The company-microstate: The Auckland Islands and corporate colonialism in global history, 1849-52

Abstract The Auckland Islands, a subantarctic archipelago 465 kilometres south of New Zealand, were the setting for one of the stranger episodes in the global history of colonial expansion. From 1849–52, these remote, inhospitable islands were governed and settled by a chartered company. The project was driven by lofty ambitions to simultaneously create a flourishing settler colony and unlock vast new whaling grounds in the Southern Ocean; the reality was a commercial disaster plagued by bitter internal disputes and a speedy abandonment. Drawing on the methods of global microhistory, I argue that the colonization of the Auckland Islands was a pivotal moment in the integration of the Southern Ocean world into global processes of governance, mobility, and trade. This anomalous case contributes to recent scholarship on ‘company-states’ and the central role of such hybrid polities in processes of cross-regional interaction and globalization.

contradictory orders to the colonists, each claiming to be the legitimate source of political authority on the islands.This farcical situation only ended in April, when Enderby finally stood down as Lieutenant-Governor and departed for New Zealand.In this contest, the sovereignty of the Company had triumphed over that of the Crown.
The SWFC's exercise of sovereignty was not in itself unusual.A wide variety of European chartered companies had exercised extensive sovereign powers well before the SWFC, controlling territories, waging war, signing treaties, imposing taxes, making laws, governing subjects, and establishing colonies.The English East India Company (EIC) is the quintessential example, a hybrid commercial and political entity that Philip J. Stern labels a 'company-state'. 4Historians have subsequently shown that other prominent early modern chartered companies, such as the Dutch East India (VOC) and Hudson's Bay (HBC) Companies, can likewise best be understood as sovereign, autonomous company-states. 5Andrew Phillips and J.C. Sharman have extended Stern's conception of the company-state still further, arguing that a range of smaller corporations such as the Russian American, German New Guinea, and British South Africa Companies are further examples of the company-state model, albeit with fewer sovereign powers and limited commercial success. 6iewed in this context, the mere fact of a company exercising sovereignty was unremarkable.What is peculiar about events on the Aucklands is the place and time in which they took place.By colonizing these islands, where the 'Roaring Forties' give way to the 'Furious Fifties' in the tempestuous Southern Ocean, the SWFC was attempting to extend the limits of European settler colonization and apply the company-state model to an entirely new region.And by initiating this project in the 1840s, the company was something of a temporal outlier, having missed the company-state's seventeenth-and eighteenth-century heyday.
The global history of corporations is a booming field of scholarship, of which the literature on company-states is only one branch.Another distinct branch focuses on domestic corporations in early modern Europe, while a third focuses on tracing the history and antecedents of the modern multinational corporation. 7The scholarship's dominant focus, however, has been on corporations formed in early modern Europe to pursue overseas trade and colonization. 8This historiography has yielded significant insights, particularly into the significance of corporations to processes of empire building and early modern globalization, but has also faced two key criticisms.The first is that it focuses too narrowly on the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, thus overlooking both overseas corporations' pre-seventeenth century antecedents and their nineteenth-century resurgence. 9The second criticism is of a tendency to focus either on individual companies or to adopt narrow national or imperial frameworks. 10Phillips and Sharman suggest that a solution to this narrow spatial and temporal focus is comparative meta-analysis of company-states on a worldwide scale, while Matthew Birchall suggests it can be overcome by exploring connections over space and time, such as those between seventeenth-century North American chartered company colonization and systematic colonization in nineteenth-century Australasia. 11William A. Pettigrew and David Veevers go further, urging historians to go beyond comparisons and connections to instead use corporations to study long-term global processes of integration. 12n short, there are growing calls for a longue durée, global history of corporations, and the response thus far has been to produce increasingly comparative and synthetic studies of the corporate form.
Yet synthesis and comparison are not the only methods available to global historians.A persistent criticism of global history has been its tendency to downplay the importance of placebased research and knowledge. 13An increasingly popular response to this critique is to embrace 'global microhistory'.While there is no single definition or method of global microhistory, I use the term here to refer to scholarship that focuses on 'outliers' and emphasizes close reading and deep contextualisation of primary sources to analyse global historical processes and structures. 14his article, then, is a global microhistory of the colonization of the Auckland Islands.It reconstructs the events of this short-lived colonial project from the fragmentary sources available and shows how particular forms of society, governance, and industry developed on the islands that reveal the SWFC to be a 'company-state'.
Drawing on this close investigation of the Aucklands, the article makes three related suggestions.First, the company-state as a hybrid political and commercial form has a longer genealogy than is often acknowledged in the historiography of company-states, spanning from its medieval antecedents through its sixteenth-and seventeenth-century heyday into the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.In this, the article contributes to a substantial body of scholarship that demonstrates the continued utility and ubiquity of various forms of corporate colonization into the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, from Wakefieldian companies in Australasia to private settlements like Fordlandia in Latin America to the assortment of what Steven Press dubs 'rogue empires' in Asia and Africa. 15Secondly, any such extension of the company-state's temporality demands a corresponding extension of the concept's spatiality.That is, the company-states of the nineteenth century operated in markedly different areas of the world to their early-modern counterparts.The company-state as an organisational form had moved to new imperial peripheries, from Asia and North America to Australasia, Latin America, the Pacific, and the Southern Ocean.Historians of these spaces must therefore grapple with sovereign corporations not just as features of colonialism and settler colonialism but as central actors.Thirdly, I contend that extending the concept in this way has analytical and explanatory value.As an example of how such a spatially and temporally extended conception of the company-state can be productively employed, the article concludes by suggesting that, short-lived though it was, the exercise of sovereignty by a chartered company in the Auckland Islands was crucial to the integration of a large, marginal region -the Southern Ocean and its islandsinto a matrix of global connections, networks, and processes.

The proposal
The Auckland Islands were first discovered and occupied by Polynesian seafarers sometime around 1350. 16 This first settlement was abandoned within two years, and the islands were only rediscoveredand claimedby whaling captain Abraham Bristow in 1806.This rediscovery prompted a sealing boomdozens of ships descended on the islands each summer from 1806 to 1838 to hunt seals for the fur trade, depleting the population to the point of unprofitability within thirty years.This boom had far-reaching ramifications, transforming the islands' ecology and integrating them into wider trade networks as seal skins from the Aucklands were sold in Britain and China by the EIC and other traders. 17Yet while the islands' integration into a global trade network was brief and ad hoc, one of the temporary visitors, a Māori sealer called Matioro, began to imagine the Aucklands as a site for permanent settlement.
Matioro's iwi (people or nation), Ngāti Mutunga, were originally from New Zealand's Taranaki region.During a period of inter-iwi conflict in the first half of the nineteenth century, Ngāti Mutunga and another Taranaki iwi, Ngāti Tama, were driven off their lands.In 1835, members of the two iwi invaded Rēkohu (the Chatham Islands), 800 kilometres east of New Zealand, where they killed or enslaved most of the indigenous Moriori people. 18In 1843, perhaps because of a shortage of land in Rēkohu, Matioro chartered a ship and led a party of approximately forty Māori and twenty-five enslaved Moriori to settle the Aucklands. 19Matioro built his settlement on what Bristow had named Enderby Island, one of the smaller islands at the north-eastern tip of the archipelago, while another chief, Manature, settled across the bay on Auckland Island itself.
Conditions on the Aucklands proved harsher than anticipated.The islands' climate was cool and stable, averaging 8°C throughout the year, but was dominated by gale force westerlies, low cloud, and constant rain. 20Matioro would have glimpsed the islands' unforested highlands from afar during his sealing visits, but a belt of gnarled rātā trees, dense scrubland, and a slippery carpet of moss, lichens, and dead rātā leaves made accessing these highlands a gruelling endeavour.When they did, the highlands proved boggy and difficult to cultivate, and the settlers struggled to grow anything more than cabbages, turnips, and marble-sized potatoes.Matioro had seen many feral pigs during his previous visits, descendants of animals released by Bristow, but soon discovered the pigs' diet made their meat repulsive.And with the sealing boom over, the Māori settlements were almost entirely isolated from the rest of the world for six years. 21ust as Matioro and Manature were facing grim conditions on the islands in the mid-1840s, Charles Enderby was developing his own plans in London.Enderby was a man of eclectic interests: a prolific pamphleteer, advocate for economic reform, and founding member of the Royal Geographical Society. 22He also had a keen interest in systematic colonization and the writings of its foundational theorist, Edward Gibbon Wakefield, that saw him invest in Wakefield's New Zealand Association and the Wakefieldian Western Australian Company. 23Indeed, Enderby developed his own ideas about systematic colonization, which he expounded on in a pamphlet promoting his Aucklands venture. 24In his professional life, Enderby was a third-generation director of Enderby & Sons, one of several English companies involved in the southern whaling industry in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.By the 1830s, however, both Enderby & Sons and the wider industry had entered a terminal decline, and Enderby's pleas for government subsidies had fallen on deaf ears. 25t was in this context that Enderby conceived the colonization of the Aucklands.He concluded that the only way to salvage the whaling industry was for its surviving firms and investors to consolidate their capital and form a single joint stock company.This company would operate out of a permanent station on the Aucklands, providing access to both established whaling grounds and the largely untouched Southern Ocean, which Enderby believed was teeming with whales. 26perating out of the Aucklands rather than London would boost profit margins significantly, such that Enderby estimated an initial fleet of fifty ships would produce profit of £278,000 within two years, and could then be scaled up with 'progressively accumulating profits' until the tiny archipelago boasted a fleet of 600 ships. 27haling was the impetus for Enderby's proposal, but his plans went far beyond a mere whaling station.For Enderby, the Aucklands represented a site of experimentation for his ideas about political economy and systematic colonization.In line with Wakefield's principles, colonization would focus on concentrated settlement in marginal 'waste land' and would be overseen by the SWFC, not the state. 28The colonists would be sober, industrious craftsmen and seamen, accompanied by their entire families and drawn principally from the coastal maritime communities of England and Scotland.Every whaler and settler would be an employee of the company, contracted for a set term, paid fair wages, and offered plots of land to settle permanently upon expiration of their contracts. 29Agriculture was central to Enderby's colonial vision, his expectations shaped by the accounts of previous visitors such as Benjamin Morrell, a sealer prone to hyperbole who declared the Aucklands an 'Eden of the south' ideally suited to farming. 30nderby expected the first generation of settlers to clear the forests and establish market gardens and small farms with herds of livestock.While the colony would initially rely on supplies from Australasia, the farms would soon provide sufficient food for both the colonists and, as the Aucklands developed into a major port, for sale to visiting ships.To encourage investment and settlement, the colony would be a free port without taxes or duties, while land speculation would be discouraged by requiring anyone wishing to purchase land to immediately use it.Other staples of Wakefieldian systematic colonization included an assisted migration scheme and a large program of public works, all funded by land sales. 31In short, the colony was to simultaneously revitalize Enderby & Sons, salvage the British southern whaling industry, provide a model for systematic colonization, and stand as a permanent tribute to Charles Enderby himself.
Enderby began developing his plan in April 1844. 32He unsuccessfully approached Prime Minister Robert Peel for government support in July 1845, then spent the next year petitioning the Privy Council to lease him the islands at a nominal rent and the Board of Trade to recommend a royal charter for his proposed company. 33Enderby's case rested mainly on a claim that his project would serve the public good by reinvigorating the British whaling industry, providing useful resources of whale oil and whalebone and creating a pool of skilled seamen that could be placed at the Royal Navy's disposal in wartime. 34In this Enderby's claims, which secured him a thirty-year lease in 1847, were part of a long tradition of public good arguments invoked by corporations to justify the privileges they sought. 35ith the lease secured, Enderby turned his attention to establishing a company.He published a pamphlet outlining his proposal for a combined whaling-colonial enterprise and invited prominent businessmen to join the incipient SWFC's Court of Directors. 36A prospectus was published in October 1848, with 6,000 £50 shares made available for subscription in an effort to raise the £300,000 Enderby estimated was necessary to outfit fifty ships and commence the colonial project. 37Nearly a third of this target capital was subscribed within three months, and, on 7 December 1848, the Company was officially constituted and an eighteen-man court of directors appointed. 38Enderby immediately transferred his personal lease of the Aucklands to the SWFC, while a Royal Charter was granted in January 1849, giving the Company the exclusive rights to colonize the islands and hunt whales and seals in the surrounding seas. 39he Charter came with a stipulation, however.All expenses of government would have to be met by the Company, one result of which was the decision that the offices of the Crown's Lieutenant-Governor and the Company's resident-commissioner would be jointly held by one man: fifty-two-year-old Charles Enderby. 40Enderby was answerable to the SWFC's court of directors but acted with the authority of both company and state on the ground.In this the Company resembles other, better-known company-states.Edward Cavanagh, for example, has argued that, other than granting and extending its charter, the Crown 'had barely a part to play in the operation' of the HBC. 41Indeed, the HBC pursued policies, particularly in regard to French trading posts in Rupert's Land, that openly diverged from metropolitan aims and interests.In similar fashion, the state had little interest in the SWFC's project, which was at odds with the interests of the existing British settler colonies in New South Wales, Van Diemen's land, and New Zealand, each of which was eager for metropolitan investment and would have welcomed the establishment of a major whaling station within their territories. 42espite a promising start to its attempts to raise capital, the SWFC's operations were almost immediately truncated.The project was endorsed by various publications and public figures, including polar explorer James Clark Ross and President of the Board of Trade Henry Labouchere, but the £300,000 Enderby had deemed essential for success proved impossible to raise. 43ccordingly, the Company's final prospectus dropped its call for investment to £100,000, while the fleet of fifty ships proposed in 1847 was cut to just threewith plans to construct five moreby the time the first settlers departed in July 1849. 44Yet while the project's budget was slashed, its ambition was undiminished.Joining Charles Enderby on the first fleet were approximately 75 settlers, chosen to fill roles that included surveyor, civil engineer, medical officer, surgeon, midwife, accountant, storekeeper, butcher, harbour pilot, cooks, farmers, whalers, and various craftsmen and general 'company servants'.At least eighteen women and several young children sailed with the first fleet, with others set to follow once the additional ships were constructed. 4537 The Standard, 6 October 1848, 1; Douglas Jerrold's Weekly Newspaper, 4 November 1848, 1410.
A more sensible option may have been to prioritize the whaling station and ensure it was profitable before committing funds to colonization, but the SWFC was determined to combine both from the outset.

The colony
The passengers of Samuel Enderby, the flagship of the SWFC's tiny fleet, expected to arrive on a remote and uninhabited island.They were shocked, then, to be welcomed to the Auckland Islands by a party of Māori, who met the ship on 4 December 1849 and piloted it into Port Ross. 46This was the first of many shocks for the Company's colonists; where Enderby had promised 'fine harbours, ready formed, and land ready for the ploughshare', they found impenetrable scrub, dense forests, steep hills, swampy ground, brutal westerlies, and a month of ceaseless rain. 47It was imperative that the three ships unload their passengers and cargoes and commence whaling quickly, but the land first had to be cleared and levelled, and the presence of women and children meant Enderby felt compelled to keep the ships in harbour as temporary accommodation until housing could be constructed ashore.
Poor planning further complicated the colony's chaotic early days.To take one example, the SWFC was formed to hunt the industry's preferred species, right whales, which tend to swim slowly, calve in shallow waters, and float when killed.The southern species of right whales, Eubalaena australis, had been hunted to commercial if not total extinction in Tasmanian and New Zealand waters by the 1840s, but there remained a significant population which returned annually to its calving grounds around the Aucklands and Campbell Island. 48Yet while the Company's ships were chosen and outfitted to target these right whales, the men recruited to crew them primarily had experience in hunting sperm whales (Physeter macrocephalus).Sperm whaling was a distinct branch of the industry requiring its own skills and knowledge and usually prosecuted from smaller ships, leaving Enderby livid at the unsuitability of his whaling crews to the venture he had proposed. 49Worse still, when the Company's smallest ship, Fancy, limped belatedly into Port Ross it was immediately deemed unseaworthy, further undermining the Company's whaling capacity. 50ver the next two years, however, the settlers devoted their energy to clearing the land and constructing a small settlement.By December 1851, twenty acres of land had been cleared, five acres of farmland cultivated, and a clear sense of order imposed on the site. 51The diaries of two colonists, Assistant Commissioner William Mackworth and accountant William Munce, and a handful of more fragmentary accounts, provide some insight into life in this Company colony. 52he Company faced immediate challenges in establishing its jurisdiction, order, and authority, with the Māori settlements seen as a particular threat.To attempt to resolve it, Enderby and Mackworth met with Matioro and Manature.With Te Reo-speaking whaling captain George Cook, whose mother was Māori, to translate, the Company men insisted that the islands and everything on them were Company property. 54A compromise was eventually struck: the Company would pay Matioro and Manature a small indemnity and allow them to continue growing crops freely; in exchange, the chiefs would sign an agreement renouncing any claim to the islands and enter Company employment as 'special constables'.These roles were far from symbolic.Enderby relied on Manature, for example, to detain as prisoners those employees who refused to work. 55any other Māori settlers followed Matioro and Manature in signing on as Company employees, doing much of the land clearing, construction, roadbuilding, and boat-handling in the settlement in exchange for wages, rations, and access to the Company's store. 56The two communities lived separately but relations were broadly positive.The Company did not impose its sovereignty over the Māori community by force, but rather engaged in a delicate process of negotiation and mutual adaptation.In common with other company-states, such as the HBC and the Russian-American Company, Māori settlers became employees and subjects of the SWFC. 57he Company imposed some laws affecting both communitiessuch as a law banning the sale of firearms to Māoribut in other cases shied away from imposing controversial laws. 58For instance, the Company had a relaxed attitude towards slavery, allowing the Māori settlers to continue enslaving Moriori.Indeed, it was the labour performed by enslaved Moriori workers at the two Māori settlements that allowed so many Māori to devote time and energy to working for the Company.Just as the EIC carved out an exemption from the 1833 Abolition Act, so too did the  SWFC demonstrate a permissive attitude towards the continued existence of slavery within its jurisdiction that was at odds with metropolitan attitudes and interests. 59uestions of jurisdiction and order were not limited to relations between the European and Māori communities, with outsiders made similarly aware of the Company's jurisdiction.The techniques of companies like the HBC and EIC in asserting the exclusivity of their rights and barring interlopers are well chronicled. 60Whilst the privileges granted to the SWFCthe exclusive rights to colonize the Aucklands and hunt whales and seals in the surrounding seaswere a fraction of those granted to the likes of the EIC and HBC, the Company was nonetheless anxious about interlopers.Enderby published notices in the Australian and British press informing the public that the Auckland Islands had become the 'private property' of the Company, with whaling and sealing in the region now strictly limited to Company ships. 61epublishing this notice in March 1851, the London Daily News observed that the notice had been issued by Enderby 'in his capacity as Lieutenant-Governor, who it appears is legally entitled to prevent encroachments of the nature of those indicated'. 62Poaching and interloping were never actually an issue in the Company's remote colony, but the approach taken to prevent this mirrors the strategies of earlier company-states.
The clearest insight into the Company's exercise of sovereignty, though, is the way it governed the lives of its employees and their families, implementing laws, imposing punishments, and issuing currency.A persistent complaint about life under Company rule was that Enderby acted simultaneously as 'judge, prosecutor, law adviser of the court, and executor of the sentence' and that colonists were unable to 'appeal against any decision of Mr Enderby'. 63The Company's approach to law and judicature was ad hoc, echoing observations about the HBC's approach to law and governance in Rupert's Land. 64Enderby appointedand regularly dismissedmagistrates and constables to assist in maintaining order. 65He implemented laws, such as restrictions on the sale of wine and spirits, and imposed punishments ranging from fines to imprisonment on an outlying island or dismissal from the Company's service. 66For more serious offences, Enderby was instructed by the Colonial Secretary simply to deal with them 'to the best of your ability according to the law of England, summoning juries of settlers if it should be absolutely necessary.' 67This was deemed necessary only once, when a case of slander was before Enderby and a jury of seven colonists in the colony's first and only civil trial in January 1852. 68d hoc judicature was far from the only source of complaint about Company rule.The Company exclusively used its own currency, promissory notes equivalent to British denominations, to pay employees, and only accepted Company notes at its store. 69This fuelled resentment, particularly amongst the seamen, who unsuccessfully demanded Enderby pay them in cash so they could purchase goods in other ports that could not be obtained at reasonable pricesor often at allat Port Ross. 70It also caused trouble for Company employees who tried to use this currency in New Zealand; Mackworth, for example, arrived in Dunedin in November 1850 with Company notes to purchase urgent supplies, only to discover that circulation of the Company's currency in New Zealand was illegal. 71ages and rations were a constant source of discontent.In his first year as Assistant Commissioner, Mackworth had to deal with a seamen's strike and a petition over wages, a five day general strike over potato rations, and two deputations about flour. 72Many colonists supplemented their wages by undertaking private work; documented examples include Mrs Evans, wife of a ship's officer, taking sewing and carpet-making commissions, Mrs Clarke, wife of a general labourer, taking work as Munce's cook, and surveyor George Bond, who had a side-line distilling spirits. 73Munce himself arranged for a friend to send him first £100 and then £600 worth of supplies from Sydney, which he sold to the Company to supplement his £186 salary. 74he issue of rations was more difficult to overcome, with the colony plagued by shortages. 75igs, sheep, and cattle were deposited on Enderby Island, but quickly became feral and proved nearly impossible to catchone party spent four fruitless days trying to slaughter a bullock without success, while a day of pig hunting in 1851 resulted in several injured colonists but no pork. 76Even imported supplies were unreliable; of 415 sheep sent from Sydney on one occasion, forty survived the passage. 77The settlers' first potato crops failed completely, while in subsequent years they could only grow potatoes 'an inch and a-half in diameter, and bad'. 78hen the British naval ship Fantome visited in 1852, the only vegetables its crew could purchase were cabbages and turnips grown by the Māori settlers, and even these were deemed 'good for nothing'. 79hese challengesalongside weather that destroyed boats and hurled roofs into the harbourforced colonists to develop strategies to cope with their situation. 80Alcohol was a favoured crutch, with drunkenness rife amongst ordinary seamen and senior colonial officials alike. 81The colony's surgeon was an infamous drinker, on one occasion falling off the jetty and being placed in the lockhouse to sober up, earning it the sobriquet 'Rodd's Castle' in his honour. 82Some colonists responded by refusing to work, others by resigning their position with the Company, forfeiting their pay just to get off the islands. 83Some settlers fell into despairthe chief medical officer's sister, for example, locked herself in a room of their cottage, attempted to shoot her brother though the wall, then shot herself in the head. 84Both survived, but quietly departed the colony soon after.
Other colonists sought out leisure activities.Shooting birds and seals for sport was a popular pastime for colonial elites, while painting, visiting the outlying farms, fishing, chess, cribbage, music, reading, picnics, and boat cruises were all features of cultural life at Port Ross. 85A roster gave families a chance to live on the farm at Enderby Island for a week at a time, and there were occasional excursions to the southern coasts or outlying islands. 86Special occasions, such as Christmas or the colony's anniversary on 4 December, were celebrated with general holidays and communal activities such as boat races, sports days, a public lunch, and a theatrical performance. 87eligion was a minor part of life at Port Ross, and there was never a priest or church.Mackworth read a service most Sundays, but the congregation was usually small, ranging from a high of six adults and a child in August 1850 to a low point in May 1852, when the service was cancelled 'in consequence of no one attending.' 88The colony was filled with children, but they were rarely counted in population estimates and their lives are poorly documented, though the funerals of two babies born at Port Ross were recorded. 89he colony's growth was slowits population peaking at approximately 300and was affected by differing visions for its future.A notable area of disagreement was the question of private enterprise.From the outset, the Company retained ownership of all land in the colony, as well as its only store, where colonists could purchase goods using Company currency.Tools and wine were popular items, but, to the colonists' frustration, they were also sent a bewildering array of luxury goods.While basics like nails, roof shingles, tallow, and shoes were in short supply, dress swords, mahogany wardrobes, and a railway cart sat unsold. 90Enderby sought to encourage private enterprise and planned for Hardwicke, a site north of the main settlement, to become a bustling town with private houses and independent businesses. 91During a visit to Sydney, Enderby and Robert Towns, the Company's agent, discussed the prospect of Towns purchasing land in Hardwicke to operate a general store.This was blocked by the Directors, however, who refused to countenance the sale or lease of land during the colony's early years, preferring to retain a perfect monopoly over all land and retail on the islands. 92e dismissal While the colonists were making the best of their situation at Port Ross, the whaling operation was foundering.Shortly after the first fleet's departure, the Company commissioned five additional whaling ships at a cost of £8,200 each, 60% higher than budgeted. 93Returns from whaling were simultaneously far lower than anticipated.By July 1851, the Company's fleet had harvested just 919 barrels of oil, valued at £5,200, against expenses of £98,332 in the same period. 94While the directors publicly promised shareholders they could 'expect a satisfactory amount of produce within twelve months', such dire returns forced them into action.George Dundas, a director and Member of Parliament, and Thomas Preston, the Company's secretary, were appointed special commissioners tasked by the directors with personally inspecting the settlement and, if necessary, relocating it to Australia or New Zealand. 95undas and Preston arrived at Port Ross on 18 December 1851, and almost immediately clashed with Enderby.The first flashpoint came on 7 January 1852, when Dundas and Preston, who had essentially taken over management of the settlement, were struggling to find enough seamen willing to join the Lord Duncan for another whaling voyage.Their solution was to reassign Enderby's long-serving cook, William Crozier, from Government House to the Lord Duncan. 96rozier had no maritime experience and was likely a member of Enderby's household in London before coming to Port Ross, but as a subject of the Company had no choice but to accept his new assignment in the galley of a whaling ship.Enderby was left without a cook, an action Munce deemed unjustified and 'most ungentlemanly'. 97Munce ceased writing his diary after this, perhaps wishing to avoid putting further criticisms of the Special Commissioners in writing.Mackworth was in Sydney and did not return until February, meaning there is no account of events at Port Ross from 8 to 28 January 1852, when Enderby sent a letter to Dundas and Preston giving twelve months' notice of his intention to resign as resident-commissioner. 98He also gave Dundas and Preston a letter addressed to the Colonial Secretary resigning as Lieutenant-Governor, which he asked them to forward 'unless we should meanwhile agree to the contrary'. 99s soon as the Commissioners accepted his resignation, having waived the notice period, Enderby demanded they provide a written explanation of 'any specific charges or causes of complaint' against him. 100They replied with a set of ten accusations they had planned to use as grounds for dismissal had Enderby not resigned first, including ignoring instructions from the directors, providing 'erroneous information', twice leaving the settlement 'without sufficient cause', 'ruinous expenditure', detaining ships at Port Ross instead of sending them to the whaling grounds, allowing colonists to incur debts to the Company they were unlikely to ever repay, and 'constant oscillation of purpose; impulsive action, and capricious conduct'. 101any of these accusations were fair.Enderby was absent from the colony for 118 of the 785 days of his Lieutenant-Governorship, for example, and while he had clear reasons for travelling to Wellington and Sydney his absences were never approved. 102He also demonstrably failed to follow instructions, such as failing to send duplicates of his despatches by multiple ships, leaving the directors without detailed reports ten months after Enderby's arrival at Port Ross, even as the London press published extracts from private letters. 103Wracked with indecision, averse to criticism, and suffering from seizures, he was also temperamentally and physically ill-suited to his position.Mackworth's diary documents his mounting frustration with Enderby's constant backtracking on decisions, such as when he signed off on a punishment imposed by Mackworth against a colonist found guilty of burning Company-owned shingles, only to change his mind and 'quash the whole proceeding' that afternoon.

Journal of Global History
This vow did not stop Enderby engaging in acts of political theatre though.On 28 February, he ordered Mackworth to read 'the Prayer usually offered up for a Lieut.Governor' at the next morning's religious service.Mackworth simply cancelled the service. 114The commissioners responded in kind, confiscating mail addressed to 'Governor Enderby' and replacing references to 'Governor' with 'Mr' in logbooks. 115When a Royal Navy ship, Calliope, arrived at Port Ross on 28 March, Mackworth, Dundas, Preston, and Enderby all rushed to convince its captain, Everard Home, to endorse their claims about Enderby's anomalous position.Home refused to intervene, informing them that he considered Enderby to remain Lieutenant-Governor until he received instructions from the Colonial Office, but that Enderby could not interfere with the affairs of the SWFC, leaving him essentially unable to act at all. 116This confirmation of his political impotency combined with threats by Dundas to have him removed from the colony in ironsfinally persuaded Enderby to leave Port Ross. 117After a final unsuccessful attempt to stay on the Aucklands by proposing to purchase land from the Company and reside at Port Ross as a private citizen, Enderby reluctantly sailed to Wellington with Dundas and Preston on 24 April. 118ith Enderby gone, Mackworth was ordered to dismantle the settlement and ship the buildings, stores, and equipment to Australasian ports to be auctioned. 119Mackworth's diary entry as he departed the islands for the final time on 4 August 1852 likely summed up the feelings of many of the colonists: 'The satisfaction I feel at this moment is beyond description.My miserable life at Port Ross will never be forgotten.' 120There is some confusion about the Māori community's reaction to the Company's plans to abandon the colony though.Mackworth reported that his offer of passage to New Zealand for all the Māori and Moriori settlers was declined, which Matioro seemed to confirm in a letter to the Governor of New Zealand confirming that his people had chosen to remain at Port Ross. 121A contradictory account from a visiting naval officer suggests that the Māori and Moriori settlers had a request to be taken to New Zealand rejected. 122In any case, the Māori and Moriori remained when the SWFC departed.Most seized a chance to relocate to Stewart Island in 1854, while a ship arrived from Rēkohu to relieve the two remaining families in 1856. 123t is notable that Enderby finally renounced his position and departed the islands because he deemed it impossible to give any orders as Lieutenant-Governor that did not meet the special commissioners' approval.When the hitherto overlapping sovereignties of Company and Crown came into direct conflict, it became apparent that practical sovereignty lay with the Company.When Enderby reached Wellington, he tried to persuade Grey to intervene on his behalf, but the Governor insisted he had always 'declined to interfere in the affairs of the Auckland Islands'. 124rey's refusal to intervene was a final reminder that, regardless of how British government officials felt about Enderby's treatment, the Crown had no desire to interfere with the Company's affairs.
The abandonment of the colony failed to save the Company.When it was liquidated in 1854, shareholders received just 15 shillings for every £50 share. 125The directors blamed the failure on Enderby's mismanagement and the effect of the Australian gold rushes on the availability of maritime labour.Enderby blamed the directors for insisting on sending families out with the First Fleet, recruiting whaling crews with no experience in the branch of whaling the Company was established to prosecute, providing him with oversized vessels, and insisting on having the Company's ships constructed and outfitted at an inflated price in Britain rather than for a quarter of the price in North America. 126Each of these reasons likely played a role in the Company's failure, while historian Ryan Tucker Jones offers another compelling reason for the failure of a whaling company based in the centre of a Southern Right Whale breeding ground.Drawing on research in cetacean science, Jones argues that Southern Right Whales developed strategies to avoid being hunted, such as rapidly changing direction under water, that were transmitted to other groups and generations. 127It is for this reason, says Jones, that the Company's whalers managed to kill only one of the thirty right whales they pursued in the waters around Port Ross, a catch rate of 3% that was markedly lower than rates of 30-40% in South Australian waters in the late-1830s or 8% for New Zealand's Banks Peninsula in 1832.
Despite the Company's collapse, Charles Enderby tried to salvage both his position and his reputation.He unsuccessfully petitioned first the Governor of New Zealand and then the Colonial Secretary to intervene. 128He rejected Mackworth's description of life on the Aucklands as 'miserable' and continued to search for a way to return, suggesting to the Colonial Office that the Aucklands be used as a penal colony and requesting a position in any such enterprise. 129Enderby & Sons had already declared insolvency in October 1849, shortly after Enderby departed for the Aucklands. 130Given he was also one of the Southern Whale Fishery Company's largest shareholders, the collapse of both companies left Enderby almost destitute.None of Enderby's later schemes came to fruition, and he retired to live with his daughter in London until his death in 1876. 131

Conclusion
The Southern Whale Fishery Company's colonization of the Auckland Islands was self-evidently calamitous.Yet it is a failure that can yield significant historical insights.The SWFC was a hybrid political and commercial body; its sovereignty, territory, and privileges were more limited than those of the quintessential company-states, but it nonetheless controlled a delineated territory, imposed and enforced laws, negotiated with Māori settlers, issued currency, and exercised sovereignty over its subjects.If the SWFC was a kind of company-state then, the question must be asked whether it was, in essence, the last gasp of what was fundamentally a seventeenth-and eighteenth-century phenomenon?Contextual evidence suggests that it was not.As historians such    as Angela Woollacott and Matthew Birchall have shown, the 1830s and 1840s was an era of renewed interest in company colonization that led to a series of new private colonial enterprises in Australasia. 132Scholars such as Jason Colby have similarly pointed to the 1840s as the beginning of more than a century of US imperialism in Central America driven by private actors and corporations, most notably the corporate colonialism of the United Fruit Company. 133And, as Steven Press has shown, filibusterism in Borneo in the mid-nineteenth century laid foundations for the revival of chartered company sovereignty as a cornerstone of European imperial expansion in Asia, Africa, and the Pacific in the 1880s. 134The colonization of the Aucklands was part of a new proliferation of hybrid commercial and political enterprises on the margins of the colonial world in the mid-nineteenth century, from the Falkland Islands and Kerguelen to Alaska, New Guinea, Africa, and Borneo, suggesting that the chartered company remained a significant aspect of private and corporate colonialism. 135Far from an anachronism, the SWFC was at the crest of the wave of a new kind of company-state, much reduced in scale and profitability but essentially unchanged in character from its seventeenth century counterparts.
The Auckland Islands' brief colonial history should therefore not be seen as absurd or anachronistic, but rather as evidence of a subtle spatial and temporal change in the company-state.The hybrid model was well-suited to the colonization and exploitation of remote and marginal spaces, which is precisely what the likes of India, Rupert's Land, Virginia, Bermuda, and the Dutch East Indies were from the perspective of European states and investors in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.The chartered company, by sharing financial risk and pooling investors' experience, networks, and expertise, provided a way to manage the inherent risks of pursuing commerce in such regions, while for governments it provided a way to outsource the cost of imperial expansion and administration to facilitate trade or emigration without demanding significant government resources. 136et the same factors that made the chartered company well-suited to pioneering risky enterprises rendered it less desirable in less risky contexts.As corporations helped to incorporate marginal spaces into increasingly cross-regional and global networks of communication, settlement, governance, and trade these spaces were reconfigured into globally connected nodes.This reconfiguration gradually eroded the advantages of monopolistic, autonomous, sovereign companies and resulted in increased state regulation and the removal of monopolies and other privileges.Even as the EIC and HBC lost first their monopolies and then their territories, however, the company-state model was applied to new peripheries in places like Africa and Australasia.As these spaces too were reconfigured from marginal to central, the company-state model remained a way to exploit and develop particular spaces, such as Kerguelen or North Borneo, that had hitherto been overlooked and undervalued.These kinds of enterprises, obscure and diminished as they were, should be understood if not as company-states then as another species of a common genusas company-microstates, perhaps, reduced in scale but identical in their hybridity.When treated as such, two related implications become clear.First, the company-state has a longer and more complex genealogy than is often recognized.Whilst the company-state's significance for processes of imperial expansion and cross-regional integration undoubtedly peaked in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, it has both medieval roots and a nineteenth and twentieth century afterlife.The case of the Auckland Islands therefore contributes to suggestions that the company-state, its descendants, and its antecedents are worthy of deeper investigation within a single frame. 138Secondly, extending the temporal scope of the companystate requires a corresponding expansion of its spatial extent.Viewed over a longer period, the company-state as a hybrid form can be seen operating far beyond Europe, India, North America, and West Africa in places like sub-Saharan African, the Pacific, Australasia, and the Southern Ocean.The Auckland Islands offer one example of this wider spatial conception of the companystate; the work of Birchall on Australia and New Zealand, Press on Africa and Borneo, and Jonas Rüegg on the 'corporate islands' colonized by Japanese companies in the North Pacific offer others. 139Taken individually these cases may be considered outliers; taken collectively, they suggest a perpetuationor reinventionof the company-state model in processes of imperial expansion, restructuring, and reorientation in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. 140hy does it matter whether we extend the study of company-states to the nineteenth century and expand it to include peripheral spaces like the Auckland Islands?Such cases can yield fresh insights into the role of sovereign corporations in wider processes of cross-regional integration.Short-lived though it was, the SWFC's colonization of the Auckland Islands was a pivotal moment in the integration of the Southern Ocean World into wider networks of governance, settler colonization, trade, and environmental exchange.In accordance with the territory granted to the SWFC, the colony of New Zealand's southern boundary had been set at 50°S. in 1852, placing the Aucklands 101 kilometres outside New Zealand jurisdiction. 141This led to confusion about the islands' legal status after the Company's collapse, which was ultimately resolved in 1862 by extending New Zealand's southern boundary to 53°S. 142This added not only the Aucklands but also Campbell Island, another 290 kilometres further south, to New Zealand's territory.
Despite the SWFC's dismal failure, attention soon returned to utilising New Zealand's newly acquired subantarctic islands.The colony's government received unsolicited proposals for settlement projects on the Aucklands in 1868 and 1871, finally leasing them to Invercargill surgeon F.A. Monckton in 1873. 143Monckton had abandoned his pastoral project by 1879, but visitors to the islands continued to insist on their potential for settlement, resulting in new pastoral leases advertised for the Aucklands and Campbell in 1894. 144Various leases were agreed, notably a 138 pastoral venture in the southern Aucklands (1900-1910) and another by a succession of leaseholders on Campbell (1895-1931). 145With the failure of these projects, New Zealand's relationship with its subantarctic islands was recalibrated, gradually shifting from a vision of transforming and exploiting them to a vision of conservation.The subantarctic islands were designated Fauna and Flora Reserves between the 1910s and 1950s and collectively designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1998.Islands that had previously been outside the limits of colonial settlement, law, and governance were, as a result of the SWFC's initial activities, steadily integrated first into colonial and later national and international structures.
A similar process of gradual integration initiated by the SWFC's colonial project can be observed from an ecological perspective.Pigs, goats, sheep, cattle, rabbits, cats, and mice were all introduced to the Aucklands in the nineteenth century, particularly during the years of company rule.The impacts of introduced species on island ecologies have been well chronicled by environmental historians.These impacts are commonly characterized as 'biological invasions', whereby, in John McNeill's evocative phrase, 'humans tear open the fabric of an ecosystem' and create the conditions for introduced plants and animals to displace or eliminate endemic species. 146This is evident in the Aucklands, where an endemic bird species became extinct, but the case of New Zealand's subantarctic islands affirms that this was not simply a unidirectional process. 147In some instances, biological invasion generated new forms of conservation practice that were subsequently exported around the world, as in the case of techniques developed to eliminate rats on Campbell Island that were taken up in rat eradication programs internationally. 148n other instances, introduced species adapted to subantarctic conditions and were re-introduced to other parts of the world as 'rare breeds'.Notably, the Auckland Islands Pig was discovered to be the world's only confirmed virus-free pig breed, sparking enormous interest amongst biotechnology researchers.The descendants of the pigs that so frustrated the SWFC's colonists have been reimagined as a precious resource uniquely suited to xenotransplantation, the transplantation of animal cells or organs into human recipients. 149Two herds of these pigs have, since 1999, been bred in secure, pathogen-free facilities in New Zealand and used for research into porcine-human kidney transplants and cell therapies for Type 1 diabetes and neurological diseases.The Aucklands may not have become the global trading hub Charles Enderby envisioned, but they were, eventually, incorporated into the circuits of global trade; the Auckland Islands Pig has become a source of heart valves, cells, and kidneys that have been distributed around the world. 150More than simply a unidirectional process of biological invasion, biological exchanges in the Southern Ocean World in the nineteenth century initiated a multidirectional process of integration that became increasingly visible in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries as knowledge and biota were transmitted back from this subantarctic periphery.
To see the SWFC as a kind of company-state is to recognize it as an example of a corporation as cross-regional actor: drawing the settler colonial gaze southward, integrating a new region into wider systems of law, trade, and governance, and initiating processes of biological exchange that would become increasingly global in nature.Put another way, the company-state provides a way to see the Southern Ocean as a dynamic space of interconnection and integration in the nineteenth century in which corporations were key protagonists.While there have been calls for a narrower vision of globalization and global history that avoids treating it as something affecting the entire planet, processes of global integration in the Southern Ocean suggest that there remain parts of the planet still to be recognized as legitimate subjects of global history. 151orporations played a crucial role as drivers and mediators of global interactions and integration and are therefore a growing area of focus for global and imperial histories.Yet while comparative, connective, longue durée, and synthetic histories of company-states and trading corporations offer one way of understanding these processes, this article argues that the methods of global microhistory offer another perspective.This is not to call for a return to narrow histories of individual corporations in isolation, rather to emphasize the distinct analytical value of finegrained investigations of the outlier or anomaly.In this I follow Sheila Fitzpatrick's observation about the significance of anomalous life stories.Fitzpatrick argues that if Carlo Ginzburg's investigation of one sixteenth century miller's idiosyncratic cosmology reveals the diversity of unorthodox ideas existing within a nominally Catholic society, then her investigation of the travels of a single Russian tramp reveals the diversity 'of wholly unorthodox behaviours and practices existing within a nominally Soviet society.' 152 In similar vein, this investigation of a single island's peculiar colonial historyan outlier in space and timereveals the range of unorthodox processes of global integration and political organisation existing in the nineteenth century, when states were nominally asserting a monopoly over sovereignty and globalization consisted of intensifying interconnections between regions more so than fresh pulses of expansion into places like the subantarctic.Such stories do not simply add colour and texture to narratives derived from an investigation of the average or the ordinary; instead, they provide new ways of thinking about behaviours, patterns, and processes.In the case of the Auckland Islands, they also draw attention to new spaces for historical investigation on the margins of the world.

16
Atholl Anderson, 'Prehistoric Archaeology in the Auckland Islands, New Zealand Subantarctic Region', in In Care of the Southern Ocean: An Archaeological and Historical Survey of the Auckland Islands, ed.Paul R. Dingwall, Kevin L.Jones, and Rachael Egerton (Auckland: New Zealand Archaeological Association: 2009), 9-38.17SeeRhys Richards, 'New Market Evidence on the Depletion of Southern Fur Seals: 1788-1833', New Zealand Journal of Zoology 30, no. 1 (2003): 1-9.18 André Brett, '"The Miserable Remnant of This Ill-used People": Colonial Genocide and the Moriori of New Zealand's Chatham Islands', Journal of Genocide Research, 17, no. 2 (2015): 133-52.19 For discussion of Matioro's motivations see Alexander Shand 'The Occupation of the Chatham Islands by the Maoris in 1835, Part 5 -The Residence at the Auckland Islands', Journal of the Polynesian Society 2, no. 2 (June 1893): 78-86; Michael King, Moriori: A People Rediscovered (Auckland: Viking, 2000), 88-90.

Figure 1 .
Figure 1.A view of the settlement at Port Ross painted by Charles Enderby, c. 1850-52 53 .

127
Ryan Tucker Jones, 'A Whale of a Difference: Southern Right Whale Culture and the Tasman World's Living Terrain of Encounter', Environment and History 25 (2019): 185-218.
133 Colby, 137 This term is borrowed from F.W. Maitland's description of state and corporation as different species of a common genus.See F.W. Maitland, State, Trust and Corporation, ed.David Runciman and Magnus Ryan (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003), 1.