Henry Capper


Henry Capper was the emigration clerk to the Colonization Commissioners, South Australian Colonization Office at Adelphi, London, and in 1837 founded the South Australian Record, a periodical published in London devoted to news from South Australia for the benefit of intending migrants and investors. A regular feature was publication of letters received by people in Britain from friends and relations who had settled in South Australia. The Record ran from 1837 to 1841 under several title changes.
Capper published two books addressed to prospective migrants to South Australia, both of which went through several editions.

The ''South Australian Record''

The Record was at first published monthly by Capper and John Gliddon from an office at 37 Great Marlborough street, Westminster, from 8 November 1837.
A paragraph in the Record of 8 May 1839 contained a candid appraisal of one of the South Australian Company's representatives in the colony, which drew the ire of Robert Torrens, who recommended to the Governor that he publicly disown the statement as an "error" on Capper's part.
Rather than submit to this insult, Capper resigned from his position with the Colonization Office, but continued publishing the Record.
The South Australian Record became briefly South Australian Record and Australasian Chronicle in 1840, became the South Australian Record and Australasian and South African Chronicle then in March 1841 the Australasian Record which ran to either late 1843 or early 1844.

''South Australia'' books

Capper assembled two compendia of advice and useful information for intending emigrants, aimed at two distinct classes of prospective emigrants.
In 1840 Simpkin and Marshall produced a booklet in which large sections were copied from How to Get to South Australia

Other activities

Capper was also a partner in the shipping firm of Capper and Gole, who in October 1840 were appointed agents by the Colonization Commissioners for the sale of land in South Australia.
In 1845 the firm of Capper and Gole was declared bankrupt. There is no reason to believe Capper ever visited Australasia.

Not to be confused with . . .

Despite the obvious similarity in titles of their respective books, there appears to be no family or other connection between Henry Capper and Orientalist John Capper F.R.A.S., author of The Emigrant's Guide to Australia, which is mostly concerned the goldfields of New South Wales and Victoria. Its chapter on South Australia is particularly trenchant.