Johnson's Voyages from Foreign-Going Agreements (1866-1871)

On the Juno Agreement Henry Johnson’s previous vessel was named as the Kewadin. From Kewadin researchers were led to Venus, Eastern Belle, Imperial and Blair Athol, in reverse order of sailing. Five years' voyages (1871-1866) were traced in this way, with one of our more interesting discoveries about Johnson postponed as a result of this "backwards" negotiation.

Henry Allen Johnson
Digby, Nova Scotia

Master's Certificate: Canada 856
Mate's Certificate: 617

Vessel Name Official Number Tons (Gross) Capacity Voyage Start Date - End Date Date of Joining - Date of Discharge Voyage Start Port - Ports of Call - End Port
Blair Athol
48041
443 tons
AB November 27th, 1866 -
July 4th, 1867
November 27th, 1866 -
July 3rd, 1867
Greenock - St. John, NB - Lepreaux, NB - Matanzas, Cuba - Greenock
Imperial
1961
1388 tons
AB August 10th, 1867 -
November 27th, 1867
August 8th, 1867 -
November 27th, 1867
Greenock - Quebec City - Greenock
Eastern Belle
48841
1103 tons
AB December 11th, 1867 -
September 3rd, 1869
December 11th, 1867 -
September 3rd, 1869
Glasgow - Bombay - Calcutta - Liverpool
Venus
61454
734 tons
AB October 1st, 1869 -
March 2nd, 1870
October 1st, 1869 -
March 2nd, 1870
Liverpool - Boston - Savannah - Havre - Liverpool
Venus Bosun March 14th, 1870 -
August 21st, 1870
March 14th, 1870 -
March 19th, 1870
Newport, NS - New York - Brake/Bremen - Middlesborough
Kewadin
55990
268 tons
AB April 9th, 1870 -
July 6th, 1870
April 4th, 1870 -
July 6th, 1870
Liverpool - Summerside, PEI - Liverpool
Juno
48477
955 tons
AB July 25th, 1870 -
January 4th, 1871
July 25th, 1870 -
January 4th, 1871
Liverpool - New Orleans - Liverpool
Crown Jewel
59196
716 tons
Mate February 4th, 1876 -
May 5th, 1876
Unknown -
April ??, 1876
Liverpool - St. John, NB - Belfast
St. Patrick
64538
726 tons
Mate April 12th, 1876 -
July 11th, 1876
June 12th, 1876 -
July 11th, 1876
Liverpool - Chatham, NB - Cardiff
St. Patrick Mate July 25th, 1876 -
October 21st, 1876
July 25th, 1876 -
November 2nd, 1876
Cardiff - Chatham, NB - Warren Pt., Ireland
St. Patrick Mate November 2nd, 1876 -
February 7th, 1877
November 2nd, 1876 -
February 19th, 1877
Newry, Ireland - St. John, NB - Londonderry, Ireland
St. Patrick Mate February 12th, 1877 -
May 30th, 1877
February 22nd, 1877 -
June 6th, 1877
Londonderry - St. John, NB - Dublin
St. Patrick Mate June 9th, 1877 -
September 2nd, 1877
June 9th, 1877 -
September 17th, 1877
Dublin - Chatham, NB - Havre, France
St. Patrick Mate September 22nd, 1877 -
November 26th, 1877
September 17th, 1877 -
December 20th, 1877
Havre - New York - Dublin
St. Patrick Mate December 31st, 1877 -
January 15th, 1878
December 20th, 1877 -
May 9th, 1878
Dublin - New York - Portland, MN - Plymouth
St. Patrick Mate May 9th, 1878 -
September 16th, 1878
May 9th, 1878 -
September 16th, 1878
Plymouth - New York - Rotterdam
Electa
64578
466 tons
Master November 19th, 1879 -
March 23rd, 1880
November 14th, 1879 -
March 23rd, 1880
Dunkirk - Richmond, VA - Bordeaux, France
Electa Master March 30th, 1880 -
August 25th, 1880
March 30th, 1880 -
August 25th, 1880
Bordeaux - New York - Stettin
Electa Master September 7th, 1880 -
February 23rd, 1881
September 7th, 1880 -
February 23rd, 1881
Stettin - New York - Unknown
JV Troop
79989
1295 tons
N/A July 16th, 1881 -
February 24th, 1883
July 16th, 1881 -
February 24th, 1883
New York - Unknown - New York
Herald
85597
1445 tons
Mate October 31st, 1883 -
December 26th, 1884
October 31st, 1883 -
December 29th, 1884
Liverpool - Valparaiso - Iquique - Hamburg
Keswick
80796
894 tons
Mate November 1st,1886 -
December 13th, 1886
November 1st, 1886 -
December 13th, 1886
Cork, Ireland - St. John, NB - Sharpness, England

Legend:
Red:Johnson not on vessel at this port
Blue:Observations from sources other than crew agreements

We could have stumbled along this track. An official number was needed for each vessel before we could determine whether an Agreement survived for the voyage Johnson made. The MHA recommends the Merchant Navy List [MNL] as the source for researchers, and provides online access to this vital publication for selected years. Just one vessel named Kewadin was listed in the MNL for 1868 (on p.217).

But with our next step, tracing Johnson's earlier ship, we were initially thrown by shipowners' partiality to "Venus" as a vessel name. The MNL for 1876 listed more than forty Venuses registered in that year: only one, however, matched the register port entered in column 5 (details of the vessel of the previous voyage) from Johnson's entry made on his joining the Kewadinin 1869. The Windsor Venus' managing owner was Jacob Curry, a name that clinched the connection with Johnson. Curry's name had appeared on the Juno agreement as that vessel's managing owner. The master of Juno was a Curry as well, and a younger member of the Curry family was amongst the crew. Johnson was indeed linked with one of Windsor, Nova Scotia's, important shipping families. The Curry's business networks, providing their means of access to freights and to capital, spanned the North Atlantic, and much of their business was done in England, out of Liverpool. The Currys shipped in the cotton trade, thus explaining the deployment of Juno to New Orleans in 1870. Their vessels, however, were built in Atlantic Canada and amongst the part-owners of vessels in the Curry fleet were craftsmen as well as shipmasters from the region. Perhaps the ship's joiner, blacksmith and builder who held a small number of shares in the Juno when first she was registered in 1865 had taken a hand in the vessel's construction. The Juno's statutory register certificate, a source that is not to be confused with the official published lists in the MNL, can be consulted for a list of her shareholders (British National Archives [BNA] BT 108/301, folio 266a). Elsewhere on this site the register certificate is reproduced in full and the sixty-fourth share system is explained.

The connection between Johnson and the Currys was beginning to look significant, at least in terms of what these connections might have meant to a Nova Scotia sailor seeking advancement in his career. The need to maintain contacts with family and friends in Atlantic Canada undoubtedly made his situation different from the men who joined in Cardiff with little intention of remaining beyond the Juno's arrival in New Orleans .

Between the voyage completed on the Juno in 1871 and the voyage started in the Venus in 1869 Johnson visited at least six different ports in the North Atlantic region. Earlier voyages (on the Imperial and Blair Athol) had involved a trip to the Cuban port of Matanzas and along the St Lawrence to Quebec City. In these cases the commercial base was not Liverpool, but the Scottish port of Greenock. Johnson was a seafarer acquiring valuable experience on Atlantic and Caribbean routes.

One lengthy voyage, made between 1867 and 1869 turned out to be exceptional in his career. Johnson was 24 when he joined the Eastern Belle at Glasgow for a voyage to the Indian Ocean. At Bombay and Calcutta the vessel loaded cotton and dye-stuffs that were ultimately delivered at Liverpool. This square-rigged vessel of 1103 tons was crewed by two mates, and sixteen ABs: it had a carpenter, sailmaker and bos'un [boatswain], and carried both a cook and steward. This was one of the largest and most diverse crews with which Johnson ever sailed. In his later career as mate and master his vessels and crews were much smaller. The vessel he commanded in 1878, the Electa (466 tons), was manned by a mate, bos'un, cook/steward and six A.B.s. To the best of our knowledge Johnson did not repeat the Indian Ocean voyage of his younger years. A break in the paper trail frustrated a complete record, and when we found him again on the other side of his Juno employment, Johnson had settled for North Atlantic routes, with the occasional voyage extending to Continental Europe.