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OR, COLONISTS—PAST AND PRESENT.
271

Dominick Gore Daly,

THE eldest son of Sir Dominick Daly, was born in. Canada in 1827, and educated as a barrister, but did not practise his profession. He resided for some time in England, where he belonged to the East Kent Militia. He also joined the Waikato Regiment of Volunteers. Soon after his father's arrival as Governor of South Australia, Mr. Daly came to this colony and acted as his Private Secretary, and continued to hold the same office during a part of Colonel Hamley's administration. In 1866 he married the youngest daughter of the late Hon. W. Younghusband, once Chief Secretary of South Australia. He had a large circle of friends, who lamented his early death, which took place on December 30, 1871, at the age of 44 years.


Capt. Emanuel Underwood,

WHOSE career has been of the most adventurous character, was born in Essex, England, in 1806. In 1815 he visited Holland, Ostend, and Bruges, and in the following year was placed at school in France with a view to learn the language of that country. In 1819 he was apprenticed to the sea in the coasting trade, from which period, up till 1864, when he settled in this colony, he visited the following places:—Gibraltar, the city of Bahia and Maranham in the Brazils, Malaga in Spain, Rio de Janeiro, Genoa, Leghorn, Buenos Ayres, Monte Video, in the Argentine Republic, Bombay, New Orleans, Mobile, Canada, Singapore, Calcutta, Whampoa, Canton, Cape of Good Hope, Mauritius, Java, Callao, Cape de Verde Islands, St. Helena, St. Michael, Tasmania, New South Wales, Queensland, Victoria, and Western Australia. He first took his command as a captain in 1832, when he was appointed to the brig "Ardgowan" bound for Richeburto in Canada; and in 1833 to the brig