Landing on Christmas Island

Take Off
Jörgen Wennberg
Thu 21 Sep 2017 11:31
Once we had finished Alex’s Birthday breakfast with this lovely view from the stern of Take Off, customs came on board to check us in.

  

After we took our dinghy into shore to continue the checking in with immigration. 

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After the checking in we continued our walk into town called Flying Fish Cove (same as the name of the bay where we were anchored) passing the post office and the court house. 

    

CHRISTMAS ISLAND HISTORY & MAP & FLAG

Captain William Mynors of the Royal Mary, an English East India Company vessel, named the island when he sailed past it on Christmas Day, in 1643. The island was included on English and Dutch navigation charts in beginning of the 17th century
English navigator William Dampier, aboard the English ship Cygnet, made the earliest recorded visit to the sea around the island in March 1688. He found it uninhabited. 

 

In 1886, Captain John Maclear of HMS Flying Fish, having discovered an anchorage in a bay that he named "Flying Fish Cove", landed a party and made a small collection of the flora and faunaIn the next year, Pelham Aldrich, on board HMS Egeria, visited the island for ten days, accompanied by J. J. Lister, who gathered a larger biological and mineralogical collection. Among the rocks then obtained and submitted to Murray for examination were many of nearly pure phosphate of lime. This discovery led to annexation of the island by the British Crown on 6 June 1888.

Soon afterwards, a small settlement was established in Flying Fish Cove by G.Clunies Ross, the owner of the Cocos (Keeling) Islands some 900 kilometres (560 mi) to the southwest, to collect timber and supplies for the growing industry on Cocos. Phosphate mining began in 1899 using indentured workers from SingaporeMalaya, and China. John Davis Murray, a mechanical engineer, was sent to supervise the operation on behalf of the Phosphate Mining and Shipping Company. Murray was known as the "King of Christmas Island" until 1910, when he married and settled in London.
The island was administered jointly by the British Phosphate commissioners and district officers from the United Kingdom Colonial Office through the Straits Settlements, and later the Crown Colony of Singapore. During those years Chinese labour was used, thereof a large community of Chinese people on Christmas Island.
The phosphate is still being exploited and ship come every week to collect the the phosphate.