Showing posts sorted by relevance for query coastal shipping. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query coastal shipping. Sort by date Show all posts

Monday 26 July 2021

Shipping in the Early Days of the Thames Goldfields NZ

 


First written May  2010, update 2021

The Steamer Fleet of the Thames Route

n 1868, Shortland, Grahamstown and Tararu were reliant on coastal shipping (the “coasters”) to move people, machinery, and equipment, gold and of course food supplies to feed hungry prospectors and miners. Thames (Graham’s town, Shortland and Tararu) was evolving into a Goldfields town that was embracing the new era of steam, a technology just evolving in Auckland Province, to drive the stampers in its batteries and the steamers plying to and fro between Thames and Auckland. The steamers were able to make the journey quicker than sailing vessels and not reliant on the wind to get them there.

From the shores of Tararu, Thames, NZ in March 2010 looking across the Hauraki Gulf and Firth of Thames – what in 1867 – 1874 was a very busy sea route with steamers and sailing ships plying to and fro. Photo CRB collection

The Otago Daily Witness wrote of these steamers:

"There is now a fleet of nine steamers, of an aggregate of 320-horse power, and costing 31,600, manned by about 100 men. These steamers, with a single exception, have been built at the port of Auckland, entirely of New Zealand material. Since the 14th of February to the 31st July last, these steamers have conveyed to the Thames 18,000 passengers, and from the Thames 14,000, leaving a margin of 4,000 in favour of the goldfield. The gold forwarded from the local banks at Shortland by these steamers, was 22,000 oz. The aggregate tonnage at Shortland during the same period, was 28,500 tons, independent of the fleet of small sailing vessels, which had been, rather unprofitably employed along the coast previous to the gold discovery at the Thames." (Otago Daily Witness 26/09/1868: p 5)

The Inspector of Steamers  James Stewart C.E. was kept active, conducting sea trials of these new steamers and issuing certificates of seaworthiness. (The trials in themselves occasions of celebration for the dignitaries, owners and local trades people involved in their building) Records of these can be read in the newspapers of the time  and records of Archives NZ. Stewart appointed on 1 July 1866 also had other roles in addition to Inspector of Steamers being Engineer Surveyor, Examiner of Engineers and Adjustor of Compass Fees.

James Stewart also became involved with some of the developments of the new steam engines and boilers being put into these steamers. Design of a boiler for p.s. Alfred. Implementation of Morton’s Patent Ejector Condenser in p.s. Challenger; Supervision of alterations to hull, boiler, and machinery in s.s. Jane; With William Lodder, compound engines to compound  principles into s.s. Star of the South. Stewart took a keen interest in steam engines and their workings, writing
two papers during his years as Inspector of Steamers on performance and running of boilers, read to the Auckland Institute (Branch of the New Zealand Institute.) In later years he was to Presidential Address to this body: -

“In marine engineering we see a most marvellous advance, and it would take all the time at our disposal this night to follow up, step by step, the steady march in the direction of speed and reduction of fuel per unit of power. The double, treble, and quadruple phases of compound engines, with proportionately high initial steam pressure high piston-speed, have worked results which in the early “fifties” would have been declared impossible by nearly all the marine engineers in Great Britain. ( By Jas Stewart. C.E., 1901, p4)

Stewart was to have his office base in Shortland Street he ran his private engineering practice Steamers he was given a room in the new Customs House, and later in the Public Works Department railways. Although base was Auckland, it was possibly a case of more out than in. From steamers to railway survey and construction, there was much involvement with the Thames area and possibly considerable time spent there.

As to the nine steamers referred to in the Otago Daily Witness 1868 , amongst these were Enterprise No 2 (The steamer that bought  James Mackay to open the Thames Goldfields , along with the first prospectors and of course those to uphold the peace of the goldfields. p.s. Duke of Edinburgh, p.s. Clyde ( formerly p.s. Avon) , p.s. Maori,  Midge, p.s. Enterprise No 2 ,s.s. Halcyon.s.s. Jane, s.s. Tauranga.

The steamer fleet regularly plying the Thames Route continued to grow and by the end of 1872 were added amongst them, then other well known steamers s.s. Go Ahead, p.s. Lalla Rookh,, p.s Challenger, s.s. Rowena (owners Cruickshank & Macfarlane) p.s. Golden Crown ( owner, J S Macfarlane , shipping agent and tramway promoter ) The growing fleet of steamers gained also the  nickname of “the mosquito fleet” – considered small to the bigger sea going vessels but many.


p.s. Golden Crown was named after the Thames mine of the same name. She was a favorite steamer for early Thames people but sold to Australian interests in 1874, due to decreased traffic on the Thames run, for which she had originally been specifically designed.

By which time in 1874 p.s. Golden Crown was one of the steamers belonging to the fleet of the Auckland Steam Packet Company Ltd, headed by a board of directors and William Lodder Engineer and Manager. William Lodder, who was appointed by this Company in 1873, was formerly Manager of the Waikato Steam Transport Service, until its sale. 

It was this Lodder, who with Stewart, implemented compound engines with compound principles into s.s. Star of the South in 1871. William Lodder wrote a paper which was read to the Auckland Institute in 1872 on Compound Engines (By William Lodder, 1872) - a new development that was to impact on steamer engines for performance, economy and change the way steamers operated. (The expense of coal and other running costs were always a real consideration and could “make” or “break” a shipping company) 

 Other steamers of the Auckland Steam Packet Company during the early 1870’s were p.s. Royal Alfred, s.s. Southern Cross, s.s. Star of the South and s.s. Pretty Jane. In 1872 the Auckland Steam Packet Company Ltd was formed into a new company, headed by directors S Jones, T Russell, T Morrin, J S Macfarlane and Captain Daldy.

p.s. Royal Alfred was a regular on the Coromandel – Auckland route with p.s. Golden Crown a regular of the Thames – Auckland route, p.s. Challenger Tapu and s.s. Southern Cross and s.s. Star of the South calls to Thames on the regular East Coast run.

As well known as the steamers so too were the Captains. Captain Farquhar -Royal Alfred and Star of the South. Captain Sellar Southern Cross, Captain Holmes also Star of the South , and Captain Fernandez Pretty Jane.

s.s. Rowena in later years was to become one of the first steamers of the Northern Steam Shipping Company of New Zealand Ltd, established in May 1881. Thomas Morrin, David Cruickshank, Captain Alexander McGregor, James Macfarlane, Thomas Ball and James McCosh Clark appointed directors of this new company. With Captain Alexander McGregor at the helm in early years of this company, this was a coalition of former steamer companies, amongst them the Auckland Steam Packet Company Ltd. The establishment of what in it’s embryo years evolved into the Northern Steam Ship Company. This Company became long standing and a New Zealand Icon of shipping - an important and well known “life link” of supplies, for those living on the coasts of the Coromandel Peninsula, Waihou and Piako Rivers.


April 1871 saw the sea trial of newly launched steam launch s. s. Fairy depart from Tararu, heading for the Wairoa River - one of the few early steamer trials conducted from the Thames Area. The Daily Southern Cross wrote:

 “We have been furnished with the following report of a trip made by the new steam launch Fairy from Tararu to the head of the Wairoa river. The account will, no doubt, be interesting to those settlers who reside on or near rivers running some distance inland, and not accessible by large steamers or cutters except at high water, and who consequently find a difficulty in sending their produce to Auckland, unless at considerable expense :— The Fairy left Tararu Wharf under charter at 8.45 a.m. stood straight for the sandspit, crossing the Firth of the Thames with a strong S.E. wind and heavy, swell arrived inside the lighthouse at 11.45 a.m.; passed over a bar between two islands beyond the lighthouse in 3 feet of water, arriving at the entrance of the Wairoa river tide out, and not much but a mud flat to navigate. The light draught of water (2ft. 3in.) drawn by the steam launch enabled us,. to proceed up the river under easy steam {101b. pressure), meeting with many sharp bends in the river, passing innumerable snags, large logs of timber, and rapids ; arriving at the Wairoa Bridge at 2.30 p.m.” ( PORT OF AUCKLAND. THE TRIP OF THE STEAM LAUNCH FAIRY Daily Southern Cross 10/04/1871: p.2) 

The era of early coastal steamers and no less those of Thames saw many changes of steamer owners and companies. Competition was strong and those early years 1867 to 1881 saw just as in gold mining, takeovers, amalgamations and new companies formed. Shipbuilders such as Messrs Niccol and sons, formerly builders of sailing vessels, moved into building and refitting steamers also. Another was Messrs Duthie and Ross. Their reputation became renowned for the fine vessels built and their ability and vision to readapt to “the new fangled” steamers.

Navigational Aids for a busy Coastal Traffic Route 

With the Thames coastal traffic busy, 1870 saw the announcement of two new lighthouses to begin – both on the Thames Coastal run. The Daily Southern Cross wrote

 “Some eighteen months ago the late Mr. Balfour, whose untimely death was a severe loss to the colony, inquired into the practicability of placing a lighthouse upon the Bean Rocks, and another at  the Sandspit, in the Ponui Passage, and from that time until September last a considerable amount of correspondence passed on the subject between the late Marine Engineer and the  Government. These steps resulted in orders being sent to Messrs, Stevenson, Engineers Commissioners of the Northern Lights, Scotland, for the necessary apparatus for two lighthouses. It was understood that Mr. Balfour had commenced the designs for the towers, but after his death no drawings were found amongst his papers, and it therfore devolved upon the  Government to select some engineer competent to supply the necessary plans of the towers, in readiness for the lighthouse apparatus, which had been ordered His Honor the present Superintendent made choice of Mr. James Stewart Civil Engineer and Inspector of Steamboats (PROPOSED LIGHTHOUSES AT BEAN ROCK AND THE SANDSPIT Da 21/07/1870: p 2) 



Construction of both of what is known as wave-washed lighthouses, including the lighthouse at being screw pile, progressed. James Heron, a Shortland  builder successfully tendered for the construction of the lighthouse in Ponui Passage - £2,300 the highest received being £4.301.Both Bean Rock and  the lighthouse at Sandspit in the Ponui Passage were completed in 1871, Messrs Fraser  & Tinne having provided the ironwork. Both lighthouses were completed with a hexagonal shaped wooden tower which formed a cottage and storeroom for the Light house keeper.


Stewart was to write and read a paper to the Auckland Institute on the foundations of the lighthouse in Ponui Passage. (By J. Stewart, 1871) In this, he described the determining of a suitable site with Captain Burgess, Chief Harbour Master and screwing down the piles with the aid of a capstan and winch handles worked by four men.

One of the first lighthouse keepers at Ponui Passage lighthouse, or Sandspit as it sometimes was known, was Daniel Macfarlane. MacFarlane - in some records spelled McFarland or McFarlane – common variance with this surname) was followed by C.H.O. Robson as Principal Light house keeper.

In those days before automation, lighthouses were manned by Lighthouse Keepers. One of the responsibilities was to keep the lights going for what had become a busy route with “coasters” – steamers and sailing ships plying with cargo and passengers. 

The early years of operation of this lighthouse saw two collisions nearby – that of the cutter “Avon” with the steamer “Golden Crown” in December 1871 and in July 1877 the ketch “Adah” with the “Southern Cross”


From newspaper accounts in later years, it would appear that in November 1896, some damage was done to this lighthouse. Evidently the schooner Huon Belle, owned by J.J. Craig was reported to have run aground against the lighthouse causing damage to two of the iron piles and the lamp glasses. 

 According to New Zealand Lighthouse, the lighthouse at Sandspit in the Ponui Passage became automated in 1915 or 1916, ending the era of light house keepers here. In 1938 the wooden cottage was moved to Ponui Island nearby.  Today in 2010 it is a different vessel navigating the route – yachts and fishing boats - no longer the schooners, steamers of those early days of Thames Goldfields. 

Reference Source:

  • Cyclopaedia NZ, Auckland Province, 1902
  • Lawson,Will.Steam in the Southern Pacific. Wellington, N.Z.: Gordon & Gotch, 1909. also on website http://www.archive.org/details/steaminsouthernp00lawsuoft accessed 26/05/2010 
  • Weston, Fred (compiler). Jubilee Souvenir –Thames Goldfields-A History From Proclamation Times To 1927. Thames: “ Thames Star”, July ,1927. 
  •  NZ Gazette 1871 -service & salary
  • Achives NZ BBAO 5544 172  868/324a
  • By J. STEWART, Assoc.Inst.C.E. “ART. XI.—A Description of the Foundation of the Lighthouse in the Ponui Passage.” In Transactions and Proceedings NZ Institute, from Volume 4. 1871 , pp 135 - 138 : also on website http://rsnz.natlib.govt.nz/volume/rsnz_04/rsnz_04_00_000770.html accessed 27/05/2010 
  • By Jas Stewart C.E. “ Art. I.—Presidential Address.,.” In Transactions and Proceedings NZ Institute, , from Volume 34, 1901: also on website http://rsnz.natlib.govt.nz/volume/rsnz_34/rsnz_34_00_000490.html.accessed 27/05/201
  •  By William Lodder. “Art. XVII.—On Compound Engines.” In Transactions and Proceedings NZ Institute, Volume 5, 1872., pp 144 - 150 also on website http://rsnz.natlib.govt.nz/volume/rsnz_05/rsnz_05_00_000740.html accessed 27/05/2010
  • Archives NZ, ACFM 8180 46 870/76
  • ArchAJHR 1872, Section G30, p 14ives NZ, BBAO 5544 24a 1879/414
  • AJHR 1878, Section H12, p 26
  • Otago Daily Witness 26/09/1868: p 5
  • Daily Southern Cross, 4/09/1863: p4
  • Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 Daily Southern Cross, 12 /03/ 1873: p 1
  • Star, 12/05/1881:p.3
  • PORT OF AUCKLAND. THE TRIP OF THE STEAM LAUNCH FAIRY Daily Southern Cross 10/04/1871: p.2
  • PROPOSED LIGHTHOUSES AT BEAN ROCK AND THE SANDSPIT Da 21/07/1870: p 2
  • Daily Southern Cross 13/08/1870 

Sunday 10 January 2016

George Turnbull Niccol - Shipping Vessels owned and built, places with links

Tairua Harbour - A Port of call for many of the Niccol Vessels - Photo Chris Ball November 2015

On 27 September 2015, The MV Tuhoe came to a final resting place, run aground on a sandbar at the Waimakariri River Mouth having just returned from  a major $200,000  restoration work at Lyttelton. Declared unsalvageable, the ninety six years old  Tuhoe was broken down where it was stranded, ending working life for this historic schooner.

Tuhoe , a 97-foot, 186 ton gross, two-masted auxiliary schooner, was launched on 7 April 1919 from the yard of ship builder George Niccol. Tuhoe was built by Niccol for the Northern Steam Ship Company ( NSSCo) with the object of withstanding rough bar work, enabling work in the shallow harbours of the East Coast and rivers of Firth of Thames.

MV Tuhoe was one of many vessels to be built in the yard of George Turnbull Niccol. A review of  Papers past newspaper advertisments record the many East Coast Ports of call amongst them: - Tauranga, Whakatane Opotiki, Tairua Mercury Bay Paeroa Te Aroha Turua Kopu, Wharepoa, Hikutaia, Puriri, Coromandel.

AFTER THE DELUGE.—The sunshine yesterday after Tuesday's "in was a good opportunity for sail drying.... [truncated] Auckland Star, Volume LXIV, Issue 51, 2 March 1933, Page 9
Photo courtesy Papers Past National Library NZ

For almost 100 years the name of Niccol was at the forefront of shipbuilding  during the settlement of the Auckland province. George Turnbull Niccol, born at Parnell, Auckland in  1858, continued the occupation of  his father Henry Niccol, learning this trade from his father.  Henry Niccol began shipbuilding soon after arrival aboard the Jane Gifford in 1842 with his wife Sarah and newly born son Thomas. Henry Niccol was son, George Turnbull Niccol grandson,  of Thomas Niccol, a well- known and prolific shipbuilder in Inverclyde, Scotland.

 The 1900's saw the shipbuilding yards of George Turnbull Niccol well established in Freeman's Bay. It was an ideal location for a wooden vessel shipbuilder - located close to the big timber mills, namely the giant Kauri Timber Company and the smaller Leyland and O'Brien Timber Company. 
 

Looking south west from the foreshore of Freemans Bay showing Kauri Timber Company (centre), G T Niccol's Shipbuilding yards ( left), Leyland O'Briens Timber Company (right), Parker Lamb Timber Company (extreme right) and small craft at anchor
Photo Courtesy Sir George Grey Special Collections, Auckland Libraries, 4-5337'

From records and various archive records it could be said that George Turnbull Niccol was also a well-known and prolific ship builder - scows and wooden steamers being his speciality suitable for the New Zealand coastal waters. Typical of many of the ship builders of that era, Niccol was also known as a ship owner. A number of these were recorded in Papers Past newspapers as calling on Ports on the Coromandel Peninsula including Tairua and inland up the rivers on the Hauraki Plains :-

Ports of the Coromandel Peninsula in the 1900s - L Top Whitianga Mercury Bay, R Top Tairua, B Left Turua, B Right Tairua- Photos Chris Ball 2015
  
By 1905 George Turnbull Niccol was established as a director of the coastal shipping company - Northern Steamship Company.  In 1906, there was a change to carrying of cargoes that had an influence on the type of vessel, particularly scows. This saw the formation in August 1906,  of  The  Federated Shipowners’ Association. Edwin Mitchelson, Charles Ranson, D. Gouk, George Niccol, J. Cardlaw, Alexander Alison, R. Reynolds, Ernest Ford, A. Jagger, E. Craig, F.B. Winstone, and Captains J. Hull and G. McKenzie. The appointed  officers of this organisation were  W. Smith (secretary), Thomas Henderson (treasurer) and M. McGregor (solicitor) .
 
Sails of Scow Ted Ashby NZ Maritime Museum - photo Chris Ball January 2015


George Niccol was there on this new " heavy weight organisation" along with Edwin Mitchelson and Alexander Alison. Edwin Mitchelson and Alexander Alison also had connections with the Coromandel Peninsula via shipping , timber, gum and gold. They also were owners/directors of the Tairua Broken Hills Gold Mining Company at the beginning of the 1900s. This mine was near Hikuai where George Turnbull Niccol was to buy land in 1912. The Thames Star reported the purchase of land to George Niccol .

"  Faithful , McConnell and Co. have sold their splendid farm, as well as the leasehold, to Mr Geo. Niccol, of Auckland, -who has a party of surveyors cutting them into farms of 200 to 300 acres" ( Thames Star 14/09/1912)
It was also reported that a Norman MacLean had sold his farm to Niccol - also in the Tairua Valley near Hikuai.

The area was not an  unknown valley to Niccol, as there was knowledge of both the Tairua Sawmill activities and shipping to Tairua from the beginning days of Tairua settlement back in 1864 when the sawmill was first built.

It would appear that George McLaughlan Niccol ( son of George Turnbull Niccol), may  also have had an interest in the Hikuai farmland. The Ohinemuri Gazette  in 1916, reporting on the Thames County Council meeting, wrote that a letter of complaint had been received from Mr. Geo. T. Niccol, of Auckland. According to Niccol, he had been sued for rates owed by his son. George McLaughlan Niccol was away fighting in WW1 on the front somewhere in France.

George McLaughlan Niccol ( 1888 - 1918 )

 Captain,  Royal Field Artillery and recipient of the military cross, for conspicuous bravery, George McLaughlan Niccol, only son of George Turnbull,  did not return from the war. Gassed twice, he contracted pneumonia and died on 30 October 1918 in France.

Three years later in 1921 George Turnbull Niccol had sold his subdivided farms at  Hikuai, Tairua  Valley to the New Zealand Government.


Hikuai, Tairua Valley - photo Chris Ball 2015

Mick Lennan in an article - Hikuai- in the Ohinemuri Journal of October 1967 said:-

" ………  and when the First World War ended, almost the whole of Hikuai, now owned by George Nicol, Uncle of Ernie mentioned previously was purchased by the Government to be subdivided for the settlement of Returned Soldiers. "
This land purchase was  under the Land Settlement Act 1908 and the Discharged Soldiers Settlement Act with the land being made available to discharged soldiers returned from WW1. January 1921 saw the Farmers' Cooperative  Auctioneering Company advertising a clearance sale of all livestock and farm equipment for George Turnbull Niccol.  The New Zealand Herald reported on the ballot held 26 October the same year and wrote:-

"SETTLEMENT AT TAIRUA. SECTION'S FOR EX-SOLDIERS. Two areas of land in the Tairua, district, part of the Hikuai. settlement, were balloted for yesterday at the office of the Auckland Lands Board. The land, which formerly was the property of Mr. G. T. Nicol, of Auckland, is situated about eight miles from the port of Tairua. The total area is 7129 acres, comprising 2014 acres of first-class land, divided into 15 sections, and 5115 acres of second and third-class land, comprised within four sections. The first-class land was available for discharged soldiers only, the other lands being available for general applicants, with a preference to discharged soldiers. For the first class land there were applications from 38 returned soldiers. Practically every applicant made an application for every section. There were three applicants for the four other sections." ( NZ Herald 27/10/1921)

Successful in the ballot were, JW Gribble, G Petersen, W Johnstone, JR McCall, WE Paterson, GH Hamblyn, FP Miller, W Phillips, EA Hammond, GE Coxon, WW Ogston, F Russell, IV Lowe, J Bruce, A Potts.

Also in 1921, Ernest John Niccol the nephew of George Turnbull Niccol  farming at Hikuai, was appointed to a Commission to inquire into and report on the kauri gum industry. Ernest was to remain in the valley farming for a few years until his retirement in Auckland.

The hills of Tairua Valley towering above Hikuai - photo Chris Ball October 2015

George Turnbull Niccol ( 1858 - 1940 )
As to George Turnbull Niccol , involvement with shipping companies and shipbuilding was continued. Managing Director  of the Kaipara Steamship Company and also prominently involved in the management of the Northern Steamship Company. Atua - his last vessel in 1932 - became the Northern Steam Ships Company's Waiotahi II. This also marked for Niccol, an end of the shipbuilding business, which was said to employ 80 in its heyday. Factors deciding this were Economic Depression Years, changed coastal transport with road and rail to the fore.

Niccol died September 1940, leaving two married daughters - Beatrice Mavis Carr and Kathleen Jean Hanna. ( Kathleen Jean sister - in -  law of Phyllis Edith Hanna ( nee Macfarlane - my first cousin) His death marking an end of an era which was a significant part of the past NZ History.

Reference Source:
           UPPER TAIRUA  Thames Star,14 September 1912, Page 1
           THAMES COUNTY COUNCIL Ohinemuri Gazette, 8 March 1916, Page 4
           Page 3 Advertisements Column 4 Ohinemuri Gazette,17 January 1921, Page 3
           BALLOT FOR LAND. New Zealand Herald, 27 October 1921, Page 5






Friday 4 July 2014

Tairua Shipbuilding

Looking up Tairua Harbour from the new Marina - Photo CRB 2014

The ingredients were there at Tairua for shipbuilding in 1873 - some fine timber in the area, a bustling new sawmill, a busy Port of call for all manner of vessels with inward and outward cargoes and a Shipwright - George Sharpe.

George Sharpe had already proven shipwright skills with the building at Matakana in 1866 of a cutter - Sovereign of the Seas. The Daily Southern Cross reported her arrival as a newly launched cutter:-

" A New Coasting Vessel— Sovereign of the Seas.— A fine large coasting cutter, named the Sovereign of the Seas, arrived in harbour yesterday from the building yards of Mr. George Sharpe, at Matakana. The vessel is an excellent model, and possesses large carrying capacity. She is built to the order of Mr. Christian, of Matakana, and is intended for the coasting trade. Her dimensions are, 46 feet length of keel, 18 feet breadth of beam, 7 feet depth of hold, and 52 feet over all She is some 58 tons builders' measurement, and 36 tons register, and arrived on her maiden trip yesterday, with 50 tons firewood, and 26,000 shingles, in charge of Captain Innes, of the Orpheus."

PORT OF AUCKLAND. MISCELLANEOUS. Daily Southern Cross, 7 June 1866, Page 3

By June the following year, Sovereign of the Seas had made several calls at Tairua and had returned to Auckland with  cargoes of timber, gum and passengers. From newspaper accounts, Sovereign of the seas could list Tauranga, Napier, Thames, Mercury Bay, and Thames among Ports of call as in this advertisement: -
 
Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 New Zealand Herald, Volume IV, Issue 1241, 6 November 1867, Page 1

Sovereign of the Seas showed her capabilities and that of the shipwright who built her when winning the Cutter challenge at the Annual Auckland Regatta on the Waitemata in 1869. ( RACE BETWEEN THE ALARM AND SOVEREIGN OF THE SEAS. Daily Southern Cross, 3 February 1869, Page 2)  Winning the "Trading Cutter" race was repeated in 1871 when Sovereign of the Seas came in ahead of Nautilus and in 1872 coming in ahead of Mercury. 1873 - the year the Fore and Aft Schooner Belle Brandon was turned off the stocks, Sovereign of the Seas sailed by her new owner Captain Martin, was placed 3rd in the Auckland Regatta Trading Cutter Challenge - Mercury in 1st place raced by Captain Diaz ( a master very familiar with sailing cutters to and from Tairua.)


The fore and aft schooner Belle Brandon said to have been built by George Sharpe for William Benjamin Jackson ( Manager of the sawmill at Tairua ) was reported to have arrived at Port of Auckland after launching: -

                                                            courtesy Papers Past, National Library NZ

Seems Belle Brandon also entered the Auckland Regatta of 1874 and performed well , leading on the run to North Head, in the Trading Vessels Race and finishing 3rd at the end of the race.  Henderson & Macfarlane owners Thomas Henderson Jnr.  and Gustav Von Der Heyde and also Regatta Committee members , perhaps also notices her sailing capabilities and the quality of the vessel.

For three years later, Belle Brandon had been purchased by Henderson & Macfarlane from the then owner, George Holdship ( well known timber merchant and future New Zealand manager of New Zealand Kauri Timber Company - which also absorbed the Union Steam Saw Saw Moulding Sash and Door Company Ltd. Mill at Tairua in 1888. ( New Zealand Herald 19 July 1888, p 3) 

Holdship had purchased Belle Brandon from first owner Jackson, for £1650.00 in  1874about £133,700.00 real price, today in 2013.)  Ownership and place built ( Tairua ) was recorded in The Register of Australian and New Zealand Shipping 1874

Henderson & Macfarlane's purchase price included the schooner Kriemhilda as part payment - Belle Brandon and  Captain F Ohlson destined to continue " The Island Trade."

In Ed. Garran, Hon. Andrew. 1892. Australasia Illustrated. Sydney: Picturesque Atlas Pub. Co. https://archive.org/stream/australasiaillus01garruoft#page/n9/mode/2up

The next vessel to arrive at Port of Auckland and built at Tairua, also by Shipwright George Sharpe, was the cutter Coralie. The New Zealand Herald wrote:- 


"Another addition to our coasting fleet has been made, in the shape of a smart 28 ton cutter, named the Coralie, which arrived yesterday from Tairua The cutter belongs to Captain Jackson, and was built by George Sharpe, Tairua. When we mention that she has been turned off the stocks by the builder of the cutter Sovereign of the Seas and the schooner Belle Brandon, it is a sufficient guarantee that she is no ordinary vessel. She is without doubt a valuable addition to our coasting craft. The following are her dimensions:—Length of keel. 45 feet; length overall 62 feet 6 inches; beam, 17 feet; depth of hold, 0 feet draught when loaded, 5 feet 9 inches."

                              SHIPPING. New Zealand Herald, 5 February 1874, Page 2

William Benjamin Jackson retained ownership of Coralie for several years. In 1880 the cutter Coralie was advertised for sale and R.A. Player of Auckland was the reported owner in 1883.




Coralie continued to sail the coastal run, carrying cargoes of timber, gum, passengers and livestock. As a new century began, Coralie was wrecked in the Waikopopu Bay, Mahia Peninsula. Thus ended nearly thirty years for this cutter built in Tairua.


Looking toward the bar at Tairua - Photo CRB 2014
Reference Source: