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BRITISH NEW

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V19, Page 489 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BRITISH NEW 
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GUINEA The
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British Territory of Papua has an
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area of about 90i540 sq. m. and a population estimated at 400,000, of whom about 600 are Europeans . The
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Protectorate, as declared in 1884, with its seat of government at
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Port Moresby, was subsidized by the three Australian colonies of
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Queensland, New South Wales and Victoria, and lasted, under the administration of two successive
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special commissioners (Major-General
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Sir Peter Scratchley and the Hon . John Douglas), till the 4th of September 1888, when it was proclaimed by the first Administrator—afterwards
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Lieutenant-Governor—Sir William MacGregor, a possession of Queen Victoria . Its constitution was that of a
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crown colony in association with Queensland; but in 1901 the federal government took control of the territory and in 1906 a proclamation by the governor-general of the
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commonwealth gave it the name of the Territory of Papua . The lieutenant-governor is aided by an executive and a legislative council, and advised by a native regulation board . Justice is administered by petty sessions in the six magisterial districts into which the possession is divided, with a central court at Port Moresby (which, however, sits elsewhere as necessary) having the jurisdiction of a supreme court, from which in certain cases an
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appeal lies to the supreme court of Queensland.£19,197 in 1905 . Commerce and Trade.—The making of mats, fishing-nets, shell ornaments, decorated gourds, and stone implements, and the manufacture of pottery, canoes and
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sago, constitute the chief native
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industries, which are the subject of barter between different regions .
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European industries include gold
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mining, in which 500 miners, besides natives, are engaged (chiefly in the Louisiade
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Archipelago), and the beche de mer and pearl-shell
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fisheries, which were formerly more productive than at
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present . Copra is naturally largely prepared, as coco-nut palms are very numerous, and are extensively planted every
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year . A small amount of
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tortoise-shell is collected . The rubber industry is, according to Sir W . MacGregor, " important and promising."
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Species of Palaquium, the genus from which, in the
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Indian Archipelago, the best gutta-percha is obtained, occur on the hills, and from their cultivation there might in time be obtained a large revenue independently of European labour .

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Timber of economic value is scarce . Red cedar (Cedrilia) abounds in the riverine flats, but the quality is poor and commercially valueless; and oaks are plentiful, but the wood is coarse . Small quantities of ebony and sandal-wood are exported . " There can be no reason-able doubt that the
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sugar-
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cane, which is native and present in a
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great many varieties, sago, cotton, probably also indigenous and of exceptionally
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fine quality, will eventually be valuable " (MacGregor) . The trade of British New Guinea is exclusively with the Australian colonies . Imports were valued at £72,286 in 1899–1900 (an increase of over £20,110 in the year), and exports (including the gold mines) at £56,167, while in 1905 the figures were £67,188 for imports and £73,669 for exports, and in 1906 £79,671 and £80,290 respectively .

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