A Daughter of the Captain of Fortrose

Monday, August 26, 2013
On a windy, freezing cold night we blew into a country bed and breakfast in the heart of the Catlins. It had taken some finding in the dark, with four children sleeping in the back.  As the hostess came over to our little cottage to welcome us, I opened the door and said hello.
"Are you  a descendant of the Captain?" She asked smiling widely, as she handed me some extra blankets.
I nodded, thrilled. "Yes, yes I am." I replied.
"Let me shake your hand." she said.
I was rather thrilled to find that my Great great great Grandfather James Wybrow was still respected and revered by the community over a hundred years later.
We had come to the Catlins to find him.


James Wybrow, the son of a hardened criminal, and convict parents was born in Australia in 1814.
He came to New Zealand as a young man and worked in the whaling trade in Southland.

I love my family history - not for the tedium of reciting dates and times and places, but because I see them as real people. I have a connection to them. Their blood, whether good or bad, runs in my veins. I love the stories behind their lives. The family legends and the family pride. In fact, I love family history, even if it's not my own family. I do believe that every life is extraordinary. Every single person that has lived on the earth has a story to tell. There's a richness in the past. There's a strange feeling in getting to know your ancestors and who they were. Like reaching back into time and grasping hold of their courage and their love and their struggles and their strength and taking some of that for yourself. Like the years slip away and they are there before you. We were their future. We were their hope of a better world.

James comes with his own legends. A larger than life man, who widowed with three young sons, married my Great great Grandmother, Elizabeth Newton. A Stewart Island girl, daughter of a Maori woman and a Scottish man. She was 13 when she married James. Thirteen!

I have heard that he was good friends with my G, G, G, Grandfather George Newton. Maybe they used to work together in their business of whaling and timber milling. I imagine him sailing over to the Island in a little boat and getting to know the family. Apparently, my family - my Maori family on Stewart Island had a reputation for their hospitality. Nobody ever left their home empty-handed. And so I think of James meeting the young girl, Elizabeth and taking her for a bride. How young is that, to be marrying and perhaps raising three young boys who were not her own.

James and Elizabeth moved to the lower part of the Catlins and set up their  home. They founded the little seaside village of Fortrose.



One of the stories about James gives testament to his humanity and his kindness. When the SS Tararua was wrecked off the coast of Waipapa Point and all on board were lost, James wrapped himself in coils of rope and anchoring himself to the beach helped to bring in the many dead bodies of sailors and men and women and children. The account tells of the nightmares he endured for many months afterwards. What a dreadful task, but one that makes me feel proud of him.

James and Elizabeth had 7 children, one of whom was my Great great grandmother Isabella.

We have a very rare photograph of Elizabeth. Someone sent it to me by email a few months ago. What a treasure.


My own Grandmother said her mother used to talk about her grandmother, Elizabeth, as a warm and caring woman. What a heritage. If there was to be only one thing about you to be passed on to your descendants, don't you think that 'warm and caring' is the best tribute of all. What a dynamic couple she and James must have been. What strength and what leadership. I am proud to be counted among their children. To be a daughter of the Captain.

19 comments :

betty-NZ said...

What an amazing part of your family history!

Nicky said...

You have a wonderful gift for sharing this part of your family history. I have been told of an ancestor of mine being one who rode for help following the wreck of the SS Tararua. So nice to see a map where I can pick out our farm on it too....
Thanks for a heart-warming tale.

BigT said...

Hi. I too am descended from Elizabeth and James and Isabella. It was great to read your account.

Anonymous said...

Kia ora :) I descend from the earlier marriage you speak of from James Wybrow II and Sarah Perkins. The James Wybrow you speak of helping with the Tararua wreckage- that was James Wybrow 2nd as the wreckage happened three years after James 1st passed. I was lucky enough to grow up in the Catlins- Waikawa where James and Sarah moved eventually- if your ever in the area again its always nice to meet whanau!

Anonymous said...

Kia ora I descend also from the earlier marriage from james wybrow II and Sarah Perkins. My grandmother was Catherine Wybrow alos known as Kate. There is a picture of her in the Waikawa museum

Anonymous said...

Hello, this was a great read. I too descend from the first marriage and from James Duffy Wybrow and Sarah Perkins. My great grandfather was Stanley Wybrow. Any information would be greatly appreciated as my family doesn't know too much of the family history. jamiewybrow@hotmail.com thanks, Jamie

Unknown said...

She was my Aunty Kate ,my dad's sister

Unknown said...

I think he was my Dad's cousin, George Wybrow, was he a wood chopper?

Unknown said...

I think he was my dad's Uncle or cousin George Wybrow.

Bec todd said...

Thank you for this! I am also a descendant of james wybrow and Elizabeth:)

Joseph Trevathan said...

I too am a descendant of Captain James Wybrow, I guess there are quite a few of us running around out there. We weren’t raised with many stories of our heritage so I look for these tidbits every chance I get. I even visited the waikawa museum recently which was a beautiful eye opener.

Anonymous said...

cheers kiaora whanau i am happily a descendant of cpt Wybrow linking up to his marriage of princess temuk a survivor of the kati mamoe tribe the lost tribe, her blood managed to survive and ended up settling at papatowai resting in peace on the other side of the waterway that fills the estury, the maori wars clash near the otago southland border famously known for the preparedness of the stronghold of ngai tahu that flanked the main attack party and ending over near lake manapouri apparently wiped the waring -waitaha[peaceful original inhabitants of nz] tribe with blood crossed through war with the first waka that landed near waitara, the
Takitimu waka descendants, kati mamoe.... our enduring explorer of new lands captains tail has grown richer in history in a way, keeping my rare hearty explore search claim inhabit, name, leave, tribe alive and de bunking the ngai tahu belief that the foot prints and smoldering fires alongside our traditional whale bone taiahas the ngai tahu chief showed friendly ed pakeha ship going searchers and surveyors the last know few were not the last captains wife Temuk or temuka, probaly was born or named around timaru temuka on the east coast take over where kati mamoe took and name the whole east coast only after leaving there fretfull happily new romanced son kahunungu to settle in happiness starting a succesfull tribe call ngati kahunungu lower north it is said the boy was contempt and did not like the look of the south island alps our chief carryed on starting the southbound take over thats enough for now .. captain wybrow had a heart of gold and many relatives i meet related to him have features i can easily distinguish like the strong shoulders and half curl of hair the honest eyes and captain stature his rescue attempt of wading many dead out of the sea near his little settlement of fort rose is testament to and part of our friendly caring southland nature he potentialy kept the southern most kati mamoe tribe alive through temuk i have rights through my ancestor to lovely maori land blocks pristine and sacred to me i am a caregiver to our land as do many with traces of relation ship we have surely something to be proud of and i see the kati mamoe blood can never die out as we left many up north and all the way down the east all over the country we are not lost although we are not fond to be named as the curse of arriving and slaughtering raping and pillaging the "still people" that once walked this land alone is believed heavily by my teachers, thank you for reading i hope u enjoyed some more deep history of the man and the legend of the "founder of fortrose an apparently amazing captain with skills of starlight navigation which was taught to my family concreting the salt in our southern veins Ry Mac... grandson of mona wybrow and captain clarence macintosh rip waikawa buryed alonside

EmmyFuzzyPenguin said...

Mona and Clarence were my nan's parents. Kia ora.

Anonymous said...

I am a descendant of Captain James Wybrow and Temuk. I am sitting here with my niece and we are reading the comments with interest. Thank you for sharing. I especially enjoyed Anonymous 12.02.2020 comments regarding the Kati Mamoe and Ngati Kahunungu.

Anonymous said...

Thank you cuzzy

Alaina Dickson said...

Kia ora,
Mona and Clarence are my great grandparents. My nan was their 2nd eldest daughter. She isn't with us anymore, but when I read things this these posts, it makes me feel like she is right here telling me all the stories.
I love seeing and reading the history on my whanau.
Thank you all ❤️

Anonymous said...

Hi all I enjoyed reading this. I am a descendant of captain james wybrow the first I am a Stewart island descendant from wakawa I love reading these stories I was told them From my families. We r still hear living well And fishermen we love Living here at a Home lands and sea.

Anonymous said...

I am nathan Harvey Descendant of james and elizabeth wybrow

Anonymous said...

My husband is the direct descendant of John Wybrow. The oldest son of James Wybrow and Temuka. All of the males in the family were named John until my husband, only because his Canadian mother wanted a different first name, however, one of his middle names is John. I find it interesting our name is often misspelled with the original Whybrow leading me to just spell my name directly after I say it. The Wybrows have a deep history here in New Zealand. My husband's grandfather was General Secretary of the Labor party in the 70/80s and High Commissioner to Canada in the late 80s. Very proud to be associated with such a storied family.

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