Event class: arrived, australia, ship, left, england, returned, sailed, family, new zealand, arriving
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Events with high posterior probability
Edwin Smith (rower) | He returned to New Zealand on the Orion boarding at Port Siad on 14 January 1946 and arriving in New Zealand 10 Feburay 1946. |
Paul Bartsch | Bartsch left after ten months this expedition in Hong Kong and traveled home via Europe, arriving in Washington in October 1908. |
Francis Browne | Browne travelled to Southampton via Liverpool and London, boarding the Titanic on the afternoon of 10 April 1912. |
Pablo Paredes | When that failed, he purposely went absent from his ship, eventually returning to Navy custody on December 18, 2004 - after his ship had already set sail. |
Ettore Boiardi | On May 9, 1914, at the age of 16, he arrived at Ellis Island aboard La Lorraine, a ship of French registration. |
Irvine Bulloch | It was Irvine who navigated the Shenandoah from just off San Francisco back to Liverpool, arriving on November 6, 1865. |
Harold Avery | , Thomas Nelson and Sons) states that in 1879, Avery's family left England for Australia. |
George Raff | He left for Sydney aboard the Earl Durham, and arrived on 2 January 1839. |
William Fessenden Allen | When his father was appointed Consul to the Kingdom of Hawaii, they sailed to Honolulu and arrived on May 31, 1850. |
Edward William Price | Price's wife and children all died together in 1875 when a ship they were travelling on, the SS Gothenburg, was wrecked off the coast of Queensland. |
Jack Fingleton | In May 1942, he went AWOL from his post at Double Bay on the shores of Sydney Harbour to visit his wife. |
Laurence Hartnett | In September 1929, with his wife and daughter Maureen, he set out on a yearlong round-the-world-trip to acquaint himself with Vauxhall's overseas markets, including in Australia, New Zealand and South Africa. |
Theodore Haultain | On 18 September 1849, as a family man without notable career prospects, Haultain emigrated to Auckland, New Zealand, on the Oriental Queen, in charge of the 8th Detachment of the New Zealand Fencibles, military pensioners who were settled in villages to protect the southern approaches to Auckland. |
Elsie Bowerman | On 10 April 1912 Elsie Bowerman and her mother Edith boarded RMS Titanic at Southampton as first class passengers cabin 33 on deck E, for a trip to America and Canada to see her father's relations in North America. |
Kartar Singh Sarabha | Kartar Singh reached Calcutta via Colombo on board SS Salamin in November 1914 : he accompanied two other Gadhar leaders, Satyen Sen and Vishnu Ganesh Pingle, along with a large number of Gadhar freedom fighters. |
Thomas Bird Mosher | Mosher then spent several years accompanying his father on voyages, including an 1866 trip around Cape Horn. |
Edward Neale Wigg | He married Janet Davidson on 6 September 1871, just 17 days after she arrived on the ship City of Adelaide with her aunt and uncle, Mr and Mrs Miller. |
Julius von Soden | After his first voyage from Marseilles to Algiers, in 1876 he was sent to Canton and then Hong Kong. |
John Mercer-Henderson, 8th Earl of Buckinghamshire | He landed at Hull docks on 21 April 1928 after a six-week voyage from Brisbane via Sydney to Hull. |
Munir Bashir | His reputation had already arrived in Beirut, therefore he was contracted as accompany and'' star-soloist'' by the legendary Lebanese chanteuse Fairuz immediately when he arrived at the Lebanese capital in 1953. |
Fred Spira | He left England with his father in June 1940, sailing to North America on the SS Antonia, where the two were reunited with Spira's mother, who had arrived in New York on the SS Volendan in February of that year. |
Richard Bowker (Australian businessman) | He visited Australia in the emigrant ship, the Shepherd and then migrated to Melbourne, Victoria in the Georgiana in February 1841. |
Maximin Alff | He was then sent to the Vicariate Apostolic of the Hawaiian Islands, arriving in Honolulu on 25 October 1894. |
Bertie King | In 1936 he left for England, sailing on the same ship as his friend Jiver Hutchinson. |
Edwin Henry Mason Smith | Private Edwin Smith embarked on Troop Ship Number 93 from Wellington on 13 October 1917 and disembarked in Liverpool, England on 8 December 1917. |
Edwin North McClellan | The same day, he departed for the Philippines, arriving in Manila on 2 December and remaining there until departing for Peking, China on 1 August 1912. |
Mark Anthony Bracegirdle | In 1936 he sailed on the SS Bendigo for Ceylon (as Sri Lanka was then known). |
Millosh Gjergj Nikolla | He set out from Shkodra on 20 December 1937 and arrived in Turin before Christmas Day. |
William A. Pickering | In 1871, Singapore's Governor Sir Harry Ord, who was back in London on leave, came across William Pickering. |
Iven Mackay | Sir Iven and Lady Mackay sailed from Perth, Western Australia, on SS Tanda on 14 February 1944. |
James Whiteside McCay | He arrived back in Melbourne on RMS Malwa on 11 November 1915, accompanied by his two teenage daughters and his brother Hugh, who had joined the ship in Adelaide, to a hero's welcome. |
Percy Scott | In July 1902 Scott received orders to return with his ship to Britain and after making passage via the Suez Canal returned to Portsmouth in September. |
Kazi Zainul Abedin | He moved first to Bombay and then took a passenger ship to the port city of Karachi at the end of 1948. |
Francis Burns | In 1834, when the Rev. John Seys was about to sail for Liberia, it was arranged that the Rev. Burns should accompany him as a Missionary Teacher. |
J. R. Black | Little is known of Black's early life, but in 1854 he passed up the possibility of a career as an officer in the Royal Navy and moved with his wife to Australia. |
Milly Witkop | right | thumb | December 1906 edition of'' Germinal'' In London, she worked in a tailoring sweatshop and saved enough money to finance her parents' and sisters' passage to England. |
Richard Jarman | Edwin Jarman, who had not emigrated to Tasmania with his father, left England for Cape Town, South Africa in 1861 where he established himself as an engraver. |
Edward Hamersley (senior) | He appointed an agent to manage his affairs in the colony, and in January 1843 the Hamersley family set sail for France. |
George Brand | He succumbed to temptation...'' Brand was sentenced to 14 years' transportation, and arrived in Western Australia on board the Stag in June 1855. |
Robin Hyde | Shortly after she resumed her journey to England via sea, arriving in Southampton 18 September 1938. |
Alfred Herbert Richardson | In December 1905 Fred Richardson travelled to Southampton to wish two of his brothers, James Richardson and Ralph Richardson, farewell on their return to South Africa on the SS Kenilworth Castle. |
Thomas Walker (Australian politician) | Walker returned to Australia in 1882, spending some time in Victoria before settling in New South Wales. |
Arthur Murray | In August 1897, he was brought to America by his mother Sarah on the S. S. Friesland, and landed at Ellis Island. |
Frank Macfarlane Burnet | Burnet left Australia for England in 1925 and served as ship's surgeon during his journey in exchange for a free fare. |
James Agnew | Soon after he went to Australia, arriving at Sydney before the end of 1839. |
Charles Stuart Curtis | Arriving at Port Nicholson, his father had walked overland from Wellington to New Plymouth, and made preparations for his family, who arrived there on February 7, 1850. |
James Swan (mayor of Brisbane) | In 1846, the'' Moreton Bay Courier'' was founded in Brisbane by Arthur Sidney Lyon, who persuaded James Swan to come to Brisbane and work on the newspaper. |
Charles Beaumont Howard | He was then appointed colonial chaplain in South Australia, sailed with Governor Hindmarsh on the Buffalo in July 1836, and arrived at Adelaide on 28 December. |
Heinrich Lehmann-Willenbrock | In 1948, he left Germany aboard his ship, Magellan, with three of his friends to Buenos Aires. |
Harry Whitney | In 1903 he went by sailing vessel to Australia. |
Harry Lewiston | In December 1919, he was officially discharged from military service, sailed from Liverpool to New York City aboard the S. S. Cedric, and from there returned to Massachusetts. |
Robert Benjamin Lewis | Lewis signed on as a ship's cook and steward on the merchantman Philip Larrabee of Bath, bound for the Haitian capital of Port-au-Prince in early 1858. |
Edward Bamford | Bamford died of pneumonia on 30 September 1928 aboard the HMS Cumberland en route to Hong Kong, where he held the appointment of Instructor of Small Arms and Musketry Officer at Hong Kong. |
Sanji Iwabuchi | He served as a midshipman on the cruiser, which made a long distance navigational training voyage to Hong Kong, Singapore, Australia, New Zealand and the South Pacific Mandate in 1915. |
Giuseppe Garibaldi | The ship was to be purchased in the United States, so Garibaldi went to New York, arriving on 30 July 1850. |
Edwin Flack | 150px | thumb | left | Edwin Flack Flack reached Athens after an uncomfortable six-day rail and sea trip, during which he was plagued with sea sickness. |
Young Stribling | During the spring of 1932,'' Strib'' went on a boxing tour to Australia, accompanied by his wife and children, and in the fall they sailed to Johannesburg, South Africa, where he defeated the heavyweight champion of that country before a record crowd of 15,000. |
George Tryon | Tryon arrived in Bombay on 10 October 1867 where preparations were already underway. |
Patrick Dalzel-Job | They returned to the UK in 1931 where he built his own schooner, the Mary Fortune, which he and his mother spent the next two years sailing around the British coast. |
Ralph Capone | He arrived in America on a ship named Werra on June 18, 1895 with his older brother Vincenzo and mother Teresa, entering via Ellis Island. |
Joshua Slocum | His first blue-water command, in 1869, was the barque Washington, which he took across the Pacific, from San Francisco to Australia, and home via Alaska. |
Henry M. Senter | In February 1915, he was a passenger on the S. S. Pastores sailing from Cristobol in the Canal Zone to New York. |
George Arliss | He embarked for a tour of America in 1901 in Mrs Patrick Campbell's troupe. |
Samuel Revans | Revans arrived in New Zealand on the ship Adelaide on 7 March 1840, docking at Wellington Harbour's Port Nicholson. |
Thomas McCarthy Fennell | In October 1867, he was put on board the Hougoumont, a convict ship bound for Western Australia. |
John Jackson Oakden | After visiting England, Oakden returned to Australia aboard the John Renwick, arriving at Adelaide in February 1837 as Philip Oakden's South Australian agent. |
Carlos Morel | Morel sailed from Buenos Aires on 22 February 1842 bound for Rio de Janeiro. |
William Shakespeare Hall | With his parents, Henry and Sarah, and five siblings he emigrated to Western Australia and reached Fremantle in February 1830. |
Georgina Hogarth | In 1842, aged 15, Georgina Hogarth joined the Dickens family household when Dickens and his wife Catherine (née Hogarth), sailed to America, caring for the young family they had left behind. |
John Collier (anthropologist) | This training largely ended in 1930, when he signed on as seaman in the four masted bark Abraham Rydberg for a voyage from San Francisco around Cape Horn to Dublin, Ireland, an experience arranged by Capt. Robinson. |
Jock Garden | Garden's elder brother James, also a sailmaker, migrated to Australia in the 1890s and the rest of the family joined him in Sydney in 1904. |
Neville Howse | The Second Contingent left South Africa via Cape Town on 13 December 1900 on the S. S. Orient, however Howse had been invalided to Britain on 28 November 1900. |
Jessie Benton Fr?mont | In 1849, Jessie and Lily made a harrowing and treacherous journey aboard ship to join Frémont in California. |
William Rooke Creswell | During a visit to Adelaide in 1885 he met a former naval colleague and was convinced to take up an appointment as First Lieutenant on South Australia's only naval vessel, HMCS'' Protector'', a posting he very much enjoyed. |
Ernest Henry Wilson | He continued across the U. S. by train, and sailed from San Francisco, reaching Hong Kong on 3 June 1899. |
George Burns | Gracie Allen and children aboard Matson flagship Lurline just before they sailed for Hawaii, 1938 Grace Ethel Cecile Rosalie Allen was born into an Irish Catholic show business family and educated at Star of the Sea Convent School in San Francisco, California in girlhood. |
Theodore Luqueer Mead | Still uncertain as to his future vocation, in 1878 Mead and his parents embarked on a six-month long entomological and nature trip to California and the Western States, travelling by steamer from New York via Panama and up the coast to San Francisco, returning via Salt Lake City and Chicago. |
Charles Heaphy | He was just seventeen years old when he was appointed as resident Artist and Surveyor to the first New Zealand Company expedition to New Zealand, sailing with William Wakefield on the Tory and arriving in what later became known as Wellington late in 1839. |
William Stevens Fielding | RMS Atlantic | SS Atlantic disaster, 1873 He was born in Halifax. |
Charles Brown (Taranaki) | At age 17, Brown junior immigrated on the Amelia Thompson, the first settler ship of the Plymouth Company arriving in 1841. |
Olive Winchester | Winchester and her mother arrived in Liverpool on September 10, 1911 on the SS Salaga from New York. |
Henry Ely Shacklock | Unsatisfied with the opportunities available to him in England, Henry Shacklock emigrated to New Zealand and arrived in Port Chalmers aboard the Bombay on the 9 September 1862. |
James Alipius Goold | In 1838, Goold arrived in Australia aboard the Upton Castle. |
Emperor Norton | He immigrated to San Francisco in 1849 after receiving a bequest of $ 40,000 from his father's estate, arriving aboard the steam yacht Hurlothrumbo. |
Frederick Race Godfrey | In 1847 at the age of 19 he came to Port Phillip aboard the sailing ship, `` Duke of Roxburgh'' to join his brother, Henry Godfrey on Boort Station, where he became a partner. |
Robert Watson (engineer) | Watson left England in November 1854, travelling to Melbourne, Victoria. |
Robin Boyd | Penleigh took his family with him to England late in the year to pick paintings ; he returned to Sydney without them in June 1923 to set up the exhibition, which was staged in Sydney and Melbourne during July -- August. |
Herbert Joseph Larkin | He and his bride sailed home to Australia, arriving in July 1919. |
Alan Hardaker | He then received a posting to Australia as supply officer to HMS Alert, a shore-based camp in Sydney, and in December 1944 moved on to HMS Golden Hind, a Royal Navy manning depot, also in Sydney. |
Lillian Russell | According to the March 17, 1922 edition of The New York Times, Russell traveled aboard the R. M. S. Aquitania from Southampton, England, to the Port of New York on the March 11 to March 17 crossing.'' |
Amos Sutton | Sutton along with his wife Charlotte Sutton (née Charlotte Collins) sailed to Calcutta (present Kolkata) and joined the missionary work at station Cuttack on 11 March 1825. |
Harry Pidgeon | His leisurely trip included stays in the Marquesas, Samoa, Fiji, New Hebrides, New Guinea, the Torres Strait, Christmas Island, the Cocos Islands, Mauritius, Cape Town, St. Helena, Ascension Island, Trinidad Island, Cristobal, the Panama Canal, and his return to Los Angeles on October 31, 1925. |
Mads Johansen Lange | Three years later, in 1824, he worked aboard the ship North, where he met captain John Burd. |
Gustavus Hines | Reverend Hines arrived in Oregon in 1840 aboard the ship Lausanne. |
Esther Charlotte Emily Weisbrodt Francis | May 1861, she with her husband and two small children, migrated to America from England, crossing the plains, arriving in Salt Lake City that September. |
Henry Stuart Russell | He migrated to Sydney, Australia in 1840, where he stayed at a New England station belonging to Arthur Hodgson, his second cousins. |
Diamantina Bowen | George, Diamantina and their sixteen-month-old daughter Nina arrived in Brisbane on Saturday 10 December 1859 on board The Cordelia. |
James Reddy Clendon | In 1828, as captain of the City of Edinburgh, he transported female convicts to Sydney and then sailed to New Zealand to pick up spars. |
William Henry John Slee | Aged 19, he sailed into Melbourne, Victoria, on 20 December 1855 aboard the Chilean brig Pedro V from Valparaiso via Tahiti. |
Horatio Gordon Robley | His regiment was withdrawn from Tauranga early in 1866 and sailed from Auckland arriving back in England at Spithead on 28 June 1866. |