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

Sunday 5 September 2021

Coromandel Maritime Heritage Trail - Te Tara-o-te-Ika a Māui ( Coromandel Peninsula )

Sailing ships and steamers at wooden wharves - p41 Bold Century 1859 - 1959 New Zealand Insurance Company 1959

Beyond all outer charting
We sailed where none have sailed,
And saw the land-lights burning
On islands none have hailed;
Our hair stood up for wonder,
But, when the night was done,
There danced the deep to windward
Blue-empty 'neath the sun!
                                                The Merchantmen, Rudyard Kipling 

Maritime Heritage is an integral part of the  Peninsula Heritage. The reality is that with no real roads across to the Eastern Seaboard coastline or into the hinterlands of Te Tara-o-te-Ika a Māui ( the Coromandel Peninsula)  until the 1900’s, Maritime Transport was the lifeline of  settlers and main method of goods, machinery and people movement. Associated also on the Peninsula – canoe and ship building, machinery and boilers for the later steamers. The maritime heritage timeline is long - crossing the peninsula backwards and forwards and the shoreline and surrounding ocean. 

Our maritime heritage  further than that, reflected in place names - Te Tara-o-te-Ika a Māui, Te Whitianga-o-Kupe and Taputapuātea - from the polynesian explorers such as Kupe and Toi who first touched the peninsula shores. Te moana nui a kiwa ( Pacific Ocean ) on the eastern shores with  Tikapa Moana-o-Hauraki    ( Firth of Thames ) and  Tīkapa Moana ( Hauraki Gulf ) on the western shores. 



Vaka - photo courtesy Te Ara - Cook Islands Museum of Cultural Enterprise, Muri Rarotonga,  2017

       A  Maritime Heritage  timeline 

Pre 1200 AD  Whitianga

Polynesian navigators came to and from New Zealand  over many voyages and many years. Their navigation, a skilled science and art was passed on and learned from one navigator to another. They navigated the pacific utilizing the sun, the moon,  the stars, bird flights, winds, clouds, ocean currents. Their stories are in the Archaeological studies of experts, the oral stories and knowledge passed down from generation to generation and today in 2021 this video:                          

How did Polynesian wayfinders navigate the Pacific Ocean?   


Te Tara-o-te-Ika a Māui ( the Coromandel Peninsula) from Google Maps 18/08/2021 


Migration  of Waka ( Canoe)  Arawa and Tainui

The migration of the waka (canoe)  Arawa and Tainui to New Zealand - Tamatekapua, Arawa and Hoturoa ,Tainui.  Both these waka are said to gave landed firstly at Whangaparāoa together. Both waka are said to have journeyed along the Coromandel coast. Tamatekapua is said to have sighted the mountain Moehau, later settled there and when died was buried on the summit of Moehau. 
 
Early to mid 1300's  AD Tairua 

Archaeological excavations undertaken by Professor Roger Green between 1959 and 1964 found a tropical pearl shell lure used in fishing  - a significant find- one of the earliest found in New Zealand. Further subsequent research of this significant find confirmed an approximate date- 1300 - 1350 AD,  that the lure came from Eastern Polynesia  on a waka ( canoe), found in what has been described as a temporary camp typical of the Peninsula.

                                                                sign re fishing lure location at Tairua 
                                                                        - photo Chris Ball August 202

1769   Voyage  of HMS Endeavour, Captain Cook -   Coromandel Peninsula 

The voyage 1768 -1771 of HMS Endeavour ( previously named Earl of Pembroke - collier bark ) was a combined Royal Navy and Royal Society expedition .Early November 1769, Captain Cook sailed up the Eastern Seaboard to Te Whitianga-o-Kupe - on 9 November observed the transit of Mercury. Continuing voyage on the other side of the Peninsula ,the Waihou river aboard two long boats, landing about 12 nautical miles from the sea before  returning to HMS Endeavour.

In Sherrin, R. A. (1890). Early History of New Zealand: From earliest times to 1840. Auckland: H Brett Publishers.



1794, 1795  ship Fancy, Captain Dell  ship Fancy  Waihou River, Waiau (Coromandel Harbour) 

On a return journey from Sydney NSW headed for the Waihou River. Fancy lay for three months some  miles up the Waihou River, gaining what was considered good timber spars. Captain Dell also attributed with entering the Waiau and  leaving the name Brampton Harbour after ship Fancy owner William Brampton - the same Captain William Brampton who with Captain Dell, visited Dusky Sound 1895 on the East Indiaman Endeavour ( not to be confused with Captain Cooks ship Endeavour)

1798 – 1800  Java-built scow Hunter, Captain James Fearn, Waihou River

10th June 1798, a Java-built scow of 300 tons , the Hunter reached Port Jackson  from Bengal, and on 20th September sailed for New Zealand to secure a cargo of spars for the China  market. Captain James Fearn made for the Waihou River, where  cargo of timber procured  , transported to the water's edge with the assistance of Maori, sailed for China about the  middle of October.

1798 –1801 ship, Royal Admiral Captain William Wilson, Hauraki Gulf and Waihou River 

The East Indiaman Royal Admiral,  found a vessel to be the Plumier in sore straits. What help was  required the Royal Admiral gave and was directed to a forest about 20 miles distant where excellent  timber could be procured. Captain Wilson is attributed with a hydrographic chart showing the track of the Royal Admiral into and exiting the River Waihou ( then called River Thames). Missionaries also were onboard Royal Admiral - One Rev Youl was to find way to Tasmania.

1801 El Plumier, Thomas Fyshe Palmer , Waihou River 

Thomas Fyshe Palmer (Scottish Martyr  sent to NSW as a convict and served time, at end bought El Plumier and sailed for the Waihou River  Thames seeking a cargo of timber. El Plumier stranded and rescued by Royal Admiral.

1815  Brig Active, Rev Samuel Marsden 

Rev. Samuel Marsden and John Nicholas visited a large village on the western side of the Firth of Thames, possibly Whakatiwai, where the wife of 'Shoupah' (Te Haupa) lived. There was a pa on the hill nearby. The India built brig Active was purchased by Marsden in 1814.


1820 HMS Coromandel , Captain Downie  Coromandel Town 
 
HMS Coromandel previously HMS Malabar and before that the East Indiaman Curvera  called in for kauri wood for ships spars. Rev. Samuel Marsden was also
( CMS Missionary , Parramatta, NSW magistrate ,chaplain of the Penal Colony of NSW ), was aboard HMS Coromandel, Captain James Downie) Captain Downie did a sketch of the River Thames ( Te Waihou) entrance.

HMS Coromandel formerly   THE EAST INDIAMAN “MALABAR.”
The Old East Indiamen   Edward Keble Chatterton Project Gutenberg https://www.gutenberg.org/files/54561/54561-h/54561-h.htm#i_b_330fp


1826  Rosanna, Captain James Herd, Thames

Herd spent a winter in the Firth of Thames in 1826. Herd's the  first chart the firth appears on is JW Norrie’s ‘A New Chart of Part of The Pacific Ocean’ in 1829. Maps after this time use ‘Firth’ or ‘Frith’.

1830’s Whanganui or Beeson’s Island -Herekino Bay,- Waiau or Coromandel Harbour 

-Bill Webster AKA  “Big Webster” the American trader, had his store, timber  and shipbuilding on Whanganui AKA Beeson's Island - the largest among a number at the entrance of Coromandel Harbour.

1830's Barque Darling, Captain Dacre  Whitianga 

Captain Dacre of “Darling “ sent  1830- Browne to Whitianga ( Mercury Bay) and 1831- Harris to East Coast. Browne sent again to Whitianga in 1836 to set up timber and trading stations. 

1831 - 1837 cutter,  Joel Samuel Polack Whitianga 

Polack - Merchant, Trader  voyage Thames  Whitianga ( Mercury Bay)  Trading expedition aboard cutter 

January 1832  brig Active, Henry Williams, William Fairburn missionaries, Mercury Islands, Tairua, Whangamata to Tauranga 

Brig Active and Karere - Expedition to Tauranga - peacekeeping  voyage 

WAR CANOES AND MISSION BOAT From a lithograph, based on a sketch by Henry Williams, 

Carleton, H. (1874). The Life of Henry Williams: Archdeacon of Waimate. Auckland : Upton & Co 1874. Also in  ENZB books The University of Auckland Libraries and Learning Services

1833  brig Active, schooner KarereFortitude , Henry Williams & William Fairburn missionaries, Puriri & Waihou 

A party of Williams, Fairburn, Brown and Morgan set off this year looking to establish a mission station at Thames. Puriri was decided on. 

1837 HMS Buffalo at Kennedy’s Bay

HMS Buffalo previously Hindostan and in 1831 for a short time a quarantine ship.   At Kennedy Bay Kauri Spars for British Navy  - Kennedy's Bay named after John Kennedy who  arrived in New Zealand aboard  HMS Buffalo in 1836 to collect spars for the Admiralty.

Eastwood, William  12 June 1868   Showing a watercolour sketch of a sailing ship in Kennedy Bay, Coromandel, with a small rowboat in the foreground. Auckland Libraries Heritage Collections 3-698-74a    


1838 or 1839  Stone Wharf ,Browne, Whitianga

constructed by Gordon Browne , said to be oldest such structure in NZ - for inward and outward goods. 

Stones taken from the old Maori fortress to build a rudiment ar y wharf across the river at Whitianga. (Evening Post, 23 December 1939). Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand. /records/17186973


July 1840 HMS Buffalo, shipwreck, Whitianga

Shipwreck of H.M.S. Buffalo - this ship also has links with Adelaide having bought Governor and immigrants to Adelaide 1836. Both Browne and Stewart, were attributed with assisting Captain Wood  and  the crew of  HMS Buffalo, in the aftermath of the ship wreck. Gordon Browne of the timber station, trader and Captain William Stewart sealer, trader and pilot for HMS Herald going south with Treaty of Waitangi to be signed and visiting Gordon Browne helped secure shipwreck. 

H. M. S. "Buffalo" [B 4263] [On back of photograph] 'H. M. S. "Buffalo" / Copied from a pen and ink drawing by Lieutenant Y.B. Hutchinson, R.N. (One of the passengers, 1836)'. Courtesy State Library, South Australia



1840 Schooner Russell  Coromandel 

Built at Coromandel Harbour

1841 Schooner Terror, Coromandel 

The schooner  Terror was built at Coromandel Harbour, made throughout with local product  of New Zealand, independent of her rigging.

1842 HMS Tortoise, commander James Wood, Te Karo Bay (Sailor’s Grave) 

Young sailor- able bodied seaman ( AB) William Samson of HMS Tortoise -  lost his life in an incident with a ship’s jolly overturning in the surf. HMS Tortoise spent several weeks loading timber spars bound  for England. Onshore at Te Karo was a "timber camp." 

The type of boat which overturned in the surf at Te Karo - Ship's Jolly

Robert Pollard, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Types_of_boats.jpg accessed 03/09/2021

1840 - 1860 Coastal Trading  East Cape, Coromandel Peninsula - Auckland 

By 1858  ownership shipping  registered to Auckland recorded 53 belonging to Maori owners. Small schooners and cutters were responsible for a large freight business taking goods, food and produce to the fast growing township of Auckland. Shipping belonging to Maori owners also voyaged to Australia. 

1852 Stop over for trading vessels Harataunga ( Kennedy Bay), Ahuahu (Great Mercury Island)

originally belonging to Ngati Huarere ,who gave  to  Ngāti Tamaterā of Hauraki who gifted land at Harataunga to Ngāti Porou. For a shipping vessel stop over on trading voyages to Auckland.

 Also, the great ancestor of Ngāti Porou, Paikea, made landfall at Ahuahu (Great Mercury Island) from Hawaiki, and is said to have left descendants at Harataunga ( Kennedy's Bay) This gift was later recognised by the Native Land Court.

Eastwood, William  12 June 1868   Showing a watercolour sketch of a sailing  ship in Kennedy Bay, Coromandel, with a small rowboat in the foreground. Auckland Libraries Heritage Collections 3-698-74a     PLEASE BO NOT COPY

October 1852 HMS Pandora, Captain Drury, Mercury Bay - Bay of Plenty/East Cape 

Captain Drury moved operations to Mercury Bay for surveys of harbours, rivers, coast. Coast from Cape Colville to Mercury bay; Channel islet; Cuvier island; Charles cove; Kennedy bay; Wangapoa river; Mercury islands. Richard's rock; Koruenga islets; Mercury bay Cook's bay, and Mangrove river Castle island; Alderman islands; Mayor island; Tairua river; Slipper island, Whangamata river.

1853  schooner Ngahuia ,Nicholas Waihou River, Hikutaia

Albert John Nicholas is attributed with building the schooner Ngahuia on the Waihou River ( then called the Thames ) Nicholas is said to have bought produce down the Waihou to be sold and was also  owner of the cutters Nimrod and William.

1865 Cutter Ringdove, Captain Poulgrain, Tairua

brings several cargoes to Tairua – including sawmill plant and machinery opened 1865. Tairua harbour. Next few decades many shipping vessels visit both the newly opened Tairua sawmill and the Mercury Bay  Sawmill. 

 1867 PS Enterprise No 2  Thames 

bought  first prospectors and others to Thames – opening of Thames Goldfield 

February 1867   p.s. Sturt, Captain Fairchild Otahu, Whangamata, Tairua

p,s, Sturt Captain Fairchild, made a trip along the coast to northward as far as Mercuries, calling at Tairua, Otahu and other places. Everything  said to be quiet in the rivers where she visited.


1868 Shortland Wharf, Thames 

 oldest wharf in Thames 

1868 Holdship Wharf, George Holdship,  Thames 

Holdship Wharf at what is now Cochrane Street – George Holdship being a timber merchant and eventually NZ Manager of the giant northern octopus - NZ Kauri Timber Company Ltd. (Incidently if one does the Maritime shipwreck trail, and Maritime Heritage of Victoria, Australia can find a number of links to Coromandel.)

 Same with Sydney – For NZ Dacre, Burns & Phelps, Craigs, P & N Russell Co and Hague Smith’s steamers Royal Alfred and Duke of Edinburgh. Of these the former was built at North Shore, Auckland, her machinery being taken from the Prince Alfred, and her boiler manufactured by Messrs. P. N. Russell and Company of Sydney from plans prepared by Mr. James Stewart, civil engineer, of Auckland. The Duke of Edinburgh came over from Australia to enter the Thames-Auckland trade. The same P & N Russell who manufactured gold mining machinery and gave a very large bequeath to start Engineering School Sydney University.

 October 1869 Thames declared a Port of Entry 

The first entry inwards of note since the declaration of the Port of  Thames was the  schooner Dancing Wave, Captain Brown, from Picton, entered with a large cargo of white pine, shipped at Pelorus Sound, consigned to W. S. Laurie.


shipping at a Thames wharf - the goldmining years 


 1869 Tararu Wharf, Thames

 
1870   Ship building, William White, Whitianga 

1873 the fine yacht Contrabantiere was launched with proper ceremony 

1872 Ponui Passage lighthouse, on maritime route Auckland - Thames

one of two wave washed lighthouses – this one built by Heron of Thames – can see area from Tararu – Both this and Bean Rock lighthouse essential for  maritime goldfields traffic to Thames.  

1874 Ship building, George Sharp, Tairua

 cutters Coralie and top sail schooner Belle Brandon built for Captain William Benjamin Jackson Belle Brandon was eventually owned by one of New Zealands first major shipping lines ( Circular Saw Line – Henderson & Macfarlane – who also had many links with the Coromandel Peninsula) 

December 1876 s.s Rotomahana, Captain A Farquhar, Auckland - Thames run 

Following steam trials - a regular run Auckland - Thames


1877 - Shipping out of Port of Thames 

 Bagnall, Stone, Gibbons – “Timber Hey Deys”  Many brigs and brigantines found their way to Thames and the Waihou River for timber which was transported to other parts of New Zealand, overseas to Australia and to the Pacific. This included the Auckland built brigantine Defiance.

Munro, John Alexander, 1872-1947. Munro, John Alexander 1872-1947 :Brigantine "Defiance" built in Auckland 1883. [n.d.]. Ref: A-103-009. Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand. /records/23051399


1880  Waka arrives Thames from Whangamata

The arrival of a very large, ornately decorated waka canoe, paddled around the coastline from Whangamata to Thames. A gift to Hohepe Paronere, a “native “minister at Parawai, from the “native” settlement at Whangamata. 

1881 May 11th Northern Steam Ship Company formed. 

Thomas Morrin, David Cruickshank, Alexander McGregor, Thomas Ball, James Macfarlane and James McCosh Clark were appointed as the first directors. Northern Steam Ship Company was to become well known on the Coromandel Peninsula – a lifeline to the small settlements. The directors were those who had links to the Coromandel Peninsula via Gum, Gold, Timber and shipping. Northern Steamship regular runs to Thames, Paeroa, Ngatea, Mercury Bay, Tairua, Whangamata by 1900.
                          
s.s. Waiotahi in supplement 1 December 1898 pg 15
Papers Past National Library NZ 


1881 - 1888 , ship building, John Alfred Murray AKA Alfred John Boradale , Boat Harbour / Te Karo

These were the cutters Half Caste built at Boat Harbour, near Tairua in 1881  The  Tararawa AKA Te Rarawa was built in 1885, also at Boat Harbour.

1889 Cuvier Island lighthouse lit 

first cast iron light tower manufactured in New Zealand – by Charles Judd, Engineering firm  at Thames.

 1894 Junction Wharf Paeroa

this was an important Wharf for was where goods, machinery and equipment delivered for Ohinemuri Goldfields Goldmining and Waihi companies.

1897  Wharf , Coromandel 

Renewed “anticipation “goldmining bought transport to   at Wharf Coromandel 


1918 granite wharf , Paritu 
 
constructed from large blocks of granite worked at Moehau Quarries on name Cape Colville Road. ( note need to be specific where this Paritu is for also other of this  on Peninsula.) 

1919 Steamer Wairoa , Tairua Bar and Pauanui 

The steamer Wairoa severely damaged when she ran aground on Tairua Bar. (Relics at Royal Billy Goat Reserve, Pauanui) The relics are a reflection and reminder of the dangers of the Tairua Bar - Plenty of ship wrecks along this Eastern Seaboard of the coast. Eg biggest vessel of all s.s. Manaia.

Engine Block of s.s. Wairoa wrecked on Tairua Bar 3 Feb 1919 
Photo courtesy Chris Ball 2014

May  1928 Old Kopu Bridge across River Waihou opened

Sole remaining example of a swing span bridge in New Zealand. Allowed vessels to pass underneath when opened including river steamers.

1928  Recreation Fishing , Zane Grey , Mercury Bay 

American western writer Zane Grey, Mercury Bay companion Captain Laurie Mitchell arrived to sample the abundant Mercury Bay waters before heading to Tahiti. Such were the fish numbers they vowed to return. It was Zane Grey who introduced ‘proper’ game fishing to New Zealand.

SUCCESSFUL DEEP- SEA FISHING WITH ROD AND LINE OFF MERCURY BAY, COROMANDEL PENINSULA: FURTHER PICTURES SHOWING MR. ZANE GREY'S ACTIVITIES.  Auckland Libraries Heritage Collections AWNS-19330125-32-2


March 1992  Clio celebrates 100 years old at Whangamata Wharf 

Not always does a vessel reach 100 years old and still be working. 

In 1992 ,by then a fishing boat , Clio  originally built by Edwards Brothers as a top sail cutter in 1892 turned 100 years old.  Fisher folk from up and down the coast  between Whangarei and Whangamata came to the celebration. Many had either owned or been with this " boat called lucky". Many were the tales of this kauri boat that worked the coast for 100 years. 


Reference Source:

  •          McNab, R. (1914). From Tasman To Marsden: A History of Northern New Zealand from 1642 to 1818. Dunedin: J. Wilkie & Company. The New Zealand Provincial Histories Collection   New Zealand Texts Collection
  •          Polack, J.S. (1838). New Zealand: being a narrative of travels and adventures during a residence in that country between the years 1831 and 1837 [Vols. I and II]
  •         Project Gutenberg's The Old East Indiamen, by Lieutenant R.N.V.R. Edward Keble Chatterton LONDON  T. WERNER LAURIE LTD. P330 https://www.gutenberg.org/files/54561/54561-h/54561-h.htm
  •         Green, R. C. (1967). 'Sources of New Zealand’s East Polynesian culture: the evidence of a pearl shell lure shank'. Archaeology and Physical Anthropology in Oceania 2: 81-90
  •      Smart, C. and Green, R. C. (1962). 'A stratified dune site at Tairua, Coromandel'. Dominion Museum Records in Ethnology 1 (7): 243-266
  •           Te Ahukaramū Charles Royal, 'First peoples in Māori tradition', Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, http://www.TeAra.govt.nz/en/first-peoples-in-maori-tradition/print (accessed 16 August 2021)
  •          G. S. Parsonson. 'Marsden, Samuel', Dictionary of New Zealand Biography, first published in 1990, updated May, 2013. Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, https://teara.govt.nz/en/biographies/1m16/marsden-samuel (accessed 19 August 2021)
  • COMPILED BY CAPTAIN G. H. RICHARDS and MR. F. J. EVANS, R. (1856). THE NEW ZEALAND PILOT. FROM SURVEYS MADE IN H.M. SHIPS ACHERON AND PANDORA, CAPTAIN J. LORT STOKES AND COMMANDER BYRON DRURY. London: PUBLISHED BY ORDER OF THE LORDS COMMISSIONERS OF THEADMIRALTY. http://www.enzb.auckland.ac.nz/document/?wid=1719&action=null accessed 05/09/2021 

  •          Daily Southern Cross  3 January 1854  Page 2

  •            Daily Southern Cross,  9 October 1869, Page 4 
  •               Bay of Plenty Times  20 May 1880  Page 5       By NORTON WATSON  By Way of Puriri Mission  Ohinemuri Regional History Journal 14, October 1970

             

                           


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