Member Login
Username:Password:
or Sign up here
Discover

DE RAYS EXPEDITION

A map of de Rays' "Mythical Empire" of ''La Nouvelle France''

The 'Third de Rays Expedition', or simply the 'de Rays Expedition' is the third New Guinea expedition of Marquis de Rays, a French nobleman who attempted to start a colony in the South Pacific. History and Passenger Lists of the Marquis de Ray Expedition to New Ireland in 1880 story of the Italian settlement near Woodburn, NSW The expedition attempted to establish a colony in a place the marquis called ''La Nouvelle France'' The Voyage or New France, ITALIAN PIONEERS, From the forthcoming publication, The Australian People, which was the island now referred to as New Ireland in the Bismark Archipelago of present day Papua New Guinea. Three hundred and forty Italian colonists, aboard the ship ''India'' set sail from Barcelona in 1880 for this new land, seeking relief from the poor conditions in Italy at that time. One hundred and twenty-three colonists died before being rescued by Australian authorities. The marquis is widely believed to have deliberately misled the colonists, distributing literature claiming a bustling settlement existed at Port Breton, near present day Kavieng, which had numerous public buildings, wide roads, and rich, arable land.

Contents
The Paradise of New France
The voyage
Settlement in Port Breton
The voyage to Nouméa
Settlement in New Italy
References
See also

The Paradise of New France


Advertising material depicting colonists at Port Breton distributed in Europe in the late 19th century

In 1879, advertising was distributed widely throughout Europe by the Marquis telling of a paradise empire called New France. The advertising was cleverly worded, and described the capital, Port Breton as a bustling new colony, which had been successfully colonised by two prior expeditions. The advertising described majestic public buildings and a beautiful climate, similar to that of the French Riviera. There were also reports of great wide roads and arable farmland.
Three hundred and forty colonists from Veneto in Italy joined the expedition, and each paid the marquis 1800 francs in gold, or were allowed the option to offer their services in labour for five years. For this trade they were offered twenty hectares of land and a four roomed house, as well as transport to the new colony and rations amounting to six months for those who paid in gold, and five years for those who offered their labour. The marquis received over seven million francs for his four ill fated expeditions.
The governments of both France and Italy claimed the expedition was a scam, and announced they would not allow the voyage to take place, citing the safety of the Italians. The Royal Investigation Bureau in Milan went as far as to order a directive that no Italian involved in the expedition would be issued a passport for travel. Many colonists did not believe the authorities, and De Rays organised the voyage to depart from Barcelona in Spain to avoid confrontation with the French and Italian authorities.

The voyage


Fifty families were sent to Barcelona and Boarded the ''India'' bound for Port Breton.
The voyage to New France aboard the ''India'' left on the 9th of July, 1880. The journey to New Ireland took more than three months, and colonists were forced to live on board in appalling, cramped conditions. Disease and tension were rife on the ship, and ventilation and rations were in short supply, causing deaths in transit. The ship, and more than three hundred colonists made landfall on the 14th of October, 1880.

Settlement in Port Breton


The colonists, upon arriving in Port Breton, discovered there was no town, settlement, or empire of New France. Housing had not been built for them as promised, and they were able to salvage from the now derelict ''India'' and the remains of the two previous expeditions some three weeks supplies, New Ireland Province bricks, notebooks and the makings of a mill. The mill was never used and parts of the grindstone can still be found at Kavieng, But the stone itself is mounted as a memorial in Rabaul.[1]
New Ireland is mostly dense jungle, and the settlers were unable to carve out the farmland they had been promised. Many started to fall sick, after their weakening journey on the ''India'' and were unable to ward off new tropical diseases such as malaria. Starvation was also a major concern, and there were also some reports of clashes with the indigenous Papua New Guinean population. About a hundred settlers died in Port Breton from disease and malnutrition.
After two months, a smaller previous expedition ship, the ''Genil'' was sent out in desperation from the failed colony to find food and supplies. Settlers waited two more months for its return before casting off on the ''India'' to try and find a nearby colony that could house the starving refugees. There were now just over two hundred and thirty settlers remaining. In a strange twist of events, the ''Genil'' arrived back at the port on the same day the ''India'' left, but the two ships did not sight each other.

The voyage to Nouméa


Settlers reportedly instructed the captain of the ''India'' to set sail for Sydney in Australia, but instead, the ship was sailed to Nouméa in the French colony of New Caledonia, which was at that time a penal colony. The settlers hoped to continue to Sydney, but the French authorities declared the ''India'' unseaworthy, and refused to allow it to leave port. Due to an apparent dislike of the French, and a desire to not reside in a penal colony, the Italians appealed to the British consul for aid. Sir Henry Parkes, the colonial secretary of New South Wales responded to their request and arranged travel for the settlers on the ''James Patterson'' to Sydney. Two hundred and seventeen settlers remained upon arrival in Sydney.

Settlement in New Italy


The colonists found themselves in temporary accommodations for a short while, in the Old Agricultural Hall, Migration as a media storm swelled around them. Eventually they were hired out by the colony to English-speaking families for thirty pounds a year, in an attempt to force the Italians to assimilate into Australian culture. Families were torn apart, and many of the colonists hoped to settle an area of New South Wales, as enough skilled tradesmen existed among the settlers to form an established settlement. Some colonists, hearing of land becoming available in the north, surveyed and individually claimed areas that collectively formed a 3000 acre parcel, and established the settlement of New Italy on the Richmond River near Woodburn in 1882. Many of the former colonists moved to that area.
The settlement is now deserted, but a museum exists on the site.

References



1. Photograph of the Stone grinding wheel from Marquis de Rays' doomed New Ireland settlement


See also



Marquis de Ray

Italian Australians

New Ireland

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.