While in Sydney, Australia, Whibley declined an offer from
John T. Arundel to work for his company John T. Arundel & Co., which mined
guano on Pacific atolls and which within two years would evolve into the Pacific Islands Co. and then subsequently the Pacific Phosphate Co., which exploited high-grade phosphate deposits on
Nauru and
Banaba (then known as Ocean Island) that were refined to create
superphosphate. Whibley appears to be one of those Europeans who chose to live on an isolated Pacific atoll as an escape from the constraints and social expectations of respectability in the
Victorian era. In May or June 1898 Whibley arrived in
Niutao in
Tuvalu (then known as the Ellice Islands) to work as the resident island trader buying
copra for the
Henderson and Macfarlane, which then dominated the
copra trade in
Tuvalu. Henderson & Macfarlane operated their vessel SS
Archer to call on islands in
Fiji,
Tuvalu, and
Kiribati (formerly the
Gilbert Islands). Whibley was called "Felele" by the Niutaons. His wife, Meri Matavaka was of the Luaseuta family of
Niutao. Meri being a Tuvaluan variation of ‘Mary’. Meri’s previous "avaga" (married one) had been
Jack Buckland the former
palagi trader on Niutao; she had refused to go with Jack Buckland to when he moved to the neighbouring island of
Nanumea. During her time with
Jack Buckland Meri had visited
Vailima in
Samoa as Jack had become a friend of
Robert Louis Stevenson during the 1890 voyage of the ‘Janet Nicoll’ Fred Whibley wrote to his brother
Charles Whibley "''Read R L Stevenson's & L.O's "Wrecker" - there in Tommy Hadden, towards the end will you find the missus's previous 'usband. He was a scorcher!. Stayed at R L S' s at Vailima 6 mos on end, with Matavaka - my missus. - She has given me quite a picture in her own tongue, - of their life there - in the Master's house, and of the amenities. - Some day, - if you might be interested I would detail it to you. - It would be off the line of what you may have heard or read at home, but all favourable to the decent, peace-loving, sensitive quiet, good man, who to me is little short of a fetish.''" Whibley died in 1919. The 3 children were raised by their large extended family of uncles, aunts and cousins overseen by their grandfather Luaseuta. The English relatives arranged for the 3 children to be sent to
Auckland,
New Zealand to go to school. ==The end of the era of European traders==