Torres Strait Expedition - Last scene of all that ends this strange eventful history
Author
John MacGillivray
(1821 - 1867)
Date1861
Object number00018956
NameJournal
MediumInk on paper
DimensionsOverall: 208 x 162 mm, 1 mm, 0.05 kg
Copyright© Joanne Dyer
ClassificationsBooks and journals
Credit LineANMM Collection
DescriptionA handwritten journal attributed to the naturalist John MacGillivray titled "Last scene of all that ends this strange eventful history ... Torres Strait Expedition". The journal begins on 16 October 1861 and concludes on 13th December 1861 aboard the JULIA PERCY and details the author's collecting expedition in northern Queensland.
The journal gives details of the journey and the various specimens McGillivray encountered and conserved. At the back of the journal is a drawn map, marking ports and the route travelled during on the journey.HistoryJohn MacGillivray was a Scottish naturalist who had first come to Australia in 1842 aboard HMS FLY as part of the expedition to survey the northern Australian coast and New Guinea, including the Great Barrier Reef and Torres Strait. On his return to England in 1846 MacGillivray was not there long before he took part in another expedition to the same region later that year aboard the HMS RATTLESNAKE. Captained by Owen Stanley, and including a young Thomas Huxley, the expedition was set to survey the Great Barrier Reef and parts of New Guinea. On his return to England in 1850 MacGillivray was responsible for writing 'The Narrative of the Voyage of HMS RATTLESNAKE' as Captain Stanley had died in Sydney.
It is clear MacGillivray was suited to, or preferred, a life at sea as it was not long, 1852, that he set sail again. This time for an expedition to South America and the South Pacific aboard HMS HERALD. Perhaps it was actually Australia that was his true destination as he ended up settling in Sydney and later Grafton, New South Wales.
It was while he was living in Sydney that he took the position aboard the expedition of the JULIA PERCY to Torres Strait, organised and funded by businessmen Robert Towns and James Paddon. MacGillivray was a clear choice, having already spent two expeditions in the region and he knew the conditions there well.
It is likely that MacGillivray had met Paddon during his time aboard HMS HERALD. In an inquiry held into the handling of the HERALD expedition, Captain Denham mentions that without the assistant of 'Mr Paddon, a merchant at Tana' who provided supplies, the expedition would have floundered.
Why Paddon and Towns funded the expedition in 1860 to Torres Strait seems to have been in search of a possible business in harvesting beche-de-mer (sea cucumber). Originally sandalwood merchants in the New Caledonia region, they had found supplies, competition and French administration increasingly difficult to contend with. Bech-de-mer in the relatively open market of the Torres Strait was a possible and appealing alternative.
SignificanceJohn MacGillivray had a long association with Australia and his contributions to the early study and collecting of fauna and flora were significant with some of his specimens still held in the British Museum.
22 November 1901