Sponsorship
In July 1854 the New Zealand
Government announced a policy whereby ‘persons resident in the province will be
able to send for their relatives, friends and acquaintances from England, on
making early application... The rate of passage money for adults will be £20… Each
adult will be allowed to bring free of cost a quarter of a ton of personal
baggage...when the settlers are aware that they can send for mechanics,
labourers, shepherds, or domestic servants on the above conditions, by naming
some person in England who will undertake to engage them..the Government has
provided for the protection of the parties on whose application the emigrant is
brought out, by requiring a promissory note, payable on demand, previous to his
embarkation, to the shipping agents, by whom it will be forwarded to the
Provincial Government.’
Alexander Sutherland had
arrived in New Zealand in early 1840 and was now well established. What a great opportunity for him to be able to send
for his two reliable, experienced shepherd nephews to work on his expanding
properties. There must have been correspondence for some time between William
and James and their uncle Alexander Sutherland in New Zealand who sponsored them. With the generous personal baggage allowance of a quarter of a ton it was likely that farm tools and such useful items could be stowed.
The Voyage Out
The Ship Maori
The sailing ship ‘Maori’
left London on 9 July 1855 with William and James McLeod on board. The ‘Maori’ was built in 1851 at
Sunderland, County Durham, for Mr C Tebbut and operated by Willis, Gann & Co, Shipping Agents. A wooden ship,
she made three visits to Nelson in 1851,
53 and 55 under the command of Captain
Petherbridge. The Maori was a ship of 800 tons, but for her size was a
very slow sailer, her average passages taking about 120 days. The1855 trip was
107 days. In 1860 she was chartered by Shaw, Savill & Co to bring out
immigrants to New Zealand. The Maori was lost at sea in 1890.
Embarkation
I don’t know how William and James got to
London to meet their ship. They may have gone by boat from Edinburgh or
Glasgow. At London the cargo being carried was loaded and steerage passengers
boarded, then the ship would be towed by steam tug to Gravesend where cabin
passengers boarded.
The website at https://teara.govt.nz/en/the-voyage-out gives helpful information
about typical emigrant voyages to New Zealand in the nineteenth century. The
following is from this website.
The Route
From the 1840s ships bound for New Zealand
went south-west down the north Atlantic, south-east to Cape Town then swung
wide round the Cape of Good Hope into the ‘roaring forties’ – westerly winds
that took ships along at great speed. Vessels were sailed as far south as their
captains dared, to catch the stronger winds, but there was always a risk of
violent storms and icebergs. On a typical voyage, all sorts of conditions were
encountered from storms to equatorial doldrums and incessant sun, to pleasant
sailing.
Steerage
William and James were steerage passengers.
Britain’s class distinctions continued on board. Privileged cabin passengers
had more space, privacy and better food. Steerage was a low ceilinged space
beneath the main deck. Steerage passengers slept in tiers on bunks. They were
provided with mattresses, but not bedding. Bunk space was cramped. The headroom
between decks could be as little as 1.8 metres. Steerage was divided into three
compartments: single men occupied the forward area next to the crew’s quarters;
single women were aft; and married couples were in the middle. Separate
hatchways gave access to each compartment. As was common, on this voyage there
were a lot more steerage passengers including children, than those in cabins.
Emigrant Ship between decks, 1850. Illustrated London News issue 17 August 1850. Married couples compartment. |
The sailing ships were often infested with pests such as vermin and cockroaches. The latrines stunk as did the animals that were kept on board to supplement the diet of cabin passengers. The steerage compartments flooded when waves broke over the ship leaving beds almost constantly wet.
Food
Those in steerage survived on salted and
preserved meat, ships biscuits, flour, oatmeal and dried potatoes. The food was
coarse, monotonous and not nutritious. There were different arrangements in
cabin and steerage for cooking and serving food. The crew cooked and served for
cabin passengers. The emigrants in steerage were divided into messes of about
six people, and stores were handed out to each mess and they cooked their own
food. After 1855 food was cooked for passengers in a central galley in common
pots. Steerage passengers were each allowed 3.4 litres of fresh water a day.
But water stored in barrels often deteriorated and became un-drinkable in a
couple of months. Passengers would try to catch rain water.
Dinner on board. Illustrated London news, 10 May 1851.
|
Hygiene
Landing
Anticipation mounted as voyages neared their end. Immigrants would be
on deck before daybreak to watch for signs of their new home. Vessels that
arrived with disease or sick passengers would be quarantined with passengers
and bedding disinfected. On 23 October 107 days from departure, the Maori
landed in Nelson. The letters state the
ship was at Blind Bay off Nelson. Blind Bay was an alternative name for Tasman
Bay. The port at Nelson, Tasman Bay was by 1855 busy but large vessels had to
pay attention to the depth of the harbour. The first deep water wharf was not
built until 1856.
While I do not have any diary
records of this voyage, the letters from passengers to the Captain indicate it
was a reasonably pleasant voyage.
Fox, William, 1812-1893, “View of Blind Bay from W. Fox’s
house” 1847 otago.ourheritage.ac.nz
To Wellington
Some cargo was unloaded at Nelson
then on October 27 the Maori left for Wellington with 15 cabin passengers and
26 steerage passengers which must have included William and James.
I have no doubt William and
James would have received a very warm welcome to Port Nicholson, Wellington by
the Sutherland family.
Te Aro Flat, Wellington, 1857 |
In a letter from Lyall's Bay, Wellington, dated 29 December
1855 to his brother-in-law John McLeod in Scotland, Alex Sutherland says:
- Mr John McLeod, Dear Sir, Your two sons William and James, arrived safe and are comfortably situated up the country in my employment…
Fascinating read! Thank you. I'm a relation of Captain Petherbridge and I'm doing some research about him. If you'd like to know more, please email me: cliver.evans@tiscali.co.uk
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