New Britain & New Ireland Provinces Photo Gallery
Gallery 1. Duk Duk- Ella Lucas
The photos were taken by the English policeman who was based at Tomarenga and as I said approx. 1964. We were based at Navunram (my Ron was head teacher ) we were there 1961 to 1965. Notice all the shell money! I think a lot of the men were from Navunaram. It was the time that the fire dancers were very “big” at the Warangoi as well. I am sure some of the Diddimen or kiaps who were based in that area at that time would have more information.
Gallery 2. Queen Emma – 1878/1944- Max Uechtritz
Emma and Phoebe were daughters to Joana Coe née Le’utu, of Samoa’s Malietoa Royal family, and Jonas Myndersee Coe, the US Consul in Apia. Jonas married six times and had 18 children.
Emma was born on 26 September 1850 and died 21 July 1913. Her sister, Phoebe, was born 5 June 1863 and died 28 May 1944. They shared three sisters and three brothers from their father’s first of six marriages.
Emma was married twice: first to James Forsayth and then to Paul Kolbe. She had two children from her first marriage. Her son, James Myndersee Coe-Forsayth, survived Emma, however her daughter died very young.
Emma has been referred to as “the epitome of promiscuity” because of her many known and alleged “liaisons” and “dalliances”.
Phoebe had 12 children: three girls and five boys, although three died very young. She married a Danish scientist, Richard Heinrich Parkinson, from the Danish Royal family, author of Dreissig Jahre in der Sudsee (Thirty Years in the South Seas) which was first published in 1907.
Emma was schooled in San Francisco and Sydney at Catholic schools, experiences she did not enjoy. After the death of her first husband, James Forsayth, Emma had a de facto relationship with Thomas Farrell. Their business venture in and around Samoa failed. A German firm, DHPG, offered Farrell and Emma a franchise on Mioko, Duke of York Islands, East New Britain, Papua New Guinea. This move proved to be very fortuitous for Emma.
Emma was a very shrewd, entrepreneurial person who worked for and against whoever suited her ambitions at the time. These included commercial enterprises, royalty, local tribes, head-men, government agencies and religious organizations. She began her “empire” on Mioko, Duke of York Islands, in 1878. As well as acquiring instant wealth from the debris of the Marquis De Rays expedition, Emma saw the value in drying coconuts for copra. She acquired land on the Gazelle Peninsula, where she had her mansion Gunantambu built at Ralum in 1886, equipped in part with furnishings of Robert Louis Stevenson which she purchased in Samoa. Over the years Emma’s ’empire” consisted of more than 60 000 hectares of plantations over many areas of New Britain, New Ireland, Bougainville and various smaller islands. Emma had a personal bodyguard of Buka boys armed with rifles. She cleverly registered her land with the American consul in Sydney. It is estimated that she employed more than 1000 nationals and about 50 whites to manage and operate her holdings. As well as copra, Emma dabbled in cocoa, cotton, kapok, vanilla and trepang amongst other investments.
Gunantambu was the social hub of the Gazelle Peninsula for many years, with many stories and scandals to boot. In 1890, Kokopo (Herbertshohe) was established and Emma had the first hotel built there in 1900 called the Hotel Furst-Bismarck (situated near the site of the current Kokopo Beach Resort). By 1909, Emma was nearly blind and suffering from diabetes. She sold her estate to Rudolf Wahlen for approximately DM 4 million. Emma lived in Prince Albert Street, Mosman, for a while. She visited Monte Carlo in 1913 with husband Paul Kolbe who died two days before Emma. The official death certificate discounts the many rumours surrounding their deaths. They were cremated and buried at Ralum. In 1924 their son reinterred the urns at Old South Head cemetery in Sydney landmarked by two very large, ornate headstones.
Phoebe was recognized by all and sundry as a benevolent, caring and sensitive person. She was known to many of the locals on the Gazelle as “Miti” (lady of high stature). Educated at a Samoan Catholic school, Phoebe showed a different personality to her rebellious sister Emma. Phoebe went to Mioko in 1881. She and her husband Richard were employed by Emma to plant the first commercial plantations in PNG. Richard undertook many scientific investigations and studies. Phoebe raised her children (as well as countless orphans and relatives) and recruited labourers for the workforce. Phoebe and Richard had similar bodyguards to Emma. The family lived at Malapau then Kuradui. In 1909 Richard died of framboesia. After WW1 and expropriations, Phoebe found herself destitute and lived with some of her children at Sum Sum Plantation; with her grandson Rudi Diercke near Kieta; Portland Island, New Hanover; Komalu Plantation, west New Ireland and finally imprisoned with Rudi at Bo Prisoner-Of-War camp, Namatanai, east New Ireland. Phoebe died in the POW camp in 1944 and was buried by Rudi.
Locating the gravesite post WW2 was difficult until finally in 2002, Phoebe’s grave was discovered and her remains reinterred next to Richard’s grave at the Kuradui family cemetery (refer ABC-tv’s Australian Story, “Finding Phoebe”, 29 March 2004).
Of Phoebe’s three daughters, Helene (Nellie) was quite infamous. Amongst a number of incidents, Nellie was gaoled in Rabaul for one month after whipping a German officer who tried to take advantage of Nellie’s younger sister Dolly. Nellie was charged with “disparaging behaviour towards the uniform of the Emperor and for insulting an officer of the Emperor”. The German officer had to leave the army because he was publicly humiliated by a woman!
According to a Dr Burger from Stuttgart who was visiting Nellie in 1912, along with her husband Carl Diercke and son Rudi at Tinputz, Bougainville, he saw Nellie physically beat a local male because he was being foolhardy with her horse. The assaulted man gathered his clan, and fully armed they advanced on Nellie threatening to kill her. Nellie mounted her horse, drew out her pistol, fired into the air several times and ordered the locals to drop their arms and go home. They did! Dr Burger decided to paint a picture of the event.
Summary by Chris Diercke. Chris, born in Kokopo, ENB, is Phoebe’s great grandson, Nellie’s grandson and Rudi’s son.
Gallery 3. Snaps from a Missionary’s Camera
John Harold Margetts
John Harold Margetts was born at Higham, near Chester, England, on 17 May 1884. He studied for the ministry of the Methodist Church at Queen’s College, and came to Australia as a minister in 1910. In 1913 he went to German New Guinea as a Methodist Missionary and was stationed on Neu Pommern (New Britain). In 1914 he was given the additional role of Chaplain to the ANMEF (Australian Naval & Military Expedionary Force). He served for twenty-two years in German New Guinea and then, following the mandate given to Australia by the League of Nations at the end of WW1, the Mandated Territory of New Guinea, at several centres on New Britain and in the Duke of York Islands. He became fluent in the language of the Tolai, Kuanua or Tinata Tuna, which served as the main language of the Methodist Mission, and wrote a number of hymns in that language.
He was a devoted pastor and a man of gentle nature. In the late 1920s he was appointed Chairman of the District, but this administrative position, in which hard decisions had sometimes to be made or persons disciplined, did not suit his nature, and he was glad to return to pastoral work when another Chairman was available. When Rabaul’s indigenous workers went on strike for higher wages in 1929, they gathered at Catholic and Methodist Mission centres on the outskirts of Rabaul. Margetts listened sympathetically to those who gathered at the Methodist centre, Malakuna, and visited the Administrator’s office to plead for them not to be punished. He then advised the strikers to return to work; when they said they were afraid they would be beaten, he personally shepherded them back to their places of work in the town, again pleading for them to be treated leniently. For this, he was verbally attacked by many Australian residents, and his pleas were generally disregarded. It was said that “He wasn’t a very effective Chairman, but he was so kindhearted he wouldn’t hurt a fly.” Margetts died at Kabakada on 14 July 1935, and was buried in the European Cemetery, Rabaul. He was survived by his wife Adelaide, who returned to Australia.
(Our thanks to Rev. Neville Threlfall for the above information)
Gallery 4. PNG Memories - Rabaul- Keith Boulton
Gallery 5. Rabaul War Relics – 1969-77 PNG Aviation
Dennis Gray
Gallery 6. Rabaul Tsunami - 1971- George Oakes
George Oakes writes:
“This took place in July/August 1971. There were a lot of earthquakes at the same time. As I understand it, the tsunami was caused by a submarine landslide in the Solomon Sea to the SE of Rabaul. The water in the harbour started rising about lunch time and rose to about 11 feet above normal tide level, then started to recede to about 11 feet below normal tide level. It then came in again to a lesser height (about 10 feet) and so on. This cycle from the highest point to the next highest point took approximately 1.5 hours. This backwards and forwards motion continued into the night until the sea settled back to normal.”
George was born in Rabaul in 1934 and joined what became DDA in 1954. He later transferred to Business Development as Principal Finance Officer and departed PNG in 1975. Postings included Mendi, Lumi, Nuku, Pomio, Kokopo, Rabaul, Lae, and Port Moresby.
Gallery 7. Rabaul before the eruption- Andrea Williams
Gallery 8. Rabaul 1994 Eruption- Chris Read
Gallery 9. Rabaul, Kokopo, and Port Moresby-
Andrea Williams
The PNG National Gamefishing Titles were held in Rabaul during Easter 2008 making a good excuse for my husband, Laurie, and I to visit and catch up with old friends – those who still lived there and others who had also returned for the Titles.
The National Titles are held in Rabaul once every few years – sharing with Pt Moresby, Lae and Madang, with Alotau proposed to join in in the future.
Matupit was mesmerizing as it continually roared and erupted whilst we were there but we also visited the New Guinea Club which now houses a wonderful collection of historic memorabilia collated by the Rabaul Historical Society. We ventured up to Namanula, then over the Nordup Road to Tavui (Sub Base) where my father’s family home was located before WWII. On to Bitapaka War Cemetery, still a very beautiful and peaceful space to reflect on the tragedies touching Rabaul’s history.
Finally Kokopo and the Ralum Club with the golf course and Queen Emma’s steps nearby, Vunapope Mission, the market, and the Kokopo War Museum (well worth a visit).
A highlight of our visit was a Bainings firedance – the fire crackled whilst the dancers responded to the crescendos of the singers and their continual beat.
I had visited Rabaul in 2005 but, for Laurie, this was his first visit in over 20 years and it was great to be back!’
Andrea Williams (née Coote)