Shipping.
HIGH WATSE, TO-HOEHOW. F'jEATif!, 1 Ft, ''ivt. rHßfl.} f’rvv.-.r* 0,20 p.e, I 10.0 ;-.m, } 10.45 p.-r, POET OHALMEE9. AT THE HEADS, December o.—May Queen, ship, from London. ARRIVED. December 4.—Kate Moynahan, brigantine, 102 ; tons, M'Coll, from Wellington, j Kestrel, ketch, 61 tons, Bern, from Moeraki. ! Fanny, ketch, 25 tons, Williams, from Gatlin’s j Eiver, Samson, p.s., 124 tons, Edie, from’Oamaru. Pasj eengers: Mr and Mrs Allan and two children,
i Messrs Lindsay, Kirkpatrick, Bishop, Menlovo, ; Petrie j and eleven in the steerage, i December s.—Hawea, s.s., 461 tons, Wheeler, | from Lyttelton and the North. Passengers : Mesi da ties Puflett.lEarlc, M’Hutchinsou,Smith, Haynes, | Collins, Muir and son, Martin, Archibald and child, | Spriggs, Learmou and three children, and Bond; | Misses C. Stephenson, Osborne, MTlowiue, Wilj hams (2), Muir, Hyams, and M’Farlane, Judge | Williams, Eev. J. Hill, Messrs Martin, White, I M'Corkindale, M'Farlane, Woodward, Steinhoff, | Walcott, Smith, Sheath, Earle, M'Hutchinson, Buchanan, Shaw, Engel, Naucarrow, Grey, Wilson, La: ce Melhuish, Toper, Hart, Smith, Watber, M'Kellar, Puflett, Captain Prose; and twelve in the steerage. Maori, s.s., 118 tons, Malcolm, from Timaru. Passengers; Mr and Mrs Witt; and four in the steerage. Express, s.s., 136 tons, Fraser, from Bluff. Passengers : Mr and Mrs Whittaker, Mr and Mrs Kent, Mesdames Dawson, Wallace, and Liddle, Messrs Waterson, Gilly; twenty-seven in the steerage, and twenty immigrants. December 6.—Stag, barque, 336 tons, M'Lellan, from Newcastle. Hannah Barratt, schooner, 67 tons, Kenner, from Pclorus Sound. SAILED. December 4.—Tui, s.s., 80 tons, Bonner, for Kalkouras. ; Mr and Mrs Loughliu, Mrs Simpson and Walker. Mary Campbell, brigantine, 144 tons, Carr, for Grey mouth.
Dagmar, schooner, 42 tons, Connor, for Timaru. Comerang, p.s., 152 tons, Best, for Bluff. December 5. —Otago, s.s., 640 tons, Caldcr, for Melbourne, via Bluff. Passengers : For Melbourne —Hon. G. 8. Lyttelton, Messrs Balfour, Maufries, M’Keuzie, Heyzan, Dr Stenhouse; and seven in the steerage. For Bluff —Mesdames W. H. Reynolds, Cameron and servant, Messrs W. J. Turnbull, Griffin, Captains Logan and Petherbridge. December 6.—Mary Ellen, schooner, 29 tons, Smith ior Moeraki. Marmion, schooner, 92 tons, Bowton, for Kaipara. Ladybird, s.s., 286 tons, Andrew, for the North. Passengers; For Lyttelton—Mrs Moodie, Messrs Esther, Goldsmith, and Murdoch. For Wellington —Messrs Prico and Heppel. For the Mannkau— Mrs Brossman ; and three in the steerage.
The ships Waimate and Carmarthenshire will he removed alongside the railway pier to-morrow. The ship May Queen, from London, was signalled at the Heads at noon to-day. JB-.Two full-rigged ships passed the Ocean Beach this afternoon.
The s.s. Express returned from her usual Southern trip at 10.30 yesterday. She - left the Bluff at 6.30 p.m. on the 4th. The topsail schooner Hannah Barratt arrived tins morning with a cargo of timber from Pelorus Sound. She left the Sound on the 27th, If the San Francisco service remains as now arranged via Fiji, the A.S.N. Company intend to run the Wentworth between Melbourne and Auckland, via Sydney. The brigantine Kate Moynhau, with a cargo of bulk timber shipped at Waugaroa, arrived on Saturday from Wellington, which port she left on the 21th ult.
The Maori returned yesterday from her special trip to Timaru. She is to leave on her monthly trip round the island to-morrow, her first port of call being Timaru.
The Union Co.’s s.s. Hawea arrived from the Northern ports early yesterday morning. She left the Manukau at 4 p.m. on the 30th ult., called at Taranaki, Nelson, Picton, Wellington, and Lyttelton, which latter port she left at 4 p.m. on the 4th, an I had fine weather with light variable winds during the passage. We thank Mr Ponsonby, purser, for report and exchanges. The barque Stag, with a cargo of coal from Newcastle, was towed up last evening by the tug Geelong. She left Newcastle on the 24th ult, with a light E.N.E. wind, which shifted to the S.W. next day and increased to a gale, accompanied by heavy thunder and lightning, and lasted all the afternoon of the 2Cth; light southerly winds continued to the 29th, when they shifted to the N.N. W. On the 2nd instant experienced a heavy gale from the north-east, and was hove-to for thirty hours under lower topsails; made the South-west Cape at 11a.m. on the 3rd, still blowing hard, with heavy sea, one of which broke on board and carried away the wheel gratings. Passed the Solanders at 4 p.m. on the 4th, and came through the Straits at 4 a.m, on the sth. Thence light winds to arrival. SHIPPING TELEGRAM, Auckland, December s.—The Macgregor arrived at 5 p.m. She left San Francisco on November 9. Passengers for New Zealand: Mr and Mrs Taylor, Mrs Fraser; fifteen in the steerage, and sixty-two for Australia. December 6.—The Taupo sails for the South with the Macgregor’s mail at 2.30 p.m. today.
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD18751206.2.18
Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka
Evening Star, Issue 3988, 6 December 1875, Page 3
Word count
Tapeke kupu
789Shipping. Evening Star, Issue 3988, 6 December 1875, Page 3
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.