Shipping.
HIGH WATER.
To-mobbow. Heads | Port Ohalmbbs I Dunedin 4.50 p.m. 1 5.25 p.m. | 6.10 p.m.
PORT CHALMRPS. ARRIVED. February 4.—United Brothers, 50 tons, Halford, from Gatlin’s River. Maori, s.s., 118 tons, Malcolm, from Lyttelton and intermediate ports. Passengers: Misses Horn, Evans, Wilson, Mrs Norman, Mr Justice Ward, Messrs Norman, Cain, Balfour, Foster, M'Leans,. Burrows, Cockroft, Sims, Gaze, M’Kerrow, Collins, Logan, Cockroft, Cain, Miller, Masters Burrows (2); and six in the steerage. SAILED. February 3.—Samson, p.s., 124 tons, Peterson, for Oamaru. Oomerang, p.s., 150 tons, Hughes, for Lyttelton and intermediate ports. Wallabi, 5.5.,101 tons, Leys, for the Bluff. Pioneer, 23 tons, Matheson,for Shag Point. February 4. —Chanticleer, 186 tons, Phillips, for Hobart Town.
The brig Chanticleer, for Hobart Town, was towed to sea by the Geelong this morning. The barque Harriet Armytage was towed down from Dunedin by the s.s. Jane last evening. It was the barque W. E. Gladstone that ran tip her numbers off the Ocean Beach on Tuesday Week.
The s.B. Wanganui came down from Dunedin this morning, and Sailed for her southern trip this afternoon.
The ship Lutterworth was removed from the quarantine ground to a convenient discharging berth, by the p.s. Golden Age, this morning. The steamers Wallabi for the Bluff, Samson for Oamaru, Comerang for Lyttelton and intermediate ports, and Ladybird for northern ports, sailed last night. The schooner United Brothers arrived this morning, with a general cargo, also spars and rigging, from the wreck of the Surat. She left there at 4 p.m. yesterday, with a fine S.W. wind.
The Harbor Co.’s s.s. Maori arrived at 8.45 this morning. After landing her mails and passengers at the railway pier, she steamed alongside the ship Zealandia to discharge cargo. We thank her steward for Lyttelton papers. The ship Crusader, which arrived at Lyttelton on Sunday, is again commanded by Capt. Sutherland. Mr Thompson, formerly of the Glenmark and Derwentwater, after eight years’ retirement from the sea, has again returned to it, and is now chief officer of the Crusader. The London ‘ Times,’ of October Bth, says:— “At the last meeting of the Shipwrecked Mariners’ Society, Captain "V. Budd in the chair, application was made from Newcastle, New South Wales, for a reward for Captain Ifwersen, of the barque Velocidade, of Lyttelton, New Zealand, who in April last, when about sixty miles off the former place, rescued the passengers and crew of the ship Belle Isle, of Liverpool, of 1,180 tons, Captain Da vise, during a neavy gale. The silver medal of the institution was unanimously voted to Captain Ifwersen, and the. thanks of the committee to the crews who manned his boats, for their united heroic and successful exertions in saving so many valuable lives on the occasion.”
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD18740204.2.3
Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka
Evening Star, Issue 3418, 4 February 1874, Page 2
Word count
Tapeke kupu
454Shipping. Evening Star, Issue 3418, 4 February 1874, Page 2
Using this item
Te whakamahi i tēnei tūemi
No known copyright (New Zealand)
To the best of the National Library of New Zealand’s knowledge, under New Zealand law, there is no copyright in this item in New Zealand.
You can copy this item, share it, and post it on a blog or website. It can be modified, remixed and built upon. It can be used commercially. If reproducing this item, it is helpful to include the source.
For further information please refer to the Copyright guide.