Abraham Bristow

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Bornc. 1771
Begbroke, Oxfordshire
DiedOctober 1846
OccupationMariner
Yearsactive1793–1820
Abraham Bristow
Bornc. 1771
Begbroke, Oxfordshire
DiedOctober 1846
OccupationMariner
Years active1793–1820
Known forDiscovery of the Auckland Islands

Abraham Bristow (c. 1771–1846) was a British mariner, sealer and whaler. In August 1806, he was the first European to discover the Auckland Islands.[1][2]

Bristow was baptised 22 March 1771 at Begbroke, Oxfordshire; the fifth child and third son of Abraham Bristow Senior and Rachael Johnson. He had four brothers and four sisters.[3] When he was about 16 years of age Abraham was bound as an apprentice seaman in the Southern Whale Fishery to Messers Enderby of London. He first enters the public record as the chief officer (first mate) aboard the Enderby owned vessel Speedy (Captain Thomas Melville) which left London in December 1793 for Australia, under charter as a government store ship, arriving at Sydney in June 1794 with much needed provisions for the colonists at Port Jackson.[4] After landing its cargo Speedy went whaling off the coast of New South Wales, before crossing the Tasman to New Zealand. The vessel then sailed east across the Pacific to South America. Supplies were obtained at Chile before Speedy cruised for whales off the Galapagos Islands in company with the whaler Emilia.[5] During this voyage they discovered a new whaling ground near the coast of Ecuador, close to the equator, that came to be known as the "On Shore Ground."[6] Speedy returned to London 19 October 1796 with 185 tuns of sperm whale oil and 6,703 seal skins.[7]

Abraham Bristow was in command of Speedy on its next whaling voyage, that began in 1796.[8] By November that year, the vessel was reported in the Pacific between the Juan Fernandez Islands and Easter Island. She returned to London 2 July 1799.

His next command was the Enderby-owned whaler Ocean (243 tons) which departed Britain in May 1800. He called at Sydney on 7 April 1801, with 270 barrels of sperm whale oil aboard, plus casks of salt for salting seal skins.[9] After a few weeks there he departed Port Jackson for the eastern Pacific, returning to London in November 1802.[10]

On 27 April 1797, Bristow married Elizabeth Jones at Bermondsey in London.[3] He departed soon after on another whaling voyage in command of the Ocean, returning in January 1805.

Discovery of the Auckland Islands

Later maritime career

References

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