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Title: The Americans In The South Seas
       1901

Author: Louis Becke

Release Date: April 5, 2008 [EBook #24995]
Last Updated: January 8, 2013

Language: English

Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1

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Produced by David Widger





 




THE AMERICANS IN THE SOUTH SEAS  




From "The Tapu Of Banderah and Other Stories"  

By Louis Becke  

C. Arthur Pearson Ltd. 

1901  










Perhaps the proper title of this article should beThe Influence of  American Enterprise upon the Maritime Development of the first Colony in  Australia,but as such a long-winded phrase would convey, at the outset,  no clearer conception of the subject-matter than that ofThe Americans in  the South Seas,we trust our readers will be satisfied with the simpler  title.  

It is curious, when delving into some of the dry-as-dust early Australian  and South Sea official records, or reading the more interesting old  newspapers and books of "Voyages," to note how soon the Americanstook a  handin the South Sea trade, and how quickly they practically monopolised  the whaling industry in the Pacific, from the Antipodes to Behring  Straits.  

The English Government which had despatched the famous "First Fleet" of  convict transports to the then unknown shores of Botany Bay, had not  counted upon an American intrusion into the Australian Seas, and when it  came, Cousin Jonathan did not receive a warm welcome from the English  officials stationed in the newly founded settlement on the shore of Sydney  Cove, as the first settlement in Australia was then called. This was  scarcely to be wondered at, for many of those officers who formed part of  the "First Fleet" expedition had fought in the war of the rebellion, and  most of them knew, what was a fact, that the English Government only a few  years earlier had seriously considered proposals for colonising New South  Wales with American loyalists, who would have, in their opinion, made  better settlers than convicts. And it is probable that if the crowded  state of the English gaols and prison hulks had not forced the Government  into quickly finding penal settlements for their prisoners, the plan would  have been carried out.  

When his Majesty's ship Guardian under the command of Nelson's  "brave captain, Riou," was wrecked off the Cape of Good Hope, and her  cargo of stores, badly needed by the starving colonists of New South  Wales, were lying at Cape Town without means of transport, an American  merchant skipper saw his chance and offered to convey them to Sydney Cove.  But the English officers, although they knew that the colony was starving,  were afraid to take the responsibility of chartering a "foreign" ship.  Lieutenant Kingafterwards to become famous in Australian historywrote  to the almost heartbroken and expectant Governor Phillip from the Cape as  follows: "There is here a Whitehaven man who, on his own head, intends  going immediately to America and carrying out two vessels, one of 100 or  120 tonsa Marble Head schoonerand the other a brig of 150  tons, both of which he means to load with salt beef and pork which he can  afford to sell in the colony at 7d. a pound. He wished encouragement from  me, but anything of that kind being out of my power to give him, he has  taken a decided part and means to run the risque. I mention this so that  you may know what is meant."  

This "risque," undertaken by the adventurous "Whitehaven man" was the  genesis of the American trading and whaling industry in the Southern Seas,  and American enterprise had much to do with the development of the infant  colony of New South Wales, inasmuch as American ships not only brought  cargoes of food to the starving colonists, but American whalemen showed  the unskilled British seamen (in this respect) how to kill the sperm whale  and make a profit of the pursuit of the leviathan of the Southern Seas.  

In 1791 some returning convict transports, whose captains had provided  themselves with whaling gear, engaged in the whale fishing in the South  Pacific on their way home to England. Whales in plenty were seen, but the  men who manned the boats were not the right sort of men to kill themthey  knew nothing of sperm-whaling, although some of them had had experience of  right whaling in the Arctic Seasa very different and tame business  indeed to the capture of the mighty cachalot. Consequently, they were not  very successful, but the Enderby Brothers, a firm of London shipowners,  were not to be easily discouraged, and they sent out vessel after vessel,  taking care to engage some skilled American whalemen for each ship.  Sealing parties were formed and landed upon islands in Bass's Straits, and  regular whaling and sealing stations were formed at several points on the  Australian coast, and by 1797 the whale fishing had become of such  importance that a minute was issued by the Board of Trade, dated December  26th, setting forth that the merchant adventurers of the southern whale  fishery had memoralised the Board to the effect that the restrictions of  the East India company and the war with Spain prevented the said whalers  from successfully carrying on their business, and that the Board had  requested the East India Company, while protecting its own trading rights,  to do something towards admitting other people to trade. The effect of the  Board's minuteworded of course in much more "high falutin" language  as should be the case when a mere Board of Trade addressed such a high and  mighty corporation as the Honourable East India Companywas that  directors permitted whaling to be carried on at Kerguelen's Land (in the  Indian Ocean), off the coasts of New Holland, the New Hebrides, New  Caledonia, New Zealand, the Philippines and Formosa, but they restrained  trading further north than the Equator and further east than 51° of east  longitude, and that restraint remained for a long time to come.  

For the Spanish war trouble the whalers took another remedy: they obtained  letters of marque and pretty soon added successful privateering to their  whaling ventures, and the Spaniards on the coast of Peru and on the  Spanish Pacific Islands before a year had passed found that an English  whaler was a vessel armed with other weapons besides harpoons and lances,  and was a good ship to keep clear of.  

By this time the Americans were taking a share in the whaling and sealing  industriesrather more than their share the Englishmen thought, for  in 1804 Governor King issued a proclamation which sets forth that:  Whereas it has been represented to me that the commanders of some  American vessels have, without any permission or authority whatever, not  only greatly incommoded his Majesty's subjects in resorting to and  continuing among the different islands in Bass's Straits for skins and  oil, but have also in violation of the law of nations and in contempt of  the local regulations of this Territory and its dependencies, proceeded to  build vessels on these islands and in other places... to the prejudice and  infringements of his Majesty's rights and properties thereon,he (King)  had, while waiting for instructions from England, decided to prevent any  foreigner whatever from building vessels whose length of keel exceeded 14  feet, except, of course, such vessel was built in consequence of shipwreck  by distressed seamen. There was nothing unreasonable in this prohibition,  as the whole territory being a penal settlement, one of the Royal  instructions for its government was that no person should be allowed to  build vessels without the express permission of the Governor, so the  Americans were only asked to obey the existing law. The proclamation ended  with a clause ordering that all vessels coming from the State of New York  should do fourteen days quarantine in consequence of the plague having  broken out there. Just about this time news reached Sydney that the crew  of an American sealer lying in Kent's Bay among Cape Barren Islands  (Bass's Straits) were building a schooner from the wreck of an East  Indiaman named the Sydney Cavea ship famous in Australian  sea story. King despatched an officer to the spot with orders to "command  the master to desist from building any vessel whatever, and should he  refuse to comply, you will immediately cause the King's mark to be put on  some of the timbers, and forbid him and his people from prosecuting the  work, and also forbid the erection of any habitation on any part of the  coast... taking care not to suffer any or the least act of hostility, or  losing sight of the attention due to the subjects of the United States,"  &c.  

Writing to England on this matter, King says:This is the third American  vessel that has within the last twelve months been in the Straits and  among the islands, procuring seal skins and oils for the China market.In  the same letter he tells how the loss of the ships Cato and Porpoise  on Wreck Reef had led to the discovery of beche-de-mer which could  then be sold in Canton for £50 a ton; this find was another reason for  keeping foreigners out of Australian waters.  

As no more is heard of the schooner building in Bass's Straits, we may  assume that the Americans quietly obeyed the laws and desisted; but there  were soon more causes of trouble.  

In March, 1805, a general order set forth that American ships, after  receiving assistance and relief at Sydney Cove, were continually returning  this hospitality by secreting on board and carrying off runaway convicts,  and so it was ordered that every English or foreign vessel entering the  ports of the settlement should give security for themselves in £500, and  two freeholders in the sum of £50 each, not to carry off any person  without the Governor's certificate that such person was free to go. This  order had some effect in putting a stop to the practice, but not a few  persons managed to leave the colony and reach American shores without  there being evidence enough to show how they got away. Muir, one of the  "Scotch Martyrs," escaped in the American Ship Otter as far back as  1795; and although his story has been told before in detail, we may here  briefly mention that the Otter was hired expressly to affect his  escape. Muir got on board safely enough, and the ship sailed, but was  wrecked off the west coast of America. After sufferings and privations  enough to satisfy even the sternest justice, Muir managed to reach Mexico,  and embarked in a Spanish frigate for Europe. The vessel was taken by an  English man-of-war after a sharp engagement, in which Muir was severely  wounded. His identity was concealed from the English commander, and he  managed to reach Paris, only to die of his wound.  

In October, 1804, there was serious trouble in Bass's Straits between  English and American sealers. Messrs. Kable and Underwood, Sydney  shipowners, had a sealing establishment in Kent's Bay, and among the men  employed were some "assigned" convicts. One Joseph Murrell, master of the  sealing schooner Endeavour, wrote to his owners a letter in which  he stated he was too ill to write coherently, in consequence of the usage  he had received from one Delano, master of the American schooner Pilgrim.  Delano's name was familiar to Governor King, inasmuch as he had taken a  part in the 1803 attempt to colonise Port Philip, as follows: One of the  officers, Lieutenant Bowen, on his way across Bass's Straits in a small  boat, had the misfortune to carry away his rudder, and when in danger was  rescued by Delano. Bowen, anxious to deliver some despatches, hired the Pilgrim's  tender from Delano to carry them, omitting to make a bargain beforehand;  and for this paltry service the American charged £400! The British  Government growled, but paid.  

But let Captain Murrell tell his story:At four in the morning on the  17th I was suddenly seized by the chief mate of the Pilgrim, and  three other American ruffians(they were really Chilenos),two of whom  caught me by the hair, the other two by the arms. They dragged me out of  bed and trailed me in this fashion along the ground till they came to the  sea beach. Here they beat me with clubs, then kept me three-quarters of an  hour naked whilst they were searching for the rest of my people.Murrell  goes on to detail as to how he threatened them with the wrath of the  Governor, to which they replied that the Governor was not there to protect  him. He was then taken to a tree and lashed to it, stripped, and all the  Americans took a hand in flogging him into insensibility. When he  recovered, he says, he asked for death rather than torture, and was  answered savagely that he and his men were the means of depriving the  Americans of 3,000 dollars' worth of skins by their operations, and that  Englishmen had better keep away from Cape Barren and leave the field open  to Americans.  

"Then," he wrote, "they began to sport away with their bloody cruelties,  until some few Englishmen belonging to other [sealing] gangs out of Port  Jackson, stung to the quick to see the cruelties exercised upon me without  humanity, law, or justice, determined not to suffer it, and began to  assemble. This occasioned the Americans to face about, at which instant I  got my hands loose and ran into the sea, determined to be drowned rather  than be tortured to death. I was followed by a number of Americans to the  seaside, who stoned me, and sent into the water after me a Sandwich Island  savage, who gave me desperate blows with a club. I put up my arm to save  my head and he broke my arm in three places. I was then dragged on shore  and left lying on the beach, the men remarking that they supposed I had  had enough, but that there were more of their country's ships expected,  who would not let me off so lightly. Then they took away some of my  people, rescuing from my custody a King's prisoner."  

In all a dozen menconvicts and otherswere taken away by  Delano and his ruffianly crowd of Chilenos and Portuguese, and this  particular sealing station was practically destroyed.  

Captain Moody, of the colonial schooner Governor King had recorded  a similar instance a few months earlier, and there is no doubt that the  colonials had just cause for complaint; as there is equally no doubt that  they themselves were not altogether innocent of provocation. Nothing,  however, came of these quarrels, for although the Governor wrote to  England on the matter, the authorities "remembered to forget" to answer,  and the rival sealing parties continued to fight without bringing about a  serious battle, and the whaling and sealing industry continued to grow in  such fashion as is here indicated. What it had become little more than a  generation later is shown in the remainder of this article, mentioning  incidentally that an American whaler, the Topaz, Captain Folger,  was the first discoverer of the descendants of the Bounty mutineers  on Pitcairn Island in 1808; and that Wilkes' United States Exploring  Expedition of 1836-42 was in a large measure suggested to America by the  great increase in that half of the century of American South Sea trade.  What this increase was can best be told in the words of the manMr.  Charles Enderbywho was unquestionably the highest authority and  whose house founded this very industry in the Southern Ocean. In April,  1849, Charles Enderby received a charter of incorporation for a proposed  southern whale fishery, together with a grant of the Auckland Islands (but  that is another story), and to celebrate the occasion a banquet was held  at the London Tavern, Bishops-gate Street, London, presided over by the  senior naval Lord of the Admiralty, who proposed the health of the guest  of the evening, Charles Enderby. In replying to that toast Mr. Enderby  quoted the whalemen's shipping list, in which it was shown that in March,  1849, "the United States, whose flag was to be found on every sea, had 596  whale-ships of 190,000 tons, and manned by 18,000 seamen, while the number  of English ships engaged in the whale trade was only fourteen!"  

During the next decade the English did something to improve this state of  affairs, but their endeavour was made too late, and by the time they woke  up to the situation the heyday of South Sea whaling was gone.  

We are so accustomed to take it for granted that the English (the original  brand thereof, not the American pattern) were fifty years ago in command  of all sea commerce, that the old-fashioned English sailor was superior to  all others, and that his ships beat every one else's in everything  appertaining to the sea, that this fact of how thoroughly the Americans  beat us in the great whaling industry is never remembered. And whaling was  and is now a branch of sea service that needs men to successfully  work in it, for it cannot be profitably pursued with the human  paint-scrubbers who to-day make up such a large section of our mercantile  marine; and the success of the American whaling seamen may supply a clue  to the Nelson-like fashion in which American men-of-warsmen tackle the  serious business of the American Navy.  









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