SHIPPING.
PORT UK LYTTELTON.
Weather Report.
May 30 9 a.m., wind S.W., liglit; weather overcast. Barometer, 29.63 ; ther mometer, 46.
High Water. To-morrow —Morning, 7.07; night, 7.31
Arrived. —May 29,
Tui, a. s. 64 tons, Wills, from Wellington via Kaikouras. Passengers—Saloon : Mr Reynolds ; steerage 3. May 30. Hawea, a.a., 462 tons, Wheeler, from Dunedin. Passengers—Saloon : Mesdames G. Mackay, Veal and son, White, Longrove, Misses Miller and Elder, Messrs J. Hurst, Buttler, and Rowlands, Masters McKenzie and Neville (2), 5 in steerage, and 13 for North.
Cleared. —May 29. Elizabeth Curie, brigantine, Travers, for Kaipara via Waikato. Nelson, schooner, Nelson, for Westport. Annie, ketch, Foster, for Port Levy. May 30. Tui, s.s., Bonnar, for Wellington via Kaikouras. . Hawea, s.s., Wheeler, for Northern Ports. Quiver, ketch, Smith, for’Leßon’s Bay. Sailed— May 29.
Albion, s.s., Clarke, for Melbourne, via Dunedin, Bluff, and Hobart 1 own. Passengers—Messrs H. Thomas, W. Beck, J. Probbatt, Mein, J. Forrester, and D, Lusk; 12 original. Arawata, s.s., Underwood, for Wellington and Nelson. Passengers—Saloon, for Wellington : Mr and Mrs Shearman, 2 children and 2 servants. Steerage—Messrs H. Davis and C. Hall; 16 original. John Knox, barque, Davis, for Sydney. May 30. Reward, schooner, Westlake, for Hokitika. Elizabeth Conway, schooner. Ware, for Hokitika. The ss. T u i arrived at 8 last night from Wellington via Kaikouras, and sails on return trip after arrival of 6 p.m. train in Port, jj The s. s. Hawea, from Port Chalmers, arrived at 8,45 this morning, and sails iSorth at 5 p.m. The John Knox was towed out into the stream by the p.s. Titan yesterday, and sailed for Sydney. A handsome fore-and-aft schooner,-named the Mazeppa, a stranger to this port, put in an appearance yesterday at 5 a.m.; she is from Mercury Bay, and is commanded by Captain Lombard, formerly sailing master of the yacht Secret, who favored us with the following report of her trip Left Mercury Bay on the 23rd instant at 2 p.m. with a strong N.W. wind, which held till the 27th, when off Cape Campbell; hero the wind shifted to the eastward, varying to the S. and holding so till arrival inside the Heads at 7 p.m. on Monday, the Kaikouras having been passed on Saturday ; got underweigh on Tuesday at 1 a.m., arriving at an anchorage as above. h The barque Caberfcidh loft Newcastle on May 12th, and arrived in harbor yesterday afternoon. She had not come to an anchorage when our express left port last night. Her cargo, 500 tons coal, is for P. Cunningham and Co. SHIPPING TELEGRAMS. Poet Chalmers, May 29. Sailed —Hawea, for Lyttelton. Passengers— Mesdames White, Lovcgrovc, Mackay, Veal, Misses Miller, Emdcn, Messrs J. Hart, Butler, Masters Neville (2), Mackenzie (2). INTEEPROVINCIAL SHIPPING. The Commissioner of Customs gives notice that about the month of September next a flashing white light of the second order will be exhibited on a lighthouse now in course of erection on the Brothers (Northern Islet.) The light will show a flqab every 10 seconds. From the lower part of the tower a fixed red light will be shown in the direction of Cook Eock. On the same night; on which The Brothers light is exhibited, the fixed white light on Mana Island will bo discontinued. Due notice of the exact date when the light will be first exhibited will be given. It is with pleasure that we hear from Captain Renner, of the schooner Hannah Barratt, which arrived here from Pclorus Sound yesterday, that when he was leaving there he saw the Aspasia, about whose safety grave doubts have boon entertained, at anchor in a small bay at the entrance to the Sound. The ketch Janet, which was driven ashore at Waikanae, was also there.— JS T eiv Zealand Times. According to advices received by the New Zealand Shipping Company, the barque Wenlock cleared out of London March 23rd, was weather bound in the Downs till the 31st, and finally cleared the Channel April 3rd. The Beatrice Havener, which is on her way to Dunedin from Boston, consigned to Messrs Bates, Sise, and Co, is a fine clipper barque of some 600 tons register, and is expected to make a smart passage. She has now been 70 days out. The Camille, also from New York, is making a very long passage, her time at sea to-day being 132 days. The Ocean Chief—reported to ho on the berth at New York for Dunedin, is bound for Wellington. INTERCOLONIAL SHIPPING.
Tho Hadcla, barque, was wrecked on Hodmans Bocks on her passage from Freemantlo to Lacepede Islands. The Star Queen left Newcastle for this port on May IGth, and the Woodbine and Isle of France on the 17th. The Sunbeam arrived at Adelaide on the 18th. The brig Bio Logo, from Hong Kong, arrived at Melbourne on May 11th. The Pet, barque, arrived at Melbourne from this port on May 14th. A late telegram from Capo Borda reported that the brig Emily Smith, from King George’s Sound to Adelaide, was wrecked near West Bay, when twenty-one people were drowned. Four Chinamen and a woman were saved. Throe of the men have arrived at a station, the other man and the woman endeavored to make their way to Cape Borda, in an exhausted condition. The vessel went to pieces five minutes after it struck. There were also on board five children belonging to passengers, with the captain, his wife, and lour children. The cargo consisted of sheepskins and timber. Tho vessel had been fifteen days out when she struck.
Permanent link to this item
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GLOBE18770530.2.3
Bibliographic details
Globe, Volume VIII, Issue 914, 30 May 1877, Page 2
Word Count
919SHIPPING. Globe, Volume VIII, Issue 914, 30 May 1877, Page 2
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