Jump to content

Weller brothers

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Snori (talk | contribs) at 18:42, 26 January 2021 (Development of trading: good ref). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The Weller brothers, Englishmen of Sydney, Australia, and Otago, New Zealand, were the founders of a whaling station on Otago Harbour and New Zealand's most substantial merchant traders in the 1830s.

Immigration

The brothers, Joseph Brooks (1802–1835), George (1805–1875) and Edward (1814–1893), founded their establishment at Otago Heads in 1831, the first enduring European settlement in what is now the City of Dunedin.

Members of a wealthy land-owning family from Folkestone, Kent, they moved serially to Australia, partly to alleviate Joseph Brooks Weller's tuberculosis. Joseph Brooks left England on 20 October 1823.[1] He arrived in Hobart on 4 February 1824 and then went to Sydney. After 18 months he returned to England, and left there for good on 1 January 1827 accompanied by Edward.[1] In the meantime George had already left England and arrived in Australia in March 1826.[2] and had bought the Albion.[1][2] By 1830 Joseph Brooks, Edward, George and his new wife, Elizabeth (formerly Barwise), their parents, Joseph (1766–1857) and Mary (née Brooks) (b.1779), and two sisters, Fanny (1812–1896) and Ann (1822–1887), were all in Sydney.[citation needed]

Development of trading

Joseph Brooks Weller interested himself in flax and timber trading at the Hokianga. In 1831 he called at William Cook's shipbuilding settlement at Stewart Island/Rakiura to commission a vessel before visiting Otago in the Sir George Murray, reaching an agreement with Tahatu and claiming territory for William IV. He returned in the Lucy Ann with goods and gear to establish a whaling station, (it is believed with Edward) in November. George and his wife came too, or arrived soon after.

The Wellers continued to trade in flax and spars, maintaining operations at the Hokianga even as they developed Otago. At that time and throughout the decade they were the only merchants regularly trading from one end of New Zealand to the other. A fire soon destroyed the Otago station, but it was rebuilt. Edward was kidnapped by Māori in the far north and ransomed. Whale products started flowing from Otago in 1833 where Joseph Brooks based himself and European women went to settle.

Relations with Māori were often tense, the establishment being ransacked and the Wellers keeping Māori hostages in Sydney,[3] reverberations from earlier conflicts (Sealers' War). Joseph Brooks died at Otago in 1835, and his brother Edward shipped his remains to Sydney in a puncheon of rum.

At 21 Edward became the resident manager while George maintained the Sydney end of the business. At this time there were 80 Europeans at Otago which had become a trading, transshipment and ship service centre as well as a whaling station. A measles epidemic greatly reduced the Māori population.[citation needed]

Further developments

New fisheries were established inside the harbour and up and down the coast. The Wellers' ships cruised beyond Australasia and they tested the tax regime preventing direct shipment of whale products to Britain.

Edward made strategic marriages to a daughter of Tahatu, Paparu, and after her death to Taiaroa’s daughter, Nikuru. There were daughters, Fanny and Nani, by each alliance.

By the end of the 1830s, exports of whale products (southern right or humpback whales) were at a peak, the station taking about 300 southern right whales on the first season, as was the resident European population. Anticipating British annexation the Wellers started buying land and settling it. But a sudden decline in whales saw Edward's exit at the end of 1840 followed by the firm’s bankruptcy. He and George lived out their lives in New South Wales. The management of Otakou whaling operations was taken over in 1840 by Charles Schultze (1818–1879), who had married the Weller brothers' sister Ann Weller, and an employee, Octavius Harwood (1816–1900).[4][5]

Otago, now the name of their settlement, reached a nadir in 1842 but revived, remaining the centre of port operations until after the establishment of Port Chalmers and Dunedin. As "Otakou" it is still the home of Pākehā and Māori.[citation needed]

Weller's Rock, also known as Te Umu Kuri, near Harington Point on the Otago Peninsula (at 45°47′52″S 170°42′54″E / 45.79778°S 170.71500°E / -45.79778; 170.71500), is named after the Weller brothers. In January 2020 Te Runanga o Otakou, the Dunedin City Council and the Department of Conservation joined forces in a project to protect the site from degradation.[6]

Folklore

"Soon May The Wellerman Come"

"Soon May The Wellerman Come" [c. 1860-70] is a sea shanty that frequently refers to the wellermen, the supply ships owned by the Weller Brothers. It continues its chorus with "And bring us sugar and tea and rum," and thus illustrates that Weller Bros were major suppliers of shore whalers. "The workers at these bay-whaling stations were not paid wages, they were paid in slops (ready made clothing), spirits and tobacco."[7]

The song was originally collected around 1966 by New Zealand-based music teacher and folk song compiler Neil Colquhoun[8] from one F. R. Woods. Woods, who was in his 80s at the time, had allegedly heard the song, as well as the song "John Smith A.B.", from his uncle. The song "John Smith A.B." was printed in a 1904 issue of The Bulletin, where it was attributed to one D.H. Rogers. It is possible that Rogers was the uncle of Woods, who worked as a teenaged sailor/shore whaler in the early-mid 19th century and had composed both songs in his later years, eventually passing them on to his nephew as an old man.[7] The song has been frequently performed and remixed, with over 10 recorded renditions between 1967 and 2005. A notable rendition of the song was made by the band The Longest Johns in 2018.[9] Possibly due to The Longest Johns' performance, the shanty went viral on the social media site TikTok in 2021, as the social isolation of teenage whalers was seen as analogous to that of youngsters isolated under Covid-19 lockdown.[10]

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Weller Family Tree: Joseph Brooks
  2. ^ a b Weller Family Tree: George
  3. ^ Pybus, T.A. "Chapter V - The decline of the Maori". NZETC.
  4. ^ Entwisle, Peter (1990). "Weller, Edward". Dictionary of New Zealand Biography. Te Ara: The Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Retrieved 9 January 2021.
  5. ^ "Octavius Harwood". Toitū Otago Settlers Museum. Retrieved 9 January 2021.
  6. ^ Hudson, Daisy (20 January 2020). "Wellers Rock to be protected". Otago Daily Times. Retrieved 8 January 2021.
  7. ^ a b Archer, John (9 September 2002). "Soon May The Wellerman Come". NZ Folk Song. Retrieved 15 January 2021.
  8. ^ Reid, Graham (2 October 2012). "Neil Colquhoun: Talking Swag (1972)". Elsewhere. Retrieved 15 January 2021.
  9. ^ Renner, Rebecca (13 January 2021). "Everyone's Singing Sea Shanties (or Are They Whaling Songs?)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 15 January 2021.
  10. ^ Hunt, Elle (15 January 2021). "The true story behind the viral TikTok sea shanty hit". The Guardian. Retrieved 15 January 2021.

References