Shipping Intelligence.
PORT OF AH URIEL ARRIVALS. JULY. 30—Lord Ashley, s.s., from Wellington AUGUST. I—Wellington, s.s., from Auckland DEPARTURES. JULY. 30—Lord Ashley, s.s., for Auckland EXPECTED ARRIVALS. Keera, 5.9., from the West Coast, early in August Lord Ashley, s.s., from Auckland Mihia, cutter, from Wairoa Rangatira, s.s., from Wellington, Lyttelton, and Dunedin, on Thursday, sth August Star of the South, s.s, from Auckland Sturt, p.s., from Wellington Turnbull, ship, Cumming, from London (loading) VESSELS IN HARBOR. Greenwich, cutter, from Wairoa Hero, schooner, from Wairoa (repairing) Wellington, s.s., from Auckland PROJECTED DEPARTURES. Foe Wellington—Wellington, tin? day (Monday) Auckland—Rangatira, on Friday, 6th August PASSENGER LIST. INWARDS. In the Lord Ashley—Miss Shepherd, Mr and ss Brandon, Messrs Roydhons, Nairn, Appleton, and Kennedy OUTWARDS. In the Lord Ashley—Messrs M'Masters, Quill and Beady ENTERED INWARDS. JULY. o—Lord Ashley, s.s , 296 tons, H. Worsp, from Wellington, with 22 cases, 6 qr casks, Robjohus Brothers; 1 bundle trees, Nairn; 185 bags flour. Kinross and Co; 1 parcel, Harding; 1 rase, bank of New Zealand; 1 truss lather, Cosgrove ; 1 case drapery, Robinson; 7 bundles, 1 bag pepper, Stuart and Co; 1 case drugs. Cowing; 'l7 gunnies sugar, 10 pckgs, Routledge, Kennedy & Co. (agents.) CLEARED OUTWARDS. JULY. 30—Lord Ashley, s.s., 296 tons, Worsp, for Auckland, with 252 sheep, G. Richardson. —Routledge, Kennedy and Co, agents. 31—Mahia, 20 tons, Hamilton, for Wairoa, with 37 bags flour, Walker; 38 bags flour, 18 bags oatmeal, 4 cases biscuits, 2 gunnies sugar, 1 coil rope, 2 half-chests tea, 1 pkg tobacco, I parcel drapery, Finlaysou; 10 bags flour, 3 gunnies sugar, 1 halfchest tea, 1 bag salt, Benton ; 200 iron standards, 23 coils wire, i keg staples, 3 pckgs nails, 1 package coffee, 1 bag salt, 2 bags flour, order; 74 bags flour, 1 bag sugar, Carroll; 5 bags flour, 1 drum tar, 1 bag twine, Neagle; 1 bundle trees, 1 pekg seeds, Taylor; I box candles, 1 case sardines, 1 case pickles, 1 box soap, 9 mats Finlayson ; I case, 1 case drapery, 2 boxes soap. 1 case sundries, I case oil, 1 jar vinegar. Prentice; 4 cases drapery, 1 box pipes, 1 case grocery, 2 bales paper, Finlayson; I truss, 3 tons flour, 3 cwt. sugar, 7 tons potatoes, 2 cases drapery, 1 package drapery, •i bags saddlery, 2 bags shot, Carroll; 1 case boots, Sargent.—Kinross and Co., agents.
Arrival of the s.s. Lord Ashley. The Circular Saw Steam Navigation Company's s.s. Lord Ashley, Capt. Worsp, left Wellington at 5 p.m. on Thursday last, July 30 ; experienced light head winds with fine weather throughout, and arrived here at 4.30 p.m. on Friday. She brought several passengers, and about 14 tons of general cargo for this port. We have to thank the purser, Mr Monkman, for Wellington papers up to date of sailing. The Ashley steamed for Auckland at 8 p.m. on Friday, with 252 sheep and 3 passengers from this port. Arrival of the s.s. Wellington. The New Zealand Steam Navigation Company's s.s. Wellington, Captain Holmes, arrived in the roadstead at an early hour yesterday morning, from Auckland, having left that port on Friday af'ernoon. The Wellington leaves for Wellington and Southern Ports this day. An Indian Cyclone. The Times of India, Bth June, furnishes the following particulars of the late cyclone in that country : —The British India Steam Navigation Company's steamer Cheduha, with mails and passengers from Calcutta to Rangoon, has, it is very much feared, gone down in the cyclone that passed over the Bay of Bengal on the 15th and 16th ult. The Cheduha left the Sandheads at tht mouth of the Hooghly, on the morning of the loth May, for Rangoon, with the mails and the following passengers:—Major-General Faunce, Lieut. J. Ferguson, 21st Fusiliers, Mrs Bainbridge, Mr Dwyer, a Mohammedan lady, twenty natives, and two children. At midnight on Saturday the cyclone made itself felt at the Sandheads. It appears to have risen far to the south, and very probably the Cheduba felt its full force. Nothing has yet been heard of her, and though she may probably be drifting a helpless hulk in the Bay of Bengal, it is feared she has met the fate of the Persia in 1864 and the Thunder in 1867. On the western coast, too, a fine ship has been wrecked. The Bueentaur, from Liverpool, was driven ashore at Bombay harbor on the 4th inst., and has become a total wreck. Her cargo alone was worth £51,000 and no portion of it has yet been saved, as the sea is breaking heavily around the wreck. The captain and crew were all saved by the Bombay lifeboat. The British ship Great Northern was wrecked at Bassein, 28 miles north of Bombay, vesterday. Particulars have not been received, but the wreck is particularly disastrous, fifteen lives having been lost, and the captain severely injurad. Miscellaneous.The New Zealand Steam Navigation Company's s.s. Rangatira is due here from Southern Ports on Thursday, sth August, and will steam for Auckland on the following day. The cutter Mahia left port at an early hour this morning for Wairoa, with a general cargo.
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HBT18690802.2.4
Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka
Hawke's Bay Times, Volume 14, Issue 705, 2 August 1869, Page 2
Word count
Tapeke kupu
846Shipping Intelligence. Hawke's Bay Times, Volume 14, Issue 705, 2 August 1869, 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.