Biography
Richard Siddins was born in 1770 (the exact place and date of birth is unknown) and died on 2 July 1846 in New South Wales, Australia. He travelled extensively in his work as aVoyages
Richard Siddins was one of the earliest and best known merchant sea captains sailing out of Port Jackson. From 1804 to 1822 Siddins helped reap the vast harvest of seals and sandalwood on behalf of the Sydney traders. He took cargoes to China and India for them, and brought back Asian goods for the colonial stores. After many adventures in the Pacific and having survived the shipwreck of Macquarie Island, he became the Port Jackson pilot and later superintendent of the South Head Lighthouse. Richard Siddins arrived in Australia, to New South Wales, in 1804 aboard the English whaler ''Alexander''. For many years he took part in trading voyages to Kolkata and the islands of the South Seas. He was in Port Jackson in 1806 aboard the ''King George'' and at the end of 1807 he brought cargoes of sandalwood, seal oil and seal furs to Port Jackson. From 1809 to 1815 Siddins was in the Fiji Islands. In Sydney, 1811, Siddins was employed by ship owner Joseph Underwood as Captain of the ''Campbell Macquarie''. In 1811 and in 1812 Siddins returned to India on the ''Campbell Macquarie'' and later in that year arrived in Port Jackson with prisoners and a cargo of spirits. Soon after he again set out on the ''Campbell Macquarie'' on a sealing voyage to the South seas. They called at Kangaroo Island and collected seal skins and salt, then headed for Macquarie Island. He and his crew ended up being shipwrecked in Hasselborough Bay on 11 June 1812, and at least four of the castaways died. Twelve of them were rescued by the ''Perseverance'', a ship that had arrived at Macquarie Island to collect a gang of sealers in October 1812. Joseph Underwood sent the ship ''Elizabeth'' and ''Mary'' to the Island to rescue the remaining crew. When Siddins landed on Macquarie island in 1812, he met the Russian explorer Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen there. Richard Siddins returned to Sydney on 20 January with 1700 skins and rigging form the wreck of the ''Campbell Macquarie''. From 1814 Lyndon Rose, with his book ''Richard Siddins of Port Jackson'', has set down his story as a tribute to his contribution to the trade out of Port Jackson in the early days of the Colony.Bibliography
There are at least three books about Richard Siddins life and adventures: * Letter from Charles R. Siddins to H.F. Norrie, undated, with newscutting, 1857 * Richard Siddins of Port Jackson / by Lyndon Rose. * Richard Siddins pocket book and letter, 1815-1878 Letter from Charles R. Siddons concerning the career of his grandfather, Captain Richard Siddons, and his father Joseph Siddins. The letter states that Captain Siddins built the home which later became the Greenwich Pier or Vaucluse Hotel. His son Joseph succeeded him as superintendent of the South Head lighthouse. Also included is a newscutting of the poem 'The Wreck of the Dunbar' by George Ferris Pickering, which features the role of the dog of Joseph Siddins in the discovery of the shipwreck. The second one doesn't have the direct purpose to tell Siddins adventures but to describe how international trade was carried out in 1770 century. The last one is a pocket book, being an interleaved copy of the New South Wales pocket almanac for 1816 containing MS memoranda and tallies, and a set of letters that came from Sarah Wentworth to Mrs Siddins from Vaucluse, N.S.W., 6 February 1878.Death
In 1832, he was compelled by ill health to exchange his situation as pilot with the superintendent of the South Head lighthouse. He died on 2 July 1846, aged 76. His wife died on 9 February 1883, and was buried at Richmond cemetery and his son, Joseph Richard (1823–1891), became a pilot at South Head.Curiosities
In his honour, Siddins Point, which projects into the middle of the head of Hero Bay on the north coast of Livingston Island in the South Shetland Islands was named for him by the United Kingdom Antarctic Place-Names Committee in 1958. Up until 2011, the name was incorrectly spelled "Siddons Point".See also
*References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Siddins, Richard Australian explorers Lighthouse keepers People from Sydney Australian sailors 1770 births 1846 deaths British people in whaling Whaling in the United Kingdom Sealing ships British sailors British hunters Sealers