
audiobook
by Scots New Zealand Land Company, Patrick Matthew
This mid‑nineteenth‑century prospectus outlines the ambitions of a Scottish syndicate that plans to transport investors, their families and friends to a new colony in New Zealand. Drafted after a shareholders’ meeting in Perth in August 1839, it explains how the company intends to marshal capital, acquire land and secure social advantages for its settlers. The document reads like a practical guide, balancing financial logic with a vision of a healthier, freer life abroad.
The prospectus lists four main reasons for leaving Britain: cheap, virgin soil; the chance to own property and earn wages without the burden of debt; the promise of better health in a temperate climate; and the pressure of competition that squeezes small capitalists at home. It extols New Zealand’s mild winters, abundant rainfall, fertile pastures and superior wool, arguing that these conditions make farming productive year‑round. Finally, it points to nearby markets—whaling fleets and an Australian colony facing drought—as ready outlets for the colony’s surplus produce.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (88K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Craig Kirkwood and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from scans of public domain works at The National Library of Australia.)
Release date
2018-05-29
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
A rare historical prospectus rather than a personal work, this publication outlines the aims and structure of a proposed land venture linking Scotland and New Zealand. Little reliable evidence points to an individual author, so it is best understood as a company-issued document.
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1790–1874
A Scottish landowner, fruit grower, and writer on forestry, he is now remembered for ideas on natural selection that appeared decades before Darwin’s more famous work. His life joined practical work on the land with bold, wide-ranging thinking about the natural world.
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by Patrick Matthew