AMERICAN WARSHIP'S VISIT
ONTARIO FROM SAMOA.
GOVERNOR MAY COME OVER.
It was announced last week that advice had been received that the U.S.S., Ontario, which is attached to the naval station of American Samoa, Tutuila, is to pay a visit to Auckland toward the end of next month for the purposes of docking and overhaul.
It is quite possible that the Governor of American Samoa, Captain Edwin T. Pollock, U.S.N., together with several of his station officers, will take advantage of the occasion to visit New Zealand. If Captain Pollock is unable, owing to official engagements, to leave his headquarters on this occasion, he will be represented by Commander Harold Jones, who is second in command of the naval station at Tutuila. It is known that Captain Pollock is most anxious personally to renew his acquaintance with the Dominion, and to give an opportunity to some of his officers to view the scenery of this country. Captain Pollock has visited the Dominion once before, when, as a lieutenant, he was one of the personnel of the battleship Brooklyn. Admiral Bemy and' the warship were sent to represent the United States Government on the occasion of the inauguration of the Commonwealth of Australia and the opening of the first Parliament by the King, then the Duke of York, in 1900. The Brooklyn made a stay of about a week at Auckland and Wellington before proceeding to Australia. Captain Pollock still ha« the liveliest recollection of the welcome and hospitality which was extended by New Zealand to the visitors on that occasion. During the war Captain Pollock was in command of the U.R.B. George Washington, Which, after the Armistice, was selected to carry- President Woodrow Wilson and the American delegates to the Peace Conference at Paris. New Zealanders will be interested to know that there has always been the closest and most friendly co-operation between the New Zealand Administration of Western Semoa and tho Naval Administration of American Samoa.. 'lho problems of the respect Governments are almost identical, and the inter change of views and visits which take place nt regular intervals between the officers of the two territories have always been marked by tho greatest cordiality and good feeling.
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Bibliographic details
New Zealand Herald, Volume LX, Issue 18346, 12 March 1923, Page 8
Word Count
368AMERICAN WARSHIP'S VISIT New Zealand Herald, Volume LX, Issue 18346, 12 March 1923, Page 8
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