IDNO
N.130989.HNL
Description
View of a Colombian dugout canoe on the shore at Charcas, Colombia. [FC 16/3/2016]
Place
S America; Colombia; Charcas
Cultural Affliation
Named Person
Photographer
Hornell, James
Collector / Expedition
Hornell, James; [St. George Expedition, Organised by the Scientific Expeditionary Research Association and under the direction of Commander D. Blair, O.BE., R.N.R.]
Date
?1924
Collection Name
Hornell Collection
Source
Hornell, Charlotte (Mrs)
Format
Film Negative Black & White
Primary Documentation
Other Information
N.130985.HNL - P.131070.HNL were found unaccessioned in Drawer C.42.2 of the Photo Store, in a cardboard box, now numbered C696/.
Related Archive: James Hornell's papers at University Library, Cambridge, ref 10065 Box 8, contains references to the St. George 10 month South Pacific Scientific Expedition, Summer 1924 - Summer 1925.
In "Outrigger Devices: Distribution and Origin" by James Hornell in Journal of the Polynesian Society, Vol. 52, No. 3 (September, 1943), pp. 91-100, "That the double-outrigger originated from a balancing-device as described, finds confirmation in the story of an incipient form of double-outrigger which I met with in Colombia (S.A) in 1924. At the town of Charcas, a few miles from the mouth of the river Iscuande, I found many small dugout canoes with a balance-pole of light balsa-wood lashed to the outside of the gunwale on each side (see text-fig.)." (97).
A newspaper clipping "St. George for England", from the Trinidad Guardian, Tuesday, May 27, 1924 in the notebook ""St. George" Expedition. Trinidad, Panama and Gorgona. 1924" describes the British Yacht St. George as, "...a beautiful and comfortably fitted up brigantine--rigged craft of 1,000 tons with auxiliary steam power engines, registered at 800 horse power." The St. George was built in the 1890s and was a unit of the Royal Thames Yacht Club. The project cost £50,000, coming from private donations. The endeavour of the voyage was to "enrich the national collections... and arouse the nation's interest in scientific wok which has been neglected".
A newspaper clipping from "Observer", 6/1/24, found in the notebook "Madeira - 1924", as well as the newspaper clipping "St. George for England", from the Trinidad Guardian, Tuesday, May 27, 1924 in the notebook ""St. George" Expedition. Trinidad, Panama and Gorgona. 1924", revealed that the St. George, South Pacific Scientific Expedition was headed by Commander David Blair, R.N.R., F.R.G.S.. The crew members and their jobs included: Major A. J. A. Douglas, F.R.G.S. was in charge of the landing parties. Pay-Lieutenant F. W. Kealey. R.N.V.R. (great-great-grand-nephew of the famous Captain John [sic? James?] Cook) was the organising secretary, Mr. James Hornell (late Director of Fisheries, Madras) was in charge of Ethnology, Dr. Cyril Crossland was in charge of Marine Biology, Mr. P. H. Johnson was in charge of General Biology, Lt.-Col. H. J. Kelsall was in charge of Ornithology, Miss L. E. Cheesman was in charge of Entomology, Mr. Laurence A. M. Riley was in charge of Botany, Mr. Larwence J. Chubb was in charge of Geology, Colonel F. S. Penny acted as Surgeon, Mr. Alfred Duggan (son of Marchioness Curzon of Kedleston) was a member of the party, Messrs. S. L. Eaton and W. Harcourt were the Cinema Operators, and Mr. Dawson served as the Artist completing drawings for the purpose of illustrating books and other forms of literature that would be compiled from the voyage. The itinerary showed the St. George sailed out of Dartmouth on 9th April 1924, reached Madeira by 25 April 1924, and then sailed to Trinidad, the Panama Canal, the Galapagos, the island of Gorgona and Malpelo, Easter Island, Mangareva, Pitcairn, the Austral Islands and Papau. This was followed by Tahiti and the Cork Group for stores, following which the St. George would begin the return trip, visiting several atolls in the Tuamatus, the Marquesas and Cocos Island, before reaching London via the Panama Canal and the Azores by summer 2015. [FC 4/5/2016]
FM:265673
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