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PORT OF AUCKLAND.

SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE. ARRIVALS. June 29—Deborah, brig, 176 tons, Captain Gordon, from Melbourne, in ballast. Passengers—Messrs. W. Collier, Kirby, Steill, Simpson, Grev, July i—Sea Belle, 20 tons, J. Hopkins, from Kawhia, to Manukau, with 400 bushels whea*, 3 casks pork, 1 cask spirits, 10 bundles iron, 5 cwt. flax, 100 bushels maize, tons flour. July 1 —Frances, 20 tons, G James, from Mahurangi, with 30 tons firewood. Passengers—Mr. J. A. Brown, Miss Brown, July I—Dolphin, 42 tons, A. Campbell, from the East Coast, with 1100 bushels wheat, 100 do. corn, 1 cask pork, 5 bags salt.—W. S. Grahame, agent. July I—Mary Anne, 20 tons, Mokena, from the East Coast, with 600 bushels wheat.—J. Salmon, agent. July I—Joseph. 18 tons, Te Poroa, from Tauranga. with 200 baskets potatoes, 40 bushels wheat, 20 do. maize, 1 cask pork. July i—Mendleschon, 25 tons, Arapeta, from the East Coast, with 600 bushels wheat. July I—Edmund, 9 tons, Pa rau, from Tauranga, with 3 bags maize, 4 kits onions, 7 sides bacon, 3 tons potatoes. DEPARTURES. July I—Francis, 20 tons. G. James, for Mahurangi, in ballast. Passengers—Mr. J. A. Brown, Miss Brown. July I—Highlander, 14 tons, Parata, for Tauranga, in ballast. July i—Hawkhead, 22 tons, R. Laurie, for Mahurangi, in ballast. July I—William, 20 tons, W. Day, for Patana, with 3 bags rice, 2 do. sugar, 1 do. biscuit, 2 bundles spades. July I—Sally Brass, 18 tons, for Mercury Bay, in . ballast.—T. Russell, agent. The brig Deborah, Capt. Gordon, has had a protracted, and a very boisterous passage from Melbourne. A few days after clearing Port Phillip heads, she encountered a succession of heavy gales, during which she had her roain-top-gallant-mast, yard, sail, and gear carried away, and suffered much damage in her canvas and rigging. Owing to the continuance of heavy gales from N. and N. E. with the Vessel in her crippled state, Copt Gordon, bore up for Cook’s Straits, and came up .Eastabout, experiencing chiefly light and baffling winds. After clearing Cape Pallisar, on 21s t May, W'illiam Paramor, a native of Dover, was killed by a fall from the fore-yard. The Deboiah brings no later dates than those already to hand, spoke no vessels on the passage.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZ18530702.2.3

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

New Zealander, Volume 9, Issue 753, 2 July 1853, Page 2

Word count
Tapeke kupu
368

PORT OF AUCKLAND. New Zealander, Volume 9, Issue 753, 2 July 1853, Page 2

PORT OF AUCKLAND. New Zealander, Volume 9, Issue 753, 2 July 1853, Page 2

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