SHIPPING.
POET OF LYTTELTON. Weather Retort—July 15. 9 a.m. Weather overcast and foggy: •wind, calm. Barometer, 30.25 ; thermometer, 49. High Water—Tomorrow. Morning, 10.53; evening, 11.23. Arrived— July 15. Wellington, s.a., 270 tons, McGee, from Wellington, Nelson, and Picton. B. Puflett, agent. Passengers—Mrs Melhuish and two children, Mrs Hall and child, Mrs Habeas. Miss Kennedy, Hon. Peter, Messrs Hill, Collins, Isaacs, Wright, Brown, Bara, McCree, Patterson, Hogg, Allen, Hall. Croydon Lass, schooner, 51 tons, Cnrran, from Waitipn. Te Anau, 1020 tons, Carey, from Melbourne via Hobart Town. R. Puflett, agent. Passengers—Mrs Bell. Mrs Bevins, Mrs Geo. Stevenson, Messrs James, Le Sueur, Wade, Todor, J. W. Bates, Ashe, and 12 steerage. Cleared— July 15. Princo Rupert, ketch, 60 tons, Hanning, for Kaiapoi. Master, agent. __ Sea Bird, brigantine, 155 tons. Smith, for Napier. Master, agent. .... Saxon, schooner, 53 tons, McKenzie, for Auckland. Cuff and Giaham, agents. Sailed—July 14. Taiaroa, s s., 228 tons, Malcolm, for North. E. Puflett. agent. Passengers—For Wellington —Messrs Chamberlain, Mahiku. For Taranaki —Mr Hayes. For Auckland—Messrs Friedman, Buchler. . . _,, _ , Sarah and Mary, brigantine, 154 tons, London. Cuff and Graham, agents. Captain Henning, of the Prince Rupert, reports in reference to the schooner Jane Hannah that she left Gatlin’s River on June 23rd with a cargo consisting of about JJJiuutt. of timber consigned to Mr Waller, of Christchurch, shipped by the Catlin’s River Saw-mill Company, to whom the vessel belonged. As already published there were four men on board, all told, bat it appears that one of the supposed crew, George Pillett, left the Jane Hannah before she sailed from Catlin’s River and joined the ketch Gatlin. His place was taken by a seaman named George Taylor, as Captain Henning thinks, who was transferred from the ketch Isabella. Captain Currie, of the Jane Hannah, was a married man, and resided at Cathn a River. He had no family. Ho was a native of Inverness, Scotland, of about thirty-two years of age, and a man very much respected among the seafaring men at Port Chalmers. None of the crew were married men. The mate, Gordon, had, like Captain Currie, been trading on the coast for five or six years. There can scarcely be any doubt now but that the vessel wrecked lately at Akaroa was the Jane Hannah. The Prince Alfred, from Pelorns Sound, was berthed yesterday at No. 6 to discharge her cargo of timber.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GLOBE18800715.2.3
Bibliographic details
Globe, Volume XXII, Issue 1994, 15 July 1880, Page 2
Word Count
394SHIPPING. Globe, Volume XXII, Issue 1994, 15 July 1880, Page 2
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