ship Adelante took hundreds of Tongarevans aboard, ostensibly to transport them to a nearby island as agricultural workers.[6] The Tongarevans went willingly: coconut blight had led to famine, while the local missionaries saw work overseas as a way of bring money to the atoll to pay for larger churches. Once on board, they were shackled in the hold and guarded day and night.[7] 253 survived the voyage to reach Callao in Peru, where they were sold for between $100 and $200 each.[8] Further slaving expeditions followed, and in total 472 Tongarevans were sold in Peru.
Source: Wikipedia
Penrhyn atoll,https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penrhyn_atoll

3. The "Grecian" and Mrs Seal
A SLAVER IN THE SOUTH SEAS. About two years ago, the brig Grecian, of about 210 tons burthen, commanded by Thos John M'Grath, sailed from Hobart Town on a whaling expedition. The vessel had a crew of 21 sailors on board, and everything in capital order for a successful voyage When the brig was out about a week she called at Botany Bay for a "lady friend" of the captain's and then commenced her cruise, which lasted about fifteen months. During this period about six and a-half tons of oil were collected. The vessel then put into Wellington, the oil was sold, and the crew partly changed for a set of Maories, Portugese, and Swedish seamen.
She was then fitted out in a very suspicious manner, but no notice was taken of the circumstance by the authorities, as they considered that the captain was well known as an experienced whaler. The vessel being originally a six gun man-of-war brig, very little was required to make her a very dangerous craft, and after a few weeks had elapsed she sailed away from the coast of New Zealand, and made for the Chatham Isles, which she reached in February last. A man named John Turner joined the brig at this place and signed articles for about four months, with the understanding that the captain should land him at New Zealand or in the Australian colonies. The vessel then sailed, and shortly after being out of sight of land, M'Grath called up the crew and proposed that they should take the vessel and keep her for themselves, and go on a slaving expedition amongst the South Sea Islands, as he said, that would pay them much better than whaling, and they could dispose of the living freight on the Brazilian coast. Turner and eight others refused to join in this barbarous enterprise and demanded as their right that they should be landed at some port where a British Consul officiated.
M'Grath then sailed for Nieu or Savage Island lying to the eastward of the Tongan Group. Here he landed Turner and his seven companions. They had only set foot on the desolate shore when a white missionary informed them that the natives would only allow them five minutes to get away from the island, or they would forfeit their lives. The second mate of the brig, named Travis, who had charge of the boat, brought the unfortunate men back to the vessel, and was heartily abused by M'Grath, who told him that he ought to have left the men on the rocks, without paying any attention to what the natives had said. Turner then again, on behalf of himself and his companions asked M'Grath to land then at any port where there was a British consul.
The brig now made for Samoa, or the Navigators' Island and touched at one of the group called Tutuilla, where the natives were killing and eating each other daily. Turner, together with his men, were landed on the north-east side of this savage coast, where they remainedd seventeen days, and had to give the natives all they possessed in money and clothes amounting to about fourteen dollars, for which consideration they were taken to the other side of the Island, where the British consular agent, Mr.Unkin, resided.
This gentleman treated them very kindly, but could do next to nothing for them as he had only at his command an open boat, in which they started for Upola (another of the Navigator group), a distance of seventy miles, which place they succeeded in reaching in two days without food or water, - having nothing to keep them alive but a few cocoa nuts. This was about the middle of last June. On arriving at Upolu, Mr. McFarlane the British consul, took: them under his protection. While they were there, a man named Bryan, who was a seaman on board of the "Grecian," arrived from the Fijis in a ship belonging to an oil merchant named Hanslem, residing at Upolu. This person had formerly been in the 65th Regiment, and had joined the brig at Wellington, New Zealand. Bryan stated that after Turner and his party had left the ship, the brig went to the Friendly Islands and put into Tongataboo. After offering to trade with the natives - one hundred and thirty of whom, including women and children, came on board to dine at McGrath's invitation, the hatches were then battened down, and the Grecian" was got under weigh. But Bryan refused to stop on board any longer and he was allowed to go ashore at Ovalo, one of the Fiji Islands, distant about three hundred miles from Tongataboo.
The brig then sailed for Lima, Peru, in order that M'Grath might dispose of his human cargo. Bryan obtained a passage to Upolu in the vessel before mentioned. Five of Turner's party then left Upolu, on a cruise in an American whaling ship, called the Desdemona, and the remainder waited until they were sent up to Sydney, where they arrived about six weeks ago. From Sydney they made their way to Hobart Town, where they had an interview with Mrs Seal, the proprietress of the Grecian; but this lady said she could do nothing for the unfortunate man, and it would be too expensive to send a vessel after M'Grath, which she could otherwise do, as his articles had expired last May. Turner then got a situation as cook and steward on board of the Urania, now lying at the Australian wharf, which trades between this port and Hobart Town.

Herald, Nov 28th.
Source: A SLAVER IN THE SOUTH SEAS. (1863, December 3). The Mercury (Hobart) p. 2.
Link: https://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article8822887

RELATED POSTS main weblog