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Name/TitleFirst Voyage of HMS Endeavour – Letter
About this objectThe expedition actually sailed shortly after. At the time of this note the ship was on her way to Plymouth for final fitting out and provisioning. Beaglehole’s ‘Calendar of Documents’ for the voyage records (Journals, vol.1, p. 623) on 3 August the corresponding note from the Admiralty Secretary to the Navy Board with the minute, “desire Commissioner Rogers to control payment of two months advance and direct Plymouth Officers to supply him…”. This manuscript is the instruction required by the minute, directed to Rogers and docket titled by him on the verso, “desiring me to pay two Months Advance to the Endeavour Bark’s Crew”.
MakerWilliams and Mason - Author
Maker RoleAuthor
Date Made1768
Period18th century
Medium and MaterialsInk (iron-gall) and paper.
Object TypeManuscripts and Ephemera
Object numberSF000094
Copyright LicenceAttribution - Non-commercial - No Derivatives (cc)
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Date range: 1768-c1850
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The mug is decorated with an underglaze and a blue transfer print. On the body, it is titled ‘Emigrants to Australia’. This type of body and glaze was discontinued by 1840. Comparison of the handle shape and the profile of the foot, point to the attribution of manufacture by the Davenport Factory.
Delta was a ship-rigged vessel with two decks and three masts. It was built in Dordrecht, Netherlands in 1839 at the shipyard of Jan Schouten and registered in the same port. Its hull was constructed of oak and sheathed in ‘yellow metal’. Delta was owned by H. van der Sande at the time of its loss and was engaged as a cargo trader.
The Delta carried 29 crew and passengers, while sailing from Melbourne to Batavia in ballast when wrecked at Kenn Reefs on 30 May 1854 whilst under the command of Captain J.G. Kunst. This vessel loss supports the pattern of shipwrecks located on a well-travelled shipping route that was poorly charted until the mid-nineteenth century. The crew of the Delta could see four other shipwrecks at Kenn Reefs at the time of their vessel’s loss.
Important image of a ship associated with Matthew Flinders, that would shortly become one of the most famous early shipwrecks in eastern Australian waters. This is a fine ship’s portrait, by one of the great exponents of the art