Collection MS 1381 - Papers on the Solomon Islands and other Pacific Islands

Companion of the Order of Saint Michael and Saint George Bundle of photographs and native story as told by native. Correspondence to Charlie and Harold Woodford from their father, C.M. Woodford, May 1910-Aug 1913 Correspondence to and from C.M. Woodford, Jun 1910-Sep 1914 Genealogies and documents relating to family history Harold Vivian Woodford Solomon Islands Philately Honours and appointments, C. M. Woodford Missions Proclamations issued by Sir George O’Brien, High Commissioner for the Western Pacific
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AU PMB MS 1381

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Papers on the Solomon Islands and other Pacific Islands

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  • 1852-1927 (Creation)

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240 volumes

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(1852-1927)

Biographical history

Charles Morris Woodford was born in 1852 and educated at Tonbridge School in England. He settled in Suva about 1882 and from Fiji visited Kiribati (the Gilbert Islands group), as Government agent on the ketch Patience. In 1886, as a fellow of the Royal Geographical Society he made the first of three successive explorations of the Solomon Islands, especially Guadalcanal, where he was the first white man to penetrate the interior to any distance, collecting natural history specimens for the British Museum. His experiences are described in his book A Naturalist Among Headhunters (1890). In 1895 Woodford became Acting Consul and Deputy Commissioner at Samoa, and in the following year, a part of the Solomon Group having been made a British Protectorate, he was appointed the first Resident Commissioner, a post which he retained until his retirement in 1914. His later years were spent in Sussex.
Woodford contributed an account of his visit to the Gilbert Islands to The Geographical Journal in 1895, and a note on Ontong Java in 1909. In 1916 he read a paper to the Royal Geographical Society on Polynesian settlements in the Solomon Islands, published in the Journal in 1926. Woodford helped elucidate the narratives of Mandaña’s discovery of the Solomon Islands by identifying places visited by the Spaniards and taking photographs for inclusion in the Hakluyt Society publications. He also published papers in the Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, of which he was a Fellow.
From The Geographical Journal, 1928, pp.206-207.

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Pacific Research Archives, Australian National University Archives Program.

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Access this title at PMB Member Libraries or by purchasing it directly from the Bureau: http://asiapacific.anu.edu.au/pambu/accessing.php

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See also: PMB 1021, PMB 1290

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