Portrait of Moultrie Salt in uniform
Date1890s
Object number00056036
NamePhotograph
MediumPaper
ClassificationsPhotographs
Credit LineAustralian National Maritime Museum Collection Gift from Sandra Davies
Collections
The Shannon journal provides a comprehensive account of a round trip voyage undertaken by the Shannon from Gravesend in the United Kingdom to Kolkata India from 1862 to 1863. Recorded by junior ship officer F.J Marshall, it includes a list of the crew for the voyage and the respective position and rank of each officer and crew member, from captain to scullery man to chaplain. The changeover in crew personnel for the return journey is also detailed, with comments such as "Botswain's mate left in Calcutta (sic) Foreman made Botswain's mate in Calcutta". A list of passengers and class levels is also provided for both outward and homeward bound journeys. For the return, a note reads "...children too numerous to be mentioned". These crew and passenger listings offer important detail on the composition of trading vessels from the period, how certain crew members would not always stay with the same ship for a round-trip voyage, how passenger levels may fluctuate dependent on port of call.
The 1862 to 1863 section of the journal also includes a ship log kept by Marshall for the outbound and homeward bound journeys. Daily summaries of weather are given, along with notes on ship course and navigation, comments by Marshall on duties undertaken during the voyage, and encounters with passing vessels. Outbound on the 21 August Marshall records that the Shannon "exchanged colours with French brig Julie, sent two bags of biscuits on board". On September 28 the ship is battling a storm with a "fresh gale, strong squalls, heavy swell, ship pitching deeply taking much water at lines, stored for sail and close reefed top sail". Throughout November Marshall details numerous duties, "washed and scrubbed clothes" (7th), "caught a shark" (11th), and "employed painting the inside of the ship" (19th). His log is a fantastically detailed account of the journey, and significant as a first hand document on the experiences of a junior officer employed on a commercial vessel during this period.
The journal also includes partial log sections for voyages to Kolkata in 1863, 1866, and leg of a trip from Kolkata to St. Helena in 1867. An 1866 crew listing is given, Moultrie Salt named among the officers. This section also features port and starboard watch categories for crew, and a list of the horses carried aboard for the voyage. The Shannon operated along the trade route between the United Kingdom and India on the tail end of the East India Company's existence, and this journal stands as an important highly detailed document chronicling a changing period of trade between the UK and India.
A rare goods certificate is also included in the Shannon journal for the steamer S.S. Malda, a British India Steam Navigation Company (BI) vessel. Dated 30 December 1874, the certificate lists 340 bags as held aboard the Malda for Bombay. For a year, from April 1874 to November 1874, Moultrie Salt served aboard this vessel as a third and second officer. This certificate as a reflection of BI's operation in India during this period.
Melbourne Steamship Company Limited
1935-1960