Page 10 - 1977 NAB CalendarMaritime Life in early Australia Part One
P. 10

CHILDREN S MISSIONARY MEETING ON BOARD THE
            “JOHN WILLIAMS” (VIC.)


                                                                                             APRIL
            The Harwich-built barque, ‘John Williams’, 297 tons, 103 feet long, 24 feet                                       drawing has been made upon the stone by Mr. William Strutt from a sketch taken
            8  inches  broad  and  16  feet  deep,  was  purchased  by  the  London                                           on  the  spot;  and  the  printing  has  been  executed  by  Messrs.  De  Gruchy  and
            Missionary Society, a group of Anglican and non-conformist clergymen                                              Leigh.” The ‘John Williams’ was wrecked in May, 1861, at Danger Island, north
            who got together to preach the gospel in foreign lands.                                                           east of Samoa, but all on board were saved.

            The ship first visited Melbourne in December, 1856, in the course of her                                          Railway Pier was built in 1854 as part of the operations of the Melbourne and
            missionary  voyages.  It  anchored  at  Railway  Pier,  Sandridge  (i.e.  Port                                    Hobson’s Bay Railway Company whose railway line from Flinders Street Station
            Melbourne)  and  more  than  3,000  children  gathered  on  it  to  hear  an                                      to Sandridge, the first line in Victoria, was opened on September 12, 1854. By
            address by Rev. P. Banff, a missionary from Tahiti. The following note on                                         October that year Railway Pier was in full working order. William Strutt was born
            Strutt’s picture of this occasion appeared in “The Argus”, March 26, 1856:                                        in  1825  at  Teignmouth,  Devon,  and  studied  at  the  Ecole  des  beaux  arts.  He
            “Children’s Missionary Meeting - It will be remembered that, prior to the                                         arrived in Melbourne in 1850, was among the first artists at the Ballarat goldfields,
            sailing of the missionary ship, John Williams, she was visited by upwards                                         and was a foundation member of the Victorian Society of Fine Arts in 1856. He left
            of  three  thousand  children,  attending  the  various  Sunday  and  other                                       Australia in 1862 and died in England in 1915.
            schools  in  and  around  Melbourne.  A  permanent  memorial  of  this
            interesting incident has just been furnished to the public in the shape of a
            lithographic  engraving,  representing  the  Rev.  J.  Banff,  the  missionary
            from Tahiti, addressing the children who are assembled on the pier. The


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