Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

SHIPPING.

'HIGH Water at Auckland—s.s a.m. ; 5.29 p.m.' ~ „ Manukau—B.4s a.m. ; 0.9 p.m. •sUN.—Rises, 4.59 a.m.; sets, 7.19 p.m. MOON.— moon, 17th, 5.17 p.m. ARRIVALS. Wellington, s.s., 279, Stephenson, from Wbangarei. Passengers : — Messrs. Wallace, Jones, McDonald, McLeod, Solan, King. Davis, McDonald, England, Longdill, Taiwhanga, Awbrey, Finlayson, ISehua, Haka, Foster, Blythe, Jones, Westmorland, Shrewsbury (2), Killand, Conyngham, Ross, Hayes, McLennan, Peters, Ellingham and 2' children, Mr. and Mrs. Percival, General Shaw, Masters Robertson (2), Mesdames Francis, Eraser, Carmichael, Muller, Finlayson, Cronin, Anderson, Heape, Misses Reid, Artley, Robertson, Sloane, Adair, Sheddin, Faulkner, Swarston, and 13 in the steerage. — Northern S.S. Co., agents. Hamburg, barque, 1696, Caldwell, from Pecalongan, Java.Colonial Sugar Co., agents. Waihora. s.s., 2003. T. Popham, from Melbourne and the South. Passengers : Mesdames Calvert and family, Bower and family, . Smith, Harden, Briscoe, Weetman, Misses Pridcaux, Harker, Mason, Cameron, Stewart, . Newton, Brigham, Messrs. Johnston, Hurley, Bower, Fletcher, Wallace, Perkins, Jackson, Smith (2). Edwards, Rolleston (2), Svmonds, Smith, Rhind, Bloomlield (2), Rothschild Evans, Lusk, Greenup, Captain Babot, and 22 steerage.—Union S.S. Co., agents. Fingal, s.s., 34, McLean, from Mangonui. —Northern S.S. Co., agents. CLEARED OUTWARDS. Waihora, s.s., 2003,Popham, for Russell.— Union S.S. Co., agents. Clansman, s.s., 336, Farquhar, for Russell and Northern ports.— Northern S.S. Co., agents. lona, s.s., 159, Amodeo, for Tauranga and Mercury Northern S.S. Co., agents. Douglas; s.s., 59, Austin, for Opotiki.— Northern S.S. Co., agents. DEPARTURES. Waihora, s.s., for Russell. Clansman, s.s.. for Russell. lona, s.s., for Tauranga. Douglas, s.s., for Opotiki. Brunette, barque, for Whangaroa, EXPECTED ARRIVALS. LONDON' : Tainui, R.M.s.s., due January 15. Arawa, R.M.s.s., February. Tongariro, R.M.s.s., sailed January 12 (via Wellington). Salamanca, ship, sailed November 5. Brahmin, ship, sailed November 20. Pleiades, ship, sailed November 2S. Oamaru, ship, sailed November 29. Euterpe, ship, loading. HEW VOKi. : William Phillips, barque, sailed Oct. 14. Arnold Von Bippen, barque, to sail No-' vember 20. Simoon, barque, sailed November 1. NEWCASTLE : Grecian Bend, barquentine, early. Ryno, brigantine, sailed January 9. Brisbane : Abiel Abbott, barque, early. Countess of Rothes, barque, sailed Jan. 5. Defiance, brigantine, sailed January 9. SYDNEY: Dart, H.M.s., sailed. January 13. Nayezdnik, H.1.R.M.5., sailed Jan. S. BAKOTONGA: Agnes Donald, schooner, early. JAVA: Nicoya, barque, early. HTJNEDiy : Gleaner, brigantine, early. GISBORNE : Gisborne, schooner, early. PROJECTED DEPARTURES. tONDOX : Waitangi, ship, to load. Dunedin, ship, via South, to load. SEW YOKE : Abiel Abbott, barque, to load. SYDNEY: Jessie, barquentine, loading. tAKOTONGA : Torea, schooner, early. Daisy, schooner, early. Aitoa : " 1 Maile,, schooner, early. J

UNPON S.S. CO.'S MOVEMENTS.

To-dj.y.— Rinsrarooma arrives from Sydney. .C'enguin leaves Onehunga at 8 a.m. Australia leaves for East Coast. Rosamond leave's for Greymouth at 4 p.m. Wednesday.—Waihora arrives from Rusfiell. Ringarooma leaves for Sydney at 4 P. 171. IT hcrsday.— Wauaka arrives at Onehunga at, S a.m. Waihora leaves for South at noon. Friday.— leaves Onehunga at 9. 30

NORTHERN S.S. CO.'S MOVEMENTS.

To-day.—Wellington leaves for Whangarei. Wednesday.—Gairloch arrives from Taracaki.

Thursday.lona leaves for Great Barrier at 8 a.m., Gajrloch leaves for New Plymouth at 1 p.m. Wellington arrives from Whangarei.

i riday.—Clansman arrives fromßussell early, and leaves for Tauranga at 7 p.m. ; lona leaves for Mercury Bay, and Wellington for Whangarei. Saturday.—lona arrives from Mercury Bay. Sunday. — Clansman arrives from Tauranga. VESSELS IN HARBOUR, [This list does not include coasters.] Dunedin, ship, at Queen-street Wharf. Waitangi, ship, at Queen-street Wharf. Brunette, barque, in stream. Northern Chief, barque, in stream. -Hamburg, barque, at Sugar Works. Jessie, barquentine, at Hobson-street Wharf, Ika Vuka, brigantine, at Hobson-st, Wharf. Mariner, schooner, in stream. Fleetwing. schooner, in stream. Southern Cross, Mission schooner, in stream. Torea, schooner, at North Shore. .Daisy, schooner, at Breastwork. •Christine, schooner, at Timber Mills. js*xon, schooner, in stream. /index, schooner, at Railway Wharf.

IMPORTS. Per s.s. Waihora, from South : 391 cases cornflour, 40 qr.-casks whiskey, 200 boxes candles, 16 packages harrows, 49 barrels ale, 34 bales twine, 20 cases acid, 50 zinc blocks, 14 bales cornsacks, 201 packages tea, 25 cases pickles, 20 cases bacon, 430 sacks and 645 bags Hour, 120 sacks malt, 22 sacks grass seed, 150U sacks wheat, 1 box ferrets, 94 boxes soap, 4 cases blacking, 30 boxes candles, 100 cases meats, 15 cases sewing machines, 20 rams, 14 balc3 wool, 11 sacks potatoes, 7 cases pears, 10 sacks barley, 10 kegs beef, 75 bags sugar, 2 qr.-casks wine, 100 bags bark. Per barque Hamburg : 2300 tons raw sugar. Per Waihora : 10 cases hams and bacon. Moir and Co.

Inwards Coastwise.—Teviot, cutter, from "Whangarei, with gum, etc.; Petrel, cutter, from Whangarei, with coal ; Rata, scow, from Waiara, with timber; Waterlily, cutter, from the Great Barrier, with 40 tons firewood.

Outwards Coastwise.— cutter, for Cape Colville, in ballast; Waipu, barge, for Mata (Thames), in ballast. Business was brisk yesterday on the wharf. The ships Dunedin and Waitangi and the steamers Waihora and Australia were all busily putting out their inward cargoes, while the several coasting steamers were as actively engaged in shipping freights for their numerous ports of call. The splendid new steel steamship the s.s. Tainui, of the Shaw, Savill, and Albion Co.'s Jline, will probably arrive in port here about noon to-morrow from London, by way of Teneriffe, Capetown, and Hobart. She brings a large quantity of general cargo to this port, and the local agents, Messrs. L. D. Nathan and Co., will no doubt use their accustomed care and dispatch in regard to its disposal, a task in which they will have the experienced assistance of Captain E. C. Babot, the ship's husband of the S.S. and A. line, who arrived from the South by the Waihora. The Auckland passengers by the Tainui are : —Right Rev. Dr. Cowie and party (6), Rev. and Mrs. Rowden, Miss W. Campbell, Mr. and Mrs. Jackson, Mrs. Peyton, Miss H. Patersou, Mr. and Mrs. McConnell, Misses S. and H. Melville, Mr. and Mrs. Gribble, Miss M. A. Hughes, Mr. and Mrs. Cursons, Mr. George Gosden, Messrs. S. Hall, Hugh Hall, Hart Lawry, James Gallagher, Peter McFarlane, A. Valantin, W. Scarborough, Jas. A. lilcher, and Geo. Johnson. We learn that the R.M.s. Tongariro left .Plymouth for New Zealand on Saturday last. She will make Wellington her first port of call in the colony, and then come on to >■ Auckland.

The barque Brunette left the harbour on i Sunday night late for Whangaroa, where she ' is to load timber for an Australian port. During yesterday the Union S.S. Co.'s Rosa- . mond was busily putting out her coal into two hulks in the stream.

By the Waihora yesterday the Auckland consignments ex the ship Helen Denny, at Dunedin, were brought to port, and the same steamer also conveyed to Auckland 109 packages ex the s.s. Ruapehu. The schooner Maile is advancing rapidly with her loading for the Islands, and will be ready to sail about the end of the present week.

Having been passed yesterday by Mr. . Jobson, inspector of machinery, etc., as "ready for sea, the s.s. Chelmsford was finally taken /over by the Northern S.S. Co., under whose flag she will now trade to her old ports in the Bay of Plenty. Captain Hopkins w riex former master, wilLaeain take charge,other

About nine o'clock yesterday tho Union S.S. Co.'s Waihora arrived from the South, with a mixed freight and a number of passengers. She leftDunedin at 4.30 p.m. on the 9th, and called at Lytteltou, Wellington, and Napier and reached Gisborne at an early hour on the 13th. She left again at 7.30 a.m., rounded the East Cape at 2.30 p.m. and steamed into port as above. She met with fine weather up the coast with light and variable winds and a smooth sea. The Waihora brines on the passengers and cargo of the s.s. Tarawera from Melbourne, that vessel staying in Dunedin to make her annual trip to the \V est Coast Sounds. The barque signalled yesterday afternoon turned out to be the Hamburg, Captain Caldwell, sugar - laden, from Pecalongan, Java, a fine large vessel of 1690 tons. Sho left Pecalongan on November 17, and had an uneventful voyage, with light winds and moderate weather, till the North Cape was sighted on Monday last, the 7th instant. Down the coast changeable weather and strong breezes prevailed. Mokohinau light was sighted on the 10th instant, and Tiri made out yesterday forenoon. In the afternoon the barque was picked up by the two tugs Rotoiti and Awhina, the services of both of which were required to convoy the Hamburg into harbour against the fresh wind prevailing. She was taken right up to the Sugarworks, where she is to discharge her 2300 tons of raw sugar. The Hamburg is one of the finest specimens of wooden sailing vessels that have appeared in our harbour for some years. She was built of pine a few years ago at Windsor, Nova Scotia, and is registered from that port. She conies into port in prime condition, both in regard to hull and gear, and her whole appearance reflects credit upon her skipper and crew.

Last evening the Northern S.S. Co.'s fleet of coasting steamers took their several departures for their respective ports, with passengers and freight. The Clansman sailed at S p.m. for Russell and the North. The lona cot away at o o'clock, for Mercury Bay and Tauranga, and the Douglas left for Opotiki and Whakatane.

The s.s. Waihora left about five yesterday evening for Russell, where she is to coal. She will return on Wednesday morning. The fate of the s.s. Triumph will be of interest to many Aucklanders, in whose minds the circumstances connected with her stranding on Tiritiri Island some three years ago are still fresh. The story of her being got oft", conveyed to port, ana being docked and repaired by Mr. George Frascr, are matters of shipping history in Auckland, and the career of the steamer in her trading ventures between New Zealand and Australia are also familiar to most of our townspeople. It is not, however, so well known that on her arrival in England from Australia she was purchased by a syndicate, of which Mr. J. L. Browne, of Sunderland, was manager, and for some time she was commanded by Captain Kemp, who was dismissed, and who in turn recovered from the owners, by a judgment delivered at the Newcastle Assizes, the sum of £300. Her bad luck seemed to attend her, even in the hands of new owners, for on the 22nd October last, at tho mouth of the Tyne (whence she originally hailed), she came into collision with a Spanish steamer named the Rivas, and was sunk in deep water. The Rivas also sustained severo damage, and had to be hastily beached to prevent her from sinking. The s.s. Wellington arrived last night, from Whangarei, with a large number of passengers and general freight.

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH18890115.2.9

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Herald, Volume XXVI, Issue 9261, 15 January 1889, Page 4

Word Count
1,782

SHIPPING. New Zealand Herald, Volume XXVI, Issue 9261, 15 January 1889, Page 4

SHIPPING. New Zealand Herald, Volume XXVI, Issue 9261, 15 January 1889, Page 4