Arthur Phillip
(11 October 1738 – 31 August 1814) was a British Royal Navy officer who served
as the first governor of the Colony of New South Wales.
Phillip was educated at Greenwich Hospital School from June
1751 until December 1753. He then became an apprentice on the whaling ship Fortune.
With the outbreak of the Seven Years' War against France, Phillip enlisted in
the Royal Navy as captain's servant to Michael Everitt aboard HMS Buckingham.
With Everitt, Phillip also served on HMS Union and HMS Stirling Castle. Phillip
was promoted to lieutenant on 7 June 1761, before being put on half-pay at the
end of hostilities on 25 April 1763. Seconded to the Portuguese Navy in 1774,
he served in the war against Spain. Returning to Royal Navy service in 1778, in
1782 Phillip, in command of HMS Europa, was to capture Spanish colonies in
South America, but an armistice was concluded before he reached his
destination. In 1784, Phillip was employed by Home Office under Secretary Evan
Nepean, to survey French defenses in Europe.
In 1786, Phillip was appointed by Lord Sydney as the
commander of the First Fleet, a fleet of 11 ships whose crew was to establish a
penal colony and a settlement at Botany Bay, New South Wales. On arriving at
Botany Bay, Phillip found the site unsuitable and searched for a more habitable
site for a settlement, which he found in Port Jackson – the site of Sydney,
Australia, today. Phillip was a far-sighted governor who soon realised that New
South Wales would need a civil administration and a system for emancipating
convicts. However, his plan to bring skilled tradesmen on the First Fleet's
voyage had been rejected. Consequently, he faced immense problems with labor,
discipline, and supply. Phillip wanted harmonious relations with the local
indigenous peoples, in the belief that everyone in the colony was a British
citizen and was protected by the law as such; therefore the indigenous peoples
had the same rights as everyone under Phillip's command. Eventually, cultural
differences between the two groups of people led to conflict. The arrival of
more convicts with the Second and Third Fleets placed new pressures on scarce
local resources. By the time Phillip sailed home in December 1792, the colony
was taking shape, with official land grants, systematic farming, and a water supply
in place.
On 11 December 1792, Phillip left the colony to return to
Britain to receive medical treatment for kidney stones. He had planned to
return to Australia, but medical advisors recommended he resign from the
governorship. His health recovered and he returned to active duty in the Navy
in 1796, holding a number of commands in home waters before being put in
command of the Hampshire Sea Fencibles. He eventually retired from active naval
service in 1805. He spent his final years of retirement in Bath, Somerset, before
his death on 31 August 1814. As the first Governor of New South Wales, a number
of places in Australia are named after him, including Port Phillip, Phillip
Island, Phillip Street in the Sydney central business district, the suburb of
Phillip in Canberra and the Governor Phillip Tower building in Sydney, as well
as many streets, parks, and schools.
Early life
Arthur Phillip was born on 11 October 1738, in the Parish of
All Hallows, in Bread Street, London. He was the son of Jacob Phillip, an
immigrant from Frankfurt, who by various accounts was a language teacher, a
merchant vessel owner, a merchant captain, or a common seaman. His mother,
Elizabeth Breach, was the widow of a common seaman by the name of John Herbert,
who had died of disease in Jamaica aboard HMS Tartar on 13 August 1732. At the
time of Arthur Phillip's birth, his family maintained a modest existence as
tenants near Cheapside in the City of London.
There are no surviving records of Phillip's early childhood.
His father, Jacob, died in 1739, after which the Phillip family would have a
low income. Arthur went to sea on a British naval vessel aged nine. On 22 June
1751, he was accepted into the Greenwich Hospital School, a charity school for
the sons of indigent seafarers. In accordance with the school's curriculum, his
education focused on literacy, arithmetic, and navigational skills, including
cartography. His headmaster, Reverend Francis Swinden, observed that in
personality, Phillip was "unassuming,
reasonable, and business-like to the smallest degree in everything he
undertakes".
Phillip remained at the Greenwich Hospital School for two
and a half years, longer than the average student stay of one year. At the end
of 1753, he was granted a seven-year indenture as an apprentice aboard Fortune,
a 210-ton whaling vessel commanded by merchant mariner William Readhead.
Phillip left the Greenwich Hospital School on 1 December, and spent the next
few months aboard the Fortune, awaiting the start of the 1754 whaling season.
Contemporary portraits depict Phillip as shorter than
average, with an olive complexion and dark eyes. A long nose and a pronounced
lower lip dominated his "smooth pear
of a skull" as quoted by Robert Hughes.
Early maritime career
Whaling and merchant
expeditions
In April 1754 Fortune headed out to hunt whales near
Svalbard in the Barents Sea. As an apprentice Phillip's responsibilities
included stripping blubber from whale carcasses and helping to pack it into
barrels. Food was scarce, and Fortune's 30 crew members supplemented their diet
with bird's eggs, scurvy grass, and, where possible, reindeer. The ship
returned to England on 20 July 1754. The whaling crew were paid and replaced
with twelve sailors for a winter voyage to the Mediterranean. Phillip remained
aboard as Fortune undertook an outward trading voyage to Barcelona and Livorno
carrying salt and raisins, returning via Rotterdam with a cargo of grains and
citrus. The ship returned to England in April 1755 and sailed immediately for
Svalbard for that year's whale hunt. Phillip was still a member of the crew but
abandoned his apprenticeship when the ship returned to England on 27 July.
Royal Navy and the
Seven Years' War
On 16 October 1755, Phillip enlisted in the Royal Navy as
captain's servant aboard the 68-gun HMS Buckingham, commanded by his mother's
cousin, Captain Michael Everitt. As a member of Buckingham's crew, Phillip
served in home waters until April 1756 and then joined Admiral John Byng's
Mediterranean fleet. The Buckingham was Rear-Admiral Temple West's flagship at
the Battle of Minorca on 20 May 1756.
Phillip moved on 1 August 1757, with Everitt, to the 90-gun
HMS Union, which took part in the Raid on St. Malo on 5–12 June 1758. Phillip,
again with Captain Everitt, transferred on 28 December 1758 to the 64-gun HMS
Stirling Castle, which went to the West Indies to serve at the Siege of Havana.
On 7 June 1761, Phillip was commissioned as a lieutenant in recognition for his
active service. With the coming of peace on 25 April 1763, he was retired on
half-pay.
Retirement and the
Portuguese Navy
In July 1763, Phillip married Margaret Charlotte Denison
(née Tibbott), known as Charlott, a widow 16 years his senior, and moved to
Glasshayes in Lyndhurst, Hampshire, establishing a farm there. The marriage was
unhappy, and the couple separated in 1769 when Phillip returned to the Navy.
The following year, he was posted as second lieutenant aboard HMS Egmont, a newly
built 74-gun ship of the line.
In 1774, Phillip was seconded to the Portuguese Navy as a
captain, serving in the war against Spain. While with the Portuguese Navy,
Phillip commanded a 26-gun frigate, Nossa Senhora do Pilar. On that ship, he
took a detachment of troops from Rio de Janeiro to Colonia do Sacramento on the
Río de la Plata (opposite Buenos Aires) to relieve the garrison there. The
voyage also conveyed a consignment of convicts assigned to carry out work at
Colonia. During a storm encountered in the course of the voyage, the convicts
assisted in working the ship, and on arriving at Colonia, Phillip recommended
that they be rewarded for saving the ship by remission of their sentences. A
garbled version of this recommendation eventually found its way into the
English press in 1786, when Phillip was appointed to lead the expedition to
Sydney. Phillip played a leading role in the capture of the Spanish ship San
Agustín, on 19 April 1777, off Santa Catarina. The Portuguese Navy commissioned
her as the Santo Agostinho, under Phillip's command. The action was reported in
the English press:
Madrid, 28 Aug. Letters from Lisbon bring the following
Account from Rio Janeiro: That the St. Augustine, of 70 Guns, having been
separated from the Squadron of M. Casa Tilly, was attacked by two Portuguese
Ships, against which they defended themselves for a Day and a Night, but being
next Day surrounded by the Portuguese Fleet, was obliged to surrender.
Recommissioned into
Royal Navy
[Phillip] is an officer of education and principle, he gives
way to reason and does not, before doing so fall into exaggerated and
unbearable excesses of temper ... he is very clean-handed; is an officer of
great truth and very brave; and is no flatterer, saying what he thinks but
without temper or want of respect.
In 1778, with Britain again at war, Phillip was recalled to
Royal Navy service and on 9 October was appointed first lieutenant of the
74-gun HMS Alexander as part of the Channel fleet. Promoted to commander on 2
September 1779 and given command of the 8-gun fireship HMS Basilisk. With
Spain's entry into the conflict, Phillip had a series of private meetings with
the First Lord of the Admiralty, the Earl of Sandwich, sharing his charts and
knowledge about the South American coastlines.
Phillip was promoted to post-captain on 30 November 1781 and
given command of the 20-gun HMS Ariadne. Ariadne was sent to the Elbe to escort
a transport ship carrying a detachment of Hanoverian troops, arriving at the
port of Cuxhaven on 28 December, the estuary froze over trapping Ariadne in the
harbor. In March 1782, Phillip arrived in England with the Hanoverian troops.
In the following months Ariadne got a new lieutenant, Philip Gidley King, whom
Phillip took under his wing. Ariadne was used to patrol the Channel where on 30
June; she captured the French frigate Le Robecq.
With a change of government on 27 March 1782, Sandwich
retired from the Admiralty, Lord Germain was replaced as Secretary of State for
Home and American Affairs by Earl of Shelburne, before 10 July 1782, in another
change of government Thomas Townshend replaced him, and assumed responsibility
for organizing an expedition against Spanish America. Like Sandwich and
Germain, he turned to Phillip for planning advice. The plan was for a squadron
of three ships of the line and a frigate to mount a raid on Buenos Aires and
Monte Video, then to proceed to the coasts of Chile, Peru, and Mexico to
maraud, and ultimately to cross the Pacific to join the British Navy's East
India squadron for an attack on Manila. On 27 December 1782, Phillip, took charge
of the 64-gun HMS Europa. The expedition, consisting of the 70-gun HMS Grafton,
the 74-gun HMS Elizabeth, Europa, and the 32-gun frigate HMS Iphigenia, sailed
on 16 January 1783 under the command of Commodore Robert Kingsmill. Shortly
after the ships' departure, an armistice was concluded between Great Britain
and Spain. Phillip learnt of this in April when he put in for storm repairs at
Rio de Janeiro. Phillip wrote to Townshend from Rio de Janeiro on 25 April
1783, expressing his disappointment that the ending of the American War had
robbed him of the opportunity for naval glory in South America.
Survey work in Europe
After his return to England in April 1784, Phillip remained
in close contact with Townshend, now Lord Sydney, and Home Office Under
Secretary Evan Nepean. From October 1784 to September 1786, Nepean, who was in
charge of the Secret Service relating to the Bourbon Powers, France, and Spain,
employed him to spy on the French naval arsenals at Toulon and other ports.
There was fear that Britain would soon be at war with these powers as a
consequence of the Batavian Revolution in the Netherlands.
Colonial service
Lord Sandwich, together with the president of the Royal
Society, Sir Joseph Banks, the scientist who had accompanied Lieutenant James
Cook on his 1770 voyage, was advocating the establishment of a British colony
in Botany Bay, New South Wales. Banks accepted an offer of assistance from the
American loyalist James Matra in July 1783. Under Banks' guidance, Matra
rapidly produced "A Proposal for
Establishing a Settlement in New South Wales" (24 August 1783), with a
fully developed set of reasons for a colony composed of American loyalists,
Chinese, and South Sea Islanders (but not convicts). Thomas Townshend, Lord
Sydney, as Secretary of State for the Home Office and minister in charge,
decided to establish the proposed colony in Australia. This decision was taken
for two reasons: the ending of the option to transport criminals to North
America following the American Revolution, and the need for a base in the
Pacific to counter French expansion.
In September 1786, Phillip was appointed commodore of the
fleet, which came to be known as the First Fleet. His assignment was to
transport convicts and soldiers to establish a colony at Botany Bay. Upon
arriving there, Phillip was to assume the powers of captain general and
governor in chief of the new colony. A subsidiary colony was to be founded on
Norfolk Island, as recommended by Sir John Call and Sir George Young, to take
advantage of that island's native flax (harakeke) and timber for naval
purposes.
Voyage to Colony of
New South Wales
On 25 October 1786, the 20-gun HMS Sirius, lying in the dock
at Deptford, was commissioned, with the command given to Phillip. The armed
tender HMS Supply, under the command of Lieutenant Henry Lidgbird Ball, was
also commissioned to join the expedition. On 15 December, Captain John Hunter
was assigned as second captain to Sirius to command in the absence of Phillip,
who as governor of the colony would be where the seat of government was to be
fixed.
Phillip had a difficult time assembling the fleet, which was
to make an eight-month sea voyage and then establish a colony. Everything a new
colony might need had to be taken, since Phillip had no real idea of what he
might find when he got there. There were few funds available for equipping the
expedition. His suggestion that people with experience in farming, building,
and crafts be included was rejected by the Home Office. Most of the 772
convicts were petty thieves from the London slums. A contingent of marines and
a handful of other officers who were to administer the colony accompanied
Phillip.
The fleet of 11 ships and about 1,500 people, under
Phillip's command, sailed from Portsmouth, England, on 13 May 1787; HMS Hyena
provided an escort out of British waters. On 3 June 1787, the fleet anchored at
Santa Cruz, Tenerife. On 10 June they set sail to cross the Atlantic to Rio de
Janeiro, taking advantage of favourable trade winds and ocean currents. The
Fleet reached Rio de Janeiro on 5 August and stayed for a month to resupply.
The Fleet left Rio de Janeiro on 4 September to run before the westerlies to
Table Bay in Southern Africa, which it reached on 13 October; this was the last
port of call before Botany Bay. On 25 November, Phillip transferred from the
Sirius to the faster Supply, and with the faster ships of the fleet hastened
ahead to prepare for the arrival of the rest of the fleet. However, this "flying squadron", as Frost
called it, reached Botany Bay only hours before the rest of the Fleet, so no preparatory
work was possible. Supply reached Botany Bay on 18 January 1788; the three
fastest transports in the advance group arrived on 19 January; slower ships,
including Sirius, arrived on 20 January.
The landing of the
First Fleet in Port Jackson, Australia in 1788
Phillip soon decided that the site, chosen on the
recommendation of Sir Joseph Banks, who had accompanied James Cook in 1770, was
not suitable, since it had poor soil, no secure anchorage, and no reliable
water source. Cook was an explorer and Banks had a scientific interest, whereas
Phillip's differing assessment of the site came from his perspective as, quoted
by Tyrrell, "custodian of over a
thousand convicts" for whom he was responsible. After some
exploration, Phillip decided to go on to Port Jackson, and on 26 January, the
marines and the convicts landed at a cove, which Phillip named for Lord Sydney.
This date later became Australia's national day, Australia Day. Governor
Phillip formally proclaimed the colony on 7 February 1788 in Sydney. Sydney
Cove offered a fresh water supply and a safe harbor, which Phillip famously
described as: "being without
exception the finest Harbor in the World [...] Here a Thousand Sail of the Line
may ride in the most perfect Security."
Establishing a settlement
On 26 January, the Union Jack was raised, and possession of
the land was taken formally in the name of King George III. The next day,
sailors from Sirius, a party of marines, and a number of male convicts were
disembarked to fell timber and clear the ground for the erection of tents. The
remaining large company of male convicts disembarked from the transports over
the following days. Phillip himself structured the ordering of the camp. His
own tent as governor and those of his attendant staff and servants were set on
the east side of Tank Stream, with the tents of the male convicts and marines
on the west. During this time, priority was given to building permanent
storehouses for the settlement's provisions. On 29 January, the governor's
portable house was placed, and livestock were landed the next day. The female
convicts disembarked on 6 February; the general camp for the women was to the
north of the governor's house and separated from the male convicts by the
houses of Chaplain Richard Johnson and the Judge Advocate, Marine Captain David
Collins. On 7 February 1788, Phillip and his government were formally
inaugurated.
On 15 February 1788, Phillip sent Lieutenant Philip Gidley
King with a party of 23, including 15 convicts, to establish the colony at
Norfolk Island, partly in response to a perceived threat of losing the island
to the French, and partly to establish an alternative food source for the
mainland colony.
Governor of New South
Wales
When Phillip was appointed as governor-designate of the
colony and began to plan the expedition, he requested that the convicts that
were being sent be trained; only twelve carpenters and a few men who knew
anything about agriculture were sent. Seamen with technical and building skills
were commandeered immediately. The colony's isolation meant that it took almost
two years for Phillip to receive replies to his dispatches from his superiors
in London.
Phillip established a civil administration, with courts of
law, that applied to everyone living in the settlement. Two convicts, Henry and
Susannah Kable, sought to sue Duncan Sinclair, the captain of the Alexander,
for stealing their possessions during the voyage. Sinclair, believing that as
convicts they had no protection from the law, as was the case in Britain,
boasted that he could not be sued. Despite this, the court found for the
plaintiffs and ordered the captain to make restitution for the theft of the
Kables' possessions.
Phillip had drawn up a detailed memorandum of his plans for
the proposed new colony. In one paragraph he wrote: "The laws of this country [England] will of course, be introduced
in [New] South Wales, and there is one that I would wish to take place from the
moment his Majesty's forces take possession of the country: That there can be no
slavery in a free land, and consequently no slaves." Nevertheless,
Phillip believed in severe discipline; floggings and hangings were commonplace,
although Phillip commuted many death sentences. The settlement's supplies were
rationed equally to convicts, officers, and marines and females were given
two-thirds of the weekly males' rations. In late February, six convicts were
brought before the criminal court for stealing supplies. They were sentenced to
death; the ringleader, Thomas Barrett, was hanged that day. Phillip gave the
rest a reprieve. They were banished to an island in the harbor and given only
bread and water.
The governor also expanded the settlement's knowledge of the
landscape. Two officers from Sirius, Captain John Hunter and Lieutenant William
Bradley, conducted a thorough survey of the harbor at Sydney Cove. Phillip
later joined them on an expedition to survey Broken Bay.
The fleet's ships left over the next months, with Sirius and
Supply remaining in the colony under command of the governor. They were used to
survey and map the coastlines and waterways. Scurvy broke out, so Sirius left
Port Jackson for Cape Town under the command of Hunter in October 1788, having
been sent for supplies. The voyage, which completed a circumnavigation,
returned to Sydney Cove in April, just in time to save the near-starving
colony.
Statue of Arthur
Phillip in the Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney
As an experienced farmhand, Phillip's appointed servant
Henry Edward Dodd, served as farm superintendent at Farm Cove, where he
successfully cultivated the first crops, later moving to Rose Hill, where the
soil was better. James Ruse, a convict, was later appointed to the position after
Dodd died in 1791. When Ruse succeeded in the farming endeavors, he received the
colony's first land grant.
In June 1790, more convicts arrived with the Second Fleet,
but HMS Guardian, carrying more supplies, was disabled en route after hitting
an iceberg, leaving the colony low on provisions again. Supply, the only ship
left under colonial command after Sirius was wrecked 19 March 1790 trying to
land men and supplies on Norfolk Island, was sent to Batavia for supplies.
In late 1792, Phillip, whose health was suffering,
relinquished the governorship to Major Francis Grose, lieutenant-governor and
commander of New South Wales Corps. On 11 December 1792, Phillip left for
Britain, on the Atlantic, which had arrived with convicts of the Third Fleet.
Phillip was unable to follow his original intention of returning to Port
Jackson once his health was restored, as medical advice compelled him to resign
formally on 23 July 1793.
Military personnel in
colony
The main challenge for order and harmony in the settlement
came not from the convicts secured there on terms of good behaviour, but from
the attitude of officers from the New South Wales Marine Corps. As Commander in
Chief, Phillip was in command of both the naval and marine forces; his naval
officers readily obeyed his commands, but a measure of co-operation from the
marine officers ran against their tradition. Major Robert Ross and his officers
(with the exception of a few such as David Collins, Watkin Tench, and William
Dawes) refused to do anything other than guard duty, claiming that they were
neither gaolers, supervisors, nor policemen.
Four companies of marines, consisting of 160 privates with
52 officers and NCO's, accompanied the First Fleet to Botany Bay. In addition,
there were 34 officers and men serving in the Ship's Complement of Marines
aboard Sirius and Supply, bringing the total to 246 who departed England.
Ross supported and encouraged his fellow officers in their
conflicts with Phillip, engaged in clashes of his own, and complained of the
governor's actions to the Home Office. Phillip, more placid and forbearing in
temperament, was anxious in the interests of the community as a whole to avoid
friction between the civil and military authorities. Though firm in his
attitude, he endeavored to placate Ross, but to little effect. In the end, he
solved the problem by ordering Ross to Norfolk Island on 5 March 1790 to replace
the commandant there.
Beginning with guards arriving with the Second and Third
fleets, but officially with the arrival of HMS Gorgon on 22 September 1791, the
New South Wales Marines were relieved by a newly formed British Army regiment
of foot, the New South Wales Corps. On 18 December 1791, Gorgon left Port Jackson,
taking home the larger part of the still-serving New South Wales Marines. There
remained in New South Wales a company of active marines serving under Captain
George Johnston, who had been Phillip's aide-de-camp, which transferred to the
New South Wales Corps. Also remaining in the colony were discharged marines,
many of whom became settlers. The official departure of the last serving
marines from the colony was in December 1792, with Governor Phillip on
Atlantic.
Major Francis Grose, commander of the New South Wales Corps,
had replaced Ross as the Lieutenant-Governor and took over command of the
colony when Phillip returned to Britain.
Relations with
indigenous peoples
Phillip's official orders with regard to Aboriginal people
were to "conciliate their
affections", to "live in
amity and kindness with them", and to punish anyone who should "wantonly destroy them, or give them
any unnecessary interruption in the exercise of their several
occupations". The first meeting between the colonists and the Eora,
Aboriginal people, happened in Botany Bay. When Phillip went ashore, gifts were
exchanged, thus Phillip and the officers began their relationship with the Eora
through gift-giving, hilarity, and dancing, but also by showing them what their
guns could do. Anyone found harming or killing Aboriginal people without
provocation would be severely punished.
After the early meetings, dancing, and musket
demonstrations, the Eora avoided the settlement in Sydney Cove for the first
year, but they warned and then attacked whenever colonists trespassed on their
lands away from the settlement. Part of Phillip's early plan for peaceful
cohabitation had been to persuade some Eora, preferably a family, to come and
live in the town with the British so that the colonists could learn about the
Eora's language, beliefs, and customs.
By the end of the first year, as none of the Eora had come
to live in the settlement, Phillip decided on a more ruthless strategy, and
ordered the capture of some Eora warriors. The man who was captured was
Arabanoo, from whom Phillip and his officers started to learn language and
customs. Arabanoo died in April 1789 of smallpox, which also ravaged the rest of
the Eora population. Phillip again ordered the boats to Manly Cove, where two
more warriors were captured, Coleby and Bennelong; Coleby soon escaped, but
Bennelong remained. Bennelong and Phillip formed a kind of friendship, before
he too escaped.
Four months after Bennelong escaped from Sydney, Phillip was
invited to a whale feast at Manly. Bennelong greeted him in a friendly and
jovial way. Phillip was suddenly surrounded by warriors and speared in the
shoulder by a man called Willemering. He ordered his men not to retaliate.
Phillip, perhaps realizing that the spearing was in retaliation for the
kidnapping, ordered no actions to be taken over it. Friendly relations were
reestablished afterwards, with Bennelong even returning to Sydney with his
family.
Even though there were now friendly relations with the
Indigenous people around Sydney Cove, the same couldn't be said about the ones
around Botany Bay, who had killed or wounded 17 colonists. Phillip dispatched
orders, as quoted by Tench, "to put
to death ten ... [and] cut off the heads of the slain ... to infuse a universal
terror, which might operate to prevent further mischief". Even though
two expeditions were dispatched under command of Watkin Tench, no one was
apprehended.
On 11 December 1792, when Phillip returned to Britain,
Bennelong and another Aboriginal man named Yemmerrawanne (or Imeerawanyee)
travelled with him on the Atlantic.
Later life and death
Phillip's estranged wife, Charlott, died 3 August 1792 and
was buried in St Beuno's Churchyard, Llanycil, Bala, Merionethshire. Phillip, a
resident in Marylebone, married Isabella Whitehead of Bath in St Marylebone
Church of England on 8 May 1794.
His health recovered, he was recommissioned in March 1796 to
the 74-gun HMS Alexander as part of the Channel fleet. In October, his command
was switched to the 74-gun HMS Swiftsure. In September 1797, Phillip was
transferred again to the 90-gun HMS Blenheim, command of which he held until
December of that year. During 1798–99, Phillip commanded the Hampshire Sea
Fencibles, then appointed inspector of the Impress Service, in which capacity
he and a secretary toured the outposts of Britain to report on the strengths of
the various posts.
In the ordinary course of events he was promoted to Rear-Admiral
on 1 January 1801. Phillip retired in 1805 from active service in the Navy, was
promoted to Vice-Admiral on 13 December 1806, and received a final promotion to
Admiral of the Blue on 4 June 1814.
Phillip suffered a stroke in 1808, which left him partially paralyzed.
He died 31 August 1814 at his residence, 19 Bennett Street, Bath. He was buried
nearby at St Nicholas's Church, Bathampton. His Last Will and Testament has been
transcribed and is online. Forgotten for many years, the grave was discovered
in November 1897 by a young woman cleaning the church, who found the name after
lifting matting from the floor; the historian James Bonwick had been searching
Bath records for its location. An annual service of remembrance is held at the
church around Phillip's birthdate by the Britain–Australia Society.
In 2007, Geoffrey Robertson QC alleged that Phillip's
remains were no longer in St Nicholas Church, Bathampton, and had been lost: "Captain Arthur Phillip is not where
the ledger stone says he is: it may be that he is buried somewhere outside, it
may simply be that he is simply lost. But he is not where Australians have been
led to believe that he now lies."
Legacy
A number of places in Australia bear Phillip's name,
including Port Phillip, Phillip Island (Victoria), Phillip Island (Norfolk
Island), Phillip Street in the Sydney central business district, the federal
electorate of Phillip (1949–1993), the suburb of Phillip in Canberra, the
Governor Phillip Tower building in Sydney, St Phillip's Church, Sydney (now St
Philip's), and many streets, parks, and schools, including Arthur Phillip High
School in Parramatta.
A monument to Phillip in Bath Abbey Church was unveiled in
1937. Another was unveiled at St Mildred's Church, Bread Street, London, in
1932; that church was destroyed in the London Blitz in 1940, but the principal
elements of the monument were re-erected at the west end of Watling Street,
near Saint Paul's Cathedral, in 1968. A different bust and memorial is inside
the nearby church of St Mary-le-Bow. There is a statue of him in the Royal
Botanical Gardens, Sydney. There is a portrait of him by Francis Wheatley in
the National Portrait Gallery, London, and in the Mitchell Library, State
Library of New South Wales, Sydney.
Percival Serle wrote of Phillip in his Dictionary of
Australian Biography:
Steadfast in mind,
modest, without self-seeking, Phillip had imagination enough to conceive what
the settlement might become, and the common sense to realize what at the moment
was possible and expedient. When almost everyone was complaining he never
himself complained, when all feared disaster he could still hopefully go on
with his work. He was sent out to found a convict settlement; he laid the foundations
of a great dominion.
200th anniversary
As part of a series of events on the bicentenary of his
death, a memorial was dedicated in Westminster Abbey on 9 July 2014. In the
service, the Dean of Westminster, Very Reverend Dr John Hall, described Phillip
as follows: "This modest, yet
world-class seaman, linguist, and patriot, whose selfless service laid the
secure foundations on which was developed the Commonwealth of Australia, will
always be remembered and honored alongside other pioneers and inventors here in
the Nave: David Livingstone, Thomas Cochrane, and Isaac Newton." A
similar memorial was unveiled by the outgoing 37th Governor of New South Wales,
Marie Bashir, in St James' Church, Sydney, on 31 August 2014. A bronze bust was
installed at the Museum of Sydney, and a full-day symposium discussed his
contributions to the founding of modern Australia.
In popular culture
Phillip has been played by a number of actors in movies and
television programs, including:
Sir Cedric Hardwicke
in Botany Bay (1953)
Edward Hepple in The
Hungry Ones (1963)
Wynn Roberts in
Prelude to Harvest (1963)
Peter Collingwood in
The Timeless Land (1980)
Sam Neill in The
Incredible Journey of Mary Bryant (2005)
David Wenham in
Banished (2015)
Barry Lee-Pearce in
The Australian Wars (2022)
He is a prominent character in Timberlake Wertenbaker's play
Our Country's Good, in which he commissions Lieutenant Ralph Clark to stage a
production of The Recruiting Officer. He is shown as compassionate and just,
but receives little support from his fellow officers.
His life was dramatized on radio in:
The Watch on the
Headland (1940)
I'll Meet You in
Botany Bay (1945)
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