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Testimonial for William Joseph Burley from James Barrett
Testimonial for William Joseph Burley from James Barrett

Testimonial for William Joseph Burley from James Barrett

Date16 January 1888
Object numberANMS0274[007]
NameTestimonial
MediumInk on paper
DimensionsOverall: 117 × 115 mm, 2 g
ClassificationsEphemera
Credit LineANMM Collection Gift from H McKellar
DescriptionA handwritten testimonial for William Joseph Burley from James Barrett, chief engineer of SS GILSLAND. Burley had worked on the GILSLAND as a donkeyman and Barrett had always found him to be "strictly sober, very willing and intelligent and a thoroughly reliable man". HistoryWilliam J Burley is a good example of the kinds of seamen who are threaded through Australia's maritime past. Born in the Maritime Provinces of Canada around 1862, dates are inconsistent in his documents, he sailed in small steamers to China, the Middle East and Australia for twenty years or so, with Britain as his base, before going ashore in Australia and probably ending his days here. Three other documents in the collection show that Burley eventually became a labourer in Tamworth, New South Wales and was trying to get a pension in 1925. He would have been only 63 if the birth date in his discharge book was true. Burley worked as a donkey man in the engine rooms of steamships in the days when they were beginning to overtake sail. He also had work as a storekeeper. Some of the vessels Burley crewed on were ROSNILL CASTLE, ROXBURGH, ARDGAY and GILSLAND. SignificanceThis letter is part of a collection of papers relating to the career of William Joseph Burley who worked in the engine rooms of various steam vessels. Together they represent a picture of a small-time merchant seaman in the 1880s and 1890s.