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Francis Price Blackwood : ウィキペディア英語版
Francis Price Blackwood

Francis Price Blackwood (25 May 1809–22 March 1854) was a British naval officer who while posted at several different locations during his time in the Royal Navy, spent much of his time posted in colonial Australia and was an instrumental pioneer of regions near Australia's east coast and nearby islands.〔

Blackwood was the second son of Vice-Admiral Sir Henry Blackwood and his third wife, Harriet née Gore, Blackwood entered the navy at age twelve. He was commissioned 8 Aug 1828 and joined under Captain Frederick Marryat. He then served on under Captain Charles Yorke.〔O'Byrne, p86〕
It was in 1833 that Blackwood was appointed to be in command of HMS ''Hyacinth'', a ship which would take him to Australia on his first visit and in which he would travel to the north-east coast to gather hydrographic data. In 1838 Blackwood received a promotion to the rank of captain.
== Voyages of the ''Fly'' ==
Three years later, Blackwood was selected to command the sloop HMS ''Fly''. He was appointed with the purpose of partaking in the initial hydrographic survey commissioned by the admiralty, which involved making explorations into and charting the waters of the Australian north-east coast.
Equipped with a wealth of costly instruments and housing two scientists (Joseph Jukes, a geologist, and John MacGillivray,
a zoologist), the ''Fly'' departed from Falmouth, Cornwall in 1842, with the accompaniment of the cutter ''Bramble'' (under the command of Lieutenant Charles Yule). Having stopped in Hobart town between the months of August and October, it was not until December 1842 that the survey began, after the ships arrived in Sydney.
Over the following three years, ''Fly'' traveled and charted from Sandy Cape to Whitsunday Island, and also sailed past a range of other locations including both Swain Reefs and the Capricorn and Bunker Group and the passage between these two. ''Fly'' also mapped and marked the outer lines of the Great Barrier Reef. It was, in part, because of Blackwood and his comrades hydrographic and exploratory effort aboard the ''Fly'' that a beacon was erected on Raine Island in 1844 with the purpose of allowing surer and safer travel through the Great Barrier Reef and marking the best passage.
It was during this time that ''Bramble'' surveyed the Endeavour Strait.
Later, in late 1844, Blackwood and ''Fly'' took a short voyage to Surabaya, but returned in April 1845 to chart a shipping route between Bramble Cay and Endeavour Strait.
After this, ''Fly'' and Blackwood surveyed and chartered several other areas. This included a length of of the south-east coast of New Guinea in the Gulf of Papua where he discovered the Fly River and named it after his ship. He also explored in the waters near Singapore during this time.
It was after this call to Singapore that ''Fly'' returned to Sydney and then, with Blackwood aboard, sailed for England in December 1845.

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