Why the Conway?
My
great, great, great, grandfather, William Spurrier was a seaman who was
probably born in London in 1779 but who arrived in Greenock, Scotland as a
young man and married a local girl, Catherine McDonald, in 1804. The Spurriers had a known family of 10
children, including three boys, William (1812), Thomas (1816) and Richard
(1819). In the early years of the 19th
century, Greenock was the most important port on the Clyde, because it had
access to deep water at a time when the dredging of a deep channel to Glasgow
had not yet been accomplished. It is not
surprising that the three Spurrier brothers should have become seamen and they
all sailed to Australia and New Zealand in the early years (1840s – 1850s) of the
transport of emigrants to these new colonies.
Thomas
Spurrier’s Masters’ Certificate of Service, dated 31st December
1850, shows that he first went to sea in 1831 at the age of about 14 as an
apprentice seaman and that he had served for 19 years in the British Merchant
Service in foreign trade. In 1854 he
sailed in a clipper ship, the Conway, from Liverpool for Geelong, Victoria, as
first mate and on the return journey to London.
He also appears to have sailed on the Conway as second mate on the
return leg of her next journey to Australia, to Hobart in 1855. In researching the ship’s history for the purpose of
understanding more about the life of Thomas Spurrier, it became clear that the
Conway had an incident-packed existence between 1851 and 1875, when she was
finally caught out by old age, poor maintenance and bad weather. The story of the Conway is worth telling in
its own right, but also gives a good insight into the golden age of sail.
Clipper Ships and
the construction of the Conway
Clipper
ships were square-rigged sailing ships, designed for speed, with long, narrow
hulls and a large sail area. These features compromised on bulk cargo capacity. Clippers were built mostly in American and
British shipyards, between about 1843 and about 1870. They plied their trade across all the oceans
of the world carrying both cargo and passengers. Demand for the rapid delivery of tea from
China initiated the clipper era in the 1840s and further stimulus to the
clipper trade was given by the Californian gold rush, which started in 1848
(New York to San Francisco) and the Australian gold rush beginning in 1851
(Britain to Melbourne). The demand for
new clippers was essentially ended by the completion of the Suez Canal in 1869,
which allowed steam ships to compete effectively with sail over long distances
for the first time. However, the
progressively aging clipper fleet continued to sail the seas for another two
decades. In that late phase of the
clipper era these ships were mostly used for the transport of emigrants from
Britain to Australia and New Zealand.
During
the Napoleonic Wars (1803 – 1815) Britain’s traditional source of imported
timber, the Baltic, was shut off and this led to the development of alternative
sources, particularly on the east coast of what is now Canada, in New Brunswick
and Quebec. By 1851 St John, New
Brunswick, was third largest city in British North America. Because of the abundance of local timber,
lumber export and shipbuilding developed as its main industries. Of the many shipbuilders who developed there,
the firm of Owens and Duncan was one of the largest. St John also became an entry point for
immigrants, especially from Scotland and Ireland. Timber ships often carried poor emigrants on
the journey to Canada.
By
the 1840s there was a boom in shipbuilding in St John. However, most ships constructed there were
not for local use but for export. Some
ships were owned by local merchants and were involved in a triangular trade,
such as timber to Great Britain, manufactured goods to the West Indies and rum
and molasses back to Canada. Some ships
were commissioned from abroad but often, in those boom times for shipping,
ships were built in St John speculatively, loaded with timber and sent to the
Clyde or the Mersey for the master to sell the cargo and often also the
ship. In the 1840s Liverpool took more
St John ships than any other port and by 1849 Liverpool was the destination for
more than 50% of newly-built St John vessels.
The Conway was built by Owens
and Duncan at St John in 1851. It is not
clear why she was given this name, but one possibility is that she was named
after Conway, a
township on the west side of the St John river.
She was one of
the last two ships built by the Owens and Duncan firm. Her construction was of local materials,
hackmatack (American larch), pine, oak and birch. She had two decks, a poop and three masts. She was ship-rigged, with a square stern and
curved build and she had a wooden frame.
The length of the ship was 168 ft, her breadth amidships 34 ft and the
depth of her hold was nearly 33 ft. Conway’s registered weight was 1195
tons. Sadly, no photograph has been
found of the Conway. In 1868 Conway was
converted to a barque rig ( mizzen mast re-rigged fore-and-aft). This arrangement required fewer seamen but
was not as fast as a fully-rigged ship.
It was typical of a general cargo ship, where economical operation was
important.
1851 – 1852 Timber, Cotton and Emigration to North America
It is not clear if Conway was
commissioned or built speculatively but she arrived in Liverpool under Captain
Marshall on 28th July 1851, probably carrying a cargo of
timber. Within a month advertisements
began to appear in a variety of Irish newspapers, such as the Cork Examiner and
the Farmer’s Gazette and Journal of Practical Horticulture, advertising
passages to New York, Philadelphia and Boston on “Harnden & Co’s present
line of packet ships from Liverpool”.
Harnden & Co was a firm of American shipping agents which had
branches in both America and Liverpool.
Advertisements placed by a Dublin agent, Roche Brothers, also offered
free steamship passages from that city to Liverpool. Conway was one of the ships slated for New
York, under Captain Marshall. Some of
the advertisements described the New York-bound ships (Colombia, Beejapore and
Harriett, in addition to Conway) as “Black Ball Line”. Was Conway commissioned from Owens and Duncan
by the original Black Ball Line, which was American? Or, was Captain Marshall sent over to sell a
speculatively-built ship and then retained as master by her new owner? The initial ownership of Conway remains
unclear. The full name of Captain
Marshall has not yet been determined but there was a Captain James Marshall
sailing out of St John at the time and Captain Charles H Marshall took control
of the American Black Ball Line in 1836.
Conway was not registered at Lloyds until 1853, so it is likely that her
ownership was initially in foreign hands.
By 8th October 1851
advertisements were indicating that Conway would sail from Liverpool for
Queenstown, the port for Cork, on Friday 12th October. She actually sailed the following day and
arrived at Queenstown on 18th October. In addition to passengers, she was reported
to be carrying a cargo of salt. The
decision to call at Cork may have been a commercial necessity to fill the 400
emigrant berths that the ship contained.
New York was the main destination for the approximately one million Irish
people who emigrated in the aftermath of the Potato Famine of 1845 – 1852. Heavy advertising in the Cork area continued
and the ship lingered in Queenstown harbour, while various inducements were
offered to tempt additional passengers, such as reduced fares and the fact that
a Catholic clergyman would be making the passage and could offer spiritual
support. Conway finally sailed for New
York on 3 November, arriving there on Sunday 28th December. From New York, Conway returned to St John,
New Brunswick, presumably to pick up another cargo of timber, though her cargo
on the final leg of this triangular trade is not directly known.
Conway, again under Captain
Marshall, sailed from St John on 22nd February, 1852, bound for
Greenock on the Clyde, where she arrived via, the North Channel, on 5th
April. This second round trip across the North
Atlantic seems to have followed a similar strategy to the first one. On this occasion 419 passengers were embarked
at Greenock for New York. The North
British Mail described most of the passengers as “Scotch and are of the better
class of tradesmen”. Among the
emigrants were three sets of wives and families travelling to join husbands who
had preceded them to California and made good in the gold rush of 1848 -. The journey to New York took a tedious 7
weeks, about twice as long as the passengers could reasonably have expected.
One group of passengers was the
Paton family from Galston in Ayreshire, which travelled on to Michigan after
landing. Young John Paton, who was later
to be instrumental in the founding of the Jehovah’s Witnesses, recorded his
impressions of the voyage in his autobiography.
He noted being seasick in an early storm, fooling about swinging on
ropes out over the ocean, being becalmed for long periods and seeing whales,
porpoises, gulls and two icebergs.
Sometime after the sighting of the icebergs, the passengers heard a
great crash and many of them were instantly convinced that the ship had
collided with a ‘berg, which led to much wailing and praying. The true explanation was equally scary. Sailors had been handling a heavy boom aloft
but it had slipped from their hands and crashed to the deck. On the way down it hit a woman a glancing,
but not fatal, blow on the head before penetrating the deck planks. The arrival of the ship in New York on 26th or 27th June impressed grandfather Paton who observed “It's worth while comin'
a' the w'y to see't."
Conway sailed on to Quebec,
reaching that city on 21st August, 1852, where it is presumed she
took on a further cargo of timber. She
cleared for Liverpool on the 18th September and the ship, under
Captain Marshall, arrived at Liverpool on 26th October. On her next voyage Conway was not contracted
to carry emigrants on her westward leg across the Atlantic but, as was typical
of ships plying their trade between Liverpool and Canada, she did not travel
there during the winter months, when the St Lawrence Seaway would be
inaccessible. Instead she sailed for New
Orleans on 22nd December, perhaps to pick up a cargo of cotton, since Liverpool
was the main port for the importation of raw material for the Lancashire cotton
industry.
1852 – Conway’s First Wrecking
Conway’s departure for New
Orleans took her into the path of two violent storms in the Irish Sea on Saturday,
26th and Sunday, 27th December, 1852. The Liverpool Mercury described the effects
of these storms in the city as follows: “…two terrific hurricanes were
experienced in this town and vicinity and which as regards their violence and
disastrous consequences to life and property exceed any similar visitations
which have occurred since the year 1839”.
At 4.00am on Saturday morning the SW wind was gusting to 70mph and this
was followed by winds as bad or worse on Sunday evening. The wind continued to rage for 8 hours. Conway put back to the Mersey on Christmas Day
and anchored off the port to ride out the storm, along with many other vessels,
dipping their bows in the surf with water cascading along the decks. Waves were crashing against the Liverpool sea
walls and the high tide, which was 6 feet higher than anticipated almost filled
the docks. Many Liverpudlians came out
to marvel at this spectacle.
The bed of the Mersey does not
have good holding ground and, about the top of high water, both the Conway and
the barque, Elizabeth, began dragging their anchors under the onslaught of the
SW gale. The crews of both vessels cut away their masts in an attempt to avoid
being cast up on the shore, but to no avail.
Conway ended up against the sea wall at the north end of the then new
docks in Bootle Bay. Subsequently, she
was variously reported as having 7 feet and 12 feet of water in her holds and
she filled with each tide. It was
anticipated that both Conway and the Elizabeth would become total wrecks. The Conway’s crew of 23 were all rescued by a
lifeboat from the Magazine on Sunday 27th and landed on the beach at Bootle.
Contrary to expectations, Conway did not become an irredeemable ruin. She was sealed, pumped out, floated off and
towed into the recently completed Sandon Basin of Liverpool’s North Docks the
following Wednesday, 30th December.
1853 – Conway joins the (Liverpool) Black Ball Line
To understand the next twist in
the convoluted story of the Conway, it is necessary to introduce one of the
most notable and powerful personalities on the Liverpool shipping scene in the
1850s: James Baines. James was born in Liverpool
in 1823. His first known job was in the
office of his shipbroker uncle, Richard Baines.
The role of the shipbroker was to link up the shipper of goods with the
ship owner who had a ship to fill. This
initiated James into a highly successful career in the shipping industry as a self-made
ship owner and manager. Early on, he
made several attempts to become a ship owner by buying vessels on credit and
then immediately selling on shares and also mortgaging his own holding. After a number of failures he became established
as a ship master in 1849, when he bought shares in a number of ships including
the Deborah, which was commanded by Captain James Liston (of whom more later). In 1851 James Baines in partnership with
Thomas Mackay established his own line of packets specialising in the carriage
of emigrants to Australia. There was a
great demand for passages to that country following the discovery of gold at
Ballarat . Many people sought to join
the gold rush before the reserves of the precious metal were exhausted.
James Baines was a natural
entrepreneur who had great drive and presence.
He could be charming and generous but he was also ruthless, even
underhand, in his business dealings.
This was shown most blatantly when he named his line of packets the “Black
Ball” Line, shamelessly copying the name and even the flag of the long-established
American shipping line of the same name.
Today this would be called “passing off”. Because of the demand for passages to
Australia, Baines needed to obtain sufficient ships in a hurry. His first large ship was the Marco Polo. She had been built speculatively in St John,
New Brunswick and sailed to Liverpool with a cargo of timber, seeking a buyer
for both the cargo and the ship. She did
not sell after her first voyage but on her second visit to Liverpool in 1852
she was bought for the Black Ball Line by Baines and Mackay and set out for
Australia the same year. In 1851 and
1852, as part of his portfolio of commercial activities, James Baines was
manager of the Liverpool office of Harnden & Co, the American shipping agents
which had handled the initial crossing from Liverpool to New York, via
Queenstown, of the Conway in 1851. James
Baines would thus have been familiar with the specification of the Conway.
At the end of 1852, when the
dismasted and holed Conway was towed into the Sandon Basin, James Baines must
have realised that here was an opportunity to buy a nearly-new ship constructed
by a reputable builder, probably at a knock-down price. Conway’s design was ideal for the emigration
trade to Australia. She was sold for use
by the Black Ball Line early in 1853 and James Liston was appointed as her
master. This was Liston’s first command
of a three-masted, fully square-rigged vessel.
Shares in the ship were actually owned by Baines, Miller, Mackay and
Harrison. Of the 129 ships which sailed to Australia under the
Black Ball flag, only 6 sailed on 3 or more voyages and one of these stalwarts
was the Conway, which sailed 4 times in Black Ball colours. In the middle of March 1853 the Black Ball
line of packets was advertising a future passage by the Conway to Port
Melbourne (for Melbourne) and Port Phillip (for Geelong, 50 miles SW of
Melbourne), but without an estimated date for departure. Conway was quickly
repaired. In addition to making her
watertight, re-masting and re-rigging, Conway’s hull was now sheathed in felt
and yellow metal. Yellow metal was an
alloy of copper (60%) and zinc(40%) with a trace of iron which was used to
inhibit fouling and deter the Teredo worm (actually a bivalve mollusc), which
destructively bores into ships’ timbers.
Conway sailed for New York on the 25th April, then
travelled on to Quebec before returning to Liverpool on 23rd
September, 1853. This triangular trading
pattern was very similar to that undertaken by Conway on her first voyage out
of Liverpool in 1851. On this occasion, she
may have taken a cargo of emigrants to New York, though no advertisement has
been found which indicates this was so and brought back a load of timber from
Quebec.
Emigration to
Australia - Introduction
Emigration
from Great Britain and Ireland to the USA and the British colonies was a
growing phenomenon during the 19th century. Of almost 300,000 emigrants in 1849 73.5%
went to the USA, 13.9% went to Canada and 10.8% went to Australia and New
Zealand. Most emigrants left from
Liverpool (52%) and London, with very little direct emigration from Scotland
and Ireland. Until the 1860s most
emigrants travelled in sailing ships. The
majority of emigrants were from the poorer classes and made the journey in
steerage, only ~3% travelling as 1st or 2nd class cabin
passengers. The Colonial
Land and Emigration Commission was established in 1840 to manage land sales in
British colonies and to use some of the money realised to regulate colonial
emigration. Emigration to the USA did not benefit from the oversight of the
Emigration Commission. Eleven officers
were selected (all Navy men) and stationed at the main emigration ports, Liverpool, London,
Bristol, Greenock, Leith, Dublin, Cork, Belfast, Limerick, Sligo and
Londonderry. The officers were
responsible for administering the requirements of the Passenger Acts by
chartering ships, selecting emigrants for free passages and appointing surgeons
to travel on emigrant ships and regulate the provision of food and other
conditions on board. The Emigration
Officer for Liverpool was thus a very important person to the shipmasters
offering vessels for the emigration trade.
Between 1853 and 1858 the post was filled by Captain Charles Schomberg
RN, who hailed from an august naval family.
Schomberg had a staff of 13 and supervised the embarkation of almost
790,000 passengers in more than 2000 ships during his period of office. So many emigrants left from Liverpool that a
special Emigration Depot had to be built on the Birkenhead side of the Mersey. James Baines sought to have a good
relationship with Schomberg, bearing in mind his role in selecting ships for
the transport of emigrants and in supervising their care on the journey. A large clipper commissioned by Baines from
Alexander Hall, the Aberdeen shipbuilder in 1854 was named “Schomberg” after
Liverpool’s Emigration Commissioner, probably to flatter his ego.
Conway’s
1854 journey to Geelong
From 22 November 1853 a blizzard of advertisements appeared in
newspapers throughout the length and breadth of Britain and Ireland for a
passage by the Conway from Liverpool to Melbourne, the date of departure being
slated for 20th December. Other
vessels and passages were also listed and the general description of the
vessels and their capabilities was as follows.
“These celebrated ships are all first class and have made
the fastest passages on record. They
carry experienced surgeons and their ‘tween decks are lofty and well ventilated
throughout. Provisions and water are
provided for 20 weeks under Government inspection. Passengers’ baggage is put on board free of
expense. Cash orders issued on Australia
from £1 and upwards, and parcels forwarded.
Apply to the owners James Baines & Co, 6 Cook-street, Liverpool”. Between 22 November and the end of December,
103 newspaper advertisements were detected in four waves, apparently targeting
the same list of titles in the same order. The newspapers were located
throughout England, Wales, Ireland and Scotland, including those based in big
cities and those in rural areas.
London-based newspapers were conspicuously absent. Scottish and Irish newspapers, on the other
hand, were overrepresented. These
statistics probably reflect both the anticipated and the actual recruitment of
emigrants by the Black Ball management from different parts of the nation.
It is easy to understand why
the Conway’s voyage to New York in 1851 should have been advertised widely,
since the Emigration Commissioners were not involved with the recruitment or
supervision of emigrants to the USA.
What is not so easy to understand is why some of Conway’s passages to
Australia should have been widely advertised (Geelong in 1854 and Hobart in
1855), while others (Sydney 1856, Melbourne 1858, Brisbane 1862) were not. Perhaps in 1854 and 1855 the shipowner had
some latitude to recruit passengers, while in 1856 and afterwards all
recruitment was done by the Emigration Commissioners?
About the beginning of December
1853, James Baines & Co dispatched a steamer and 5 lighters, capable of
handling 1000 tons of cargo at a time, to Melbourne. This provision was probably related to the
fact that large ships had to anchor some way off Melbourne and the Black Ball
line needed to ensure that its passengers with their luggage and associated
freight reached the city without delay after arrival.
At the end of November, 1853,
Conway was lying in the Sandon Basin, probably undergoing adaptation and
general sprucing up prior to the journey to Melbourne under the auspices of and
subject to the inspection of the Emigration Commissioners. On 29th of that month Joseph
Irving, a painter, fell into the Conway’s hold and was so severely injured that
he died. It appears that the unfortunate
Irving was part of a painting gang employed between decks to put the last
touches to the Conway before her planned departure.
Most emigrants were from the
poorer classes in British society and travelled in the cheapest accommodation,
called steerage. This was arranged like
a communal dormitory with bunk beds down the sides of the ship and a long table
down the middle. In Conway, rations for
an adult for a week were 3 ½ lbs of biscuit or bread, 6oz salt beef, 1 1/2lbs salt
pork, 1 1/2lbs tinned meat, 2lbs 10oz
flour, 8oz raisins, 6oz suet, 3 pints peas, 8oz rice, 1 1/2lbs potatoes, 4oz
butter, 1lb 9oz oatmeal, 6oz treacle,
12oz sugar, small amounts of tea, coffee, salt, pepper, mustard, pickles and 21
quarts of water.
A Terrible Storm and an Outbreak of
Cholera
On Monday 16th
January 1864 Conway left the great float and anchored in the Mersey having
taken on board 382 passengers and a cargo of general merchandise. She carried a crew of 50 seamen and officers. Her destination was now fixed for Geelong and
she was expected to depart the following day.
Geelong lies on Corio Bay about 50 miles south west of Melbourne. Its initial growth was largely due to the
discovery of gold at Ballarat, which lies inland from Geelong. Conway did not actually leave until 6pm on Thursday,
19th January. The delay appears to have been due to the late arrival
of three Irish families who had been stranded in Dublin and had lived in
miserable conditions, with little food, on the docks for three days. By the time they joined the Conway they were
exhausted. Sadly, their circumstances
were about to take a decided turn for the worse. The following day, Friday 20th, at
4pm Conway dropped her pilot off Port Lynas, which lies on the north coast of
Anglesey and Captain Liston set course for the southern entrance to the Irish
Sea. Soon after the pilot left the ship
the weather deteriorated rapidly and by 10pm Conway was sailing under double-reefed
topsails. The fierce winds continued all
the following day, Saturday 21st and Liston found that he was unable
to make any headway against the SW gale.
He therefore decided to turn and run before the wind, making for the
northerly channel to the Atlantic. For
three nights (Friday to Monday) the passengers dared not undress themselves for
fear of sinking. One of their number,
Mrs Jean Stones, gave birth to a daughter in the midst of the gale. (The child was later, on 14th
February, christened “Anna Conway Liston Stones”. One week previously, on Tuesday 7th February,
another passenger gave birth, this time to a boy. He too was named “Conway”).
On Sunday 22nd February, 1854, the wind veered suddenly to
NNW, the direction that Conway needed to travel to leave the Irish Sea and on
Monday 23rd the plunging of
the Conway into the heavy seas caused her to lose her jibboom and two new jibs,
which, along with the mainsails, fell into the sea with a great crash. All the sailors stripped in order to be
prepared to swim for their lives and 117 passengers were locked up in one
cabin, some praying, others screaming and some in fits. The conditions for the
passengers were abominable. Seasickness
was rife and, the ultimate tragedy, cholera had broken out on Sunday 22nd,
appearing first amongst the three Irish families who were late joining the
ship. In addition, diarrhoea from other
causes was rampant. The passengers were
in a state of panic and misery. James Liston
decided to make for the Clyde to effect repairs to his battered ship. By Tuesday 24th he had reached
Gourock Bay at the entrance to the Clyde, where he joined the Martin Luther,
also from Liverpool and the Trojan of Port Glasgow. Conway dropped anchor and rode out the storm
until Friday 27th.
Conway was not the only ship in serious trouble as a
result of the gales. The Canadian Steam
Navigation Company’s steamer Charity sailed from Liverpool on 16th
January. By Friday 20th
January, she had reached the Atlantic by the northern entrance when she was
struck by an enormous sea which swept her from stem to stern, smashing all 6 of
her lifeboats, cascading water into her engine room releasing clouds of steam
and smoke into the vessel, sweeping one seaman overboard, breaking the rudder
from the tiller and causing her cargo to shift.
Captain Paton could not get the Charity brought before the wind and she
wallowed for the next 14 hours. She eventually
reached the Tail of the Bank anchorage off Greenock in the Clyde on the
afternoon of Saturday 21st.
There was a crowd of other vessels there also seeking shelter from the
extreme weather.
The Tayleur, a newly-built iron ship of 2000 tons register
on her maiden voyage to Melbourne with 579 people on board, left the Mersey
under tow at 12.00 noon on Thursday 19th January, a few hours before
the Conway. She experienced very severe
weather on Friday and Saturday morning and had two sails blown away. In the murky weather she got too close to
Lambay Island, near Dublin, on a lee shore, when she failed to respond to the
rudder and was blown onto land. Some
passengers and crew managed to jump or swim across to the rocks but the Tayleur
quickly sank. Of the 579 on board, 296
were saved and, tragically, 283 drowned.
On Thursday, 26th January James Baines &
Co, was active in the relief effort for the Tayleur survivors. The company wrote
to their Dublin agent concerning the disaster to the Tayleur. “Two of our ships, the Indian Queen with 320
and the Conway with 382 government passengers, sailed the same day as she did,
but nothing has been heard of them since they sailed, we presume they have got
safe away.” So, at that time, the
company was apparently unaware of the dire situation in which their ship, the
Conway found herself. There had been two deaths, a child, who had
been buried at sea and an adult (probably Mrs Isabella Thomson), who had been
rowed ashore for burial at Gourock. It
is likely that Captain Liston took the opportunity, on the visit to Gourock, to
contact the owners in Liverpool with information on Conway’s crisis. The authorities in Gourock would also have
become aware of the situation, because of the burial. On Friday 27th January, Captain Keele,
the Emigration Officer at Greenock received a letter informing him that there
were cases of cholera on board the Conway off Gourock. The information had apparently come from
Liverpool (from the Conway’s owners?) via Glasgow. Keele immediately set out to visit the ship
in the company of two doctors acting as consultants, Dr Fraser, the Medical Inspector at Glasgow
and Dr Morton, the Medical Officer at the Board of Health and they reached
Conway on Saturday, 28th to
find a situation that was rapidly getting out of control. Captain Keele was shocked to discover that in
the midst of this disaster the Conway’s surgeon, Dr Byrne, appointed by the
Emigration Commissioners to travel on the ship to look after the health and
welfare of the emigrants, was suffering from delerium tremens and had been
incapable of assisting the passengers in their time of need. Byrne was immediately dismissed and Keele
sought out a new appointee as surgeon on the Conway.
Tensions in
Greenock
Dr Gavin, the Medical Inspector for the Board of Health
in Glasgow had been sent for by the Greenock authorities on Saturday, 28th
January but was not immediately available.
He eventually arrived in Greenock at 10.30pm and had a long meeting with
the medical and parochial authorities. Dr Gavin wanted Conway to be brought to Greenock,
the nearest port with facilities to handle the emergency and the healthy passengers moved
on shore. He enquired about the availability of suitable buildings. No suitable accommodation seemed to be
available and, in any case, the Conway was beyond the bounds of Greenock’s
jurisdiction. The view of the Greenock
authorities was that Conway should be towed to somewhere isolated, such as the
Gareloch, Loch Long or the old quarantine station on the Holy Loch, all on the
other side of the Clyde, a significant distance from Greenock! While
Dr Gavin and the authorities were in consultation Captain Keele arrived from
the ship and reported that there had been three further deaths and that the
bodies had been brought on shore and interred at the cemetery. The authorities were entirely focussed on avoiding the
risk of the highly contagious cholera spreading into their town, whereas Dr
Gavin was seeking the best possible circumstances in which to treat the sick
and eliminate the further spread of the disease amongst the passengers and crew
of the Conway.
The Greenock authorities consulted with the Sheriff and
the Collector of Customs and resolved to cut off all communication with the
stricken ship. Orders were given to the
police to hail all
boats which approached the harbours, for the purpose of ascertaining whether
they came from the Conway and policemen were stationed at various points along
the shore to prevent passengers and crew from Conway reaching the town. They
believed that Conway was not their problem and the appearance of Conway off the
port would cause great alarm.
To
understand the response of the Greenock authorities it is important to realise
that in those pre-antibiotic days in the mid-19th century cholera was a
remarkable common disease in the crowded conditions of many British towns and
cities. Cholera is an infection of the
small intestine by the bacterium Vibrio
cholerae. It results in the
production of copious watery diarrhoea and can rapidly lead to death if the
patient is not rehydrated and their electrolyte balance restored. It is estimated that in 1832 half of those
who caught cholera died of the disease. Infection
is caused by contamination of food or drink by the faeces of an infected
person, including excreta from people who are infected but have no symptoms. Greenock with its “narrow undrained streets,
pestiferous lanes and closely built houses” was no stranger to cholera and it
had a hospital for the isolation of cholera sufferers. There had been a major outbreak in 1832 and,
only 5 years previously, in 1849, a cholera outbreak in the town was so severe
that, at its height, it was killing one person every two hours. But passengers
on board ship, especially when locked in the close confines of steerage for
days during storms, would have experienced the ideal conditions for the spread
of the disease. A stand-off between the civic and medical
authorities briefly ensued but the medical men quickly brought some big guns
into play.
On the following day, Sunday, 29th, Dr Gavin
informed the Board of Health in Glasgow of the cholera outbreak and the
resistance of the Greenock authorities to allowing the ship to dock there and
to accepting its passengers and crew on shore.
He sought its instructions.
Captain Keele wrote to the chairman of the Greenock Parochial Board
asking him to open the Cholera Hospital.
His request was declined on the basis that Conway did not lie within the
parish boundaries and was thus beyond their authority to act. It suggested the provision of hospital ships
as an alternative. Dr Auld, the Medical
Officer of Quarantine, wrote to the Greenock Magistrates requesting separate
accommodation for the healthy passengers and pointing out the official
authority for his request. The
Magistrates met on Sunday evening and said they would only act on the request
if directed to do so by Government, but if that were the case they would give
full cooperation. Captain Keele and Dr
Gavin visited Conway again on Sunday.
Since their visit the previous day there had been two further deaths,
including Isabella White, whose mother had died previously. Additionally, four people were in a state of
collapse. There had now been 7 deaths in
total, including one seaman.
Monday 30th January brought some relief to the
passengers and crew of the Conway. A
steamer took a supply of medicine, blankets and firebricks out to the ship. The Rev Gordon, a Catholic clergyman also
travelled on the steamer to render spiritual help to the sick passengers. Disease continued to spread amongst both
passengers and crew. Two children and the boatswain died during the day. At 3pm there were 20 cases of cholera, with 4
in a state of collapse and 37 cases of diarrhoea. The Greenock authorities now realised that
they would have to give in to the pressure being exerted on them to admit
Conway and her human cargo. The local
newspaper commented that it suspected that the authorities had not much choice
in the matter. To their credit, the
authorities now made rapid preparations for the ship’s arrival The Greenock Master of Works, Mr Allison, set
about converting a former sail loft at the West Quay for the accommodation of
the healthy. It was divided into four
apartments, the one at the south end for 120 single females, the middle two
apartments for married couples (89), children and infants (124) and at the
northern end the 40 unmarried male passengers were placed. The apartments all had beds and toilets
attached and cooking facilities were placed in the yard. A police cordon was arrayed around the
building to prevent communication between the passengers and the general
public. Preparations were also made at
the Cholera Hospital for the admission of the sick, with the provision of additional
beds and furnishings. The initial
failure of the Greenock Authorities to act had, however, been passed up to the
Home Office and a letter from Lord Palmerston, the Home Secretary, quoting from
a communication by Captain Keele, telling
him that the Greenock authorities had not at first rendered him all the
assistance that he thought he was entitled to receive, arrived in
Greenock on Wednesday, 1st February.
However, the Greenock Authorities, having already caved in, immediately
responded by telegraph hotly denying the charge of non-cooperation. The biggest of big guns had, in the end, not
been necessary.
It proved impossible to find a steamer capable of towing
the Conway from Gourock Bay to Greenock so, on Tuesday 31st January,
a request was made to the Admiralty to use HMS Vulture, a steam paddle frigate
of 1960 tons. The Admiralty reply was
that a request could be made to the captain of any available Royal Navy vessel,
provided the costs were met. It is not
clear how Conway eventually reached Greenock but she had arrived off the port
by Wednesday,1st March Two dead adults and 3 dead
children were then landed, making 11 deaths in total.
The Sacking of Captain Liston and
the arrival of Captain Duguid
By this
time James Baines & Co had sent a representative, Captain Dixon, to
Greenock. He must have discovered that
Captain Liston, after arriving off Gourock on Tuesday 22nd January,
had inexplicably failed to report the outbreak of cholera on board Conway until
about Friday, 25th, thus delaying the mobilisation of help for the
ship. Liston was dismissed, though the
exact date of his departure is not presently known. It is claimed by Michael Stammers in his book
“The Passage Makers” that Liston’s removal from command followed complaints by
some passengers to the owners. The
judgement of Captain Liston was certainly called into question indirectly by
the Greenock Advertiser. This Black Ball
captain thus found that his reputation was only as good as his last voyage, as
the famous James Nicol Forbes, who lost the Black Baller, Schomberg, on her
maiden voyage in 1855 and Captain Pole were also to discover. None of the three appears to have had another
major Black Ball command after being held responsible in some measure for a
crisis. It is not known if first mate,
Thomas Spurrier was put in temporary command of Conway after Liston’s
dismissal, but the seriousness of the situation clearly demanded the presence
of a proven leader. That person was to
be Captain William Henry Duguid.
William Duguid was born in 1824 in Devonport. After serving as mate on the China (1851) and
the Actaeon (1851-52), he was made commander of the Fleetwood in 1852 at the
age of 28, before becoming master of the Lady Falkland in 1853. The Fleetwood and the Lady Falkland, which
operated out of Liverpool, were both owned by Rankin, Gilmour & Co. This company was a major timber importer from
Canada but developed a sideline in importing cotton from the southern USA, to
make full use of its ships in winter. The Lady Falkland, under the command of
Captain Duguid, arrived at Quebec from Belfast to pick up a cargo of timber on
6th September 1853. The ship
cleared on 28th September and arrived in Liverpool on 31st
October. On 2nd December the
Lady Falkland was reported to be loading at Liverpool for Apalachicola, with
Duguid named as her master. Apalachicola
lies on the Gulf of Mexico coast of Florida, close to the cotton-growing region
of the southern United States. However,
when the Lady Falkland cleared for Apalachicola on 12th December,
Duguid had been succeeded as master by Captain Pearson. It is likely that the cause of this change
was that William Henry Duguid had moved from the employment of Rankin, Gilmour
& Co to that of James Baines & Co.
It is not known why Duguid was recruited by the Black Ball Line but one
intriguing possibility is that he was being lined up to captain the Schomberg,
which would be launched in early 1855. This
ship was expected to achieve fast passages.
When the Schomberg was first advertised for passages to Australia in June
1854, Duguid was named as her captain, though his name was quickly replaced by
that of Captain James Forbes. If this
had been the Black Ball plan it was quickly overtaken by the unfolding events
in Greenock in February 1854. Clearly,
James Baines judged that William Duguid was the man to sort out the Conway
crisis. The precise date on which
William Duguid took command is not known but he was certainly on board by
Wednesday, 15th February.
Cholera brought under control
The
Greenock Parochial Board held its regular monthly meeting on the evening of
Friday 3rd March under its chairman Hugh Ritchie. Ritchie assured the Board that local and
parochial authorities had made every reasonable attempt to prevent the Conway’s
passengers from arriving in Greenock but the Government had ensured that the
Conway was towed within Greenock’s boundaries, compelling their cooperation. Hugh Ritchie had personally come under
intense pressure from the General Board of Health in London and from Dr Gavin,
who “laid before him the instructions by which, as chairman of the parochial
board he would be required to act in the untoward circumstances in which the
Conway had arrived and enjoined him at his peril not to neglect compliance
therewith.” The Parochial Board were
concerned at the additional costs that they were incurring but they received
assurances from both the Conway’s owner and Dr Gavin that their extra outlays
would be reimbursed.
Most of the Conway’s passengers had been landed by Friday
3rd March. Six ill passengers
remained on board and 40 had been moved to the Cholera Hospital. The passengers who were well had taken up
residence in the West Quay sail loft. On
the following day the remaining 6 sick passengers were removed to the hospital. The first signs then began to emerge that the
strategy for containing the disease was working. Of those in the hospital, only two had
cholera, two were in a state of collapse and 14 had diarrhoea, the remainder was
progressing favourably. Captain Brotchie
of the Seamen’s Chapel attended the healthy passengers every evening to conduct
worship. Release from the foul confines
of the ship had an immediate effect on morale and demeanour and “their evenings are spent in
dancing and merriment.” Over the
following week the statistics on sick passengers showed that the formerly
rampant ill-health among the passengers was rapidly declining. By Monday 6th
February there was only one case of cholera and 8 of diarrhoea and these cases
had reduced to none of cholera and 3 of diarrhoea by Friday 10th. The following Monday, 13th
February there was but a single case of diarrhoea in the hospital and by the
next day this case too had been cleared up.
The
Conway was entirely cleaned out and all bedding in use on board was burnt. The ship was then scraped and fumigated with
disinfecting fluid and then washed over with hot lime. Preparations were made
for the re-embarkation of the passengers and the resumption of their
interrupted journey to the antipodes.
There was a phased return of passengers to the Conway, starting with the
single women and the cured patients on Tuesday 14th February. The rest of the passengers were to have been
allowed back on board the next day but this was cancelled when cholera
apparently broke out again. Those on
board the Conway were disembarked. Blame
for this new outbreak was directed at the new ship’s surgeon, who had not
followed the advice of his medical colleagues and suffered dismissal.
Captain
Brotchie of the Seamen’s Chapel had been unremitting in his attention to the
emotional and spiritual needs of the passengers from the moment they arrived in
Greenock. He spent many hours amongst
them, visiting the sick on board ship and in the Cholera Hospital and
conducting religious services in the West Quay sail loft and on the Conway. As the Conway’s departure approached, the
grateful passengers subscribed to the purchase of a desk to show their
appreciation for Brotchie’s work. This
was presented by Mr Chant, the Government Emigration Agent at Liverpool (who
appeared to have been sent to Greenock to help manage the situation), on behalf
of the passengers. The ceremony took
place on the deck of the Conway on Wednesday, 8th March. Subsequently there was a delay in sailing
until the new surgeon superintendent arrived.
Conway finally welcomed her third doctor to hold this position on the
voyage, when Dr Blunt came aboard early on Sunday morning, 12th
March. Conway immediately departed for
Geelong, though she only got as far as Gourock Bay on her first day, due to
headwinds.
Mutiny on the Conway
The return
of cholera on Wednesday, 15th February was unnerving for the crew
who had lost the boatswain to the disease.
Some of them mutinied, though they returned to accepting orders later
the same day. It is not clear if there
was truly a recurrence of the dread disease.
On Thursday, 16th February the Cholera Hospital reported
three cases of diarrhoea and all other patients convalescent. Possibly there had been a false alarm. Re-embarkation was resumed on Thursday,
continued on Friday and by Monday 20th February everyone was back on
board, save one possible cholera patient who was recovering in the
hospital. But the emergency proved not
yet to be finally ended. On Friday 24th
February another passenger was brought ashore apparently showing the symptoms of
cholera.
When
Captain Duguid took command of Conway he must have been determined to stamp his
authority on the crew, if he was to get the situation under control. The temporary mutiny on Wednesday 15th
February could not be treated lightly, if he was to secure the obedience of his
men and the respect of his officers. In
the Greenock Sheriff Court on Wednesday 21st February, before
Sheriff Marshall, Captain Duguid preferred a charge against the third mate, carpenter,
sailmaker and 8 seamen to the effect that these men had combined amongst
themselves and with others of the crew to disobey and had actually disobeyed
his commands, contrary to Section 78 of the Mercantile Marine Act, 1830. However, the prosecution case quickly
unravelled. Mr Neil, defending the crew,
had three objections to the charges, the second of which proved to be crucial.
The crew had signed on in Liverpool to sail to Geelong under Captain Liston as
master, but Liston had been dismissed and his name had been deleted on the
ship’s articles and replaced with that of Captain Duguid. This may have seemed reasonable to Duguid as
a practical seafarer used to getting things done, but legally it was without
effect because the crew were not a party to the change. The sheriff immediately dismissed the case,
leaving Captain Duguid with egg on his face.
It is not clear if any or all (as claimed by Michael Stammers in “The
Passage Makers”) of the crew left the ship and were replaced in the short
period of 3 days, or if they continued on the voyage to Geelong.
The Impact
of the Conway Incident
The total death toll amongst Conway’s passengers and crew
is difficult to determine with precision but probably amounted to 14 passengers
and one crew member, which is really quite a modest total, given the
circumstances. The passengers were on
board for 13 days between leaving Liverpool and landing at Greenock. During that time they endured 5 days of
confinement in increasingly unhygienic conditions while the storm raged. The death rate for passengers and crew was
about 3.5%. What was the impact of the
Conway incident on the town of Greenock?
The Greenock Advertiser’s assessment in the middle of February, when the
outbreak was well under control and the departure of the Conway was
anticipated, was “….the
vessel will soon leave the port where her arrival caused great dismay but
fortunately produced no disastrous consequences”. There were 17 deaths in all in Greenock in the
month of February 1854 due to cholera. Of
the total, 11 cases were members of Conway’s passengers and crew. The other six
cholera deaths were spread over 5 different locations, including the gaol, but
such a sporadic pattern was not unusual for this town. It is difficult to know if many, or even any,
of the deaths were due to the presence of the Conway’s sick passengers in the
Cholera Hospital, but the suspicion is that it was few or none. At their statutory annual meeting in February
1855, Hugh Ritchie presented the annual report of the Parochial Board. The report both assumed that cholera had
spread into the community from Conway, “and in its consequences
throwing bereaved widows and children on the Board to increase future
expenditure” and also admitted that the effect had been slight, “….your
Committee cannot fail to recognise in
this visitation the great kindness of the Almighty, in only slightly affecting
the community by this dreadful scourge” On the other hand there had certainly been a
modest financial imposition on the town, due to the need to adapt accommodation
for the Conway’s passengers, sick and well.
Another impact was on the marine community. Vessels outwards bound from Greenock had some
difficulty in obtaining clean bills of health and some customs officers
requested to be relieved from duty at the West Quay, such was the fear of the
disease in the population at large.
Although an undertaking had been given by Captain Keele
that Greenock’s additional expenditure on the Conway would be met, no
reimbursement had occurred by the end of May 1854. In frustration Hugh Ritchie, Chairman of
Greenock Parochial Board, wrote to the Emigration Board in London. To his
relief, an immediate response was received confirming that Captain Keele had
been instructed to settle Greenock’s account.
In fact the additional expenditure by the Greenock Parochial Board only
amounted to £200 out of a budget of £9000, < 2%. The Greenock Authorities had argued, with
justification, throughout the Conway incident that they were being expected to
provide resources locally to deal with a matter which should really be the
responsibility of national government.
This issue raised its head again in July 1854 long after Conway’s
departure from the town. Captain Keele
had written to the Greenock Town Clerk requesting that the town prepare a
contingency plan, including the preparation of suitable accommodation, in case
an event such as the Conway incident should recur. This caused indignation amongst the baillies. They pointed out that Conway was registered
in Liverpool and such a provision was for the benefit of the whole
country. However, Captain Keele warned
them that the Government would do nothing.
A wrangle over responsibility for other additional costs
associated with the Conway cholera incident arose between James Baines and the
Emigration Commissioners in July 1854.
Baines tried to claim an additional £3,168 for the detention of Conway
for 52 days in total (this time period seems to commence with her arrival at
Gourock). The lawyer acting for Baines
put the blame for the incident on the Emigration Commissioners because they had
appointed the drunkard surgeon superintendent, Dr Byrne. The Commissioners took a very different
view. They withheld £1000 from the first half of the payment
stipulated in the charter party because firstly, the Conway had failed to sail
on time and secondly, when the ship put into Greenock, the Commissioners paid
the cost of all the emigrants’ food which should properly have been at the
expense of James Baines & Co. They
also justified their appointment of Dr Byrne on the grounds that he had
performed well for them on other contracts.
It is likely that some compromise was reached but the exact outcome of
the dispute, which rumbled on for three years, is not known.
Journey to Geelong resumed
In spite
of the inauspicious start to Conway’s journey from Liverpool to Port Phillip,
the voyage resumed on 18th March, 1854 from Greenock and took a relatively
fast 83 days to reach the destination.
Interestingly, 420 emigrants started the journey in Greenock, made up of
306 adults and 114 infants and children.
Bearing in mind that Conway left Liverpool with 382 passengers and that
in Greenock some passengers left the ship to return to England by train, in
addition to those who died in the cholera outbreak, there must have been a
significant recruitment of new passengers.
Not all passengers arrived at their destination. Over and above the probable 14 deaths from
cholera between Liverpool and Greenock, as well as at Greenock, it was reported
that there were 9 deaths and 4 births on the journey from Greenock to Geelong,
not an unusual occurrence.
Conway
anchored off Port Henry on Saturday 17th June, 1854 and was put in
quarantine, under the supervision of Captain Duguid, his officers and the
surgeon, Dr Blunt (referred to as “Dr Burke” in the Australian press), as a
precautionary measure. The passengers
and crew were not long detained and a notice appeared in the local newspaper
informing the community that the emigrants on the Conway would be available for
hire from the following Thursday, 22nd June. The end of the voyage also meant that the
shipping company would be paid by the Emigration Commissioners, £6,655 for the
surviving immigrants and £37 for those who died. Gratuities were also due to the surgeon
superintendent, officers and constable, £435 in total.
Geelong and the Gold Rush
Geelong
takes its name from the local aboriginal word for “land” or “cliffs”. The area was first surveyed in 1838 and
initially the town’s importance was associated with the production of
wool. Geelong lies on Corio Bay and Port
Geelong began in 1853 with the creation of a shipping channel. However, great change occurred, starting in
1851, when gold was discovered at Ballarat, which lies inland from Geelong and
the gold rush rapidly developed. Geelong
was the nearest port to the gold workings and many aspiring miners entered
Australia through Geelong. At that time,
more than 200 clipper ships could often be seen lying in Port Phillip Bay.
The gold
rush caused problems for the masters of clippers delivering their human cargo
of emigrants to Geelong and Melbourne.
Crew members often jumped ship to try their luck in the diggings,
leaving ships stranded, often for weeks, while a desperate search was made for
replacements. Inflated wages frequently
had to be paid as an inducement to sign on for the return journey to Britain. Other crew members were recruited from low
dives and were not infrequently brought aboard drugged or drunk. William Swan, an apprentice from the Conway
appears to have deserted on 4th July. He was brought before the Police Court in
Geelong but no one turned up from the ship to substantiate the charge of
desertion. As a result he was discharged
on an undertaking that he would go back on board. However, Conway must have lost about 18 crew
members in Geelong, because the Victoria Labour Market and Shipping Office
advertised for “18 seamen for Conway to East Indies” on 11th July.
Cargo on
the return trip to Britain often included gold dust. Thus, a motley crew made up with low life
caused anxieties for many a captain. The
Medway returned to Britain with 4 tons of gold packed in boxes stowed under the
births of the saloon and the first class passengers were provided with weapons
to support the officers in deterring and, if necessary, fighting any crew
members with designs on the precious metal.
A brass canon loaded with grapeshot was fixed in the after part of the
ship and trained on the crew quarters in the forecastle. Only officers and stewards were allowed in
the rear part of the ship.
The Geelong Emigrants
Emigrants
travelling out to Australia frequently joined friends or family who had already
made the transition. Newspaper
advertisements were often the means by which the incomers found their
contacts. The following, typical,
notices appeared in The Argus in mid-July, 1854: “Ship Conway.
John Keith, Aberdeen, will find John Wright in Johnston Street, opposite
the Rochester Castle, Collingwood. And:
“Ship Conway. Mary Ann Lee who came out
from Liverpool in the Conway you will find your brother James Orme by applying
at Guan and Dundas’s Store, Flinders Lane”.
The Conway carried a diverse cargo, in addition to the 420 emigrants,
including such items as wood, coal, turpentine, iron, spades, pails, harrows,
saddlery, seeds, plaster of Paris, a cart, butter, beer, bacon and cheese. Clearly many immigrants were expecting even
basic items to be unavailable in this new country.
A
substantial number of single females travelled out on the Conway in segregated
accommodation, to protect them from the attentions of single male passengers
and members of the crew. They must have
found the arrangements to their satisfaction because on arrival at Geelong they
placed the following statement in the Geelong Advertiser and
Intelligencer. “To Captain Duguid. Of the Black Ball Line Clipper Ship
Conway. Sir We (the single females on
board the ship Conway) by which happily (indecipherable)
voyage have great pleasure in returning you thanks for your exertions and
perseverance in bringing us safely to our destined port and for the extreme and
special manner in which you have treated us since we left England and though
now we have come to the land of prosperity we shall ever remember with
gratitude the happy days we spent on board the good ship Conway. We now conclude with our best wishes for your
welfare and trust that you may have a safe and speedy voyage home and remain yours
respectfully (signed) Jane McLelland on behalf of 120 fellow single Female
Passengers. Geelong June 20th 1854”.
1854 – 1855. Conway’s return via Calcutta
For
Captain Duguid the arrival in Geelong brought little time to relax. He had responsibility for the safe discharge
of both passengers and cargo, for paying accounts on behalf of the company, for
searching out new business and for preparing the vessel for the journey back to
Britain. Many of the
clippers of the Black Ball Line made the return journey to the UK by continuing
across the Pacific Ocean, rounding Cape Horn and returning to Liverpool up the
Atlantic. There were few passengers
wishing to make the journey from Australia to Great Britain and though the
ships brought back gold and wool, the return journey was not as profitable as
the outward voyage. Conway did not
follow this pattern on her four round trips to Australia for the Black Ball
Line, as she travelled back via India, appearing to seek commercial
opportunities wherever they could be found. Conway sailed from Geelong on 21st July
1854, reportedly (in Lloyd's List) bound for Guam, though she eventually sailed to Calcutta in
India. Guam is the largest of the
Marianas Islands and lies in the western Pacific about 2000 Km east of the
Philippines. Conway appears to have
called at Melbourne before travelling through the Torres straights, in company
with ships Chandernagore, Montgomery and Janet Mitchell, to arrive at Galle,
Ceylon on 12th September.
Conway cannot have travelled to Guam.
To do so, she would not have taken this route and, in any case, there
would not have been sufficient time.
From Galle she travelled on to Calcutta, reportedly reaching Sagar
(Sangor) at the mouth of the Hooghly River on 20th October, though Lloyd's List reported that she had reached Calcutta by 22nd September. Calcutta stands on the Hooghli.
At this
time large parts of India were administered by the East India Company, which
even established its own armies. This
joint stock company had been created to develop trade with the East Indies,
though its main areas of operation were in India and China. The EIC was highly successful and at one time
it accounted for more than 50% of world trade, particularly in such commodities
as cotton, salt petre (an essential component of gunpowder), tea and opium
(which found its way in large quantities to China). It is obvious why James Baines & Co and
Captain Duguid should seek commercial opportunities in Calcutta, which was the
centre of the EIC’s operations on the east side of India.
Conway
was reported as sailing from Calcutta for London on both 17th
November and 5th December, 1854.
This may be accounted for by a minor accident that befell her. As she was passing down the Hooghli she was
“ran foul of” by another vessel, touched the ground and lost her anchors. She was surveyed and found to have sustained
no damage, so she proceeded for London, but this incident must have caused some
delay. The fact that Conway was heading
back to London, rather than Liverpool, from where she would start her next
voyage, suggests that she was carrying wool, or gold, or both. Liverpool lacked a wool market and London and
the Bank of England was the obvious destination for gold dust. Conway arrived off Falmouth on 24th March 1855, called at Gravesend on 30th and reached the London Custom House the following day.
Three
newspapers reported (perhaps only one report copied?), when Conway was nearing
Britain, that she had come from Callao (the port of Peru’s capital, Lima) and
Calcutta, but there are reasons to doubt that she could have travelled from
Calcutta via Callao to London. Firstly,
ships calling at Callao were very likely to be collecting a cargo of guano
(seabird excreta), which was an excellent fertiliser, but caused a pervasive
and persistent stink on board. The
Emigration Commissioners were very reluctant to consider using guano boats for
the carriage of emigrants for this reason, but Conway was used several times
more in this role. Secondly, the
distance from Calcutta to London, via Callao was 22,260 nautical miles,
passing around Cape Horn. On her journey
out from Greenock to Geelong, Conway had averaged 6.15 knots, a fairly fast
passage. Had she kept up this average
travelling back to London via Callao, she would have taken 151 days plus
loading time in Callao. The journey back
to London actually took 115 days. If the route had been across the Indian Ocean
and round the Cape of Good Hope, her average speed would have been 4.18
knots. Thirdly, no reports have been
discovered of Conway sailing from Calcutta for Callao, or of Conway actually
being at Callao. Another clipper, the
Conway Castle, did engage in the guano trade about this time, which may have
caused some confusion with ship identities.
Conway and the Crimean War
The
Crimean War started in October 1853, when the Ottoman Empire declared war on
Russia. However, the Ottomans quickly
suffered a major defeat, allowing the Russians to take control of the Crimean
Peninsula and thus exert control over the Black Sea. This rise in Russian power brought Britain
and France into the war on the side of the Ottomans and the Russian threat was
neutralised after the capture of Sevastopol.
There was a great need for the British forces in the Crimea to be
resupplied with horses and Mr Lindsay, MP, who was very critical of the Admiralty’s
tardiness in arranging transport for the animals, made his own proposal to use
a fleet of clippers for that purpose.
Conway was one of the vessels mentioned.
It was reckoned that Conway could carry 170 horses. However, it was never a concrete proposal and
nothing came of the idea.
Conway’s 1855 voyage to Hobart
Town
Starting
at the end of October 1854, advertisements appeared in a wide range of British
newspapers announcing that James Baines & Co had made arrangements with the
Government of Van Diemen’s Land (now Tasmania) “for the
conveyance of the entire emigration to that colony under the bounty system have
determined on establishing a line of their Clipper Ships direct to Hobart-Town
and Launceton”. Conway was one of the
ships due to travel, at a date to be announced.
At that time, Conway would have been at Calcutta and her date of
availability uncertain. The total number
of advertisements detected between 27th October and 18th
November, 1854 was 71 spread over 42 titles.
The advertisements did not obviously go out in waves and seemed on this
occasion to be more targeted. Many
newspapers only received a single advertisement but the Northern Whig (Belfast)
received 5. No advertisements were found
in Welsh or London newspapers and Ireland and Scotland were again
over-represented.
Conway
ended her last voyage in London but her next voyage was due to start in
Liverpool. Although no record has been
found of the transition of Conway between the two ports, it is likely that she
was towed by steamer. Lloyd's List reported that on 4th June Conway was off Liverpool. On 15th
June 1855, James Baines & Co announced in the Liverpool Mercury that the
Conway, under Captain Duguid, had entered dock in Liverpool to load for
Australia (she had actually entered out on the 11th). Black Ball advertisements
offered passages at 16 gns for the journey to Hobart Town. Emigrants started to converge on
Liverpool. Twelve families from Paisley,
in total 58 individuals, left the town on Monday 2nd July to travel
to Liverpool by train. They had been
granted emigration bounty tickets by the Executive Council of Van Dieman’s
Land. Conway sailed for Hobart Town with
453 passengers, all travelling under bounty regulations, on Thursday 12th
July. Typical of emigrant ships to
Australia, Conway’s cargo included rosin, coal, tar, pitch, pig iron, salt,
soap, a substantial amount of machinery and manufactured goods and food items,
including butter, hams and bacon, ale and rum.
After rounding the Cape of Good Hope (which suggests Conway did not sail
a great circle route) she encountered “thick and heavy weather”. She arrived at
Hobart on 14th October after a passage of 94 days. Early in the voyage measles broke out and
more than 50 cases were recorded, resulting in the deaths of two children. There were in total 13 deaths (mostly
involving infants) and one birth on the passage.
Conway
anchored off Hobart before being towed to the New Quay by the steamer
Venus. The newly-arrived immigrants were
soon made available for hire. While many
of them were from labouring or farm labouring background, there were also
significant numbers of craftsmen such as masons, blacksmiths and carpenters. The Argus gave the national breakdown of the
immigrants as 243 English, 149 Scotch and 51 Irish. About 50 immigrants travelled by the steamer
Fenella to Launceton on the other side of the island, some of them bound for
employment in the Mersey Coal Works.
On a long
passage tensions between individuals, both passengers and crew had the
potential to break out in open hostility and even violence on some small
provocation. John Sullivan, a passenger,
complained to the police on arrival in Hobart that another passenger, Julia
Hart had assaulted his wife, Ellen, by throwing a vessel of boiling tea or
coffee over her, severely scalding the left side of her face, shoulder, breast
and neck, before hitting her on the face with the vessel that had contained the
beverage and attempting to pull her hair out.
The incident had occurred on 16th October, shortly before
arrival in Hobart. Apparently the
altercation had been sparked when Hart overheard the Sullivans’ daughter
complain about her son, Jemmy. The outcome of the case is currently not known. The absence of female company on a long
voyage also led to conflict. Michael
Nulty, a passenger on Conway, had gone to visit a female at a Mr Risby’s house
in Hobart a few days after landing and became involved in an altercation. He was brought up before the police
magistrate but discharged as the fight was not considered to be sufficiently
serious.
Love also
blossomed during the Conway’s passage from Liverpool. On 22nd October, 8 days after
Conway’s arrival in Hobart, two marriages were conducted. The first involved two Welsh passengers,
Rowland Davies and Rachel Evans and the second was between George Smith, one of
the Conway’s officers and passenger Alice Smith of London.
Crew Troubles in Hobart Town
On
arrival, Captain Duguid had to deal with a variety of crew issues. Two seamen, Jeffrey Walsh and Thomas Harrison
jumped ship in Hobart but were soon apprehended. They pleaded guilty to desertion but said in
mitigation that, while they were happy with Captain Duguid’s conduct, they had
been provoked by the boatswain, who was in the habit of swearing at them,
allegedly using the terms, reported in those coy times as “Sons of bs” and
“Sons of ws”. We can only guess at the
epithets employed! Were Walsh and
Harrison rather sensitive souls? Most
sailors, one suspects, would have accepted being sworn at as part and parcel of
the job. Duguid defended his boatswain
in Court, saying that he had received no complaint from the runaways and that
the boatswain was an effective disciplinarian.
The likely reason for the Boatswain’s hostility emerged in court. Captain Duguid revealed that Walsh had allowed
a heavy block to fall from the masthead.
It narrowly missed the boatswain, who was standing on deck at the time.
The boatswain must have thought Walsh at least clumsy and careless, but
probably suspected malicious intent. The captain expressed a wish to have the two
men back aboard, perhaps sensing that it would be difficult to find
replacements in Hobart. However, the two
absentees did not wish to return and accepted a month in jail. Duguid also preferred a charge of refusing to
work against another seaman, William Rogers, who had disobeyed an order from
the 1st mate to wash the decks, which was a daily task. This event happened while Conway was in port. Apparently, Rogers was the ringleader of a
group which had been getting progressively more insolent and mutinous. For example, the gang had been singing
indecent songs (they claimed they were sea shanties!), which deterred visitors
to the ship. Rogers was sent to the
House of Correction for a week and threatened with more severe treatment,
should he reoffend on his return to the ship.
Another crew member in trouble was William Griffiths. Captain Duguid
charged him with absence without leave on 5th November. He had very
poor eyesight and on several occasions Duguid had looked for him to take him to
see a doctor but the defendant could not be found. The police eventually found him drinking in a
pub. He too got 7 days in the House of
Correction. The Conway had at least two
other desertions in Hobart, by Charles Fairburn and William Allison. Captain Duguid stated that the men were well
behaved and he had no idea why they should have absconded. They too got 7 days, apparently the standard
seaman punishment, before being returned to ship.
There was
also an accidental death by falling into the hold, one of the regular causes of
death on board ship. A popular seaman, Robert
Roberts appeared to have fallen down the hatch of the lower deck when he tried
to descend to the hold for some water during the night, without using a
light. An inquest was held in the
Waterman’s Arms and a verdict of accidental death recorded. Roberts was buried the same afternoon and his
coffin, draped with the Union Jack, was carried by his messmates.
The
bounty passengers were pleased with Captain Duguid’s conduct of the voyage and
had an address published in The Courier, praising Duguid, Mr Hill, the First
Mate, Mr Mickle, the Second Mate and Mr Hay the Purser. They even praised the provisions and the
medical care, saying they wished to contradict rumours, circulating in Wales,
that passengers were ill-treated on Black Ball ships. Perhaps this belief accounted in some measure
for the lack of Welsh emigrants? Captain
Duguid graciously accepted the praise of the passengers in a letter published
in the same paper, The Courier and thanked the passengers for keeping to the
ship’s regulations.
1855 – 1856. Conway’s return via Bombay
Conway’s
master also had to prepare the vessel for the return to Britain, clearing out
and selling unwanted stores and taking on cargo or ballast. For example, an advertisement was placed in
the Colonial Times by Daniel Graham of the Exchange Warehouse offering 30 casks
of prime Irish pork, ex-Conway, for sale “cheap”. As on her previous voyage to Australia in 1854,
Conway returned to Britain via India.
She cleared at Hobart Town on 19th November 1855 and arrived
in Bombay on 24th January 1856. On 28th February she sailed for her
home port of Liverpool, arriving on 10th or 11th July, 1856. Nothing is currently known of Conway’s cargo
on either leg of her return journey.
Sometime
during 1856 but presumably while she was in Liverpool between voyages to
Australia, she was surveyed for Lloyds and re-sheathed with felt and yellow
metal fastened with iron bolts. The type
of felt used was a patent felt produced by Messers Ellis & Co which they
described in an advertisement as follows.
“…by aid of machinery combining the latest improvements
together with the first practical ability procurable, has enabled them to
produce an article which for strength durability and quality is much superior
to anything yet submitted to the public…..The Patent Sheathing Felt…for
sheathing of ships under either Yellow Metal or Wood, combining great strength
as well as durability and presenting a beautifully even surface; it will
nourish and preserve the timber and caulking, prevent leakage and effectively protect the planking from the
destructive ravages of the worm”.
1856 – Conway’s journey to Sydney
After her
return to Britain, Conway, under Captain Duguid, was again offered by James
Baines & Co to the Emigration Commissioners for a charter to take emigrants
to Sydney, New South Wales. The bid was
accepted. On this occasion there was no
advertising of passenger berths by the owner, though the freighting
opportunities were publicised, mainly in the Liverpool press. Conway was also contracted to carry the mails
for Australia and New Zealand. She entered out on 21st August and sailed on 21st September 1856 with 443 emigrants, arriving in Sydney
on 30th December, after a passage of 100 days and docked at the
Circular Wharf. The ship was said to be in a remarkably clean state. The Australian newspapers reported that there
were 72 married couples, 107 single men, 18 single women and 121 children, in
total 430 souls, 13 fewer than were reported to have started the voyage,
accounted for (approximately) by 16 deaths and 4 births during the voyage.
The
Conway’s cargo was typical of the range of items taken by emigrants to
Australia, or ordered by those already in the country, with food and drink, raw
materials and manufactured items predominating.
Many of the imported items were quickly put on sale, including nails,
tinware, glass, coffin furniture, carpenter’s tools (damaged by sea water) and
a large quantity of slates. Conway carried stores to feed the passengers for 140
days, so the surplus was auctioned at the Circular Quay on 19th
January 1856. In total there was a
substantial number of items and the quantities were large, for example, 5
gallons of lime juice, 33 barrels of flour, 20 cases of preserved potatoes and
80lbs of pepper.
The
Maitland Mercury and Hunter River General Advertiser speculated that the new
immigrants would find it easier to procure employment in the country districts
than had recently been the case, with wage rates of £50-£60 for married
couples, farm servants £35 - £40, ploughmen £50, shepherds £30, bush carpenters
£52, stockmen £40 - £45, bullock drivers £45 - £60 and general man servants £30
- £40.
There was
the usual range of incidents involving both passengers and crew. Thomas Millington, an immigrant, found
himself before the Police Magistrate within a few days of arrival, charged with
drunken and disorderly conduct. Alice
Robinson, who had found work with a family in Newcastle, NSW, appears to have
been pregnant before the start of her voyage on the Conway. She confessed her condition to her mistress
but the baby was born prematurely and died.
Alice was exonerated by the Coroner at the subsequent inquest. Seaman
Thomas Robertson was fined 90s for being drunk but Captain Duguid paid the
fine. Duguid also showed his softer side
in withdrawing a charge of disobedience against another seaman, Alexander
Martin, on the basis of his previous good behaviour and he was sent back to the
ship. James Brown, another seaman was
sent to jail for 24 hours for disorderly conduct. Thomas Norby tried to jump ship but was
caught and sent back on board. Codwallader
Hughes received 24 hours in jail for disorderly conduct on board. There was a
fine balance to be drawn between maintaining discipline and ensuring crew
retention. It is likely that the
apparently generous acts by the ship’s master were actually examples of him
acting out of self-interest, since he had to guard against being stranded in
Sydney for lack of sufficient crew numbers for the onward journey.
Newly arrived
passengers, as was usual, sought out, or were sought out by, friends and family
already in the country. “If you should
meet Alice Williams, late of Swansea who left home in the ship Conway….there is
a letter in the Post Office from T Goodhugh”, and “If
Donald Campbell and Hugh McMaster joiners of Glasgow per ship Conway from
Birkenhead have arrived in Sydney they will please write to Cuthbert Campbell
care of James Burrell, Spencer-street corner of Roselay-street North
Melbourne”, were typical messages in the newspapers.
1857. Conway’s return via Bombay
At the
end of January 1857, Conway was being prepared for her homeward journey. Notices were placed in the local press
advising those with claims or accounts against the vessel to make them by the
end of Wednesday, 30th January.
Accommodation was advertised for cabin passengers to Bombay but there
were no takers. Conway was also contracted
to carry the mails for Bombay and she finally sailed from Sydney on Tuesday, 5th
February and arrived at the Indian city on 17th or 18th April, 1857, a
journey time of 71 days. The Bombay
Presidency was a centre of operations in Western India for the East India
Company and an important port. It is
likely that Captain Duguid hoped to pick up commissions there when he offloaded
the mails from Australia. Conway is
presumed to have secured a contract because she sailed from Bombay on 1st
June 1857 for Bushier, the chief sea port of Persia, on the Persian Gulf,
though the nature of her cargo is not known.
She returned to Bombay, where she picked up a cargo including
dyestuffs, cottons, cocoa nuts, gingelly wood (gingelly seeds are used in
Indian cooking) and bales of cotton.
Conway set sail for Liverpool on 9th December 1857, finally arriving
back at her home port on 31st March or 1st April 1858.
1858. Conway’s journey to Melbourne
Within days
of the return of the Conway, the Emigration Commissioners had accepted a bid by
James Baines & Co to provide the ship for the transport of emigrants from
Birkenhead to Melbourne at a price of £14 4s 3d per statute adult, a weighted
figure allowing for children at a fraction of the adult rate. Conway had to be available to travel between
22nd May and 31st May, 1858 at the discretion of the
Commissioners. In addition to her
passengers, Conway would also be carrying mail and freight. James Baines & Co advertised the service
which included “Conveying goods to Geelong forwarding passengers by steam
to all parts of Australia and Tasmania at ship’s expense”. Conway entered out on 16th April and actually left on 10th June,
1858 carrying 425 souls (381 statute adults).
The make-up of the passengers was 19 married couples, 77 single men, 233
single women and 77 infants and children.
The high proportion of single females was unusual. During the voyage there were two births, one
live, a boy christened “Conway” and a still birth, but no other deaths, which
was not the norm.
Conway
Diarists
Two of the emigrants on this trip, Fanny Davis and Annie
Gratton, separately kept diaries of their experiences, which give an invaluable
insight into life on board Conway under Captain Duguid and
Surgeon-Superintendant John Carroll, as well as the lot of the emigrant
passenger generally. The originals are
worth reading in full but some highlights have been extracted.
Living accommodation for steerage passengers was both
communal and cramped, as Fanny Davis explained “Each
person has two canvass bags given them and they are told to put a month’s
clothes into them as all the boxes are to be put into the hold of the vessel
today and only taken out once a month to get out another month’s clothes and
put the dirty ones away”.
The
journey started in British early summer and conditions warmed as they
approached the equator, to the extent that the ladies needed an awning on the
poop to protect them from both heat and sun. During the passage down the
Atlantic the weather ranged from gales and heavy seas to periods of being
becalmed. After the line was passed, the
weather deteriorated progressively. The
days got shorter and colder and the seas were often mountainous. Even with hatches closed, seas washing over the
decks penetrated into the cabin. As a
result, the floor was often swimming with water. Confinement in the cabin in conditions too
dark to read was also difficult to bear.
On 3rd August the jib-boom was broken in two and a sail was “sent
to pieces” in stormy weather. The
falling sail broke the glass in one of the ventilators, which fell down into
the cabin occupied by Annie Gratton. Sometimes
the weather was so bad that the women could not get on deck and the men had to
bring food, etc, to them. The women
often had to wear shawls and gloves in the cabin, or went to bed to keep warm,
or to escape from the water swilling around the cabin floor. On one occasion, Surgeon-Superintendent
Carroll took pity on them. He brought 6
sailors and stayed with them while they mopped up the cabin. To a hardened seaman, such conditions were a
part of life and they were probably not very sympathetic to the girls’
circumstances and needed Carroll’s presence to ensure the job was completed. Occasionally fires in cages were hung in the
cabin to alleviate the cold, such as on 13th August. On 28th August, in the Southern
Ocean, Annie Gratton noted “Heavy sea and rolling. 8 kts.
Snowball fight. Then a hail
storm”. When the weather was bad and the
ship rolling heavily, the single women often had difficulty sleeping and lay
awake listening to commands being given by Captain Duguid, which were relayed
to the crew by the First Mate. In
response, sailors ran about singing, their feet drumming on the deck above. Bad weather frequently caused fear and panic
amongst the girls. Some fainted, some
were crying and calling out names of friends left behind and others were on
their knees calling on the Saints or the Blessed Virgin Mary to save them.
Many
of the passengers suffered from sea sickness.
Annie Gratton was sick on only the second day after departure and felt
ill for much of the journey. Surgeon-Superintendent Carroll urged suffers to
spend time on deck to counteract the symptoms.
On 15th June he ordered all passengers on deck and those who
could not walk were carried. Especially
after rounding the Cape of Good Hope, persistent cold was a problem and Annie
Gratton recorded having chilblains on her fingers and toes. Conditions on board were often
treacherous. One young woman slipped
down stairs and broke her leg and a seaman was washed overboard and drowned
only 4 days into to the voyage. At this
time, the death of seamen due to disease or accident (mostly drowning) in the
British merchant fleet was about 1% per year for disease and the same rate for
accident.
The
ships’ officers did their best to entertain the passengers. During calm conditions in mid-Atlantic they
met with another Black Ball ship, the Oliver Lang and the meeting, which lasted
several hours, ended with a firework display.
In fine conditions there was singing and games on deck. Some merry Scotch girls did the Highland
Fling and on 9th August, a Fancy Dress ball was held. Annie Gratton remarked that “Many had low
dresses”. Clearly the women were not so
persistently miserable that they could not be bothered to make themselves
attractive on special occasions!
The
Surgeon Superintendent was appointed by the Emigration Commissioners to look
after the welfare, as well as the health, of the passengers. On one occasion Mr Carroll berated the cook
for the poor state of the food. Some
livestock were carried and it was an occasion of note when a sheep was killed on
14th July. Annie Gratton did
not like ships’ biscuits and hard salt junk (nautical slang for salted beef or
pork) which was served 3 nights per week, but eventually she got used to this
fare. On their last night on board at
anchor in Hobson’s Bay they dined on fresh bread and beef, which must have
seemed like ambrosia.
Annie Gratton, a competent writer,
was clearly one of a group of “better class” girls and she noted that the “Doctor
and Captain soon signalled out the most respectable and show them many
favours. Advice to emigrants: you cannot keep too respectable”. Early in the voyage the single women showed
fear and concern at the heavy rolling of the ship. They were visited by captain
and doctor, who were amused by the reaction of the girls, to reassure
them. There were fewer strictures
imposed on the passengers than Annie Gratton had been expecting. Captain Duguid was clearly a popular and
humane master, but also a highly responsible one. Not for him heavy drinking, or playing cards
with the saloon passengers, while the First Mate was left to look after the
ship. On 21st July, 1858 when
Conway was near Brazil, the Captain was afraid of land and turned ship the four
times during the night. While passing
through the South Atlantic, Duguid, apparently to impress the ladies, caught
two Cape Hens (name applied to a variety of sea birds, but typically the White
Chinned Petrel) with baited hooks, tied up their beaks and threw them amongst
the women to look at. A little later, on
15th August, he caught an albatross and tied a note round its neck
with red ribbon. When Conway arrived at
Melbourne, The Argus commented, “The ship is remarkably clean and, taking all
in all, reflects great credit on the captain, doctor and officers of the ship”.
In
the confined and crowded conditions on board Conway it did not take long for
tensions to emerge. As early as 24th
June, Annie Gratton noted “Some people agreeable, some disagreeable. The Misses Merigan have proved very
deceitful”. And on 29th June,
“It is impossible to describe the deceit and slander carried on amongst 280
females.” She also, a bit snobbishly,
objected to the standards of personal hygiene of some passengers. “It is with great difficulty we can keep
ourselves clean as there are some filthy people on board and I am sorry to say
the unwelcome travellers have found their way to our part of the ship.” Petty theft was also born out of the
circumstances in the cabin. “Knives and
forks get lost and then they steal from one another”. The following quotations from Annie Gratton
sum up the general mood as the journey progressed towards its conclusion. “Becalmed.
Finding journey tedious”. “All
getting tired of each other”. And as
journey’s end approached, “Everybody
disagreeable and impatient”.
On
19th July 1858, when Conway was about 70 miles off the coast of
Brazil, the passengers were invited to write letters to friends back in
Britain. Four other ships were in sight
at the time and the letters were put in tin boxes, then into a barrel which
also supported a tiny flag staff and flag.
The ship’s bell was rung and three similar barrels thrown over side,
presumably in the hope that one of the other vessels would pick them up and
transport them back home. The passengers
were told by a member of the crew that the tide would carry the barrels ashore
and this appears to be what happened. A
correspondent of The Times, writing from Ceara, Brazil, August 5th
said “A few days since a barrel was found off the coast by some fishermen,
which when opened was found to contain a tin box full of letters. Those letters were written on board the ship
Conway on the 19th ult, off the Cape of San Roque, by the passengers
giving their friends at home information of the progress of their passage since
leaving Liverpool on the 15th of June bound for Melbourne. Our vice-consul here, John W Studart, we are
informed, has forwarded the said box with the letters to the general post
office, London”.
1858. Arrival in
Melbourne
On 15th
September, 1858, Conway dropped anchor off Port Phillip Heads to take on the
pilot and then moved on to Hobson’s Bay, close to Port Phillip and the process
of inspecting and unloading passengers and cargo began. The journey time had been a modest 97 days. As usual, the Conway’s cargo was very
diverse, with large amounts of food and drink, such as butter, oats, ale,
vinegar and spirits, but also manufactured goods, including soda ash, railway
bars and galvanised iron sheets. The
ship was visited by the Medical Officer and by Government Inspectors and on 18th
September steamers came along side to take the passengers ashore. The Married couples and children left first,
followed by the single girls. Captain
Duguid handed them down and the first mate received them on the steamer. After formalities lasting two hours they were
free to go.
Most of the
Conway’s passengers had been partially assisted by their friends and relatives
to pay for their passage to Australia but about 100 of the single women were
funded entirely by the Government. Those
emigrants who lacked positions were made available for hire from Monday, 20th
September at the Immigration Office.
Conway was
equipped with Dr Normanby’s Apparatus for Distilling and Aerating fresh water
from salt or impure water. It was
capable of supplying 850 gallons in 24 hours, enough for the needs of the 450
or so passengers. However, the equipment
was not required on the return voyage and was offered for sale in Melbourne in
The Argus, with a recommendation to anyone travelling to the mine workings at
Port Curtis, where there was known to be a water shortage.
Most
residents of Melbourne who met Captain Duguid were impressed by his conduct,
but one man, Charles Bolton was not.
Indeed he was so incensed by the treatment he felt he had received that
he wrote a letter to the local press. He
was passing down the bay in a small vessel belonging to Mr Bayes, shipping
butcher, to meet the ship Conflict on her way up. His boat was suddenly engulfed by heavy
squalls and, as a result, he had to sail past the Conflict. The poor weather conditions obliged him to
continue speedily down the bay. He was
shipping water and in danger of sinking when he sighted the Conway, also on her
way up and signalled for help. Conway
continued on her course, which action was given a negative interpretation by
Charles Bolton. He was eventually
rescued by a steamer but only after another ship, the Harmony, had thrown him a
line which he could not secure as Harmony was doing about 9 knots. It is unlikely that Conway and her master had
carelessly ignored another vessel in distress.
A much more likely explanation is that Conway either did not see the
small boat, due to the conditions, or that Duguid judged that he could not turn
and manoeuvre to help Bolton’s craft.
1858. Conway’s
return via Calcutta
As on her
previous three journeys to Australia, Conway returned to Britain via
India. On this occasion she was under
contract to the Honourable East India Company to transport a large number of
horses to Calcutta. Presumably, these
were reinforcements for the additional troops sent to India as a result of the
recent unrest in the sub-continent.
However, by the time Conway sailed from Hobson’s Bay on Thursday, 18th
November 1858, the East India Company had been liquidated in the aftermath of
the Indian Mutiny of 1857 and the Company’s assets transferred to the British
Crown. The Government also took
responsibility for EIC contracts, presumably including the one involving
Captain Duguid’s ship. Conway’s
availability to carry cabin passengers, gold and specie (coinage, especially
high value) to India was advertised in the local Australian press. She carried 2,768 oz of gold to
Calcutta. In contrast, in the same week
Swiftsure carried 84,775 oz of the precious metal to London.
The date of
arrival of Conway at Calcutta is not presently known but on 31st
January, 1859, Conway was cleared at Calcutta for Mauritius, where she arrived on 7th March. It is very likely that the voyage to this
Indian Ocean island, more than 3,200 nautical miles from Calcutta, was to take
on board sacks of sugar, since this substance was the main product of the
Mauritian economy throughout the 19th century. Conway then travelled on to Bombay, arriving on 4th June to unload her cargo. She then sailed for
Calcutta where she arrived on 14th August 1869 at Kedgeree, 65 miles
south of Calcutta on the Hooghli River.
1859 – 1860.
Transporting “Coolies” from Calcutta to Trinidad
Slavery was
abolished throughout the British Empire by Act of Parliament in 1833. This resulted in a labour shortage in the
plantations of Trinidad, Guyana and other British possessions in the West Indies. As a consequence indentured labour was
recruited from various countries to fill the gap. India was an important source of “Coolie”
labour for the West Indies sugar plantations and the transport of these
labourers was organised by the Emigration Commissioners. Conditions on the
“Coolie” ships were often insanitary and deaths could be in excess of 10%,
typically due to the outbreak of cholera.
In early schemes the labourers were indentured for a period of 5 years
but this was increased to 10 years after 1855.
At the end of the contract period, the labourers had a right to claim a
free passage home. Many stayed in their
adopted lands but some returned, often accompanied by substantial amounts of
money and bullion, put into safe keeping with the ship’s master.
Trinidad was
one of the principal recruiters of indentured labour and in late 1859, Conway
was contracted to carry emigrants to that destination at a price of £9 7s 6d
per head. It was initially announced in Lloyd's List that Conway had cleared for London on 9th November but this was quickly corrected to give her destination as Trinidad. On the way Conway had a brief stopover at Cape Town between 31st December and 2nd January. She arrived at that West
Indian island on 29th January 1860.
Captain Duguid then sailed Conway back to London, where she arrived at
Gravesend on 25th or 26th May, 1860. She entered inwards at the London Customs
House two days later. This had been William
Henry Duguid’s last voyage as master of the Conway. His next charge was to be another Black Ball
vessel, the Solway, which left Gravesend for Sydney with a full complement of
emigrants on 12th July 1860, not much of a break for Duguid after
being continuously absent from Britain for 717 days, from 10th June
1858 to 26th May 1860.
A Comet Sighted
Conway was
towed back to Liverpool from London by the steam tug, Storm King. The vessels passed Deal on 19th
June 1860 and arrived in Liverpool on 23rd June. The only thing of note that happened on the
journey around the south coast of England and up the Irish Sea was the
observation of a comet by the captain of the tug. It was announced in a letter to the Liverpool
Daily Post by a William Griffiths as follows, “The captain and crew of the
steam tug Storm King, whilst towing the ship Conway from London to Liverpool,
report that on Thursday last (21st June), at 11pm about 30 miles SW
of Milford Haven, wind NW and hazy they observed the sky to clear up to the northward
and present a remarkable appearance when a comet of great brilliance was seen
surpassing that of 1858 and was distinctly visible from 11 o’clock at night
until 1 o’clock in the morning and bearing by compass N by W”. It is now known as the “Great Comet of 1860”
and appears to be a long orbit comet that has only been observed once.
1860. Conway
Contracted to take Soldiers and Families to India
After her
return to the Mersey at the end of May 1860, Conway entered Birkenhead Graving
Dock to have some maintenance and repairs carried out – she had been away from
her home port for almost two years and her hull must have been heavily fouled. By the beginning of July she had been moved
to the Queen’s Basin. At this time,
Daniel M’Rae had been appointed ship’s carpenter and he kept a watching brief
on work being carried out to masts, spars and rigging. Mr Potter, master shipwright, had been
contracted to carry out this work.
Conway was given a new mizzen mast, a replacement main mast (possibly
new), several new spars, a foreyard and a topsail yard.
As a result of the Indian Mutiny in 1857, many
reinforcements were sent out urgently to the sub-continent in 1857 and
1858. A great number of soldiers’
families were left behind and, being separated from their soldier husbands and
their wages, many became destitute. By
1859 the crisis in India had largely passed and it was possible for separated
wives and children to be consigned to India to rejoin their husbands. More than 2000 women and nearly 3000 children
were dispatched in 1859 and a further 600 women and 700 children in 1860, under
the authority of the Horse Guards and the Emigration Commissioners. Plymouth, Southampton, Birkenhead and
Gravesend were the embarkation ports used and wives and families travelled
there at public expense. Each woman was
provided with 20/- and each child with 10/-, at the expense of the Indian
Government, to equip them for the voyage.
Further substantial funding was made available by the Society for
Improving the Condition of Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Wives. There were extreme cases of destitution. One woman arrived from Ireland dressed only
in a man’s great coat. As might be expected with poor or destitute women,
children and infants, disease often broke out and mortality resulted, especially
amongst the youngsters.
Conway was initially chartered by the Honourable Council
for India to carry cavalry and infantry troops from Cork to Bombay, the announcement
being made on 21 June 1860. The vessel
was inspected by Mr Ritherdon, shipwright surveyor to the Marine Transport
Department of the Indian Council. He
found that she was iron-bolted, with the exception of a few copper bolts and
considered that these bolts may have become corroded. James Baines & Co declined to substitute
copper for iron bolting and to make certain other alterations, as a result of
which the Marine Transport Department rejected Conway and an alternative vessel
was substituted.
Conway was again offered for service to India. On 10 July, 1860 she was chartered by the
Emigration Commissioners, acting on behalf of the Council for India to carry
principally soldiers’ wives and families, but also some soldiers, to Calcutta
at a price of £16 9s 3d per statute adult.
The date of sailing (at the discretion of the Commissioners) was to be
between 1st and 18th August, 1860. This acceptance of the Conway to transport
mostly soldiers’ wives, when she had just been rejected for the transport of
soldiers, caused some comment in the press about the lack of consistency in
marine surveying standards, but these comments were ill-informed. Robert James, RN and William Haselden, RN
surveyed Conway on July 11th, while she was in dry dock. New bolting had been put in, timbers had been
repaired and she had been caulked all over.
Conway’s
Officers
Conway’s new master was Captain William Pole, who was
born in Lerwick, Shetland in 1827. He
gained his Mate’s Certificate in 1852, 1st Mate’s in 1853 and
Master’s in 1854. Between April 1855 and
April 1859 he commanded the Thomas Hamlin, an iron-built ship of 832 tons,
owned by Hamlin & Co and registered at Greenock. Thomas Hamlin was a Greenock shipowner and
well-known local advocate of temperance.
The Thomas Hamlin seems to have been mostly involved in the sugar trade,
travelling between various Indian ports and the island of Mauritius. Greenock was a centre of sugar refining. The other officers on the ship were Thomas
Dodgson, First Mate; John Seymour Hart, Second Mate; Edmund Catterall,
Boatswain; George Anderson, Surgeon-Superintendant; TE Le Blanc, Assistant to
Surgeon-Superintendant; Mr Neville of the 70th Regiment,
Quartermaster (in charge of the soldiers aboard).
Detachments of the 23rd Royal Welsh Fusiliers
and the 35th Regiment left Chatham on 15th August for
Birkenhead to join the Conway. A further
detachment of married men of the 34th and 54th Regiments
and their wives and children, left barracks at Colchester for the same
destination. Many of the women were
wives of soldiers previously sent to India in the wake of the Indian
Mutiny. In total Conway carried 211
adult passengers (including about 70 soldiers) and 153 children and infants. In
addition to her human cargo, Conway had taken on 200 tons of coal, 180 tons of
railway iron and 379 tons of cases of machinery and bricks in the Coburg Dock,
Liverpool.
The Conway departed from the Mersey on Friday, 24th
August 1860 and was towed out by the steam tug Resolute. She was left on the following Sunday near the
Tuskar Rock, which lies 7 miles off the south east coast of County Wexford,
Ireland. Initially she encountered only
light headwinds but early on the morning of Thursday, 28th August a
fresh gale developed from the south west and a portion of the lower deadeyes
and fore- and maintopgallant and royal backstays were carried away. Some of the eyes snapped through, and the
rigging gave way at the masthead. The
top tier of water casks and provisions in the fore hold came adrift and rolled
about. They were then secured by the
second mate with the help of some soldiers.
During this period of bad weather, Conway almost came to grief on the
Irish coast, when breakers were sighted ahead, but she just managed to avoid
going ashore.
September
1860 – Conway is wrecked again
After this incident the weather remained unremarkable
until Friday, 7 September, when bad weather started about 4pm with
constantly increasing wind speed. The
sails were shortened progressively until midnight when the crew went aloft to
take down the fore topgallant yard but before they had got to the topmast head,
the maintop gallant mast, yards and rigging fell. At 2.30am on Saturday, 8th
September, with the vessel still rolling heavily, the foremasthead and rigging
were carried away and at 3.30am the main and mizzen channel plates gave
way. Then the wire mainstay gave way at
the masthead and the main mast fell aft on the poop, striking the mizenmast and
falling on the port side. Daniel M’Rae,
the carpenter and several passengers were injured as a result. M’Rae was knocked unconscious and
subsequently he suffered from problems with his eyesight, which prevented him
carrying out repairs. The mizzen mast
was the next to fall, smashing the poopdeck, rails and skylight, the two
quarter lifeboats and others on the skid, tearing up the main deck and carrying
away the standard of the after main pumps.
Water cascaded into the passenger accommodation ‘tween decks and the
passengers were set to bailing out. The
soldiers on board were employed pumping out using the foremast pumps. About 7am on Saturday, 8th
September the sling of the foreyard gave way and fell across the longboat and
pinnace. Over a period of 7 hours,
Conway had been wrecked and rendered essentially unsailable. She was now located about 240 miles NW of
Madeira.
In order to try to remedy the situation, the crew cut
away part of the stump of the mizzen mast, rigged a jury mast and set another
topgallant sail. When conditions allowed the crew were ordered to start clearing
the main deck but little progress was made with this task. Captain Pole, Mr
Dodgson, Dr Anderson and Mr Neville discussed their options, the captain’s
preference being to try to sail to Funchal, the capital of Madeira. The others agreed. However, the ship could
only manage about one knot under the jury rig and would not answer the helm,
sometimes going around in circles. The ship was still rolling heavily and the
plight of the passengers and crew was extreme when, at 7am on Sunday, 9th
September, another ship was sighted and Conway signalled to her.
Rescue by
the Summer Cloud
The ship was the Summer Cloud, a clipper belonging to
Houlder Brothers of London, which had sailed on 6th August, bound
for Sydney, under Captain William Sabiston.
Summer Cloud too had experienced bad weather, having weathered two
severe gales in the Channel and then the extreme conditions suffered by Conway
on 8th September. She arrived
alongside Conway between 2pm and 3pm.
The scene that greeted them was horrific. Captain Sabiston later wote, “I never yet saw
such a scene of wreck and destruction in my life before; her masts all laying
over her stern, and men, women and children rolling about the decks”. Sabiston went aboard the Conway to consult
with Captain Pole. At 4am on Sunday, 9th
Thomas Dodgson sounded about 2ft of water in the hold and at 7am the level had
risen to 3ft. Between 5pm and 6pm that
evening the depth of water had increased to almost 6ft. It was agreed that the passengers and crew of
Conway would be evacuated to the Summer Cloud, but that the evacuation would be
postponed until the morning. In the
meantime Summer Cloud stood by.
The following day 416 souls were evacuated from Conway
using the three boats of the Summer Cloud and mixed crews from both vessels,
Conway’s boats all having been smashed in the storm. The operation took from 8am to 9pm and, in
spite of the rolling of the Conway, was accomplished without loss. At the end of the operation, William Sabiston
wrote a letter to the owners of Summer Cloud, which he ended with, “Excuse this
rambling letter, but I am tired and wearied – WS”. It had been a long and exhausting day but one
which must have given Sabiston a great deal of satisfaction.
Captain Pole was concerned that Conway, now a hulk, was a
danger to other shipping and, in consultation with his officers and Captain
Sabiston, a decision was taken to scuttle her.
The first mate, Thomas Dodgson, the second mate, John Seymour Hart and
the carpenter, Daniel M’Rae, bored four holes in the starboard side of the hold
and two in the port side of the bow. The
Boatswain sounded her just before quitting the vessel and the depth of water he
calculated was rather over 8ft. Along with Captain Pole they then left the
Conway. They were the last people off
the ship and they were convinced that she would soon sink.
Conditions aboard the Summer Cloud were very trying. She was smaller than Conway, yet she was
carrying the passengers and crew of both vessels. The overcrowding prevented her crew setting
much sail on the journey to Funchal, but fortunately the weather was fair. William Sabiston summed up the situation as
follows, “The Lord keep us from ever being in the same state as we have been
these last few days. People in a state
of starvation through inability to cook food for so many people. Women and children scrambling for eatables,
and men as bad, if not worse”. Summer
Cloud arrived at Funchal at 6pm on Thursday, 13th September and the
rescued passengers were landed the following day and found accommodation. Subsequently, the Emigration Commissioners
made alternative arrangements for their onward travel to India. Remarkably,
Conway’s passengers, in spite of desperate circumstances, had suffered no
casualties throughout the whole episode.
By chance, HMS Geyser, a six-gun paddle steamer was in
Madeira, having towed another vessel there.
She took Captain Pole and 37 men of his crew on board and returned to
Plymouth, landing them on 28th September. Conway’s master then sent
a telegram to the Admiralty with an account of what had happened. On receipt of the news the Admiralty wrote to
Lloyds of London to inform them of the arrival of Conway’s master and crew in
Plymouth. Presumably HMS Geyser was also carrying Captain Sabiston’s letter to
Houlder Brothers. Thus did the fate of
Conway and her crew become known to the world.
Houlder Brothers, the owners of the Summer Cloud were
naturally proud of the achievement of their vessel under the leadership of
William Sabiston and immediately sought to gain recognition for his undoubted
professionalism and persistence. They were also seeking to puff up the image of
their company. The following letter was
sent to the editor of the Morning Post, under the name of the company, no doubt
seeking to catch the attention of Government.
“Loss of the Conway.
Sir, Believing some short account of the loss of the Conway would be
interesting to your readers, we annex an extract of a letter, dated Madeira,
Sept 16, 1860, received from Captain Sabiston, of the Summer Cloud, in which he
modestly gives the particulars of the distressing accident, which but for his
unflinching courage, must have ended in the awful destruction of above 400
persons.
The Summer Cloud formed one of the ships of our monthly
line to Sydney, and was despatched from London on the 12th
July. She is a fine clipper ship of only
700 tons register, and it affords a great satisfaction to find that the
precautions taken by us to ensure the safety and comfort of our passengers, and
which the owners so ably seconded, regardless of expense, enabled Captain
Sabiston, unaided, to rescue the Conway’s perishing people without a single
accident.
We hope Captain Sabiston’s noble conduct will not be
permitted to pass without some suitable recognition on the part of Her
Majesty’s Government – We are, sir, your obedient servants.
Houlder Brothers and Co
146, Leadenhall Street, London, Sept 29”
Putting aside the cloying Victorian melodrama and
overstatement of the anonymous author, which suffuses the missive, it is
difficult to sustain the claim by Houlder Brothers that the Conway rescue was
somehow accomplished by the expenditure they had lavished on the Summer Cloud. Captain William Sabiston was subsequently rewarded for his "courage, humanity and energy" with the award of a golden chronometer by the Board of Trade..
The Summer Cloud continued on her journey to Sydney,
leaving Madeira on 16th September 1860. She would have been expected
to reach Australia before the end of that year, even on a slow passage. By the middle of January 1861 she had not
arrived and anxiety was being expressed in the newspapers that she had been
lost. She finally arrived on the
afternoon of 26th January 1861, after a very slow passage of 161
days. The explanation proved to lie in
the route Captain Sabiston had chosen to follow. Basically he had followed Admiralty advice
and sailed via the Cape of Good Hope.
After rounding the Cape he did not descend to high latitudes, his
furthest southing being 42 degrees. As a
result he travelled much further than if he had followed the great circle routing
principle. Also, his route did not pick
up the most favourable winds and his slow progress led to Summer Cloud’s bottom
becoming heavily fouled, impeding her sailing speed even further. In contrast, the Star of Peace crossed the
equator on 25th November 1860, passed the meridian of the Cape on 18th
December and followed a great circle routing for Sydney. She reached a latitude of 52.4 S and arrived
on 17th January, 9 days before the Summer Cloud.
1860. Conway’s passengers finally reach India
The Emigration Commissioners then worked with commendable
speed to charter a rescue vessel to collect the passengers from Funchal and
take them on to Calcutta. The Black Ball
Line was again successful in winning the contract and the Chatsworth, 1037 tons
register, under the command of Captain James Baker was chartered on the 8th
October to sail for Madeira on 29th October 1860 at a price of
£13-9s-3d per statute adult. She left
Funchal for Calcutta on 21st November 1860, having on board 69
married couples, 2 single men, 67 single women and 165 infants and children, making
a total of 362 souls (equal to 271 statute adults). Conways’ surgeon-superintendent, George
Anderson sadly became ill in Madeira and died on 26th October. He was replaced on the Chatsworth by
Surgeon-Superintendent Frederick Gourlay, MD. Conway’s Assistant Surgeon-Superintendent,
Thomas Le Blanc, had serious charges (identity not known) laid against him
while in Madeira and, after an investigation, he was discharged from the
vessel. Back in Birkenhead, in July
1862, he was convicted of obtaining goods and services on false pretenses and
sent down for three calendar months with hard labour. James Chant, the Emigration Commissioners’
Dispatching Officer at Birkenhead, who had been drafted to Greenock in 1854 at
the time of the cholera outbreak on Conway, had accompanied Chatsworth to
Madeira and supervised the dispatch of Chatsworth’s passengers. Not all Conway’s passengers travelled on in
the Chatsworth. One woman received an
official letter telling her that her husband had died in India and that she was
to return to Britain. Other soldiers’
wives arrived in India only to find that their husbands had been sent on to
China to fight in the Second Opium War (1856 – 1860). Chatsworth arrived off Kedgeree at the mouth
of the Hooghli River on 12th March 1861.
1860. Inquiry into the wrecking of the Conway
Also, with remarkable speed, a Board of Trade Inquiry was
instituted, under the Merchant Shipping Act of 1854, into the circumstances of
the loss of the Conway. The agent of the
Shipwrecked Mariners’ Society in Plymouth had forwarded the Conway’s men to their
home port of Liverpool, where several of them gave evidence to the inquiry. The
Board of Trade, the owners and the master were legally represented at the
proceedings, which began on 12 October 1860 in the Sherriff’s Court, St
George’s Hall, Liverpool, before Mr TS Raffles, the stipendiary magistrate and
Captain Harris RN, nautical assessor to the Board of Trade.
In examining the circumstances of the loss, a number of
matters was evaluated before the inquiry reached its conclusions. Each will be dealt with in turn.
Alcohol
consumption by the officers. The evidence
concerning alcohol consumption by the officers was conflicting but sufficient
claims of alcohol abuse were made to give rise to the suspicion that there was a
measure of truth in them. The officers
tended to stick together and took a “see no evil” approach. The First Mate stated that he never saw the
Captain the worse for liquor and that “anyone who said he was drunk during the
voyage would tell a falsehood”. Daniel
M’Rae gave a similar opinion, when asked if the captain was ever drunk, “No,
all orders were clear and correct”. Second
Mate Hart also supported the ship’s master, saying that Captain Pole was
attentive to his duties and that he saw no symptoms of drink upon him from the
time of leaving Liverpool until he left the wreck. Peters, the Steward informed the Inquiry that
the Captain was sober in every way. He
also said that he did not see the Second Mate or the Boatswain drunk during the
voyage. Captain Pole himself claimed
that he had never been drunk in his life and had heard no complaints that he or
his officers were ever drunk.
However, several witnesses gave evidence that the Captain
and some of his officers did drink and were on occasion drunk, even though
different witnesses were not always consistent with each other. Seaman William Lavering, said that the
captain was not always sober and that he was drunk on the night of 28 August
when the ship came close to shore off Cork.
He was also drunk subsequently, as were the officers down to the
boatswain (but excluding the third mate).
All of the officers were drunk on the night of the wrecking. When
Captain Pole went on board the Summer Cloud he fell down and could not get up
without assistance and he was the worse for liquor. Another
seaman, Jeremiah Ryan partially contradicted Lavering by saying that the
captain was not drunk on 28 August but that he had been drinking on the first
night out of port, though he was not drunk.
He saw the captain the worse for drink on the day of abandonment, Monday
10th September 1860. On the morning that the Conway lost her masts
(Saturday 8th September), in his opinion, none of the officers,
except the third mate, was in a fit state to give orders. Another able seaman, Henry Dickson, said that
Captain Pole was drunk on several occasions but he never saw him so drunk that
he had to lie down. It is easy to label
the statements of the ordinary seamen as unreliable, but it is less easy to dismiss
a letter written by the ship’s doctor in similar terms. This letter was placed before the Court and
was debated but was not admitted as evidence.
In it Dr Anderson charged that the captain’s conduct was reprehensible
and that he was drunk during the incident off the Cork coast. Another letter, also not admitted as
evidence, from Mr Neville, the quartermaster, alleged that the captain was
drunk, both before and at the time of the wrecking and until he went on board
the Summer Cloud.
Behaviour of
the crew. Conway was
claimed to be a temperance ship and the crew were not allowed alcohol, except
on special occasions. Thomas Dodgson
described the 42 crew as “a fair average one as far as they went” and said that
they behaved very well until the time of abandonment. As a result of the damage to the ship the
crew was able to gain access to the store room and drank from the liquor held
there. One man even left the wheel and
Dodgson had to pull him out of the store room, where he was imbibing in the
company of some soldiers. Edmund
Catterall, the Boatswain, reported that on the day of abandonment the crew took
about 30 minutes to turn out after being called but otherwise behaved tolerably
well. Second Mate Hart confirmed the
drinking behaviour of the crew at the time of abandonment, saying that the
majority was drunk when leaving Conway, including some of those rowing
passengers across to the Summer Cloud.
He had no criticism of the behaviour of the soldiers and the passengers. Edmund Catterall, the Boatswain, backed up
the evidence of Hart concerning the crew’s conduct. However, Catterall’s evidence concerning crew
conversations on board the Geyser were rather damning of the crew. He reported that some of the men said, ““If
owners don’t give us a present for the loss of our clothes (and, -‘em, they
nearly all got their clothes) we’ll lose their insurance” they’d swear this and
that, and God knew what else they would not swear”. If this reported conversation is accurate it
implies that some crew members were prepared deliberately to lie in Court to
take revenge on the Conway’s owner. How
much credence should be given to their evidence?
Fitness of
the ship to undertake the journey. There seems little doubt that Conway had been
adequately repaired and was structurally fit to start her voyage to India. She had a new mizzen mast and various spars,
a main mast was also put in though it is not clear if it too was new. Her cladding had been bolted with new iron
bolts and she had been caulked all over. In addition, Captain Pole wrote in the
ship’s log before sailing that the Conway was “stout, staunch and strong”,
suggesting that he was satisfied with her structure and state of repair. Daniel M’Rae, the carpenter, formed the view
that the ship was sound in every way and that the use of Canadian timbers in
her construction did not lessen the integrity of the vessel. The only evidence to the contrary which was
turned up by the inquiry related to the tautness of her rigging. Thomas Dodgson, the first mate gave evidence
that the rigging did slacken in the early days of the voyage. Potentially more damaging was the claim by
seaman, William Lavering, that the rigging was slack before Conway left the
Mersey. However, there was reason to
question the accuracy of his evidence, as can be seen elsewhere. The adequacy of storage in the hold was also
suspect due to water barrels coming adrift during the first period of rough
weather. All vessels had to be inspected
after loading but before clearing out and any defects in either rigging or
storage would likely have been spotted then.
The
judgement of Captain Pole. The evidence
presented to the inquiry concerning the decision to abandon and scupper the Conway
almost entirely backed up Captain Pole.
He was supported by his first and second mates, the boatswain, the
quartermaster and the doctor. They
agreed that if they remained on board until the first breeze of wind arose they
would sink with her. Captain Sabiston
also supported this view. The only
dissenting voice was seaman William Lavering, who told the inquiry that he felt
that the Conway should not have been abandoned but an attempt made to sail her
to Funchal. His evidence was subsequently undermined, when it was demonstrated
that he had not initially opposed abandonment but changed his view when he
found that the crew’s possessions were to be left on board the Conway.
The cause of
Conway’s loss. The Inquiry found decisively in favour of Captain Pole
and the company on all points except one.
The vessel had been competently surveyed and, although a few months
previously some defects had been found, these had been rectified and the vessel
was structurally sound. There was no
evidence that the ship had been badly stowed or that it was overloaded. The captain was fully justified in abandoning
the ship when he did. To do otherwise
would have involved him taking a heroic gamble with the lives of his crew and
passengers, which could have resulted in all on board being lost. If Captain Pole was justified in abandoning
ship, then he clearly did not hazard the vessel with bad judgment, no matter
what his state of inebriation. Whether
he was ever drunk was beyond the competence of the Inquiry to evaluate but
there appears to have been some doubt in the minds of Mr Raffles and Captain
Harris, since they pointed out that “The matter may be further investigated,
should your lordships desire it, before the local Marine Board…” Finally the Inquiry concluded that the Conway
was “lost by accident, or ordinary “peril of the sea””. Captain Pole’s master’s certificate, which
had been removed from him at the start of the Inquiry, was returned and he was
free to continue his career.
No evidence has been uncovered that Captain Pole did have
to face further scrutiny of his drinking habits but it may be that the evidence
brought to the Board of Trade Inquiry put doubts into the minds of the Conway’s
owners as to Pole’s suitability to command its ships. He did not subsequently sail as a captain
with the Black Ball Line, though in 1861 he was in command of the ship Patna.
On the return of Conway’s crew to Great Britain after the
Madeira wrecking, Jeremiah Ryan and some other seamen went to see James Baines,
perhaps in the belief that he would volunteer some compensation for them. These (probably illiterate) men from the
lower orders would have been uncomfortable in the presence of one of the most
powerful ship owners in the land and may well have been incapable of articulating
their case. Baines did not volunteer
anything but instead asked them what they wanted. “Nothing in particular” was the reply and the
seamen all trooped out, still harbouring resentment against the powers that be.
1860. Conway’s Amazing Journey to Barbados
Following abandonment of the Conway, it was assumed that
she had gone down and become a total loss.
Indeed, it was stated as a fact in the inquiry into the abandonment of
the Conway that she had sunk. Conway’s
owners and insurers certainly thought so, for a successful claim was made on
the insurance policy held on the vessel.
Greatly to the surprise of everyone who had been connected with the
Conway’s last trip, a communication was received at the Underwriters’ Rooms,
Liverpool from Barbados, dated 22 October 1860 which reported that Conway had
not sunk but had been salvaged.
On 11th September, 1860 (the day after Conway
was abandoned) the Home, owned by Lochlan Cameron, Esq, of Liverpool and
commanded by Captain Rose, which was on route from Newport to Grenada with a
cargo of coals for the Royal Mail Steam Company, fell in with the Conway in lat
35deg 36’N, lon 19deg 15’W (250 miles north west of Madeira). The Conway was derelict, with only her fore
lower mast and bowsprit standing and with the main and mizzen lower masts lying
fore and aft on the port side of the main deck and quarter deck. The ship
clearly had not drifted far from the position of her abandonment on the
previous day. There were people on board
from the barque Orizona of Bordeaux and the Spanish barque, Isabella and they
were stripping everything of value from the Conway and carrying the booty away
in boats to their parent ships. Captain
Rose was amazed and shocked by the scene before him, both from the devastation
on the main deck and between decks and from the behaviour of the French and
Spanish sailors, who were “dressed in women’s apparel a la Bloomer, with plumes and artificial flowers waving on their
heads gracefully in the breeze, while busy in breaking open chests, carpet
bags, knapsacks, bedding, &c.”. It
should be recalled that the Conway was carrying many soldiers’ wives to
Calcutta and their personal possessions would, of course, have included
clothing. Captain Rose intimated to the
captains of the other two vessels that because Conway was a British vessel, it
was his duty, as a British subject, to act for the benefit of all concerned and
put a stop to further plunder. He would
not interfere with their claim upon the ship but he would stand by to ensure
that the ship was carried into port. He
clearly indicated to the masters of the plundering ships his determination to
act, with a thinly-veiled threat of force if they did not comply. In his own words “One of my boys gave the
French captain rather a bull-dog shake, they thought fit to take their
departure”!
Rope, canvas, signals, compasses and sails were all gone
from the Conway and essential replacement supplies had to be ferried across
from the Home. The hold was flooded to a
depth of five feet, with water flowing in continuously from the lower of two
augur holes in the starboard lower bow post, but water only came in from the
upper hole when the ship dipped. These
holes were plugged from the inside and four seamen left on board for the night,
while the Home stood by. The next
morning (12 September 1860) a jury rig was accomplished by the Home’s chief
mate with five of her sailors and they were given instructions to sail for the
first port in England that wind and weather would permit. The chief mate was also given a sealed report
to be delivered to Lloyd’s agent when the Conway docked. Clearly, Captain Rose thought he had some
important information to disclose to Lloyds.
On 13th September at 6.00pm the two ships parted, with the
Home continuing to Grenada with her cargo of coal.
By an amazing feat of seamanship and navigation, the
scratch crew of six men, commanded by the Home’s First Mate, Mr Jones, with a
jury rig of three sails and seven feet of water in the hold, sailed the Conway
about 2,620 nautical miles to Carlisle Bay, Barbados. They arrived there on 21 October 1860, 38
days later, at an average speed of about 3 knots. Conway was delivered up to the Admiralty
authorities. The vessel’s registered
weight (ie empty) was over 1,100 tons and her normal crew complement was about
40. However, the largest of the three
sails in the jury rig was a maintopsail (medium-sized), whereas Conway would
normally have had a complement of about 20 sails. All the chests and boxes on board Conway had
been broken into and their contents rifled.
Most of her cargo of coal and railroad iron and her stores were still on
board and more or less intact. The main mast was lying on the deck “in a state
of rottenness”. A sergeant and five
police officers were put on board to protect Conway’s property.
1860. Repair and Return to London
The arrival of Conway in Barbados was communicated to the
Underwriters’ Rooms, Liverpool in a letter dated 22nd October, which
reached Liverpool on 17th November 1860. Immediately there was
comment in the British press concerning the cause of Conway’s dismasting and
claims that the rotten state of the mainmast was the reason for Conway’s
wrecking, contrary to the findings of the recent inquiry. However, this claim is difficult to evaluate
at this distance in time. Certainly the
main mast fell first and that event would make the other masts more vulnerable
to the storm due to the failure of stays, even if, like the mizzen mast, they
were new. The inquiry into Conway’s
wrecking was not re-opened.
Conway was surveyed in Barbados and found to be
completely watertight and was thus discharged.
She was repaired and re-rigged and then sailed to London via New York,
which she left on 6th July 1861 in the command of Captain Groves. She arrived at London Docks in August 1861. Conway was reported to be partly insured,
though it is not known if the policy covered the vessel, the cargo or
both. Since James Baines & Co had
claimed and the insurance company had settled on the policy at a time when it
was believed that Conway had sunk, it is not clear in whose ownership Conway
then stood. What is clear is that she
ceased to be a Black Baller. Captain
Rose and his crew became salvors and gained rights to recover their costs and
share in the value of the sale of Conway.
She was sold to E de Pass, London and her remarkable career continued.
The Home, which had salvaged the wreck, proceeded from
Grenada to New Orleans, presumably to collect a cargo of cotton. The vessel left New Orleans on 6th
March 1861 and arrived at Liverpool on 5th May. On 9th May, Captain Rose was
paying off his crew at the Sailors’ home when five men, formerly part of the
Home’s crew and who left the ship in New Orleans, appeared and demanded wages
they claimed were due to them. Rose
believed them to have deserted ship in the southern American port and thus not
due for any wages. He handed them in to
the custody of the police. The five had
joined the Home at Bristol in August 1860 for a voyage to New Orleans and to be
discharged in any port in the UK. In
Court the ship’s articles and log book were produced. The defence of the five was that they were
carried off the ship by armed runners against their will. This claimed event occurred at the start of
the American Civil War, which began on 12th April 1861. Armed runners were operating at that time to
induce or coerce sailors on British ships to desert to American ships. Captain Rose admitted that runners had
visited his ship. The defence also
claimed that the charge of desertion was contrived by Rose to deprive the five
of their share of the salvage fee (in total, £1700, about £170 per man) from
the Conway. Rose admitted not making an
entry in the ship’s log concerning the incident until a week after it occurred.
The magistrate discharged the prisoners, thus making the men eligible for a
share of salvage and also to recover their belongings left on the Home.
Military
stores to Canada
Under her new owners, Conway was contracted to the Royal Navy
to transport military materials to Quebec and Montreal. On Thursday, 12th September she
went alongside Woolwich pier in preparation to ship guns and munitions of war
from the Royal Arsenal. She was also due
to receive 700 tons of gunpowder from the floating magazine. Conway sailed from Gravesend on 19th
September and the following day anchored at Deal before proceeding. Conway reached Quebec on 3rd or 4th November and Montreal on 13th November. She departed that city on 22nd November 1861, rather late in the year to be making this
journey, since the river would imminently be affected by freezing conditions and
vessels risked damage from ice, or even being frozen in for the winter. It was reported from Quebec on 29th November that "Upwards of 50 ships were between Quebec and Brandy Pots
yesterday of which about 30 were above the traverse; it is hoped they got
through last night. The Conway and
Paragon have been towed to Bic". Conway arrived at Gravesend on 11th January 1862.
1862. Conway’s journey to Brisbane and Middle Class
Female Emigration
Conway did not sail again until
the summer of 1862. At the end of June
she was contracted to the Emigration Commissioners to convey emigrants from
Southampton to Brisbane, Queensland at a rate of £12 12s 6d per statute
adult. The ship was scheduled to sail on
11th August 1862 under Captain Charles Ogilvie Spence. She entered out on 23rd June at the East India Dock, sailed about 7th August,reaching Portsmouth on 10th August and Southampton on 12th August. She finally sailed from Southampton on Sunday, 18th August carrying 396 emigrants (256 ½ statute adults). Surgeon-superintendent JG Winstone was in
charge of the emigrants, 219 of whom were from England, 140 from Scotland and 8
from Ireland. A schoolmaster (Mr RE Pym)
and a matron (Miss Pym) were also appointed. About £136 from Kelsall’s
Emigration Charity was distributed to the poorest and most needy cases on board
in Southampton. Conway was again fitted
with Dr Normanby’s distilling apparatus to provide fresh, aerated water (about
10 gallons/hour) from sea water during the passage. She sailed under the banner of the White
Horse Packet Line.
Conway’s passage
was slow at times, as she was affected by light and contrary winds in
places. She picked up her pilot off Cape
Moreton on 2nd December, 1862, 102 days out from Southampton. There were two births during the voyage but
no significant disease and no deaths.
The immigrants presented a testimonial and a silver tankard to
Surgeon-Superintendent Winstone and also to Captain Spence, as a mark of their
gratitude. Miss Pym was praised for her care of the single ladies and the
Brisbane immigration authorities complimented Captain Spence and Mr Winstone
for the cleanliness of the ship and the good health of the passengers. Conway’s passengers were landed by the
steamer Rainbow.
Conway’s cargo and her passengers’ luggage, was unloaded
and carried up the bay by the same steamer.
Items in the cargo, which were lightered to the quayside by various
smaller vessels, conformed to the pattern of Conway’s previous voyages to
Australia, with food, drink and manufactures to the fore. There were also two pianos. Some of the drink, including “No 3 Burton
Ale”, had been imported speculatively and was immediately offered for
sale. Excess stores, including maize,
Californian flour, jars of pickles and empty pickle jars and a variety of items
of tinware, were also disposed of by auction.
As usual,
various members of the Conway’s crew had designs on desertion. Some were detected in the act of stealing one
of Conway’s boats on arrival. One seaman
jumped overboard from the Rainbow steamer and attempted to swim ashore. He was later found drowned. Two seamen absconded
from Conway and were reported to be drinking in the Sovereign Hotel, Little
Ipswich. Police sergeants Carson and
Greenaway went to arrest them, but one of them, Christian Anderson, a Swede,
resisted and drew a knife, whereupon, Sergeant Greenaway knocked him down with
his baton. Anderson was fined £5, or two
months hard labour as an alternative.
Anderson and his colleague, John Rock, were also charged with assaulting
a Conway passenger, Francis Davis, after accusing him of informing Captain
Spence of their plans to abscond. Davis
denied informing, but admitted he was present when someone else passed
information to Captain Spence. Both
assaulted Davis and received another fine of £5 for their efforts. They also had to find sureties concerning
their behaviour towards Davis for 6 months, due to them having made further
threats against him, saying that Davis would get some more for what he had done
when “the other chaps got out of hokey”. Some seamen may have been helped to abscond by
local boatmen travelling to and from ships anchored in the bay. Two sailors from the Whirlwind, which was
anchored near the Conway, were found by the police hiding on a boat and the
boatman, Robert Miller, charged with aiding and abetting the seamen. He indignantly protested his innocence in the
local paper.
Maria Rye and Middle Class Women
Emigrants
A significant number of the emigrants were nominees of
land purchasers, including about 100 single women who were nominated by Miss
Maria Rye, a prominent advocate of “middle class” female emigration, who
founded the Female Middle Class Emigration Society in 1861. Apparently, the Emigration Commissioners
tried to dissuade Miss Rye from sending so many middle class ladies to Queensland,
due to the lack of suitable employment opportunities for them, but Maria Rye
had previously bought about £700 worth of Queensland passage certificates in
blank and she ignored their advice.
News of Conway’s middle class ladies had
reached the colony in advance of the ship’s arrival. It generated a lot of correspondence in the
local newspapers, most of which took a sceptical, even withering, view of the
desirability of sending such ladies to a colony where social conditions were
likely to be very different from those left behind in the home country. The following extract from a letter to the
Brisbane Courier of 29th November, 1862 gives the flavour of the
debate, “Expressed
in other words, this simply means that a vessel now daily expected to arrive,
will land upon our shores about one hundred females of a class most unsuitable
to the colony, and whose coming bids fair to entail upon them an amount of
mental suffering and humiliation which a continued residence in the old country
despite of all the heart-aches and up-hill struggles which there attend the
pathway of "genteel " poverty "- would scarcely have forced upon
their endurance. We are beginning to import genteel poverty at too rapid a rate
as it is. Scarcely a vessel arrives but brings its proportion, however infinitesimal,
of persons of "high respectability," but no means. They have never
been used to hard work, or work of any kind, in fact, and they have a decided
objection to attempt a commencement”.
Speculating on
the possible reason for these ladies emigrating (the excess of males over
females in Australian society) the sneering continued. "Here," said
the DORCASES of English society, "is an opportunity not to be lost. How
many thousands of our countrywomen, well-born, well-educated, and
well-domesticated, are pining away their lives in single blessedness, and how
many thousands of sturdy Australian settlers are sighing for feminine
companionship”. In fact most of the
single women proved to be competent and adaptable. Six of them inserted an advertisement in The
Courier flagging their availability for hire “in Houses of Business, viz.
Saleswomen, Assistants, Dress-makers, Barmaids, Housekeepers (one a widow) or
in any energetic employment. Country not
objected to”. Several of the more
educated girls quickly found employment as governesses at salaries of £60 - £80
per year. So much for the sneering in
the local press!
Some misunderstanding over the nature of the “ladies” who
descended on Brisbane had arisen due to them being represented as “governesses”,
which was inaccurate, since they were mostly higher class servants. There were actually 96 “ladies” and they were
temporarily accommodated in the Normal School building. However, due to some administrative error, no
beds or bedding were provided initially and they had to sleep on bare boards on
their first night ashore. This was
probably not the welcome that they had expected and, perhaps through
embarrassment, some of Brisbane’s lady residents clubbed together to obtain
furniture and other materials to make the British guests more comfortable.
Miss Charlotte Bustard was one of the middle class lady
immigrants. Her mother was a friend of Mrs
Janet Brown, who had emigrated to Toowoombah about 12 years previously and, on
hearing of the arrival of the Conway, Janet Brown wrote a letter to
Charlotte. This was dispatched by hand
to Brisbane by an acquaintance of Mrs Brown who happened to be going that
way. This country chap was a bit bemused
about how he should deliver the letter and resorted to pushing it through the
letter box of the Brisbane Courier. The
Courier made a bit of sport about the circumstances and the appearance of the
informal postman (“of rather imbecile appearance, and somewhat inclined to the
seedy in point of attire”) but, not knowing who Miss Bustard was, published
Janet Brown’s letter in the hope that Charlotte Bustard would see it. The letter gives a good insight into life for
a middle class immigrant lady in Queensland in the early 1860s. Clearly some middle class immigrants, including
the Browns, had survived the rigorous conditions and done well. Interestingly,
experience of the harsh life of the colony had not obliterated Mrs Brown’s English
middle class attitudes and in her letter she could still look down upon a
“rough Scotch woman” on the cattle station “who stands up to her tub like a
man, and gets through an immense amount of sheer hard work, but is sadly
unsympathetic, and, naturally enough, does not understand the nick-nackaries of
life”!
1863. Conway returns via Bombay
By early January 1863, Conway was taking on a cargo of 400
tons of coal, which would also act as ballast, for her next journey. Rather tediously, the coal had to be carried
down the bay by smaller vessels. Conway
cleared for Point de Galle in Ceylon on 23rd January 1863 but did
not leave immediately, the reason being a shortage of crew. In addition to desertions, one Conway seaman,
James O’Brian was found drowned. At his
inquest held at the Sawyer’s Arms he was described as being of “a free and
jovial disposition” and it was conjectured that he had been drinking prior to
the departure of his ship and had fallen into the harbour. The jurors viewed the body and found no
evidence of violence on it, though “it was plain the fishes had begun their
work of demolition”. Captain Spence
advertised for three, then four, then six men to complete the crew for India at
“the highest rates of wages given”. The
reason for the increase in number was not further desertions but a problem with
the wording of the ship’s articles, which failed to specify the total size of
the crew correctly. This was pointed out
to the captain by the “forecastle lawyers”!
The men refused to work unless the ship had 30 sailors, ie men who could
work the ship, on board. Captain Spence
had to return to Brisbane several times in order to secure the necessary
complement. Conway was still anchored at
the Water Holes near the Pilot Station on 6th February, but must
have sailed soon afterwards, her ultimate destination being Bombay.
Nothing is currently known about Conway’s arrival
in Bombay or her departure from that port.
By 22nd September 1863 she had reached Ascension Island on her
journey back to London. She arrived at
Gravesend on 30th December.
It was the end of her long and successful association with the transport
of emigrants to Australia.
Conway after
Emigration – Mostly Timber and Coal
The subsequent career of the Conway was as a
freighter carrying mainly coal from Britain and wood on the return journey. The next record of Conway departing from
Britain was when she left Gravesend on 9th April, 1864 for
Quebec, under the command of Captain Barrett, arriving on 14th May. She is presumed then to have
returned to Britain with a cargo of timber, entering inwards at the London
Custom House on 26th July and docking in the Surrey Docks.
Conway next sailed on 18th August, repeating the journey to
Quebec. She travelled out in ballast and
reached Ile d’Orlean in the St Lawrence, about 100 miles from Quebec, bound up,
on 1st October. She returned
to London, reaching Deal on 23rd November, 1864 and Gravesend two
days later.
On 16th January 1865, Conway was
reported to have cleared at London to load coal in the River Tyne. She arrived in ballast at South Shields on 25th
January and entered the Tyne Dock. This
large dock was opened in 1859 by the North Eastern Railway to handle coal
exports via the river. When this trade
was at its peak, 7 million tons of coal were handled annually using the four
staithes (wooden structures which allowed coal to be dropped directly into
ships’ holds via shutes) built to facilitate the loading of ships. The depth of
water at the ‘cil at the entrance to Tyne Dock was 24ft at spring tides, enough
to handle Conway which drew about 22ft when burthen. Conway loaded 714 tons but
had to wait until 11th February for favourable wind and water. Along with many other vessels, Conway was able
to leave Tyne Dock, at last, on 10th February. Conway, under Captain Owen, was originally
announced to be heading for Callao, the port of the city of Lima, Peru, but she
eventually went instead to Genoa in Northern Italy.
Conway beached
on the Norfolk Coast
The weather on Conway’s passage down the North
Sea was dreadful. Heavy gales,
snowstorms and fog were reported and there was much disruption to
shipping. Conway was one of the
casualties, getting stuck on Haisborough Sands, a 10 mile long sandbank lying
parallel to the coast off Happisborough, Norfolk. After a failed attempt by a steam tug to refloat her she got off with the help of
beachmen for a fee of £250, after jettisoning 300 tons of coal. Conway then proceeded on her way, passing the
P&O steamer Poonah on 10th March and arriving in Genoa on 15th
March, 1865. Her return journey was to
Newport, South Wales, presumably to load with coal and she left for Gibraltar
on 27th April. After sailing
back to Britain Conway entered Tyne Dock, South Shields about 4th
October, 1865 to load 740 tons of coal. As
on her previous visit to the Tyne Dock, Conway had to wait a substantial time
before she could safely emerge into the river, in company with 50 other sailing
vessels, on Saturday 21st October.
On this occasion, with an additional 26 tons of coal in her hold, Conway
drew 22ft 9in of water. A member of
Conway’s crew, Edward Bluck, an apprentice from London, deserted on 19th
October. His ship had left by the time
he was brought before the courts and he was sent down for a month. On this
voyage Conway, still under Captain Owens, was destined for Rio de Janeiro.
Her date of arrival at the then Brazilian capital has not been
determined though it was after 12th December, when she was spoken to
in mid-Atlantic.
Back to Quebec
Conway then travelled directly to Quebec for
timber. She arrived at St John, New Brunswick 0n 20th April and at Quebec on 7th
May, 1866 before returning to the Port of Liverpool on 1st July. The voyage to Quebec was then repeated, with
Conway leaving Britain on 26th July. She was reported to be off Dundrum Bay the following day and arrived in Quebec on 30th
August, loading then clearing for Liverpool on 1st October and was
back in Liverpool on 28th October.
Captain Owens was Conway’s master throughout. Only these rather stark statistics have so
far been uncovered about the two visits to British North America in 1866.
Conway Struggles
with Leakiness
Winter was a period of the year when access to
Quebec was impossible, due to ice in the St Lawrence. Instead, Conway entered out on 14th November and left
Liverpool for Rio de Janiero on 2nd December 1866, apparently
intending to call at Cardiff for a cargo of coal. However, she did not get further
than the Lleyn Peninsula in North Wales, where she put in at the small port of
Portdinllaen for some unspecified, but probably maintenance-related reason. She
then returned to Liverpool on 22nd December, though the details of
her arrival in Liverpool and subsequent departure for, and arrival in, Cardiff have
not been discovered. She must have sailed from Cardiff for Rio de Janiero
before the 8th January, because on that date she was seen steering
south 20 miles south of the Tuskar Rock, County Wexford, South East
Ireland. Her maintenance problems
apparently persisted because the following day, 9th January she made
another unscheduled call, this time at Broadhaven, a small town in Pembrokeshire,
due to being leaky and her crew "refractory". She then apparently
moved on to Milford Haven, where she was surveyed and the decision taken to
lighten her and to caulk her topsides.
After these repairs had been completed she sailed for Rio de Janiero on 14th February,
where she arrived on 2nd May 1867.
From Rio de Janiero, Conway again sailed directly for Quebec and was seen off the Pilgrims on July 27th. She arrived at Quebec on 2nd August 1867. Conway had loaded and departed by 24th
August, when she was seen bound down the St Lawrence. Her destination on this
occasion was Plymouth, where she arrived on 22nd September. From Plymouth she sailed, still under Captain Owens, to Pensacola in
Florida, returning to Liverpool on 12th April 1868. The usual reason for ships travelling to the
southern states of the USA was to load with cotton for the Lancashire cotton
industry and Conway may have been carrying cotton on this occasion, since she
returned to Liverpool, the main port for cotton importation. However, Conway also returned with 157
barrels of rosin, the solid form of resin from pine trees. It was offered for sale in the Exchange
Buildings on 15th April.
Rosin was used, amongst other things, in the manufacture of varnishes
and paints.
Another
Accidental Death
Conway entered the Sandon Graving Dock for
maintenance and repairs following her return from Florida. This may have been the time when she was
re-rigged, because on her next voyage she was specifically referred to as a
“barque”. She was being guarded in dock
by Daniel Keith, a 62 year old shipkeeper from Bootle. Sadly, he appears to have fallen into
Conway’s hold on the night of Saturday, 9th May, 1868, though he was
not found until the following morning.
Keith was still alive and immediately taken to the Northern Hospital, where
it was found he had fractured the base of his skull and had also sustained
internal injuries. He died soon after
admission. This accident was closely
similar to that which befell painter Joseph Irvine in November 1853, when
Conway was also in the Sandon Dock, being prepared for her first journey to Australia.
Another
Grounding
When she returned to sea on 27th May,
1868 with a new master, Captain Thomas, Conway again headed for Quebec. She was seen off Queenstown on 6th June and reached Quebec on 18th July.
However, on leaving the wharf with her cargo of timber she grounded and
was said to lie badly at low water.
Conway was quickly re-floated and, apparently undamaged by her
experience, left for Plymouth, where she arrived on 21st September,
1868. It was again the season for travel
to the southern American states and Conway departed from Plymouth bound for
Pensacola on 10th October and arriving back at Liverpool on 16th
February 1869.
At this time Conway was still spoken of as being
“of London”, so presumably she was still in the ownership of Mr de Pass. Another voyage to Quebec then ensued, Conway
departing from Liverpool on 6th April1869. She was passed, bound up, in the St Lawrence
by the steamer Nestorian on 8th May and arrived in Quebec on 14th
May. Her departure for Plymouth was on
21st June 1869 under a new master, Captain Harland. Plymouth was attained on 30th
July. The journey was then
repeated. By 19th August,
Conway was mid-Atlantic and arrived at Quebec on 11th September. Perhaps prophetically, Conway passed a wreck
of about 790 tons floating bottom up during her journey.
Conway and
Bristol
Conway cleared in Quebec on 9th October for the return to Britain. The journey from Quebec to Bristol was difficult, due to Conway being leaky again.
It was reported that she was making 10in of water an hour and part of
her cargo had been thrown overboard. She
anchored in Walton Bay on Sunday, 14th November to await a suitable
tide for passage up the Avon and an available berth at the docks at Bristol. At this location the tidal range can be more
than 40ft. Ships were towed up to Bristol on a rising tide by steam tugs and
needed to be securely moored before the tide turned. Conway was tied up in Bristol on 19th
November, 1869. Her cargo (or remaining
cargo) was listed as 206 pcs white pine timber; 5pcs ash timber; 25pcs oak
timber; 27pcs walnut timber; 169pcs birch timber; 12,216pcs floated pine deals;
2,188 deal ends; 9,286 bright pine deals; 354 pine boards and 6,000 WI staves.
It was at about this time that Conway was sold to
Bristol owners. She also acquired a new
master, Captain Webster. On 11th
March 1870 Conway was advertised as loading for Quebec and entered out the
following day. She appears to have made
the short hop across the Bristol Channel to Penarth, Cardiff about 24th
March, probably to load coal, before finally sailing on 29th March. She arrived in Quebec on 15th May, 1870. Conway sailed from Quebec on 18th June under a new master, Captain James and
returned, this time to London. She
reached Deal on 30th July and Gravesend on 31st July. She left again for Quebec in ballast on 16th August, under
the command of Captain James, passing Deal on 17th
August and reaching Quebec on 1st October, 1870
The journey back from Quebec to Bristol began on 22nd
October, with Captain James still in charge.
On this occasion her cargo consisted of 1,205pcs
white pine; 1,809 pipe staves; 10,346 WI staves and 1,481 pine deals. Again Conway
experienced problems with water ingress.
She sprang a leak off the Newfoundland Banks and was spoken to and
supplied with provisions by the Chinaman from Foo-chow-foo on 5th
December. Conway arrived in the Kingroad, an anchorage near the mouth of the
Avon, for Bristol on 13th December but had to wait until 21st
December before beginning the tow up to Bristol, for want of dock accommodation.
The owner of either the Conway or the
Florence Nightingale, which was delayed for a similar period, advised his
consignees, “that they must never again offer them any freights to
Bristol”.
The Western Daily Press also joined in the criticism of
the Bristol city fathers on 17th December, 1870. “The delays and loss caused by want of dock
accommodation at Bristol have been so frequently pointed out that it is like
repeating a thrice-told tale to allude to the subject again. There happens however, to be at Kingroad at
the present moment a very striking illustration of this local defect. There are now lying at that anchorage four
vessels consigned to Mr HR James of Queen Square not one of which can come up
the river till next week. These vessels
are the Florence Nightingale 1362 tons register from Quebec, the Conway 1140
tons register from Quebec, the Retriever 1336 tons register from Quebec and the
Emperor 625 tons from Gaspe. The
last-named vessel will not get up till Monday, the Conway will be delayed till
Tuesday and the Florence Nightingale and Retriever till Wednesday. Another vessel the McLeod 1360 tons register
from Quebec consigned to the same house will be delayed till Wednesday if she
should arrive before that day. These
facts require no comment. They are an
exhaustive commentary on the folly which has left the port in the condition
which has made such things possible”
1871 - Another
Mutiny
On 3rd March, 1871, Conway began
loading for her next voyage to Quebec, travelling across the Bristol Channel to Penarth, Cardiff, to load with
coal under Captain Acraman. The date of departure for Quebec from Penarth
is not known but by 20th April Conway had had to put in to
Queenstown, Cork having lost her foremast above the eyes of the lower rigging, her maintopgallantmast
and some spars in stormy weather. Also,
she was again leaking badly, admitting 5in to 6in of water per hour. She was towed to the docks to discharge and undergo repairs, which were carried out by Messers
Wheelers at Queenstown. Conway
resumed her passage to Quebec on 6th June. But further problems arose when the crew
mutinied and Conway had to return to Queenstown, reaching that port on 19th
June, still leaky.
Events had unfolded as follows. It appears that Conway’s crew was paid off (including Captain Acraman) while she was under repair in Queenstown.
After the repairs had been completed, a scratch crew was recruited from
the local area, mainly Queenstown, Passage and Crookhaven. They were subsequently described in Freeman’s
Journal as “some of the most determined ruffians that have ever sailed from
here “. Conway proceeded under a new master, Captain Jones and had reached
a latitude of 22degW when the mutiny broke out.
Apparently the cause of the crew’s discontent was that there was more
work setting up the new rigging, which had slackened, than they had either
expected or cared to undertake. At first
they refused to sail further west and then became mutinous. Captain Jones was
thus compelled to signal a passing Allen Transatlantic steamer, the St Patrick
for help. The St Patrick sent across a
boat load of burly sailors with fire-arms and hand-cuffs. Ten ringleaders of the mutiny were put in
irons to immobilise them while Conway made for port. The vessel was met by a substantial corps of
police officers who dumped the miscreants in the bridewell (slang for a prison or
police station in Ireland), until their trial on Wednesday, 21st
June. Captain Jones then appears to have been replaced by Captain Heselton who recruited new men and Conway resumed her voyage. She was sighted on 12th August,
1871 in mid-Atlantic about 1000 miles from her destination.
Conway was off the Pilgrims on 31st August, in the Traverse on 2nd September and arrived at Quebec on 4th September,
1871. After taking on her cargo of timber she sailed for Bristol on 27th September and arrived at Kingroad on 25th
October. The cargo consisted of 81 pcs
oak timber; 20 pcs black walnut timber; 164 pcs birch timber; 10 pcs ash timber;
125 pcs red pine timber; 496 pcs white pine timber; 12,107 bright pine deals;
700 bright pine deal ends; 1,948 pipe staves and 3,600 WI staves. Interestingly,
Conway’s master had again been changed, the return journey being under the
command of Captain Hesselton, who imported, on his own account, 12 barrels of
cod rounds. There was no delay at the anchorage in the Severn Estuary and
Conway immediately passed to Bristol.
Her crew was discharged and her cargo unloaded. Frederick Crickley, a 66 year old seaman, was
taken on as watchman to guard the now deserted ship. Captain Hesselton had seen Crickley at 7pm on
Wenesday, 8th November but when he returned to the ship at midnight
he found Crickley dead, lying on his back in the galley. Apparently the dead man had recently been
complaining of pains in his chest.
Winter was now approaching again and Conway’s next voyage, again under Captain Heselton, was to Pensacola in Florida. She sailed
on 25th November 1871, arriving at her destination on 3rd
January 1872. She left Pensacola for
Liverpool on 17th February and arrived in the Mersey on 7th
April. No details of her cargo have been
uncovered but they are likely to have included cotton and rosin which could
readily be sold to industries located near her port of destination. In 1872, Conway’s ownership appears to have
changed twice. Firstly, she was sold to
Henry Randall James, a Bristol shipbroker who had imported goods on Conway
several times. Then Conway was sold on
to a rather mixed local partnership of accountants, merchants of various hues
and Mr Stockfisch, the superintendent of the Bristol Sailors’ Home.
Conway
Grounded in Walton Bay
Conway entered outwards on 29th April sailed for Quebec from Liverpool on 6th May, 1872, under Captain Williams. She arrived at her destination on 1st
June and sailed for Bristol on 4th July. Conway anchored in Walton Bay,
about 6 miles SW of the mouth of the River Avon, on 1st August,
waiting for suitable conditions to pass up to the Cumberland Basin in Bristol
Docks. About 7pm on Monday 5th
August a violent squall got up which raised the level of high tide about 6ft
above the expected level. Conway dragged
her anchors and was driven high up on the beach. Her false keel was broken off and substantial
damage caused to her hull. However, she
managed to stay upright. In an attempt
to refloat her on the approaching spring tides, her deck cargo of timber was
unloaded and the help of steam tugs enlisted, but to no avail. She was beneaped until 18th August,
1872, when she was finally got off, taking in water and passed up to
Bristol. Her cargo consisted of 23 pcs
oak timber; 1,241 pcs white pine timber; 1,299 deals; 5,712 pipe staves; 6,000
WI staves and 6 cords lathwood, which had been consigned to Bayly and Fox.
Conway must then have undergone repairs following her
latest mishap and she reappeared to take on cargo for Quebec about 22nd
March, 1873. She sailed on 17th
April, was in the St Lawrence off the Quarantine Ground on 7th June and arrived in Quebec on 9th June. She left Quebec on 10th July and arrived back in Bristol on 14th August, under
the command of Captain Moulton. Her
cargo was typical of her journeys from Quebec, consisting of 89 pcs of oak timber;
1,821 pcs of fir timber; 1,680 deals; 2,881 pipe staves; 6,000 WI staves and 17
cords lathwood. Conway’s owners then
planned to repeat the journey across the Atlantic. She was advertised as taking on cargo from 29th
August 1873 “for foreign parts”. The
ship entered out for Quebec at Bristol on 30th August and finally
sailed on 25th September, again under Captain Moulton, arriving at the southern port on 22nd November. The
reason for the long delay between entering out and actually sailing is unknown
but could have been maintenance-related.
It is also not known if she took on a cargo of coal as ballast. However, when she finally left, her
destination was given as Pensacola, not Quebec.
The change of plan was probably due to the delay in sailing which made
it unwise to head for Quebec so late in the year and risk getting stranded over
winter in the St Lawrence.
More Storm
Damage
From Pensacola, Conway returned to Bristol, leaving on 20th December and anchored
in Kingroad on 25th February 1874, before finally docking in Bristol on 3rd March.
No details are known of her cargo but it seems unlikely that she was
carrying cotton, otherwise she would probably have headed for Liverpool and the
Lancashire cotton market. With the
arrival of spring, Conway again headed for Quebec, sailing on 6th
April under Captain Moulton. She was now
described as a “Whitby ship”, but that was probably because she had a new owner
who lived in the Yorkshire port. Conway
was soon forced to turn back and arrived in the Kingroad on 17th
April. She had been struck by a heavy
sea during a WSW hurricane and suffered serious damage. Her hatches were stove in, boats smashed,
skids carried away and binnacle and compass washed overboard. Also, her ballast (coal?) shifted and two of
her crew were injured. Conway was then
patched up and resumed her journey, under yet another new master, Captain Martin, arriving at Quebec on 9th
June. Her return trip to Britain began on 7th July and
she reached Bristol on 12th August 1874. She was carrying another typical cargo of
timber, consisting of 27pcs oak timber; 1,134pcs white pine; 1,473pcs floated
pine deals; 262 pipe staves and 20 cords lathwood.
And Leaks
Captain Martin was still commanding Conway and she was
quickly turned around, sailing from Bristol on 27th August for
Quebec, thus giving her sufficient time to load with timber and retreat down
the St Lawrence before the appearance of ice in the river. The details of her subsequent return to
Bristol and departure for her routine winter voyage to Pensacola have not been
discovered. It is even a possibility that she never reached the St Lawrence but diverted to Pensacola. Conway reached Pensacola on 14th November 1875. On her return journey to London
from Pensacola Conway ran into further trouble. On making landfall she headed for Falmouth,
where she arrived on 9th February, in a leaky state and having lost
an anchor. Again, she was patched up and
departed for London on 11th February 1875. Somewhere in the Channel she was picked up by the tug Cambria, arriving at Gravesend on
13th February and entering the Surrey Commercial Dock 2 days later.
1875 – Conway’s
Last Voyage
Conway departed on what was to be her final voyage from
London about the beginning of April 1875, under Captain George Prance. She was destined for Quebec in ballast and
was spoken to in mid-Atlantic on 10th April. On 7th May 1875 Conway was
abandoned leaking badly and her crew of 22 rescued by the German barque Schiller, which
landed them at New York, the information being communicated back to Britain by
telegram. Captain Prance returned to
Bristol on the steamship Great Western, arriving on 16th June after
a favourable passage. Her second mate later testified that her
timbers were decayed and her fastenings loose.
In truth, she was unseaworthy and, on the published evidence, she had
probably been so for some time. Indeed,
between 1851 and 1867 Conway was only reported in the press to be leaky once,
in 1866 but, between 1868 and 1875, she was reported to be leaky 6 times.
Conway – 24
years on the World’s Oceans
How far did Conway travel? It is difficult to be precise but if the
minimal distances between all the ports she is known to have visited are added
together a figure of 351,000 nautical miles is reached, but this is the bare
minimum for the mileage she must have travelled. What was the true distance travelled? A guess could be perhaps 1.25x – 1.5x that
distance.
During her commercial life she crossed the North Atlantic
and back 24x, travelled to South America 2x, the Mediterranean 2x and journeyed
to Australia, followed by India, 5x. On
each occasion of her 5 Australian trips, when she carryied about 2000 emigrants
in total, she had a different port as her destination - Geelong, Hobart,
Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane. Her
cargoes, other than the human variety, included many diverse items but the
staples of timber, coal and cotton predominated
Her period of commercial life spanned the period from the
heyday of the clippers in the 1850s to their progressive decline during the
1860s and 1870s, as steam gained the upper hand. It can be seen in her record that her
successive owners struggled to maintain her commercial viability, moving away
from passengers and the attentions of the Emigration Commissioners after 1862
and re-rigging her as a barque in 1868, both actions resulting in a requirement
for smaller crews. On her first voyage
to Australia in 1854 she carried a crew of 50 but on her last voyage in 1875
her complement was down to 20. Another
likely economy measure appears to have been the adoption of a minimal
maintenance regime resulting in her becoming increasingly leaky and prone to
unscheduled interruptions to her passages.
At the peak of Conway’s prowess under William Henry
Duguid, one of the finest but least-lauded clipper skippers, her master
retained his position for 6 years.
Towards the end of her life she had frequent changes of master, some
only serving for one leg of a round trip across the Atlantic. This again seems to have been an economy
measure, with the master and all the crew being paid off at every opportunity
to save on crew costs, though perhaps some skippers were glad to depart from
commanding what had become a leaky old tub.
Conway led a charmed life, being wrecked on two occasions
to the point where she was expected to be a total loss and having several
lesser scrapes and groundings. On each
occasion when she was close to oblivion a change of owner was the result. As an all-wood ship and mainly soft wood, it
is remarkable that she lasted as long as she did. She also gained notoriety as the “Cholera
Ship” in 1854 and suffered two mutinies one, off Queenstown in 1871, probably
being a direct result of the owner’s crewing strategy, which resulted in a gang
of work-shy ruffians being recruited to the forecastle.
For me, this study of the life of the clipper ship Conway
has given a wonderful insight into the life of seafarers, including my
relative, Thomas Spurrier and emigrants in the mid-19th
century. I hope others will find
incidents here to fascinate, amuse or even horrify them as they search for the
essence of their own ancestors’ lives.
Don Fox
20120410, 20120425, 20150612, 20161229
donaldpfox@gmail.com
donaldpfox@gmail.com
Thank you for this detailed and interesting post Don. Tom Barclay, the Local Studies librarian at the South Ayrshire library gave me the link to it when I wrote asking for information about my ancestors. They were cotton handloom weavers from Girvan, who travelled on the Conway to Hobart from Liverpool - July 12- October 14. I've recently led a project to restore the graves of these ancestors in a quite remote part of north-eastern Victoria, Australia. For your interest see: https://gofundme.com/save-our-pioneer-graves
ReplyDeleteI'm also very impressed by your blog, so I've signed up as a follower. I want to build mine concurrently with my PhD research studies into the role these ancestors and other Scottish families helped to develop this part of Victoria. Many thanks, Jennifer McCoy
I realize that it has been nearly 6 years since you posted this blog, but I just came across it today when performing a search on a passenger ship named Conway. My 4th Great Grandparents and their 8 children (including my 3rd Great Grandfather) immigrated from Scotland to the US aboard that ship. Near the end of your 3rd section, you state: "The arrival of the ship in New York on 26th or 27th June..." You also questioned whether the Capt was a James or a Charles Marshall. According to the NY passenger list where my Ross family immigrants are listed, it appears that the arrival date was June 29, 1852 and it is sworn to by the Capt James Marshall. I'd love to learn more about that sailing and any documention you may have. I'm more than willing to provide you with the NY passenger list references if you are interested. Please fee free to contact me if you wish.
ReplyDeleteYour detail is impressive but it's a great pity you did not include a list of all your references, some of which would have been useful for readers to follow up on, especially those who had ancestors on this ship.
ReplyDeleteRe the paragraph: A Terrible Storm and an Outbreak of Cholera
On Monday 16th January 1864 Conway left the ... - 1864 needs to be corrected to 1854.