The
Bonin Islands
By Russell Robertson, Esq.
Read before the Asiatic Society of Japan on the
15th March, 1876.
The Bonin Islands which lie between the parallels of 26.30 and 27.45
North are situated almost due South of Yokohama at a distance of about 500 miles,
Port Lloyd situated in Lat. 27.5.35 N. and 142.11.30 East Longitude being
distant 516 miles—the longitude of Port Lloyd has been fixed by a later
authority at 142.16.30.
The
Islands consist of three groups, the Northernmost and Southernmost of which are
known respectively as the Parry and Bailey or Coffin groups. The centre group is made up of three
Islands: Stapleton to the North, Peel Island to the South and Buckland Island
in the centre. This middle group
is 9 1/4 miles in length 4 1/4 of which are taken up by Peel Island.
Hillsboro'
the largest of the Bailey or Coffin group is 7 1/2 miles long and 1 1/4 miles
broad.
From
Japanese records it would appear that these Islands were known to Japan in the
year 1593, if not before that, when they were held as a fief by the Daimio
Ogasawara Sadayori and communication was maintained with them up to 1624. In Koempfer's
[sic] work the following mention is made of the Islands, "About the year
1675 the Japanese accidentally discovered a very large island, one of their
barks having been forced there in a storm from the Island Hachijo from which
they computed it to be 300 miles distant towards the East, they met with no
inhabitants but found it to be a very pleasant and fruitful country, well
supplied with fresh water and furnished with plenty of plants and trees,
particularly the arrack tree, which however might give room to conjecture that
the Island lay rather to the South of Japan than to the East, these trees
growing only in hot countries. They called it Bone sima or the Island Bune and
because they found no inhabitants upon it they marked it with the character of
an uninhabited Island. On the shores they found an incredible quantity of fish
and crabs, some of which were from four to six feet long."
The
turtle that abound at the Bonins were probably taken by the Japanese for
enormous crabs.
A
blank in the history of the Bonin Islands then follows until 1728, when
communication was again established by a descendant of Sadayoris, Miyanouchi
Sadayori by name, of short duration however, for after a long interval we find
no further mention of the Islands in Japanese records until the close of 1861,
when Japanese Commissioners were sent to Port Lloyd, the visit resulting in the
establishment of it small colony under the governorship of Mr. Obana Sakusuke.
The attempt was however a failure. Several of the colonists returned to Japan
after a brief stay and the remnant was withdrawn early in 1863. The Islands
known to most of us by name have during the past few years excited not a little
curiosity from the reports that have reached us from time to time as to the
condition of the settlers there and from surmises as to what steps might
eventually be taken to establish then as the territory of one or other of the
countries which it was supposed hall claimed them.
In
November of last year, 1875, the Japanese steamer Meiji Maru, having on board
four Japanese officers as Commissioners, proceeded to Port Lloyd and in the
same month and simultaneously with .the Meiji Maru the Islands were visited by
H. M. S. Curlew, Commander Church, R.N. on board of which vessel I was a
passenger. The Bonins figure on some charts as the Arzobispo Islands, but again
on others the Arzobispo appear as a distinct group. It is contended that the
word Bunin is a corruption of the Japanese words Munin “uninhabited” and this
appellation would tend to confirm their first discovery by Japanese. Any way
they are known generally as the Bonins, the slip from Bunin to Bonin being
easily accounted for, though to Japanese they are more familiar as the
Ogasawara-shima, or Ogasawara Islands.
From
the name Arzobispo it is not improbable that the Islands were known to the
Spaniards long since, the more so that they are not so very far from the
Marianas or Ladrones group now settled by the Spaniards and known to navigators
early in the 16th century. The object of this paper is not however to settle
disputed points about prior occupancy, and I therefore pass on to the time when
the Islands became more generally known to the outer world.
In
the year 1823 they were visited by an American whale ship the Transit, Captain
Coffin; whence we arrive at the name Coffin applied equally with Bailey to the
Southern group. It is not clear however that the Transit visited either the centre
or the Northern group. In 1825 the Supply, an English whaler, touched at Port
Lloyd and left a record of her visit by nailing a board to a tree, afterwards
found there by Captain Beechey R. N. of H. M. S. Blossom which vessel anchored
in Port Lloyd on the 9th June 1827. It is to Captain Beechey that we are
indebted for the admirable chart of the harbour of Port Lloyd now in use, and
for much of the published information about the Bonins. H. M. S. Blossom a
sloop carrying 16 guns and a complement of 122 all told had been dispatched
from England on the 19th May 1825 with instructions to cooperate with
Franklin's and Parry's Arctic Expeditions. Captain Beechey's instructions were
that he should be at Behring's [sic] Straits in the autumn of 1826, and if he failed
to meet either Franklin or Parry he was to leave Behring's Straits in October
of the same year, repairing there again in the autumn of the ensuing year
1827—the intervals to be employed in cruising in the Pacific Ocean; at the
close of 1827 the Blossom was to leave on her return voyage to England.
Captain
Beechey having sailed as above narrated on the 19th May 1825 rounded Cape Horn
and touching at Tahits [sic] and the Sandwich Islands reached Behring's Straits
in July 1826. In October the Blossom, failing to meet Franklin left Behring's
Straits and proceeded to San Francisco where she anchored on or about the 6th
November. On the 28th December 1826 Captain Beechey sailed from San Francisco
and again visited the Sandwich Islands, proceeding from there to Canton and
Macao at which latter place he arrived on or about April 30th 1827. After a
brief stay the Blossom again set sail making for Loochoo, and in due course,
some time in May 1827, she anchored off the town of Napha the capital of those
Islands.
From
here Captain Beechey took his departure on the 25th May, and shaping his course
to the Eastward he reached on the evening of the 7th June the situation of the
Bonin Islands as marked in Arrowsmith's chart in use at that time. The
following day, the 8th, no land was in sight, and Captain Beechey was on the
point of giving up the Islands as having no actual existence, when, after a few
hours sail to the Eastward, several islands were seen extending in a North and
South direction as far as the eye could discern. These were the Bonins. A full
account of the Blossom's visit is formed in Captain Beechey's narrative,
published in two volumes.
It
will suffice if I narrate here that the Blossom anchored in Port Lloyd on the
9th June 1827, having first attempted to fetch the southernmost group, but
finding wind and current against the ship and discovering in the nearest land
an opening which appeared to give promise of a good harbour, Capt. Beechey made
for this and anchored in Port Lloyd. to which lie gave this name out of regard
to a late Bishop of Oxford.
Captain
Beechey was much surprised to find here two Europeans who turned out to have
been two of the crew of the English whaler William which vessel had been
wrecked in Port Lloyd some eight mouths previous to the Blossom's arrival. The
name of one of the men was Wittrein; that of the other is not given.
According
to the statement of these men it appears that after the wreck of the vessel the
crew set to work to build a small schooner in order to find their way to
Manilla [sic], as the chances of their being picked off from Port Lloyd were
somewhat remote; to their surprize [sic] however a whale ship, the Timor,
appeared, and took off the crew of the wrecked vessel with the exception of
these two men Wittrein and his companion.
The
Blossom remained at Port Lloyd for six days, and the time was fully taken up
with surveying the harbour, excursions in the immediate neighbourhood, and in
circumnavigating the Island. To the Island in which Port Lloyd is situated
Captain Beechey gave the name of Peel Island, in compliment to Sir Robert Peel,
the then Secretary of State for the Home Department; and to the other two of
the cluster he gave the names Stapleton and Buckland, the last mentioned after
the then Professor of Geology at Oxford. A large bay at the South East angle of
Peel Island is named Fitton Bay, after a late President of the Geological
Society, whilst a bay to the Southwest angle of Buckland Island is called
Walker Bay, after Mr. Walker at that time one of the officers of the
Hydrographical Department.
To
the Southern cluster of Islands Capt. Beechey gave the name of Bailey, after a
former President of the Astronomical Society, but they are equally known as
Coffin Islands from the name of the master of the American Whaler Transit, who
it was believed was the first to visit them, excepting visits said to have been
made by Japanese.
To
the Northern group Capt. Beechey gave the name of Parry after the former
Hydrographer to the Admiralty.
Capt.
Beechey has pronounced Peel and surrounding Islands to be volcanic in their
nature, which is borne out by Commodore Perry of the United States Navy, who
when visiting the Islands later on 1853, writes of Port Lloyd as follows:
"It would appear that Port Lloyd was at one time the certain of an active
volcano, from which the surrounding hills had been thrown up, while the present
entrance to the harbour was formed by a deep fissure in the side of the cone
through which a torrent of lava had poured into the sea, leaving after its subsidence
a space into which the waters subsequently were emptied, bringing with them
their usual deposits, which together with the coral formation now forms the
bottom and sides of the harbour."
After
leaving Port Lloyd on the 15th June, Captain Beechey made another attempt to
reach the southern group, the Bailey or Coffin Islands, but finding the wind
adverse he bore away to the north and fixed the position of the Parry Group.
This
officer's remarks about the Bonins which appear in full in the work to which
I.have previously alluded furnished the only comparatively full information
about them up to 1853 when they were visited by Commodore Perry. The narrative
of the Blossom's cruise is a book seldom met with out here, and I am indebted
to Captain St. John of H. M. S. Sylvia, for the loan of the work which has thus
enabled me to give certain particulars about the Bonins without which this
paper would have been incomplete. The sailing directions and notes with regard
to the Bonins appearing in that valuable work the "China Pilot" are
taken from the narratives of Beechey and Perry.
Before
leaving, Captain Beechey affixed to a tree a sheet of copper nailed to a board,
and on the sheet of copper the following words were punctured:
“H.
M. S. Blossom, Captain Beechey, R.N., took possession of this group of Islands
in the name and on behalf of His Majesty King George, the 14th June,
1827."
On
the occasion of our visit in the Curlew, Captain Church and I came across this
board in the house of one of the settlers, who parted with it for a trifling
consideration. It was in a fair state of preservation, and the inscription as
given above could be deciphered after a little trouble; the date appeared to us
to be June 17th, but as the Blossom left on the 15th, the proper date is
probably the l4th.
According
to Captain Beechey the Japanese accounts of the Bunin Islands as appearing at
that time in Mr. Klaproths "Mémoire sur la Chine," and by Mr. Abel
Remusat in the “Journal des Savans" for September, 1817, it is said that
the Islands of Bonin sima or Munin sima consist of eighty-nine Islands, of
which two are large, four of middling size, four small and the remainder of the
group consists of rocks. The two large Islands are said to be inhabited, and
temples and villages appear in the Japanese chart published in the “Journal des
Savans." Further, it is stated that these Japanese accounts, or I should
more correctly say the translations of them, depict the Islands as extremely
fertile, producing vegetable and all kinds of grain, sugar, cocoa nuts, lofty
palm trees, sandal-wood, camphor and other trees.
From
this description, Captain Beechey throws doubts upon the Islands visited by him
as being identical with the Bonin sima of the Japanese, and to use his own
words says "it may be doubted whether Bonin sima is not an imaginary
Island."
In
Captain Beechey's opinion the Islands correspond with a group named Yslas del
Arzo Bispo in a work published many years ago in Manila "Navigacion
Especulativa y Pratica" and so much indeed that he has retained on the
chart the name Arzobispo which was mentioned at the commencement of this paper,
equally with that of the Bonins. It must be remembered, however, that neither
the Northern nor Southern cluster, the Parry and Bailey or Coffin groups, were
visited by Captain Beechey (by visiting I mean, landed upon,) and Japanese have
informed me that it was on the Southernmost group Bailey or Coffin, that the
early Japanese settlers took up their abode, and where it is believed the
remains of a few shrines are still to be found. Making allowance for
exaggeration in the description appearing in the early native records, and
considering, too, that vegetables, sugar cane, cocoa nuts, pine apple, &c.,
are now grown on Peel Island, also that among the trees there are palm and
sandal wood, it is not unlikely that the Island, visited by the Blossom are the
veritable Bonins or Munin sima of the Japanese.
We
are now to witness the influence of the Blossom's visit to these Islands.
Before taking leave of this little vessel with whose name and that of her
Commander the Bonins cannot but always be associated, I should record that
after leaving these Islands, Captain Beechey in pursuance of his original
instructions to be at Behring's Straits in the autumn of 1827, again made for
the Polar Seas, where he arrived in. due course; but finding no trace of
Franklin at the different rendezvous agreed upon he reluctantly left for
England by way of San Francisco and Cape Horn, and anchored at Spithead early
in October 1828, after an absence of three years and a half during which the
ship had sailed over 73,000 miles.
The
Bonins now seem to have attracted attention at the Sandwich Islands where the
news of the Blossom's visit was not long in reaching, and from whence a party
of colonists sailed for Port Lloyd in 1830. Captain Charlton then British
Consul at the Sandwich Islands taking a lively interest in the expedition.
The
party as far as I can ascertain consisted of the following: Mateo Mazarro said
to have been a native of Genoa, but I am inclined to think recognized as a
British subject, John Millichamp an Englishman, Nathaniel Savory born in
Massachusetts, United States, Alden B. Chapin also an American, and Charles
Johnson a Dane. They had with them some Sandwich Island natives as labourers,
some live stock and seeds, and landing at Port Lloyd hoisted an English flag
which had been given them by Captain Charlton.
Little
is now heard of the Bonins until 1842, though doubtless in this long interval
of 12 years Port Lloyd was frequently visited by whalers and communication of
some kind was thus kept up. In 1842 Mazarro returned to the Sandwich Islands.
He described the settlement at Port Lloyd as flourishing, stated that he had
hogs and goats in abundance and a few cattle, that he grew Indian corn and many
vegetables and had all kinds of tropical fruits. Mazarro returned to Peel
Island and eventually died there. His widow, to whom I shall here after refer,
is still living at Port Lloyd.
I
now pass over another interval of seven years until the year 1849 or 1850, when
I find that Port Lloyd was visited by the U. S. Surveying Brig Dolphin, but she
only made a brief stay of four or five days. The next man-of-war to come was H.
M. S. Enterprise, Captain Collinson, in 1851, which vessel also made but a
short stay of about a week. The Enterprise was a companion ship with the
Investigator both vessels being in search of Sir John Franklin's ill fated
expedition. The former had parted company from the Investigator, and had
probably taken the Bonins on her way up to Kamschatka and the Arctic.
Thomas
H. Webb, a British subject who had arrived at Port Lloyd in the American Barque
Japan of Nantucket in 1849, and where he is still a resident, has a lively
recollection of Captain Collinson's visit, and it is to Webb, that I am
indebted for much of the information I am able to give in respect to the visits
of ships to Port Lloyd from the year 1847 up to the time of the Curlew's visit
in 1875, excepting of course the visit of Commodore Perry in 1853 of which a
full account has been published elsewhere.
In
1852 H. M.'s surveying brig Serpent touched at Port Lloyd and remained there
some eight days.
We
now come to Commodore Perry's visit in 1853, an important one to the settlers
on Peel Island.
On
the 14th June, 1853, the U. S. men-of-war Susquehannah and Saratoga dropped
anchor in Port Lloyd, having left the port of Napha in the Loochoos on the 9th
of the same mouth. At this time, of the original settlers who came in 1830, and
whose names are mentioned at the commencement of this paper, only one,
Nathaniel Savory was left, but there were now on Peel Island in all 31
inhabitants, made up as follows; four English, four American, one Portuguese,
the rest being natives from either the Sandwich, the Ladrones, the Caroline or
Kingsmill Islands, together with children actually born on the Bonins.
The
stay of the Susquehanna and Saratoga was limited to four days, the ships
leaving on the 18th June, and returning to the Loochoos which they reached on
the 23rd of the same month, but the time was fully taken up in exploring both
Peel and Stapleton Islands.
To
the exploration of the first mentioned two parties were told off from the
Susquehanna, one headed by Mr. Bayard Taylor which took the South, while Dr.
Fahs Assistant Surgeon of the ship with his party went over the North of the
Island. They started early on the morning of the 15th June and did not return
to the ship till 10 p.m. of the same night. A full account of this day's
proceedings, and indeed a very full account generally of the Bonins is given in
chapter X, volume I, of the narrative of Commodore Perry's expedition to China
and Japan, published by order of the United States Government..
I
do not quote at length from the account therein contained because the work is
one of modern date, and is within reach of any one who cares to procure it.
It
will be sufficient if I note that not only are the Bonin Islands prominently
mentioned in the work above alluded to, but on his return to the States the
Commodore placed in the hands of the compiler some further notes on the subject
of these Islands and submitted a scheme for their colonization. He appears to
have thought that their situation was most advantageous as forming a point on a
proposed mail line, which, starting from San Francisco would touch at Honolulu
and the Bonins for coal and supplies and then on to Shanghai as its terminus.
The importance that Yokohama was to attain to as a place of call for mail
steamers could not then of course be foreseen, considering too that the scheme
of a mail line across the Pacific to China, although attracting attention, had
not then been developed.
It
was during the visit of the Susquehanna and Suratoga at Port Lloyd that
Commodore Perry recommended the settlers to draw up a code or rules of
governance for themselves, rather than that they should live under what he
described to one of the settlers as Club Law. No mention is made of this in his
book, but an organization scheme was drawn up. It consisted of three articles
and thirteen sections, and was called "organization of the settlers of
Peel Island." It provided for the election of a Chief Magistrate and
Council of two persons to be elected by and from amongst the settlers, the
chief Magistrate and Council to have power to enact rules and make Regulations
for the Government of the Island, such rules and regulations to be binding on
the residents provided the concurrence and approval of two-thirds of the whole
number of residents had been obtained.
A
copy of the organization scheme has been placed at my disposal, and the manner
in which it came about was narrated to me on the Island.
Under
these rules Nathaniel Savory was elected as Chief Magistrate and James Motley
and Thomas H. Webb as Councilmen. The document was signed by Nathaniel Savory,
Thomas H. Webb, James Motley, William Gilley, John Brava, Joseph Cullen, George
Brava and George Horton.
The
rules however were never enforced, and the existence of the scheme is now
scarcely remembered on Peel Island.
It
is of importance that I should follow up the fate of those whose names appear
appended to the documents. Nathaniel Savory died in 1874.
Thomas
H. Webb is now living at Port Lloyd.
James
Motley died on the Bailey Islands in 1870.
William
Gilley was killed at Port Lloyd thirteen years ago, by a man named Jack Spania
said to be an Englishman.
John
Brava and George Brava are still living on the Bonins.
Joseph
Cullen died in Port Lloyd two years ago.
George
Horton was removed to Japan in 1862 by the Japanese, and handed over to the U.
S. Consul at Kanagawa. Horton died I believe shortly after arrival in Japan.
To
some of the above names I shall have again occasion to refer.
Before
taking leave of Commodore Perry I should state that he left on Peel Island four
head of cattle, and on one of the other Islands five Shanghai sheep and six
goats.
I
enquired at Port Lloyd what had become of this stock, and was told that the
cattle had disappeared, having probably been lifted by the crews of the whalers
that were in harbour either at that time or that came shortly after Perry's
visit. The sheep died, but the goats have multiplied to such an extent that the
islands now swarm with them.
Not
long after the Susquehanna and Saratoga's visit the U. S. man-of-war Plymouth
came to Port Lloyd. Her stay was marked by a most unfortunate accident. One of
her cutters with fourteen men had gone outside the harbour in the face of a
somewhat rough sea and was never more heard of, there being no doubt that she
capsized with all hands, not one of whom ever reached shore.
The
place is a very dangerous one for boat work, which should be avoided as much as
possible outside the harbour. Much anxiety was felt while I was at Port Lloyd
on account of a party of Japanese that had put off one morning from the steamer
Meiji Maru, and rounding the southern headland of the harbour was lost to sight
from the ship. At 6 o'clock p.m. of the same day, and night setting in, there
were no signs of the boat; a gun was fired and a rocket sent up from the Meiji
Maru but it was not until 10 p.m. of the same evening that some of the missing
ones returned with the report that the boat had been beached the other side of
the headland close to the Frenchman Leseur's holding. The boat was eventually
recovered, but Leseur said it was a marvel she had ever escaped for she was
lifted in on the top of a raging surf right over the rocks and landed close to
his own dwelling.
The
next visit of men of war after the Plymouth was that of four Russian ships
which came to Port Lloyd in 1854. This squadron consisted of a frigate, a
corvette, a store ship and a small steamer. Their visit was followed by that of
the U. S. Frigate Macedonian, Captain Abbott, on her way to Manilla. The
Macedonian had left the U. S. Flag ship Powhattan in Yedo Bay. Commodore Perry
entrusted to Captain Abbott's care implements of husbandry and seeds to be
distributed amongst the settlers, in a letter to one of whom the Commodore
writes "it must be understood that the sovereignty of the Bonin Islands
has not yet been settled, and the interest taken by me in the welfare and
prosperity of the settlement has solely in view of the advantages commerce
generally."
In
the ensuing year 1855 the U. S. Man-of-war Vincennes visited Port Lloyd and
remained 10 days.
In
1871 an attempt to colonize Peel Island was made from Japan, and in November or
December of that year a Japanese steamer was despatched to Port Lloyd from
Yedo, having on board a Commissioner, subordinate officers and about 100
colonists.
Rules
and Regulations for the governance of the settlers inclusive of foreigners, and
harbour Regulations so called were drawn up in English by the Commissioner and
his assistants. They appear never to have been enforced, and the present
settlers seem for the most part ignorant of their existence. I have however a
copy by me from which I extract the following somewhat unintelligible rules.
“Article
3.-It shall be unlawful for any vessel or vessels that may be come into this
port to discharge any of the cannon that will hurtful for the fishing.
Article
4.-Any vessel or vessels may come into this port or harbour said the vessel
shall to pay to the pilot amount of the established pilotage.
Article
5.-If any person or persons come on shore from any vessel that may be come into
this port who shall have pleasure hunting and waste upon the land of any
inhabitants and also committed any of such he or they shall be seized and
transported to the Captain of their vessel."
Communication
would appear to have been kept up with Port Lloyd from Japan from time to time
during 1862, for it is recorded that the colonists soon wearying of the
enterprise, left Port Lloyd in batches, until early in 1863 the Commissioner
himself withdrew, taking with him the few Japanese that had for some fifteen
months cast their lot upon the Islands.
The
Japanese settlement was situated on the South side of the harbour and one of
the houses erected by them still remains. Close to this house a large stone has
been erected which records that the Bonins were first visited in the time of
Iyeyasu by Ogasawara Sadayori and that in 1593 they received the name of
Ogasawara jima, that they were again visited in 1828, that they are Japanese
territory, that they were re-visited in 1861 and that this tablet was erected
as a perpetual memorial.
From
time to time whalers arriving at Yokohama have been reported as from the
Bonins, and in 1872, 1873, and for some time in 1874 a small schooner, the
Tori, under American colours made trips between Yokohama and Port Lloyd, taking
stores and cheap piece-goods from this, and returning with turtle shell, turtle
oil, lemons and other Island produce.
In
1874 the U.S. man-of-war Tuscarora while engaged on her line of soundings
visited Port Lloyd and made a brief stay, and in November 1875, we have the
visits of the Japanese steamer Meiji Maru and H. M: S. Curlew.
Later
on, and since my return, the Bonins have I believe been visited by the Russian
man-of-war Hydamack and the German frigate Hertha.
I
have given prominence to the visits of men-of-war but it is not to be concluded
that the settlers were dependent on these alone for their glimpses of the outer
world. Port Lloyd has been the frequent resort of whalers mostly under American
colours, in some instances flying the French or Hawaiian Flags. In one year the
arrivals at Port Lloyd have been as many as 15 vessels, but lately the sight of
a whaler has been somewhat rare, as may be judged from the fact that last year
1875, but one vessel, a whaler, had touched there prior to the arrival of the
Meiji Maru and Curlew.
In
1849 the year of the rush to California several vessels, so I was informed by
one of the residents, touched at Port Lloyd on their way from China to San
Francisco; these ships varied in size from 300 to 1,000 tons, and so far as I
can learn must have been coolie passenger ships. That same year, 1849, is also
a memorable one in the annals of the settlers, for in the autumn a lorcha and
schooner under Danish colours and cutter with the British flag came to Port
Lloyd and made a stay of some two months, during which the vessels were hove
down and repaired. They then left in company, but after a few days the lorcha
and cutter returned and their crews made a raid on the place, offering no
personal violence but carrying off every thing they could lay hands on. The two
vessels then quitted Peel Island and were seen no more.
I
have thus briefly sketched the history of the Islands down to the time of my
visit, but I shall probably in the course of this paper have to refer to past
dates in order to complete, as well as can be done in the limits of a paper of
this nature, the history of Peel Island and its settlers up to the present
time.
H.
M. S. Curlew anchored in Port Lloyd on the morning of the 26th November, having
left Yokohama at 10 a.m., of the 22nd, the voyage being principally made under
canvass.
The
Japanese steamer Meiji Maru with the Japanese Commissioners on board, left
Yokohama on Sunday the 21st November at noon, and arrived at Port Lloyd early
on Wednesday the 24th.
As
we made slowly in the early morning, for the entrance of the harbour, the
approach to which is clearly marked by two conspicuous crags known as "the
Paps," the Islands presented a fertile appearance, and the palm trees
twisted this way and that by the action of the winds were a conspicuous feature
in the vegetation.
The
approach to the harbour is marked by bold rocks, and a sheer wall of dark rock
rising up at the South side of the harbour dwarfed almost to miniature the
Meiji Maru, which vessel we descried at anchor well up the harbour. A canoe
propelled by three men was noticed about a mile astern of the Curlew, but as no
signal was made to us Captain Church did not think it advisable to stop, but
proceeding on to the anchorage let go close to the Japanese steamer in about 22
fathoms of water. It turned out that the canoe had on board a Frenchman, Leseur
by name, the self constituted pilot of Port Lloyd, whom Captain Peters of the
Meiji Maru had thought fully sent out with a letter to the Curlew, in order
that Leseur's services might be availed of if required.
The
harbour of Port Lloyd open to the south-west is about a mile and a half in
length, and has a breadth varying from half a mile to a mile.
At
the upper end of the harbour, and on its northern shore, a coral reef extends
for some distance, terminating in a pinnacle rock. Westward of this, and but a
short distance from the beach, is a depth of ten fathoms, the spot styled by
Captain Beechey of the Blossom as "ten fathom hole"; from this the
water deepens rapidly towards the mouth of the harbour.
The
general character of the scenery as observable from the harbour is hilly, with
here and there bold crags; the cliff line rising straight from the water's edge
notably so on the Eastern side of the anchorage, while the western and north
western shore is marked by a line of yellow sandy beach to the rear of which
the ground is flat for a short distance, backed by hilly slopes and steep
ascents. A fringe of trees hides the level ground and forms a natural boundary
between the plots of cultivated land and the sea shore.
The
hills are covered with verdure, but the luxuriant and almost tropical nature of
the vegetation is not fully realized until after landing.
The
ordinary palm and cabbage-palm trees abound on the rising ground which
surrounds the anchorage.
A
solitary hut at the head of the harbour in front of which the American flag was
hoisted shortly after our arrival, a few canoes drawn up on the beach, and a
canoe or two with small white sail flitting across the anchorage, constituted
the only outward signs of life visible from the Curlew.
It
is not within the scope of this paper to give in detail a narrative of what
occurred on each day of my stay which occupied exactly a week, my time moreover
was for the most part taken up with matters which would have but little general
interest; but I will endeavour to give a faithful picture of the condition of
the present settlers and to note such matters of interest as will convey to
those who are desirous of knowledge on the subject as much information as I myself
possess derived from actual observation.
It
must be remembered that in 1830 the little colony which in that year first
settled at Port Lloyd consisted of Mazarro, Millichamp, Savory, Chapin and
Johnson; that of these Millichamp is now living at Guam in the Marianas or
Ladrones group, and the rest are dead, Savory having died as recently as the
10th April, 1874, at the age of 79, leaving a widow and six children now
residing on Peel Island. Mrs. Savory was the widow of Mazarro above mentioned,
and was married to Savory after Mazarro's death, having also buried another
husband in the interval.
In
1853, the time of Commodore Perry's visit, there were residing at Port Lloyd in
addition to Sandwich Islanders and natives of other groups, eight foreigners—Savory,
Webb, Motley, Gilley, the two Bravas, Cullen and Horton. What befell the
majority of these bas before been stated. These with the other Islanders made
up in 1853 a resident population of thirty-one.
The
settlers now number sixty-nine, of whom sixty-six reside on Peel Island, and
three on the Bailey or Coffin group, of these thirty-seven are males and
thirty-two females, and out of the whole number about twenty are children whose
ages vary from one to fifteen. Amongst, the present settlers there can only be
said to be five whites, namely, Thomas H. Webb, an Englishman born in
Wallington, Surrey; Leseur a Frenchman who hails from Brittany; Allen a German
who comes from Bremen, Rose, about whose nationality I am uncertain, some
calling him a German others a Dutchman; and John Brava whose real name is
Gonsalves, a Portuguese, born in the Island of Brava, one of the Azores.
Of
these John Brava, born in 1811, and consequently now 65 years of age was the
first to come to Port Lloyd where he arrived in 1831 in the British whaler
Partridge.
He
remembers Millichamp, Savory and Mazarro being there when he came, as also
another foreigner, probably either Chapin or Johnson, whose name however he has
forgotten. He married at Port Lloyd a Sandwich Island woman since dead, by whom
he had two sons George and Andrew Brava, the latter of whom is dead as is also
his wife; two of his children, however, Francis and Lucy Brava are still
living. The other son, George Brava, a man now close on 40 years of age lives
close by his father; he married a daughter of Savory's, who died leaving three
children, Jose, Rosa, and Andrew Brava now living with their father.
Thomas
H. Webb, came as I think I have before mentioned to Port Lloyd in the American
Barque Japan of Nantucket, some time in 1847, and has thus been nearly thirty
years a resident on Peel Island. He married the daughter of an
Englishman—Robinson by name—she is living with him now and they have a family
of eight children.
George
Robinson about whose ultimate fate there is much uncertainty arrived at Port
Lloyd in the whaler Howard some time in 1849 and took up his residence with
Webb, whose home was at that time shared by a man named Gilley (afterwards
murdered). Robinson did not remain long at Port Lloyd but removed to Hillsboro'
Island, the most important of the Bailey Group, where he cleared and planted
out a considerable portion of ground. After a residence of a few years he left
with his family for Guam and Seypan and in his absence Motley, of whom mention
has before been made, went and occupied his clearing on Hillsboro Island.
Robinson
eventually returned and appears to have arranged amicably with Motley for a
joint occupation of the clearing. Robinson on his return had brought with him
some natives from the Kingsmill Group and discontent soon manifested itself
amongst them, fomented, so it is said, by a woman named Kitty in the employ of
Motley. This appears to have engendered a quarrel between Robinson and Motley
for they separated, the Islanders above mentioned leaving Robinson and taking
service with Motley. An Englishman, known as Bob, who had run away from a
whaler and found shelter with Motley, left the latter and went over to
Robinson. At this time Robinson's family consisted of his sons John, Henry and
Charles and his daughters Eliza, Caroline and Susan. There was living with him
as nurse to the children a woman, Zipher by name, a native of Raven Island.
Notwithstanding
the separation of Robinson and Motley, matters appear to have gone from bad to
worse and scenes of bloodshed ensued over which I will not linger. It is
sufficient to say that one morning, (the event occurred some time in 1861) an
attack is said to have been made by the Kingsmill Islanders on the elder
Robinson who with his children John, Henry and Eliza fled in one direction, his
daughter Caroline, then a girl of 19, taking with her the younger sister Susan
and her brother Charles flying in another. In the fight that ensued the man Bob
was killed, whether by or at the instigation of Motley is not accurately known.
Motley has since died and is buried on Hillsboro' Island. His name will be
remembered as one of those appended to the organization scheme.
It
is said that George Robinson and the children with him were picked off by a
passing whaler, the Montreal, Captain Sole; the rest of his family fled to the
opposite side of the Island and making their way to the sea shore subsisted
there for a period of eleven months living on shell-fish and berries, until
attracted by the smoke of a fire, the captain of a passing whaler the E. L. B.
Jenny, hove to off the land and going ashore in a boat found the two girls
Caroline and Susan Robinson with their brother Charles and the nurse Zipher in
a most pitiable condition as may well be imagined. Taking them on board he
proceeded to Port Lloyd close by, where the family were sheltered by Webb who
subsequently married the girl Caroline, Susan later on becoming the wife of a
man named Pease, said to have been an American and whose disappearance at Port
Lloyd in the autumn of 1874, is generally well known. Mrs. Pease, Charles
Robinson and the woman Zipher are now living on Peel Island.
John
Robinson is reported to be living at the Sandwich Islands, which would go to
confirm the supposition that with his father they had made good their escape
from Hillsboro'. The woman Kitty is still living at the Bailey group, with the
man Rose and a Kanaka boy, making up the three resident on those Islands.
The
next to arrive at Port Lloyd is the Frenchman Leseur better known on the
Islands as Louis. He came in the Hawaiian whaler Wyola in 1862 or 1863, but he
had made several visits to the Islands before that in different whalers. In one
of the years however abovementioned he took up his residence at Port Lloyd
where he has since, with the exception of a visit to Guam continued to dwell.
He is a stout hearty-looking Frenchman of about 55 years of age, speaking
English remarkably well—his present wife Pidear by name is a nature of Grigan,
one of the Ladrones group, and is the widow of a man known as John Marquese, a
native of the Marquesas.
By
a former wife, who is buried at Port Lloyd, Leseur has three children, Albert,
Louisa, and Phillis who are still living. I may here mention that it was at
Leseur's house we found the copper plate and board put up by Captain Beechey in
1827. Leseur sail he had found it in an outhouse on the clearing he now
occupies.
We
next come to the German Allen who arrived with Leseur in 1862 or 1863. He
appears to be a man of fifty and upwards and has taken to wife a Sandwich
Island woman Poconoi by name. They live on Peel Island about a couple of miles
from Port Lloyd and midway between the dwellings of Leseur and Webb.
As
regards the man Rose now living on the Bailey Islands, it is uncertain when he
actually came to reside there. All that is known of him at Port Lloyd is that
he made his first appearance there in the French whaler Gustav in 1852. He was
left there sick, but shipped again and made his appearance at Port Lloyd from
time to time in successive whalers. He was eventually found residing on
Hillsboro Island, but the precise date of his arrival there, or indeed how he
got there at all, is not known.
The
settlers other than those of whom I have made particular mention consist of men
and women from the Sandwich Islands; from Grigan or Agrigan as it is sometimes
called; from the Caroline Islands; and front the Gilbert or Kingsmill
groups,-there is also one man from Bermuda, Robert Myers by name, claiming to
be a British subject; a Mauilla man named Sino, and two Japanese women the
wives respectively of Sino and Myers. Of the 66 settlers now on the Bonins 35
have been born on the Islands. The nomenclature is curious, for I found in the
list of residents that I procured when at Port Lloyd the following names, Thomas
Tewcrab, and his wife Bosan, Charley Papa, Friday, Bill Boles, Samuel Tinpot,
Zipher, Hannah Poconoi, Samuel Tinpot, Pidear, Mrs. Tinaree, and Mrs. Fanny and
Mrs. Betty.
Miscegenation
has brought about rather curious results. In the male children the white
parentage is very distinct: light olive complexion, dark eyes and clear cut
features, in the females the Micronesian blood is unmistakeable, and I found in
many cases the flat face and coarse features of the Pacific Islanders—on the
other hand in some cases the women are in appearance very closely akin to the
Hindostanee.
The
men dress for the most part simply in shirt and trousers with broad brimmed
Panama hat; a cotton shirt being replaced by a flannel one in the winter
months. The women in print gowns with a bright colored kerchief on the head.
The
two Japanese women above referred to were taken from Yokohama in the schooner
Tori some time during 1873; four or five others also were passengers, but they
elected—to return to Yokohama.
Having
thus conveyed a general idea of how, the resident population is made up I
proceed to describe their dwellings, their occupation and mode of life.
Each
family has its holding or clearing of cultivated land close to which the
dwelling and outhouses are erected, these are situated for the most part round
the harbour, but screened from view by a fringing of hummock trees.
Webb,
Allen and Leseur have their clearings away from Port Lloyd to the south and
west of the harbour in each case close to the sea.
To
the holdings are given distinct appellations. Thus, commencing from the left
hand, or north western side of the harbour, there is Yellow Beach on which the
Bravas father and son; the Tewcrabs a family numbering some 15 members and
Charles Robinson have their clearings; continuing along the shore a site known
as the Cove opposite ten fathom hole is reached; then a spot known as Jackson
unoccupied. From this it is but a step to the Head of the harbour, as the
location of the Savorys is called, and continuing along the eastern and
southern shore, we come to Bull Beach, the dwelling of the Manilla man Sino and
his Japanese wife, and but a short distance beyond this the site known as Aki
the present residence of the widow Pease and former site of the Japanese colony
established at the close of 1861 and broken up early in 1863.
Leaving
the harbour and coasting round the sea shore, but bearing to the south,
Leseur's place of residence known as Blossom or Clarkson's village is reached;
further on is Poconoi the dwelling of William Allen, and beyond this Little
River where Webb and his family reside; to each of these a land track leads
starting from Aki, but the road is a rough one, and they are more easily
reached by canoe provided the weather suits.
The
dwelling houses resemble one another closely and to describe one is to describe
all. They consist of two rooms, constructed with wooden uprights, and each has
a solid wood flooring; the sides and roof are thatched with the leaf of the
cabbage palm neatly secured to the rafters with thin wooden slips. Kitchens and
outhouses are all separate from the dwelling. Of furniture there is of course
not a very large display; a rough deal table, a few chairs and a seaman's chest
go to make up the furniture of one room, while the bedroom opening out from it
is supplied with a plain wooden bedstead.
Each
cabin, for so it may be called, is supplied with a clock—a few cheap and highly
colored prints adorn the wall, and from the ceiling hang rifle and fowling
piece. A few shelves with plates and crockery-ware neatly arranged complete all
that is seen in the interior of these dwellings. Everything is scrupulously
clean, from floor and woodwork to linen and crockery.
Of
books, with the exception of a few I saw in Webb's house, there are none, and,
Webb excepted, no one on the Islands can either read or write.
In
the cultivated ground which surrounds each dwelling are seen patches of garden
vegetables, sweet potatoes, pumpkin, and wherever there is a little running
water, taro, from which the article of diet so well known in the Sandwich
Islands under the name of poi is made.
The
dwellings are all with but one exception, that of the widow Pease at Aki,
situated on low ground and to the back of the cabins the sloping ground is in
some cases laid out with Sugar cane, Maize, and a few Cocoa-nut plantations.
Plaintains [sic] thrive and are grown close to the homesteads, and lemons of
excellent quality abound throughout the Island.
Pigs,
geese, ducks, and fowls are kept by the settlers, and appear to thrive well.
What with wild goat, wild and tame pig, poultry, fruit and vegetable produce
afforded by the shore and excellent fish and turtle from the harbour, the
settlers are not so badly off for food. It happens, however, at times that
violent hurricanes play sad havoc with the vegetation and now and then there is
actual distress for food, one family that I came across being reduced to Indian
corn meal alone for diet.
The
occupation of the settlers can very easily be imagined. Rising at dawn work is
done either in the garden or about the. house until breakfast which is taken
about eight a.m. the meal varies according to season and consists of whatever
the family may have at hand either fresh or salted turtle, fish, corn meal,
taro, or vegetables. After breakfast work is resumed; one will go after turtle
which when in season in April, May and June are turned over in great
numbers—one man securing perhaps 50 a day. Another will go fishing or perhaps
taking his gun look after a wild goat or pig; firewood has to be cut or a neighbour
wants a helping hand to repair his house or erect a new one.
The
evening meal is taken shortly before dusk, it is probably the same in materials
as the breakfast, perhaps with the addition of goat's flesh or pork. And after
supper to bed—and so on from day to day, an existence varied only by the
occasional visit of a whaler, now apparently very rare. In addition to the
products of the Island already noted I should mention that arrowroot of very
good quality is grown, and that the soil seems emmently adapted both for this
and for tapioca.
Of
running water there seems no lack.
The
settlers have of course an eye to trade, though they seem more inclined to
barter than to accept money; and naturally so, for money is of little or no use
amongst themselves and they can only hope to pass it off with the next incoming
whaler, unless perhaps it is hoarded.
Their
wants are notably piece goods of any description, provided they are of light
texture and suitable for clothing, stores, salt (much used in salting down
turtle for winter consumption) soap, tobacco, hardware, nails, knives, tools of
different kinds and ammunition. Against these they are ready to barter turtle,
turtle-shell, turtle oil, bananas, lemons, poultry and garden produce. If
however the purchaser prefers to pay in cash the following are the island
rates: Turtle, each $2; turtle oil $10, $15 and $20 a barrel; turtle shell, 50
cents per pound; lemons, $2 a hundred.
It
can be understood, however, that the wants of the settlers, which are in
themselves comparatively few, are easily supplied to so limited a population.
The Meiji Maru took down presents in the shape of blankets, piece-goods, tea,
spirits, cigars and a few miscellaneous articles, and Captain Church of the
Curlew, not unmindful of the settlers' wants, made up for each of those who
required them a packet containing shirts, flannel, shoes, knives, soap and
other useful ships' stores.
As
I personally visited the dwelling of each settler, and as in so doing I had to
cross the southern portion of the Island in order to visit Leseur, Allen and
Webb at their respective holdings, I was enabled to get a very good idea of the
character of the scenery, the vegetation and the general resources of the
Island. It is not until landing that the more tropical nature of the vegetation
is apparent. Palms, what appeared to be a species of wild pine apple, and
luxuriant ferns grow in rich profusion, the hill sides are clothed with verdure
and the valleys are filled with a description of wild bean, with here and there
patches of taro.
The
following are the principal trees and plants. I give their names as known among
the settlers,—in some cases probably Hawaiian appellations have been adopted.
Tremana;
a beautiful wood and largely used by the settlers. Whalers are in the habit of
taking away quantities of this wood which is sold to them at twenty-five cents
a foot, and on one occasion a schooner took away from the island a full cargo
of it.
Mulberry;
used on the Bonins for the uprights of houses and generally for building
purposes.
Cedar,
so called, furnishes a beautiful wood of which the floorings of the dwellings
are nearly all made.
Tea
tree and poison wood tree; used for making the hulls of canoes.
Spruce;
used only for fuel.
Base
wood tree; in use for binding down the thatch of the dwellings.
Shaddock;
the wood of which is used for roofing purposes.
Yellow
wood; no particular use.
Hake
wood and white oak; both employed in dwellings.
Lohala
tree. Mats are made of the leaves and fibre of this tree—the fruit makes a good
food for pigs.
Milk
wood, red iron wood and white iron wood; in use for building purposes.
Black
iron wood; used only for fuel.
Soft
Hao wood; of which the hulls and canoes are made.
Swamp
Sao wood and mountain hao wood; used for making the arms of canoes with which
the outrigger is attached to the hull.
Narrow
leaf hao tree; the wood of. this is used for the handles of hatchets and for
garden implements.
Kehop
tree or shrub; a beautiful plant resembling an aloe and bearing a sweetly
scented flower; the leaves of. this are much in request by the settlers as they
are supposed to contain certain healing qualities; they are made soft by
heating before a fire and are then applied to bruises and sores.
In
addition to the above mentioned and those already noted there are on the
Islands, wild plum and crryhe, orange, laurel, juniper and box wood tree,
sandal wood, marmottao, wild cactus, curry plant, wild sage and celery. Mosses,
lichens and various kinds of parasitic plants abound.
Of
minerals upon the Islands none are known to the settlers, unless I except iron
pyrites specimens of which are found on Peel Island.
The
shores are covered with coral, and these, together with the reefs, are strewn
with shells some of which are very beautiful.
Earthquake
shocks and tidal waves are frequent, the peculiarity of the latter being that
no bore rushes up the harbour, but the water suddenly rises just in the manner
as described to me by a settler as water is raised in a bowl by inserting an
inverted tumbler, when the water has attained a certain height, it as suddenly
recedes. The climate is more tropical than temperate. At the time of our visit
during the latter end of November the thermometer at noon stood at 70° and 75°
and after Yokohama seemed oppressively warm. Sickness is almost unknown amongst
the settlers, the only thing they complain of is that on the changes of season
from heat to cold, and from cold to heat, they are liable to chills resulting
in violent colds.
I
noticed no signs of intemperance, nor did I see in any of the houses either
beer, wine or spirits.
To
those who visited us on board the Curlew beer seemed to recommend itself most,
but only to the older men, the younger refusing to take anything but water with
their meals, when entertained on board the ship. The use of tobacco is general.
I
have before remarked that on our arrival at Port Lloyd the American flag was
run up close to a cabin at the top of the harbour. This turned out to be on the
holding owned by the widow Savory and her family, though the dwelling itself is
obscured from the anchorage by trees.
I
had a long chat with this old lady who received Capt. Church and myself
surrounded by her family, one or two of the other settlers also being present.
She
explained that the hoisting of the flag was out of compliment to us, and that
one of her husband's dying wishes had been that the flag should be so displayed
whenever a vessel arrived or on any exceptional occasion.
I
asked Mrs Savory if she had any ideas on the subject of protection by any
particular Power, but the family all gravely shook their heads at this, and
said they wanted to be regarded as Bonin Islanders, by which I understood them
to mean that they wished to be left alone in undisturbed possession of their
holdings, and the less that was said about nationality or protection of any
kind the better. Close to the house is Savory's grave, and indeed in most of
the enclosures the resting places of the dead are conspicuous features
surrounded with neat palisades and in some cases a headstone recording in
English the name and date of death of the deceased. While on this subject I
should not omit to record that one of the settlers told me he had, when digging
near the shore a few years back, come across the skeleton of a child apparently
about ten years of age; the bones fell to pieces at the touch and on exposure
to the air, from which it is conceived that they had been there many years.
I
have not before noted that English is spoken by all the settlers, unless I
except some half dozen from the Kingsmill group, who speak their own language.
There
is however no attempt at education on the Islands, nor is there indeed any one
there who could improve this state of things, Webb being the only one who reads
or writes and this indifferently well. Religion has with perhaps the exception
of Webb, no name amongst them; the marriage and burial services are however
always read by Webb when occasion requires.
When
speaking to Mrs. Savory about her husband's death, I asked if his end had been
peaceful. She replied "quite so; that he had given certain directions with
great clearness,” but when following up my question by asking if he had
expressed himself in any way about a future state, the question did not seem to
be understood and was received with blank looks. Mrs. Savory rather amused me
when in reply to a question I put as to what possible charm there could be in
such an existence as she and her family were leading she replied, “Well, I
guess we pay no taxes here."
From
Mrs. Savory, her son Horace, a young fellow of two or three and twenty, from
Webb, Leseur, Charles Robinson and the Bravas, Captain Church and I received
much kindness and attention.
It
now only remains for me to make some concluding remarks. Popular rumour had
ascribed to the Bonins a colony of semi-savages, murdering one another and
altogether leading a barbarous existence. I found a small colony of settlers,
living to all outward appearances in decency and order, cleanly in their
attire, civil in their address and comfortable in their homes. Such is the
bright side.
The
dark picture is the utter apathy of the settlers; their indifference to
anything outside of what goes to satisfy their immediate wants; their suspicion
in some cases of one another. No religion, no education, old men and women
hastening to their graves without the one, children growing up without the
other—and there is a darker picture than this. This paper records the fact of
two men Gilley and Bob (so called) having fallen by the hand of their
neighbours. On the 9th October, 1874, Benjamin Pease, a resident at Port Lloyd
disappeared and it is believed met with a violent death, while on the 11th June
1875 a negro, Spenser by name, strongly suspected of having been Pease's
assassin also disappeared, receiving his death blow it is said at the hands of
one of the residents. I was informed by a settler that during his stay on the
Bonins, now extending over 25 years, no less than 11 men had met with violent
deaths. I would not have it assumed, however, that these tragedies are to be ascribed
altogether to the bona fide resident population, if indeed, the word population
can be ascribed to such a little band.
It
must be remembered that the component parts of the population are a few old
residents, a few comparatively new, some born on the Islands and now getting on
in years, runaways from whalers and men perhaps purposely left behind, and
these latter we may be sure not the most orderly of the crew.
I
trust that if communication comes to be established with these islands with
anything like regularity that the claims of the settlers on the sympathies of
the foreign communities of Yokohama and Yedo will not be overlooked, and that
an attempt at ameliorating their condition will be made from one or both these
settlements if not indeed generally from the open ports in Japan. I can vouch
for it that kindly sympathy expressed either in word or deed will not be
inappreciated there, and that in spite of many drawbacks, there are as warm
hearts on the Bonins as any that beat amongst ourselves.
A
General Meeting of the above Society was held in the Grand Hotel on Wednesday,
the 15th instant, the President Dr. S. R. Brown in the Chair. The attendance of
members and friends was unusually large. The minutes of last meeting were read
and approved.
Mr.
Russell Robertson then proceeded to read his interesting paper on "The
Bonin Islands."
On
its conclusion Dr. Brown remarked that he was sure it would not be regarded as
a mere formality, when he said that the Asiatic Society was much indebted to
Mr. Robertson for the elaborate and interesting account he had given of the
Bonin Islands. That group so near to us, and yet out of the usual track of
vessels that traverse the Pacific has long been known to navigators and others,
but the reports respecting the islands have been so fragmentary and scattered,
that it was difficult, if not impossible, to form a correct conception of their
physical characteristics, or of the condition of their inhabitants. Mr.
Robertson has given us, what must have cost him much pains taking, an almost
exhaustive description of these islands, as the result of his research among
books of voyages and travel, and his own careful personal observations,
gathering up into a connected whole all that is known of their past history and
present state. The variety of nationalities among the 69 residents there shows
that whalers have most frequently visited those islands. That little community,
is composed of persons from the United States, Great Britain, France, Germany,
Portugal, the Sandwich Islands, the Ladrones, the Kingsmill and other groups in
the Pacific, as well as Japanese and natives of the Bonin Islands.
The
Japanese Government not long ago made an abortive attempt to colonize those
islands, and perhaps still claims sovereignty over them, but the people on the
Islands it appears prefer to be left to themselves.
Mr.
Robertson's concluding remarks respecting the social, intellectual and moral
condition of those people deserve consideration. Webb, the only man among them
who can read and write, must soon pass away, and there is none to fill his
place in burying their dead or reading the marriage service at their weddings.
It is pitiful to think of the deeper ignorance and degradation into which those
people must of necessity relapse, unless some outside influence intervenes to
prevent it. Mr. Robertson's suggestion that the foreigners in Japan might do
something to improve their condition and prospects, commends itself to all
hearts that have a fellow feeling for their kind.
Dr.
Brown referred to George Horton whose name is mentioned as one of the men
living there a few years ago. He said he knew him, that Horton's history served
to show through what checquered fortunes obscure individuals often pass. He was
left in the Bonin Islands as an invalid at his own request, by Commodore.Perry
in 1853 or 1854. In 1862 he was brought to Yokohama under arrest, in a Japanese
whaling vessel, charged with having made a piratical attempt upon that vessel.
Horton was about 80 years old at the time. Being brought before the United
States Minister for trial, the facts elicited were these. While the Japanese
vessel lay at Port Lloyd, Horton one day was out shooting at a mark with an old
pistol, when a man of the island who had been out on a cruise in the whaler, asked
him to go on board with him and help him to bring off his chest, as he wished
to leave the ship. Horton consented and when the boat drew up along side the
ship, threw his rusty old weapon down in the stern sheets of the boat, and went
up on deck. Here some wordy altercation about the removal of the chest, between
its owner and the Captain, resulted in Horton's being accused of piratical
designs against the ship, and he was tied up with ropes, and made fast to a
spar. In this condition he was brought to Yokohama and handed over to the
United States authorities for trial. A mere look at the shaky decrepit old man
was enough to disprove the charge and he was accordingly acquitted. The
decision of the Court was that Horton should either be replaced in possession
of his clearing and house at the islands, or that $1000 should be deposited
with the American Consul for his support here. The latter alternative was
preferred by the Captain of the ship. Horton was a native of Boston in England,
had at first owned and commanded a vessel, had been a seaman in the British
navy for twenty-five years, was in the battle of Copenhagen, served under
Nelson in the battle of the Nile, and finally had served in the U. S. Navy
eighteen years, when left on the Bonin Islands. He survived his removal to
Yokohama by about two years, and his remains lie interred in the cemetery here.