During the
Auckland Tall Ships Festival earlier this year the Auckland Libraries
heritage and research collections organised a popular display which included letters, maps, magazine covers and photographs. Of particular interest to many visitors were the hydrographic charts.
These charts are fascinating examples of early mapping and are wonderfully detailed, with volcanic cones sometimes looking like puffs of smoke. They are accessible via the
Heritage Images database and copies of the charts are available to be purchased from
Sir George Grey Special Collections.
In 1848,
Captain John Lort Stokes
commanded the paddle-steamer
Acheron, and began the first official hydrographic survey of the New Zealand coastline. Starting on Auckland's North Shore, the
Acheron then traveled to Banks Peninsula, Otago, Wellington and Fiordland. In 1851, the
Acheron was replaced by the smaller vessel
Pandora under Commander Byron Drury. Over the next four years Drury and his officers diligently filled in the gaps on the charts for the north west coast of the North Island.
According to
Te Ara, 250 sheets of fair tracings had been sent to the British Admiralty for inclusion into charts by 1855. Amazingly, as recently as 1969, one or two charts which were created by Stokes and his officers were still in use.
Another connection to Stokes is contained in letters written to him by his former shipmate, the great English naturalist Charles Darwin. Iain Sharp writes about the letters in
Real Gold: Treasures of Auckland City Libraries. The letters, which contain unflattering comments about Grey, were included in a parcel of books sent to Grey from London. In a later letter written to Grey, Darwin's embarrassment about the incident was made clear when he mentioned he was 'much mortified'. Stokes also included a message which ensured Grey that he would find the person responsible for slipping the revealing letters into the pile of books. Sir George Grey Special Collections contains
three letters written by Darwin to Grey which have been digitised and are available on the
Manuscripts Online database.
Author: Zoë Colling, Sir George Grey Special Collections
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