The Voyage
New Italy had its beginnings in 1880, when families of farmers
from the region of Veneto in Northern Italy, were beguiled by
the Marquis de Rays to purchase homes and fertile land in a phantom
paradise of the Pacific named La Nouvelle France (an imaginary
kingdom in the Bismarck Archipelago).
Cleverly worded advertisements spoke of sunshine, lush vegetation
and beaches and the promise of freedom, not living under dictatorship.
Despite warnings of the unsuitability of the proposed land and
the Royal Investigation Bureau in Milan issuing a direction that
no passport would be issued to any Italian participating in the
scheme 50 families boarded the “India” in Barcelona
in July 1880 (Niau, 1935). They were the third expedition to leave
for the shores of Port Breton and were reassured with claims that
two shipments of other people from elsewhere in Europe were already
settled.
In October of that year, after a disastrous voyage, the expedition
arrived at the promised land, Port Breton (opposite Rabaul), only
to be confronted with deprivation and death. Chaos now reigned,
there was nothing prepared and no happily settled migrants. The
supplies on the island were meager and grossly inadequate, while
the promised well built housing was non existent.
On the 16th of December the two Captains (de Prevost and Rombardy),
Mr McLauchlan (who had been a captain on a previous expedition)
and Pere Lannuzel the Priest set sail on the ‘Genil’
to collect supplies from Sydney. The reasoning behind the choice
of people on this trip is questionable, the top administrators
and the priest forsaking a desperate community did not help with
the morale of the Italian migrants.
The Italian’s spent four months at Port Breton, suffering
the constant rain and impenetrable vegetation, struggling to find
food and create shelter. Many suffered from fever and illness
that their known remedies could not cure and many deaths occurred
while there.
On the 20th of February 1881 the ‘India’ departed
Port Breton to seek refuge and by strange fate the ‘Genil’
returned to the cove on the same day, although the ships never
sighted each other.
From Port Breton, the emigrants traveled to Noumea on the "India"
but soon discovered their new location unsuitable also, as it
was a penal colony. The "India" was then declared unseaworthy
by the local authorities in Noumea and the emigrants were now
stranded.
The Italian Consul in Australia heard of the emigrants' misadventure
via his colleague in Noumea and requested assistance from Sir
Henry Parkes (the then Premier of NSW). As a gesture of goodwill,
Sir Henry Parkes arranged for their rescue and chartered the "James
Paterson" to collect the survivors. On 7th April 1881, 217
of the original 340 emigrants arrived in Sydney, destitute and
in poor health.
History
The Voyage
Migration
Primary Settlement
Memorialisation
Families
Timeline
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Map showing the
regions of Italy. Select region 5
for a more detailed map of the Veneto region.
Circular Quay, Sydney with
the Exhibition building in the Domain. This is the scene that
would have greeted the passengers of the James Patterson in
April 1881

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