Campbell Island Cattle, as you would expect, are from
Campbell Island. Campell Island is a subantarctic island that lies over 600
kilometers south of mainland New Zealand. They were first introduced to
Campbell Island for the sustenance of any shipwreck survivors who happened to
come ashore there.
Although there is a report of “an attempt at agriculture
which failed in 1856” the veracity of this is in doubt. However, there are
reliable records of pigs, guinea fowl, and geese being liberated in 1865, and
goats and pigs were released there in 1868. Sheep were introduced by a French
scientific expedition which stayed there for almost four months at the end of
1874, and although the fate of the other early introductions is unknown, the
sheep were seen in subsequent years.
The first true farming venture started in 1896 with the
importation of between 300 and 400 sheep. In 1901 another 1000 sheep – of
Leicester/Merino and Lincoln/Merino crosses – were brought in, and the
following year another 1000 sheep plus eight cattle and two horses were landed.
In 1903 it was reported that there were then 4000 sheep, two
horses, and 20-30 cattle on the island. By 1910 the sheep had increased to
nearly 7000, and there were six bulls and ten cows which were allowed to run in
a wild state.
Difficulties of transport and of getting people to operate
the farm in such an inhospitable, lonely island resulted in a cessation of
farming in 1931, and although sheep numbers had fallen by this time, both these
and the cattle were abandoned.
During the second World War, a coast watcher noted that
there were “about 20 head of cattle” on Campbell Island in 1941, but very
little attention was paid to these animals either then or subsequently. In 1954
the island was declared a “reserve for the protection of flora and fauna” and
there was increasing pressure to get rid of both the sheep and cattle,
particularly because of the effect that they were having on the native
vegetation.
Studies were made of the sheep and some were taken to the
mainland in 1976 (see The Feral Sheep of Campbell Island). The remaining sheep
and the cattle appear to have been shot out by the late 1980s or early 1990s,
and some accounts give the date of 1984 for the extermination of the cattle.
Little is known about the cattle but from photographs taken
of them in 1976 it would appear that they probably originated from a largely
Shorthorn-type breed.