Mitre Peak, Milford Sound New Zealand - photo JM Stewart 1987 |
Reading about the Grono family reunion being held in the Ebenezer Church Grounds, Coromandel Road, NSW Australia on 3rd May 2015 got me thinking about the links of this family to New Zealand.
Back on
3 May 1799 - 216 years ago - Captain
John Grono and Elizabeth Grono ( nee Bristow) arrived on Australian
shores at Port Jackson , Sydney aboard the naval store ship HMS Buffalo. With
the Grono parents were two of their daughters - Elizabeth and Jane ( born
aboard ship at Cape Town ). They shared the journey with 68 cattle loaded aboard at
Cape Town , South Africa on the way by Captain William Raven, Captain
Grono crewed on this journey as
boatswain.
Coromandel Road at Ebenezer was named for the
ship Coromandel which bought eight
families of free immigrants to Port Jackson in June 1802 . These families -
Davison, Hall, Howes, Johnston, Johnstone, Meins, Stubbs and Turnbull
settled together at Portland Head, Ebenezer. They were joined by seven other
families – Arndell ( of First Fleeter Dr. Thomas Arndell) ; Grono ( of
Captain John Grono who came in 1799 with his wife Elizabeth aboard the ship Buffalo); Bushell, Cavanough, Jacklin,
Suddis and Jones.
Both ships which bought those early Ebenezer Setters, carried the same names as two of the ships significant to early European History on the Coromandel Peninsula of New Zealand. HMS Coromandel in 1820 - for which namesake the town of Coromandel takes its name; HMS Buffalo which was shipwrecked in 1840 at Whitianga. The early ships His Majesty's Coromandel and His Majesty's store ship Buffalo were not the same ships as came to Coromandel Peninsula.
However Captain John Grono and several family members did spend considerable time on seal fisheries of the Fiordland coasts, South Island, New Zealand.
Seal and Whale Fisheries New Zealand
The early days of " hard graft" in the Royal British navy for Welsh born Captain John Grono, fitted him for the Seal Fisheries in the early 1800's. Out of Port of Sydney and up and down the coasts of Fiordland, New Zealand - into the many Sounds on this coastline. Conditions in the open seas of this area were harsh, rugged terrain , the weather cold and wet, with snow in Winter months. Many were the shipwrecks and loss of lives. It was nothing for the men to be away for anything up to eighteen months, sometimes even as long as three years. As in the instance of the ten men of the brigantine sealer Active left marooned on Secretary Island lying between Doubtful and Thompson Sounds.
Left with a whaleboat, an adze, an axe, and drawing knife the men's diet was reduced to
seal meat, fern roots, fish and shellfish - these eked out dry provisions, salted meat and rum they were
left with. The Active gone to get supplies from Sydney never returned, the whaleboat sprang a leak
when the men attempted to leave Secretary Island . There they stayed until arrival of Captain Grono in the sealing
schooner Governor Bligh.
Halls Arm Doubtful Sound - Photo JM Stewart early 1980's |
Two of the men from
the Active - Alexander Books and Robert McKenzie after rescue in 1813 later became
son--in-laws of Captain Grono . Along with Captain Wiseman another
son--in-law all three were involved with the sea and ships.
Captain Wiseman's
marriage to Maria Grono in 1829 was short lived. Industry was shipwrecked in
February 1831 at Codfish Island, Easy Harbour, Stewart Island , with the loss of Captain Wiseman, ten men
and six Maori woman . Only Chaseland, his wife and George Moss survived.
In the early 1800s
Grono was recorded as Master of the 18 ton
sloop Speedwell owned by Andrew
Thompson; in 1805, the schooner Governor Bligh in 1807; Unity in 1809; Governor
Bligh in 1811 ; Branch
Towards the 1820's
Grono added to his sealer's expertise that of ship builder. Four of the ships that came out of Grono's Hawkesbury shipyard are the brig Elizabeth
(84 tons), 1821; Industry (87 tons), 1826; the barque Bennelong -her name
changed shortly after to Australian (279 tons), 1829; and the
schooner Governor Bourke (250 tons),
1833.
Working the seal
fisheries and whaling in the Southern Oceans and New Zealand Coasts led to
exploration of the various bays, islands and Sounds. Often while the men were
sealing, the Master would take the ship looking for more seals. Captain John
Grono was attributed with naming the following during his travels:
Milford Haven -
though to be named in 1812 by Captain John Grono, who was born near Milford Haven in
Wales . The name was later changed in 1851 to Milford Sounds by John Lort
Stokes Captain of the government Survey ship HMS Acheron.
Thompson Sound - said to be named for the owner of the vessel Governor Bligh which Grono was Master of firstly in 1807. Governor Bligh being the vessel from which Grono found the Active in 1813. Thompson managed Governor Bligh's farm which was next to Grono's - on the Hawkesbury River.
Elizabeth Island
- in Doubtful Sound, Named Captain John
Grono(who had a sealing station in Doubtful
sound) after his Wife Elizabeth
Bristow. There is also a bay in Doubtful called Grono Bay named for the Captain
who was said to have had a sealing station there. Also a mountain - Mt. Grono.
Crooked Arm, Doubtful Sound - Photo JM Stewart early 1980's |
Track ,Crooked Arm, Doubtful Sound - Photo JM Stewart early 1980's |
Hall Arm - in Doubtful Sound - said to be named for another of Grono's sons - in - law. George Smith Hall who married the second daughter of John and Elizabeth Grono - Frances.
Hall Arm, Doubtful Sound - Photo JM Stewart early 1980's |
Grono
was attributed with also naming Caswell, Nancy, George and Bligh Sounds - also on the South West Coasts of Fiordland, South Island.
Map courtesy McLintock, A.H. , A Descriptive Atlas of New Zealand, Wellington, New Zealand: R.E. Owen, Government Printer, 1960 |
Foveaux Strait -
Until 1809 it is likely the Strait was known but it was not until Grono gave
the designation Foveaux to a stretch of waterway that was before unnamed.
"SHIP NEWS. Yesterday arrived from the Southward
the Governor Bligh colonial vessel, Mr. Grono, master, with upwards of 10,000
fur seal skins. The 31st of January she fell in with the brig Fox at sea, with
about the same complement. The Fox had lost her anchors and cables, and was
very short of water, which latter want Mr. Grono relieved as far as was in his
power. In a new discovered Strait which cuts off the South Cape of New Zealand
from the main land, fell in about the middle of February with the Pegasus, Captain Bunker,
who had been pretty successful ; and learned from him, that he had spoke the Antipode schooner
9 or 10 weeks before, she being then
very short of provisions and upon the return to the Seal-islands to take her
gangs off. In the Strait above-mentioned, which is called Foveaux Strait, the
Pegasus struck on a rock but received little damage ; and he Governor Bligh met a like accident, tho'
with no material injury. The above Strait Mr. Grono describes as being from
about 36 to 40 miles in width, and a very dangerous navigation from the
numerous rocks,shoals, and little islands, with what it is crowded." ( The
Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser
12 /03/1809 P 2)
From Stewart Island looking toward the Mainland ( South Island ) NZ across Foveaux Strait - Photo CRB 2012 |
The barque Australian was the largest vessel built by
Grono. At the time of her launching, on
21 March 1829, it was recorded that she
was the largest ship built in the colony of New South Wales, then and that she was owned by Messrs. Cooper, Levy
and Grono. Australian was intended for
the whaling trade.
In 1836 Captain
Rhodes entered an agreement with Australian's owners on a whaling
expedition to New Zealand and adjacent
waters. The voyages of two
years was recorded in a journal by Captain William Rhodes 1836 - 1838. The
voyages pursuing the whales were
extensive :
" first of all to Banks Peninsula on the east
coast of New Zealand, and then to Tonga; thence to the Kermadecs and by way of
the Three Kings to Lord Howe Island and back to northern New Zealand; from the
Bay of Islands to New Caledonia, and, after sighting the Australian mainland,
eastward again to Tonga; south from Tonga to the waters west of the Chatham
Islands, and finally up the New Zealand coast, with a call for supplies near
East Cape, and back to the northward before returning to Sydney.( Rhodes, W B)
There is a map of the voyage of the Australian in Rhodes Journal.
Whariwharangi Bay Abel Tasman Park top of South Island - near Cook Straits - Photo JM Stewart late 1970's |
Captain John Grono died in 1847 and is buried in the Ebenezer Churchyard. His footsteps 216 years ago from arrival in Australia in 1799 took Grono to many places - some still not easily accessible today. A relevant part of the past both Australian and New Zealand history.
Links with Ebenezer, New South Wales, Australia from NZ
The names - Grono ,Mobbs and Arndell are familiar in my
mother's family tree.
Maria Grono third
daughter of Captain John Grono and Elizabeth Grono ( nee Bristow ) married
William Mobbs son of William Mobbs and Ann Mobbs ( nee Grover ) ;Ann Tomlinson
married brother of William Mobbs - Isaac Mobbs; Phoebe Tomlinson married
youngest brother John Mobbs. William Mobbs snr. and Ann Mobbs started an
orchard on 30 acres at Carlingford.
- Hall-Jones, Gerard, Ed., Handbook to the Fiordland National Park, Fiordland National Park Board, reprinted 1971
- Hall-Jones, John. Doubtfull Harbour, Craig Printing Co. Ltd., Invercargill, 1984
- Ingram Chas W.N. & Wheatley, P Owen, Shipwrecks New Zealand Disasters 1795 – 1936
- Dunedin Book Publishing Association 1936 - Active and Industry
- McLintock, A.H. , A Descriptive Atlas of New Zealand, Wellington, New Zealand: R.E. Owen, Government Printer, 1960 .
- McNab, Robert. 1909. Murihiku: A History of the South Island of New Zealand and the Islands Adjacent and Lying to the South, from 1642 to 1835. Wellington: Whitcombe and Tombs Limited. http://nzetc.victoria.ac.nz/tm/scholarly/name-101200.html accessed 02/05/2015
- Rhodes, W.B. n.d. The Whaling Journal of Captain W. B. Rhodes Barque Australian of Sydney 1836-1838. Christchurch: Whitcombe and Tombs Limited. http://nzetc.victoria.ac.nz/tm/scholarly/tei-RhoWhal.html accessed 02/05/2015
Trove Newspapers
- The Pioneers, The Voice of the North, Thursday 10 March 1932, page 7
- Captain John Grono, Windsor and Richmond Gazette , Friday 26 April 1940, page
- SHIP NEWS. The Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser Sunday 12 March 1809 Page 2
- The Sydney Herald , Monday 18 April 1931 Page 4
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