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John Finlay Duff
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John Finlay Duff : ウィキペディア英語版
John Finlay Duff
John Finlay Duff (1 April 1799 – 18 May 1868)〔Newspaper obituaries gave his age as 73. Either this was an error, or he was born around 1794.〕 was a ship's captain and businessman in the Colony of South Australia.
==History==
Duff was born in Dundee, Scotland in 1799, son of John Duff and his wife Elisabeth, née Finlay, of a ship owning family. He qualified as a master mariner and first reached Australia in July 1835, when he captained the ''Africaine'' from London to Hobart.
On his next voyage to Australia, the barque ''Africaine'' left London Docks on 28 June, but without Captain Duff, who was to be married the next day at St Botolph's Aldgate. The newlyweds joined the ship, anchored in The Downs off Deal, Kent, on the following day. Witness to the wedding was his friend and business partner John Hallett, who with his family were among the ''Africaine'' migrants.
The ship, which had been chartered by Robert Gouger and John Brown with around 60 emigrants and a considerable cargo bound for South Australia, had an uneventful voyage and on 1 November 1836 were off the coast of Kangaroo Island, near Cape Borda.
:A small party asked to be put ashore, intending to hike along the north of the island to Nepean Bay, but they found the going much more difficult than Sutherland's 1819 memoir led them to expect, with little food and water to be had. Mr. Osborne took ill and could proceed no further; Dr. Slater stayed with him, and both presumably perished, though if found, their bodies were never identified. Ten days after they set foot on the island the remainder, Nantes, Warren, Bagg and Fisher, reached the settlement at Kingscote, where they were hospitably received by Samuel Stephens and Dr. Wright, other employees of the South Australian Company and fellow-passenger John Hallett, who had been searching for them the better part of the previous week. Finding their ship gone, at least one of the exploration party, Robert Fisher, was critical of Duff for not waiting longer for them.
The ''Africaine'' left for the mainland on 6 November, Duff having decided not to wait any longer, encountered William Light's brig ''Rapid'' at Rapid Bay, and Light was welcomed aboard the ''Africaine'', then moved on to Holdfast Bay, arriving before the . Duff was immediately commissioned to set sail for Hobart for urgently needed supplies, incidentally making useful business contacts in Van Diemen's Land.〔
Duff and Hallett, who were both part-owners of the ''Africaine'' with Thomas Finlay (perhaps Duff's maternal grandfather),〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Bound for South Australia: John Finlay Duff )〕 opened a store and shipping agency on Grenfell Street in 1837, one of the first in the Colony. Their residences were both on South Terrace, Adelaide, almost adjacent; Duff moved from South Terrace around the end of 1846.
They dissolved their partnership in December 1840. Both had substantial land holdings; Duff purchased one of the original town acres at the corner of Currie Street and West Terrace and larger properties near the city.〔 He allowed his farmer tenants to pay their rent in bags of wheat. He donated part of his property "Woodford", near Magill, for St. George's Anglican Church. They had other properties further out: at Port Lincoln, and "Woodford" on the Para River, where he ran sheep. In 1837 he exported in four bales of wool to England – the first from South Australia. Duff and Hallett were early and generous contributors to the establishment of Trinity Church.〔

In 1838 Duff and his wife returned to England where their first child was born, and was christened at the church where they had been married (she was to be christened a second time, as Jessie Light Duff at Trinity Church, North Terrace, Adelaide, in honour of Colonel William Light). They returned to South Australia as fellow-passengers on the ''Asia'' with Dr. George Mayo, with whom he developed a long-lasting friendship, arriving in July 1839.〔
Duff owned the schooner ''Waterwitch'', usually commanded by D. Talbert, which traded between Mauritius, Bourbon and Port Adelaide, also between Port Adelaide and Fremantle, Western Australia. She was lost with all hands on a return voyage which left Mauritius on 28 August September 1846. He also owned the barque ''Guiana'', which he took to Mauritius twice, and the ''Augustus'' which he also commanded on several Mauritius voyages.
In 1859, Captain Duff accepted the appointment of Harbourmaster and Lightkeeper at Glenelg, which he held for several years. One of his first duties was to decide on the suitability of Cape Willoughby for a lighthouse.
He died at his home at New Glenelg, and was buried at West Terrace Cemetery. Robert Gouger thought very highly of him, noting that "… he appears to be a thorough sailor, decisive and skilful; he pays equal attention to all his passengers, has no favorites apparently, and therefore is a general favorite."〔 Light was also fulsome in his praise for Duff's seamanship and judgment.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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