Sign In

- Or use -
Forgot Password Create Account
Stock# 102206
Description

First Edition, with the Auxillary Remarks.

A handsome example of Horsburgh's rare sailing directions with a plethora of information on Southeast Asia, China, Australia, etc. This title marks the beginning of a series of editions that would run for decades.

With the 1814 50-page "Auxillary Remarks" on paper watermarked 1807 and 1813 bound in before the Index.

Rarity

Ferguson 481 notes an example at the Mitchell Library. OCLC shows some 16 copies spread among the usual Australian institutions, the National Library of Singapore, the National Taiwan University, the National Library of New Zealand, the British Library, and a handful of American institutions.

According to RBH, the last example to appear at auction, in 2012 at Bonhams, made £3,125, rebacked.

Provenance

Early ink presentation inscription on front pastedowns: "Harvey Wright [possibly Wight?] from his friend Captn. Gover"

Condition Description
Two volumes. Quarto. Contemporary (endpapers watermarked RT & Co / 1814) ½ polished calf over marbled paper boards. (Scrape to front cover of Volume 1. Hinges tender or split, with cords holding. Minor losses to leather at heads and feet.) Complete. (Unsophisticated. Scattered foxing and toning. Long tear into Tt and short to tears to 3U and 3U2 in Volume 2.)
Pagination: [8], xix, [1, blank], 397, [1, blank]; [6], 506, [18], 19-50, [507]-518 pages.
Reference
Ferguson 481, not noting the Auxillary Remarks.
James Horsburgh Biography

James Horsburgh (1762 -1836) was a Scottish hydrographer who worked for the British East India Company (EIC) and charted much of China, Southeast Asia, India and contiguous regions in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.

Horsburgh went to sea at the age of sixteen and was captured and imprisoned by the French at Dunkirk. After his release, he made voyages to the West Indies and Calcutta. In 1786, as first mate in the Atlas, Horsburgh sailed from Batavia to Ceylon and was subsequently shipwrecked on the island of Diego Garcia. This disaster influenced him in his decision to produce accurate maps after he found his way back to India.

EIC hydrographer Alexander Dalrymple published three of Horsburgh’s earliest charts of the Straits of Macassar, of the western Philippines, and of the tract from Dampier's Strait to Batavia. In 1799, Dalrymple published Horsburgh’s Observations on the Eastern Seas on behalf of the EIC.

Meanwhile, Horsburgh continued his sailing career in the Carron, which had been taken up by the British government as a transport to the West Indies and, on his return to England, sailed again for Bombay. There, in April 1798, he was appointed to the command of his old ship, the Anna, and during the next seven years he made two voyages to England, besides several to China, Bengal, and Madras.

On the return trips to England in 1799 and 1801, Horsburgh became acquainted with the London scientific community including Sir Joseph Banks, the astronomer Nevil Maskelyne, and Henry Cavendish. Horsburgh kept barometric records for Cavendish during his voyages from 1802 to 1804, which elucidated the diurnal variation in the open sea between 26°N and 26°S. It was these measurements and his high society contacts that assured Horsburgh nomination and approval as a Fellow of the Royal Society upon his retirement from the sea in 1806.

Horsburgh continued to publish on nautical navigation. In 1806, he released Memoirs Comprising the Navigation to and from China. Next, in 1809 and 1811, Horsburgh finalized Directions for Sailing to and from the East Indies, China, New Holland, Cape of Good Hope, and the interjacent Ports, compiled chiefly from original Journals and Observations made during 21 years' experience in navigating those Seas, also known as the India Directory. These publications made Horsburgh a likely candidate for the position of hydrographer to the EIC, a post he gained in 1810. While serving as hydrographer he revised the Directory, with subsequent editions in 1816-7, 1826-7, and 1836. He also oversaw the compilation and publication of the EIC’s Atlas of India in 1827.

Horsburgh died in 1836. However, his legacy lived on. Friends and admirers in Canton raised a memorial subscription and erected the Horsburgh Lighthouse on Pedro Branca in the Strait of Singapore.  With the permission of his children, the Admiralty took up the Directory and released editions in 1841, 1852, 1855, and 1864. After his death and with the demise of the EIC, his charts passed to the Admiralty Hydrographic Office, who reissued them.