Narrative of the voyage of HMS RATTLESNAKE, volume 2
Maker
John MacGillivray
(1821 - 1867)
Subject or historical figure
Owen Stanley
(British, 1811 - 1850)
Date1852
Object number00027901
NameBook
MediumInk on paper, leather, marbled boards
DimensionsOverall: 218 x 145 x 29 mm, 0.75 kg
Copyright© Joanne Dyer
ClassificationsBooks and journals
Credit LineANMM Collection
DescriptionTitled "Narrative of the voyage of HMS RATTLESNAKE, commanded by the late Captain Owen Stanley, RN, FRS &C During the years 1846-1850. Including discoveries and surveys in New Guinea, the Louisade Archipelago, etc. to which is added the account of Mr. RB Kennedy's expedition for the exploration fo the Cape York Peninsula. By John MacGillivray, FRGS naturalist to the expedition. Published under the sanction of the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty. In two volumes, Vol. ll."
This volume is divided into three chapters with six appendices and an account of Kennedy's expedition to Cape York. It covers the voyage of the RATTLESNAKE around northern Australia and includes seven lithographs and engravings.HistoryThe expedition of HMS RATTLESNAKE was commanded by Owen Stanley, with John MacGillivray as the naturalist and Thomas Huxley as the assistant surgeon. This expedition was a wide-ranging blend of hydrography, and natural history observation.
Cruising from 1846-1850, Stanley did much to document what in the 1840s was largely unknown to the British to the north of Australia. Stanley's early death on the return to Sydney was the occasion of the first great state funeral to be held in the colony.SignificanceThis book is an important record of British exploration in the Torres Strait and New Guinea. One of the most notable discoveries of the RATTLESNAKE expedition was the clear channel between Cape Deliverance and the north-east entrance to Torres Strait.
John MacGillivray
1861