Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 31 de mar. de 2024 · Date 1840 By Williams, Edward Marsh, 1818-1909 Reference A-083-005 Description. Shows the Herald, moored in a bay surrounded by rocks and bush in Stewart Island, during its voyage around the more heavily-inhabited parts of New Zealand to obtain signatures on the Treaty of Waitangi.

  2. Edward Marsh Williams as an elderly man, circa 1903. The book alongside him is "Old Manawatu" by Thomas Lindsay Buick. Photographer unidentified. Dated assuming the subject was circa 85 years old at the time this photograph was taken.

  3. 1840 TIMELINE. A portrait of HMS Herald lying at anchor in Sylvan Cove, Stewart Island, drawn by Edward Marsh Williams, 1840. January 29th 1840... Lieutenant Governor Hobson arrives in New Zealand aboard the HMS Herald, having been sent by the Colonial Office with a very comprehensive brief. This brief relates to the explicit conditions of a ...

  4. 1823-1973. A RECORD OF THE DESCENDANTS OF. HENRY WILLIAMS, 1792-1867. and. WILLIAM WILLIAMS, 1800-1878. the sons of. Thomas Williams, 1754-1808 and Mary Marsh, 1757-1831, who were married in 1783. Two of their eight children came to New Zealand. HENRY arrived on August 6 th, 1823, and established the Mission Station at Paihia in the Bay of Islands.

  5. Edward Marsh Williams as an elderly man, circa 1903. The book alongside him is "Old Manawatu" by Thomas Lindsay Buick. Photographer unidentified. Dated assuming the subject was circa 85 years old at the time this photograph was taken. Quantity: 1 b&w original negative(s).

  6. Edward Marsh Williams, Pararaka [sic], farmer. Some features of our website won't work with Internet Explorer. Improve your experience by using a more up-to-date browser like Chrome, Firefox, or Edge.

  7. Edward Marsh Williams, the eldest son of Henry and Marianne Williams, reassured Shortland. Te Haratua was indignant that Kihi had murdered an employee of ‘his (Te Haratua’s) own pakehas’. He was there to ‘deliver a more summary form of justice.’ Williams persuaded Te Haratua and his warriors to leave and allow the case to proceed.