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Image Not Available for The ENDEAVOUR entering Botany Bay on 29th April 1770. Ex Libris Francis J. Bayldon, master mariner, 1933
The ENDEAVOUR entering Botany Bay on 29th April 1770. Ex Libris Francis J. Bayldon, master mariner, 1933
Image Not Available for The ENDEAVOUR entering Botany Bay on 29th April 1770. Ex Libris Francis J. Bayldon, master mariner, 1933

The ENDEAVOUR entering Botany Bay on 29th April 1770. Ex Libris Francis J. Bayldon, master mariner, 1933

Artist (Australian, 1908 - 1998)
Date1933
Object number00008398
NameBookplate
MediumInk on paper
DimensionsOverall: 194 x 155 mm
ClassificationsEphemera
Credit LineANMM Collection
DescriptionA bookplate from the library of Francis Bayldon depicting ENDEAVOUR entering Botany Bay. The text reads 'The ENDEAVOUR entering Botany Bay on 29th April 1770. Ex Libris FRANCIS J BAYLDON, MASTER MARINER, 1933' and features a pen and ink drawing of the ENDEAVOUR engraved by Geoffrey Ingleton.HistoryLieutenant Commander Geoffrey Ingleton (1908-1998) was a historian, book collector, artist, modelmaker, publisher, printmaker and illustrator. Born at Bairnsdale, Victoria on 14 May 1908 he joined the Royal Australian Naval College at Jervis Bay, NSW in 1922. His naval training took him to Britain and when Ingleton returned in 1930 he was commissioned a Lieutenant. Leaving the Navy in 1936 he went on to establish a successful career as a draftsman, artist and etcher, gaining fame for his works depicting maritime scenes, ships and events in Australia's past, including a series of works focused on Sydney. The EARL OF PEMMBROKE, later renamed HMB ENDEAVOUR was built in 1764 at Whitby, North Yorkshire for the coal trade. Purchased by the British Admiralty in 1768, it was fitted out for the Admiralty’s expedition to the South Pacific to view the Transit of Venus and locate the Great South Land. The voyage was commanded by Captain James Cook and set out in 1769. During ENDEAVOUR's return trip to England, Cook explored the east coast of Australia and landed at Botany Bay on 29 April 1770. His report on the bay including the safeness of the harbour and availability of fresh water quickly became the 'sign post' for Captain Arthur Phillip to land the First Fleet there on 18 January 1788. Back in England in 1771 ENDEAVOUR was refitted and used as a store ship for naval ships travelling to the Falkland Islands and in 1775 discharged, sold and renamed LORD SANDWICH. It is believed the British sunk the ship with nine other vessels in 1778 at the entrance to Newport Harbor, Rhode Island, USA during an attempt to blockade French ships.SignificanceGeoffrey Chapman Ingleton was one of Australia’s foremost maritime historians who accumulated an extensive collection of maritime literature and items during his life. He was an author and highly gifted illustrator, producing etchings and portrayals of early Sydney life based upon his extensive maritime knowledge and research.
Geoffrey Chapman Ingleton
c 1930
Geoffrey Chapman Ingleton
1930s-1940s