On 20 March 1820 Brind arrived in the Bay of Islands as the captain of the whaler , which was owned by
Samuel Enderby & Sons. The
Cumberland visited
Kororareka (nowadays Russell) a number of times, including in August 1821, before sailing for Sydney, Australia in November 1821 with a cargo of whale oil. On 17 December 1825 Brind returned to the Bay of Islands as captain of the
Emily. From about 1823 until 1826 Captain Brind lived with a daughter of
Pōmare I, chief of the Ngāti Manu
hapū (subtribe) of the
Ngāpuhi. Brind became a friend of the Reverend
Thomas Kendall and assisted the latter upon his expulsion from the
Church Missionary Society. Brind arrived at the Bay of Islands in September 1828 as captain of
Toward Castle. From 1828 Brind lived with Moewaka, the daughter of Rewa (Manu), a chief of Ngai Tawake
hapū of the Ngāpuhi. Their daughter was baptised Eliza Isabella Brind, who was murdered in 1841 by
Wiremu Kingi Maketu, who was later convicted of the murder of Eliza and 4 others. ==The Girls' War==