A convict sentenced to the penal colony on Norfolk Island, he escaped and made his way to Nauru in 1842. There he "assimilated native culture [...,] took a Nauruan wife, fathered several children, and was adopted as a Nauruan. He became perhaps the only beachcomber the Nauruans ever fully accepted and trusted." He acted as an intermediary between his people of adoption and passing European trade vessels.[1]
In 1888, when Nauru became a Germanprotectorate, he assisted the German authorities in informing the Nauruans of the way in which the country would be governed, and in persuading them to relinquish their firearms, with which a third of the population had been killed during the civil war.[1]
In 1889, his canoe was swept away to sea by strong currents, and he was not seen again.[2]
References
^ abcdMcDANIEL, Carl N. & GOWDY, John M., Paradise for Sale: A Parable of Nature, Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000, ISBN0-520-22229-6, pp. 32–35
^ abVIVIANI, Nancy, Nauru: Phosphate and Political Progress, Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1970, ISBN978-0-7081-0765-2, p.13
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