Mining Company Registrations




AUCKLAND PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT GAZETTE.

endeavouring to obtain it, to use persuasion rather than compulsion. While the measures required should be insisted upon with firmness, no opportunity should be lost of explaining to the ignorant that they are necessary for health and safety. Allusion to the mortality in the last epidemic may probably be useful to promote a ready obedience. Resort to the Magistrate’s Court may possibly be in no case necessary; but if examples are to be made, offenders of the highest position should be in the first place selected, as being those whose shortcomings would be the least excusable. A tendency to allow immunity to one class, while another, and that the least culpable, is punished, while always highly unjust, would, if indulged in the present instance, be additionally objectionable, as likely to weaken, if not prevent, general co-operation for the attainment of the object desired.

C. W. De Vœux,
Administrator of the Government.

Mr. Simon to the Secretary of State, Colonial Office,
Local Government Board, (Medical Department,)
Whitehall, S.W., 16th January, 1872.

Sir,—

I beg to acknowledge the receipt of your letter of the 13th ultimo, enclosing a copy of a Despatch from the Governor of St. Lucia, covering a copy of a communication received from the Administrator of that Island, together with a copy of instructions issued by him to Inspectors of Nuisances; and in compliance with the request contained in the latter paragraph of the letter I would observe—

  1. That the instructions appear to relate only to cases where a nuisance actually exists, and not to cases where means of prevention against nuisance (such as drains to carry off slop water, proper arrangements for the disposal of excrement) are requisite. It would seem desirable that the inspection should include both sort of cases.

[Although such a principle is only but little admitted in the Sanitary Law of England, it would seem very desirable that, without notice from an Inspector, it should be an offence punishable by fine to have a nuisance on one’s premises.]

  1. The filling up of stagnant water with earth is not likely to reduce materially the mischief to health which such water may be causing, to provide against which an improvement in the drainage would seem to be needful.

  2. There is no reference in the instructions to any local authority ordinarily charged with seeing to the sanitary condition of the villages. It may, in the circumstances of the Colony, be impossible to provide such an authority; but the want of it will be much felt in reference to sufficiency of the means adopted to carry out the Inspector’s notices as to foul privies and cesspools.

Instead of the words “cleanse, or at least disinfect, with chloride of lime or carbolic acid,” in paragraph 2, I should advise “cleanse or empty, with the use of proper disinfectants, such as chloride of lime or carbolic acid.”

  1. Drinking water should (as was suggested by a pencil note, now accidentally erased), be protected against pollution by any filth or refuse, and not only against contamination by human excrement.

I am, &c.,
John Simon.
The Under Secretary of State,
Colonial Office.


I, THE undersigned, MICHAEL HENNELLY, hereby make application to register “The United Gold Mining Company, Registered,” under the provisions of “The Mining Companies’ Limited Liability Act, 1865,” and “The Mining Companies’ Limited Liability Act Amendment Acts, 1869 and 1870;” and I do solemnly and sincerely declare that the following statement is, to the best of my belief and knowledge, true in every particular, viz:—

  1. The name and style of the Company is The United Gold Mining Company, Registered.

  2. The place of operations is at Coromandel Goldfields, in the Province of Auckland, in the Colony of New Zealand.

  3. The nominal capital of the Company is Nine thousand six hundred pounds, in Nine thousand six hundred shares of One pound each.

  4. The amount already paid-up in cash is Nil, and Seven thousand two hundred pounds in partly paid-up shares.

  5. The name of the Manager is Michael Hennelly.

  6. The Office of the Company is at Kapanga.

  7. The names and several residences of the shareholders, and the number of shares held by each at this date, are as follows, namely:—

SHARES.
Edward Dockrill, Coromandel
Frank Hayse
Michael Heydon
Daniel Sheridan
William Buckby
Richard Bell Booth
Philip Bannan
Frederick T. B. Booth
Charles Mills
Peter Brown, Grahamstown
Michael Hennelly
Michael Hennelly, in trust for Company

Dated this 11th day of June, 1872.

M. HENNELLY,
Manager.

Witness to signature:
J. Reeve, J.P.


I, THE undersigned, DAVID MITCHELL ROSS, hereby make application to register “The Ballynock Gold Mining Company, Registered,” under the provisions of “The Mining Companies’ Limited Liability Act, 1865,” and “The Mining Companies’ Limited Liability Act Amendment Acts, 1869 and 1870;” and I do solemnly and sincerely declare that the following statement is, to the best of my belief and knowledge, true in every particular, viz:—

  1. The name and style of the Company is The Ballynock Gold Mining Company, Registered.

  2. The place of operations is at Kapanga, Coromandel Goldfields, in the Province of Auckland, in the Colony of New Zealand.

  3. The nominal capital of the Company is Ten thousand pounds, in Ten thousand shares of One pound each.

  4. The amount already paid-up in cash is Nil, and Five thousand pounds in partly paid-up shares.

  5. The name of the Manager is David Mitchell Ross.

  6. The Office of the Company is at Kapanga, Coromandel.

  7. The names and several residences of the shareholders, and the number of shares held by each at this date, are as follows, namely:—



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Online Sources for this page:

VUW Te Waharoa PDF Auckland Provincial Gazette 1872, No 22





✨ LLM interpretation of page content

🏥 Instructions for Inspectors of Nuisances (continued from previous page)

🏥 Health & Social Welfare
Sanitary inspection, Public health, Nuisances
  • C. W. De Vœux, Administrator of the Government
  • John Simon, Secretary of State, Colonial Office

🌾 Registration of The United Gold Mining Company

🌾 Primary Industries & Resources
11 June 1872
Gold mining, Company registration, Coromandel, Shares
13 names identified
  • Michael Hennelly, Manager of The United Gold Mining Company
  • Edward Dockrill, Shareholder holding 800 shares
  • Frank Hayse, Shareholder holding 800 shares
  • Michael Heydon, Shareholder holding 800 shares
  • Daniel Sheridan, Shareholder holding 800 shares
  • William Buckby, Shareholder holding 1600 shares
  • Richard Bell Booth, Shareholder holding 800 shares
  • Philip Bannan, Shareholder holding 400 shares
  • Frederick T. B. Booth, Shareholder holding 800 shares
  • Charles Mills, Shareholder holding 400 shares
  • Peter Brown, Shareholder holding 400 shares
  • Michael Hennelly, Shareholder holding 400 shares
  • Michael Hennelly, Shareholder holding 1600 shares in trust for Company

  • M. Hennelly, Manager
  • J. Reeve, J.P., Witness to signature

🌾 Registration of The Ballynock Gold Mining Company

🌾 Primary Industries & Resources
Gold mining, Company registration, Coromandel, Shares
  • David Mitchell Ross, Manager of The Ballynock Gold Mining Company

  • David Mitchell Ross, Manager