by Margaret Reid
A long-standing and good friend of the James Craig, Lady Jessie Richmond died March 26th 1985. She was one of the last links with the era of sailing ships which traded across the Tasman Sea. The sixth child of Joseph James Craig, owner of the James Craig and the Jessie Craig which was named for her.
Her contribution to the Museum is largely unknown
to the greater part of our membership. The museum pursues research into
the background of the James Craig and the Craig Family of Ships,
and it was in this context we met Lady Richmond, by correspondence, as
she lived in New Zealand.
We sought from her just about everything
pertaining to the Craig ships. She was so gallant, for in spite
of being in her eighties and with poor eyesight she would always turn
up something of value; information, documents, photographs, books and
most of all, full support for the authentic restoration of the James
Craig.
She loved the sea. In the 1950s she had the
foresight to write to some of the then surviving masters and others who
had served in her father's ships asking to be told all they remembered
of those far-off days. Their replies provide us with wonderful information.
Her contribution to the maritime history of Australia and New Zealand
is of inestimable historic value. We shall miss her.
The following is the transcript of a tape she
wrote and produced herself for the museum. Her voice, with every syllable
enunciated clearly, is light and measured:
My name is Jessie Richmond . . .
and I am the eldest living descendant of my late father, Joseph James
Craig, merchant and shipowner of Auckland, New Zealand, and one time owner
of the James Craig and others of the Craig line.
I have been asked to remember all I can of
those far off days of the sailing ships--- unfortunately, although I was
born in 1899, I can only pass on what others have told me. It was not
until the 1950s that I felt it was time to get in touch with as many as
I could of the sea captains and their wives and others who had sailed
under the Craig house flag.
The Craig line sailed out of Auckland and called
at various ports around the New Zealand coast and was also in the trans
- Tasman intercolonial trade. Each year, my father, accompanied by my
mother, visited Australia to attend to his various business affairs. In
one of his last letters to me June 1916, he wrote from The Astor, Sydney
- "I have travelled over 3,000 miles on the railway since I arrived
here - 8 nights on the train in 11 days."
Captain C. Chaplin wrote to me in the 1950s,
and he was a Trinity House pilot. He had served in the Jesse Craig
and sent me many photographs of the sailing ships. He said that in 1908
or 1909 whilst serving in the Jesse Craig, and I quote:
"There still remained on board every
log book from her first voyage as Isola onward, including several
years under the Danish flag as the Else, and finally after being
acquired by J.J. Craig, so they must have covered forty years.
There was quite a pile of them and I recalled
they were stowed in the ransom locker in the after cabin. Often on a Sunday
afternoon when in some westcoast timber port, having no attractions to
tempt me ashore, I used to get out some of the very early ones and read
of those daily happenings. On her first voyage she was chartered to carry
immigrants out to Brisbane before entering the trade for which she was
built, namely, the copper-ore trade from the west coast of South America.
I have never heard of such a collection remaining in a ship for so many
years. They were all the more interesting, for back in those days they
often contained irrelevant and domestic matters such as would never be
seen today, and I recall one that solved a problem that had for some time
puzzled me.
On an outward voyage off Cape Horn they weathered
very heavy weather, and the log book contained the entry of the damage
sustained, which included that the brass top on the forward capstan had
been wrenched off and lost. Some time later, evidently when in better
weather, there was another curious entry - the captain employed himself
in carving a new top for the forward capstan. Poor man, must have been
in need of something to do. That teak wood top was still there in my time
- it had frequently puzzled me why such an eminent shipbuilder should
have fitted a sturdy iron capstan with a wood top, the usual thing being
a brass casting engraved with the ship's name and date. There was my answer
in an old log book.
The log of the first voyage when she had 130
passengers bound for Brisbane, was full of interest and I wish I could
have kept it. I never heard what became of the Craig collection, but I
suppose they were destroyed when the vessel became a hulk. The life story
of a ship just lost because no one cared . . ."
I tried to find out from the Harbour Master
of Tasmania in 1968 but gave up. I wrote to Mr C.A. Woods who wrote that
the whereabouts of the log books and the figurehead of the Jessie Craig
were unknown by the Marine Board of Hobart. Without my going into the
ship's history, it is interesting to note that in 1953 the Union Steamship
Co. of New Zealand Ltd at Melbourne owned her, and in later years, the
Jessie Craig was transferred to Hobart where she was employed as
a hulk,and in 1953 the company handed her over to the Tasmanian Government
and in 1954 the then Minister for Agriculture, the late Honourable J.
Dwyer, VC, arranged to have the ship towed to New Harbour on the west
coat of Tasmania where she was beached and sunk to provide a breakwater
at the harbour entrance. In a matter of weeks the prevailing wind soon
demolished her and left no evidence of a fine ship.
In a letter from Captain John Sinclair Stuart
of Williamstown, Victoria in 1957 he wrote:
"You and I met only once, I was Second
Mate in the Kathleen Hilda Captain Neagle was in charge. We were
moored at Hobsons Bay Wharf, Auckland, after general overhaul. She was
a fine looking ship and at the time looking her best - black with gold
board outside and inboard pale green and white enamel. The spars were
white, i.e. scraped and varnished, the iron bands on same printed post
office red. J.J. supplied everything his officers and crew really needed,
all his ships being well found and fed, and if not, it was the captain's
fault and Captain Campbell soon made a change. One afternoon Captain Neagle
brought you, Alexander and sister on board, and I was detailed to entertain
you three. I put up swings under the boat skids and made a merry-go-round.
I pushed the capstan round while you three sat in a hammock hung between
two bars. The cook, a Negro, made cakes and sweets, probably a cockroach
here and there for the Kathleen Hilda was alive with them. J.J.
called with his tandem pair and took you three home, tired and dirty."
I must mention here that my eldest sister,
Hazel, told me when she was taken on board in her best clothes, she always
wore gloves. Captain Stuart goes on to say-
"I was in the Craig line from 1900 to
1912, the last five years as Master. In those days a boy in a good shipping
line, who worked hard and studied in-between, rose fast. I was 4 1/2 years
before the mast, one year as Second Mate, 1 1/2 years as Mate the 5 years
Master before I joined steam."
Captain Stuart died in 1958. It was in a post
script he said to me that his parents were very poor in Auckland and he
and his brother used to make extra money when they could for his big family.
They collected certain leaves which they found on J.J. Craig's property
of 14 acres at Omana, Epsom, Auckland. These leaves were sold by the sackful
to the chemist and the money meant a great deal to them as a family. The
boys were brought to Omana House and were seen by J.J. who asked them
what they were doing, and when he heard their story, gave them full permission
to gather as much as they wanted and when they wanted. Captain Stuart
said when he was older he again arrived at the house, and this time it
was to ask for a job, which he received, and so joined the Craig line
as an AB, where he remained for twelve years.
Now Captain Finlay Murchison arrived in Australia
in 1906 from Scotland as an apprentice on board the barque Loch Lomand
of Glasgow and ran away in Melbourne. He joined the Jessie Craig
as an AB with Captain Donald Urquhart as Master. When Captain Urquhart
retired he became a Sea Pilot of Melbourne. Captain Murchison wrote:
"The conditions on board the Craig vessels
were excellent - the wages were Four Pounds Ten per month for an AB, quite
good for 50 years ago. All the cargo was worked in and out of the vessels
by the crew, the food was all that could be desired and we were living
on the fat of the land."
He also wrote that a great number of the men
who served in the Craig vessels left their mark on Australian and New
Zealand maritime history. Many commanded the finest ships belonging to
New Zealand and Australia, also, in the business world of both countries.
Captain Finlay Murchison retired from a position of Commissioner of the
Maritime Services Board of New South Wales with control of all the ports
in the State, and prior to that, he served as a Harbour Master of Sydney,
and before that Sea Pilot for Sydney and Newcastle, for 31 years.
Captain John MacFarlane served his apprenticeship
of four years in the vessels trading between London and New Zealand, but
in 1899 he joined the Royal Tar. She was built of Australian hardwood
on one of the northern rivers of New South Wales, probably the Bellinger
River. He held the record of any Australian ship between Melbourne and
Newcastle - time, four days. I am still quoting -
Now Captain MacFarlane, at the age of 26 in
1901, became Second Mate in the barque Quathlamba, late the Hazel
Craig, and went from Melbourne to Lyttleton, New Zealand, and on to
Auckland where there was a change of Master and he writes -
"Three days after the ship left Auckland
she was dismasted. We lost the fore top mast and the main topgallant mast.
This happened on my watch below and in daylight. All hands were called,
and when we got on deck I found the crew headed by the Master and the
Mate, using axes and hammers cutting away at the wreck. The Mate was an
old man and much more of a steamship than a sailing ship man. The Master
was a young man in his first command, and they both seemed to lose their
heads.
I called the Master aside and pointed out to
him that I understood J.J. Craig insured his vessels in his own office
and that there was no benefit in cutting away good standing rigging as
the wreckage was on deck and we could save all the rigging possible, so
he told me to go ahead and do it my way. It blew hard for several days
but eventually we got all the wreckage clear and the ship under jury rig
and arrived back in Auckland in about 12 days.
Captain Campbell came on board and I understood
the first question he asked the Mate was- "Did you save the rigging?"
The Master, being an honest man, told the Captain that thanks to the Second
Mate that most of the rigging was saved. Then Captain Campbell asked him
if he thought the Second Mate could re-rig the ship, and was told that
no doubt the Second Mate could if he would - if he liked. So I was called
to the cabin for my first meeting with the Marine Superintendent. He asked
me if I would re-rig the ship, so I told him it was the Mate's job and
not Second Mate's. Captain Campbell told me that the Mate would be appointed
but not for a week, or more, anyway. We finally agreed that I would do
the job and that no one was to interfere except Captain Campbell himself."
After Captain MacFarlane passed his Second
Mate's certificate he was anxious to become a first-class sailor and so
went to a rigging loft in Glasgow for eighteen months and rigged many
ships. Captain MacFarlane wrote of the Master's accommodation in the Marjorie
Craig and said:
"There was a large bedroom, 16' x 12',
and double-bed, a private bathroom, and a sitting room, 20' by 16'. There
was a tiled fireplace and it was all most comfortable. There was ample
room to carry a wife and family, but I was a single man the, while in
J.J. Craig's employ. The Marjorie had a Scandinavian goddess as
a figurehead - I think it was `Thea'."
For 4 1/2 years Captain Macfarlane was Master
and then joined the Jessie Craig, then the SS Ihumata which
was owned by J.J. Craig and R.S. Lamb of Sydney.
In 1981, I was honoured to represent the Craig
family on the important occasion when a gala welcome was given to the
James Craig on the Sydney harbour. My husband and I flew from New
Zealand to be with you all. The James Craig was named after my
eldest brother and sailed under the Craig flag for 11 years from 1900,
carrying out a trading pattern between New Zealand and Australia, exporting
timber and bringing back coal, wheat, hardwoods for railway sleepers,
etc., etc. My father named certain ships after members of his family and
the Clan Macleod became the James Craig in1905, when her
white hull was painted in gunport style in conformity with the rest of
the fleet. In 1911, she left New Zealand for Sydney where she was sold.
My mother, who as the daughter of Captain Alexander
Campbell, remembered being on board his ship with her mother at Timaru
in May 1882 when a storm blew up on a lee shore. My mother, who was then
about fourteen, and others, were put ashore when the weather threatened,
and Captain Campbell took his ship to sea and survived the gale. Two other
ships, the Ben Venue and City of Perth were driven ashore
with some loss of life. So you see, I have inherited the love of the sea
from both sides of my parents, and I also had the temerity to marry a
sailor. Captain Campbell took over the Clan Macleod in 1900, as
he assumed command of each ship as they were added to the fleet.
I shall now mention a few men who served under
the Craig house flag, as well as those I have mentioned. The late, and
Very Reverend Donald Muir MacDiarmid, MBE, born in 1886 in New South Wales.
He served four years in the mercantile marine, 18 as a missionary and
finally, from 1954-55, he became the Moderator of the General Assembly
Church of New Zealand, and, it is also interesting to note that Sir Muirhead
Bone, the famous wartime artist, served before the mast.
Then there was Lt Commander William Edwards
Sanders, VC, DSO, RNR, born in Auckland, New Zealand in 1883. He joined
the Craig line in 1906 and served in the Marjorie, the Louisa
and Joseph Craig. Incidentally, the Louisa and the Joseph
were named after my paternal grandparents. Sanders was awarded the VC
on 30th April, 1917 while he was in command of HMS Prize a three-
masted topsail schooner. She was one of the famous "Q" Ships
of World War 1. Sadly lost his life at sea in August 1917.
It is wonderful to know that the James Craig
is to be returned to full glory. This is due to the foresight and
devoted work of many enthusiastic lovers of the sea and the ships. So
far the various committees have had a difficult task of raising vast sums
of money, and of keeping up the enthusiasm for the project. In this they
have been manifestly successful as the events show.
I thank you from the bottom of my heart for
bringing to life again this ship, and may she give great satisfaction
to young and old as she graces the Waterfront Museum, or elsewhere, for
years to come, a reminder of the pioneering and difficult days borne by
our forefathers and their wives who sometimes accompanied them on voyages
across the Tasman.
I will close now with the hope that I have
recalled something of those days and as Mansfield puts it -
"Long since when all the docks were
filled with that sea beauty, man ceased to build."