Thanks For Coming Back! Your Free Allocated Content Will Shortly Be Coming to an End. We would like to give you a 14-Day Free Trial with No Credit Card Required.

Create a profile and unlock personalized features. Receive your personalised daily report. Login to your Personal FEED, Follow and Join Channel VIP Rooms. Comment and be part of our global community. Get access to all member content with No Censorship, Freedom of Speech, No tracking, No algorithms and NO A.I. Plus much more. Click the START button, complete the form below and verify your email address.

This offer expires in
00 00 00

Start your free trial now!
No Payment or Credit Card Required

Already a premium member? Log in here

Skip the Trial - Join Us Now

Join the Worldwide Community That Believe in the Protection of Freedom of Speech

Your Free Allocated Content Has come to an End. However, We would like to give you a 14-Day Free Trial with No Credit Card Required.

Create a profile and unlock personalized features. Receive your personalised daily report. Login to your Personal FEED, Follow and Join Channel VIP Rooms. Comment and be part of our global community. Get access to all member content with No Censorship, Freedom of Speech, No tracking, No algorithms and NO A.I. Plus much more. Click the START button, complete the form below and verify your email address.

This offer expires in
00 00 00

Start your free trial now!
No Payment or Credit Card Required

Already a premium member? Log in here

Skip the Trial - Join Us Now

Join the Worldwide Community That Believe in the Protection of Freedom of Speech

You need to log in to proceed.

Login

Read

General Gates sent to Sydney under guard - Today in History

  • elocal magazine By elocal magazine
  • Apr 17, 2025


17 April 1820

The American sealer General Gates – named for a War of Independence general and commanded by Captain Abimileck Riggs – had sailed from Boston in October 1818. After Riggs persuaded 11 convicts to sign on as crew, the General Gates brought the missionaries Samuel Marsden and John Butler from Sydney to the Bay of Islands in July 1819.

Riggs dropped off two of these men with a sealing gang on an isolated island in the Southern Ocean. The other nine were still on board when HMS Dromedary visited the Bay of Islands in April 1820 during a voyage to investigate the suitability of New Zealand timber for Royal Navy spars.

Riggs had treated the men badly and his cover story soon unravelled. In the first official coercive operation undertaken in New Zealand, he and the General Gates were seized and returned to Sydney, where Riggs was fined heavily and the vessel was detained for nine months.

NZ History

History
New Zealand
Avatar

View elocal magazine’s premium content now…

Get a free 14 day trial (no credit card required)

Already a premium member? Log in here

Skip the Trial - Join Us Now