The
Church of the Province of New Zealand was not formed until 1858. In 1850,
George Selwyn, the
Bishop of New Zealand, approached his fellow
Australasian bishops for funds to buy a boat for evangelisation of the islands of
Melanesia, which then formed part of his
diocese by virtue of a clerical error in the
letters patent. That missionary endeavour became the
Melanesian Mission, but also led to the establishment of the Australasian Board of Missions. In 1872 (by which time New Zealand was a separate
province) the Australasian Board of Missions was constituted as a board of the church by a canon of
General Synod. It was only in 1872 that an administrative structure was created, with a general secretary. The board celebrated its jubilee in 1900, at the consecration of
Gilbert White as
Bishop of Carpentaria at
St Andrew's Cathedral, Sydney. Many chairmen (and the renamed national directors) were former diocesan bishops, including
George Cranswick (1942–49),
Donald Shearman (1971–73),
Ken Mason (1983–93), and
Geoffrey Smith (2000-05). Another notable chairman was the Rev
Frank Coaldrake (1957–70), a prominent pacifist during WWII and who, in 1970, was elected Archbishop of Brisbane but died before being consecrated. In 1953 the board created a department of co-operatives and appointed the Christian Socialist the Rev
Alf Clint as director; Clint had previously established a series of co-operatives in
Papua. At the time, the board still had a number of
Aboriginal missions, and Clint travelled around them, establishing co-operatives at
Lockhart River Mission (1954),
Moa Island, Torres Strait (1956), and
Cabbage Tree Island (1959). In 1957 Fr
John Hope of
Christ Church St Laurence gave Clint a house,
Tranby, for his work with Aboriginals. Now (2021) called Tranby National Indigenous Adult Education and Training, Tranby is still run by the Co-operative for Aborigines Limited, founded by Clint. By 1959 the Lockhart River co-operative was bankrupt due to the collapse of the
trochus shell market. In 1960 the Rt Rev
John Matthews was elected
Bishop of Carpentaria; he considered Clint to be a destabilizing influence and, in 1961, banned him from entry to Anglican missions in the diocese. That led the board in 1962 to replace its co-operative department with an autonomous body, Co-operative for Aborigines Ltd, of which Clint was the general secretary. The board was renamed the Anglican Board of Mission – Australia in 1995. ==Work==