An advertisement in the PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY from 1977
276 Pitt Street in Sydney today
Morris, Hedstrom Ltd, J.C. Godeffroy & Sohn, Deutsche Handels- und Plantagen-Gesellschaft (DHPG), Burns Philp & Company Limited, Steamships Trading Company — witth the exception of the last, all those other conpanies, who at one time dominated trading in the South Pacific, have disappeared, as has Breckwoldt & Co., a trading company headquartered in Hamburg in Germany, which had branches in Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, Fiji, and Samoa.
Once on everyone's lips, the name 'Breckwoldt' has all but disappeared from memory, and can only be found after some dedicated searches in long-forgotten archives, such as old edition of the PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY, the then 'Bible' of every expatriate living in the islands — which, incidentally, has also disappeared as completely as Breckwoldt.
Who would have thought at the 50th anniversary of the founding of the comapny that only a few years later there would be nothing left of it? What were the catastrophic events and the tough decisions that led up to this cataclysmic demise of a once so proud South Sea Islands trader?
In a last-ditch effort the last of the Breckwoldts, Tim Breckwoldt, of the third generation that usually loses it, has put down his 'stein' and done some heavy thinking instead of drinking to find the best way to preserve the name 'Breckwoldt' for posterity, in both German and English.
He promises it to be a no-holds-barred account from start to finish, although he will keep it clean with the help of BREWO toilet soap.
Stay tuned for an update!















