Tall Ship Blackbird

The key objectives for Blackbird Tall Ship Adventures are:

  1. Obtain a traditional sailing vessel reflective of the era capable of ocean passages, taking documentary crew, researchers, their equipment and supplies, volunteers and paying passengers.

  2. Conducting Blackbird day tours, sunset cruises, corporate events and educational sails for major ports and whilst not at sea, including paying day customers, paying passage customers, school students and South Sea Islander descendants.

  3. Tall Ship Adventures program –customers for paying passage when travelling between Islands and Villages and participating in the research works, learning kustoms and cultures and experiencing local sites such as volcanoes, village life and ceremony.

  4. Tall Ship Blackbird will also conduct sail training, educational and leadership programs for young people between 16 and 30 and also dedicated programs for those over 30 including adventure sails, voyages and expeditions. 

 

Latest News

Blackbird's LATEST EDITION of Storian Blong Yumi is out now. Learn of the UNKNOWN ISLANDER, the ABORIGINAL CONNECTION, seaching for lost shipwrecks with FINDING HELENA, join BLACKBIRD ADVENTURERS, help us get our very own TALL SHIP, enjoy our new range of BLACK FEATHER wines, enter great competitions,...
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Featured

  During Australia's main Blackbirding days between 1863 to 1904 Queensland sugar and cotton plantations, sheep and cattle farms, pearling and fishing vessels and domestic households were worked by South Sea Islanders who were recruited – or more accurately during the Blackbird “era” kidnapped – by men who were, and are still known today as Blackbirders.   Blackbirding in the Pacific region was not only left to Australians.  Plantation owners in Fiji, New Caledonia, German plantation owners in Samoa and Papua New Guinea recruited for their respective locations.  In 1862 and 1863 Peruvian mine owners organised devastating slave raids on the Pacific. Over a period of about 40 years, 62,000 Islanders were brought to Queensland from the Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, Papua New Guinea and other parts of the South Pacific to provide cheap labour for the burgeoning sugar industry.  A small number of labourers came from the Polynesian and Micronesian islands such as Samoa, Kiribati and...