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The Counterfeit Seal: A Tale of Otago's First Settlers.

A Versatile Individual

A Versatile Individual

In some respects Adams was perfectly placed to write such a story, his own growth and maturation having been mirrored by that of the settlement. His parents, John James Adams and Elizabeth (née Noble), arrived at Port Chalmers, Otago, from Scotland (thought John was an Irish national) with two of Adams’ siblings and other Free Church emigrants in August/September of 1848 aboard the Blundell2 – one of four colonist ships to arrive at the settlement that year. It can only be speculated whether Adams’ mother was pregnant when the family first set foot in New Zealand, but his birth in 1849 suggests it is certainly possible; passenger conditions varied depending on whether an individual travelled in steerage or cabin, yet the prospect of a long, overcrowded voyage across the ocean with poor food and hygiene3 would have been daunting to even the most stoic of mothers. Regardless of their social status before their departure from Scotland, fortune smiled upon the Adams family in their new home – nineteenth-century Highland emigration often aimed to recruit those deemed to have “special skills”4, and as a tailor, John Adams certainly fit the bill. Demand for hand-made clothing was high until the early twentieth-century – when factory manufactured clothing became a viable option5 – and just four years after their arrival the family could afford to offer for sale two central Dunedin houses6, later taking up farming as a source of livelihood.

It is difficult to determine what sort of education Adams and his siblings would have received. Although one-eighth of all proceeds from the sale of land at the Otago settlement was to be put towards “religious and educational purposes”7, the colony experienced an unfortunate run in schoolmasters; disease, fatal accidents and employment opportunities at other settlements meant at least five separate individuals acted in the role from 1848 to 1856 [7], which would have undoubtedly affected the schooling provided for pupils. Regardless, Adams and his siblings evidently received sufficient education to be able to pursue their interests; for example, his brothers, John Archibald Duncan Adams and Alexander Samuel Adams, both trained as solicitors, and went on to found the legal firm Adams Bros8. Adams, however, found his calling in the world of publishing.

Prompted by the discovery of gold in the Tuapeka district in 1961 – and serving as an expansion for its predecessor, the Otago Witness – the Otago Daily Times became New Zealand’s first daily newspaper that same year9. Adams’ employment with the papers began after they entered public ownership under the Otago Daily Times and Witness Company, when he commenced work as a runner for the Otago Daily Times in 186510. Following the trajectory of Adams’ career with the paper in close detail is nigh impossible, his dedication was such that in 1880 he first appeared listed as publisher for the Otago Daily Times and Witness Company11 – a position he would hold over a thirty-year period until his retirement in 1908 [10]. Over this time Adams made other contributions to the more technical aspects of the publishing process, patenting an improved paper-trimming machine in 1896 which was put to use by the Company12; a simple online search produces the complete application for the patent, which is still in effect today. It must, then, have seemed a natural choice for Adams to have The Counterfeit Seal published through the same company he had been engaged with since the age of 16.

"Adams’ Patent Newspaper Trimmer." Otago Daily Times [Dunedin] 27 May. 1896, 10502th ed.: 2. PapersPast. Web. 2 Nov. 2014.

"Adams’ Patent Newspaper Trimmer." Otago Daily Times [Dunedin] 27 May. 1896, 10502th ed.: 2. PapersPast. Web. 2 Nov. 2014.

Far from The Counterfeit Seal being his first foray into the literary world, Adams had already published The Origins and History of Good Templary: With an Exposition of its Principles and Objects in 187613; the book was warmly welcomed by the Lifeboat Lodge International Order of Good Templars, which purchased two dozen copies with the hope that the work would “have a long and successful career of usefulness14”. Adams was also a prolific contributor to both the Otago Witness and the Otago Daily Times – his series “Epochs in Irish History” first appeared in September of 1890, and continued to be printed in the Otago Witness until September of 1892, at which time eighty-four different installments had been published15. This focus on British history and identity proved to be a prominent theme in much of Adams’ writing, as did a tendency to glorify the Motherland; his article “Who Are the Saxons?” (1878)16, for example, sought to explore the Germanic origins of the British Empire, which Adams thought of as “the most respected and trusted nation amongst the nations.” Although the Empire “constituted an important aspect of the maintenance of Scots consciousness” (Brooking and Coleman, 20), Adams’ belief in the righteousness of his British ancestors was such that he came to subscribe to the belief known as British Israelism, or Anglo-Israelism.

President of Dunedin’s British-Israel Association17, Adams shared the strong belief of other Anglo-Israelites that the British people were the direct lineal descendants of Israel’s “ten lost tribes”18. He wrote numerous pamphlets on the concept, such as "Beulah, Or, The land of Israel Regenerated: A Pamphlet for the Times in 1885"19, and "Nebuchadnezzar's Dream; or, Britain, the Universal and Last Empire"20. However, contrary to the positive reception experienced by The Counterfeit Seal and his explorations into the origins of the temperance movement, Adams’ expositions on British Israelism appear to have attracted rather pointed criticism. One unimpressed reader’s review of Nebuchadnezzar’s Dream referred to the pamphlet as an addition to “the vast number of literary monuments of wasted time and misapplied energy”21. Let it not be said that such denigrations were taken lying down – indeed, Adams was vocal and sharp in his responses to those who questioned his dogmas; he suggested that one of his critics must have read Nebuchadnezzar’s Dream “through the eyes of a monster”22 in order not to have found himself in accordance with Adams’ views. The passionate rhetoric evidenced in the publisher’s informative tracts was not limited to the literary medium, with Adams often entering into public engagements in order to further the causes he deemed worthy; his speech on the unification of the British Empire to the Moray place Congregational Church in 188523 is just one such example.

"Review: Nebuchadnezzar's Dream; Or, Britain The Universal and Last Empire." North Otago Times 1 Aug. 1881, 2840th ed.: 2. PapersPast. Web. 3 Nov. 2014.

"Review: Nebuchadnezzar's Dream; Or, Britain The Universal and Last Empire." North Otago Times 1 Aug. 1881, 2840th ed.: 2. PapersPast. Web. 3 Nov. 2014.

One can only presume how Adams’ more radical views would have been received within the Otago Baptist community – of which Adams was part – especially given that his brother, Alex, served as president of the Baptist Union during the late twentieth-century (Tucker, 22)24. But however strong his sentiments in relation to the Anglo-Israelite cause were, Adams’ devotion to New Zealand’s Temperance and Prohibition Movements was arguably at least as ardent – possibly due to the close alliance between the Baptist Union and New Zealand Alliance (Tucker, 22), which was dedicated to the abolition of the liquor traffic25. Adams was incredibly active in advancing the Temperance and Prohibition Movements throughout the Otago region; in 1871 he founded the Southland branch of the Order of the Sons and Daughters of Temperance Organisation, which was concerned with educating the public about the injury they believed was caused by alcohol consumption, and encouraging individuals to sign pledges of total abstinence from the drink [25]. Adams was also a dedicated member of the Independent Order of Good Templars (I. O. G. T) [25]; the participation of his brothers Alex and John in the I. O. G. T somewhat complicates determining Adams’ own position within the group, but it is possible that he may have been Adams to achieve the status of Dunedin Grand Chief Templar, referred to in an article by the Omaru Mail26. It is known for certain, however, that in 1896 Adams was elected chairman of the Temperance Political Committee, a venerable position27.

But once again, Adams’ intense dedication to a controversial cause drew responses that were not always encouraging, despite the Temperance Movement having enjoyed widespread support and victories during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries28. One disgruntled individual wrote to the New Zealand Herald complaining that prohibition activists were introducing sentiments of “spite and hate into society which will do more harm than all the evils of the drink traffic”29, and specifically called for the boycott of the Otago Daily Times in the hopes that Adams – who he identified as one of the individuals “seeking to take [the] lives” of those involved in the liquor trade – would go out of business as a publisher. Heated attacks on his person evidently did not stunt Adams’ commitment to the temperance and prohibition causes however, as he was employed as secretary for the New Zealand Temperance Times in 1876.

Given the various political and social causes Adams involved himself with, it seems almost surprising that he found the time to marry and raise a family in the midst of it. That there are no records of Adams’ marriage having taken place is not unusual. Although birth, marriage and death records were compulsory from 1847 and standardized from approximately 1856 due to government involvement, this does not guarantee that those kept were either accurate or complete30. This also makes it difficult to ascertain the name of Adams’ wife, primarily due to the practice of coverture in marriage – women were to use their husband’s name for all legal purposes31, a linguistic practice which resulted in the publisher’s spouse being referred to as “Mrs. R. N. Adams” in all public media. It is known that the couple had three children, two girls and a boy. Their son, also named Robert Noble Adams, was born in 1875, and received a Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery degree from the New Zealand University in 190132. Although he was appointed house surgeon at Auckland Hospital almost immediately after having received his qualifications, the younger Adams briefly followed his father’s footsteps into the literary world, writing Let's Go Home: The Journal Of A Jubilee Journey in 1936. Understandably, there had been some initial difficulty in determining which Robert Noble Adams wrote The Counterfeit Seal – thankfully, the epigraph at the front of the novel’s dedication to parents who were “members of that brave pioneer band” provided clear signs that the older Adams was the author. Comparatively little is known about couple’s two daughters, who were born on the 14th of October, 188033, and the 3rd of October, 188534, respectively. But at the time of Adams’ death in 1914, it was reported by the Evening Post that the publisher left in his wake a widow, a son, and only one daughter. Early European settlements were often incredibly unclean due to a lack of clean water and an efficient sewage system, and diseases such as typhoid – to which infants and young children were especially susceptible – were prevalent in fast-growing towns, like Dunedin, and could prove fatal if untreated35. Adams’ own death must have been a shock to his family, when he passed away from pneumonia following serious surgery on August 20th36; a newspaper article from the Marlborough Express shows that just seven months earlier Adams had been an active member of the Presbyterian church, receiving a transfer from the Presbyterian Home mission station of Awatere-Flaxbourne to continue his work at the Waikato outfields37.

"Personal." Otago Daily Times [Dunedin] 28 Sep. 1908, 14330th ed.: 6. PapersPast. Web. 2 Nov. 2014.

"Personal." Otago Daily Times [Dunedin] 28 Sep. 1908, 14330th ed.: 6. PapersPast. Web. 2 Nov. 2014.