Showing 2491 results
Authority record- Person
- 1869-1951
Born in Queensland, Australia, educated in Aotearoa/New Zealand. In the 1890s, Ellis became an employee of the Pacific Islands Company Ltd of London, which was involved in the guano industry on islands in the Coral Sea and the Phoenix Group (Kiribati). In 1900, he became curious about a rock which was used as a doorstop in the Sydney office of his company and this led to the discovery of the phosphate deposits on Ocean Island and Nauru. He was a prominent figure in the Pacific Phosphate Company Ltd in 1902. After the phosphate company was bought out by the British, Australian and New Zealand governments after World War I, Ellis became commissioner for New Zealand on the British Phosphate Commission, which was established to exploit the phosphate deposits on Ocean Island and Nauru. He was the author of three books, Ocean Island and Nauru (1936), Adventuring in Coral Seas (1937), and Mid-Pacific Outpost (1946).
- Person
- 1841-1919
John T. Arundel was a leading figure in the Pacific phosphate industry on Kiribati and Nauru. He initially travelled to the Pacific in 1860 and 1868, and established John T. Arundel & Co. in the Pacific 1871 with financial support from Houlder Brothers and Co. In 1897, John T. Arundel & Co merged its business with trading and plantation firm Henderson and Macfarlane. They formed the Pacific Islands Company Ltd (PIC), which was based in London with trading activities in the Pacific, particularly Kiribati. In 1902, PIC became the Pacific Phosphate Company and began phosphate mining on Banaba, Kiribati in 1901 and on Nauru in 1906. Arundel died 30 November 1919 in Bournemouth, England.
- Person
- 1881-1974
George Herbert Eastman ran the London Missionary Society (LMS) Mission in Rarotonga, Cook Islands, 1913-1918. Between 1918 and 1947, he ran the LMS Gilbert Islands [Kiribati] Mission, based at Rongorongo on Beru island. In 1949, Eastman and his wife Winifred (nee Grimwade, married 1914) retired to Swanage in Dorset, England.
- Person
- 1751–1833
Steen Andersen Bille was a Danish naval officer who rose to the rank of Admiral and became a Privy Counselor during Denmark's period of 'armed neutrality' policy following the Gunboat War. Instrumental in rebuilding the Danish Navy after 1814.
- Person
In 1952, Gleeson was Officer in charge of the Economic Branch of the Commonwealth (Australian) Department of Territories.
- Person
- 1949-2023
- Person
- -1961
Father Jean Louis Guinard Sm spent 60 years in Fiji as a priest of the Roman Catholic Mission. He arrived in January 1901 and died in 1961. Forty-two years of his service were spent at Namosi.
- Person
- 1921-2015
Archbishop George Hamilton Pearce was born in Boston. Massachusetts. He was the first Bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Apia, Samoa, and first Archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Suva, Fiji.