A Voyage to New Holland and Round the World
By (Author) Captain James Colnett RN
Edited by Allen Mawer
Rosenberg Publishing
Rosenberg Publishing
1st July 2016
Australia
General
Non Fiction
919.944042
Paperback
112
395g
On his last voyage, the journal of which is published here for the first time, he took convicts to Sydney Cove in 1802-03 on HMS Glatton and returned with shipbuilding timber. He is probably unique in his inability to discern any redeeming feature in Sydney, not even its harbour. He thought New Zealand a far better option. No mariner knew the wide Pacific better than James Colnett, RN. He had sailed with Cook; he had filibustered in the north-west Pacific fur trade (nearly starting a war with Spain in the process); he had made a whaling reconnaissance to the Galapagos Islands. Although the journal is an important record of a short-lived experiment using warships as convict transports, its wider interest lies in Colnetts observations on New South Wales as he found it in 1803. Sensitive to criticism but with unconventionally liberal views about the administration of justice, he is probably unique in his inability to discern any redeeming feature in Sydney, not even its harbour. In fact he believed New Zealand a better prospect for a colony in the region. His description of New South Wales as mutinous was prophetic. Colnett was instrumental in having King recalled. Ironically, King was replaced by a man who already had a bad record with mutineers: Captain Bligh of the Bounty would become Gvernor Bligh of the Rum Rebellion.
Mawers crisp and well-edited version of Colnetts account is worthy of examination, renewing as it does a certain awe at the physical and societal hardships faced by those who took part willingly or otherwise in the growth of Empire.Victor Suthren Merrickville, Ontario, Canada
Granville Allen Mawer is an independent historian. His major works, several of which have been shortlisted for Premiers Awards and other important prizes, range from maritime and colonial history to local history and biography. He has been favourably reviewed in the Times Literary Supplement, the New York Times Book Review and the Australian Book Review. In 2011 Rosenberg published Diary of a Spitfire Pilot, his tribute to his father, who was killed in 1943. His current project, a follow up to this edition of Colnetts last voyage, is the first full-scale biography of Colnett.