Full title: [Maslyn Williams Ocean Island photographs]
Author/creator: .
Date: 1901-1959.
Call Numbers: PXB 293 (v.4)
Record Identifier: Yr867wDn
Language:
Formats: Pictures, Photographs
Contents: Photographs - 138 silver gelatin photoprints
Publishers:
Notes:
"In May 1900, A.F. Ellis, a young man working for a London based company, The Pacific Island Co. Ltd., discovered phosphate deposits on Ocean Island and Nauru in the Central Pacific. At the urging of the Company the British Government annexed Ocean Island to its Gilbert and Ellice Protectorate. Nauru was already included within Germany's Pacific possessions and arrangements were made for the Company to mine the Nauru deposits under license.
The use of manufactured fertilisers was, at this time, underpinning an agricultural revolution and the Company - which had now given up its other Pacific pursuits - made handsome profits.
After the 1914/18 war the Governments of Australia and New Zealand, anxious to ensure their access to the phosphate deposits, insisted that the Company transfer its rights to a Government Commission representing Australia, New Zealand and Great Britain. Thur, in 1920, the British Phosphate Commission came into existence. At about the same time Nauru was transferred from German to Australian rule.
During World War 2 Japan occupied these islands, but after the war the Phosphate Commissioners took over again and a few years later purchased the mining rights on Christmas Island in the Indian Ocean. In 1970 the mining operation on Nauru was sold to the Government of the newly-independent Nauru, and in 1979 the Ocean Island deposits were exhausted.
The Commissioners continued to mine Christmas Island until 1980 when the Governments handed over the project to private enterprise." - -- Foreward to the contents list
Permalink: https://collection.sl.nsw.gov.au/record/Yr867wDn
MMS ID: 110036917