Showing posts with label HMS Mohawk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HMS Mohawk. Show all posts

Monday, 6 May 2013

Saturday 7th May 1898 HMS Mohawk

Sat 7th May (1898)
The Southern Cross got underway early in
the morning to carry on with her cruise, but
when she had got about 2 miles from us
she went on shore on a coral bank our
boats was called away and sent to her
to render any assistance which she would
require, after working all day long taking
out her stores and all heavy gear, and plac-
ing out anchors we manged to get her off
by the evening tide without any material
damage she then came back into harbour
and dropped anchor, we sent our divers
away to examine her bottom and found
it was all right only a strip of copper off
here and there just where she had touched, dur
-ing the day we were invited by the Royal Com-
issioner C. M. Woodford having his wife
& son with him they stayed on board and
lunched with our Captain and on leaving
he was saluted with 7 guns which greatly
frightened the Natives, the natives seems very
much struck with our figure head, which
is a very good representation of a Mohawk
Indian with a Tomahawk in his right
hand and a scalping knife in his left
all ready to strike out at anything, the
natives collected around the bows, talking &
making alls orts of grimaces at it, mak-
ing great fuss of the ship, they brought a
canoe full of long grass which they kept ty-
ing together till they made a line long enough
to take the measurement of the ship. We are
about the biggest and heaviest Man of War
that has been here, so no doubt they are under the
impression of building a War canoe on the same size.



Source http://www.euppublishing.com/doi/abs/10.3366/anh.1999.26.3.419
Charles Morris Woodford
First Resident Commissioner of british Solomon islands protectorate and important (forgotten) Collector of Natural specimens
born Gravesend Kent 1852, Died Steyning Essex 1927
Hi s collection of Bats is at The Natural Hisory Museum

Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London

Volume 55, Issue 2, pages 320–328, March 1887

CM Woodford Journal
http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Popular_Science_Monthly/Volume_35/August_1889/Life_in_the_Solomon_Islands


Extract from link mentioning Tomohawk (see diary entry)
From the trading station at Rubiana, which is the center of the head-hunting district, our first visit was to a small island occupied by another trader. This island he is allowed to occupy on sufferance only. It belongs to the natives of Sisieta; they will not sell it, as they use it for their cannibal feasts. I was told that six bodies were eaten here a fortnight before my visit. From here we went to a town called Oneavesi, and thence crossed to the small island of Rubiana proper, where we found nearly all the men away on a head-hunting expedition to the island of Isabel. I here photographed the interior of a tambu house, the post of which was carved to represent a crocodile. Along the rafters was a row of heads. I also took a photograph of a collection of sacred images, near to which was a heap of skulls, upon every one of which I
PSM V35 D500 Sacred image at rubiana.jpg
Fig. 1. — Sacred Image at Rubiana.
noticed the mark of the tomahawk.



Sunday, 5 May 2013

Diary of a Royal Marine aboard HMS Mohawk Solomon Island & Santa Cruz 1898

Island Cruise

H.M.S. Mohawk

Australia Station
Solomon Islands
&
Santa Cruz Group
South West Pacific Ocean

1898

Diaries of William Cocks - Royal Marines


About HMS Mohawk


Source National Archives (Greenwich) Mohawk Logs
Type: Cruiser 1886 3rd class
Built: Clyde (J. & J. Thomson)
Dimensions: 225' 0"
Beam: 36' 0"
Tonnage: 1,770 tons
Armour: 6-6" : 8-3pdrs : 1 tube (Originally8)?
Complement: 172 men
Speed: 17 knts Horsepower 2,200 N.D, 3500F.d.

1890 Sheerness
1893 N.A. and W.I   Captain E.H.Bagly
1901 chatham
Sold 4.4.1905 Garnham

From newspaper clipping inside cover Daily Mail Special  (unknown date).

PLANTING UNION JACKS

FOURTEEN ISLANDS AND A VOL-
CANO FOR THE EMPIRE

 News by the Australia Mail tells of the arrival
at Sydney of H.M.S. Mohawk, after a wholesale
annexation cruise among the Islands of
Melanesia. so successful was the trip that any
decrease of the empire owing to the ocean's
onslaughts on the Kentish cliffs in the past years
will be simply recouped by our recent aquisitions
in the pacific.

In April last the Mohawk left Sydney under
orders t hoist the flag of England on the Santa
Cruz, the Swallow, the Reef, and other islands.
These group of islands lie 400 or 500 miles east
of the Solomons, the home of savage cannibals.

Altogether in Santa Cruz and the other islands
the Union Jack was run up on fourteen islands,
namely:-On Santa Cruz,Utupua,Tinakula, in
the Santa Cruz group; Matema, Fenuloa, Lom
Lom, Nifiloli, Bangauena, Bamga, Natapa, Pelian.
Nukapu, Nalogo, Nupani,Tocupia, in the Reef
and Swallow Group.

One of the officers of the Mohawk,
in recounting his experiences said, "During
the cruise we burnt a couple of villages
at Vella La Vella to avenge the outrage on Mr
Prat, a British subject. Commander Freeman
went ashore had a "palaver" with the chiefs.
One notable character, Belungi, was charged
with being out head-hunting, and from the evi
dence it appeared that after

CRUISNG ROUND FOR

some time in search of a white head (they prefer
the European) he came up with a canoe laden
with eight young native women, who were out 
for pleasure. He shot six and took with
him. The charge being proved, Belungi was
given until the rising of the court for the pro-
duction of the two missing girls. These he re-
fused to hand over, so was taken prisoner to
new Guinea.

"One of the most interesting features in 
connection with our cruise was the visit to
Tocupia. This island is without a history. Its
people certainly are not kanakas, woolly-haired,
or stunted in stature. The whole island, which seems
to give colour to the Darwinian idea of a sub-
merged continent in so far that the formation is
mountainous with valleys, and has about 800 people
 on it. they are gigantic in stature; one we
measured was 6ft 10in., and the women are
proportionate. The men have long,straight
hair, which they dye a flaxen colour, and
which in thick folds hangs over their copper
tinted shoulders. The women,on the contrary,
have their hair cut short. Strange to say these
natives have no weapons of defence at all  A 
remarkable law among them is that they marry
only once, the superstition being that if a married
manor woman dies, no mater how many children
there may be, the deceased's spirit has gone 
ahead and is waiting for the other half.
"During the cruise we annexed a volcano, on
which at night, though not very active, one could
hear a rumbling noise and see a flame or glare
above it. This was in the Santa Cruz Group.