03014nkc a22002177i 4500001000700000008004100007040002600048100006800074245003600142264001400178300004000192336002800232337002300260338003200283500002400315506002800339533007700367540031300444545189100757856014802648261588220927k18691870xx 000 0|zxx d aANU:PMBcANU:PMBerda1 aSterndale, Handley Bathurstd1 November 1833 - 25 December 187810a'A mound built ruin.' c1869-1870 a1 digitised drawing in NEF and JPEG astill image2rdacontent acomputer2rdamedia aonline resource2rdacarrier aAU PMB PHOTO 129-14 aAvailable for reference aElectronic reproduction:bCanberra :cPacific Manuscripts Bureau, d2022 aAvailable for referenceuSterndale's text and drawings copyright Bridget Davis. Other text quoted from 'A Paradise of the Gods. Writings and Drawings of Handley Bathurst Sterndale' (PMB MS 1442) is copyright J.J. Overell. PMB copyright policy http://asiapacific.anu.edu.au/pambu/copyright.php.0 aHandley Bathurst Sterndale was born in India in 1833, where his father worked as an indigo planter. He was educated in Britain, but ran away to sea at the age of 16. He travelled to the Americas, where he undertook a variety of employment, including labour in Panama and as a mercenary in Nicaragua. Sterndale probably first arrived in the Pacific in the 1850s where he worked in the trade of shell and beche-de-mer. He also worked for plantations in the labour trade, also known as blackbirding. He married Helen Matilda Caulton in Melbourne, Australia in 1867. In 1870, Sterndale spent some months working as a surveyor for the German trading company Goddefroy & Sohn who sought to establish plantations on the island of Upolo, Samoa. During this time, he made the journey across Upolo - likely in his capacity as a surveyor – and made notes and sketches of the expedition. In 1871, on Motu Kotawa on the islet of Pukapuka atoll in the Cook Islands, he wrote the manuscript ‘Upolu; or, A Paradise of the Gods’ and worked his sketches into finished drawings. In that same year, Sterndale published the first of what became regular articles under the title, ‘My Adventures and Researches in the Pacific’ in the ‘Australian Town and Country Journal’. He wrote under the pseudonym ‘A Master Mariner’. Sterndale also wrote for the New Zealand newspaper ‘The Daily Southern Cross’ and ‘The New Zealand Herald’. In 1872, Sterndale worked as an agent for King Cakobau of Fiji and in 1874 entered a joint venture with Thomas Henderson, of New Zealand company Henderson and Macfarlane, to develop the Cook Islands atoll of Suwarrow. This ended in a dramatic conflict between the two, with the Sterndales forced to return to New Zealand. He later moved to San Francisco, probably to remedy his poor health, but he died there on Christmas Day, 1878 at the age of 45.41uhttp://asiapacific.anu.edu.au/pambu/digital/catalogue/index.php/a-mound-built-ruinzView this item in the Pacific Manuscripts Bureau Catalogue.