Friday, June 9, 2023

LINK WITH CAPTAIN COOK AT BOTANY BAY ON SALE IN MELBOURNE

A   circa   1831   mourning ring for the memory of  Rear Admiral  Isaac Smith  (1752 -1831), the first Englishman to set foot  on the east coast of the Australian  continent  , off  Captain Cook's Endeavour  ,  at  Botany Bay, on April  29,  1770 , is  on sale for  $48,000  by  Douglas Stewart  Fine Books  at the  Melbourne  Antiques  and  Art  Fair  this long weekend. 

 A diamond, pearl  and   enamel  , gold engraved ring , it  is in a crimson  morocco  box with a brass clasp .

Smith  was   17 years old  when he went ashore  at Kamay from the Endeavour's  yawl  , ahead of  Lieutenant James Cook, Banks, Solander, Parkinson, the Tahitian Tupia. A party of armed marines accompanying them  in the ship’s pinnace and long-boat.

Smith  served on Cook’s first and second voyages to the Pacific and was   related to Cook by marriage, as he was the cousin of Elizabeth Cook, the commander’s wife. On both voyages – on the second, as master’s mate – Smith assisted with surveying and cartography.

The landing was made after the intruders had been challenged by two Gweagal warriors, and musket shots had been fired. Cook ordered the young man to ‘Jump out, Isaac!’

Further  information supplied by the  bookshop follows.

Although Smith’s stepping onto Gweagal land carries with it immense symbolic significance, it should also be noted that he was one of three men, including Lieutenant Zachary Hicks and Surgeon William Monkhouse, who collected short lists of words from the language of the Gweagal with whom they interacted during the Endeavour‘s brief sojourn at Kamay. 

These words survived in a manuscript that was later compiled by William Lanyon, a shipmate of Smith on Cook’s second voyage. Fortunately, this manuscript was published in 1979 by Lanyon’s descendant, linguist Dr Peter Lanyon-Orgill, prior to its being lost. The existence of these word-lists suggests that at least some friendly encounters between the Europeans and the Gweagal must have taken place.  

Smith  was given his own command after his return from the second voyage in 1775. He continued to serve in the Royal Navy until 1794, when ill-health forced his retirement. Smith spent his remaining years domiciled in Clapham with his cousin, Elizabeth Cook, where he died in 1831.

In his will, dated 18 December 1827, Smith bequeathed ‘unto my dearest Cousin Mrs Eliz Cook of Clapham in Surrey two hundred guineas for a ring and mourning and all or any part of my effects in plate books or furniture at her house at Clapham she may choose to accept as a mark of my great regard and respect for her knowing she does not wish a larger legacy.’ He also left nineteen pounds for the son and daughters of his late cousin Charles Smith ‘for a ring of remembrance‘ and eighteen for the same to both Elizabeth Ann Stuart and Mary Marston.

 The Captain Cook Museum in Whitby holds one of the aforementioned rings, which is identical in all respects – including the engraved legend – to the ring offered here. It is likely that all of these rings were made by the same jeweller.

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