C1847

View of Port Nicholson from the Range of Hills Wes…

Scarce hand coloured c.19th engraved view looking over what is now known as Wellington Bay. Collections: Alexander Turnbull Library: P f919.31 BRE 1847 National Library Australia: Bib ID 151897 National Library New Zealand: State Library New South Wales: CALL NUMBERS … Read Full Description

$A 195

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S/N: PIONZ-045-NZN–221304
(C031)
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Details

Full Title:

View of Port Nicholson from the Range of Hills Wes…

Date:

C1847

Condition:

In good condition.

Technique:

Hand coloured engraving.

Image Size: 

185mm 
x 115mm

Paper Size: 

220mm 
x 125mm
AUTHENTICITY
View of Port Nicholson from the Range of Hills West of the Ohiro Valley. - Antique View from 1847

Genuine antique
dated:

1847

Description:

Scarce hand coloured c.19th engraved view looking over what is now known as Wellington Bay.

Collections:
Alexander Turnbull Library: P f919.31 BRE 1847
National Library Australia: Bib ID 151897
National Library New Zealand:
State Library New South Wales: CALL NUMBERS F84/6
State Library Victoria: CCF 919.31 B74P

References:
Bagnall, New Zealand Bibliography to the year 1960 Wellington: 641

Samuel Charles Brees (1809 - 1865)

Samuel Brees arrived in Wellington in 1842 to fill the position of surveyor and civil engineer for the New Zealand Company. During his time in Wellington he was responsible for continuing the work of his predecessor, William Mein Smith, surveying the Karori Road and the hills surrounding Wellington Harbour. He oversaw the completion of the initial Wanganui and Manawatu surveys. In 1843 he led an exploratory journey to the southern Wairarapa through Upper Hutt and the Rimutaka range, and prepared the preliminary subdivisions of these areas. By August 1844, six months before Brees’s contract was due to expire, the New Zealand Company was in financial difficulties and was no longer able to pay him. Throughout his period as principal surveyor he had given as much of his spare time as possible to his favourite leisure activity of recording his surroundings in pencil and watercolour. The ending of his employment freed him to devote more time to painting, while he settled his affairs and arranged for his family’s return passage to England. He had produced a substantial portfolio of views of all the areas he had visited, particularly scenes in and around Wellington. These works would normally have become the property of the New Zealand Company, but the company waived its claim to them in the expectation that Brees would publish the sketches and be somewhat compensated for the loss of income he had suffered through the early termination of his contract. On 8 May 1845 Brees, with his wife, now four children, and a servant, sailed on the brig Caledonia for London. His drawings were superbly engraved by Henry Melville in London and remain an important record of early Colonial settlement in New Zealand.

View other items by Samuel Charles Brees

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