Molokani

Note relating to the named image states that Molokani Island is one of the Penrhyn group. Another photo is of two lepers on Motokani island. (See PA1-q-0632)

There are 4 related items to this topic
Image

[Molokani, the leper colony in Penrhyn atoll, during the visit of HMS Mildura with Lord...

Date: [14 October 1900]

From: Ross, Malcolm 1862-1930 :Photographs by Malcolm Ross of New Zealanders in the Great War, Maori, mountaineering, New Zealand scenery, etc

Reference: 1/2-021248-G

Description: Photograph of Molokani, the leper colony in Penrhyn atoll, taken on 14 October 1900 by Malcolm Ross on the cruise of HMS Mildura to the Cook Islands, Niue and Tonga, October 1900, during which the Cook Islands and Niue were annexed on behalf of New Zealand. During the Mildura's visit to Penrhyn, on Sunday 14 October 1900, Malcolm Ross, Charles Hill-Trevor and Surgeon May of the Mildura visited by sailing boat the leper colony on an island on the opposite side of the lagoon from the main settlement (Source: Hill-Trevor album 2, PA1-f-143, pp 18-20). Quantity: 1 b&w original negative(s). Physical Description: Dry plate glass negative 4.75 x 6.5 inches

Image

[The leper island, Penrhyn, during the visit of HMS Mildura with Lord Ranfurly and party]

Date: [14 October 1900]

From: Ranfurly family: Collection

Reference: PA1-q-633-28

Description: Clipping from The Press, comprising a report by Malcolm Ross on the voyage to Penrhyn, and two photographs taken by Malcolm Ross on the cruise of HMS Mildura to the Cook Islands, Niue and Tonga, October 1900, during which the Cook Islands and Niue were annexed on behalf of New Zealand. The upper photograph (PA1-q-633-28-1) shows the leper island in the Penrhyn atoll, 14 October 1900. The lower photograph (PA1-q-633-28-2) shows the village on the leper island in the Penrhyn atoll, 14 October 1900. Photographs identified from PA1-f-143, pp 17-24 During the Mildura's visit to Penrhyn, on Sunday 14 October 1900, Malcolm Ross, Charles Hill-Trevor and Surgeon May of the Mildura visited by sailing boat the leper colony on an island on the opposite side of the lagoon from the main settlement (Source: Hill-Trevor album 2, PA1-f-143, pp 18-20). Physical Description: Clipping and two photographic prints mounted on album page, 253 x 314 mm (page size)

Image

[The leper island, Penrhyn, during the visit of HMS Mildura with Lord Ranfurly and party]

Date: [14 October 1900]

From: Ranfurly family: Collection

Reference: PA1-q-633-29

Description: Clipping from The Press, comprising a report by Malcolm Ross on the voyage to Penrhyn, and a photograph taken by Malcolm Ross on the cruise of HMS Mildura to the Cook Islands, Niue and Tonga, October 1900, during which the Cook Islands and Niue were annexed on behalf of New Zealand. Photographs identified from PA1-f-143, pp 17-24 During the Mildura's visit to Penrhyn, on Sunday 14 October 1900, Malcolm Ross, Charles Hill-Trevor and Surgeon May of the Mildura visited by sailing boat the leper colony on an island on the opposite side of the lagoon from the main settlement (Source: Hill-Trevor album 2, PA1-f-143, pp 18-20). Physical Description: Clipping and one photographic print mounted on album page, 253 x 314 mm (page size)

Image

Album recording the ceremonies annexing the Cook and Niue islands, and HMS Mildura's re...

Date: 1900

From: NZ Parliamentary Library :Two albums. Construction on the Dunedin and Moeraki Railway, and the annexation of the Cook Islands

By: Baynes, Henry Compton Anderson, active 1900; Burton Brothers (Dunedin, N.Z.); May, Percival, active 1900; Muir & Moodie (Firm); T B Banks and Company

Reference: PA1-q-632

Description: Views of annexation ceremonies, of the local people and their leaders, of Lord Ranfurly and his party which included Naval personel from the Mildura who added presence to the occasions and raised flags during the ceremonies. There are photographs of two lepers on Molokani Island in the Penryn group and the Governor on a pearl shell diving boat on Manihiki. On the way back to New Zealand the Mildura stoped at the Kermadec Islands. Photographs were taken of Sunday (Raoul) and Macaulay Islands, and of the crater on Curtis Island. This part of the album ends with the Mildura in Lyttelton Harbour and the Governor coming ashore in a boat. Most of the rest are scenic shots of the Tourist highlights of New Zealand. There are three photographs of women crossing the Tasman Glacier and boiling a billy. The album ends with a group of photographs of the Channel Islands According to a note at the front of the album, all photographs, other than the New Zealand scenic tourist shots, were taken either by Captain Baynes or P M May, Surgeon, both of HMS Mildura. However, this is one of several albums recording the annexation of the Cook Islands held in the Photograph Archive. Many of the same images occur in all of them and a large number of these came from negatives held in the Malcolm Ross Collection. Malcolm Ross was a New Zealand Journalist who as the correspondent for the Times news paper, accompanied Lord Ranfurly's party on the Mildura, and was responsible for photographing the occasion. Quantity: 1 album(s) Album(s). Provenance: This album was offered to the National Library of New Zealand by Isabel Baynes, probably the widow of Captain Baynes. It was selected with some other items in July 1935 by Dr Scholefield, New Zealand Parliamentary Librarian, during a visit to Hampton Court Palace where Isabel Baynes lived. From 1935 to 1998 the album was housed in the New Zealand Parliamentary Library.