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EARLY EXPLORERS IN AUSTRALIA
From the Log-Books and Journals
BY
IDA LEE (Mrs. CHARLES BRUCE MARRIOTT)
F.R.G.S., Hon. F.R.A.H.S.
AUTHOR OF "THE COMING OF THE BRITISH TO AUSTRALIA,"
"COMMODORE SIR JOHN
HAYES, HIS VOYAGE AND LIFE,"
"THE LOG-BOOKS OF THE LADY NELSON,"
ETC.
WITH MAPS AND ILLUSTRATIONS
METHUEN & CO. LTD.
36 ESSEX STREET W.C.
LONDON
First Published in 1925.

WYTFLIET'S MAP OF THE TERRA AUSTRALIS
PREFACE
This volume deals with only a portion of the exploration of the Southern
Continent and is not intended to be a complete history of Australian discovery.
I have endeavoured, however, to relate in addition to the better-known
discoveries, many important voyages and surveys which have been less frequently
described and in many cases I have left the explorer to tell the story of his
adventures in his own words.
Throughout the various chapters I have tried to trace the first arrival of
English ships on the west coast, the trend of maritime exploration on the north
and north-west coasts from the days of Dampier down to King, the surveys of Cook
and of his successors on the east coast, the rediscovery of Moreton Bay, the
finding of Port Phillip, and the circumnavigation and settlement of
Tasmania.
The book also deals with certain inland discoveries from the time of the
landing of Governor Phillip in New South Wales until Allan Cunningham had begun
his exploration of Queensland. These include the expeditions of Caley, Evans,
and all those who struck out westward across the Blue Mountains, and I have
dealt with them as constituting a prelude to Cunninghain's journal, in order to
show in whose footsteps Cunningham followed and to indicate the extent of the
colony at the time of his arrival there.
Allan Cunningham was a Kew botanist who became also famous as an explorer. It
would be difficult to say in which field of enterprise he won most renown. The
collections of new plants and seeds that he sent and brought home from the most
distant shores of Australasia were hardly surpassed by those made by Robert
Brown, and with regard to Cunningham's explorations we find that historians
to-day place him in the very front rank of discoverers of the Southern
Continent.
It was not until after he had journeyed as botanist with Oxley's party into
the interior of New South Wales in 1817, and had traversed bush and mountain and
beheld the wide rivers winding inland that the desire to study anything beyond
the flora of the country entered his mind. In his accounts of his journey with
Oxley one can trace how he gradually came to listen to "the call of the wild,"
and by looking at the map of Australia of those early days it is possible to
gauge to some extent the fascination that tempted him. He must have seen the
great spaces left blank on that map, but whether mountains, plains, lakes, or
rivers lay there none could tell, for the spaces were unexplored territory that
no traveller had ever crossed. In the map they surround the small colony at Port
Jackson, then ruled by Governor Macquarie, and spread over nearly the whole
continent.
Even where fresh discoveries across the Blue Mountains had been made up to
1814 a single line suffices to show how far Europeans had been able to advance
into the Unknown.
The days, then, which followed Cunningham's coming to the colony were
glorious days, appealing to men of spirit and courage to blaze a road through
country where no civilized man had yet been, and to learn whether it possessed
the features of grass and water absolutely necessary if civilization was to be
drawn from the small settlements near the coast into the heart of the
continent.
How nobly Cunningham responded to the call is well known--perhaps by none
better than by those who live in the townships along the route that he toiled so
earnestly to discover, many of which are even now only just springing up. How,
without neglecting the duties connected with his post as King's Botanist, he
wrested from the land the knowledge of its mountain-passes, its fine rivers, its
rich pastures, it has been my humble endeavour to make known afresh in the
present volume, in which his journal, here first printed in full, is the special
feature.
After a careful study of his letters, of his journal, and of his reports
(extant in England) I have come to the conclusion that Cunningham himself would
have preferred to be best remembered as a botanist. For this reason I decided to
give some account of his botanical researches. Botany being an entirely new
study to me, in dealing with the names of the plants and flowers of Australia
mentioned by Cunningham. I have had the assistance of Mr. N. E. Brown, A.L.S.,
who has kindly given me most able help and advice.
Cunningham's manuscripts are to be found in the Libraries of the Botanical
Departments of the Natural History Museum at South Kensington and at Kew, and I
beg to thank the authorities of both Libraries for their courtesy in permitting
me to transcribe them.
With regard to my own story of Cunningham's explorations I can only add that
I had proposed writing of them in a different manner from that which I have
adopted, but owing to illness continually hampering my efforts I have been
unable to carry out my original intentions. I therefore trust that in due course
an abler writer will deal with what I have omitted and do Cunningharn's memory
the justice it so richly deserves.
To all who have helped me in various ways to complete this work I offer my
sincere and grateful thanks; had it not been for their aid the book could not
have been produced in its entirety. To the Librarians of the various English
Libraries, of the Sydney Public Library, and of the Mitchell Library, Sydney, I
wish to express my gratitude for their valuable assistance. To Mr. Henry Selkirk
of the Royal Australian Historical Society I am greatly indebted for his
examination of Allan Cunningham's journal and Field Books, preserved in Sydney,
and for comparing Cunningham's maps there with those of modern geographers. I
also wish to thank Mr. C. H. Bertie, F.R.A.H.S., for permitting me to reproduce
the illustrations of Cook's Landing-place and of the brass tablet at Kurnell,
previously published by him and I desire to acknowledge Mr. Kashnor's kindness
in allowing me to reprint some rare charts in his collection of those made by
Dalrymple which I had not met with elsewhere.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER
PREFACE
INTRODUCTION
I. DAMPIER, COOK,
BANKS
II.
COOK AT ENDEAVOUR RIVER
III. THE COMING OF
PHILLIP
IV.
MARITIME DISCOVERIES. PORT JACKSON
V. THE EXPLORATION OF
THE INTERIOR
VI. ALLAN
CUNNINGHAM
VII. CUNNINGHAM'S
JOURNAL--OXLEY'S LAND JOURNEY
VIII. CUNNINGHAM'S
JOURNAL--OXLEY'S LAND JOURNEY COMPLETED
IX. CUNNINGHAM'S
JOURNAL--KING'S WEST COAST VOYAGE
X. CUNNINGHAM'S
JOURNAL-"MERMAIDS" VOYAGE COMPLETED
XI. CUNNINGHAM'S
JOURNAL--THE FIVE ISLANDS AND ILLAWARRA
XII. THE SECOND
VOYAGE OF THE "MERMAID"
XIII. THE THIRD
VOYAGE OF THE "MERMAID"
XIV. THE VOYAGE OF
THE "BATHURST"
XV. CUNNINGHAM
REACHES PANDORA'S PASS
XVI. MOUNT TOMAH;
MORETON BAY AND THE BRISBANE RIVER. THROUGH PANDORA'S PASS
XVII. CUNNINGHAM'S
NORTHERN JOURNEY
XVIII. FURTHER
EXPLORATIONS IN QUEENSLAND
X1X. CUNNINGHAM'S
LAST JOURNEYS
INDEX (not included in this ebook)
BOTANICAL REFERENCES
(not included in this ebook)
MAPS AND ILLUSTRATIONS
1. TERRA
AUSTRALIS, PART OF WYTFLIET'S MAP (1597)
2. TRYAL ROCKS
(FROM DALRYMPLE'S COLLECTION)
3. CAPTAIN
DANIEL'S CHART OF THE ABROLHOS, 1681 (FROM DALRYMPLE'S COLLECTION)
4. CLOATES
"ISLAND," BY P. P. KING
5. PLANTS
FOUND IN NEW HOLLAND BY DAMPIER
6. PLANTS
FOUND IN NEW HOLLAND BY DAMPIER
7. PLANTS
FOUND IN NEW HOLLAND BY DAMPIER
8. JAMES
COOK
9. KURNELL:
COOK'S LANDING-PLACE
10. "RESOLVED
TO DEFEND THEIR COASTS." DRAWN BY J. STEPHENSON
11. TABLET
PLACED AT KURNELL (IN 1822) BY THE PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY
12. MATTHEW
WEATHERHEAD'S CHART OF JERVIS BAY
13. EYE SKETCH
FROM BASS'S ORIGINAL CHART
14. CHART
SHOWING THE "HARBINGER'S" TRACK. DRAWN BY GOVERNOR KING
15. COLONE L
PATERSON'S MAP OF THE COLONY
16.
ARROWSMITH'S MAP OF NEW SOUTH WALES
17. EVANS'S
ROUTE MAP
18. ALLAN
CUNNINGHAM
19. A PRIMROSE
FROM ENGLAND
20. JOHN
OXLEY
21. FACSIMILE
OF THE BARK
22. NATIVE
BURIAL GROUND (OXLEY'S EXPLORATIONS)
23. CAPTAIN
PHILLIP PARKER KING
24. PORT
ESSINGTON
25. "MERMAID"
BEACHED AT CAREENING BAY
26. HARTOG'S
PLATE (FROM FREYCINET'S ATLAS)
27. CROSS'S
MAP, SHOWING CUNNINGHAM'S JOURNEY IN 1823
28. MORETON
BAY, SHOWING FLINDERS' DISCOVERIES IN THE "NORFOLK'S" VOYAGE
29. RED CLIFF
REACH BRISBANE RIVER
30.
CUNNINGHAM'S ROUTE IN 1825
31.
CUNNINGHAM'S ROUTE MAP OF 1827
32.
CUNNINGHAM's ROUTE FROM SEGENHOE TO THE DARLING DOWNS, SHOWN UPON A MODERN
MAP
33. SKETCHES
FROM CUNNINGHAM'S DIARY
34. BREMER
RIVER
35. RICHARD
CUNNINGHAM
Early Explorers in Australia
INTRODUCTION
From the earliest dawn of Australia's history the beautiful flora and
singular fauna of the country have appealed to discoverers and naturalists. Yet
the old Dutch voyagers who first came to the Great South Land collected few
specimens of what they found there, and apparently no record exists of any of
the country's natural productions having reached Europe until long after the
names of Eendracht Land, Dedel's Land, and the Land of the Leeuwin were engraved
upon the maps of the world.[*]
[* Heeres says: In 1605 Jansz surveyed the cast coast of the Gulf
of Carpentaria as far as about 13°45'S. In the year 1616 the Dutch ship
'Eendracht,' commanded by Dirk Hartog, on her voyage from the Cape of Good
Hope to Batavia...for the first time surveyed part of the west coast of
Australia. As early as 1619 this coast was known by the name of Eendracht
Land, and Dedel's Land (called after a sea captain named Jacob Dedel) was made
in July, 1619, and appeared in the charts of 1627." The same writer observes:
"Dedel's Land is bounded by the Land of the Leeuwin, surveyed in 1622. (See
"Part Borne by the Dutch in the Discovery of Australia."--J. E.
Heeres.)]
According to Labillardière, the first specimens of any kind to reach Holland
from New Holland were two shells which had been given to Burgomaster Witsen of
Amsterdam in 1698 by a sea captain in the service of the Dutch East India
Company. This was William Vlamingh, who had visited Western Australia in the
previous year; and, in a letter to Dr. Lister of the Royal Society Witsen says
"he found them on the seaside, and I make bold to send you the draught of them,
the shells themselves being twice as long and as broad as the draught." He adds
the courteous message "I could not bestow them better than on one who hath the
best knowledge of these and all other sea products." A description of the
shells, with illustrations, was afterwards published in Lister's "Synopsis
Conchyliorum "--one being the first nautilus,[*] the other then named the
Concha persica clavicula radiata.
[* Nautilus pompilius.]
The Burgomaster's letter mentions other curiosities seen by Vlamingh in the
new land, among them black swans, three of which were caught and taken to
Batavia, but shortly afterwards died there; and on an island near the coast were
"rats as great as cats which had a kind of bag or purse hanging from the throat
downwards." On this account the Dutch gave the name of Rottennest[*] to the
island and called the river where the swans were taken the Swan River.
[* Rats' Nest. The rats were a species of kangaroo
rat.]
There were found also "many well-scented trees, and out of the wood is to be
drawn oil smelling as the rose." A small bottle of it was distilled at Batavia
and sent to the Directors of the Dutch East India Company at Amsterdam, which
appear to prove that the eucalyptus first yielded its oil to the Dutch.
Soon after Witsen's letter had reached Dr. Lister, William Dampier brought
home his collection of dried plants, including many gathered in Western
Australia. Dampier had twice visited that country: he was there before Vlamingh,
on his voyage with the buccaneers in the ship "Cygnet" of London under Captain
Read, entering on January 5, 1688 what is now called Cygnet Bay, and he was
there in 1699 in the "Roebuck," of which vessel he was in command;[*] and after
Dampier's return from this voyage in 1702 more than ever before was known in
England concerning the South Land.
[* After leaving Australia on his first voyage Dampier quarrelled
with Captain Read and quitted the "Cygnet" at Nicobar. He made his way to
Sumatra and reached England in 1691. Having been brought under the notice of
King William III by the Earl of Pembroke, he was placed in command of
Roebuck," an Admiralty ship, and sent on a second voyage of
discovery.]
In the journal of his first voyage Dampier mentions New Holland several times
before he is able to record that he has seen it. First of all, at the Ladrones
he had been told by experienced seamen that ships bound to Java from the Cape of
Good Hope often found themselves, and sometimes to their cost, on the shoals off
New Holland; ships had been known to run aground there when their navigators
thought that they were a great way from it, as to which Dampier remarks: "Hence
possibly the Dutch call that part of the coast the Land of Indraught, as if it
magnetically drew ships to it." In this, however, Dampier assigns a meaning of
his own to the word Eendracht, which the Dutch had bestowed upon a part of
Western Australia; for we know that the land was named in honour of the ship
"Eendracht," the word itself meaning, in Dutch, "union" or "concord."
He mentions New Holland again after the ship had passed Timor, and, being
uncertain as to what was the form or shape of the country he was about to land
in, he describes it as "a part of Terra Australis Incognita." When he reached a
shoal off the coast, he complained that it was laid down too far to the
north-ward in the Dutch charts, and after the "Cygnet" rounded what is now known
as Cape Lévêque and anchored a league to the eastward of its shores, on January
5, 1688, he gave this account of the country:
"New Holland is a very large tract of land. It is not yet determined whether
it is an island or a continent, but I am certain that it joins neither to Asia,
Africa, nor America."
Dampier wrote boldly; for, although early in the seventeenth century the
Dutch had made discoveries on the north and west coasts, in 16o6 Torres had
sailed through the strait now known by his name, in 1627 Peter Nuyts had crossed
the Australian Bight to Nuyts' Archipelago off the south coast, and in 1642
Tasman had discovered the shores of both Tasmania and New Zealand, yet nothing
was known of the eastern or south-eastern coasts, and a multitude of geographers
still believed the old fables that Australia was included within the boundaries
of the vast Terra Australis Incognita, the imaginary Antarctic continent
supposed to cover the whole of the southern portion of both the eastern and
western hemispheres--an idea founded on the ancient theory that a southern
continent was needed to maintain the equilibrium of the globe.
In the western hemisphere the southern continent was believed to join Tierra
del Fuego or Magellanica (South America), and in the eastern hemisphere it was
thought to stretch as far north as New Guinea, while its southern boundary ran
as far south as the Pole itself. So firmly was this idea fixed in the minds of
the most learned men that it had become difficult to eradicate it, and we find
this imaginary continent portrayed in maps of the world up to the time of
Dampier's coming to Australia.[*]
[* P. du Val, in his World Map of 1674, in order to show the Dutch
discoveries in Australia, makes a sharp break in the outline of the imaginary
continent, but he still keeps New Zealand as one of its promontories--part of
a territory whose coast-line ran southward till it almost reached the southern
extremity of South America; and Tasmania was thought to be another part of
it.]
Points of this vast land had been identified and named by European seamen and
others, the most familiar names given tc the various parts being Beach or Locach
and Maletur--names handed down since the time of Marco Polo--Terra di Vista,
Brasiliae Regio, Psittacorum Regio, or the Land of Parrots, in the eastern, and,
contiguous to Tierra del Fuego Regio Patalis and Regio Magellanica in the
western hemisphere.
By far the oldest portion of the Terra Australis was the land of Beach or
Cape Beach. It was the title given to a tract of country in Northern Australia
in the neighbourhood of Arnhem Land, while the old name Regio Patalis (the
region of Patala at the mouth of the Indus) was bestowed at different periods
upon various parts of the vast continent; Terra di Vista was another ancient
name for land in 42° S. lat., of which nothing was known except that "it was 450
leagues from the Cape of Good Hope." Buache, the French geographer, is best
remembered for the memoir he published in 1763 (only five years before Cook
sailed on his first voyage), in which he enumerates the names appearing on the
maps of Terra Australis, or, as he calls it, Terra Antarctica. In writing of
Terra di Vista, Buache points out that "on Mercator's Great Chart published in
1569 (and on Wytfliet's Of 1597) there is also marked in these latitudes the
great Gulf of St. Sebastian[*] and an island called Cressalina," "of which," he
adds, "there is a MS. map in the collection of the Marshal d'Estrèes"...Buache's
memoir was regarded as an important work at the time of its publication, so much
so that afterwards it was reprinted by Alexander Dalrymple, hydrographer at the
Admiralty, who possessed a wonderful knowledge of old and rare charts, and who
collected valuable information respecting the tracks of vessels which were the
first to sail among the islands and shoals of the Pacific and especially among
those around the Australian
[* Not to be confused with the channel of that name in Tierra del
Fuego.]
To return to the Gulf of St. Sebastian. Although Buache did not himself give
its position as being near or off Australia, he believed that it was not far
from Terra di Vista. Now, how-ever, it is thought that in all probability what
he referred to as Terra di Vista was a portion of Western Australia, since it
was placed to the south of the Cape of Good Hope and no land exists in the
position assigned to it upon the maps themselves.
Cook was aware of the importance attached by geographers to the rediscovery
of the Gulf of St. Sebastian, and as the Dutch formerly had given orders to
their seamen to look for Cape Beach, so in like manner Cook was instructed to
search for this gulf. The "Resolution" and the "Adventure" both looked for it,
and we even find Dr. Solander, on his return to England in 1774, mentioning it
in a letter to a friend when thus describing Furneaux's homeward voyage:[*] "He
[Furneaux] sailed directly south from New Zealand till he came into lat. 55° and
between that and 6o° continued his course eastward...looking for St. Sebastian's
Land and for Cape Circumcision, but arrived the 18th March last at the Cape of
Good Hope without having seen an inch of new land...He has proved that there is
no southern continent and that the French discoveries are small islands instead
of continents; or perhaps, as my friend Omai calls ice, 'things that the sun
drives away or causes to vanish.'"
[* Solander to Ellis, "Correspondence of Linnaeus," Vol. II, p.
17.]
On hearing that Cook did not find the Gulf of St. Sebastian, Dalrymple
remarked that he should have looked for it in the eastern and not in the western
hemisphere;[*] and possibly Dalrymple, although his theory regarding the
existence of a huge southern continent was disproved, possessed evidence
relating to the discovery of the gulf which has not been handed down to us. The
remark at least raises a question as to where Dalrymple expected that Cook would
find this gulf. We only know that upon some ancient maps, as for example on
Wytfliet's of the continent of Terra Australis, 1597 (Map 1), there appears on
its southern shores a wide opening (not unlike the real Spencer Gulf of early
Australian maps) which bears the name of Golfo S. Sebastiano, and to the
eastward of this is another river-like opening in front of which is an island
called Cressalina. If we follow the coast-line of the continent round to the
westward we come to another part of it named Psittacorum Regio, and this, in the
opinion of competent authorities, was in fact Western Australia. Opposite
Psittacorum Regio, or the Land of Parrots, and at a short distance from it,
looms the Cape of Good Hope, but, judging from the position of Java Major to the
northward and the Pacific Ocean to the eastward, the outlines of the Cape are
even more out of their proper place on the map than are those of Western
Australia.
[* Many believed that the gulf would be found in the western
hemisphere, and Thomas Kitchin, the well-known geographer, in banishing the
imaginary Terra Australis from his maps after Cook's return from his
researches still retained a small portion of the land bearing the name of the
Gulf of St. Sebastian, which he places to the south-east of the Falkland
Islands--a little to the westward of where Ortelius had placed it on his map
in 1587.]
In spite of the fact, too, that in this map the Gulf of St. Sebastian seems
to have its origin a few miles from the South Pole, or that portions of Terra
Australis are laid down within the limits of the Antarctic Circle, and that to
the south-eastward the land shows no sign of ending, it seems to convey the
impression of being an authentic discovery of Australia. Its eastern shores are
bounded by the Pacific; New Guinea is shown as an island, and Beach on the north
part is face to face with the island of Java Major. The text which was published
with it gives this description: "The Australis Terra is the most southern of all
lands. It is separated from New Guinea by a narrow strait. Its shores are little
known, since after one voyage and another that route has been deserted and
seldom is the country visited unless when sailors are driven there by storms.
The Australis Terra begins 2 or 3 degrees from the Equator and is
maintained...to be of so great an extent that if it were thoroughly explored it
would be regarded as a fifth part of the world."
No great land south of the Equator excepting Australia answers to this
description of Terra Australis, and, as Dalrymple believed the Gulf of St.
Sebastian would be found in the eastern hemisphere, it would seem that he must
have regarded the land on whose southern shores its name is inscribed, not as
the huge imaginary continent supposed to spread over the southern portions of
both hemispheres and to encircle the South Pole, but as a smaller continent
confined within the limits of the eastern hemisphere, which could have been no
other land than Australia.
It is probable that Europeans visited this continent even before the Dutch
discovered portions of it. Witness the Portu-guese word "Abrolhos" on early sea
charts, the name Terra del Zur on many old maps, and the rock carvings, found by
Sir George Grey in Western Australia, one figure among them being garbed as a
priest. These carvings apparently were the work of shipwrecked people who took
up their abode in caves. The countenance of one man engraved in the rock shows
that they were Europeans: they do not appear to be connected with any Dutch
visit, and it is thought that they were survivors either of a French or a
Portuguese ship, long since lost on these shores, of which no traces have been
found. There is the story too, that Spanish ringbolts have been discovered in
Sydney Harbour, which, if really true, would prove that this side of the
continent also was visited. While controversy usually attends the finding of any
signs of the presence of Europeans on the mainland at an early date, the
knowledge that more than one old map showing Terra Australis bear dates prior to
the arrival of the Dutch is sufficient to justify the belief that Australia was
discovered before the beginning of the seventeenth century.[*]
[* The wooden globe of Paris, one of the most famous geographical
records extant, made about the year 1535, bears an outline of a continent in
the far south, having inscribed upon it the legend: "Terra Australis recenter
inventa, Anno 1499. Another inscription of a similar nature appears upon the
map of Oroncé Finé (1531), only omitting the date of discovery. In a work by
Francis Monarchus entitled "De Orbis Situ," a small map bears a similar
notice, and in the text of the book the date of discovery is set down as 1526.
Vopellio's map, 1556, adheres to 1499 as the correct date. From this time
forward cosmographers of different periods seem to have had no doubts
concerning the authentic discovery of the South Land, although they could not
agree in their methods of delineating its outline.]
Other geographers award the honour of discovery to the Malays, who came to
fish for trepang on the north and north-west coasts. Both Flinders and King when
surveying those shores met with their proas, and it is said that they had fished
there for centuries. And probably if one race of mankind outside its native
inhabitants can claim to have had the earliest knowledge of Northern Australia,
that race would be the Malays. They are said originally to have inhabited
Palembang and the banks of the River Malayu in Sumatra and to have migrated
thence about the end of the twelfth century to the south-east extremity of the
opposite peninsula, where they built the ancient town of Singapore and
afterwards that of Malacca (though the name Malaya was applied to the peninsula
many ages before). Some of the Malays, especially the traders of Celebes, lost
sight of their coasts and pushed out on the open seas, directing their course by
the position of the stars and sometimes by the aid of a compass. (At what time
they came into possession of this seaman's guide is conjectural, although it was
thought to have been introduced from China.) A voyage as far southward as
Melville Island or Admiralty Gulf would have been quite an easy matter for their
fleets.
But turning from the mists of tradition to the clear light of written
history, the fact that the Portuguese and Spanish first made charts of Australia
carly in the sixteenth century would show that at that time they must have
gained some definite knowledge of its coast-line. So jealously, however, did
these two nations guard the secrets of their voyages and charts that no records
of their discoveries have been handed down to us. It may be significant in this
connexion that Wytfliet's map was dedicated to the King of Spain.
At the end of the sixteenth century a new maritime power sprang into being.
Holland, having successfully waged her war of independence against Spain and
wrested from Portugal her supremacy in the eastern seas, China as well as India
and the Spice Islands became the scene of Dutch activity, and Dutch ships began
to take the leading part in the maritime exploration of Southern Asia. These
ships when bound for Bantam (the western portion of Java) must have sighted
Australia, especially when stormy weather drove them to its shores. Their first
knowledge of the southern continent is believed to have been acquired in 1595 in
a voyage fitted out by some rich Dutch merchants, at the instigation of
Cornelius Houtman, a merchant who had lived in Lisbon and had gathered from the
Portuguese particulars concerning their discoveries. Being imprisoned for debt
there, Houtman wrote home to the Dutch merchants, giving them much information
regarding the East, and they obtained his release and sent him upon this voyage
to the East Indies. On the way from Antongil (on the east side of Madagascar) to
Java the compasses of the Dutch ships were subject to great variation, and by
going too far north they failed to make certain sandbanks (probably the Abrolhos
or those near Point Cloates) "marked on their Portuguese charts" which they
should have sighted, and Wytfliet says that on this voyage much was learned of
the Australis Terra. For fully sixty years the southern continent now became the
goal of the Dutch navigators, and Dutch expeditions left Holland in quick
succession with instruc-tions to investigate and report upon the South Land, to
which they gave the name of New Holland. The stories of these voyages have their
places in the Dutch archives and are well known to us. Of late years the records
have been published and contain all that is known concerning the Dutch
discoveries in New Holland.
About the year 1600, after the founding of the East India Company, we find
English ships beginning to compete with the Dutch for a portion of their trade
with the East. With the eastern monsoon the English sailed eastward principally
by what the Dutch called their "new route," that is to say, round the Cape of
Good Hope past the islands of St. Paul and Amsterdam, thence making the coast of
New Holland.[*] Between New Holland and the south-eastern shores of Asia the
Indian Ocean flows through many channels into the Pacific, and ships coming from
the southward across the Equator to China and japan had to pass through some of
these channels. "It soon became a recognized practice for British seamen
destined for the straits between Java and Timor to secure the land-fall from New
Holland."[**] Instead of coming there by accident or through being blown out of
their course, we learn that now the ships made it "their principal care to fall
in with New Holland."
[* Early Dutch navigators recommended seamen to make the South
Land in 26° Or 27°. British ships usually made it in 22° or 23° S.]
[** "A New Directory for the East Indies," S. Dunn. 5th ed.
London, 1780. P. 368.]
The earliest accounts in their captains' log-books and journals telling of
how they first saw what is now a British possession are full of interest to-day
and should have a place in every Australian history. There are not many records
relating to these English voyages. Here and there a log-book of ancient date
states the bare fact that the land was sighted, or an old directory quotes the
remarks made by some captain--small scraps of intelligence, yet sufficient to
prove that long before Cook discovered the east coast in the "Endeavour" British
seamen had reached and taken their bearings from the west coast of New
Holland.
One experienced commander[*] (the date of whose voyage is not stated), after
giving 22° 31' S. as the latitude that ships should endeavour to make for,
sounds a note of warning with regard to the perils around its shores. "I must
observe," he writes, "that till under the lat. of 26° S. the coast of New
Holland must be approached with caution as there is great danger, though there
are many never-failing guides to warn you of your approach, such as great
quantities of skuttle-bones, weeds and drifts, and near the Bank grampuses
playing like seals and innumerable quantities of Tropick birds, but skuttle-fish
and weeds are commonly the first marks. The land in lat. 22° S. and 23° S. is
low, the soundings 130 fathoms mud about 14 leagues from the coast."
[* Remarks published by William Nichelson of H.M.S. "Elizabeth,"
1758-64.]
One can picture, while the east coast remained all unknown the little stream
of British ships making its way eastward to Western Australia, creeping along
the reefs in the darkness past the low sandhills and grassy slopes in the
neighbourhood of Point Cloates and North-West Cape, where now, from lighthouses
of grey concrete, every five or seven seconds a flashing white light is thrown
upon the seaman's path. The little stream of ships with the advancement of time
has grown into a big river with many branches, which divide and penetrate every
harbour of the continent.

TRYAL ROCKS (FROM DALRYMPLE'S COLLECTION)
The first English ship to reach Australian waters of whose coming a record
survives was the ship "Trial"[*] She was wrecked in 1622 upon rocks which soon
were placed on charts under the name of the Tryal Rocks, although for long they
were thought to be of doubtful existence. Ten of the ship's passengers safely
reached Batavia on July 5th; a second boat came there on the 8th with thirty-six
survivors, and these informed the Dutch Governor (Koen) that they had abandoned
their ship with ninety-seven people on board in lat. 20°10' S. They also stated
that the "Tryal" had struck upon the reef during the night in fair weather. Both
English and Dutch ships looked for the rocks, yet gradually people doubted their
existence, because seamen who claimed to have sighted them placed them in
entirely different latitudes. Dampier hoped to find them. The "Jane" frigate in
1705 searched for them in vain, although her com-mander guessed the truth
concerning their situation. In his journal he wrote on June 27th of that year:
"Hove to, according to custom, on account of the Tryal Rocks (if such
exist), for although they are reported to extend 20 leagues in length I was
informed by the Commodore of the Dutch ships ... that he never heard of these
rocks being seen. If they exist they must lie much farther east than in the
route toward Java Head."
[* The "Tryal" carried a letter from the Hague to Dutch
authorities in the East giving particulars of the Treaty concluded in 1619
between the English and Dutch E.I. Companies.]
Many years after a Dutch sloop was again sent to explore them in consequence
of their having been seen by the ship "Vaderland Getrouw" in 1718 in 20½° S. The
sloop sighted and charted them and reported that they ranged from east to west
forty miles, were in lat. 19°30' S. and were eighty leagues from New Holland.
Captain Foss of the Danish ship "Fredensberg Castle" saw them in 1777, and
geographers continued to place them on their maps, yet many sailors still
refused to believe that they existed. At last the voyage of the ship
"Greyhound," on her passage from China to Port Jackson as late as 1819, reopened
the question by her commander declaring that he had met with a reef of rocks in
lat. 19°59' S., long. 103°30' E., which were the long-lost Tryal Rocks.
In 1820, after a minute survey of the different situations where these rocks
had been reported, Lieutenant Phillip Parker King in H.M.S. "Mermaid" came to
the conclusion that the Monte Bello Islands exactly answered the description
given by the Danish captain, and he states, "There remains no doubt in my mind
but that Barrow Island (in 20°40' S., 115°27' E.) and Trimouille Island (of the
French) and the numerous reefs around them are the identical Tryal Rocks." Since
King's day naval surveyors have found the exact position of the rocks.
"Admiralty Sailing Directions" (1917) state that "Tryal Rocks, awash at high
water, are near the outer edge of the S.W. part of Monte Bello Islands reef and
5 miles N. of the north extreme of Barrow Island." King attributed the
difficulty of identification to errors in longitude on the part of early
navigators whose reckonings, as is well known, cannot be relied upon, owing to
the fact that they had to depend upon their chronometers, which were liable to
get out of order.
The second English ship to make the Australian coast of whose presence off
the Abrolhos a record has been preserved was the "London" under Captain Daniel,
who came there in June, 1681, according to Thornton, Horsburgh and Thomson
(Dalrymple places the date as 1687), and therefore Daniel saw these shores
before his countryman Dampier. Of his coming Captain Daniel wrote in his
journal: "With the wind S.W. by W. steering by compass N.E. by E, at 10 a.m. the
water was discoloured: a man at the foretop saw a breach rise ahead of us. We
put our helm hard a starboard and stood away N.W. by W. and weathered the N.W.
end of it about ½ a mile: at that distance the depth was 35 fms. white corally
ground with some red mixed: next depth (about 2 hours after we tacked) was about
40 fms., the same ground, and at 9 p.m.having run off by log on a N.W. by W.
course had no ground at 65 fms...The breach which we first saw happened to be
the northernmost of all, there being several and by our computation are 20 miles
in length. Within the breaches several small white sandy islands were seen with
some bushes on them: a very heavy sea broke against the south part of these.
When close to them the mainland was not seen."
Captain Daniel apparently saw Wallabi Group, the northern-most of the three
groups of islands and rocks comprising the Abrolhos. He named it "Dangerous
Rocks," He also may have given the name of Maiden's Isle to Rottnest Island, as
it is so called in many old atlases. He made a chart of the Abrolhos which was
published by Dalrymple, and, however imperfectly it may represent these shoals,
it seems to have been the first attempt by an Englishman to chart the shores of
Australia.
There is a curious silence among historians regarding Cloates Island, or
Cloates Doubtful Island, off Western Australia, yet to sailors in olden days it
was an island of mystery; and for English sea captains who made it their duty to
fall in with New Holland it possessed a peculiar attraction. They looked for it
and wrote about it in their log-books more than any other part of the continent,
because for years people were wont to disbelieve in its existence too. Owing to
the hidden trendings in the coast and the elbow that is formed in its outline
where they first sighted land a difficult problem was presented to one sailor
after another which none could solve.

CAPTAIN DANIEL'S CHART OF HOUTMAN'S ABROLHOS
Lieutenant King also found that Cloates Island did exist and was not an
island or shoals like the Tryal Rocks and the Abrolhos, but actually formed a
part of the mainland. Early explorers had passed along this portion of the
coast, though none had named the point until in 1719 it was suddenly christened
Cloates Island, and Cloates Island it remained until a hundred years later, when
King proved it to be a peninsula. This supposed island was discovered by Captain
Nash (possibly an Englishman), in com-mand of a Flemish ship, the "House of
Austria," bound from Ostend to China. On seeing it he wrote in his journal:
"Being clear weather brought to, sounded, and had no ground with 100 fms. though
not above four miles off shore. The day before and several days after observed
an incredible quantity of seaweed like that from the Gulf of Florida and small
birds like lapwings both in size and flight. This island cannot be seen far even
in clear weather and lies N.E. by E. and S.W. by S. about 32 leagues in length
with terrible breakers from each end running about three miles into the sea." He
gave the lat. as 22° S. and from it made 7°26' westing to Java Head. As he could
find no account of this land in any of his books or charts Captain Nash named it
Cloates or Cloot's Island in honour of a Flemish Baron, one of the owners of the
ship.[*]
[* "A New Directory for the East Indies," S. Dunn. 5th ed.
1780.]
Other ships followed Captain Nash's route and saw Cloates Island, and
reported having seen it. Captain Pelly of the ship "Prince of Wales" in 1739 at
first sight thought the land like small islands, so very low that they could not
be seen from the deck. A great smoke was rising only at five or six leagues
distant. He "sounded and had no ground at 160 fms...raised the land and found it
long and level about the height of the Lizard."...He believed "the land like
islands joined to the rest." The last sentence seems to show that Pelly queried
the report that the land was a single island, or else had seen other islands in
the north-east.
Another East India Company's ship, the "Haeslingfield," sighted Cloates
Island in 1743. On July 16th Captain Robert Haldane[*] records having seen weeds
and common berries in the water in lat. 24°33' S.; "also next day but not so
much as before." On the following day, Monday, July 18th, he writes: "Saw
Cloot's Island. Lay to...Made sail...Kept a good look out all night, having been
yesterday at noon only 75' to ye southward of Cloot's Island discovered by ye
'House of Austria,' an Ostend shipping, by our account not a great way from ye
meridian in which they made it. At daylight saw it bearing S.E. ½ S. to E. by S.
distant 6 leagues. Sounded, but had no ground with fms., nor have we seen any
scuttle bones at all nor weeds since the 16th and 17th as they mention, and but
2 or 3 birds of a whitish colour and of size of a pigeon. It extends from N.N.E.
to S. by W. about 9 or 10 leagues in length and rises gradually towards the
middle; from the N.E. end of it runs a ledge of rocks upon which we saw breakers
a great way out. By a very good observation I make it to lie in lat. 22°08' S.
and 32°01' East from St. Paul's, which agrees pretty well with a journall of ye
above mentioned ship by accident found on board.[**]...I am apt to believe that
this island is laid down...in charts a good deal too much to westward." The last
remark was true. "Doubtful" Island has always been placed too much to westward,
and at some distance from the mainland.[***]
[* India Office Log-Book.]
[**] The curious fact of Captain Nash's journal being found on
board the "Haeslingfield" is additional evidence that he was of English
nationality.
[***] Upon the charts showing Cook's first discoveries,
and upon the atlas pub-lished with La Pérouse's voyage, it is shown between the
erroneously charted Tryal Rocks and the Australian coast. On the map drawn by
Lieutenant Roberts, R.N., to describe Cook's track in his last voyage, Cloates
Island appears twice, to the south-east and again to the south-west of the Tryal
Rocks and beneath the latter island is given the further information "according
to the French." In Purdy's "General Chart of the World," 2nd ed., 1812, it is
shown with the addition of "doubtful," and also (without that qualification) in
Espinosa's Spanish Chart of the same date. Cloates Island must not be confused
with Kalatoa, or Old Clouts Island (upon which the "Ocean" was wrecked) in the
Flores Sea.]
Fifty-three years after the "Haeslingfield" had passed (in the year 1796) the
master of the ship "Belvedere" reported having seen Cloates Island "on the lee
bow bearing E. by N. 5 or 6 miles at 9; breakers off each end...10 a.m. a bluff
point seen from the masthead." After steering ten miles, the observed lat.,
being 21°10' S.[*] "the body of Cloat's Island was seen half way up the mizen
shrouds."
[*] Its true lat. 22°42' S., long. 113°'41' E.
But by this time geographers were inclined to be sceptical, and Horsburgh
writes: "This evidently was not Cloates Island but some of the low islands in
the bight to the east of North-West Cape." Joining the unbelievers, he adds:
"Cloates Island very probably has no real existence."

CLOATES "ISLAND"
Lieutenant King, however, who was sent by the Admiralty to explore the
north-west coast, was not the man to pass over any reliable evidence concerning
early discoveries in those regions and he determined to examine this coast. He
came there first in 1818, and on February 10th saw the land and described its
outer shore very much after the manner of early seamen: "The coast is tolerably
elevated, may be seen at a distance of 6 or 7 leagues. The shore is fronted with
rocks that extend 3 or 4 miles into the sea, on the extremity of which the surf
breaks with a continued foam." On the 14th he rounded North-West Cape and
entered the bight which he named Exmouth Gulf, and before dark his ship, the
"Mermaid," had sailed twenty-five miles down the opening without seeing its
termination. Exmouth Gulf is twenty-seven miles wide between Tubridgi Point and
North-West Cape, and has been traced fifty miles into the land yet even to-day a
great part of it is very imperfectly known. "The western side trended
southwards, losing itself in distance and bore the appearance of being an
island," King records after bringing the "Mermaid" to an anchorage in an inlet
called Bay of Rest, or Jogodor. From here he continued his examination, but was
forced to leave Exmouth Gulf without being positively certain whether the bay
within it in which his ship had anchored was a part of an island or of the
continent.[*]
[* Allan Cunningham, the botanist on board, had little doubt that
it formed part of the mainland. (See his journal, February 16,
1818.)]
In October, 1820, during his third voyage to the north-west coast, King
wrote: "The existence of Cloates Island, of which there are so many undeniable
descriptions, was for a long time questioned by navigators. I think, however,
that it does exist, and that it is no other than the mainland to the southward
of North-West Cape." When he came to the curious arm or elbow in the coast-line
which had caused sailors to mistake this peninsula for an island, he observed:
"In the neighbourhood of the Bay of Rest (within the Gulf) the shore is more
sinuous...here the Gulf is twelve miles across...the Gulf then shoalens and at
fifteen miles farther terminates in an inlet...at the south end of the high land
that forms the west side of the Gulf and which is doubtless the identical
Cloates Island that has puzzled navigators for the last eighty years.[*] It
perfectly answers the descriptions that have been given, and the only thing
against it is the longitude, but this like that of the Tryal Rocks is not to be
attended to."
[* King's "Intertropical Australia," Vol. 11, P. 365.]
It is evident that King was keenly interested in the history of Cloates
Island and was determined to remove all doubts as to its identity. And after he
had examined it he says: "The description of this island by Captain Nash of the
ship 'House of Austria,' as well as that of the 'Haeslingfield' in 1743 and by
Captain Pelly, accord exactly with the appearance of this promontory, nor is the
longitude much in error when we consider the strength of the currents which set
to the north-west during the easterly monsoon in the space between New Holland
and Java."[*]
[* King's "Intertropical Australia," vol. 1, P. 443.]
Thus once and for all King cleared up the mystery which had for so long
surrounded Cloates Island.
From these glimpses into the log-books of British seamen who sighted the west
coast, we pass to the journal of William Dampier, the first Englishman of whose
landing we have actual record.
CHAPTER 1
DAMPIER, BANKS, AND COOK
On the "Cygnet's" arrival off Cape Lévêque, Dampier recorded his first
impressions of the country. "This part," he writes, "is all a low, even land
with sandy banks against the sea...the points rocky and so are some of the
islands in the bay...The soil is dry and sandy, destitute of water, except you
make wells, yet producing divers sort of trees." He at once noticed a species of
eucalyptus which grew most abundantly, calling them dragon trees, and describing
them as "the largest of any there. They are about the bigness of our large apple
trees...the rind is blackish...The leaves are of a dark colour. The gum distils
out of the knots or cracks that are in the bodies of the trees. We compared it
with some Gum-dragon or Dragon's Blood that was aboard and it was of the
same."
On January 5, 1688, after the "Cygnet" had anchored, some natives were seen
walking on the shore. A boat was sent off from the ship in the hope of being
able to get water and provisions, but on seeing it approaching them the blacks
quickly disappeared. For three days the buccaneers searched for their houses,
but found none; then, anxious to be on friendly terms with the inhabitants, left
toys in different places which it was thought they would visit. A little later,
while searching for water among the islands, Dampier and his shipmates came upon
a great many natives.
He describes these people as being "tall and thin, with long limbs...great
heads, round foreheads, and great brows. Their eyelids always half closed to
keep the flies out of their eyes, they were being so troublesome, no fanning
will keep them from coming to one's face. They have great bottle noses, full
lips, and wide mouths, and the two fore teeth of the upper jaw are wanting in
all of them." He thought the colour of their skin was coal black and that "they
have no sort of clothes. They have no houses but lie in the open air. Earth
being their bed and Heaven their canopy." On looking around to see what they
lived upon, he says: "Their only food is a small sort of fish which they get by
making wares of stone across little coves,"[*] and adds: "Their chiefest
dependence is what the sea leaves in their wares...be it night or day, rain or
shine, they must attend to them or else they must fast, for the earth affords
them no food at all." Some of them "had wooden swords; others a sort of lance;
the sword is a piece of wood shaped somewhat like a cutlass." From which it
appears that they carried boomerangs, of which Dampier has left us this
impression. He imagined that the natives used stone hatchets as he saw no iron
or other metal, and believed that they obtained their fire "by rubbing or
twirling a hard piece of wood between the palms of their hands" against a softer
piece "until it smokes and at last takes fire."
[* These stone weirs were afterwards seen by King on the
north-west coast in 1818, by Roe at Oyster Harbour, West Australia, and by
Oxley on the Lachlan River, New South Wales; and King remarks that by their
being found on the south-east, south-west,and north-west coasts, he concluded
"this expedient was a native practice throughout the continent."]
On one island (to the eastward of Cape Lévêque) the buccaneers discovered
about forty inhabitants--men, women, and children--who, on seeing white men
landing there were at first "much disordered" and "made a great noise," but when
they saw no harm was intended they became more subdued. For a dwelling-place
they possessed "only a fire with a few boughs before it--set up on the side the
wind was." When they grew friendly the sailors tried to make them help to water
the ship. They put clothes on some of them and led them to the wells (where
water had been found) and placed a barrel of water on each man's shoulders to be
taken to the boat, which was only waste of time, for the natives "stood like
statues and grinned like so many monkeys"; and Dampier relates, "We were forced
to carry the water ourselves but they very fairly put the clothes off and laid
them down," no doubt highly pleased to be rid of them.
While one of the boats was seeking food in these islands (to which the name
of Buccaneers' Archipelago has since been given) a number of natives were seen
swimming from one island to another, and consequently it was believed that they
had "no boats, canoes, or bark logs." The way in which these tribes propelled
themselves through the water is described, however, by Allan Cunningham in a
later chapter of this volume. Four natives were brought on board the "Cygnet,"
when they greedily devoured rice boiled with turtle and dugong which the English
set before them.
On one occasion some of the blacks who lived on the mainland came close to
the ship, and standing on a high bank began to threaten the sailors by calling
to them from their high position and wildly flourishing their spears and
boomerangs; nor would t leave off until Captain Read ordered the drum to be
beaten. Then they hastily took their departure, "crying 'Gurry, Gurry' deep in
the throat." At spring tide the "Cygnet" was hauled into a small sandy cove as
far as she could float. When the tide turned, the dry sand extended around the
ship for nearly half a mile, and in his diary Dampier says: "All the neap tides
we lay wholly aground for the sea did not come within 100 yards of where she
lay"; which gave the men time to clean the bottom of the ship. Meanwhile, most
of the sailors lived ashore in a tent and mended their sails, their constant
food being manatee (dugong)[*] and turtle. On March 12th the "Cygnet" left the
shores of New Holland, directing her course to the northward.
[* A full-sized dugong--popularly known as the sea-cow--ordinarily
furnishes about a ton of good meat. Part of the flesh resembles beef and other
portions would easily be mistaken for pork. Dugong feed on the seaweed growing
in shallow waters round the coast.]
When he visited Australia for the second time as captain of the
"Roebuck"--some eleven years afterwards--Dampier spent about three weeks on the
west and north-west coasts discovering harbours, meeting natives, and sometimes
landing upon its shores. It is said that he was "well acquainted with botany,"
and he thus describes the natural features of the coast at Shark Bay, which he
entered on August 7, 1699, and anchored within it, at three different places:
"The land is of indifferent height...There are many gentle risings neither steep
nor high...but in this bay or sound...the land is low by the seaside, the mould
is sand...producing a sort of sampier [samphire] which bears a white flower.
Farther in, the mould is reddish...producing some grass, plants, and shrubs. The
grass grows in great tufts as big as a bushel, here and there tufts being
inter-mixed with heath...much of the kind...growing on our commons in
England."
There were curious trees of different sorts, and the visitors thought the
foliage of some even more curious; many grew to a height of five or six feet
"before one comes to their branches, which are bushy"; the colour of their
leaves was white on one side and green on the other. There was long grass
growing there, but it was very thin. Some of the trees were sweet--scented and
turned "reddish within the bark like Sassafras but redder...Most of these and
the shrubs had either blossoms or berries on them. The blossoms...were of
several colours as red, white, and yellow, but mostly blue, and these generally
smelt very sweet and fragrant, as did also some of the rest; there were
beside...plants, herbs and tall flowers and some very small flowers growing on
the ground that were sweet and beautiful, for the most part unlike any I had
seen elsewhere."
"Of large land fowl," Dampier saw "none but eagles, and five or six sorts of
small birds...not bigger than larks, some no bigger than wrens, all singing with
great variety of fine shrill notes," and the sailors caught sight of some of
their young ones in their nests. There was an abundance of water-fowl in Shark
Bay, among them duck--these also had young ones--gulls, and pelicans, and others
of a kind never seen before. The land animals were "only a sort of
raccoon...with very short fore legs," and he says they "go jumping" and were
good meat, which would show that he met with a small species of kangaroo.
The lizards resembled other lizards excepting in three remarkable
particulars: they had "a larger and uglier head and had no tail...instead...they
had the stump of a tail which appeared like another head."[*] They were very
slow in motion, and when "a man comes nigh them they will stand and hiss," and
so hideous did they appear to him that he observes: "I did never see such ugly
creatures anywhere." There were plenty of sea-fish and shell-fish: among the
latter, oysters both of the pearl and the edible variety, and the shore was
"lined thick with many sorts of very strange and beautiful shells, for variety
of colour and shape most finely spotted with red, black, and yellow," such as he
had not seen anywhere "but at this place," and he brought away what he
could.
[* The stump-tailed lizard, Trachysaurus
rugosus.]
There were a great many sharks in this bay, and these, he says, our men "eat
very favourily." Inside a huge one that the sailors cut open was found part of a
dugong. Being ignorant of the Malayan name of this herb-eating mammal, Dampier
called it a "hippopotamus," and because the sharks were so numerous he named the
indentation Shark Bay.
When his ship left there on August 14th he proceeded to follow the coast
round to the north-east and passed through many islands of a pretty height,
which, he thought, must stretch back "as far as to those of Shark Bay." He had a
strong suspicion that these constituted an archipelago of islands.[*] and that
possibly there was "a passage to the south of New Holland and New Guinea into
the Great South Sea eastward."
[* The French Commander, L. de Freycinet called it Archipel de
Dampier in 1803.]

FROM DAMPIER'S VOYAGES
He therefore determined to examine the islands, the largest of which were
"mostly rocky and barren," the rocks being of a rusty yellow colour, and the
"Roebuck" anchored on August 22nd on the inner side of an island the outside of
which he describes as "a bluff point."[*] Here he landed with some of his men,
who took shovels to dig for water, but none was found. He found that two or
three sorts of shrubs grew there, "one just like rosemary and therefore I called
this Rosemary Island." The rosemary shrub grew plentifully but "had no
smell...Some other shrubs had blue and yellow flowers," and there were two sorts
of grain like beans: "the one grew on bushes, the other on a sort of creeping
vine that ran along the ground." Dampier says that this vine had thick, broad
leaves, and the blossom resembled "a bean blossom but much larger and of a deep
red colour looking very beautiful." It appears likely, although the description
of the leaf is hardly a true one, that this last was Dampier's Glory Pea
(Clianthus Dampieri, Cunn.), a specimen of which is contained in
Dampier's Herbarium. His collection.[**] is still preserved at Oxford, and
besides the Glory Pea there are in it the following plants that he brought from
New Holland: Casuarina equisetifolia, Melalcuca gibbosa,
Solanum orbiculatum, Tripolona Dampieri, Dammara alba, and
Trachymene pusilla.
[* Writing of Dampier, Captain P. P. King says: "I take Malus
Island to be that on which he landed and the bluff...is no other than our
Courtenay Head." From the south-east "in the bearing Dampier saw it, Rosemary
Island would appear to be joined to Malus Island, and hence his opinion that
it was an island five or six leagues in length and one in
breadth."]
[** Also called Sturt's Desert Pea. Drawings of seven plants seen
by Dampier were engraved in Plukenet's "Almatheurn," 1769, while about eleven
appear in the "History of Dampier's Voyage."]
Among the land birds the most noticeable were "white parrots, which flew a
great many together," besides numberless sea-fowl. The "white parrots" were the
slender-billed species of white cockatoo (Licmetis pastinator, Gould),
now known as Dampier's Cockatoo. In August and September these birds still fly
"a great many together" from the mainland over to Rosemary Island and the other
islands of Dampier's Archipelago, where they breed in the holes of the
rocks.

FROM DAMPIER'S VOYAGES
The anchorage at Rosemary Island proving unsatisfactory, and as he could find
no water, Dampier stood away on August 23rd and steered to the north-east. In
fine weather, with a clear sky, "there being not one cloud to be seen," the
"Roebuck" coasted along the shores of the mainland, looking for an opening
during the day but "edging away from it at night" for fear of shoals. At night
when it was calm the sailors fished with hook and line and they then took many
kinds of fish, including snapper, bream, and dog-fish, and also caught a
monkfish, of which Dampier brought home a drawing. This appears in the story of
his voyage.
On the 28th the "Roebuck" lost sight of the land and a great many water
snakes now appeared in the water, and birds, chiefly boobies and noddies,
hovered about the ship's track. At night a noddy was caught: the top of its head
was coal black, the breast and under part of the wings white, and the back and
upper parts faint black or smoke colour. It had feet just like a duck's feet and
a deeply forked tail and very long wings.
On the 30th land was seen again and the ship anchored in the afternoon three
and a half leagues off shore, coming into a bay which has since been named
Roebuck Bay.[*] In the earlier part of the evening an eclipse of the moon was
witnessed but not very clearly, for the horizon was hazy. The moon had been
"half an hour above the horizon and at 2 hours 22 minutes after sunset the
eclipse was quite gone."
[* The space between Cape and Point Gantheaume was named Roebuck
Bay by Captain P. P. King, as "here Dampier had anchored in the 'Roebuck's
voyage."]
Next day Dampier landed with a well-armed watering party, who "carried
shovels and pickaxes to make wells. When they came near the shore they saw three
tall, naked black men in a sandy bay who as the men rowed in disappeared." The
boat, in charge of two seamen, was then sent off shore to wait while the rest of
the party went in search of the natives, who at length were seen with eight or
nine more standing on the top of a small hill a quarter of a mile away. On
catching sight of the strangers coming their way they quickly dispersed. From
this hill Dampier saw a low, open plain half a mile off with "several things
like haycocks" dotted over it. He thought these objects were houses at first,
but "found them to be so many rocks." He returned to the landing-place, where
the men had begun to dig a well, when nine or ten natives made their appearance
at a little distance away and began to threaten them. Dampier says, "At last one
came towards us and...I went out to meet him making...signs of peace and
friendship, but he ran away. I took two men in the afternoon along by the
seaside purposely to catch one...of whom I might learn where they got their
fresh water. There were 10 or 12 natives a little way off, who seeing us going
away from the rest of our men followed us at a distance...There being a sand
bank between us and them, we made a halt and hid ourselves in a bending of the
sand bank. They...thought to seize us. So they dispersed themselves some going
to the sea shore, and others beating about the sand hills...So a nimble young
man that was with me...ran towards them...soon overtaking them, they faced about
and fought him. He had a cutlass and they had wooden lances...being so
many...they were too hard for him...I chased two more that were by the sea
shore, but fearing how it might be with my young man I turned back quickly...to
the top of a sand hill whenceIsaw him near me closely engaged with them. Upon
seeing me one threw a lance at me that narrowly missed me.Idischarged my
gun...but avoided shooting any of them till finding the young man in great
danger...and myself in some, and that though the gun had a little frightened
them at first they...soon learnt to despise it...crying 'pooh pooh pooh' and
coming on afresh, I thought it high time to charge again and shoot one of them
which I did. The rest seeing him fall made a stand again and my young man took
the opportunity to disengage himself and come off to me. My other man also was
with me...and I returned back with my men being very sorry for what had
happened. They took up their wounded companion...and my young man who...had been
struck through the cheek by one of their lances...was afraid it had been
poisoned...but he soon recovered."
Among the New Hollanders there was one who by his appear-ance seemed the
chief of them all and a kind of prince or captain among them. He was a young,
brisk man, not very tall nor so "personable" as some of the others, but much
more active and courageous, painted--as none of the rest were--with a circle of
white paste or pigment about his eyes, a white streak down his nose from the
forehead to the tip, and his breast and part of his arms white with the same
paint, not for beauty or for ornament but to make himself look more terrible,
his painting adding very much to his natural deformity. All these savages had
"the same black skins and frizzled hair," the same blinking eyes, and had the
same kind of flies teasing them as those seen by Dampier in his former voyage,
when he came to the north-west coast and touched at a part which was "not above
40 or 50 leagues to the north-east of this."

FROM DAMPIER'S VOYAGES
Here too were many native fire-places with three or four boughs "stuck up to
windward of them." Round these fire-places there were nearly always found heaps
of shells, and consequently he surmised that these people lived on shell-fish,
as did those met with in his first voyage. Their spears also were similar, but
the natives seen in the "Cygnet's" voyage were on an island in the company of
women and children, and it was imagined that for that reason they did not
attempt to attack the white men, as these on the continent had done, where only
men were congregated.
Although the watering party had dug down eight or nine feet they found no
water, so on September 1st Dampier sent the boatswain of the "Roebuck" ashore to
dig deeper. Next morning the men returned with "a rundlet of brackish water"
which they had got at another place, but it was not fit to drink. However, he
decided that "it would serve to boil oatmeal for burgoo, and the sailors
subsequently brought aboard four hogs-heads of it." It was perceived that the
tides ran very swiftly here, and at low water the shore was rocky; but at high
water a boat could pass over the rocks.
No more was seen of the natives, though the smoke of their fires was observed
two or three miles away. The land resembled the shores of Cygnet Bay. Dampier
describes it as being "barri-caded with a chain of sandhills to the sea." The
soil by the sea was dry and sandy, bearing shrubs and bushes. Some of these had
"yellow flowers or blossoms, some blue and some white: most of them with a very
fragrant smell. Some had fruit like peapods, in each of which there were just
ten small peas...no more nor less." There were also here some of that sort of
bean that Dampier had found at Rosemary Island and another "of red, hard pulse
growing in cods also with little black eyes."[*]
[* Abrus precatorius.]
He says: "I know not their names but have seen them used in the East Indies
for weighing gold and...at Guinea as I have heard the women make bracelets with
them to wear about their arms. These grow on bushes; but here are also a fruit
like beans growing on a creeping sort of shrublike vine."
The land farther in...was very plain and even, "partly savannah and partly
woodland..." Here there were a great many rocks five or six feet high and "round
at the top like a haycock," beyond them again, farther inland, small
trees...twelve or fourteen feet high "with a head of small...boughs"; while by
the sides of the creeks, and more especially near the sea, were a few small
black mangroves. Dampier saw few animals, although his men described "two or
three beasts like hungry wolves, lean like so many skeletons," which doubtless
were dingoes, and some lizards were noticed as well as a "raccoon or two" and
one small speckled snake. Among the birds there were crows or birds "closely
resembling the English crow"; also plenty of turtle-doves" that were plump and
fat and very good meat." A great many green turtle were seen, but none were
caught, there being no place there to set a turtle net and no channel for
them.
He here added to the collection of shells that he had gathered at Shark Bay,
obtaining some that were strange to him, "chiefly a sort not large, and thick
set all about with rays and spikes...in rows." But of his collection he
afterwards "lost allexcept a few, and those not of the best." It is probable
that some of these shells reached England as well as his herbarium although his
ship sprung a leak on the homeward voyage and foundered at the Isle of Ascension
in 1701.[*]
[* Ten weeks later three English men-of-war called there, and on
board these ships Dampier and his men returned to England.]
After Dampier had finished writing the story of the "Roebuck's "voyage" he
added some further particulars respecting the South Land which show us that he
no longer believed in the existence of a great southern or Antarctic continent.
He was satisfied that in his travels he had found a number of islands spread
over the waters where the land of Terra Australis Incognita had been supposed to
extend, and he observes, "'tis probably the same with New Holland."
On maps of the world the portions of New Holland discovered by the Dutch were
now being methodically laid down and the vast imaginary continent left out.
Gradually, in its true place in the eastern hemisphere, a vague outline of
Australia appeared, but of so curious a shape (as for example in the world maps
of Le Rouge and Robert Vaugondy) that it bore only a deformed likeness to the
real island-continent. The east coast had never been seen, so an imaginary
coast-line was given to it which, starting at the New Hebrides in the north, ran
south-westerly without a break until it joined the southern extremity of
Tasmania.
DISCOVERY OF THE EAST COAST--COOK'S VOYAGE--CAPE HOWE TO POINT DANGER
The day was now approaching when all doubt was to be dispelled and Australia
was to take her place as a known continent.
In 1770 a little English ship, not at all majestic--like other British
men-of-war--and bearing a name as humble and unpre-tentious as herself,
discovered the east coast and gave to it its real form on the map of the world.
A little bark[*] Of 370 tons, she flew the white ensign and bore herself
steadily through heavy seas and stormy weather; yet it still seems wonderful
that so small a ship should carry out a misson of which it has been said it was
"to the English nation the most momentous voyage of discovery that has ever
taken place."[**]
[* As the word was then written.]
[** Preface to Cook's Journal by Admiral Wharton. The Admiralty
instruc-tions ordered Cook, who had received a lieutenant's commission, to
proceed to Tahiti, and after the completion of the astronomical observations
at that island, to continue the discoveries in the Pacific in which Byron and
Wallis had been engaged. Tahiti had been recommended by Wallis, who had
returned just before Cook sailed, as the point from which the transit of Venus
should be observed.]
[

CAPTAIN JAMES COOK
The seaman who commanded her was James Cook. Some-times we hear that Captain
Cook has not been fully appreciated in his native land, but if this is so, at
least let it be said that among his countrymen who travel farthest, more
especially among those whose paths lie on the sea, there has been reserved for
him within the great Empire of Britain a true measure of his worth. In the lands
visited by him in the South Pacific his name and his doings live as those of no
other navigator of any age or race. We will endeavour to re-state briefly how he
discovered the east coast.[
Lieutenant james Cook, as he then ranked in the Royal Navy, "saw land" with
"the first daylight" of Thursday, April 19, 1770. On seeing it Cook at once
looked towards the south, where, according to his longitude compared with that
of Tasman, he should have been able to see Tasmania. But all was clear in that
quarter. He then perceived that the strange land trended north-east and
south-west, which convinced him that he had reached the east coast of New
Holland. And he began to doubt whether Australia and Tasmania were one country,
as was then generally supposed.[
To those on board the "Endeavour" the face of the country appeared "green and
woody" and its shore "a white sand." It would seem as though Nature herself had
prepared a reception for the coming of the voyagers, as at noon all were called
on deck "to see three waterspouts which made their appearance at the same time,
in different places between us and the land...Two soon disappeared, but the
third...lasted fully a quarter of an hour. It was a column which appeared of the
thickness of a mast or...tree and reached down from a smoke-coloured cloud...to
the surface of the sea; smaller ones seemed to attempt to form in its
neighbourhood, one...close by it and became longer than the old one...They
Joined together in an instant and gradually contracting into the cloud
disappeared."[*]
[* "Journal of Sir J. Banks," edited by Sir J. Hooker.]
Immediately Cook saw the land he began to make a chart of its coast-line--a
chart which may be called the foundation of Australia's charts, which the
navigators who followed him have built upon and added to. He placed on it the
first land seen, under the name of Point Hicks to honour the "Endeavour's "first
lieutenant," who," he says, "discovered this land." Although Cook gave the name
as Point Hicks there is no headland, but only an elevation in the coast-line at
this place. The land, however, slopes away south-westward from where he saw it.
and so no doubt was regarded by him to form a "point."[
Two headlands were next seen farther northward. The first rises to a round
hillock like "the Ram Head" (Rame Head) going into Plymouth Sound, and was given
that name; the second remarkable for the way in which the coast trends there,
being north on the one side and south-west on the other, was called Cape Home. A
small island lying off it is known as Gabo Island.[*]
[* Gabo is said to be the native rendering of Cape
Howe.]
From Cape Home, Cook followed the coast northwards, and as he went along gave
a quaint variety of names to its different features. On the 21st a fairly high
mountain near the shore was called Mount Dromedary on account of its peculiar
shape, and on the 22nd--a day on which the "Endeavour" stood closer in with the
land--a remarkable peaked hill inland for a like reason received the name of the
Pigeon House.[
The air was wonderfully clear. When they had passed Bateman Bay and Point
Upright, with its perpendicular cliffs, those on board could plainly see five
natives upon the beach, smoke from their fires having already been noticed. From
the ship these people looked "enormously black," and the commander would have
sent a boat ashore, but a large hollow sea "from the S.E. beating high upon the
beach," prevented him. The land continued to form "alternately rocky points and
sandy beaches," and "inland between Mount Dromedary and the Pigeon House are
several pretty high mountains," writes Cook in his journal.[*] Of these hills
all excepting two were covered with trees, and the trees had "all the appearance
of being stout and lofty," he remarks, possibly imagining they would prove
suitable for ship-spars. On April 23rd a cape was discovered and named in honour
of St. George; and two leagues beyond it, on the 25th, Cook observed that a part
of the shore seemed to form a bay.[**] To the north point, because of its
curious shape, he gave the name of Long Nose; and eight leagues farther along
the coast he called a headland Red Point, as it appeared to him to be of that
colour. A little way inland north-west of this point was a round hill whose top
"looked like the crown of a hatt."
[* Cook's journal, edited by Sir W. Wharton.]
[** Jervis Bay, afterwards so named by Lieutenant Bowen in honour
of Earl St. Vincent.]
Before dark, smoke was constantly seen on shore and two or three native
fires. On this night the "Endeavour" lay becalmed, drifting in before the sea
until one o'clock a.m., when she got a land breeze. On the morning of the 26th,
in clear, pleasant weather, she steered past some white cliffs which rose
perpendicularly from the water.[
At noon the wind fell and Cook had to tack several times and stand on and off
shore. This he continued to do until daylight on the 27th, after which he stood
in for the land. Owing to the variable winds the ship lost much ground, so that
at noon Red Point bore from here only three leagues to the southward.[
On the afternoon of this day[*] the pinnace and yawl were hoisted out to
attempt a landing, but the pinnace leaked and had to be hoisted in again.
Several natives were moving about the beach, and four were seen carrying a boat
which it was thought they meant to launch and come off in to the vessel. As they
did not come, Cook with Banks, Solander, and Tupia the Tahitian put off in the
yawl and pulled towards the shore to where they could still see four or five
natives. They, however, soon took to the woods. Three or four of their canoes
lay on the beach and from the yawl looked like the small ones of the New
Zealanders. Trees were seen here, but no underwood, the trees being a species of
palm.[**] The surf was beating high upon the shore,[***] and as Cook saw that a
landing could not be effected the yawl returned on board.
[* By civil reckoning this would be on the afternoon of the 27th,
as Cook's journal was kept by ship time, i.e. the day begins at noon before
the civil reckoning, in which the day commences at midnight. Cook, however, at
this time had made no allowance for the loss of a day in sailing westward on
his voyage from England.]
[** Livision a australis.]
[*** This was near Bulli.]
"At daylight in the morning," writes the commander on April 28th, "we
discovered a bay,[*] which appeared to be tolerably well-sheltered from all
winds." The "Endeavour" stood directly towards it. Smoke was rising on shore,
and through the glasses ten natives could be distinguished at a barren spot,
where they had gathered round a fire. When they saw the ship they left the fire
and retired to a little eminence to watch her coming. A little later two canoes
were seen to draw into the land with two men in each, who, after hauling up the
boats, joined their fellows on the hill. Meanwhile, Mr. Robert Molineux, the
master, had been sent in the pinnace to sound the entrance, and he now came
alongshore beneath where they stood. They then retired higher up the hill,
excepting at least one man, who hid among the rocks and was not seen to leave
the beach.
[* Botany Bay.]

KURNELL: COOK'S LANDING-PLACE
The boat from the "Endeavour" continued to skirt the shore, and some of the
natives followed her as she turned into a cove a little within the harbour.
There the natives came down to the water's edge and by signs and words, which
were not understood, invited Molineux and his men to land.[*] These natives were
armed with spears and boomerangs. During this time a few others who had not
followed the pinnace, but had remained on the shore opposite the ship, began to
call in a threatening way and to brandish their weapons menacingly. The blades
of the wooden ones, "in shape resembling a scimitar" (familiar to us as the
boomerang), gleamed in the clear light, so that some on board the ship thought
they "looked whitish" and "some thought shining," possibly because the wood had
been so highly polished.[**]
[* Banks's journal.]
[** Banks's journal.]
Two natives painted with white pigment are described by Banks as being
particularly noticeable: their faces only dusted over with it, their bodies
adorned with broad stroke drawn over their breasts and backs, resembling
soldiers' cross belts, while their legs and thighs also had broad white stroke
drawn round them. The two black men talked very earnestly together, when they
were not shouting defiance and brandishing their crooked weapons.[*]
[* Banks's journal.]
The ship reached the entrance of the bay at noon, the beginning of a new
day--April 29th--by ship time. Under the south head[*] of the bay four canoes
were seen, each containing a man who held in his hand a fishgig with which he
struck at the fish The natives in these canoes ventured to the very edge of the
surf, and so intently were they occupied that they scarcely lifted their eyes to
glance at the "Endeavour" sailing past. Standing in with a southerly wind and
clear weather, shortly afterwards Cook came to an anchorage under the south
shore of the bay--about two miles within the entrance--opposite a small native
village consisting of six or eight houses.
[* The outer heads of the bay are Cape Solander (south-west) and
Cape Bank (north-east)]
Presently an old woman came out of a wood, followed by three young children;
she carried an armful of firewood and each child also had gathered a little
bundle. As she went towards one of the houses the woman often looked at the
ship, but her face showed neither fear nor surprise at what she saw. She began
to kindle a fire, and then four canoes came in from fishing. The men landed,
and, hauling in their canoes, prepared their meal to all appearance quite
unmoved at the presence of the strangers who were now little more than half a
mile from them.
In the afternoon Cook manned the ship's boat, and at 3 p.m., with Mr. Banks,
Dr. Solander, and Tupia, proceeded to the south shore of the bay, where, abreast
the ship, men, women, and children were seen standing. When the boats approached
the shore, the natives all made off, excepting two men, who seemed determined to
oppose the landing. These men were each armed with a bundle of spears and
carried wommeras[*] (throwing sticks), and they called out loudly to the British
in harsh, strident voices something which even Tupia failed to understand. The
commander ordered the boats' crews to lie on their oars so that he might speak
to the natives, and some beads and nails were thrown to them. But all to no
purpose. As they saw the boats pull inshore again they began to shout and wave
their spears, as though resolved to defend their coasts to the uttermost. Seeing
that the two men were determined to resist him, Cook ordered a shot to be fired
between them. At this the younger of the two dropped his bundle of spears, which
he immediately snatched up again, and they retired to a spot where some more
spears were lying.
[** The throwing stick was first observed at this
time.]

"RESOLVED TO DEFEND THEIR COASTS TO THE UTTERMOST"
Then the elder man picked up a stone and threw it at the boats, which caused
the commander to fire a second time. The native was struck on the legs with the
shot, yet the only effect it had was to make him go and fetch a shield which he
brought from a house a hundred yards off. At this time the British stepped upon
a rock. They had no sooner done so than the natives, Cook says, "throwed two
darts at us; this obliged me to fire a third shot, soon after which they both
made off."
Thus the British first landed on the East Coast!
The present name of the locality where Cook landed is Kurnell. It was known
to the natives as Kundel. Cook himself at first christened the bay in which he
anchored Stingray Bay. But before he left there he saw fit to change its name.
In his journal Cook writes:
"During our stay in this harbour I caused the English colours to be displayed
ashore every day, and an inscription to be cut upon one of the trees near the
watering place, setting forth the ship's name, date, etc."
Yet another link was to connect the "Endeavour" with this new land, for on
the night of April 30th--by civil reckoning--Cook lost one of his ship's
company. A seaman named Forby Sutherland died, whom they buried next morning on
shore at a spot near the watering-place. Then for the first time an Englishman
was laid to rest in Australian soil. This, Cook tells us, "occasioned my calling
the south point of the bay Point Sutherland." It was also the place where he
first landed, which is now marked by a memorial, the point being known as
Inscription Point.
The Philosophical Society, a hundred years ago, placed a brass plate at
Kurnell to commemorate the discovery of Australia's eastern shores; and Barron
Field, the friend of Charles Lamb, wrote these lines in honour of the
occasion:
Here fix the tablet. This must be the place
Where our Columbus of the
South did land;
He saw the Indian village on the sand,
And on this rock
first met the simple race
Of Austral Indians, who presum'd to face
With
lance and spear his musket. Close at hand
Is the clear stream, from whence
his vent'rous band
Refresh'd their ship, and thence a little space
Lies
Sutherland, their shipmate; for the sound
Of Christian burial better did
proclaim
Possession than the flag of England's name.
These were the
Commelinae[*] Banks first found;
But where's the tree with the ship's
wood-carv'd frame?
Fix, then, the Ephesian brass; 'tis classic ground."
[* A genus of herbaceous plants called in honour of Commelin, a
Dutch botanist.]

TABLET PLACED AT KURNELL (IN 1822) BY THE PHILOSOPHICAL
SOCIETY
When Cook and his party had disembarked at this point they found a few small
huts made of bark in which four or five little children were hiding, to whom
beads and other presents were given. A number of spears lay about the huts and
these the visitors took away. The spears varied in length from six to fifteen
feet. One sort had four prongs, which were headed with very sharp fish bones
besmeared with a green-coloured gum. These were regarded as poisonous. The
canoes, lying upon the beach, Cook thought were "the worst" he had ever seen.
They were from twelve to fourteen feet long, made of one piece of bark drawn or
tied up at each end and kept open by means of pieces of stick-by way of
thwarts."
After the first sharp encounter with the natives the visitors frequently saw
them while the ship remained in the bay. They appeared to possess darker skins
than any previously met with on the voyage. "Their beards were thick and bushy,"
and the hair of their heads as well, yet "by no means woolly." To Banks these
men looked "of a common size, lean and seemed active and nimble; their voices
coarse and strong." On the first night from the "Endeavour" many moving lights
were noticed at different parts of the bay, and Banks conjectured that the
natives were spearing fish in the darkness, after the manner of many other South
Sea Islanders. He had already seen seaweed stuck in the prongs of some of the
fishgigs found in the huts.
The country within the vicinity of the harbour was explored thoroughly by the
British seamen. On the 30th a watering party had been sent to the south point to
dig holes in the sand; from these, and with water obtained from a small stream
afterwards discovered, the ship was sufficiently supplied, and the wooding
parties found there an abundance of wood.
Cook made an excursion into the inland country on May 1st, and says that it
was "diversified with woods, lawns, and marshes. The woods free from
underwood...and the trees at such a distance from one another that the whole
country, or at least great part of it, might be cultivated without being obliged
to cut down a single tree." He perceived "the soil everywhere, except in the
marshes, to be a light white sand," producing "a quantity of good grass which
grows in little tufts about as big as one can hold in one's hand and pretty
close together."
He came upon native huts and impressions in the grass where the blacks had
been sleeping, and a glimpse was caught of a single native-the others having
apparently fled. Just before starting on this expedition Cook had visited some
native habitations near the watering-place and had placed several articles in
them, such as cloth, looking glasses, combs, beads, and nails, as presents for
their owners, and some were now left in these newly discovered.
Mr. Banks and Dr. Solander, who went with Cook's party, collected specimens
of flowering and other plants growing there. Every one of these seemed new and
most of them were in full bloom. The leaves of the trees turned edgeways towards
the branches and resembled those described by Dampier. Some of the plants were
of uncommon shades of colour and resembled heaths; others of strange form grew
wild; with many species of long, graceful rushes and grasses, green moss and
ferns--chiefly of the kind known as maidenhair--flourishing in such profusion
that a few days later Cook changed the name of Stingray Bay, which he had given
to this portion of the Australian coast, and wrote in his journal: "The great
quantity of plants Mr. Banks and Dr. Solander found in this place occasioned my
giving it the name of Botany Bay."
Curious animals ran about the woods. Between the trees Dr. Solander had a
glimpse of a small one "something like a rabbit; Mr. Banks's greyhound "just got
sight of him," and lamed himself on a tree stump trying to chase it, while
traces were found of a larger one which was certainly the kangaroo. There were
also "footprints of an animal clawed like a dog or wolf" and of another whose
feet were like those of a polecat.[*] Here and there trees had been cut down
with a blunt instrument, others were barked, and in many of the palms steps
three or four feet apart (not five as Tasman had seen farther southward) were
cut to enable the natives to climb them.
[* Banks's Journal.]
Of two sorts of gum found in this excursion "one sort," says Cook, "is like
Gum Dragon, and is the same, I suppose, Tasman took for Gum Lac; it is extracted
from the largest tree in the woods." In mentioning the timber trees Banks refers
to one species which he saw--possibly the identical tree that Cook
describes--yielding gum much like Sanguis draconis; these descriptions
being apparently the first references to the Eucalyptus or gum tree of
this part of Australia. Other trees bearing a fruit of the Jambosa[*] kind, in
colour and shape resembling cherries, of which the men ate plentifully, are
mentioned later by Banks as growing on the shores of the harbour. At a later
date Cook again refers to the timber trees. He says: "Although wood is here in
great plenty yet there is very little variety: the biggest trees are as large or
larger than our oaks in England, grow a good deal like them and yield a reddish
gum," in which description we recognize yet another species of our old friend
the Eucalyptus. He continues: "The wood itself is heavy, hard, and black,
like Lignum Vitae. Another sort grows tall and straight something like
pines--the wood of this is hard and ponderous...something of the nature of
America live oak." He also remarks: "There are a few sorts of shrubs and several
palm trees and mangroves about the head of the harbour." Of the country at this
part he says it is "woody, low, and flat," and he thought the soil "in general
sandy."
[* The Malay apple.]
In the woods he saw a variety of very beautiful birds, such as cockatoos,
loriquets, parrots, etc., and crows which he thought "exactly like those we have
in England." Like every English explorer in every age, Cook found a resemblance
in something in the new land to one of its kind "at home." "As in England" and
"like those we have in England" are phrases that seem to ring through the
stories of British discoverers, as if they had found pleasure in making the
comparison.
On the afternoon of Wednesday, May 2nd, Cook went on shore to the
watering-place and caught sight of seventeen or eighteen natives. In the
forenoon Mr. Gore, the second lieutenant, had been dredging for oysters and had
met some of them, who followed him and his companion at a distance of ten or
twenty yards. Whenever Mr. Gore turned and faced them, they stood still; but
though they were all armed they never offered to attack him. A short time
afterwards the same natives were met by Dr. Monkhouse and his companions, who
made a "sham retreat." They had no sooner done so than the natives threw their
spears after them. Cook wished to speak with the blacks, and he, Solander, and
Tupia tried to come up with them, but he could not by words or by signs prevail
upon them to wait for him to approach them.
On the 3rd, accompanied by Mr. Banks and Dr. Solander, Cook made a short
excursion along the sea coast to the southward. On entering the bush they met
three natives, who ran away, as did some others seen later, much to Cook's
disappointment. Next morning he went in the pinnace with Solander and Monkhouse
to the head of Botany Bay, and on the way they caught sight of ten or twelve
natives fishing, each in his own small canoe, who, on seeing them, at once drew
into shoal water. At the first place at which they landed some others took to
their canoes before the Englishmen could get near them. After this Cook
continued his journey by boat and went almost to the head of the bay, where he
landed and travelled inland for some distance.
The country looked much like that near the coast but the soil was better, a
deep black mould replacing the sand in many places and it was thought capable of
producing grain.[*] Besides timber there was "as fine meadow as ever was seen,"
and Cook also notes that the stone there was of sandstone character, "and very
proper for building "--a suggestion of its future usefulness which time has
verified.
[* Don Luis Née (botanist to the Spanish expedition under
Malaspina), who visited Sydney in 1793, wrote of this part of the country much
as Cook did, although many have wondered whether "meadows" ever existed there.
Née says of his excursion.. "I saw a few places suitable for agriculture:
among them some patches of black earth...and a plain of half a league
whichIthink would yield wheat or barley because...it bears Melaleuca
and rushes, which show there is some humidity in the soil. It was composed of
vegetable mould."]
On this morning Banks, who did not accompany Cook, devoted his time to drying
and preparing his botanical specimens on shore, spreading them in the sun,
turning them, and sometimes turning the paper in which the plants were placed
inside out. By this means all the specimens were brought on board in good
condition at night. While he was thus engaged eleven canoes with a black fellow
in each came towards him, who, however, paid no attention to him but proceeded
to fish. Opposite to their fishing ground some of the "Endeavour's" people were
occupied in shooting. One black fellow, prompted perhaps by curiosity, hauled up
his canoe and went towards them. He stayed about a quarter of an hour, then went
off in his boat. Banks believed that he had been stealthily watching the
strangers from behind the trees, although when questioned no one appeared to
have seen him. When the evening grew too damp for him to continue his work any
longer, Banks sent his plants and books on board and went on a shooting
excursion, intending to get some specimens of birds for his collection. He put
up a large number of quail much resembling English ones, of which he could have
shot a great many more had he not wanted birds of different varieties.
On the 4th Mr. Gore determined to try his hand at spearing fish.[*] He had
observed quantities of large sting-ray following the flowing tide into the
shallows and met with instant success, striking several when they were in not
more than two or three feet of water. One, after it was cleaned, weighed 239
lbs. On disturbing the natives at their fires the British often found fresh
mussels broiling upon the coals, and at one place heaps of very large oyster
shells lay scattered around. The seine was hauled at different parts of the bay;
and in a cove on the north side on April 30th the catch weighed about 300 lbs.
On May 5th on the north shore the sailors took a number of leather-jackets, a
fish with a tough skin, in which the scales are embedded.
[* Banks's journal.]
Numbers of water-fowl sought their food in the sand and mud. Most of these
were unknown to the visitors. Especially noticeable was one sort, black and
white and as large as a goose but most like a pelican. This, according to a note
of Admiral Wharton, was probably the black and white, or palmated, goose, now
extinct there.
On the flats and mudbanks there were many kinds of shellfish, apparently the
chief support of the natives, since, so far as could be observed, they did not
eat the sting-ray. At the same time, says Cook, "they catch other sorts of fish,
which we found roasting on their fires, some of which they strike with their
gigs." Possibly he was referring to snapper.
At first the commander had intended to leave the harbour on Friday, May 4th,
but as the wind would not permit him to sail, he gave orders for parties to go
out in different directions to try to find the natives and speak with them. A
midshipman succeeded in meeting with two very old Australians, man and woman,
both grey headed, with whom were two small children, all being naked. They were
sitting under a tree close to the water side watching some other natives
gathering shellfish into their canoes. The midshipman went up to the old people
and gave them a parrot that he had just shot, but they would not touch it.
Neither would they say one word, and appeared to be too frightened to speak.
Being alone the midshipman was afraid to stay long with them lest the other
natives should discover him. The man had bushy hair and his beard was long and
rough. The woman's hair was cropped short. On this day Dr. Monklhouse narrowly
escaped a spear thrown by a native from a tree.
On Sunday, May 6th, Cook took his departure from the bay. Of his going he
writes: "Having seen everything this place afforded, we at daylight weighed with
a light breeze at N.W. and put to sea, and the wind soon after coming to the
southward we steered alongshore N.N.E., and at noon we were by observation in
the latitude Of 33°50' S., about two or three miles from the land and abreast of
a bay, wherein there appeared to be safe anchorage, which I called Port
Jackson."[*] This entry tells us that as Cook's ship drew level with the heads
of Port Jackson lie had a glimpse of the harbour within. Had he looked farther
into this "bay" he would have seen how widely it extended and at the same time
would have robbed Captain Phillip of the credit of discovering it eighteen years
later.
[* In honour of Mr. George Jackson, afterwards Sir George
Duckett.]
But Cook did not enter there. And this Mother of Harbours, whose waters gleam
in a hundred coves, was destined to remain unseen. Her rocky, moss-grown points,
her miniature islands, and her sandy beaches all lay undisturbed as the great
seaman passed on his way. Yet the name of Port Jackson still is linked with that
of Cook, for in after years from there, through the heads which he had seen,
came Flinders and King in the discovery ships "Norfolk" (1799), "Investigator"
and "Lady Nelson" (1802), "Mermaid" (1819-20), and "Bathurst" (1821) to finish
his work--the immense work which Cook had already begun--the charting of the
East Coast.
That others on board the "Endeavour" could see something more than a plain
coast-line at this time is apparent from thee remarks in Banks's journal. He
writes: "The land we sailed past during the whole forenoon appeared broken and
likely for harbours." The "Endeavour" continued on her way northward, keeping
near the coast, and at sunset passed more broken land that formed a bay which
Cook named Broken Bay.[*] All night he steered at a distance of about three
leagues off shore, and next day saw high land projecting in three bluff points
which he called Cape Three Points. The wind now dropped, and on the 8th at noon
"our situation," he tells us, "was nearly the same as yesterday, having not
advanced one step farther to the northward."
[* It is said that this "broken land like a bay" was that in the
vicinity of Narrabeen Lagoon. "Historical Records of New South
Wales."]
While standing off shore on the evening of the 9th a charming sea scene was
witnessed by those in the "Endeavour" of which Parkinson has left a description.
"We saw two of the most beautiful rainbows my eyes ever beheld; the colours were
strong, clear, and lively. Those of the inner one were so bright as to reflect
its shadow on the water." At midnight Cook stood in for the land again until
eight next morning and had so little wind that the vessel could hardly fetch
Cape Three Points. At noon on the 10th "a small round rock or island lying close
under the land" was noticed bearing south-west three or four leagues. This was
Nobby Head at the entrance to the port which came to be known afterwards as
Newcastle on account of the abundance of coal in its vicinity.
On the 11th, at 4 p.m., the "Endeavour" passed a low rocky point only a mile
distant, "with an inlet on its north side that appeared to me from the mast-head
to be sheltered from all winds," remarks Cook, who named the headland and the
inlet Point and Port Stephens respectively. The next morning at eight he saw "a
high point...which made in two hillocks" and called it Cape Hawke in honour of
Admiral Hawke, then First Lord of the Admiralty.
On the afternoon of the 12th the "Endeavour" ran along the shore and those on
board could see the smoke of native fires a little way inland. Several had been
seen the day before, but on this day Cook noticed one upon the top of a hill,
and writes:
"It was the first we have seen upon elevated ground since we have been upon
the coast." On this day "three remarkable hills," large and high and "
contiguous to each other," bore north-north-west, and because they were so alike
they were named The Three Brothers.[*] On Sunday, May 13th, while standing
northward after having tacked several times, Cook observed "a point or headland
on which were fires that caused a great quantity of smoke, which occasioned my
giving it the name of Smoky Cape."
[* At the back of Kempsey.]
Of the aspect of the country he says: "The land hath increased in height
insomuch that...it may be called a hilly country; it is diversified with an
agreeable variety of hills, ridges, and valleys and large plains all clothed
with wood. Near the shore the land is in general low and sandy except the points
which are rocky, while over many are pretty high hills which at first rising out
of the water appear like an island."
Fresh gales with rain and hail swept over the ship as she passed outside some
small rocky islands that were first seen on the 15th, and called the Solitary
Islands. On that morning as they steered close in to the land again, natives
could be seen on shore through the glasses. According to one historian,[*] each
of these natives was loaded with a bundle which looked like palm leaves. A high
point bearing north-west-by-west was named Cape Byron after the " Dolphin's "
captain (in her first voyage to the Pacific), while to the north-west of it
again "a remarkable sharp-peaked mountain" was sighted.
[* Pinkerton: "Cook's First Voyage." See also Cunningham's
journal.]
At sunset breakers were discovered on the larboard bow, only five miles from
the land. The commander therefore hauled the ship off it, and brought her to.
She lay with her head eastward till ten o'clock, when, the soundings having
increased, he wore ship and "lay her with her head in shore" until 5 a.m. on the
16th, when he made sail. By daylight breakers were again seen between the ship
and the shore and were stretching from a point--under which lay a small
island--"eastward for a distance of two leagues."[*] The point off which these
shoals lay was called by Cook Point Danger[**] and the curious mountain seen the
day before was then given the name of Mount Warning.
[* Danger Reefs, three rocky patches which extend three miles east
from Cook Island.]
[** Point Danger is the north head of the Tweed River.]
POINT DANGER TO COOKTOWN
On Thursday, May 17th, another point of land was discovered and christened
Point Lookout. On the north side of it there was a wide, open bay, which Cook
named Morton's Bay, in honour of James Earl of Morton, who was then President of
the Royal Society. The name, however, is now spelled Moreton Bay.[*]
[* King says: "At first Moreton Bay was called Glass House Bay,
but as Cook had bestowed the name of Moreton Bay upon the strait [Rous
Channel] to the south of Moreton Island, this name became generally accepted."
Oxley made the discovery that Point Lookout was situated on Stradbroke
Island.]
The land at the head of the bay appeared so low that he writes: "I could but
just see it from the topmast-head." Nor could he see the river which fell into
the bay on its western side, on whose banks now stands the town of Brisbane--the
capital of Queensland.
Nevertheless, Cook gives us the information that some on board were of the
opinion that there was a river in the vicinity as the water looked so pale.
Banks clearly was one of these, for he Writes on that day: "The sea here
suddenly changed from its usual transparency to a dirty clay colour as if
charged with freshes, from whence I was led to conclude that the bottom of the
bay might open into a large river."
In marking the situation of Moreton Bay, Cook observes:[*] "This place may
always be found by Three Hills which lay to the northward of it. These hills
were not far apart and were a little island and their singular form of
elevation...which resembles a glass-house occasioned my giving them that name.
The northernmost of the three is the highest and largest."
[* Matthew Flinders examined Moreton Bay in 1799, but Oxley
discovered that Moreton Bay extended as far south as 28°, where it
communicated with the sea.]
At noon a low bluff point which formed the southern point of an open sandy
bay from here bore north-west,[*] distant three leagues. Cook steered alongshore
and saw at daylight on the 18th a point which bore south-west of him. He had
seen it before but now named it Double Island Point, on account of its figure,
because "it looks like two small islands lying under the land." The shores of
the mainland within it were moderately high, but appeared more barren than any
yet seen and more sandy. Banks saw the sand lying there in great patches of many
acres which had only lately moved, for "trees in the middle of them were quite
green."[**] Here the coast trended to the north-west and formed a large open
bay, which was named Wide Bay.
[* "The Bay is Laguna Bay, and the point is called Low
Bluff."--Wharton.]
[** Probably a species of Acacia. Cunningham saw one
variety growing in "glittering red sand" in Exmouth Gulf.]
On Sunday, 20th, a number of natives assembled on a black bluff or point of
land, and it was evident that they had come to watch the ship go past, which to
them must have been indeed a strange sight. Cook accordingly called the point
Indian Head. Curiously enough, nearly thirty-two years later twenty-five natives
gathered on the same spot to watch Flinders sail by in command of the two ships
"Investigator" and "Lady Nelson." The blacks who watched the "Endeavour" had
possibly in some way warned their neighbours of the ship's approach, as natives
were now observed in other places on shore, and Cook records that there were
"smokes in the day and fires in the night."
At daylight the northernmost land loomed high and ended in a point, from
which a reef was discovered running northward as far as eye could see. Breakers
were plainly seen soon afterwards "a long way upon our lee bow, which seemed to
stretch quite home to the land." The point of land, on account of its having two
very large patches of sand upon it, was named Sandy Cape.[*] Cook now fell in
with one of the dangerous shoals that surround the reef here, and possibly this
is the reason why Flinders, who followed him in 1802, found the trend of the
land different from that laid down in Cook's chart. Or perhaps Cook's ship may
have claimed his whole attention. On the 21st the "Endeavour" crept along the
east side of the shoal until, judging that there was enough water to allow her
to get across it, the commander ordered a boat to be lowered, and sent it ahead
to sound; a passage over the shoal was thus found, and eventually the ship
passed over the tail. Cook named the shoal Weak Sea Spit, because there was
smooth water within it, whereas upon te whole coast to the southward he had
always had a high sea or swell from the south-east.
[* Sandy Cape is the northern point of Great Sandy Island...a
channel called Great Sandy Strait separates the latter from the mainland and
opens at its northern end into Hervey Bay; within its entrance is Wide Bay
Harbour--"Admiralty Sailing Directions."]
"For these few days past we have seen at times a sort of sea sea-fowl which
we have nowhere seen before," Cook writes; "they are of the sort called
boobies...Last night a small flock of these birds passed the ship and went away
to the N.W. and this morning from half an hour before sunrise to half an hour
after, flights of them were continually coming from N.N.W. and flying to S.S.E.,
and not one was seen to fly in any other direction. From this, we did suppose
there was a river or inlet of shallow water to the southward of us, and that,
not very far to the northward, lay some islands where they retired to at night."
Captain Flinders thought that probably the birds Cook saw retired for the night
to Bunker Group in 23°54' S. and 152°25' E. and that they went to Hervey Bay
during the day.
On the 22nd the shore inland appeared thickly clothed with wood, and through
the glasses trees were seen resembling palm-nut trees, Pandanus tectorius
according to Banks, who in giving their botanical name states that the species
had not been met with since the "Endeavour" left the islands within the tropics.
In the evening Cook anchored about thirty miles south-east from the south head
of Bustard Bay. On this night he saw a watersnake; and two or three evenings
previously one had lain under the ship's stern for some time. Banks also saw two
swim past the ship, "beautifully spotted and in all respects like land-snakes
except that they had broad, flat tails, which probably serve them instead of
fins in swimming."[*]
[* Evidently the deadly species known as the yellow-bellied
sea-snake, which has a broad, flat, spotted tail, and is blackish-brown on the
back and yellow beneath. "It is unique in that its keeled tail does the dual
work of propeller and rudder." It is the commonest Australian sea-snake and
very venomous, "Outdoor Australia," "Sydney Mail."]
The "Endeavour" now came abreast of a large open bay where Cook anchored on
May 23rd at 8 p.m., and next morning went ashore accompanied by Banks and
several officers. The party landed on the south point of the bay, where there
was a channel which led to a lagoon. The commander sounded and surveyed the
channel, and, after the boat had gone about a mile, met with a little shoal
which he was able to pass over. A small stream of fresh water was discovered,
and then he made an excursion into the woods; he also wished to row up the
lagoon, but was stopped everywhere by the shallows.
However, he was able to inspect a native camping ground on the west side of
this lagoon and found ten small fires close together with cockle shells lying
around them, and saw (as Dampier had seen in the north-west) at the side of the
fire a piece of bark about a foot and a half high propped up to keep the wind
off; some other pieces lay strewn around which Cook concluded were coverings
used by the natives at night and that many of them slept in the open. There were
trees here of the same kind as had been seen in Botany Harbour; one grew like
birch but he found its bark entirely different from birch bark. Unfortunately he
was unable to see what the wood of this tree was like, having brought no axe
with him. Around the outskirts of the lagoon he noticed the true mangrove, such
as grew in the West Indies and which had already been met with on this voyage;
and there was a sort of palm, similar to those noticed in low sandy places in
the South Sea Islands. "All or most of the land and water fowl seen at Botany
Harbour," he says, "were found here, besides bustards such as we have in
England, which occasioned my giving the place the name of Bustard Bay." Some
black and white duck were here also and plenty of small oysters, sticking to the
rocks, stones, and mangroves; and on the mudbanks under the mangrove trees Banks
observed a large proportion of small pearl oysters, and he wondered whether the
sea might abound with full-grown ones, for if so, he thought, a pearl fishery
must turn out to immense advantage."
In the branches of mangroves on the sides of the lagoon they found a number
of nests of ants, of which one species was quite green. The ants when disturbed
came out in large numbers and "revenged themselves upon their disturbers, biting
more sharply than any I have felt in Europe," according to Banks, who describes
them in his journal. "The mangroves had another trap...This was a small kind of
caterpillar, green and beset with many hairs...which sat together upon the
leaves...like soldiers drawn up, 20 or 30 perhaps on one leaf. If these wrathful
militia were touched...they did not fail to make the person offending sensible
of their anger, every hair...stinging as much as nettles do, with a more acute
though less lasting smart." Banks saw upon the sides of the hills many trees
yielding gum. They differed from those seen on May 1st in having longer leaves,
like those of the weeping willow; these trees were of a different species of
Eucalyptus from the trees seen farther to the southward, and he also for
the first time saw "the plant (Xanthorrhcea) yielding the yellow gum," of
which there were vast numbers.
While engaged in fishing, two days later, he relates how some crabs took our
baits and sometimes suffered themselves to be hauled into the ship." One sort
(Cancer pelagicus?, Linn.) was ornamented "with the finest ultramarine
blue conceivable, with which all his claws and every joint were deeply tinged.
The under part was of a lovely white, shining as if glazed and perfectly
resembling the white of old china."
On Thursday, 24th, at 4 a.m., the "Endeavour " weighed with a gentle breeze
and made sail out of Bustard Bay. She soon met with breakers, while land "making
like islands" bore north-west-by-north. At nine on the morning of the 25th the
ship drew level with the northernmost point of the mainland, which looked white
and barren; and as it lay directly under the Tropic of Capricorn was named Cape
Capricorn.[*] On the west side of the cape there appeared to be a lagoon, and "
on the two spits that form the entrance " were a great number of pelicans, at
least so I call them," adds Cook, fearless of all criticism.
[* The eastern point of Curtis Island.]
He believed that the northernmost land he then saw formed an island, and was
correct in this conjecture. It was afterwards named Hummocky Island by Matthew
Flinders, who learned its true dimensions. Next morning the ship passed what
looked like the mouth of a river, and shortly afterwards a similar indentation
was noticed. Far away inland the smoke of native fires could be seen rising; and
again, in the afternoon, Cook was convinced that there was either a river,
lagoon, or inlet close at hand.[*]
[* The Fitzroy River empties itself into the south-western part of
Keppel Bay. Keppel Bay is situated between Cape Capricorn and Keppel
Isles.]
The "Endeavour" now was steering directly between the coast and the Great
Barrier Reef. Her course was becoming more and more dangerous. Cook did not even
know that this great reef existed, but he saw the increasing number of shoals
and was warned that he must exercise great care. Over and over again his fine
seamanship extricated his ship from the perils lining her path. Besides the
shoals, spurs of rock and numbers of islands lie off the coast, and on Sunday,
27th, while the "Endeavour" was standing through the channel between Great
Keppel Island and the mainland, the master, who was sounding with two boats,
found in many places only two and a half fathoms of water. When he brought back
his report the ship had already anchored, and the wind veering, she sailed back
three or four miles, but again had to come to an anchorage, where she remained
until a passage for her could be found by the boats. At length she passed out
between Great Keppel and North Keppel Islands.
Having left the Keppel Islands behind Cook next saw Cape Manifold, and he
says he so named it because of the number of high hills over it. It lies
north-west distant seventeen leagues from Cape Capricorn, and "between them the
shore forms a large bay which I called Keppel's Bay."
On the 28th he came close in with Cape Townshend, which he named and which he
describes as being "more barren than woody." The "Endeavour" then met with the
many islands which lie scattered up and down the coast to the northward, forming
a part of the Northumberland Islands. A large inlet--known to us as Shoalwater
Bay--was seen to trend to the south-east.[*] A little later the ship ran into
shoal water. With a boat taking soundings ahead, the "Endeavour" followed
west-by-north, leaving many islets, rocks, and shoals between her and the
mainland. Just before noon the boat made the signal for meeting with another
shoal, upon which Cook immediately let go an anchor and brought the ship up
"with all sails standing." A strong tide was running, and he thought that this
tide "carried us so quickly upon the shoal."
[* The entrance to Shoalwater Bay lies between Cape Townshend and
Pier Head. The bay itself extends thirty-five miles to the south-east in the
direction of Cape Manifold and divides into several branches.]
The ship was then on what is known as "the Donovan Shoal" in Broad Sound
Channel. Fortunately no harm came to her and at three o'clock she made sail
again, but at six o'clock on the same day (the 29th) anchored once more two
miles off the mainland and still in sight of a number of islands. At five next
morning the master was sent with two boats to sound the entrance of an inlet,
which bore west, about one league distant. He soon made a signal for an
anchorage and the vessel stood within the inlet, which was believed to be the
mouth of a river, but which in reality was a strait leading into Broad Sound,
which Cook was to name later. A search for water was made, and because he found
none Cook named the place Thirsty Sound.[*] Here on May 30th he went on shore
with a party, and immediately proceeded to mount "a pretty high hill before
sunrise in order to get a view of the coast and the islands." Cook called the
hill, which is situated at the north-west entrance of Thirsty Sound, the Pier
Head. He then started to survey the inlet and got about eight leagues up it when
he discovered that it formed a large lake which communicated with the sea. He
saw two natives, but of these he only had a glimpse at some distance. The party
got no fresh water or refreshment of any kind, and although they saw turtle,
"caught none nor no sort of fish or wild fowl only a few landbirds."
[* Thirsty ound is the narrow strait separating Quail and Long
Islands from the mainland--"Admiralty Sailing Directions."]
The earth here looked a hard red clay; the trees were of different kinds and
all the uplands clear of underwood; the lowlands were overrun with mangroves.
Oysters were to be had, but Cook thought they were so small as not to be worth
picking off the rocks.
For Banks, however, the place seems to have had attractions, in spite of a
troublesome grass which it was impossible to avoid, and which he thus describes:
"Its sharp seeds were bearded backwards, and whenever they stuck into our
clothes were by these beards pushed forward till they got into the flesh...This
grass, with the mosquitoes that were likewise innumerable, made walking almost
intolerable." He continues: "We were not, however, to be repulsed, but proceeded
into the country. The gum trees were like those in the last bay, both in leaf
and in producing a very small proportion of gum; on the branches of them and of
other trees were large ants' nests made of clay as big as a bushel. The
ants...were small...In another species of tree (Xanthoxyloides mite) a
small...black ant had bored all the twigs and lived in quantities in the hollow
part where the pith should be: the tree nevertheless flourishing and bearing
leaves upon those branches as freely and well as upon others that were sound.
Insects in general were plentiful, butterflies especially...On the leaves of the
gum tree we found a pupa or chrysalis which shone as brightly as if it had been
silvered over with the most burnished silver...It was brought on board and the
next day came out into a butterfly of a velvet black changeable to blue."
On the 31st the "Endeavour's" course took her between the Duke Islands (the
largest group of the Northumberland Islands) and the reefs and islands lying
north-west of Thirsty Sound. Here once more she got into shoal water, and, on
June 1st, the anchor had to be let go. The boats having sounded about the shoal
again the vessel set sail and finally came to an anchorage under the lee of
three islands lying off the northern approach to an inlet which Cook named Broad
Sound.[*] A bluff, rocky headland forming its north-west entrance he called Cape
Palmerston, and a pretty high promontory seen at noon on
[* These were the Bedwell Islands--Wharton.]
Saturday, June 2nd, Cape Hillsborough. The shores of the mainland were
clothed with wood, and as the ship steered between the mainland and another
group of islands, mountains and hills, plains and valleys came into view. The
islands belonged to the straggling group stretching for sixty miles along the
Queensland coast which Cook named the Cumberland Islands in honour of Henry
Frederick Duke of Cumberland.
On Sunday, June 3rd, Cook discovered a passage thirty miles long between the
mainland and some islands lying off the coast.[*] In passing through it Cook
writes: "This passage I have named Whit Sunday's Passage as it was discovered on
the day the Church commemorates that Festival." He thought the whole of it was
"one continued safe harbour" with small bays and coves on each side "where ships
might lay as it were in a basin," but he did not wait to examine it as he was
unwilling to lose the benefit of the moonlight. The land on both sides formed
hills and valleys, "diversified with woods and lawns that looked green and
pleasant." A small island in the passage is called Pentecost Island. On a sandy
beach upon one of the islands two natives were seen and "a canoe with an
outrigger larger and differently built to any we have seen upon the coast."
[* The east side of this channel is formed by the northern portion
of the Cumberland Islands from Shaw Island to Hayman Island.]
As the "Endeavour"--under easy sail, and having gentle breezes and clear
weather--skirted this portion of Queensland's shores, numberless capes and bays
received their names. Each day saw new designations selected by Cook as most
suitable take their places on his chart, among which were Cape Conway and
Repulse Bay (so named because he was forced to haul the ship away from it) on
June 3rd; Cape Gloucester and Edgecumbe Bay on the 4th; Cape Upstart and
Cleveland Bay on the 5th and 6th respectively; while on the 7th a group of
islands named the Palm Islands was charted. On one of the islets of this group
next day a quantity of smoke on shore made it apparent that large native fires
were burning; and men, women, and children gathered together upon the small
islet could be made out through the glasses, gazing at the ship. Thinking that
he could see coco-nut trees, the fruit of which, he says, would have been very
acceptable, the commander sent Lieutenant Hicks to try and obtain some, and Mr.
Banks and Dr. Solander went with the party. They were disappointed, and Cook
wrote in his journal: "They met with nothing worth observing." Natives were
heard there, but not seen, and the trees turned out to be not coco-nut but
cabbage palms.
A point now received the name of Point Hillock on account of its shape.[*]
Between it and a cape to the southward which had been called Cape Cleveland, the
shore formed a large bay, that was christened Halifax Bay. It was sheltered from
all winds by the islands lying close to it. Having passed Point Hillock in
following the land, the vessel met with another point which Cook named Cape
Sandwich. From it the coast ran first west and then north and formed a fine
large bay to which was given the name of Rockingham Bay. Cook thought this bay
well sheltered and affording good anchorage, but he says that having met with so
little encouragement by going ashore, he would not wait to land, and, instead,
he continued to range along the coast until he fell in with what he calls "a
parcel of small islands" known to us as the Family Islands. Through these he
found a channel a mile wide, between the three outermost and those nearer the
shore, and went through it.
[* It is near the southern extremity of Hinchinbrook Island which
Cook regarded as part of the main.]
On one of the islands nearest to the ship a group of natives had collected
who watched the vessel very attentively. They were very dark in colour, quite
naked, and had short hair. This day's sail brought the "Endeavour" to that part
of the coast where the Great Barrier Reef draws in closer to the mainland and
consequently the dangers in her track were multiplied.
On the 9th she came abreast of some tolerably high land, the point of which
was named Cape Grafton, and on the 10th Cook anchored in a bay lying three miles
to the westward of it, a low, green, woody isle in the offing being called by
him Green Island. Here he went on shore to look for water, accompanied by Banks
and Solander. The bottom of the bay being low mangrove land, they rowed out
towards the head of the cape and found two small streams, but on account of the
surf and the rocks it was thought that it would be an unsuitable place to water
the ship. The country round was steep and rocky and was left unexplored.
At midnight on June 10th, with showers of rain falling, but having little
wind, Cook weighed once more, and stood to the north-west. A little later, in
order to pass outside a low island lying about two leagues from the mainland, he
hauled off to the northward; it was one of the Low Isles, being partly under
water. Another island,[*] seven miles distant, was seen at noon, and at this
time Cape Grafton bore S. 29° E. distant forty miles. Between it and the
northernmost land in sight a large but not very deep bay indented the shore;
Cook called it Trinity Bay, in honour of the day on which it was discovered, and
to the north point of it he gave the name of Cape Tribulation, "because," he
says, "here began all our troubles."
[* Called Snapper Island by Lieutenant Jeffreys in
1815.]
The following evening (June 11th) there being a fine breeze and clear
moonlight the ship, while standing off the land, suddenly shoaled her water from
twelve, ten, and eight fathoms with great rapidity. Cook gave orders to anchor,
and then, as the lead before ten o'clock gave twenty fathoms, he imagined there
could be no danger in standing on once more. But again the water suddenly
shoaled, and a few minutes before eleven the Endeavour" struck a reef and stuck
fast.
Sails were hurriedly taken in and the boats were hoisted out in order to
sound the depth of water round the ship and if possible to ascertain her
position. A little later it was found that she had been carried over a ledge of
the rock upon which she had struck and lay in a hollow within it.
The coral rock was situated in lat. 15°47' S., long. 145°35' E., being only
six or seven leagues from the shores of the mainland. It is now known as
Endeavour Reef.[*] Cook's coolness and promptitude at this period kept his men
together. There was no excitement; every order was quickly carried out. The
pumps were set to work to keep the leak in check, and heavy articles, chiefly
guns, and all kinds of ballast were thrown overboard.
[* Endeavour Reef is 41 miles long, E. and W., and half a mile
broad. A fringe of sunken coral extends right round the reef.--"Admiralty
Sailing Directions."]
The water being deepest astern Cook had the stream anchor carried out from
the starboard quarter and hove a great strain upon it to try to get the vessel
off the rock at high water, but without success, and she beat so violently
against it that the men could scarcely keep their feet. Their position grew more
and more perilous. By the light of the moon they could see the ship's sheathing
boards floating thickly around her. About midnight part of her false keel came
away, and as she settled down at ebb tide, a rock under her starboard was
plainly heard grating against her timbers, so that it was expected that at any
moment she might go to pieces. The best chance of saving her lay in continuing
to lighten the ship. Stores, guns, casks, iron and stone ballast and other
things were therefore thrown overboard after the rest. Fortunately the sea was
smooth and the weather fine, and on the 12th the sailors carried out two bower
anchors, one on the starboard quarter, the other right astern, and "got blocks
and tackles upon the cable and hove taut." It was seen that as the tide rose the
leak let in water fast, and three pumps hard at work could only just keep the
"Endeavour" clear.
At night the ship righted, but as she did so the water gained more and more
on the pumps, and as Cook expresses it, "threatened immediate destruction."
However, he resolved "to risk all and heave her off," and about twenty minutes
past ten o'clock, after having been twenty-three hours on the reef, she floated
and was hove into deep water, having at this time three feet nine inches of
water in the hold.
In this hazardous situation all hands turned resolutely to the pumps,
although for some time every one believed the task to be hopeless. Then it was
discovered that a mistake had been made by a seaman in taking the depth of water
which had greatly exaggerated the rapidity with which the leak had gained on the
pumps. When this became known it acted on the men like a charm. They redoubled
their vigour, so much so that next morning the pumps had actually gained on the
leak. The commander bestowed great praise on the men for their conduct at this
time, and he writes: "In justice to the ship's company, I must say that no men
ever behaved better."
Cook now stood in for the land, and he writes: "The leak decreaseth, but for
fear it should break out again we got the sail ready for fothering."The plan of
fothering the ship was executed by Mr. Monkhouse, one of the midshipmen who had
once seen a ship brought by this means from Virginia to London. He took an old
studding-sail and "mixed some oakum and wool, chopping it small, and placing it
in handfuls on the sail, where it was stitched down firmly. After being thus
prepared the sail was hauled under the ship and kept extended till the suction
carried the oakum and wool into the leak." This plan succeeded so well that soon
afterwards one pump sufficed to keep the water under.
At six in the evening the "Endeavour" anchored about five leagues distant
from the Australian coast and one from the shoal. The leak was still making
about fifteen inches of water an hour. Early next morning (the 14th) Cook
weighed and edged in for the land. At this time he says that he passed close
outside two small low islands and named them Hope Islands, for he remarks, "We
were always in hopes of being able to reach these islands." They are, however,
merely sand cays, very low and covered with bushes that lie midway between Cape
Tribulation and Endeavour River. The spirit shown by the officers and crew
throughout this trying period was worthy of the highest traditions of the Royal
Navy, but one realizes that all the care and responsibility rested upon the
shoulders of the commander, and his troubles do not seem to have been nearly
over. Shortly after noon he sent the master with two boats to sound ahead of the
ship and to look out for harbour within the mainland, as it was now very
necessary to find a place where the "Endeavour" in her disabled condition might
take refuge and have her defects repaired. At three o'clock in the afternoon an
opening was seen that had the appearance of leading into a harbour. The ship
stood off and on while the boats examined it, but it was found that there was
not sufficient depth of water for her to anchor.
On Cook's chart the name of Weary Bay was given to this opening. By that time
the sun was setting, and as there were many shoals around her the "Endeavour"
again anchored, being then about two miles from the Queensland coast, which now
trended from north-east to south-by-east. At eight o'clock at night, to Cook's
relief, one of the mates returned in the pinnace and reported that he had found
a good harbour two leagues away. This indentation is now known to us as
Cooktown, being so called in remembrance of Cook's sojourn there. The great
seaman himself bestowed upon the river at whose entrance it lies the name of
Endeavour River.
At six o'clock next morning Cook weighed and stood in towards this harbour,
but to avoid shoals that were visible he sent two boats ahead to lead the way,
and after they had passed the shoals the boats were ordered to examine the
channel leading into the inlet. However, the wind rose and it was thought safest
to anchor, the ship then being one mile from the shore. Signalling to the boats
to come on board, Cook went himself and buoyed the channel, which was found to
be narrow. The harbour itself though small appeared to be a most convenient
one.
It continued to blow fresh this day and the "Endeavour" was forced to remain
at anchor on the 15th and 16th, but an attempt to run into the inlet was made on
the 17th which nearly proved unsuccessful, as twice she ran ashore. On Monday,
the 18th, she was floated and warped in, being finally moored alongside a steep
beach on the south side of the river, where, on the same morning a stage was
erected from the ship to the shore.
CHAPTER II
COOK AT ENDEAVOUR RIVER
Once the ship was moored safely tents were pitched for the sick men, among
whom were Mr. Green, the astronomer, and Tupia, both showing symptoms of
scurvy.
Dr. Solander and Mr. Banks had already commenced plant-gathering. On the
18th, whilst roaming in search of specimens in the inland country, the latter
saw boughs of trees stuck in the ground by the natives to form the frames of
their gunyas, but none of the inhabitants were actually seen.
On the afternoon of the 19th, having given instructions for the sick men to
be brought on shore and the stores and ballast landed, Cook made his way to the
top of one of the highest hills overlooking the harbour to take a view of his
surroundings. Whenever it was possible he made a practice of doing this. The
country did not appear to possess many attractions; the low land near the river
was overgrown with mangroves and at every tide was covered with salt water; the
high land looked stony and barren.
Next morning the guns left on board were mounted on the quarter deck for
protection and a forge set up on shore so that the armourers could commence to
repair the ship. The powder, as well as most of the coals left in the hold, were
landed on the 22nd. Cook then cast loose the "Endeavour's" moorings and warped
her to a spot higher up the harbour which he had fixed upon as suitable for
carrying out the work. Her bow was hauled in to the beach, and her stern kept
afloat, so that when the tide went out the extent of her injuries could be
ascertained.
The leak was found to be "at her floor heads a little before the starboard
fore chains." On the following day Mr. Banks saw it and thus described it: "In
the middle was a hole large enough to have sunk a ship with twice our pumps, but
here Providence had most visibly worked in our favour, for it was in great
measure plugged up by a stone as big as a man's fist. Round the edges of this
stone (which was a piece of coral rock) had all the water come in...and here we
found the wool and oakum or fothering which had relieved us in so unexpected a
manner." He continues: "The effect of this coral rock...is difficult to
describe...It had cut through the plank and deep into one of her timbers,
smoothing the gashes...so that the whole might easily be imagined to have been
cut with an axe."
Each day the carpenters worked while the tide would permit them, and after he
had seen their task begun Cook was able to survey more of the country. He had
noticed a number of pigeons flying round the camp, so on the 23rd he sent men
across the river to try to kill some, when one of the shooting party caught
sight of a strange animal, "something less than a greyhound, it was of a mouse
colour, very slender made and swift of foot," this being the first description
of the kangaroo given to Cook, and, indeed, the first information he obtained of
its existence, although the animal seen by Pelsart, Dampier, and Vlamingh and
one of the smaller species from the Aru Islands which had been made known in
1711 are said to have been the first kangaroos heard of in Europe. Next day Cook
saw one for himself, only a little way from the ship, and he says: "I should
have taken it for a wild dog, but for its walking and like a hare or deer...the
length running in which it jumped of the grass prevented my seeing its
legs."
Banks, who spent his time in penetrating inland, heard many different
accounts of it, and at once designated it "the animal of the country," as indeed
it was and is, though rather too rapidly decreasing. Later, too, he tells us
that it was called by the natives kangaroo, spelling the word thus, and not, as
it is spelled in Cook's journal, "kanguru." Banks tells of another remarkable
animal that had been seen by one of the seamen (an Irishman surely!), who,
having seen a flying fox, gave this description of it: "About as large and much
like a one-gallon cagg;[*] as black as the devil and had two horns on its head;
it went but slowly but I dared not touch it."
[* Bank's journal.]
To his dismay, on the 26th Banks found that most of his plants on board which
had been stowed in the bread-room were under water. The mischief being done he
began at once to try to restore them. Many were saved by his energy, but some he
could not revive. In his excursions into the bush he met with nests of ants
which he likens to the white ant of the East Indies, but harmless; and he
describes their nests as pyramidal in shape and varying from a few inches to six
feet in height. He thought that they resembled Druid monuments in England, while
Solander compared them to runic stones at Upsala in Sweden.
The botanists made baskets to hold their specimens, and the plants remained
fresh in these baskets for days. During the stay of the "Endeavour" in the South
Seas the men had learned how to weave them by watching the islanders at work. At
first specimens were dried by laying them in the sand; later it was found that
they would dry better in paper books, although one person was kept entirely
employed in attending to them and exposing the quires to the sun's heat.
The coco palm did not grow at Endeavour River. Mr. Gore picked up, upon the
beach, the husk of a coco-nut, which had evidently been swept there by the waves
from some island to windward.[*] He also penetrated four or five miles into the
country, where he saw marks of men's feet and tracks of animals, though he met
with neither man nor beast. Some others from the ship, in their rambles on the
north side of Endeavour River, reached a spot where there were fires burning
which the natives had only just left. In these expeditions some wild yams were
found growing in a swampy place, and their tops proved so good that on the 29th
Cook sent a party to gather a quantity for the ship's company. He tells how, on
the night of this day, "Mr. Green and I observed an emersion of Jupiter's first
satellite, which took place at 2 hours 58 minutes 53 seconds in the a.m.; the
same emersion happened at Greenwich...on the 30th at 5 hrs 17 minutes 43 seconds
a.m."; and he adds: "The difference is 14 hours 18 minutes 50 seconds equal to
214°42'30" of Long.--which this place is W. of Greenwich."[**]
[* King says Cook imagined that it came from "Terra del
Esperitu."]
[** The true longitude is 214°45'.]
On Saturday, June 30th, while some midshipmen were making a plan of the
harbour, the commander ascended a hill now called Grassy Hill, which stands
close to the south point of the inlet, "to take a view of the sea." Its shores
were lined with shoals, and Cook was perplexed and anxious as to what route he
should take when he resumed his voyage. The heads of many rocks only just showed
above the water. "The only hopes I have of getting clear of them," he says, " is
to the northward, where there seems to be a passage."
Fortunately the sailors were greatly refreshed during their stay in this
harbour; and on July 2nd a good catch of fish supplied 2½ lbs. for each man.
Next day at low water Cook had a number of empty casks, lashed together, placed
under the ship's bows and the stream anchor laid out in hopes of being able to
float her. He was now impatient to put to sea, and when the master, who had been
sent out on the previous day in the pinnace to look for a safe route, reported
at noon that he had found a passage for the ship, Cook decided to leave at the
first opportunity.
During his investigations the master had landed on a dry reef, and finding
some very large cockles (Chima gigas) brought back a boatload chiefly of
the cockles, "one alone being more than two men could eat." Mr. Molineux also
entered an indentation of the mainland three leagues to the northward of
Endeavour River, where he disturbed some natives, as he thought, at supper. They
quickly disappeared leaving behind them "some fresh sea eggs" and a fire
brightly burning, but there was no hut near. Cook thought at this time that the
natives had no boats large enough to convey them out to the shoals, but he found
out afterwards that they were in the habit of visiting the islands between the
Great Barrier Reef and the mainland.
At high water on Wednesday, 4th, the ship was again floated, and on the 5th
was beached on the sandbank on the south side of the river. At this spot a
monument was erected in memory of the event by the inhabitants of
Cooktown.[*]
[* A column of granite now adorns the principal street of Cooktown
and bears the inscription: "In Memoriam Captain Cook who landed here June 17,
1770.--Post cineres gloria venit."
The "Endeavour," however, still made water and three people went down to
examine her. It was found that the main plank was chafed and that she had lost
three streaks of sheathing, but the master "was positive that she had received
no material damage," and the carpenter was of the same opinion, so that Cook
resolved to spend no more time in trying to repair her where she lay.
She was refloated at high water and moored alongside the beach where her
stores were deposited. In the morning these were got in readiness to be taken on
board, and eight tons of water were also obtained from springs not far off.
In the meantime further delays kept Cook longer here. Banks went over to the
opposite shores of the harbour on several occasions. As he was crossing on the
4th shoals of garfish leapt out of the water, and some falling into his small
boat were caught. He crossed the river again next day and saw "innumerable
fruits" on a sandy beach apparently washed there by the waves. Most curious
coco-nuts were among them, all incrusted--many of them covered with
barnacles--"a sure sign that they have come far by sea, probably" (Banks adds)
"from Terra del Espiritu Santo" (the New Hebrides).
On the 6th what may be called the first inland expedition on the east coast
set out from the camp. Lieutenant Gore, Mr. Banks, and three men went in a small
boat to survey the country higher up the river intending to be away for some
days. After having passed through "groves of mangroves" they came to country
similar to that they had left behind, and as they proceeded up the stream, which
gradually contracted, only a few mangroves were to be seen and the banks were
steep, being covered with trees of a beautiful verdure called in the West Indies
mohoe or bark tree (Hibiscus tiliaceus). Farther in the land was
low and thickly covered with long grass. In the course of the day Tupia saw an
animal like a wolf, which, of course, was a dingo; and three kangaroos and a bat
as large as a partridge were also seen, but none was caught.
The party camped at a spot close to the river bank and made their fire. Here
mosquitoes spoilt their enjoyment, and, as Banks says, spared no pains to molest
them as much as was in their power. "They followed us," he writes, "into the
very smoke, nay! almost into the fire, which, hot as the climate was, we could
better bear the heat of than their intolerable stings." And adds further:
"between the hardness of our bed, the heat of the fire, and the stings of these
indefatigable insects, the night was not spent so agreeably but day was
earnestly wished for by all of us. At last it came, and with its first dawn we
set out in search of game."
On this day four of the "animals of the country" were sighted; two were
chased by Banks's greyhound, though the kangaroos got away owing to the length
and thickness of the grass, which stopped the greyhound running, while they
bounded over the top of it. Banks then saw that instead of going on all fours
they went only on their hind legs as the smaller jerboa does.
The men saw a tree burning, but on reaching the spot no natives could be
seen. An old tree of touchwood had evidently been recently fired by them. Their
huts were found, and near them were lying twigs of trees, broken but not yet
withered, with which, possibly, children had been playing. Footsteps fresh on
the sands below high water proved that natives had gone that way. Their oven
showed that food had lately been cooked in it, while some shells of a kind of
clam and the roots of a wild yam, which had been baked, were lying close by.
At the close of the day the visitors stopped at a sandbank where under the
shade of a bush they hoped to be free from their tormentors of the previous
night. They made their beds of plantain leaves, spreading them on the sand, and
they proved as soft as a mattress, and with cloaks for bed-clothes and grass for
a pillow the men had a good night's rest, possibly due to the fact that the
mosquitoes did not trouble them. On the 8th, at daylight, they returned to the
ship. On their passage down the river several flocks of whistling duck flew
past, some of which were shot, and once an alligator about seven feet long was
seen crawling out from under the mangroves and making its way down into the
water.
On the 10th of July four black fellows appeared on the north side of the
river opposite the "Endeavour." They had a canoe (with an outrigger) in which
two of them embarked, and, coming to within the distance of long musket shot,
stopped and began talking loudly. The British called to them and beckoned them
to come closer. They soon did so, and drew in until they were quite alongside
the ship, though they often held up their spears as if to show that they were on
guard. Cloth, nails, and other articles were given them, which they took without
showing the least sign of satisfaction. At last by accident a small fish was
thrown into the canoe, when they expressed the utmost joy and instantly made
signs that they would fetch their two comrades, which they soon did, and all
four landed at the camp, each man carrying two spears and a throwing-stick with
him. Tupia, who was on shore, went towards them where they stood in a row as if
about to throw their spears, and he made signs that they should come forward
without their arms. They then laid them down, and, sitting on the ground beside
him, received various presents of beads and cloth given them. They soon became
friendly and only grew alarmed when anyone attempted to go between them and
their arms. "At dinner we made signs to them to come and eat with us," says
Banks, "but they refused. We left them, and going into their canoe they paddled
back to where they had come from."
Again on the 11th they visited the British camp and Banks tells us that in
addition to two of the visitors of the previous day there now came two new
natives, "whom our old acquaintances introduced by their names, one of which was
Yaparico." Although not noticed before, it was now seen that the four natives
had the septurm of the nose pierced, having a large hole through it, into which
one of them had stuck the bone of a bird as thick as a man's finger and about
four or six inches long. "An ornament no doubt, though to us it appeared rather
an uncouth one," remarks Banks. The black fellows presented their white friends
with a fish, but did not stay long, as on perceiving that some of the officers
were examining their boat "they went directly to it and pushing it off went away
without saying a word."
On the 12th they came again. On this occasion Tupia received them in his
tent, which pleased the early Queenslanders so much that three of them stayed
with him while the fourth went with the canoe to fetch two others, and on their
return the new-comers were introduced as before to the English by name, "which
they always made a point of doing," says Banks. Although they remained there the
best part of the morning not once during that time would they venture farther
than twenty yards from their canoe.
When they had paid their first visit they had allowed the sailors to decorate
them with medals, which were tied by a ribbon round their necks. These ribbons
were now covered with smoke, and, remembering the night of torment he had lately
himself endured, Banks remarks, "I suppose they lay much in the smoke to keep
off the mosquitoes."
Cook tells a similar story of his meeting with these natives on the 10th, so
that this really was the first visit of the Queensland blacks to the ship's
people. He noticed their small wooden canoe with outriggers at a sandy point on
the north side of the harbour, where they were employed in striking fish. Some
on board wished to go over to them. "But," says Cook, "this I would not suffer,
and let them alone without seeming to take any notice of them." In describing
them he says: "One of these men was above middle age, the other three were
young: none were above 5½ feet high and all had small limbs. They were naked,
their skins the colour of wood soot: their hair black, lank and cropt short, and
neither woolly nor frizzled, nor did they want any of their fore teeth," as did
those seen by Dampier. He continues: "Some part of their bodies had been painted
with red and, one of them had his upper lip and breast painted with streaks of
white called 'carbanda.' Their features were far from being disagreeable, their
voices were soft and tunable, and they could easily repeat any word after us.
But no one, not even Tupia, could understand a word they said."
Mr. Gore, who seems to have been energetic both on land and sea, on the 14th
killed a kangaroo. "To compare it to any European animal," says Banks, "would be
impossible, as it has not the least resemblance to any I have seen."
The kangaroo was cooked and eaten and its flesh was, as one might suppose,
excellent. In his journal Cook writes: "It was a small one, weighing 28 lbs.,"
after being cleaned; and he continues: "It was hare lipt and the head and ears
were most like a hare's of any animal I know...The forelegs were 8 inches long
and the hind 22 inches"; and he thought the forelegs "only designed for
scratching in the ground. The skin is covered with a short, hairy fur of a dark
mouse or grey colour." A much greater delicacy for the men were the turtle
there, which were frequently caught, and were in great numbers. Indeed, on the
9th Mr. Molineux caught three on a reef without the harbour which was called
Turtle Bank;[*] they weighed 791 lbs., and on that day, says Cook, all hands
feasted on turtle for the first time. These were mostly green turtle, and, when
killed, were found to be full of turtle grass, which Banks identified as a kind
of conferva.
[* Turtle Reef.]
Although her departure was delayed, the ship was ready to leave on the 16th.
Up to the time of sailing the botanists remained busily engaged in examining
specimens and in completing their collections so as to take away as many
different species as possible. Tupia encountered blacks on the north side of
Endeavour River on the 17th, who, Banks relates, "gave him a kind of longish
root about as thick as a man's finger and of very good taste." Probably this was
dingowa, or fern root, much eaten by the natives.
Banks also records that at this time the natives soon had become quite
familiar and lost all fear of white men. On the 18th one gave an exhibition of
his powers in throwing the spear. The weapon shot through the air so steadily
and swiftly that Banks was amazed at its flight, "never being above four feet
from the ground and stuck deep in at a distance of 50 paces. After this display
the blacks went on board, and, he says, "soon became our very good friends."
Leaving them, Cook and Banks crossed the river and walked northwards to a
high hill about six miles from the ship. On ascending it they viewed the sea
coast, and Cook writes: "It afforded us a melancholy prospect of the
difficulties we are to encounter." From here too in every direction the sea
looked covered with shoals.
On the morning of the 19th ten or eleven natives came to the "Endeavour" from
the opposite side of the river, six or seven of their companions including some
women remaining behind. All these blacks were naked. Those who came on board
made known by signs that they wanted some of the turtle that were on the deck,
several having been placed there for the voyage. On their requests being refused
one angry and disappointed man was seen, energetically aided by his companions,
trying to haul two turtle to the gangway in order to put them over the side of
the vessel. When they were prevented doing this the black fellows revenged
themselves by throwing overboard everything within their reach. Bread was
offered to them but they rejected it scornfully, and soon afterwards took their
departure.
The commander, with Mr. Banks and five or six others, followed them on shore.
Immediately the blacks landed, one of the party ran to a patch of dry grass,
tore up a handful, and lighted it at a fire that the seamen had made there. He
then started to set fire to the grass in several places, making a circle round
the camp, with the result that in a few minutes the whole of the surroundings
were in a blaze.
Banks, who was setting out to gather plants, suddenly saw one of the tents
erected for his use in imminent danger of being burnt, so leaping into a boat he
promptly brought some sailors from the ship who hauled it down in time to save
it from the flames. The forge was destroyed, however, and one of the litter of
pigs was scorched to death. Not content with starting fires at this point the
blacks ran to another place where the men had been washing linen, and where the
linen with the fishing net lay on the ground to dry. Determined to save the
seine if he could, Cook followed the natives, but in spite of his efforts to
prevent them they again set fire to the grass and it was soon blazing furiously.
Finding persuasion useless, Cook at last fired a musket at one of the
ringleaders who was starting new fires forty yards away; on the shot striking
him he ran to his companions and they all disappeared into the woods. The second
fire was extinguished, but the first one rapidly increased and burned fiercely.
At this time the natives were not far away, for their voices could be heard in
the distance, so Cook and Banks with some others went to look for them and soon
met several. Seeing that they carried spears the white party picked up a few
that they had left behind and closely pursued the black men. But the Australian
native is fleet of foot and after Cook had chased them for about half a mile he
was compelled to halt at the foot of a tree, whence he called to the natives to
stop, and presently they did so, and he writes: "After some little
unintelligible conversation had passed, they laid down their darts and came to
us in a very friendly manner." The borrowed spears were then returned to their
rightful owners which, he says, reconciled everything."
There were four strange black fellows now with the natives, who had never
been seen before, and each one was introduced by name to the British with the
usual ceremony. The man who had been hit had gone away, but it was evident that
he had not been badly hurt. When eventually Cook's party made their way back to
the ship the natives accompanied them until they came abreast the "Endeavour."
Here they remained in conversation for a short time. They then went away and set
the bush on fire at about two miles distant.
On Friday, 20th, the ship was brought to a new berth and let swing with the
tide. The master, who had been sent in the pinnace to inspect the coast higher
up, returned during the night, and stated that he could find no safe passage to
the northward. However, being ready for sea, Cook went next day and buoyed the
bar, but the wind continuing unfavourable he was forced to remain longer at his
anchorage.
While thus delayed, his people saw more of the natives. On the 23rd some
sailors, sent into the country for a supply of green food, lost one of their
party in the bush. This man suddenly came upon four blackfellows seated round a
fire. They were engaged in broiling a bird, and he also perceived part of a
kangaroo hanging on a tree near. Being unarmed he had the presence of mind not
to run away from the blacks, but went and sat down among them. At first being
afraid of their numbers he offered them his knife in order to conciliate them.
The natives took it, handed it round from one to the other to examine, then
returned it again to him. When they had felt his hands, his body, and the
texture of his clothes they allowed him to depart peaceably, and on seeing that
he did not know his way directed him back to the "Endeavour."
On Friday, August 3rd, Cook unmoored and began to warp out of the harbour.
Soon a breeze arising he was compelled to remain within the bar for the night.
At seven o'clock next morning he put to sea.
COOKTOWN TO POSSESSION ISLAND
On leaving Endeavour River, Cook steered east-by-north and sent the pinnace
before him to lead the way. He had ordered the yawl to pick up a net that had
been left on the Turtle Bank, but the wind freshening the "Endeavour" got out of
the harbour before her. Wishing to view the shoals at low water from the
masthead before venturing among them, Cook came to an anchorage shortly after
noon. The northernmost point of the mainland then in sight, to which he gave the
name of Cape Bedford, bore north-west distant three and a half leagues, while
the Turtle Reef lay but a mile to the eastward. He informs us on the 4th that he
had not then decided whether to beat back to the southward "round all the
shoals" or to seek a passage to the eastward or northward, "all of which
appeared to be equally difficult and dangerous." Nor did he know the extent of
the Barrier Reef, which rose to the eastward like a wall of coral rock between
him and the South Pacific. On the 5th the boats were ordered to Turtle Reef for
turtle and shell-fish, and in their absence Cook surveyed the shoals. Beyond the
nearest shoal he saw many more stretching into distance, although to the
north-east the sea looked fairly clear and he finally resolved to go in that
direction. The fishing boats returned with a turtle, a sting-ray, and a quantity
of clams, which afforded each man one and a half pounds of fish, and during the
night the sailors caught some sharks.
Fresh gales blew next morning and prevented the vessel sailing until 2 p.m.
on August 6th, when the weather had moderated. Leaving Turtle Reef, Cook stood
to the north-east, having shoals ahead and on both bows, and at 4.30 the pinnace
made the signal for shoal water. After tacking Cook soon anchored as night was
approaching and he hoped to proceed at daylight. But a strong gale from the
south-east blew next day and the ship was compelled to strike her yards.
Around her on all sides there were shoals. With his officers, on the 7th,
Cook looked in vain from the masthead for a passage between them. Breakers were
visible everywhere: "All the way from the south round by east to N.W. extending
out to sea as far as we could see," and he adds: "It did not appear one
continued shoal but several detached from each other."
The surf broke highest on the easternmost side, and after finally reviewing
the situation he observes: "I saw that we were surrounded on every side with
danger insomuch that I was quite at a loss which way to steer...for to beat back
to the S.E. the way we came as the Master would have me do would be an endless
piece of work." At last he determined to seek a passage along the (Queensland)
coast and to follow it northward. Gales continued to blow, and not until the
10th at 7 a.m. was the "Endeavour" able to weigh her anchor. She then stood in
towards the mainland and at nine drew abreast three small islands covered with
mangroves (now called the Three Isles), which lie eight miles from Cape Bedford.
Cook directed his course between the islands and the mainland and next saw a
point in the coast bearing north-north-west at a distance of two leagues. To the
north-east of it appeared three more islands,[*] which were high, having small
ones near. The ship continued her course between the islands and the shore and
at noon was four leagues from the former and two from the latter. Cook thought
that he was now clear of danger and that the open sea was before him, but he was
soon to find that he had been deceived, so he named this headland Cape Flattery,
writing of it: "It is a high promontory making in two hills next the sea and a
third behind with low sandy land on each side."
[* The Direction Islands.]
On the 11th a petty officer at the masthead cried out that there was "land
ahead extending round to the islands without," and that there was a reef between
the ship and these islands. On hearing this Cook himself went to the masthead
and saw the reef plainly, but he thought that the officer was mistaken in
thinking the land was mainland, for to Cook it appeared to be islands. However,
as others on board were also of the petty officer's opinion, he signalled for
the boat to come on board, and stood in for the Australian coast and anchored
under a point of the mainland about a mile from the shore. He then landed and
went to the highest point he could find where he obtained a view of the coast.
This, he could see, trended away north-west-by-west for eight or ten leagues. He
also saw nine or ten small low islands...and some large shoals between the
mainland and the three high islands, without which again were islands which the
petty officer had mistaken for the mainland.
Cook called the point of the mainland from which he obtained this good view
Point Lookout. He saw there the footsteps of natives in the sand and the smoke
of their fires up in the country. The sea coast north of Cape Bedford was low
and chequered with white sand and green bushes for ten or twelve miles inland,
and there was high land beyond. To the north of Point Lookout the shores
appeared shoal and flat, which, he adds, "is no good sign of meeting with a
channel as we have hitherto done." He returned on board the "Endeavour" at
evening and decided then to visit one of the high islands next morning. He
therefore set out in the pinnace in company with Mr. Banks for the northernmost
and largest of the three,[*] and Mr. Molineux at the same time, by his orders,
took the yawl to leeward to sound between some low islands and the main.
[* Lizard Island.]
When he had arrived at the island and climbed to the top of the highest
hill[*] Cook discovered to his dismay that a reef extended for two or three
leagues outside the island and ran north-west and south-east out of sight. This
was in fact a portion of the main Barrier Reef. The waves rose high upon it, yet
breaks were seen and the water within it looked deep. Cook stayed on the hill
until sunset trying to get a better view of the shoals, but the weather
continued hazy, and he determined to spend the night there, hoping that the
morning would be clear. In this, however, he was disappointed, for next day the
atmosphere was even more hazy. At three in the morning he sent one of the mates
away in the pinnace to sound the depth of water between the island they were on
and the reef, and also to examine one of the breaks in the reef.
[* The summit which is a bare, domed-shaped hill, is 1,179 feet in
height and from its height and conspicuous appearance forms a good mark from
seaward and from the channels inside--"Admiralty Sailing
Directions."]
Cook named this island, which was about eight miles in circuit, Lizard
Island, and he says that he gave it this name because the only land animals that
he saw were lizards. It was high, rocky, and barren, excepting on the north
side, where there were sandy bays and low lands covered with thin long
grass.
The remains of some old native huts and heaps of old fish shells showed that
the Australian natives came over from the mainland. The islands to the southward
were both smaller and there seemed a clear passage between them and Cape
Flattery. In the afternoon of the 13th Cook left Lizard Island and went back to
his ship, touching at a low sandy island on his way, which he named Eagle
Island.
Of his visit to Lizard Island Banks writes: "We ascended the hill and from
the top saw plainly the grand reef still extending itself parallel with the
shore...Through it were several channels exactly similar to those we had seen in
the islands. Through one of these we determined to go. To ascertain, however,
the practicability of it we resolved to stay upon the island all night...We
slept under the shade of a bush that grew upon the beach very comfortably."
On the following day he continues: "Great part of yesterday and all this
morning till the boat returned I employed in searching the island. On it I found
some few plants which I had not before seen...There was one small tract of
woodland which abounded very much with large lizards, some of which I took.
Distant as this isle was from the main, the Indians had been here in their poor
embarkations....We saw seven or eight frames of their huts...All the houses were
built upon the tops of eminences exposed entirely to the S.E., contrary to those
of the main, which are commonly placed under some bushes or hillside to break
the wind. The officer who went in the boat returned with an account that the sea
broke vastly high upon the reef and the swell was so great in the opening that
he could not go into it to sound. [But he found that the depth of water within
the reef varied from 15 to 28 fathoms.] On our return we went ashore on a low
island, where we shot many birds: on it was the nest of an eagle, the young ones
of which we killed, and another, I knew not of what bird, built on the ground of
an enormous magnitude; it was in circumference 26 feet and in height 2 feet 8
inches built of sticks...[*] The Indians had been here likewise." This was the
island which had been named Eagle Island by Cook.
[* Tallegalla lathami, Gould, i.e. North Queensland scrub
hen. It really was a small nest of the kind. A common height is 5 or 6 feet
and 20 yards round the base.]
On his return on board the commander found that the master had made his
examination of the low islands.[*] He had spent the night on one and had found
there piles of turtle shells and some of the fins with meat on them left on the
trees were so fresh that he and the boat's crew ate of them, and it was evident
that the natives had lately feasted there. He also saw two spots lately dug up
about seven feet long and shaped like a grave, which he thought were native
tombs. On receiving an unfavourable report from the master with regard to the
soundings inside the low islands, and comparing it with his own observations,
Cook clearly perceived that it would be courting danger to try to keep any
longer near the mainland, and after consulting with his officers he resolved to
quit its shores.
[* Turtle Group.]
Accordingly, at daylight on the 13th he weighed anchor and stood to the
north-east. By 2 p.m. he had arrived at one of the openings in the main reef,
the outermost reef seen from Lizard Island. The master went in the pinnace to
examine the channel and soon made the signal to the ship to follow and she
passed safely through it. This channel through the Barrier Reef is known as
Cook's Passage.
In giving further information concerning his track Cook says he called the
three high islands the Islands of Direction, as "by their means a safe passage
may be found even by strangers in within the main reef and quite into the main."
Lizard Island, he adds, "affords snug anchorage under the N.W. side of it, fresh
water, and wood for fuel.'' Not only on this island, but also on Eagle Island
and other places, were found bamboos, coco-nuts, and seeds of various
plants-which were not the produce of the country.
After the "Endeavour" had passed through Cook's Passage she had no ground
with one hundred fathoms of line, and a large sea came rolling in from the
south-east. The sight pleased Cook greatly, "after having been entangled among
islands or shoals more or less ever since May 26th, in which time we have sailed
above 360 leagues by the lead without ever having a leadsman out of the chains
when the ship was under sail, a circumstance that perhaps never happened to any
ship before."
But the big swell of the South Pacific soon made it apparent to him that his
ship had received damage on Endeavour Reef of which he had not been aware, or
had not noticed, while sailing in the smooth waters within the Barrier, for "she
now made as much water as one pump kept constantly at work would free." By noon
on the 14th the vessel was out of sight of land, and on the following day orders
were given at six in the evening to shorten sail and bring her to for the night.
Next morning Cook made sail and steered west in order to make the land, "being
fearful of overshooting the passage, supposing there to be one between this land
and New Guinea," which shows that if he had heard of the discoveries of Torres
he had forgotten them. As a matter of fact, neither Cook nor Bligh nor any
Australian discoverer seems to have reaped any benefit from the experiences of
that navigator.
On Thursday, 16th, a little after noon, land was seen from the masthead
bearing west-south-west. It was high land, and at 2 p.m. more was seen to the
north-west, "making in hills like islands," which was thought to be part of the
coast (of Australia). An hour afterwards a reef, yet another part of the Great
Barrier Reef, was discovered lying between the ship and the mainland. It
extended to the southward and was thought to terminate to the northward abreast
the ship; but the supposed termination was soon proved to be merely an opening,
for the reef itself was shortly afterwards observed extending farther to the
northward, out of sight. "The ship's sails had scarcely been trimmed before the
wind came to E. by N., which," writes Cook, "made our weathering the reef very
doubtful, the northern point of which still bore N. by W. distant about two
leagues."
The "Endeavour," however, continued to steer northward in hopes of being able
to clear the reef, care being taken that she should not run too far on one
course. To prevent this at midnight she tacked and stood to the
south-south-east. It then fell calm, and on sounding no bottom could be obtained
with 140 fathoms of line. A little after four o'clock a roar of surf was clearly
heard, foretelling that danger was near, and at daylight breakers, white with
foam, could be distinguished not a mile away, towards which, to the horror of
those on board, the heavy sea was fast hurrying the ship. There was not a breath
of wind and no possibility of being able to anchor, and Cook says: "In this
distressed situation we had nothing but Providence and the. small assistance the
boats could give us to trust to." The pinnace was then under repair; but the
yawl was put in the water and the long-boat hoisted out, both being sent ahead
to tow, and with the result that at last they got the ship's head round to the
northward.
By this time it was six o'clock and they were not more than eighty or one
hundred yards from the breakers. A big sea now lashed the ship's side and curved
when next it rose in such a lofty breaker that "only a dismal valley, the
breadth of one wave, lay between the 'Endeavour' and destruction."
Meanwhile the pinnace had been hastily repaired, and it too was hoisted out
and sent ahead to tow, although it seemed then as if nothing could save the
ship. Yet all on board remained quite calm and every man did his utmost to avert
disaster, and Cook writes: "All the dangers we had escaped were little in
comparison of being thrown on this reef where the ship must be dashed to pieces
in a moment. A reef," he adds, "such as...is scarcely known in Europe. It is a
wall of coral rock rising almost perpendicular out of the unfathomable ocean,
always overflown at high water and dry in places at low water."
And just when, to those on board, all seemed lost, "a small air of wind"
sprang up--so small that at any other time it would have scarcely been noticed,
and, with its aid and the help of the boats, the "Endeavour" was seen to move
slantingly away from the reef. In less than ten minutes the hopes of the men
were again dashed down, as a calm set in, while they were still not above 200
yards from the breakers. Yet once more the little breeze returned, and at this
time a small opening was perceived in the reef about a quarter of a mile away.
One of the mates was sent to examine it and he found that its breadth was not
more than the length of the ship, but that within there was smooth water.
Through this opening Cook decided to take the "Endeavour," though it was
doubtful whether he would be able to reach it at all. He, however, brought her
opposite to it, and to his surprise saw the ebb rushing out through the gap as
though it were a mill stream, and this carried the ship back a quarter of a mile
away from the breakers. By noon she was one and a half or two miles from them;
yet even then she could not have hoped to get clear if a breeze had sprung up.
As Cook says: "We were embayed by the reef, the ship in spite of our exertions,
driving before the sea into the bight"; and he adds: "The only hopes we had was
another opening we saw about a mile to the westward of us which I sent
Lieutenant Hicks to examine."
While Mr. Hicks was inspecting this second opening the ship struggled with
the tide, sometimes in her efforts gaining a little and at others losing way. At
two o'clock on the afternoon of the 17th the first lieutenant returned with a
favourable report of the opening and it was resolved to try to get through it,
as this seemed to be the only means by which the ship could be saved.
A light breeze sprang up from the east-north-east, and with the help of all
the boats and a flood tide the "Endeavour" entered the opening. The tide, whose
waters ran like a mill-race, hurried her through with a force that kept her
straight and prevented her driving to either side of the narrow channel. Once
through, she came to an anchorage safely within the reef about eight or nine
leagues from the mainland. Cook named the channel Providential Channel, because
it had so proved for the ship in the hour of her danger; and in recalling the
satisfaction that he had felt but a few days before when he had found himself
without the reef, he says: "That joy was nothing compared to what I now felt at
being safe at anchor within it."
For the rest of the day the "Endeavour" remained at this anchorage in full
view of the mainland coast. Giving his impressions of the land, Cook writes: "On
the mainland within us was a pretty high promontory which I called Cape Weymouth
and on the N.W. side of this cape is a bay which I called Weymouth Bay," this
being in honour of Lord Weymouth. On going to the masthead he saw that a great
part of the reef was dry and that there was another opening in it to the
south-east (possibly that now known as the Hibernia's Entrance).
Next morning the "Endeavour" got under way and stood to the north-west; it
was now deemed advisable to keep within the Barrier Reef, of whose extent and
vast length Cook at this time had gained important knowledge. Whilst pursuing
his course within the Barrier he perceived that the main or outer reef still
extended to the north-east, and he now met with a shoal and with the islands
which lie between the reef and the Australian mainland. At half-past six next
evening he anchored three miles from the northernmost of some small islands
bearing west ½ south, which he named Forbes's Islands. The coast here formed a
moderately high point called by Cook Bolt Head. Beyond it were low and sandy
beaches. At 6 a.m., when the ship was got under sail and stood in for an island
lying off the coast, her course was interrupted by shoals, but at length she
found a channel to it. The mainland here within the islands formed a point which
was named Cape Grenville, between which and Bolt Head was a bay which was called
Temple Bay. Nine leagues east ½ north from Cape Grenville were some high
islands, and these were named Sir Charles Hardy's Isles, while those off the
cape were called the Cockburn Isles.
Cook now steered a course along the Queensland shores which was afterwards,
for a time at least, followed by Bligh, who served under him as master of the
"Resolution." It was nineteen years later that Bligh entered through an opening
now called Bligh Boat Entrance in the Great Barrier Reef in the "Bounty's" boat
and ran along the shores that Cook's ship had coasted, steering a course among
the same islands. Writing on August 20th Cook says: "At 4, we discovered some
low islands and rocks bearing W.N.W. which we stood directly in for. At half
past six we anchored on the north-east side of the northernmost in 16 fms.
distant one mile from the island. This island lay N.W. 4 leagues from Cape
Grenville. On the isles we saw a good many birds which occasioned my calling
them Bird Isles."Bligh also came to the Bird Islands with his half-starved men,
and he tells us that he anchored on "the north-westernmost of four small keys,"
naming it Lagoon Island. "Before and at sunset," continues Cook, "we could see
the mainland which appeared very low and sandy...and some shoals, keys and low
sandy isles away to the N.E. At 6 a.m. we got again under sail and stood N.N.W.
for some low islands." The shoals and keys are now called the Boydong Cays.
"After weathering a shoal on our larboard bow, having at the same time others to
east of us...and having weathered the shoal to leeward and seeing some shoals
spit off from them and rocks on the starboard bow," Cook says that, being afraid
to go to windward of the islands, he brought to. He then made signal to the
pinnace to rejoin the ship, and sent her to leeward "to keep along the edge of
the shoal off the south side of the southernmost island." As soon as the pinnace
had got a proper distance he wore and stood after her.
Writing of this island, which is only a small spot of land with some trees
upon it. Cook says: "We saw many huts and habitations of the natives which we
supposed come over from the main to these islands (from which they are distant
about 5 leagues) to catch turtle at the time when these animals come ashore to
lay eggs." Having taken the yawl in tow, the "Endeavour" stood after the pinnace
to "two other low islands having two shoals, and one between us and the
main."[*]
[* Possibly these were Halfway Islets and East Islet.]
"At noon," writes Cook, "we were about 4 leagues from the mainland extending
N. as far as N.W. by N. all low, flat, and sandy "--the distance covered in the
twenty-four hours being forty miles. At 1 p.m. on the 21st, finding that he
could not go to windward of the two islands without getting too far from the
main, Cook bore up and ran to leeward, where he found a fair open passage. He
was now steering parallel with the mainland, "having a small island between us
and it and some low sandy isles, and shoals without us."[*] At four o'clock the
"Endeavour" had lost sight of the islands, nor were any more seen before sunset,
the farthest part of the mainland then in sight bearing north-north-west ½ west.
At this time Cook was almost abreast of Sharp Peak at the southern entrance of
Escape River. **2] Soon afterwards he anchored for the night in thirteen fathoms
soft ground about five leagues off shore.
[* On this day Cook passed between Cairncross and Sandy Islets.
See P. G, King's comments on Cook's Log.]
[** So named by King in 1819.]
At daylight once more, with the yawl ahead sounding, the "Endeavour" got
under way. She steered north-north-west, and as no danger was visible the yawl
was taken in tow and the ship made all sail until eight o'clock, when Cook
discovered shoals ahead on the larboard bow. He then came to the conclusion from
what he saw that the northernmost land, which he had considered was a part of
the continent, was an island or islands between which and the main there
appeared to be a good passage. The islands, one of which is remarkable for its
flat top, are known to us as Mount Adolphus Islands. Cook now had the
satisfaction of finding a good channel between the Mount Adolphus Islands and
the coast; he kept the long-boat rigged continually between the ship and the
mainland, as he says, "although there appeared nothing in the passage, there was
a strong flood." It may be noted as justifying Cook's precautions that the
Quetta Rock is in this channel. By noon he had got through and the nearest land
to the southward lay only three or four miles distant. Soon afterwards he
discovered that this was the northernmost point of the continent whose eastern
coast he had so thoroughly explored, and he writes in his journal: "The point of
the main...which is the northern promontory of this country, I have named York
Cape in honour of his late Royal Highness the Duke of York. It lies in the long.
of 218°24' W., the north point in the lat. Of 10°37' S., and the east point in
W10°41'S."
At this time he caught sight of islands lying a good distance off
north-by-west to west-north-west, and behind them yet another chain of islands.
The land below the east point of York Cape looked low and flat and seemed barren
as far inland as the eye could reach. The land on the northern part of York Cape
was rather more hilly and the valleys appeared well clothed with wood.[*] To the
southward of the cape the shore was seen to form a large open bay which Cook
named Newcastle Bay. (It was "the large and fair inlet" in 11° S. of Bligh.)
From Adolphus Channel Cook steered three or four miles to westward round York
Cape and discovered some islands which were "detached by several channels from
the mainland. He recalled the boats and gave instructions to them to lead
through the channel next the main, and soon afterwards the "Endeavour" made sail
and followed them. Rocks and shoals were found in this channel, so Cook made the
signal to the boats to lead through "the next channel to the northward between
the islands which they accordingly did; we following with the ship and had not
less than 5 fms. and this in the narrowest part...which was about 1 mile and a
half broad from island to island."
[* Cape York, the extreme north point of Eastern Australia, is
covered with dense scrub along a series of hills called the Carnegic Range;
the hill next the cape being Mount Bremer, 372 feet. The Cape itself is a
long, low shelf of rock tapering to the edge of the water.]
At four o'clock the "Endeavour" anchored. The mainland (Cape York Peninsula)
then extended south-west (S. 48° W.), while the southernmost point of the island
on the north-west side of the passage bore S. 76° W. "Between these two
points,"writes Cook, "we could see no land, so we were in great hopes we had at
last found out a passage into the Indian seas, but in order to be better
informed I landed with a party of men, accompanied by Mr. Banks and Dr.
Solander, upon the island which lies at the S.E. point of the passage. Before
and after we anchored we saw a number of people upon this island armed in the
same manner as all others we have seen except one man who had a bow and bundle
of arrows, the first we have seen on this coast." The man who was differently
armed from his companions probably came from one of the islands in Torres
Strait, where the inhabitants use bows and arrows.
Cook was to learn later that he was not the first to discover "a passage into
Indian seas," for in 1606 Torres had "found a great land in 11°30' S. and
sailing on met with a great reef with a channel, many islands and a mainland,"
this, of course, being Torres Strait and the Barrier Reef. In the preface to
Cook's second voyage, however, we find that Cook gives due credit to Torres for
the discovery of the strait.
The natives seen by Cook's party at this island-which was afterwards called
Possession Island-were not ferocious, although the commander writes: "from the
appearance of the people we expected they would have opposed our landing, but as
we approached the shore they all made off and left us in peaceable possession of
as much of the island as served our purpose."
After landing, according to his usual custom, Cook went up on the highest
hill. Of it he says: "It was of no great height, yet no less than twice or
thrice the height of the ship's masthead, but I could see no land between S.W.
and W.S.W. so that I did not doubt there was a passage." This passage was, as we
know, Endeavour Strait, through which Cook passed safely into Torres Strait and
thence made his way to Timor.
In his journal he continues: "Having satisfied myself of this great
probability of a passage through which I intend going with my ship, and
therefore may land no more upon this Eastern coast of New Holland; and on the
West [coast] I can make no new discovery, the honour of which belongs to the
Dutch navigators. But the Eastern from the latitude of 38° S. down to this place
I am confident was never seen or visited by any European before us. And
notwithstanding I had in the name of His Majesty taken possession of several
places upon this coastInow once more hoisted English colours and in the name of
His Majesty King George the III took possession of the whole eastern coast from
the above latitude down to this place by the name of New South Wales,[*]
together with all the bays, harbours, rivers, and islands situated upon the said
coast, after which we fired 3 volleys of small arms which were answered by the
like number from the ship."
[* According to the Admiralty copy of Cook's journal.]
Possession Island (Coolbee), on which Cook planted the flag of Britain, thus
taking possession of the whole of the east coast of Australia from 38° S., is
two and three-quarter miles in length by one and a quarter wide. From the top of
the cairn of stones upon which Cook planted his flagstaff there is a magnificent
view of numberless islands in Torres Strait.
Taking leave of Cook and the "Endeavour"[*] at the entrance of Endeavour
Strait and turning again to the scene of his labours on the east coast we
realize the far-reaching effects of his voyage. In these days it is easy to look
back and survey the bountiful harvest that has sprung up where he first sowed
the seed and to mark how capably his countrymen continued his work of discovery
in that southern field of exploration. It is a more difficult task to grasp how
the settlement of Australia, tardily undertaken by the British authorities, came
successfully to be carried out. Where Cook saw empty bays and harbours fringed
with only trees and scrub now rise cities and towns of recognized and growing
importance, overlooking waters teeming with busy ships. Arid coasts and barren
bushland developed into a fertile soil. A self-supporting colony grew up on the
shores of Port Jackson, whence the English colours were carried to lands and
islands yet more distant, until at last the whole of Australia became a valuable
British possession.
[* The "Endeavour" was sold by the Admiralty for £645 in 1775, and
again became a collier, having been originally built as one. Two different
accounts are given of her end. One says that she was sold to the French and
when England and France were at war, took refuge at Newport, U.S.A., where she
eventually was broken up. The other account states that she never left the
Thames.]
AUSTRALIAN BOTANY--BANKS TO BROWN
The publication of the results of the botany of Cook's first voyage was long
retarded, and illustrations of the Australian plants collected by Banks and
Solander in H.M.S. "Endeavour" in 1770 were not published until 1905. Then a
large work was printed by order of the trustees of the British Museum showing
the original collection, "with determinations in accordance with the
nomenclature at present adopted."
In this work are engravings of the collections of those early voyagers, who
seem to have gathered an extraordinary number of specimens during their stay on
the east coast--the Australian plants alone representing a total of 331. Among
them are many beautiful acacias, banksias, goodenias, correas, xanthorrhaeas,
and orchids, with which we are now familiar. The Eucalyptus alba and
terminalis are included, being the first of their species to be brought
home.
Following the landing of the British, the native shrubs, ferns, and palms
which grew around Sydney soon became known and were more sought after in England
than even those of the Cape. Writing at that period, Labillardière, the French
botanist, states that the old adage semper aliquid novi ex Africa was
forgotten in the more striking novelties brought from Australia. These new
plants greatly puzzled the botanists who first saw them and imagined that they
resembled known species from which they proved to be entirely different. Among
the earliest specimens to arrive home were Casuarina torulosa and C. stricta,
Eucalyptus obliqua and Leptospermum lanigerum--the genus
Eucalyptus being established by L'Heritier, a Frenchman who had visited
England in 1786-87 and studied the Kew collections. He founded the genus on
Eucalyptus obliqua, a species which had been already named
Aromadendrum by Dr. Anderson,[*] who was on board H.M.S. Adventure " in
Tasmania, and the tree was first brought home in that ship in 1774. The earliest
illustrations published of these plants were drawn either from garden or dried
specimens, but a little later Dr. White's book appeared containing drawings of
birds and animals from life and also of flowers in their wild state.
[* The first writer to call attention to Anderson's plants (apart
from Dryander's reference to his MSS.) was Robert Brown. Four genera named by
Anderson were Aromadendrum, Collema, Euphocarpus, Ramsaia; respectively
Eucalyptus, Goodenia, Correa, and Bauera.--Banks.]
This work, as well as the new varieties sent home by Governor Phillip and his
successors, particularly those of Hunter, Paterson, and King, brought the
knowledge of Australian flora and also of the fauna into very great prominence.
Colonel Paterson was a well-known zoologist and botanist and while he was ever
seeking fresh plants to despatch to England, his wife, Elizabeth Paterson,
besides showing the keenest interest in his work, made collections of beautiful
shells gathered when residing in Norfolk Island, Tasmania, and Sydney. In one of
his letters (preserved at Kew) her husband wrote "she has made this her hobby";
and Mrs. Macarthur, wife of Captain John Macarthur, also studied both botany and
astronomy in those early days.
Specimens of plants and papers of seeds were brought to England by the
botanists of the different expeditions which touched at more distant parts of
the continent. Among these collectors were David Nelson, botanist on board the
ill-fated "Bounty" which visited Tasmania in 1789; Labillardière, who
accompanied the French expedition under d'Entrecasteaux in 1791-93, twice
visiting Tasmania; and Archibald Menzies, surgeon of the "Discovery,"
Vancouver's ship, which anchored along with the "Chatham" in King George's Sound
in 1791. In 1795 Cavanilles published descriptions from dried specimens
communicated by Don Luis Née and Tadeo Haeneke, botanists accompanying the
Spanish expedition under Malaspina, who touched at Sydney in 1793. The first
book dealing exclusively with the plants of Australia (here we again quote
Labillardière) was Smith's "Specimens of the Botany of New Holland " published
in 1793, the second being that of Labillardière himself giving a description of
the plants of Tasmania (then known as Van Diemen's Land) and of Western
Australia. Labillardière points out that his own work contains descriptions of
plants which had been already described by Nelson in 1789.
Among Australian flowers the most notable was the waratah whose vivid carmine
colour made it distinguishable upon the most inaccessible mountains. Smith says:
"By common consent it is called by that name by both Europeans and natives," and
he adds: "It is a favourite with the latter on account of the rich honeyed juice
which they sip from its flowers."The illustration of the waratah that appears in
his book was made from a coloured drawing--transmitted from Sydney--compared
with the dried specimens of the flower which had been sent home by Dr. Mite.
Following in the footsteps of Banks, Anderson, Nelson, and Labillardière
there voyaged to the southern continent a botanist the results of whose work
surpassed those of all who had preceded him there, both in regard to the number
of plants despatched home as in novelty of species. This was Robert Brown, who
accompanied Captain Matthew Flinders as botanist on board H.M.S. "Investigator."
Brown not only was with Flinders in his exploration of the more distant coasts,
but also strove to make himself acquainted with the flora of every known part of
New South Wales and Tasmania. The full set of Brown's collection is in the
Natural History Museum at South Kensington; it is perhaps the most important of
all Australian collections. Indefatigable as he was, Brown left the continent
before its great inland territory had been discovered and while there yet
remained a vast region still awaiting the explorer and the botanist.
CHAPTER III
THE COMING OF PHILLIP, FOUNDER OF BRITAIN'S FIRST AUSTRALIAN COLONY
"Its acquisition will compensate England for the loss of North
America."--Francisco Nunez de San Clemente. [Add. MSS. 19, 264, British
Museum, New Holland. Translation from Spanish.]
The story of the founding of the first colony hardly comes within the limits
of our subject, for the explorer's theme is discovery; but some reference to the
work of the first Governors cannot well be omitted from this book, so we will
deal with it as briefly as its importance and its interest will permit.
In January, 1788, Captain Arthur Phillip, hastening before the rest of his
fleet to choose a place for his settlement, reached the shores of New South
Wales. Accompanying him on board H.M. armed tender "Supply" were a few officers
and the most capable engineers and workmen his fleet could command. They had
rounded the southern shores of Tasmania and now followed in Cook's track along
the east coast. Phillip had been set a great task, for the British Government
had ordered him to form a penal settlement at this great distance from home; his
voyage had been very long and hazardous, and he had almost accomplished it. Yet
even on the very threshold of the country that he had been sent to colonize his
courage might well have failed him when he beheld the vast, bare, uncultivated
land which Cook had discovered.
Its unending coast-line trended strangely;[*] sometimes disclosing features
singularly stern and hard, as at Cape Dromedary, Point Upright, and Longnose, at
others softening into low white sandhills and spreading in wide beaches of sand
where an occasional cabbage-palm was visible; while higher up in the background
a line of blue haze veiled the distant horizon. Between the line of blue haze
and the shore were forests of eucalyptus trees whose leaves of olive green, and
the smoke rising from native fires, did not escape the notice of those on board
the "Supply."
[* Phillip saw more of the coast than Hunter did in this voyage,
and he wrote from Sydney in 1790: "From what I saw when I came on the coast
between this harbour [Port Jackson] and South Cape I make no doubt several
good harbours will be found."--"Historical Records of New South Wales," Vol.
I, Part ii, P. 358.]
As from the deck Phillip watched his ship draw nearer in to the shore he must
have realized that at the end of his journey his work was only just beginning.
Beyond wood and water and the native plants seen by the "Endeavour's" people
none could tell what the country might possess. Before him stretched the
Unknown. Behind him in the fleet were, in all, 1,163 persons, the majority of
whom were prisoners. The most urgent problem confronting him, therefore, was how
to supply the immediate needs of so many people in this strange land. This alone
may well have caused him anxiety.
Since the "Endeavour" had traced her lonely course along that distant coast
no ship had visited the south-eastern part of Australia, and the natives had
probably forgotten all about Cook's visit until, early on the morning of January
18, 1788, the "Supply" arrived.
Phillip was greatly disappointed with what he saw of Botany Bay. The green
meadows described by Banks were found to be barren swamps and sterile sands,
doubtless owing to a drought that had befallen the country; and the bay itself,
although extensive, was exposed to the full sweep of the easterly winds, which
blew violently and rolled a heavy sea against the shore.
On entering the bay the "Supply" was compelled to anchor a little distance
from land. Some forty natives fishing near the south shore, being greatly
alarmed at the vessel's appearance, hastily dragged their canoes out of the
water, placed them on their backs, and ran off with them into the bush.
Meanwhile the women saw to the safety of their children and the fishing-tackle.
A few of the more courageous men remained behind and ventured to the water's
edge, brandishing their spears and boomerangs and shouting "Warra, Warra!--Go
away, Go away!" exactly as these people had done eighteen years before when they
had watched the arrival of Captain Cook.
On the north side of the bay only six or seven natives were observed, so it
was at this point that, during the day, Phillip, with Lieutenant H. L. Ball, the
"Supply's" commander, Lieutenant King of the "Sirius," and Lieutenant William
Dawes of the Royal Marines prepared to land. In consequence of the hostility of
a small band of blacks who kept up a continuous attack with stones, Captain
Phillip, to avoid a quarrel, ordered the sailors to row along shore until the
boat came to a spot where he thought he might find water. The search was
unsuccessful, and about sunset the party re-embarked and rowed back to the part
of the beach opposite which the "Supply" had anchored.
Several natives armed with spears and waddies had collected there, and were
gazing intently at the vessel. Phillip beckoned to them and made signs that he
wanted water, but they apparently were lost in amazement. Growing impatient at
last Phillip, handing his musket to the man nearest him, sprang out of the boat,
and walked towards the black men, holding out presents to show his friendly
intentions. Seeing that the Governor frequently waved his hand to his own party
to retire, at last one of the oldest blacks came forward, and, giving his spear
to a younger man, advanced alone. When the natives understood what he wanted
they laid down their arms and led the Governor and his party to a rivulet of
fresh water. These natives seemed quite peaceable; but, on Phillip's return to
the beach, others gathered there who resented the landing, and, in order to
reach the boat, it became necessary to fire off a gun to disperse them.
On the following day, January 19th, three transports arrived and reported
that the hay for the cattle on board was almost exhausted. A party was
consequently sent to cut grass, and Captain Phillip made a tour of the south
side of the bay. In this expedition he again saw the inhabitants, and again
advanced alone to meet them. A green branch was used by both parties as a sign
of friendship, and the blacks threw down their spears to show that they were
amicably disposed. Meanwhile the sailors gave them presents of coloured flannel,
red baize, and beads, with which they adorned themselves. They were excellent
mimics and could imitate the marines to perfection. The sound of the fife
delighted them, but the beating of the drum sent them running into the bush, and
they would not return until it ceased. The headgear of the strangers also
pleased them, and several hats were stolen off their owners' heads, and whenever
an Englishman took off his hat they gave shouts of approval.
"Heavy in clouds came on the day" (January 20th) of Captain Hunter's arrival
in H.M.S. "Sirius" with the remainder of the transports. "To us," wrote Captain
Tench, "it was a great and important day and I hope will mark the
foundation...of an Empire."
The harbour being considered too exposed, the Governor decided to look for a
more convenient landing-place, and set out on January 21st, accompanied by
Hunter and two other officers, in three open boats to examine the coast to the
northward, intending to reach "what Captain Cook had called Broken Bay.[*]
Another opening, marked Port Jackson on his chart, however, first attracted
notice, and Phillip ordered his seamen to explore the inlet within. At first
sight it presented a rather unpromising appearance, having "high, rugged, and
perpendicular cliffs" guarding the entrance on either side.
[* Hunter's Journal.]
In passing between the heads the boats were greeted with wild cries from the
natives on the rocks above. Others were observed in the coves, who, on seeing
the strangers, left the shore and joined those higher up in evident alarm. The
black men followed in the wake of the visitors for some distance, keeping close
to the edge of the cliffs, but the long, heavy swell of the ocean gradually
sank, and the shouts of the natives grew fainter as early in the afternoon the
boats ran into smooth water, and the seamen saw stretching in front of them a
wide and picturesque harbour with bays and coves and rocky points, many being
covered with green foliage down to the water's edge. On the hills inland tall
trees grew, with olive-green leaves resembling those seen upon the coast to the
southward.
Captain Phillip was struck with the beauty of the scene, and when he found a
safe cove possessing both wood and water chose this as the site of his
settlement. The cove was given the name of Sydney in honour of Thomas Townshend,
Lord Sydney, then Home Secretary in Pitt's Government. Two days were spent in
surveying the various coves, and during that time the inhabitants became well
disposed toward the white people, and a chief who went with Phillip to inspect
his camp gave evidence of intelligence and courage. At another point a party of
natives waded into the water to receive the gifts offered them and showed such
manly trustfulness in the British sailors that the Governor afterwards gave the
spot the name of Manly Cove.
On the 23rd Phillip rejoined his people and directions were given to the
fleet to prepare to proceed to Port Jackson. Leaving orders with Hunter to
follow him next day, the Governor on the 25th sailed in the "Supply" back to
this harbour. We find one of the most interesting descriptions of subsequent
events and of the landing at Sydney in the journal of Daniel Southwell,
midshipman in H.M.S. "Sirius." He writes:
About January 24th, to our great surprise, we saw two strange sail in the
offing...a current set them bodily to the southward and, together with a
contrary wind...kept them from coming in until the 26th...They proved the
'Boussole' and 'Astrolabe,' Monsieur de la Perouse."
The French ships had last left Samoa, where at the island of Maouna they had
lost l'Angle the "Astrolabe's" commander, with several other officers and
seamen, and two long boats, in an attack made by the natives while searching for
water. La Pe~rouse had sailed to New South Wales guided by Cook's chart, and had
anchored off Norfolk Island, but could not land on account of the surf.
On first seeing the British ships, on January 24th--when he tried in vain to
speak to them--La Pe~rouse wrote: "We saw this day a sight entirely new to us--a
British fleet lying at anchor, the colours and pendants of the ships...plainly
distinguishable. Europeans are all fellow-countrymen at such a distance from
home, and we felt the greatest impatience to get to an anchorage, but the next
day was so hazy and our ships sailed too badly to overcome both the force of
wind and currents, so we did not get in until the 26th at nine in the
morning."
As soon as the French ships had anchored, the first lieutenant and a
midshipman from H.M.S. "Sirius" went on board the "Boussole" bearing a message
from Captain Hunter, offering in the name of the Governor all the services in
his power, but regretting his inability to furnish provisions, ammunition, or
sails, since his convoy was on the point of departure. Clonard, second in
command, was at once despatched to tender the thanks of the French commodore to
Captain Hunter--who was already apeak with his topsails hoisted--and to intimate
that the wants of the French did not extend beyond wood and water, of which they
should find plenty in the bay. The first lieutenant did not inform La Pe~rouse
whither the convoy was bound, but several launches and small boats were under
sail, and it was conjectured that the distance must indeed be short to render it
unnecessary to hoist them into the ships. An English sailor, less cautious than
the rest, informed the crew of the "Boussole" that they were only bound to Port
Jackson, a few miles away, where ships could anchor "within pistol shot of the
land in water as smooth as a basin."
After thus exchanging greetings with the French, Hunter's fleet left for
Sydney. Mr. Southwell continues: "We weighed for Port Jackson and came to there
the same evening in as snug a place as London River. Nothing could be more
picturesque than the appearance of the country while running up this
extraordinary harbour. The land on all sides...is covered with trees...Towards
the water's edge craggy rocks and wonderful declivities are everywhere to be
seen. A number of small islands are interspersed...some lying in the middle of
the stream...and although extremely rocky are covered with trees, most of which
are evergreen. The white sides of the eminences with very little help from fancy
have at a distance the appearance of grand seats and superb palaces...The
natives too formed a part in the landscape, for some had posted themselves on
the overhanging cliffs and brandished their lances...We ran two leagues...and
came to a place called Sydney Cove."
On this evening, January 26th, the people were assembled at a point where the
"Supply's" passengers who had arrived with the Governor had first landed in the
morning. Here a flagstaff was erected and a Union Jack displayed while the
marines fired volleys, between which the healths of His Majesty and the Royal
Family with success to the new Colony were cordially drunk.
Not all the ships came into Sydney Cove that evening; some had to anchor out
in the stream.[*] On the following day (.January 27th), however, the remainder
of the fleet drew closer inshore and the landing began. The first undertaking
was to clear the ground and erect houses, the framework of which had been
brought from England. Meanwhile the settlers encamped in tents and under the
trees, "in a country resembling the woody parts of a deer park," and, at first,
there was a good deal of confusion mingled with amusement at the novel
experiences. In one place were "a party cutting down wood, another setting up a
forge, a third dragging a load of provisions; here stood an officer pitching his
tent with his troops parading on one side of him and a cook's fire blazing
furiously on the other," every one animated with a desire to do his utmost in
helping to found the settlement.
[* See log-books of the transports.]
On Sunday, February 3rd, Divine Service was held under the shade of a large
tree (it was a very hot day), at which the Rev. Richard Johnson, chaplain to the
new colony, officiated.
The plan of the town," says Southwell, "is laying out, in which I believe Mr.
Dawes is particularly engaged. Whether a name is decided I cannot tell, but have
heard Albion mentioned." This name we know was not finally adopted, and a note
in the MS. says that Sydney was the title decided upon by the Governor for the
town as well as for the cove upon which he had first bestowed it.
In the meantime La Pe~rouse was busily careening his ships at Botany Bay. At
first few visits were exchanged. But there were on board the "Boussole" and
"Astrolabe" some of the first scientists of France, and soon a pleasant
friendship sprang up between the representatives of the two nations. During
their stay the French officers pitched their tents on shore, set up a small
observatory, and put together the frames of two large boats which they had
brought from France. Round their camp a stockade, guarded by two small guns, was
thrown up as a protection against the attacks of the natives.
At this time La Perouse and his officers penned the letters to their friends
in France which were fated to be the last received from those on board the
ships. Perhaps not without a shade of disappointment La Pe~rouse wrote of his
arrival: "We were preceded by the English only five days. To the most
distinguished politeness they have added every other service in their power, and
it was with regret we watched them depart for Port Jackson...Our boats are
already on the stocks; by the end of the month I expect they will be launched.
We are only 10 miles distant from the English by land and consequently have
frequent intercourse with them." One realizes too the note of sadness in another
letter when, possibly with l'Angle's fate in his mind, La Pe~rouse wrote: "I
have arrived here without a sick man on board either of the ships; I have formed
here a new kind of entrenchment with palisades so as to build our boats in
security; this precaution was necessary against the Indians of New Holland
who... threw spears at us after receiving our presents and experiencing our
kindness. My opinion of uncivilized races has long been formed and this voyage
will confirm it. I have been too often in danger not to know them."
Among the first visitors to the " Boussole " and the " Astrolabe" were
Lieutenant King and Lieutenant Dawes, who came round in the cutter from Sydney
on February 1st, in the morning. They dined with the commodore and after
inspecting the scientific collections in the ships were entertained at the camp
on shore. On February 8th another party of naval officers came overland from
Sydney to visit the French. At the same time Clonard went to Port Jackson,
taking with him correspondence to be forwarded to the French Ambassador in
London. Quite a little entente cordiale resulted from these visits, but
soon afterwards a gloom fell over the French encampment when on February 17th
Pere Receveur, one of the chaplains, died from the effects of wounds he had
received at the hands of the Samoans. He was buried close to the observatory at
the foot of a large tree, on which were nailed two pieces of board with an
inscription bearing his name and the date of his death. Two days later Captain
Phillip sent two horses over to the French camp to conduct La Pe~rouse and his
suite to Sydney. This is the only instance mentioned of the French commodore
visiting the Governor, but it is probable that he came to the settlement more
than once.
On March 11th the "Boussole" and the "Astrolabe" weighed anchor and sailed to
the northwards. For forty years no news of them reached Europe; then wreckage
was found at Vanikoro and information afterwards obtained which left no doubt
that both vessels had been lost there and that many of the Frenchmen in
endeavouring to escape from the waves were killed by the natives.
To return to the settlement at Sydney. The Governor's canvas house had been
erected on the east side of the cove: the military had encamped at the head and
most of the prisoners were placed on the west side. As winter approached
barracks for the soldiers were begun. Capital bricks were made at somewhat less
than a league from the camp, and this spot, though rather a scanty village,
"became a pleasant walk." Gardening, farming, and cultivation of the soil
occupied the attention of every one. A wharf for the convenience of landing
stores was constructed; the long-boats were employed in bringing cabbage-trees
from the lower parts of the harbour, where they grew in abundance, and they were
found fit for use in erecting temporary huts, the posts and planks being made of
the pine of the country, the sides and ends fitted with lengths of cabbage trees
plastered with clay, and the roofs generally being thatched with grass.
Presently Sydney took shape. According to a description of it handed down to
us by one who lived there in November, 1788, the town at first did not present
an attractive picture. "We have now two streets," says the writer, "if four rows
of the most miserable huts you can possibly conceive deserve that name. Windows
they have none, as from the Governor's house, now nearly finished, no glass
could be spared, so that lattices of twigs are made by our people to supply
their places. At the extremity of the lines, where since our arrival the dead
are buried, there is a place called the church yard."
The curious contrast between the "miserable huts" constructed by the settlers
and the "superb palaces" of Nature's making seen by Southwell must have lent the
Sydney of those early days a very strange appearance. But only for a time were
the huts seen there. As the population increased the streets were lengthened and
more substantially built houses with pretty gardens supplanted the huts. The new
homes, set amid the exquisite surroundings of harbour scenery on the one side
and the wildernesses of bushland on the other, soon gave to Sydney that charm
which ever since has distinguished it.[*]
[* Half a century later Captain Lort Stokes thus wrote of the
town: "A noble city has sprung up as if by magic which will ever serve as a
monument of English enterprise."--"Stokes' Voyage," Vol. 1, P.
244.]
If at first the town was small, the dimensions of the colony placed under
Phillip's control were enormous. He was instructed to administer territory
defined as including "all the east coast of Australia from Cape York to South
Cape (at the southern extremity of Tasmania), its western boundary being
constituted by the 135th degree of east longitude." The Governor's commission
read publicly when he landed had proclaimed him ruler of this immense region,
embracing as it did nearly half the continent under the name of New South
Wales.
The only portions seen or surveyed up to the time of Phillip's coming were
the places Torres and the Dutch had sighted in the north; the shores of the east
coast traced by Cook, and, in addition to Tasman's discoveries in Tasmania,
Marion Bay, where du Fresne had anchored; Adventure Bay and the islands, and
parts of the Tasmanian coast-line, which had been charted by Furneaux and Cook,
so that there was a great field ripe for discovery. As soon as he had seen the
work of building a town started and, when the land was cleared, the planting of
wheat, barley, and rice which had been brought from Rio and the Cape, Phillip
led his people forth on their path of exploration.
In 1788 he defined the boundaries round a portion of the settlement which was
named the county of Cumberland. We are told that this comprised the portion
lying between the northernmost point of Broken Bay and the southernmost point of
Botany Ray, extending westward to the Lansdowne and Carmarthen Hills, which he
had seen and named during his inland excursions. He also minutely surveyed the
harbours of Botany Bay and Port Jackson, and went several times to Broken Bay in
order to examine its different branches. Charts of all these harbours were sent
home by him to the Admiralty.
It had been arranged that the settlement should never be left without twelve
months' provisions, but in consequence of H.M.S. "Guardian," a 44-gun ship under
the command of Lieutenant Riou, after leaving the Cape on December 23, 1789,
being nearly wrecked on her way to Sydney, the colony was brought to the verge
of starvation. By skilful seamanship Riou took the helpless vessel back to Table
Bay, though he wrote home "the ship is past recovery."[*] Meanwhile in New South
Wales much of the valuable live stock imported had been killed, and not until
the arrival of the "Lady Juliana" on June 3, 1790, were the meagre rations of
the hungry people increased.[**] H.M.S. "Gorgon" had been at once commissioned
for the relief of the colony after the "Guardian's" loss was reported at home,
and on September 21st she reached Port Jackson, convoying a fleet of ten
transports, when Captain Parker, her commander, with Captain King, newly
appointed Governor of Norfolk Island, landed with dispatches for Governor
Phillip.
[* "The Gorgon" took most of her stores from the Cape, leaving
nothing but her anchors.]
[** The arrival of the "Neptune," "Surprise," and "Scarborough" in
1790 relieved the distress.]
The "Gorgon's" voyage added to the knowledge of the East Coast. Some of those
in command of the ships in passing up the coast entered harbours which until
then were quite unknown. Lieutenant Bowen, of the "Atlantic," discovered an
inlet where Cook had imagined that the shore would form a bay and had named its
northern point Longnose.
Bowen took the "Atlantic" into the bay and found that its latitude was 35°15'
S. Its entrance was from a mile to a mile and a half wide: "the southernmost
point an island [Bowen Island] almost connected with the mainland; the north
point pretty high and rising perpendicularly out of the sea."[*] The north point
at first was taken for a long, low island, but afterwards it was ascertained to
be a peninsula. After Bowen had passed through the entrance he found himself in
"a very capacious basin three or four miles wide and five or six miles in
length," with regular soundings; of it he wrote: "The west side and head of the
bay was a white sandy beach, the eastern shore is bold and rocky, and there is a
small shoal in the middle of the entrance." Bowen came upon a native canoe upon
the beach and saw kangaroos, but could not find fresh water. He named this
harbour Jervis Bay in honour of Admiral Sir John Jervis.
[* Hunter's Journal, which quotes Bowen's description of
it.]
Another captain, Matthew Weatherhead, anchored his ship "Matilda" "for two
days inside an island off Tasmania in 42°15' S.and 148½* E." Weatherhead was one
of those energetic seamen who took a delight in making known the geography of
the South Pacific. He appears to have taken the "Matilda" into an inlet "within"
Schouten Island, which, he says, "afforded shelter for five or six ships."
Schouten Island lies off the eastern coast of Tasmania, and is about ten
miles from it. Weatherhead reached this island, which had been discovered by
Tasman in 1642, and seen by Furneaux in 1774, on July 27, 1791. Neither the
Dutch nor the English navigator had stopped to investigate its shores, both
imagining it to be part of a group. Only a narrow strait separates the island
from Freycinet Peninsula to the northward. The French on coming there in 1802
called the strait Géographe Strait, after Baudin's ship, and named the wide
space between Schouten Island and the Tasmanian mainland Fleurieu Bay, now
Oyster Bay, imagining that they were the first to see it but Weatherhead had
brought the "Matilda" to an anchorage there, and on his arrival in Sydney
Captain Tench realizing that he had made a discovery, questioned him concerning
it. In answer to Tench's inquiries[*] Weatherhead likened the bay to Spithead,
and said that he had found plenty of fresh water on shore, and that it was sandy
and in many places full of craggy rocks. The only animals that he saw were three
kangaroos. Although he met with none of the natives, he had seen several huts
like those of Port Jackson, in one of which lay a spear. In honour of his ship
Weatherhead named the place Matilda Bay.
[* Tench's questions and Weatherhead's replies appear in full in
an "Account of Port Jackson," by Captain Watkin Tench, 1793, P.
137.]
Captain Tench, as though afraid lest anyone should doubt the authenticity of
the above discoveries, wrote as follows on the last page of his "Account of Port
Jackson": "The two discoveries of Port Jervis and Matilda Bay may yet be wanting
in the maps of the coast. My account of their geographic situation except
possibly in the exact longitude of the latter...may be safely depended
upon."

MATTHEW WEATHERHEAD'S ORIGINAL CHART OF JERVIS BAY
Weatherhead met with another island off Cape Dromedary, where he thought two
or three ships might easily find shelter. He probably sighted the small bight on
the west coast of Montagu Island (seen by the "Surprise"), where small ships can
take refuge. In the month of the following November he visited Jervis Bay and
examined Bowen's discoveries, of which he made an "Eye Draught " (which we
reproduce), at the same time remarking, " There is exceeding good anchorage
here."[*]
[* "Adm. Sec. In Letters: 2309."]
Alexander Dalrymple made a copy of Weatherhead's sketch, to which he appends
the note, "In the Matilda many natives were seen and canoes on the beach; the
natives were armed with spears but they could have no communication with them."
Dalrymple also shows the mouth of a creek on the west side of the bay and marks
the words "Fresh Water" on the beach south of it. He calls a point yet farther
to the southward Cabbage Tree Point, and on the east side of the bay he gives
the names (from north to south) of Long Point, Long Beach (the "Matilda's"
anchorage), Cawood Point, and Rocky Point, these being the first names given in
Jervis Bay.
No less than five of the "Gorgon's" fleet, including the "Matilda," were
whaling ships. Having seen whales on their way up the Australian coast the
masters obtained Phillips's permission to try for a cargo of oil off there,
hoping to be able to establish a fishery in New South Wales. Captain Melville of
Messrs. Enderbys' ship "Britannia" (followed by the "William and Ann") was the
first to put to sea on October 25th, and killed seven whales on that day,
although he secured only two. Another master killed nine whales and secured
five.
The other captains, Colonel Collins thought, were more desirous of obtaining
a knowledge of the harbours on the coast than of keeping at sea long enough to
be able to determine whether a fishery might be successfully established.
Weatherhead was one of these. He landed during November from a boat in a bay
north of Sydney, "about six miles southward of Port Stephens, where the seine
was hauled and a quantity of fish taken."[*] Captain Nichols brought the
"Salamander" to an anchorage in Port Stephens, "until then not visited by
anyone." He made an eye sketch of the harbour and some of its arms; Salamander
Bay being then placed on the chart.
[* Morna Point is 4½ miles south of Port Stephens, the land
between Morna Point and Newcastle Harbour forming a bay known as Newcastle
Bight.]
Weatherhead left Port Jackson for Peru on December 28th. One dark night his
ship grounded upon Mururoa or Vairaatea (the Osnaburg Island of Carteret). In
1826 Captain Beechey in the "Blossom" saw remains of the vessel, and was able to
identify the shoal as the scene of the "Matilda's" wreck. He named it Matilda
Shoal. Weatherhead and his ship's company reached Tahiti safely in their
boats.
When the Port Jackson natives saw that the white people had taken up a
permanent residence in their land their behaviour changed. For some time they
withdrew from the settlement and appeared to spend their time in fishing and
hunting the kangaroo, called by them "patagorang." Nor would they ever visit
Sydney. Captain Phillips therefore determined to take one of their number
prisoner, thinking that if the man were treated kindly he would induce his
countrymen to place more confidence in Europeans. The first man to be captured
was Arabanoo (named at first Manly after the spot where he was taken). He became
a general favourite but did not live long. Then two sick children were brought
into the hospital for treatment. Later in November, 1789, two other natives were
seized on the north side of the harbour; some of the seamen, meeting them on the
beach, pulled them into the boat and brought them back to the settlement. One
was a chief named Colebe, the other a younger man called Bennilong. Both were
kept at Government House, where they were well treated and given suitable
clothes. Colebe soon afterwards made his escape, carrying off the whole of his
wardrobe. Bennilong was given his liberty in April, 1790, and at first did not
seem inclined to leave the Governor's residence; but one evening he too
disappeared without saying good-bye to his white friends. The fishing boats
subsequently met these two men in the harbour, and afterwards, although they
came armed with either spears or clubs, the natives visited Sydney, and from
that time a better feeling sprang up between the white and black races.
Up to this time the homes of the colonists had been erected within a
comparatively small space round the shores of the cove, but on the arrival of
fresh ships bringing more prisoners and settlers, Phillip turned his attention
to the formation of fresh settlements; one made in 1788 at Parramatta soon
became a place of importance. On November 2nd, with three officers and a party
of marines, the Governor visited the spot and named it Rosehill, after Mr.
George Rose, then Secretary to the Treasury. Gradually small hamlets began to
spring up amid the surrounding inland country.
Fortunately Phillip remained long enough in New South Wales to see his colony
firmly established and to penetrate many parts of the interior. (An account of
these explorations will be found in another Chapter.) But the anxiety and cares
of office at last weakened his health. It is not unlikely that the beginning of
his illness was due to the scanty fare that he had lived upon in the time of
famine, when the Governor, "from a motive which did him immortal honour," gave
up to the public store flour set aside for his own use, since he did not wish
for more at his table than the daily ration issued to each person. His health
continued to decline, and at length he petitioned the Home Government to be
allowed to return to England. Reluctantly leave was granted and he left in the
"Atlantic" on December 11, 1792, amid the regrets of the whole community.
The Founder of the first colony, he will ever be remembered as one who, in
the words of the first Governor-General, laid its foundations "deep and wide."
To have reached the bare shores of Australia safely with his fleet was a triumph
of seamanship, but in a space of five years where all was wilderness to have
moulded and left behind him a British colony fast becoming self-supporting was a
feat that only few other men could have accomplished.
Captain John Hunter was appointed to succeed him.
Between the departure of Captain Phillip and the arrival of Hunter there was
an interval of about two years and nine months, during which period the
settlement was administered successively by the senior officers of the New South
Wales Corps (an irregular force raised at home for special service in the
colony). The first of these, Major Francis Grose, who practically suppressed
civil government after Phillip left, thereby creating a serious set-back to all
the former progress, continued in office until December, 1794, when he resigned
and sailed for England. His successor, as Lieutenant-Governor, was Captain
William Paterson, another officer of this regiment. He is best noted for the
energy he displayed in endeavouring to penetrate the mountains, in forwarding to
Europe specimens of the botany and natural history of the country, and in
protecting the settlers from the raids of the natives when they became
troublesome.
There is also evidence that Major Grose and his brother-officers, although
they have been greatly blamed for the disappointing condition into which the
colony relapsed at this time, were not unmindful of its general needs, as the
following extract from a letter written by Captain Paterson (before he became
Lieutenant-Governor) to a friend[*] at home will show. It is dated Port Jackson,
August 23, 1794: "The 'Britannia,' Captain Raven, is taken up by the officers
for the purpose of bringing horses and cattle from the Cape of Good Hope, and by
her I have sent a box of specimens for you and directed Captain Raven to leave
them in charge of Masson if there be no ship ready to sail while he is there. In
return I hope you will not forget me in the garden seeds and farming seeds such
as clover, horse beans, lucerne, and such as you think will stand the long
voyage. At present I have only a garden of 6 acres...My stock increases fast. I
have a large stock of goats, a cow and a calf, and expect great things by the '
Britannia,' at least I ought for my share is £400."
[* Forsyth.]
Then Paterson goes on to tell us more about the colony: "Everything looks
well and the country not that desert which many of the first settlers supposed.
We are now independent of flour, and in a few years I have little doubt but that
meat will be in plenty. We find, as the country gets cleared, the soil is found
to be better for wine and corn. I think it will exceed the Cape. The
encouragement Major Grose has given settlers of all descriptions has certainly
done wonders. From this place to the new settlement at the Hawkesbury, a man can
walk in eight hours and a good road made all the way, so that we have an
intercourse with that [place], Toongabby and Parramatta in the course of one
day..."
In 1795, when the second Governor, Captain Hunter, arrived and took over the
Colony from Paterson, its internal affairs again began to flourish. The fortunes
of the land improved, forests were cleared and cultivated, and the town showed
signs of progress. New settlers, too, in increasing numbers made their homes at
Parramatta and in the Hawkesbury River district at Portland Head.
The first book ever printed in Australia, "The General Standing Orders of New
South Wales, 1802," states that Sydney and Parramatta or Rosehill were first
divided into two parishes, Sydney being called the Parish of St. Phillip in
honour of Governor Phillip, and Parramatta the Parish of St. John in honour of
Captain John Hunter. Sydney Parish included Petersham, Bulanaming, Concord, and
Liberty Plains (named in 1793), while Parramatta Parish included Banks Town,
Prospect Hill, Toongabby, Seven Hills, Castle Hill, Eastern Farm, Field of Mars
(the name given by Phillip to land granted by him to eight marines), Northern
Boundary, The Ponds, and Kissing Point. Each of these places was of course
little more than a hamlet and only consisted of a few settlers' houses.
The Hawkesbury or St. George's Parish was made the third parish of the new
colony during the rule of Major Grose in 1794. In this region six cattle, some
of the herd first brought to the colony, which had strayed into the bush in
June, 1788, had sought a retreat, and here they or their descendants were
discovered in 1795. The country over which they ranged became known under the
name of the Cowpastures, and it not only formed a happy hunting ground for the
Governors, but also supplied them with the rare luxury of fresh meat. At
Greenhills, its principal town, which was renamed Windsor, Captain John Hunter
spent much of his time. There exists an old sketch of the Cowpastures known as
John Hunter's Chart, made in 1797, on which is shown a lagoon with the name
Black Swan Lake, and at some distance from Mount Taurus, where a bull had been
killed, various inscriptions such as "here a bull was seen" or "beautiful
country." The chart shows that Hunter, as did Phillip before him, went exploring
inland.
Captain Hunter also made expeditions along the coast; in Phillip's time he
had charted Port Jackson and surveyed several rivers; he now initiated fresh
discoveries, and tried to build a ship of 160 tons, which, however, he could not
finish, "but she stood in the frame upwards of two years exposed to the weather
without the smallest decay." He brought to the notice of the Home Government the
native flax, the indigo which grew "spontaneously," and the astringent bark of
trees well adapted for tanning, as well as the abundant iron ore, and, what was
most encouraging, the equally abundant coal.
e left for Europe in September, 1800, and, on taking his departure, placed
the administration in the hands of Captain King, who, when Hunter did not
return, was appointed to succeed him.
Governor King's energy gave an impetus to discovery both on land and sea, and
his efforts to promote British influence extended far beyond the limits of the
colony that he ruled.
remembering the proximity of Tasmania and New Zealand, and, thinking it
unwise to leave the shores of the former island unpeopled and open to the
designs of other nations, he impressed his views upon the Home Government, with
the result that settlers were sent to Tasmania, and a house--possibly the first
ever built in New Zealand--was erected for officials in the Bay of Islands. King
retired in August, 1806.
The new Governor, Captain William Bligh, was a Cornishman like his
predecessor, and had seen service in various parts of the world. He had fought
with distinction at the Dogger Bank in 1781, at Gibraltar in 1782; and, in 1801,
under Lord Nelson, he commanded the "Glatton" at the battle of Copenhagen. In
1787 he had proceeded in the "Bounty" to Tahiti to collect bread-fruit, and was
the victim of the well-known mutiny. His second voyage on the same errand was a
complete success, and to the British Government he seemed to be the very man to
pilot the young settlement into quiet waters. Bligh, however, brave man though
he had proved himself, and superb seaman, as all his voyages will testify, was
not a success as Governor. He soon ruffled the military officials and roused a
commotion which he could not control, with the result that, after placing him
under arrest, they kept him a prisoner within his own house for twelve months.
He returned to England in 1809 and in turn was succeeded by Colonel Paterson,
formerly of the New South Wales Corps, who arrived from Tasmania.
Paterson left the colony in 1810. He was one of the best and the most popular
of the lieutenant-governors, but his kindliness of heart often prevented him
from doing useful work for fear of giving offence. On leaving Port Jackson ten
boats crowded with people followed his pinnace to the ship, "cheering him all
the way." He died during his homeward voyage.
Lachlan Macquarie, who succeeded him as the new Governor, came of an old
Scottish family settled at Ulva. He had seen service in America, in India, and
at Alexandria. In 1807 he was appointed to take command of the 73rd, and in 1809
received orders to proceed to New South Wales with that regiment, being promoted
to the rank of major-general while he held the reins of government.
Macquarie's rule, which extended over a period of twelve years, was of the
greatest importance to the colony. He had been invested by the home authorities
with larger powers than any previous Governor with the exception of Phillip, and
had been given a free hand and adequate means to carry out any measures which he
might deem expedient. Among his reforms perhaps none were more beneficial than
those which affected the port itself.
One of his methods was to impose taxes upon native products brought into the
harbour and landed at Sydney by whalers and traders from different islands in
the Pacific. The harbour had become for many of these vessels nothing more nor
less than a dumping ground; and, owing to the fact that its depth of water
allowed ships to discharge their cargoes in the very heart of the town, wharves
and stages sprang up in all directions round the cove. Macquarie insisted that
these buildings should be constructed with some uniformity, and enforced
regulations for the greater convenience of shipping and commerce. His judicious
development of its trade raised Port Jackson to the position of an important and
thriving seaport. Among other taxes he imposed the following:
On each ton of béche-de-mer, £5; on each ton of sandalwood, pearl shell, or
sperm oil, £2 10s.; on each spar from New Zealand, £1, as well as various duties
upon cedar, kangaroo skins, and seal skins. A flourishing trade had long since
been established in these commodities so that the new taxation considerably
increased the revenue.
His insight also told him that roads and bridges, being the natural ducts of
a new country, should precede rather than follow colonization, and with prison
labour at his command, by means of chain-gangs, he made roads inland wherever it
was possible to do so, making them so thoroughly that many constructed during
his rule are still used. He encouraged the exploration of the interior and
visited each settlement in turn, going by sea to those at a distance, and
endeavouring to effect improvements wherever it was in his power. In consequence
there was not a pioneer in the country who did not in his heart thank the
British Government for placing such a man at the head of the infant colony.
Macquarie's activities were not confined to the outlying country and the
adjacent settlements. In Sydney his energies found scope in all directions. He
found the town composed of small houses or huts scattered about or huddled
together according to no organized plan. Under his hand it began to be a fair
city with well-ordered streets and imposing public buildings. He tried also not
only to rebuild the town but to beautify it by planting gardens and by making
walks and roads wherever they would command views of the shores of Port Jackson.
A lighthouse possessing a revolving light was erected by him at South Head. Mrs.
Macquarie had the drive in the Domain laid out after her own plan, and on the
extreme point overlooking the harbour a sort of natural seat has ever since been
known as "Mrs. Macquarie's Chair." The Governor and his wife bade farewell to
New South Wales in December, 1821.
He died in London two and a half years later, and was buried at his old home
in Scotland.
CHAPTER IV
MARITIME DISCOVERIES. PORT JACKSON
Even before Macquarie's coming to Port Jackson, Sydney was looked upon as an
important British outpost in the southern hemisphere. Thence while the city was
still in its infancy had set out the exploring expeditions of Hunter, Shortland,
Waterhouse, Bass, Flinders, Grant, Murray, Curtoys, and Symons, and later of
King, often with only such equipment as the colony could provide. True
successors to the English sailors of the Elizabethan age, their voyages have
placed some of these seamen among Britain's most noted discoverers. They served
in the naval ships, of which it has been justly said that they helped to build
up the country. Considering the amount of work done, there were not many vessels
employed, and only a close study of the instructions issued to the men who held
commissions in them can throw even a little light on the patience and skill with
which they first explored not only New South Wales but also the adjacent seas
and territories.
the most fascinating story of early Australia is to be found in their
log-books and journals. In these the daily events are recorded, set down at the
time they occurred in a matter-of-fact, sailor-like way--the writer possibly not
realizing that he was entering information which was to complete a link in the
chain of the discovery of a continent. Yet these bare facts seem to unfold a
clearer message for us than anything the most ornate language could convey.
Following the "Endeavour," which, as we have seen, discovered the east coast,
and the "Sirius" and "Supply," which convoyed the first fleet to southern
waters, the ships whose names are perhaps most familiar in connexion with the
early exploration and settlement of Australia are the "Reliance,"
"Investigator," "Buffalo," "Lady Nelson," and Mermaid."
"SIRIUS"
The "Sirius" was a frigate of about 520 tons and mounted twenty guns. Built
as the "Berwick," she was intended for the East India Company; meeting with an
accident by fire she was purchased by the Admiralty and renamed. Captain Hunter
was appointed to command her with the rank of post-captain, but, when the vessel
was assigned to Captain Phillip for his expedition, Hunter for a time was second
in command. On the colonists being landed he resumed his post as captain of the
ship. Unless the story is true that Spanish ringbolts have been found embedded
in the rocks at Sydney, the "Supply" and "Sirius" (with the vessels forming the
fleet) were the first European ships to anchor in Port Jackson. In September,
1788, the "Sirius" was sent to the Cape of Good Hope to obtain a supply of fresh
provisions for the settlement. It was a rather remarkable voyage, for on her way
thither she steered a course southward of New Zealand to Cape Horn, endeavouring
to keep as much as possible in a parallel between the tracks of the "Resolution"
and the "Adventure," and on November 24, 1788, before rounding the Cape, reached
the high latitude Of 57°31' S. The "Sirius" spent twenty-eight days amid the ice
and passed through what Hunter describes as a lane or street of ice-islands
varying in magnitude from the size of a country church to two or three miles in
circumference. Many were half black, apparently with earth, to which they had
adhered; others were tinged a beautiful sea green.
On January 2nd Hunter arrived at Table Bay and came back to Sydney in May,
1789. When the colonists were reduced to starvation during the famine the
"Sirius" received orders to bring a supply of provisions from China and to call
at Norfolk Island on her way. She left Port Jackson on March 6, 1790, and was
destined never to return, for on reaching Norfolk Island on March 19th she
struck a reef of coral rocks while trying to enter Sydney Bay and became a
complete wreck. Over one hundred years later her anchor was recovered and is now
a "Monument" in Macquarie Street, Sydney.
Captain Phillip then hired a Dutch snow called the "Waaksamheyd"
("Vigilance") to bring the officers and men home, and on his arrival in England
Hunter was as usual placed on trial by court martial for the loss of his ship,
but was honourably acquitted. At this time (October, 1793) we find him on board
H.M.S. "Queen Charlotte" under Sir Roger Curtis at Torbay. He sailed to take up
his appointment as Governor of New South Wales on February 15, 1795, in command
of H.M.S. "Reliance," Captain Henry Waterhouse, an officer who had served under
Phillip, holding the rank of second captain. After calling at Teneriffe and Rio,
Hunter arrived at his destination on September 5, 1795.
"SUPPLY"
The "Supply" was a wonderful little ship, and it has been said that she was
"ever the harbinger of glad and welcome tidings."[*] Described as a very firm,
strong little brig, she mounted eight guns and was purchased by the Admiralty to
take the place of the "Grantham" when that ship was proved unseaworthy. While
the complement of the "Sirius" numbered 160 men, that of the "Supply" was but
fifty-five. Under Lieutenant Ball, as tender to the frigate, she helped to
escort the transports and store ships to New South Wales, and seems to have been
especially favoured by Captain Phillip. When eighty leagues eastward of the Cape
of Good Hope, he went on board the "Supply" in order to hurry on in advance and
choose a place for the reception of his fleet. To her, therefore, fell the
honour of being the first ship to follow the "Endeavour" along the east coast.
It has been told how she had entered the harbour of Port Jackson a day before
the other vessels in 1788. While stationed there she had a very useful career
and made many voyages to Norfolk Island. She sailed from Sydney with the
"Sirius" in March, 1790. In the following month Captain Phillip dispatched the
brig on an important mission to Batavia. A little later she too was ordered home
for refitting.
[* Tench.]
The " Supply " returned to England by way of Cape Horn, possibly in the track
which the "Sirius " had previously taken, for on December 27, 1791, she also
reached the high latitude Of 57°32' S. On April 20, 1792, she sighted the
Lizard.
"RELIANCE"
Through the services of her officers and men the "Reliance" played a very
distinguished part in promoting settlement and colonization. After Captain
Hunter had landed at Sydney under a salute of fifteen guns from the ship on
Saturday, September 12, 1795, his patent was read constituting him Governor.
Waterhouse succeeded Hunter as her captain. He was Bass's brother-in-law and
proved a very energetic officer. The colonists owe him a debt of gratitude, for
in 1797, when the "Reliance" in company with another "Supply" under Captain Kent
called at the Cape, Waterhouse and Kent purchased the valuable merino sheep of
the late Colonel Gordon and brought them at their own expense to Sydney.
Waterhouse Island in Tasmania (which possesses a good anchorage) was named by
Flinders in his honour, and when homeward bound in the "Reliance" in 1800 he
himself discovered, far to the southward of New Zealand, an island which he
named Penantipodes Island.
In the year 1797 Lieutenant Shortland (who as a midshipman had served
formerly under Phillip), while in pursuit of some runaways, came upon an unknown
river north of Port Jackson, to which he gave the name of Hunter, and found a
harbour where in the surrounding cliffs a stratum of coal was found. At this
spot the settlement, afterwards known as Newcastle, was formed.
Yet among those serving in the "Reliance" at this time who worked for and
guided the destinies of the new land the figures of George Bass and Matthew
Flinders stand out in greatest prominence. Bass was the ship's surgeon, with a
passion for discovery; Flinders a midshipman who two years previously had
completed a difficult voyage in the "Providence" under Captain Bligh, and who
therefore was admirably fitted for the work of exploration. These two men,
sometimes apart, sometimes in company, sailed from Port Jackson again and again
to glean knowledge of the coast-lines of both Australia and Tasmania. Within a
month after their arrival at Sydney they had fitted up a boat only eight feet in
length, called the "Tom Thumb," that had been brought out in the "Reliance," in
which they traced George's River for a distance of twenty miles beyond Captain
Hunter's Government Survey. In March, 1796, they again put to sea in a
Sydney-built boat (another "Tom Thumb") and gained a minute knowledge of the
coast south of Botany Bay. In returning home they entered Port Hacking, and on
the outward voyage while trying to obtain water their boat was thrown ashore
above Wollongong. From here, coasting Five Islands, they ran southward as far as
the lagoon near Port Kembla, now called Tom Thumb's Lagoon, where they landed
and met with many adventures, falling in with natives unseen before. Their
muskets being rusty and their powder wet, Flinders kept the somewhat hostile
natives amused by clipping their beards while Bass dried the powder and laid in
a store of water. "This part," the former says, "was called Alowrie by the
natives." It is known to us as Illawarra.
On December, 1797, while Flinders was absent in Norfolk Island, Bass took
another voyage. In a whaleboat manned with six volunteers--bluejackets from the
"Reliance"--he visited Shoalhaven, Jervis Bay, and Twofold Bay, penetrating as
far as 40° S. Continuing his southerly course after passing Cape Howe, he found
the coast of the mainland became more and more exposed and was convinced that a
strait existed between Australia and Tasmania. He touched at Wilson's Promontory
and Western Port, and in the belief that the former land had been seen by
Furneaux called it Furneaux Land, though Captain Hunter afterwards changed the
name to Wilson's Promontory "in honour of Mr. Wilson of London."
Bass's voyage extended along 300 miles of coast, and he drew a rough outline
of the land seen by him, which unfortunately has been lost. The original chart
was entitled "An eye sketch in a whale-boat by Dr. Bass." A part of this was
embodied in a chart which Governor King drew to show the track of the
"Harbinger" through Bass Strait. King observes that the land in Bass's chart
appears to be erroneously laid down to the extent of "twelve miles in latitude
and forty miles in longitude." He has preserved to us, nevertheless, an
important relic of this intrepid seaman, and Matthew Flinders, who supplied King
with details of it, has also made use of it in his atlas, slightly altering the
position of the land, to reconcile it with its true situation upon the map.

PART OF AN EYE SKETCH IN A WHALE BOAT DRAWN BY GOVERNOR KING FROM THE
ORIGINAL MADE BY BASS
To complete his explorations Bass set out with Flinders in 1798 in a small
schooner of twenty-five tons called the "Norfolk." Touching first at Twofold Bay
they surveyed it and running south came to the Kent Group and Furneaux Islands,
the southeasternmost of a chain of islands between Wilson's Promontory and
Tasmania, some of which Flinders had surveyed in the colonial schooner "Francis"
which had been sent to the relief of the shipwrecked crew of the "Sydney Cove,"
an East Indiaman lost in 1797 on her way from Bengal to Sydney. On October 19th
Flinders anchored with Bass at Preservation Island, the scene of the wreck. From
there they went to Cape Barren Island, where they met with many strange animals,
including the wombat, brush wallaby, and the echidna.
On November 1st they anchored for a tide at the largest of the Swan Isles,
two small islands which Flinders had also seen before and had so named because a
European sailor had assured him that he had met with vast numbers of black swans
breeding there. They could not find a single swan, but observed a sooty petrel
and several wild geese. "The swans therefore really turned out to be geese. This
bird was either a Brent or Barnacle Goose with a small short head, long slender
neck and plumage for the most part of a dove colour with black spots. It had a
deep, hoarse, clanging and though a short, yet an inflected voice. Its flesh was
excellent."[*]
[* Cereopsis Novae Hollandiae or Cape Barren Goose, which
is only found in Australian waters.]
From there Bass and Flinders coasted along the northern shores of Tasmania,
and on November 3rd discovered Port Dalrymple and the mouth of the Tamar. Bass
had an opportunity of observing the country situated within an angle formed by
two chains of mountains. They examined the river up to a point where its waters
had become half salt and half fresh. The grey kangaroo abounded in the open
forest and the brushes were tenanted by the smaller black wallaby. The plumage
of the parrots was noticed to be more sombre than those of the mother colony and
many water-birds frequented the arms and coves. Numbers of black swans were seen
swimming in the river. Bass calculated that there were at one spot 300 within
the space of a quarter of a mile square and he heard the dying song of some
scores; that song, so celebrated by the old poets, "exactly resembled the
creaking of a rusty alehouse sign on a windy day."
Driven back by gales to the Furneaux Group on November 21st, they left again
on December 3rd to continue their Tasmanian explorations, and on the 6th
discovered Circular Head--the eastern point of a peninsula projecting northward
from the coast. On the 9th, south of Three Hummock Island (the north-eastern
island of the Hunter Group), a long swell was perceived to come from the
south-west, and Flinders hailed it as "the completion of our long-wished-for
discovery of a passage into the Southern Indian Ocean."
On the day on which they saw Cape Grim (the north-west cape of Tasmania) the
land was observed to be washed by ocean breakers, which proved, what had been
already surmised, that a navigable channel separated Australia and Tasmania,
this channel of course being Bass Strait. Following the west coast of Tasmania
downwards, they passed South-West Cape and then South Cape, and turning into the
opening of Storm Bay on December 14th weathered Cape Frederick Henry (of
Furneaux). They examined the openings in the neighbourhood of Tasman's Peninsula
named the Isle of Caves and Norfolk Bay, and on December 21st reached the
entrance of the Derwent. Taking with them Captain Hayes's chart of the river,
they explored it, and anchored in Herdsman's Cove above the spot named Risdon by
Hayes. They beat down the river on January 2nd and turning into D'Entrecasteaux
Channel entered Port Pruen, where they saw signs of a ship's visit and a tree
felled near a run of water. Flinders thought that either D'Entrecasteaux or
Hayes had been there, and as a matter of fact Hayes had watered his ships in
this cove in May, 1793. After surveying Furneaux's Frederick Henry Bay, Flinders
and Bass on January 3, 1799, sailed out of Storm Bay, and, resuming their
exploration of the east coast, completely circumnavigated Tasmania.
Later in the year Flinders was sent in the "Norfolk" to chart the east coast
of the continent to the northward of Port Jackson, when he discovered Shoal Bay
and after surveying Moreton Bay, anchored in Hervey Bay. The immediate result of
his voyages was his summons to England, where he received from the Admiralty a
commission to return and undertake a complete survey of the coasts of Australia.
He was now promoted to the rank of commander and appointed to the sloop
"Investigator" (formerly the "Xenophon") with a complement of eighty-eight men
as well as a landscape painter, a natural history painter, and a botanist, who
was Robert Brown. Among the officers there were eight midshipmen, one of whom
was John Franklin.[*]
[* Afterwards Sir John Franklin, the Arctic explorer.]
"INVESTIGATOR"
On July 18, 1801, the "Investigator" sailed from Spithead, reaching Cape
Leeuwin, Western Australia, and on December 7th entering King George's Sound,
which ten years before (in 1791) Vancouver had visited and named. Here Flinders
careened his ship. Leaving on January 5, 1802, he voyaged along the southern
coast of the continent. From Fowler Bay he proceeded, sometimes on land and
sometimes by water, exploring and naming Spencer Gulf and St. Vincent Gulf.[*]
He also named Mt. Lofty and disproved the existence of the supposed strait
dividing Australia from north to south. He thus annexed the whole of South
Australia for his country. In Encounter Bay he met the "Géographe" under Baudin,
and after bidding the Frenchman adieu turned his attention to a fine harbour
near the western entrance of Bass Strait. He was unaware that Port Phillip had
already been discovered by Murray in the "Lady Nelson," and placed the name of
his own ship on a pile of stones at the top of Station Peak. He reached Port
Jackson on May 9th.
["He fell in with two immense gulfs ... he went as high as he
could go in his ship and traced round the heads of these deep gulfs in his
boats."--King's letter to Nepean.]
On July 22, 1802, the "Investigator" left Sydney to survey the eastern and
northern coasts. In this voyage Flinders filled in many blank spaces on Cook's
chart of the east coast, and after entering Torres Strait sailed along the whole
of the Gulf of Carpentaria. On an island in the gulf called Sweers Island he
again left the name of his ship and the date 1803. He stopped at Cape Wessel. to
effect some repairs and returned to Sydney by way of the west coast, calling at
Timor and reaching Port Jackson on June 9, 1803.
Here the "Investigator's" timbers were found to be unsound and she was
condemned. As Flinders wished to finish his survey and then lay his charts
before the Admiralty, he applied to Governor King for a ship to go home in, and
went as a passenger in H.M.S. "Porpoise," of which Robert Fowler, late first
lieutenant of the "Investigator," was placed in command. The "Porpoise" sailed
from Port Jackson on August 10, 1803, in company with the "Cato" of London and
the "Bridgewater," a vessel belonging to the East India Company. The ships had
been a week at sea when, 200 miles from the land, the "Porpoise, followed by
"Cato,'' struck on the Great Barrier Reef and was disabled--the "Bridgewater"
just clearing the danger.
The Great Barrier Reef.--The chain of coral reefs which are known
collectively as the Great Barrier Reef--the scene of many a brave seaman's
misfortune--extends for nearly one thousand miles from Swain Reef at their
south-eastern extremity to Bligh's Anchor Cay, their northernmost termination.
They hedge the east coast of Australia from 22°23' S. to as far as Cape
Direction in 12°51' S., whence they trend northwards to Anchor Cay, "forming a
coralline structure unequalled in the world for their vast extent and formidable
obstructions to navigation,"[*] where ship after ship has been dashed to pieces
or left her timbers to whiten and rot, if not to serve as a beacon to warn the
passing mariner.
[* "Admiralty Sailing Directions."]
The reefs vary in breadth from a few hundred yards to several miles, and in
distance from the shore, from twelve to seventy miles. The swell of the Pacific
dashes against the outer edge of the Barrier with terrific force while the inner
waters remain perfectly tranquil. Beneath them, however, lurk innumerable
dangers in the shape of banks, shoals, and sunken rocks.
Although so dangerous, the reefs are surpassingly beautiful. The water is
very clear. The coral, of vivid tints of green, purple, brown, and white, forms
many a fairy bower beneath the waves, and takes every conceivable shape and
pattern. "We had wheatsheaves, mushrooms, and staghorns," writes Flinders, and
other forms in a variety of colours, "equalling in beauty and excelling in
grandeur the parterre of the curious florist." Besides the live coral growing as
it were out of solid rock, there is dead coral in masses of dull
white--composing the stone of the reefs or rising above the water in the form of
blackened lumps; to these last Flinders gave the name of Negroheads. In the
pools within the edges of the reefs are sponges, sea eggs, and sea cucumber
(trepang).
Ships making their way up the east coast to Torres Strait have the choice of
two routes. One leads through Capricorn or Curtis Channel along the Australian
coast and is called the Inner Route, for the ships pass within the reefs. The
other route leads outside the barrier--to the eastward of the reefs--and is
therefore known as the Outer Route.
Since the days of Cook the names of different ships have been bestowed upon
these reefs and shoals, either because the ships discovered them or else met
with mishaps there. Among those thus distinguished in very early times were the
Endeavour Reef (1770), Bellona Reefs (1793), Cato Bank (1803), Frederick Reef
(1812), Kangaroo Shoals (1815), Alert Reef (1817), Minerva Shoal (1818), and San
Antonio Reef (1821).
There are deep openings through the barrier by which ships can either pass
out to the Pacific or from the sea to the coast. Cook discovered the first
passage, while others have been found in comparatively recent times, as, for
example, the Flora Pass, reported by the schooner "Flora" as lately as 1883.
These passages, like the reefs, often take the names of the ships or the men who
threaded them; thus the earliest discovered were Cook's Passage (1770), Bligh
Boat Entrance (1789), Flinders' Passage (1802), Hibernia Entrance (1814),
Indefatigable Entrance (1815), Nimrod Entrance (1822), and many others. In 1798
Captain Swain in the ship "Eliza" discovered the southernmost reef[*] in 22°23'
S. 152°37' E., although the brig "Deptford," Captain Campbell, in the previous
year had met with coral reefs--within the barrier--farther northward, in
latitude 21½° S. The "Eliza" ran for twenty leagues among the reefs before she
cleared them and had soundings from ten to sixty fathoms. Swain at last found a
passage out of them "in 22° S. by a long and tortuous channel." The reef now
bears his name; the pass has none (possibly because it was no pass but a series
of openings which were too sinuous to be considered safe), but he appears to
have been one of the first to navigate a ship through the reefs off the
Australian coast after Cook and Bligh had threaded their way through Cook's
Passage, Providential Channel, and Bligh Boat Entrance.
[* Lady Elliot Islet is the most southern coral islet.]
During the "Investigator's" voyage Flinders gained his first knowledge of the
extent and dangers of the Barrier Reef. In company with the "Lady Nelson" he had
steered up the east coast in Cook's track, marking its features and picking his
way through the shoals that line the shore. To the north-north-west of Breaksea
Spit he found a vast mass of reefs twenty leagues from the coast. When the ships
reached Watering or Middle Island (one of the Percy Group) on October 6th
another long range of reefs were seen which Flinders says were not the identical
reefs seen by Campbell in the "Deptford" although they formed part of the same
barrier. He discovered too that these reefs instead of being two degrees from
the nearest island as laid down by Campbell were only twenty miles from it.
Continuing their voyage to the Cumberland Isles the ships throughout had broken
water and reefs on both sides of them. On October 18th the "Lady Nelson," which
had lost her main keel and damaged her trunk, was sent back to Sydney, and
Flinders proceeded on his voyage alone.
Immediately after he parted from the "Lady Nelson" he again became entangled
in reefs extending from east to north-north-west. He bore along "their inner
side," tracing the edge of the reefs until on October 21st he found a passage
out to sea. This is situated forty miles from Cape Upstart, in 18°45' S. 148°10'
E., E., and since has borne the name of Flinders' Passage. Its inner or southern
entrance, through which he passed, was seven and a half miles broad; the passage
ran nearly north and south and was twenty-one miles long. He then continued his
course to Torres Strait, discovering the reefs known as Eastern Fields, and,
turning again towards the Main Barrier, entered Torres Strait by Pandora's
Entrance which had been discovered by Captain Edwards in 1791. Flinders says
that from the time he entered the reefs, he had to steer 500 miles before lie
found a way out; and in giving directions to seamen who might follow his track
through the opening, he writes: "The commander who proposes to make this
experiment must not be one who throws his ship's head round in a hurry"; and
again he says: "If he does not feel his nerves strong enough to thread the
needle (as it is called) among the reefs while he directs the steerage from the
masthead I would strongly recommend him not to approach this part of New South
Wales" (as the coast was then called).
In 1803 when Flinders left Port Jackson for the last time in H.M.S.
"Porpoise" in company with the "Cato" and "Bridgewater" he sailed by the Outer
Route to Torres Strait. Wreck Reef, or rather the chain of reefs, on which the
"Porpoise" and the "Cato" were wrecked on the morning of August 17th (when the
"Bridgewater" left them to their fate), being on the eastern side of the barrier
and about eighteen and a half miles in length and from a quarter to a mile and a
half in breadth. It consists of patches of coral reef separated by navigable
channels and is the home of seabirds and turtle. The eastern end of it, named,
Flinders says, "not improperly," Bird Islet, in 22°10' S., 155°28' E. was found
to be covered with coarse grass and shrubs. After striking, the "Porpoise took a
fearful heel over on her larboard beam ends," fortunately falling towards the
reef so that her people were saved. The "Cato," under Captain Park, struck about
two cables length away and "fell on her broadside," when her masts instantly
disappeared. Several of the seamen were bruised against the coral rocks and
three young lads were drowned. One of the poor boys who had been shipwrecked no
less than three or four times before--in every voyage that he had made--clung to
a spar beside his captain and through the night bewailed that he "was the
persecuted Jonas who carried misfortune wherever he went." He lost his hold
among the breakers, was swept away and seen no more.[*]
[* Flinders, "Terra Australis."]
The shipwrecked men gained the dry sand in the centre of the reef and
prepared their encampment. While searching for firewood that night they
discovered a ship's spar and a piece of timber, rotten and worm-eaten, which, in
the opinion of the master of the "Porpoise," was part of the sternpost of a ship
of about 400 tons. Flinders imagined (as all sailors were then wont to do when
seeing wreckage) that it had belonged to one of La Pe~rouse's ships, but in more
recent years timber as well as coins and other relics from a Spanish galleon
have been recovered within the reefs, where they had been sheltered and
preserved, perhaps embedded in some sandy shallow, so that it is not improbable
that both sternpost and spar came from a long-lost Spanish vessel.
Flinders immediately set to work to build a cutter out of the timbers of the
"Porpoise." This, when finished, he named the "Hope," and embarking in her with
Captain Park and twelve others he sailed on August 26th to Port Jackson. For the
relief of the shipwrecked crews Governor King dispatched the ship "Rolla" and
two schooners, the "Cumberland" and the "Francis." Leaving Port Jackson at
daylight on September 21st Flinders reached Wreck Reef eight days later, when
the crews were taken on board.
During his absence some of his old officers of the " Investigator--among
whom, besides Robert Fowler, were Samuel Flinders and John
Franklin--superintended the building of a small decked ship, which was named the
"Resource." On being manned she was placed in charge of Denis Lacy, formerly
master's mate of the "Investigator."
The officers and men of the "Porpoise" and "Cato" were distributed among the
four ships. Those who preferred to return to Port Jackson went back there in the
"Francis" and the "Resource";[*] others, including Lieutenants Fowler and Samuel
Flinders and John Franklin, sailed in the " Rolla" to China, where they obtained
passages to Europe. Matthew Flinders, with ten officers and seamen, embarked in
the "Cumberland" (the little schooner of twenty-nine tons lent by Governor
King), intending to proceed to England, but on his homeward voyage he was forced
to call at Mauritius. There he was detained by the French and kept a prisoner
for seven years.
[* As the "Resource" sailed to Sydney George Curtoys, commander of
the "LadyNelson" spoke her off Broken Bay and records this fact in his log. In
1804, with the "Lady Nelson" and the colonial sloop "James," she conveyed
settlers from Sydney to Newcastle when Governor King raised that place to the
dignity of a settlement. While voyaging home the "James" was wrecked and went
to pieces off Broken Bay. Her crew was picked up and conveyed to Fort Jackson
by the "Resource."]
Flinders has left a clear account of his explorations in his work "Terra
Australis," and his surveys were so accurate that his maps form the basis of all
modern Australian charts. In later days it is interesting to look upon the first
bare outline of New Holland in one of his journals, from which the northern
coasts are missing (it being simply a rough draft made when he was a midshipman,
in 1792, with Captain Bligh in H.M.S. "Providence," before he had seen the
southern continent), and then to turn to the charts accompanying "Terra
Australis," in which every part of it appears delineated with so much care,
skill, and detail that each map is a revelation in draftsmanship. One cannot
help wondering whether Flinders when he drew that first roughly formed picture
of the country was even then attracted to it and had resolved to fill in its
outline; but, be this so or not, his name and the discovery of its coasts are
inseparably connected.[*]
[* He died in London in 1810, and was buried in the churchyard of
St. James's, Hampstead Road.]
"BUFFALO"
The "Buffalo" is well known on account of her many pioneering voyages; and
writers of the early history of the colonies seem to regard her with a feeling
akin to affection. Her figurehead was the effigy of a kangaroo, which may have
endeared her to the white people as it did long ago to the black natives, of
whom it is said that they were never tired of gazing at her as she lay at anchor
in Sydney Harbour.
Turning over the pages of one of her log-books[*] we find her first in her
own country at her moorings at Deptford (alongside the "Discovery"), under the
command of Captain Ravenn,[**] and one of the earliest entries runs: "On
Saturday, December 17, 1797, received on board fifty-one cauldrons of coal for
the use of the colony of New South Wales"--an order evidently given before the
discovery of coal in Australia had become known in England. It was a debt that
was afterwards to be liberally repaid, for by Governor Hunter's orders a few
years later coal was carried from Newcastle to Table Bay for the use of British
ships calling at the Cape. The log-book continues: "On March 3rd the 'Buffalo'
made sail to Long Reach," where, on March 24th, "the settlers to be rated as
supernumeraries for victuals" came on board. On May 1st at 7 a.m. two boats were
sent to Tilbury Fort for gunpowder for the ship's store, and by the 10th the
ship had again weighed anchor and dropped down to the Nore towards H.M.S.
"Zealand," the flagship of Admiral Lutwidge. On the 12th she received fifteen
men from this ship to make up her complement. From the Nore the "Buffalo" sailed
to the Downs, and on June 8th came to in St. Helen's Roads, where Captain Raven
went on board H.M.S. "Arethusa" and received his final instructions before
sailing. On June 9, 1798, in company of eight sail bound for India, the
"Buffalo" stood out to sea.
[* Captain's Log, 1797.]
[** William Raven, formerly of the "Britannia."]
On her outward voyage she called at Rio de Janeiro and again at Table Bay,
losing before she reached the former port one of the ship's company, for another
entry states on Friday, August 3rd: "Missed Edward Parkinson, boy, who could not
be found and imagined was washed out of the head and drowned as nobody could
give an account of him since six o'clock." Boys were shipped to sea at an early
age in those days and sometimes were unfitted for the hazardous life. The age of
poor Edward Parkinson is not recorded, but Peter Lainz, the little cabin boy
from St. Malo who sailed with Bougainville, was only twelve years old. He also
disappeared one evening after the ship had passed Cape Verde in the same
mysterious manner and was never heard of again.
At Table Bay the "Buffalo" took on board (not inappropriately) a number of
South African cattle for the colony. On January 4, 1799, she again made sail
with the fleet for India, but parted from it at daylight on the following
morning and continued her voyage alone. Many of the cattle died before she
reached Sydney on May 3rd, although Captain Raven put into Adventure Bay and
Jervis Bay to obtain a supply of fresh grass and water for them. At both places
Tasmanian and Jervis Bay natives were seen and were "very friendly," coming down
to the beach "among the people," so that in these harbours, as well as at
Sydney, the ship's figure-head may have made a good impression.
From this time onward the "Buffalo" was always busy. She played the part of
flagship or transport, discovery or store ship with equal success. In 1800
Governor Hunter came back to England in her. On once more returning to the
southern station she carried out important explorations, and in 1803 made
surveys in New Caledonia. Captain Kent then visited the country, and on this
voyage Port St. Vincent was named in honour of Admiral Sir John Jervis.[*] Among
the ship's most notable missions under Captain Kent was that of the founding of
Launceston, Tasmania, in 1804. (Hobart had been established already.) In
accordance with his instructions the LieutenantGovernor, Colonel William
Paterson, sailed from Sydney on Sunday, October 14th, embarking in the " Buffalo
" under a salute of eleven guns from the fort. Forty-six officers and men of the
New South Wales Corps accompanied the Governor, while the " Lady Nelson " also
carried troops and settlers to the proposed settlement. Two smaller vessels, the
" Francis " and the `Integrity," at the same time received orders to sail with
Captain Kent to Port Dalrymple.
[* Kent named three islands inside the coral reef at Port St.
Vincent, King, Paterson, and Robbins Islands--after the Governor of New South
Wales, Colonel Paterson, and Mr. Robbins respectively--and the little island
where the "Buffalo" anchored on her arrival was called Skull
Island.]
fter leaving the harbour the ships, sailing southwards, met with a heavy
gale, "which almost blew them back to Port Jackson." A few hours before the gale
began the "Francis" had parted company with the "Buffalo," but the "Lady Nelson"
and the "Integrity" remained with the flagship until the end of the storm, when
the latter lost sight of both vessels. Owing to the tempestuous weather, out of
the four ships which had left Sydney the "Buffalo" alone reached Port Dalrymple
and moored on November 3rd four miles within the port. Next day she dragged her
anchors, and touched, in spite of every exertion, but fortunately on a flat
rock. By a spirited effort on the part of the crew she was floated undamaged,
her anchor was slipped, and she was taken three miles higher up the harbour,
where during the day the "Integrity" joined her.
On November 11th possession was taken of the northern shores of Tasmania on
behalf of Great Britain with the usual formalities. The Lieutenant-Governor was
saluted with eleven guns by the "Buffalo" on landing, and a royal salute was
fired when the Union Jack was hoisted. On the 13th the general disembarkation
took place at Outer Cove, where the Lieutenant-Governor had fixed his camp amid
surroundings that seemed to all delightful, the waters of the harbour extending
inland for many miles without interruption.
party of Tasmanian natives (now an extinct race) were encountered next day by
some of the new colonists. At the sight of the white men they gave a furious
shout and followed the British back to their camp. Here overtures were made by
Colonel Paterson and they grew more conciliatory. Now and then, however, an
indignant clamour, beginning with a single individual, ran rapidly through their
lines, accompanied by excited gesticulations, the natives "biting their arms as
a token of vengeance." In the end the blacks, we are told, "withdrew peaceably
but were positive in forbidding us to follow them."
On November 21st two small ships--the "Lady Nelson" and the "Francis"--with
torn sails and splintered masts, having sought refuge first at Twofold Bay and
afterwards among the Furneaux Group, joined the "Buffalo" and "Integrity" at
Port Dalrymple. On their coming into the port those on board saw with
satisfaction the British colours flying on shore, and on the 23rd the bricks
which had been sent from Sydney in the "Lady Nelson" to build houses for the
settlers were safely landed. The "Buffalo" took her departure on November 29th,
but before she left her crew erected two beacons to facilitate the safe entry of
ships into port.
One of the last voyages of the "Buffalo" was made in 1807, when she sailed
for England after her long stay in the colony. Among her passengers on this
voyage were Mr. Marsden, senior chaplain, and his wife, and Mrs. King, wife of
Governor King. After leaving Sydney a heavy gale threatened and it was proposed
that the passengers should quit the "Buffalo," since she was an old ship and
thought unseaworthy, and go on board a stauncher vessel which bore her company.
The Governor's wife, however, was an invalid and could not be moved, and Mrs.
Marsden would not leave her, so that the chaplain refused the offer and remained
behind. Throughout the night the gale blew strongly, and the creaking timbers of
the "Buffalo" groaned beneath the violent storm in a manner which gave those on
board much concern. When morning dawned all eyes sought for their companion
ship. But in vain. She was nowhere to be seen, nor was she ever heard of
again.
"LADY NELSON"
In entering upon her eventful colonial career the "Lady Nelson" did that
which alone ought to immortalize her--she was the first ship that ever sailed
parallel to the entire southern coast-line of Australia.[*] A brig of sixty
tons, she was built at Deptford in 1799, and differed from other exploring
vessels in having a centre-board keel. She was chosen for exploration because
her three sliding centre-boards enabled her draught to be lessened in shallow
waters, for when these were up she drew no more than six feet.
[* "Early History of Victoria."--F. P. Labillière.]
In 1799, when the news reached London that the French were fitting out an
expedition to survey unknown portions of Australia, the authorities were quickly
stirred to renewed activity and decided to send the "Lady Nelson" to Sydney. She
was hauled from Deadman's Dock into the river on January 13, 1800, with her full
complement of men and stores on board, having been placed under the command of
Lieutenant James Grant, and stocked with provisions for fifteen men for a period
of nine months and enough water for three months. Before sailing her armament
was increased to six carriage guns.
In January 16th she sailed to Gravesend. So small did she look when she left
the Thames that the sailors in the ships in the river ridiculed her appearance
and ironically christened her "His Majesty's Tinderbox." Grant called at
Portsmouth, where he had orders to leave port with H.M.S. "Anson," Captain
Durham, who (the Powers being at war) was to convoy a fleet of East Indiamen
then on the point of sailing; and with them was H.M.S. "Porpoise," bound for New
South Wales. This ship was formerly the "Infanta Amelia," prize to the "Argo,"
and was lying at Portsmouth when H.M.S. "Porpoise," after twelve months delay,
was proved unsound. The Admiralty purchased the Spanish vessel, rechristened her
the "Porpoise," and she sailed in company with the convoy on March 18, 1800. In
New South Wales she proved an extremely useful ship, and with the "Buffalo"
carried out the orders of Governor King, having been placed under his authority.
She met her end, as has been told, on Wreck Reef.
After leaving Portsmouth the "Lady Nelson" did not long remain with the
convoy. From the first she was scarcely able to keep pace with the big ships
which bore her company, and when the commodore gave orders for her to be taken
in tow by the "Brunswick" those on board had an unpleasant experience. On March
23rd Grant therefore determined to let go the hawser and to proceed on his
voyage to Sydney alone. The brig eventually reached her destination in spite of
all predictions to the contrary, and early on December 16th sighted the
flagstaff at Port Jackson, which port she entered at six in the evening. Grant's
coming gave much satisfaction to the colony, and when Governor King heard the
description of his passage through Bass Strait, and of how the "Lady Nelson" had
passed deep indentations on the north side of it and had seen beautifully wooded
shores and rocky islands lying off them, he was greatly pleased. He did not,
however, conceal his disappointment that Grant had been unable to penetrate a
deep bay called by him Governor King's Bay (a name which afterwards was changed
to Port Phillip).

CHART OF BASS STRAIT DRAWN BY GOVERNOR KING, WHICH EMBODIES NOT ONLY PARTS
OF BASS'S EYE SKETCH, GRANT'S CHART AND FLINDERS' MS. CHART, BUT ALSO A SKETCH
GIVEN TO THE GOVERNOR BY MR. REID, MASTER OF THE "MARTHA"
Governor King had been instructed to have the whole of the south coast
properly charted, and he determined to send Grant back again in the "Lady
Nelson" to survey it. Grant on returning to Port Phillip for the second time
failed to explore the bay; and John Murray, formerly master's mate in the
"Porpoise," was appointed to succeed him as commander of the "Lady Nelson,"
after he had voluntarily sent in his resignation. Murray's appointment is dated
September 3, 1801, and in January, 1802, he entered Port Phillip. He saw it
first on January 5th, but, a high sea preventing him, he could not then effect
an entrance and steered away to King Island, the eastern shores of which he
surveyed, returning on January 30th to the south coast. He then sent Mr. Bowen
and five men in the "Lady Nelson's" launch to examine Port Phillip. A "most
noble sheet of water" was found. On the return of the launch Murray himself
sailed into this newly discovered port in the "Lady Nelson," and after surveying
and charting it for the Governor's satisfaction he hoisted the Union Jack. The
chart of Port Phillip then drawn by Murray may be termed the most important he
ever made, and it was one of those sent home to the Admiralty by Governor King.
It shows the track of the "Lady Nelson's" boat when the brig entered Port
Phillip for the first time in 1802. As the chart Grant had made of its outer
shores was very imperfect, the Governor himself drew an eye-sketch of Grant's
explorations, which was sent home also.
Governor King made other drawings of Bass Strait. We have 111 already
referred to the one which combines Bass's eye-sketch with the "Harbinger's"
track through the Strait. The "Harbinger," under Captain Black, came from the
Cape and arrived at Sydney on January 11, 1801. She had closely followed in
Grant's track and was therefore the second ship to sail through Bass Strait. On
his way Black met with an island which he named King Island in honour of the
Governor.[*] Another eye-sketch drawn by King shows the track of the ship
"Margaret" from England commanded by Captain Buyers, this being the third ship
to sail through Bass Strait. She came to an anchorage in Port Jackson on
February 7, 1801.
[* Mr. Raid of the "Martha," however, had first seen it in 1799,
and had informed Governor Hunter of his discovery.]
There is yet another very early MS. chart of Bass Strait in existence and one
which is historic. It is described as "A chart of Bass's Straits generally laid
down from one published by Alexander Dalrymple, Esq., with additions made during
the 'Arniston's' passage through them in 1804." Louis de Freycinet acknowledged
that the drawing of Port Phillip in his chart of "Terre Napoleon" was taken from
it. Originally copied from one of Dalrymple's charts during the "Arniston's"
voyage, it was found among the papers of the "Fame" when that vessel was
captured by the French ship "Piemontoise" in 1806. The "Arniston" was one of a
fleet of ships that left England in 1804 under convoy of H.M.S. "Athenien,"
whose commander had received orders from the Admiralty "to proceed with the East
India ships under his convoy through Bass Strait to China passing east of New
Holland and Port Phillip."[*] Interesting as it is (the original being still
preserved in the dossier of Baudin's journal in Paris), the chart has no
geographical importance, for the shores which profess to be those of Port
Phillip bear no resemblance to the outlines of that harbour.
We now return to the story of the "Lady Nelson," a vessel which occupies a
niche in the history of Victoria somewhat similar to that filled by the
"Endeavour" in the annals of New South Wales; but whereas Cook's ship discovered
the east coast and then left it, the "Lady Nelson," after charting the bare
coast-line of Victoria, returned again and again to explore its inlets and to
examine its shores. Indeed, while she was stationed at Sydney there was scarcely
a dependency of the mother colony that was not more or less indebted to her
whether for proclaiming it a British possession, or for bringing it settlers and
food, or for providing it with a means of defence against the natives.
[* Sailing orders, Dalrymple to Marsden; May 25, 1804.]
The "Lady Nelson" went northward as well as southward, and in company with
the "Investigator," in 1802, examined the Queensland shore as far as the
Cumberland Islands. In making her way up the coast, unfortunately, she sustained
damage which rendered her unfit for service. At the time the ships were within
the Great Barrier Reef; and Flinders states that he kept the brig with him until
a passage clear of reefs could be found to enable her to get out to sea.
Flinders bade Murray farewell among the Cumberland Islands when Flinders wrote:
"The zeal he had shown...increased my regret at parting from our little
consort."
After separating from the "Investigator," Murray, in order to spare the "Lady
Nelson's" sole remaining anchor, gave orders for two swivel guns crossed to be
lashed together, and, when winds were light and waters smooth, he anchored with
the swivels until the carpenter was able to make an iron-bark anchor to take
their place. He made his way carefully down the coast and reached Sydney Cove on
November 22nd.
In 1803 Lieutenant George Curtoys succeeded Murray in command of the "Lady
Nelson." He had been master's mate of the "Glatton," and before coming to
Australia had spent a long term of confinement in a French prison during the war
with that country; his health, therefore, was in a rather delicate state when he
took charge of the vessel. He was highly recommended to Governor King by Captain
James Colnett. On June 10, 1803, in company with the "Albion," whaler, Captain
Bunker, the "Lady Nelson" sailed from Sydney with the first British colonists
under Lieutenant Bowen for Risdon Cove, on the Derwent River, and then was laid
the foundation of the present city of Hobart. This was the first attempt made by
the British to colonize Tasmania, Risdon being chosen as the site by Bowen
because there the best stream of water ran into the cove and also because there
were extensive valleys behind it.
When the colonists had disembarked at Risdon Cove and building operations had
been started, at which time we are told that the "Lady Nelson" "lent the colony
a bell and half a barrel of gunpowder," the brig returned to Port Jackson. Here
Lieutenant Curtoys was again taken ill and was removed to the naval hospital. As
his health did not improve, he shortly afterwards resigned his command and
retired from the Royal Navy.[*]
[* Later we find him in charge of a brig which traded between Java
and Timor, and his death was reported at Timor in 1813.]
The "Lady Nelson's" new commander was James Symons, who also had served as
midshipman in the "Glatton" under Captain Colnett and afterwards on board the
"Buffalo." Symons was ordered by Governor King to proceed to Port Phillip to
assist in moving the settlement (which had been formed at that place in 1803
under Colonel Collins) to Tasmania. The "Lady Nelson" left Sydney on November
28, 1803; but, being delayed by bad weather first at the Kent Group and again at
Port Dalrymple, she did not reach her destination until January 21, 1804. On the
25th, having received the Port Phillip settlers on board, in company with the
"Ocean" she made sail out of Port Phillip Bay. After a passage of ten days she
reached Risdon. Colonel Collins thought this site ineligible and gave orders for
the Risdon settlement to be moved to Sullivan's Cove, where he had encamped, the
name Hobart, which had been given by Lieutenant Bowen to Risdon, being retained
for the new site. Later in the year 1804 the "Lady Nelson" under Symons visited
New Zealand and Norfolk Island, and helped to remove white settlers to
Launceston when the Norfolk Island settlement was broken up.
In 1806 Symons received instructions from the Governor of New South Wales to
convey a New Zealand chief named Tippahee or Tepahi, and his sons from Sydney
back to his own dominions. Tippahee's residence was at the Bay of Islands, and
there he was safely landed. Before lie entered the harbour Mr. Symons carried
out a little expedition of exploration and examined a deep bay in his boat,
ascending a river which he seems to have surveyed. Among the many valuable
charts made by the commanders of the "Lady Nelson," however, there are not any
of New Zealand, and possibly Symons did not actually chart the places which he
has described.
From this time. forward occasional voyages were made by the "Lady Nelson,"
and we read of the different governors and officials taking excursions in her to
the various settlements. No detailed record of these exists, so it is not always
easy to trace the doings of the ship. For some years she lay dismantled in
Sydney Harbour, and during that period is described as "nothing more nor less
than a coal hulk." Before this she had been handed over by the Admiralty to the
colonial authorities.
In 1819, by an order of Governor Macquarie, she was thoroughly overhauled and
accompanied the "Mermaid" as far as Port Macquarie; later, in 1824, when in
charge of Captain Johns, she was chosen to convey settlers to Melville Island,
where the British Government had determined to form a settlement. With H.M.S.
"Tamar" (Captain James Gordon Bremer) and the "Countess of Harcourt," a ship
chartered to assist him, the "Lady Nelson," heavily laden with passengers,
soldiers, and stores sailed on August 24, 1824.
She then left Port Jackson for the last time. On September 20th the vessels
reached Port Essington, and an entry in Captain Bremer's log states that on that
day possession was taken of the north coast of New Holland on behalf of the
British Government. On November 10th Captain Bremer took leave of the settlement
and handed it over into the charge of Captain Maurice Barlow, who had been
appointed commandant. The "Lady Nelson" remained behind to act as guard-ship,
and she was also required to bring needed stores and supplies from the islands
to the northward for the use of the settlers.
resh provisions being scarce, in February, 1823, Captain Barlow dispatched
her to the islands for a cargo of buffaloes. When she left Port Cockburn her
commander was warned to avoid an island called Baba, which was infested with
pirates who bore the reputation of being very daring and very cruel. It is
supposed that the warning was unheeded. for there the little vessel met her end.
When Lieutenant Kolff, of the Dutch Navy, visited Baba in July, 1825, the
inhabitants were shy and deserted the village called Tepa on his landing. He was
convinced that a crime had been committed, and learned that some months
previously "an English brig manned by about a dozen Europeans had anchored off
Aluta on the S.E. coast and had engaged in barter with natives, who were on
board in great numbers and who, taking the opportunity of five men being on
shore...attacked and killed the people in the brig as well as those in the boat
when they returned." The last news of the "Lady Nelson" was brought to Sydney
some time afterwards by a ship called the "Faith," whose captain reported that
her hull with her name painted on the stern was still to be seen at Baba
Island.
Besides the ships whose work has been described above, there passed in and
out of Sydney Heads small colonial vessels including the "Norfolk," "Francis,"
"Cumberland," "Edwin," "Integrity," and "Resource," whose histories are
interwoven not only with that of Port Jackson but with those of Tasmania and New
Zealand as well. There were also the East India Company ships bringing more
prisoners to the colony. And these too played their part in discovery. On their
way across the Pacific their commanders frequently took unknown routes and drew
many a useful chart of islands and channels seen, which Dalrymple afterwards
published. The charts show the tracks of their ships, and the accounts of their
voyages may be read in the first Sydney newspapers where many a thrilling tale
of adventure is narrated, rivalling those old stories of the Spanish main
recorded in the more ancient chronicles of the sea.
All these voyages created keen interest at Sydney, especially when on the
arrival of the ships their commanders brought the news of the finding of a new
harbour, coast, or river, with information that the land was fertile and its
waters a good sealing ground. An impetus was given to shipping and colonization
and fresh ventures were quickly planned, men sometimes setting out of the port
in the frailest craft with the poorest equipment, to investigate the desirable
regions. These ventures "helped largely to develop the spirit of daring, the
strong love of liberty which pushed forward the rough aggressive pioneer work
and cleared the way for British dominion in neighbouring lands."[*]
[* Old Sydney Traders by Maorilander.]
To Port Jackson, too, there came traders from all countries, including the
weather-beaten South Sea whalers laden with furs from the sealing grounds on the
New Zealand coasts. Sealers also came from the islands in Bass Strait, where,
save when an occasional King's ship put in an appearance, they were monarchs of
both sea and land. Others there were from islands farther to the northward the
stories of whose voyages are memorable not only as tales of adventure but for
the gorgeous setting in which the scenes were laid amid islands, atolls, and
coral reefs.
What a history of their first coming those old skippers might have written!
The majority were venturesome, hard-grained British seamen (with an occasional
American), who ably assisted the naval officers who traversed long ranges of
sea-line, for we find the old maps marked with their tracks and the names of the
ships[*] in which they sailed from Sydney to Tahiti or Fiji, where they
occasionally sought a cargo of sandal-wood. From Port Jackson some sailed
southward to Hobart, and from Hobart they penetrated farther southward to
Macquarie Island,[*] dispersing when whales and seals in Australian waters
became scarce, to come together again in later years at New South Shetland.
[* Such names as the "Britannia," "Nautilus," "Eliza," "Hibernia,"
"Favourite," and "Active."]
[** Among these the "Emerald," "Perseverance," "Lynx," "King
George," and "Betsy."]
Some of the names of the captains of these ships will live in the history of
exploration, as, for example, Matthew Weatherhead, whose story has been told;
Raven of the "Britannia" and Bampton of the "Endeavour," both pioneers of Dusky
Bay; Ebor Bunker, who, in the "Albion," carried some of the first British
settlers to Tasmania; Alexander Rhodes of the "Alexander," beloved of the
Maoris; Frederick Hasselburg of the "Perseverance," who discovered Macquarie and
Campbell Islands and later lost his life by drowning among those islands; George
Powell of the "Dove,"[*] whose chart will ever be remembered in the history of
the Antarctic; and Richard Siddons of the "Lynx," perhaps the greatest traveller
of them all, who gave so much information concerning early Fiji, and delighted
to hold mission services on board his ship in Sydney Harbour, and whom we find
later in company with William Smith and Robert Fildes in Blythe Bay, New South
Shetland.
[* Formerly of the "Queen Charlotte," and afterwards of the
"Rambler," who was killed by natives of Vavu.]
There were also those foreign discovery ships whose commanders followed La
Pe~rouse into southern waters and entered Port Jackson to seek refuge for their
weather-beaten vessels and to gain knowledge of the southern continent, of which
they have given us accounts in their journals. They saw Sydney while the town
was in its infancy, when canoes of the blacks floated on the waters of the
harbour, and trees and foliage still covered the surrounding points and
indentations, so that their writings are valuable records. The most notable
expeditions being those of Alexandro Malaspina, who brought the Spanish ships
"Descubierta" and "Atrevida," in 1793; of Baudin, commander of the French ships
the "Géographe" and the "Naturaliste," in 1802; also of De Freycinet, who came
in the "Uranie " in 1819; Commodore Bellingshausen a year later with the Russian
ships "Vostok" and "Mirni," a navigator celebrated for his long voyages in the
Antarctic; Duperrey in the "Coquille" in 1821; Bougainville the younger with the
ships "Thetis" and "Esperance" in the same year; and Durnont d'Urville in the
"Astrolabe," who came in search of La Pe~rouse's expedition (1826-28) and at
last found the island where the ships were lost.
CHAPTER V
THE EXPLORATION OF THE INTERIOR
GOVERNOR PHILLIP AS EXPLORER
The first Governor of New South Wales had soon discovered that although he
had been set over so vast a territory there was only a narrow strip within his
grasp. Within a few miles of Sydney there ran a range of mountains rising in
places almost perpendicularly to a height of from 4,000 to 5,000 feet. Curving
above Broken Bay on the north and below Port Jackson on the south they formed a
barrier which completely hemmed in the settlement and cut off all advance into
the interior.
They were part of the Great Dividing Range which runs with scarcely a break
down the eastern coast of the continent from Cape York, the most northerly
point, to Wilson's Promontory at the southern extremity. Because of their cobalt
colouring Captain Phillip gave them the name of the Blue Mountains. No more apt
designation could have been found, for the atmosphere at the distance from which
they are viewed imparts to them a wonderful blueness. For twenty-five years men
tried in vain to pass over this barrier. In the days of Phillip and under the
rule of his immediate successors expeditions, all of which ended in failure,
left Sydney and endeavoured to penetrate different parts of the mountains.
Perhaps because in those early years no one was able to cross them they held a
strange and powerful fascination for the colonists. Rocks, precipices, and thick
eucalyptus scrub might repel the would-be discoverer, but when days bright with
sunshine revealed sparkling waterfalls and smooth green patches among the ranges
the desire to explore became irresistible. Many set out never to return; often a
settler in search of grass or a pioneer starting without proper equipment
vanished for ever in the wilderness of forest; but his disappearance caused
little surprise and the country to the westward remained unseen and unknown.
The first actual attempt to reach the mountains was made by Phillip himself
shortly after his arrival. On April 15, he departed with provisions for four
days attended by officers and a party of marines. In three days they passed the
swamps and marshes on the north side of the harbour and found themselves in
rocky barren country covered with bush, which made their advance difficult and
often impossible. Fifteen miles from the coast Phillip obtained a fine view of
the mountains, and he called the northernmost the Carmarthen Hills, the
southernmost the Lansdowne Hills, and one between Richmond Hill.
At that time he felt sure that there must be a river near at hand, and on the
22nd started again, taking with him some small boats in which to cross any
stream that might be found. For four days, by keeping close to a small creek,
his party pushed their way through difficult country, and on the fifth day
reached a small eminence whence for the first time a full view of the Carmarthen
and Lansdowne Hills was obtained. Phillip named this eminence, which was his
farthest point, Belle Vue Hill. Lack of provisions then compelled him to return
to Sydney, having fully proved the difficulties of penetrating into the
interior, for the whole distance covered by his party had not exceeded thirty
miles.
nother expedition was planned by him to examine the country westward from
Belle Vue, but it had to be deferred. In June, 1789, however, whilst surveying
Broken Bay, which he had seen first in March, 1788, Governor Phillip discovered
a large river whose water at a short distance from the entrance was found to be
fresh and good. He named it the Hawkesbury, and on June 26, 1789, Captain Watkin
Tench and Mr. Arndell, assistant surgeon, reached the banks of another river to
which the name of Nepean was afterwards given by the Governor.
Captain Tench describes the latter river as being nearly as broad as the
Thames at Putney. "From its banks," wrote Phillip in February, 1790, "I hope to
reach the mountains, which has been attempted by a party who crossed the river,
but after the first day's journey they met with a constant succession of deep
ravines...so that they returned, not having been able to proceed more than
fifteen miles in five days; when they turned back they supposed themselves to be
twelve miles from the foot of the mountains."[*]
[* Governor Phillip's letter, 1790, " Historical Records of New
South Wales."]
The party Phillip refers to as having "crossed the river" was one under the
command of Lieutenant William Dawes, who in December, 1789, got across the
Nepean and unsuccessfully tried to reach the ranges. Captain Tench says that "at
the time they turned back they were further inland than any other Persons
ever were before or since--being 54 miles in a direct line from the
coast--when on the summit of Mount Twiss--a hill so named by them which bounded
their peregrination."[*]
[* "A Complete Account of the Settlement, etc.," Watkin Tench,
1793.]
On August, 1790, Dawes and Tench together started on another expedition; they
took with them a strong escort and spent a week penetrating in a
south-south-west direction "bounding their course at a remarkable hill," to
which, says Tench, from its conical shape we gave the name of Pyramid Hill."
Some short excursions were undertaken towards the close of 1790, and a little
later, on April 11, 1791, Governor Phillip himself again led an exploring
expedition inland. Dawes, Tench, and Collins accompanied him, and included in
the party, which numbered nineteen persons, were two Sydney natives.
Every man except the Governor carried his own knapsack, which contained
provisions for ten days...and every man was garbed to drag through morasses,
tear through thickets, ford rivers, and scale rocks." The advance was first
directed to the north-west, and two days after leaving Rosehill they reached the
river. Tench says they then "turned to the right hand" and traversed a creek,
until on the 13th they came to a little hill, from which they had a good view to
the westward. The Governor called this eminence "Tench's Prospect Hill." On the
14th, on leaving it, they retraced their steps to the river, passing over
country which "excepting for the last half mile was a continued bed of stones in
some places so thick that they looked like a pavement."
Although Captain Phillip cannot be said to have actually made any further
discoveries, a good deal of general information concerning the inland parts was
obtained in this expedition. He ascertained that the Nepean was an affluent of
the Hawkesbury; he observed the windings of the various branches of the river
and the places that ought to be avoided by future explorers, and he also had
opportunities for noting the customs of the inland natives; one old man gave an
exhibition of his powers in climbing trees which is described as being "the
finest display the Governor had ever seen."
CAPTAIN PATERSON AND OTHERS
On September, 1793, Captain Paterson, of the New South Wales Corps, led an
expedition into the mountains. He was accompanied by Captain Johnston, Mr.
Palmer, Mr. Laing, and a strong escort of soldiers, among whom were some
Highlanders, who, like Paterson, were accustomed to Scottish hills. Boats were
sent round to Broken Bay, whence they entered the Hawkesbury and on the fourth
day reached Richmond Hill. At this place in 1789 Governor Phillip's progress up
the river had been obstructed by a waterfall which his boats could not pass
over. Paterson overcame the difficulty by leaving his large boats and proceeding
with two that were smaller and lighter. He found the river carried him westward
and that the navigation was very intricate; a new river, however, which ran
through a huge ravine, was discovered and named the Grose (in honour of Major
Grose), and up this Paterson took his boats.

MAP COMMUNICATED BY COLONEL PATERSON (IT SHOWS BASS'S ROUTE INTOTHE INTERIOR
FROM MOUNT HUNTER)
The termination of his journey was at a large rocky precipice which received
the name of Canopy Cliff. This cliff faced the junction of the Grose with a
smaller stream, the Grose flowing east and the stream west of the cliff. A high
peak of land seen by Paterson at this point was named Harrington Peak. From
Canopy Cliff to its junction with the Nepean he found the Grose River to descend
in falls and rapids about 400 feet. But the party could not continue their
exploration, since one of the boats had loosened a plank and the other had been
driven upon a stump, so Paterson gave up further progress, "leaving the western
mountains to be the object of future discovery." He reached Sydney on September
22nd, and in writing an account of his expedition to a friend at home he says:
"From an accident that happened to our boats, we returned after a journey of ten
days and got about 10 miles nearer them (the mountains) than former
travellers."[*]
[* Unpublished letter to Forsyth. In this letter Paterson speaks
of a second expedition he was about to take into the mountains.]
"Captain Paterson," remarks Collins, who relates the story of his journey,[*]
"was amply rewarded for his labour and disappointment by discovering several new
plants." He saw but few natives, and believed that their arms and legs were
longer than those of the coast natives." As they live by climbing trees ... it
might perhaps have been occasioned by the custom of hanging by their arms and
resting their feet at the utmost stretch of the body..."
[* Collins's " Account of Colony of New South Wales."]
Following Paterson's exploit, attempts were unsuccessfully made by different
people, among whom were Hacking, Dr. Bass, and Wilson, to find a pass through
the ranges. Wilson's terminal point "may be regarded as being on the hillside
overlooking the Wollondilly at Bullio."[*] Perhaps the most difficult task was
that undertaken by Bass, of whom it is said that he used iron boat-hooks on his
hands and feet in climbing down the steep sides of the rocks, and, when stopped
by ravines, caused himself to be lowered by ropes, but, after fifteen days of
danger and fatigue, he returned to Sydney without achieving success. On an old
map at the British Museum communicated by Colonel Paterson is an inscription
which perhaps tells best what Bass actually did. It runs as follows: "In this
direction[*] Mr. Bass's party went 28 miles from Mount Hunter--beyond that the
mountains were impassable; soil good for the first 18 miles."
[* R. H. Cambage: " journal of the R.A.H.Soc."]
[** i.e. westerly from Mount Hunter.]
ENSIGN BARRALLIER
Ensign Barrallier, New South Wales Corps, was the next to make a notable
expedition into the ranges. In 1802, in order to obtain leave of absence for him
from his military duties so that he might lead the expedition, Governor King
claimed him as his aide-de-camp, and sent him "on a fictitious embassy to the
king of the mountains."
Barrallier first made a preliminary excursion and crossed the Nepean with a
party of four men to find out the best route by which to proceed later. He
journeyed "as far as about 45 miles," where he chose a site for a depo~t at a
place called Nattai by natives and discovered the river still known as the
Nattai River, then he returned to Sydney, and having received his final orders
from the Governor went first to Parramatta and then to Prospect. Taking his
departure from the latter place with a party which consisted of nine persons
besides himself and a native from Cowpastures named Gogy, he crossed the Nepean
on November 6, 1802, at a ford called Binheny by the natives. Here it was found
impossible for the bullock wagon laden with provisions to get over the river and
the bullocks had to be unyoked, and finally the provisions, as well as the wagon
itself, had to be carried by the men to the opposite bank. Once all were safely
across Barrallier directed his route to the south-west[*] and spent the night
near a swamp called by the natives Baraggel. Here some rare shells were
discovered. Next day, November 7th, he passed Menangle. In the lagoon were fish
and eels of enormous size, more of which were found at Carabeely, another
stretch of water and swamp, and near the latter the men killed a kangaroo.
Barrallier here came upon a herd of wild cattle and counted 162 "peaceably
pasturing.'' They were descendants of the six landed by Phillip in 1788 which
through their keeper's neglect had strayed into the bush more than fourteen
years before to live and multiply in freedom.
[* After passing Menangle his route took him near the spot where
Picton now stands.]
On catching sight of the party the beasts advanced as if to attack the men
and had to be driven off. A second herd and a third were seen, also the body of
a bull "of a reddish colour with white spots" lying in a ditch, below a terrace
conjectured by Barrallier to have been "the battle-field of the bulls." Two
natives were met on this day where the party halted for dinner. One of these, a
"mountaineer" whose name they made out to be Bungin,[*] was very shy and wore a
curious mantle of skins of various animals sewn together. The other, whose name
was Wooglemai--i.e. in native language, one-eyed--was friendly and knew Gogy the
native from the Cowpastures and apparently had visited Parramatta and Prospect.
The explorers, continuing their journey at 5.30 p.m., encamped for the night
near a running stream on territory belonging to the mountaineer, who in return
for kindness shown him built a hut for Barrallier and next day attached himself
to the party. Two miles from this place "a chain of mountains was visible, the
direction of which," says Barrallier, "is inclined towards the south."
[* Barrallier writes: "Bungin was an inhabitant of the south, and
had left the Canambaigle tribe because they wanted to kill him."--Diary of
Ensign F. Barrallier, "Historical Records of New South Wales,"Vol.
V.]
Continuing their advance on November 8th the men crossed several creeks and
late in the afternoon, after traversing a plain, entered rocky country and
reached a valley where they spent the night. At this time they were four miles
from Nattai. On the morning of the 9th the silence was broken by the sound of
"cooees" in the distance, and shortly afterwards two mountain natives were
brought into the camp. One had never seen white people before and was terrified
when Barrallier offered to shake hands with him.
On the same morning the exploring party, advancing again over rough country,
"all covered with stones and brush," arrived at Nattai,[*] and Barrallier
decided, before starting on his journey into the mountains, to send for a fresh
supply of provisions. Three men, accompanied by the native Wooglemai, went back
next morning with the wagon to the settlement. They did not return until the
19th, and during the interval Barrallier with some of his party carried out some
short explorations. He followed a creek[**] which ran between mountains to the
Nattai River, the terminus of his first journey. Tracing the river on its left
bank, he came on November 11th to the junction of the two rivers, the Nattai and
the Wollondilly.
[* About six miles north-west of the town of
Thirlmere.]
[** Shea's Creek, Barrallier's route to R. Cambage--" Journal,
R.A.H.Soc., Vol. III.]
In the evening he arrived at a valley where he camped for the night.[*] In
describing his journey on the 12th he says he passed through another chain of
isolated mountains which might be nearly four miles in length and sighted on the
right "the great range, the height of which is more and more considerable ", the
soil of the country everywhere was very rich; "the hills...covered with
kangaroos, which resembled a flock of goats grazing peaceably."[**] He sowed
pumpkin seeds and an apricot stone at the foot of a mountain, where he also
noticed prints of natives. Observing a mountain which "though high[***] appeared
easy of access he climbed it, but could not gain its summit, being stopped by a
barrier of rocks-projecting outwards-in the shape of vaults." Proceeding onwards
he met with some strange natives, from whom it was difficult to elicit any
information regarding the mountains and who afterwards showed signs of hostility
to some of the party. On the 13th he returned to the depo~t.
[* Burragorang Valley.]
[** "Historical Records of New South Wales," Vol. V.]
[*** Identified by R. Cambage. ("Journal R.A.H.Soc.," Vol. III) as
South Peak, and "is an outline...in the extreme southern end of a small
chain...known as the Peaks...the sandstone rocks of which the peaks are
composed extend back north-westerly, forming the southern watershed of the
Tonalli and are called the Tonalli Range."]
After the return of the wagon Barrallier started on a longer and more
important journey into the ranges. On November 22nd he left the dep~ot, taking
with him five of his strongest men and some natives with sufficient provisions
for one month. He travelled through a precipitous gorge (S. 75° W.) by a route
which he had already pursued, crossed the Nattai River near which he had "cut
some huts," and on November 23rd arrived at the junction of the two rivers,
Nattai and Wollondilly. Here he met several strange natives, including a chief
named Goondel. who conversed with some of the members of his party.
On November 24th, having passed at noon the mountain he had tried to climb on
the occasion of his first journey,[*] and having crossed difficult bushy
country, "going over hills which stood in all directions," he arrived about four
o'clock at the top of a hill where he was able to observe that "the direction of
the chain of mountains extended itself north-westwardly to a distance which I
estimated to be 30 miles and which turned abruptly at right angles.[**] It
formed a barrier nearly N. and S. which it was necessary to climb over."
[* South Peak, according to R. Cambage]
[** Tonalli Range.]
At seven o'clock he reached the summit of another hill,[*] whence he descried
three openings: "the first on the right towards N. 59°30' W.; the one in front
of me and which appeared very large was west from me; and the third S. 35°0' W."
The sight of these openings filled the party with encouragement.[**] Their
spirits had flagged in the course of the day, for the range of mountains which
they had passed over was covered with big granite stones which had made the
route very laborious.
[* Alum Hill, according to R. Cambage.]
[** The three openings by Barrallier have been identified as
follows: The northern opening just south of Mount Colong and at the head of a
creek which flows into Colony Creek. The centre one due west of Woolshed, the
third that through which the Bindook track passes. (See R.
Cambage.)]
The trees were blue gum and iron-bark of medium height; and a number of
rivulets were passed. The total. distance covered by Barrallier up to this date
is given as 100 1/2 miles. Naturally the distance measured "as the crow
flies"[*] was not nearly so great; but Barrallier had to take a zigzag course
over the mountains, and his men were sometimes compelled to travel two or three
times as far as they might have gone had a direct route been possible.
[* Barrallier's route is shown upon Oxley's maps and also upon a
map of New South Wales by J. Cross, 1827, corrected to 1829 and dedicated to
J. Oxley.]
On November 25th at noon Barrallier reached a large stream, where he halted
for dinner. Its current was very rapid and its bed was filled with granite
stones. He crossed some hills, their direction being north and south, climbed a
very steep height, and at six o clock discovered a cave large enough to contain
twenty men, and he says he was then only half a mile from "the western passage."
He sent two men "to discover it" and "to ascend the mountain at the N. of this
Passage," while he waited in the cave for them, On their return they "related
that after passing the range that was in front of us we would enter an immense
plain, that from the height where they were standing on the mountain they had
caught sight of only a few hills standing here and there in this plain, and that
the country in front of them had the appearance of a meadow." Much elated with
the news, Barrallier continued his march at nightfall and arrived at the mouth
of a passage half a mile wide, formed by a perpendicular cut in the mountains
(the profiles of which were of immense height), and he now writes with certainty
about his discovery of a pass through them:
"I sent men to try and find the trees...for the building of our huts. This
work was completed...and after every one was sheltered, they congratulated
themselves with having succeeded in accomplishing the passage of the Blue
Mountains without accident."
On November 26th, at daybreak, Barrallier set out, taking two men with him,
"to verify by myself the configuration of the ground and to ascertain whether
the passage of the Blue Mountains had really been effected. I climbed the chain
of mountains north from us, and when I had reached the middle of this height the
view of a plain as vast as eye could reach confirmed the report of the previous
day."
To his sorrow, on this day, while trying to get through to the level country,
Barrallier found an unforeseen impediment in some hills that formed a barrier.
He followed a creek, and then discovered a fast flowing river[*] between two
chains of very high mountains. Turning northwards he reached the river at its
junction with a large stream,[*] and in crossing it he and his men met with many
dangerous obstacles.
[* Identified as the Kowmung River.]
[* Christy's Creek, probably Waterfall Creek.]
On the 27th so many barriers were encountered that on the 28th Barrallier was
compelled to abandon the expedition. "After having cut a cross of St. Andrew on
a tree to indicate the terminus of my second journey," he tells us he turned
homeward and following the line of his outward track back to Nattai, reached the
depo~t at 8.30 p.m. of December 2nd.
It will be seen that Barrallier had good reason to claim that he had crossed
the Blue Mountains,[*] although the colonists do not seem to have benefited in
any way from his arduous travels. Either he was unable to define his route
clearly upon his map, or else the details he could furnish were too meagre to be
of any use as a guide to explorers; but it is certain that a passage through the
mountains remained undiscovered. Cambage writes: "The terminal point reached by
this courageous explorer was...towards the head of Christy's Creek about 15 or
16 miles in a direct line southerly. from the Jenolan Caves," and he adds: "It
is remarkable that Barrallier should have followed so far down the Kowmung
before turning to the left, for had he turned up the river instead of down he
would probably have succeeded in crossing the Great Dividing Range, after which
he would have had no difficulty in proceeding westward."
[* R. H. Cambage," R.A.H.Soc.'s Journal," Vol. III.]
CAYLEY'S REPULSE
Barrallier's successor as an explorer of the Blue Mountains was George Caley,
who in 1800 came to Sydney primarily to collect plants for Sir Joseph Banks, but
who interested himself also in matters concerning the welfare of the colony.
Soon after his arrival he was made superintendent of the Government Garden,
which had been marked out at Parramatta, and from time to time dispatched boxes
of Plants and seeds to England in charge of the captains of different ships
voyaging homewards. So carefully did he classify his collections, and so
skilfully arrange them, that he was called "Botanicus peritus et accuratus" by
Robert Brown, who named the Banksia Caleyi in his honour.
Caley soon found opportunities to make excursions inland, going at first only
short distances. In October, 1801, with two companions, he left Prospect,
crossed a chain of hills called the Devil's Back, where the Cabramatta Creek
takes its rise, and arrived at the Nepean. This river Caley prefers to call the
Hawkesbury, saying that "it is the principal branch and ought to have that
name." Encamping near its banks, during the night he and his companions heard
the noise of the wild cattle, and next day went in quest of them. They took a
south-easterly course--having crossed the river on a fallen tree--but failed to
come up with the herd, though they saw at the head of a marshy flat the body of
a dead bull, probably of the Cape breed. Soon afterwards they returned to
Prospect.
A few months later, with two others, Caley traced the course of Tench's
River, and, being only familiar with English rivers, was struck with its deep
bed and high, perpendicular banks, with trees growing on either side, which he
described as "melancholy Casuarinae."
In March, 1802, he was particularly energetic and on the 9th started on a
short tour which lasted five days, but of which he has left but few particulars.
On the 26th he set off again from Parramatta, in company with one man, and with
his mare laden with provisions, to visit Mount Hunter. Striking out on a
south-west-by-south course, they travelled for eighteen miles and came to "a
flat piece of ground called Arayling by the natives," five miles from which they
arrived at the Nepean. There they had to take the baggage off the mare and carry
it themselves over the river, an operation which Caley says, "took us nearly up
to the neck in some places...The water was very cold and the current
strong...the bottom inclined to quicksand." They afterwards swam their horse
across and reached Mount Hunter on the 28th.
The ascent was steep and difficult, owing to shrubs impeding their path. From
it Caley obtained a fine view of the Blue Mountains, which he resolved to
explore, observing a little prematurely that "they did not deserve the name of
mountains." He defined them merely as "high hills," though he admitted that "to
the northward they may be more rocky," from which it is evident that he did not
catch sight of the naked rocks forming bastions round them or the deep gorges
lying hidden between the "high hills." A little later, when he attempted to
fight his way across them, he altered his opinion that they were hills, and
bestowed upon them the title of mountains.
We read in his diary that in October, 1802, he made another short journey
from Prospect with two companions--possibly the same two as before--and, taking
"a direct W.S.W. by S. course," came to the Nepean. Having passed over the
river, they travelled through forest land, and arrived "at the foot of a hill
(Blue Mountains)," to the summit of one of which they climbed.
In December of the same year Caley twice crossed and recrossed the Nepean in
an expedition undertaken for the purpose of defining the true course of the
river, for at that time some of its windings were not yet filled in upon the
maps in use in the colony. He left Prospect on December 4th, accompanied by a
friend, and took his mare laden with sufficient provisions for an extended tour.
The party set out on a west-south-west-by-south course, and first arrived at the
Great Creek,[*] where they fell in with a number of natives. That day they
forded the Nepean at a part of the river which Caley does not seem to have seen
before, as he says he found that it trended north and north-west.
[* South Creek.]
After leaving its banks, they travelled a short distance and "got on to the
hills (Blue Mountains)"and pushed their way along them for three miles through a
dense thicket which at last compelled them to turn back. In their return journey
they met with another river, which was probably that now known as Mount Hunter
rivulet, for they had only proceeded a short distance from it when he remarks:
"This place I thought I had seen before in my journey to Mount Hunter."
On his return to the Nepean, Caley recrossed it, but did not go back to
Prospect, though he says that he looked for that place from the brink of the
hills, but could not clearly see it, the weather being hazy. He writes:
"We...crossed the Hawkesbury River at the end of the hills...that seemed to be
rent asunder for a passage for it, which I propose to call Dovedale, from its
grand and romantic appearance." From Dovedale, so named after the well-known
valley in Derbyshire, Caley made his way to Bagalin, "the place I was bound for,
this being at another part of the river. Here he halted. He could see a large
vale from Bagalin, and, believing that the river flowed through it to the
south-cast, he resolved to explore it with the view of finding the head of the
river.
Setting out on this second journey, Caley and his companions crossed the
Nepean at a known part of the river where it had been already surveyed, and
possibly at a short distance from where Barrallier had forded it a month
before.[*] They then directed their course south-by-east three miles, and
pitched their tent at a swampy place, the name of which, as they learned from
natives, was Menangle. The natives also told Caley in answer to his questions
that the river did not run through the vale he wanted to find, and that he would
be unable to take his mare over the rocks to it.
[* This ford was North of Bird's Eye Corner: another ford over the
Nepean was known as Emu Ford, and another Cowpasture Ford.]
During his short stay there a heavy thunderstorm took place, and he allowed
four natives to take shelter under his "painted sheet" or tent. Leaving Menangle
he travelled to the south-west, and then traced his former course south-by-east
and came almost at once upon the river "deeply seated in a narrow, rocky valley
with almost perpendicular sides." He followed it for a quarter of a mile and
found that its course ran first south-south-east, a turn north-north-east, then
east-north-east. About four miles from Menangle he halted at a place where there
was good water and plenty of grass for the mare. It was a very picturesque spot
and he named it Ripponden--a name that has since disappeared from the maps.

THIS MAP, PUBLISHED BY ARROWSMITH, SHOWS NATAI AS WELL AS THE COW PASTURE
PLAINS AND THE TRACK TAKEN BY EVANS WHEN HE FOLLOWED BLAXLAND, WENTWORTH AND
LAWSON'S ROUTE ACROSS THE BLUE MOUNTAINS
Still anxious to find the river's true course, he travelled north-north-west
over some hills and came to Poppy Brook, so called (by him) because wild poppies
were found growing there. Poppy Brook was a small stream of clear water flowing
over a bed of small black stones, similar to those he had often seen in brooks
in England. It is the Stone Quarry Creek of Barrallier,[*] whose name for it
survives, and takes its rise in the high land west of Picton.
[* In early maps of New South Wales by Arrowsmith (communicated by
Lieut-Colonel Paterson and also upon Oxley's map) Poppy Brook and Stone Quarry
Creek are shown as different streams. Apparently Governor King identified them
as the same stream.]
The tracks of wagon wheels told Caley that Barrallier had been there before
him, and the natives at Menangle had related that "at Nayti, the furthermost
outpost reached by him, he had built a bark hut." Caley remarks that he had
already heard from Governor King that "Barrallier had been 150 miles in the
country," where "he had fixed stations," and says also that the Governor had
pointed out one of these to him, "which I understood was 50 miles S.S.W. from
Prospect and called by the natives Natta, but which I now learn is Nayti," and
he adds, "with that I endeavoured to find it."
Crossing Poppy Brook, Caley first proceeded to the south-west and
west-south-west without any success: he then turned south-south-west and
discovered a sheet of water or lagoon which he called Scirpus Mere; some
beautiful plants were growing not far from this lagoon, and where the thicket
was densest he found a species of Persoonia with sweet-scented flowers
and pubescent leaves. Seeing no signs of Barrallier's depo~t, and having lost
all traces of his wagon wheels, he went to "another range to the eastward," but
still not finding Nayti returned to Poppy Brook. On leaving this stream a second
time Caley struck a course for four miles to the north-north-east, and at the
end of the fourth mile arrived at a spot called by the natives Murdogra, "which
being a low, flat piece of ground without any trees growing upon it, its green
verdure had a pleasant appearance in a country where all was forest." Here he
stayed the night and saw, at about a mile distant from his camp, the smoke of
native fires. He continued to search for Nayti, but could not find it, though he
was convinced, from what the natives had said, that it was at no great
distance.
At this time the party fell in with wild cattle, but "not in a herd; in
general two bulls and at the most six, were seen together." Some of them had
humps between their shoulders, though "it is said that there was not a humped
one among them when they ran away," and Caley remarks: "Many people are of the
opinion that the natives kill them, but...the natives told me that when the
cattle see them they immediately run at them and they are obliged to climb up
the trees." Turning back next day, after a tour of nine days, Caley returned to
Prospect.
In addition to making sea voyages to different parts of the coast in search
of botanical subjects, we find Caley a year or so later again touring inland. In
1804 he set out on an excursion to the territory which he called Vaccary Forest
(the Cowpastures), to ascertain the extent of its boundaries. His diary of this
journey is enlightening. We learn that it was then conjectured in Sydney that
the wild cattle which had so long pastured in Vaccary Forest were now beginning
to roam farther into the country and it was feared that they would altogether
forsake the tracks they had frequented hitherto. A large party of horse and foot
indeed had been sent to drive them if possible into "a very strong fenced yard
newly made...for this purpose," but "this scheme or rather chase ended...with
running one or two cows down."
It had been usual since the days of Captain Hunter for the governors and
officers to take visitors to the colony on excursions to the Cowpastures to hunt
the wild cattle, although it was found no easy matter to single one out of the
herd. Caley believed these excursions would become even more frequent, owing to
the fact that "the trees had been marked all the way there, a track being
visible and a small house built" for the hunting parties. Still at that time
little was known with respect to the boundaries of these pastures, and Caley
therefore proposed to make a complete survey of them. Loading up his mare with
provisions he left Parramatta accompanied by his manservant and went on February
11th to Prospect, whence the party took their departure. They encamped for the
night at the side of some small ponds, around which there was young grass
growing, and set off early on the morning of the 12th to the Nepean, arriving at
the river about noon. Before they reached it they "discovered Cowpasture House
seated in a bushy place on this side of the river."[*] The grass all round it
and even close up to it had been burnt, but it had escaped injury. "It was,"
says Caley, "no more than a small hut built of boards, thatched with grass, and
a wooden chimney. We saw in the house a cask containing a quantity of salt which
had been carried there to salt beef."
[* The principal station was at Cawdor, where a dwelling-house was
erected...afterwards used as a cowhouse.--W.R.G., "Saturday
Magazine."
The men got over the river easily, the water being low; a little further down
they noticed a fallen tree had been thrown across it for the purpose of a
bridge. They found its banks crowded with trees, chiefly casuarinae. On
leaving their crossingplace, Caley bore away to Menangle, where he pitched his
tent. The lake was now reduced to a very small compass, as the weather for so
long had been hot and dry. On the following day he went back to the log bridge
and recrossed the river in search of a pond where he expected to find some rare
plants; but, to his surprise, it had entirely dried up. In making his way back
to the camp he heard a voice--not that of a native, but of a white man calling;
and, as "some desperate runaways were known to infest that quarter," he was
careful to make preparations for an attack.
Four months before he had accompanied Mr. Robert Brown to Mount Hunter, and
when upon the mount they had heard two men "hallooing" who evidently had lost
each other, and Caley says: "By our halloaing in return one of them was decoyed
to within a few rods of us, but as soon as he got the first sight, immediately
fled." Although Caley did not actually see anyone on this occasion, he resolved
to be very much on his guard, but says he did not think he would be "easily
overcome even by an armed banditti."
Leaving Menangle, he went to Ripponden, which he had visited in 1802. From
there he proceeded in the direction of Poppy Brook. On the way he saw a beaten
cattle track, along which he travelled, and presently came upon a large herd of
cattle lying down, which quickly sprang up and each one stared at the party
"with fierce visage." A young dog that Caley had with him soon put them to
flight. There were fifty-three in the herd, and they made off towards the
river.
Caley then met with a small brook which he had seen before (possibly in
December, 1802), to which he now gave the name of Little Brook. He continued in
the direction of Poppy Brook, and noticed as he went how much the road was
travelled between there and Ripponden. "Being an important one," he says, "I
have called it London Road."
In the region of Poppy Brook, where he and his servant encamped, Caley
decided to begin his survey, "at the termination of the range where I began my
S.S.W. course in the discovery of Scirpus Mere." He set out next day on his old
track to carry out this intention, when he heard a voice through the brushwood,
and shortly after "a native came running to me and called me by my name...He
informed me there was a large party Walbunga," which meant "catching kangaroos
by setting the place on fire, and by [the blacks] placing themselves in the
direction the animal is forced to pass and by throwing spears at it as it passes
along."
In further conversation with his black friend Caley learned that there were
strange blacks from the mountains among the party of natives, and that one
visitor was no other than the famous Cannabygal, or Cannamikel, a chief much
dreaded by the other tribes. At last Caley prevailed upon the native to "cooee"
for the others so that he might see the strange blacks, and "a large party came
running towards us and by the place being brushy they were upon us before they
well saw who we were." Some of the natives evidently had seen Caley from their
hiding-places on a former expedition, for he writes: "I perceived a deal more
knew me than I could recognize...My man noticing a few...behind a tree I
immediately went up to them and inquired for Cannabygal and...one man clapped
his hands upon his breast and gave me to understand he was the person."
Of this early meeting with the mountain natives Caley gives the following
account: "I singled out the chief of the party[*] I was known to and opened a
familiar conversation. During that time all the rest were in a profound
silence...The strangers were four in number, three men and one woman; the men
were without any clothing except a belt to fix the mogo in; the woman had a kind
of cloak upon her back made of skins of animals but which did not conceal her
nakedness...They were of gigantic stature in comparison with the rest; their
hair being long and their features in general gave them a frightful countenance,
though I must own that Cannabygal had something pleasant in his face while I was
conversing with him. None of the four ever had seen a white man before. They had
a large domesticated native dog with them."
[* Evidently a Cowpasture native to interpret for him.]
Caley shot a bird to show the power of his fire-arms and gave it to them, and
they were much surprised that they could not discover any wounds. At last, he
says, finding that his absence was more wished for than his company, he informed
them he was about to depart. They at once pointed out to him the exact direction
which they desired him to take, and his native friend acquainted him with the
fact that several women belonging to the mountaineers' party were stationed near
by and that therefore he must be careful not to alarm them. Caley gave a promise
that he would go in the direction pointed out, and kept his word. This obliged
him to go a little way out of his course, but he says that the distance was "too
trivial" to be noted on his map. The Cowpasture natives had informed him that
the strangers were cannibals, but this he doubted. He asked the natives several
questions respecting the source of the Hawkesbury and they pointed to the
south-east; when he inquired as to the whereabouts of Nayti they pointed
west-by-north.
It was probably at this meeting and from these mountain natives that Caley
obtained the information concerning the unknown interior which afterwards in a
letter to Mr. Robert Brown he claimed to have possessed. He said in it that he
had heard from the natives that there was a great river inland and a plain above
the trees, and that "the mountain natives who came at times to the outskirts of
the colony had their heads covered with emu feathers."
After parting from the natives and their guests Caley and his man sought
their former track. They ascended a steep hill to get to a higher and more
backward range, and "fell in with a herd of cattle which had taken the road we
were going, but before we got on to it they returned...the dog close at their
heels; seeing them in a state of confusion I was beginning to clear the way for
them. However, I had the satisfaction of seeing them keep on the range...Some
decayed fallen trees they leaped over like hunters, and there was a noise made
by the rattling of horns such as I had never heard."
A cow fell behind and lay down, evidently unable to move, so Caley went up to
her but could render no assistance, for at the sight of him she became so much
frightened that he says "it was only tormenting her more." He regretted being
unable to shoot her and put her out of pain on account "of His Excellency's
Proclamation forbidding the like," adding: "I could not ease my mind at having
to leave the poor animal thus, and resolved if I should visit this part again I
would know whether she had quitted it."[*]
[* Caley heard afterwards that a lame red cow always followed the
herd in this manner and concluded that she might not have been badly
hurt.]
He and his man continued "to rise upon the range," and saw a great bush-fire
at the spot where they had lately left the natives. At length they got to the
farthest end of the range, where, Caley says, "I now began to trace the western
boundaries of these pastures."
He thus describes a small valley with some ponds of water and good grass
which he thought suitable for a station: "The place we had chosen to pass the
night by its greenness had a pleasant appearance...It was rocky in places...The
cattle came here for water...This is the place I have called Green Dingle." On
first coming there Caley believed himself fortunate to find such a pleasant
camp, but shortly afterwards he rather regretted having chosen it for a
resting-place, as the voices of natives were heard close at hand, from which it
was evident that the blacks had followed them and were only hidden from them by
a turn in the valley. Warning his man to keep very quiet he made preparations to
resist them, "as I could not tell in what manner they would act." At night Caley
took care to keep up a very small fire, concealing it and their tent with bushes
so that they should not be seen by the natives. He writes: "We could hear them
making a loud noise as if they were dancing and making merry...When they became
silent we went to sleep...and fixed our gun in such a position as to have
nothing to do...than pulling the trigger on our being suddenly awakened."
Next morning Caley and his man rose early and breakfasted before daybreak.
After loading the mare with their baggage they went towards the black fellows'
camp, but already they had left it and were upon the march. Caley followed them,
wishing to see Cannabygal again, but writes: "He kept out of my presence...My
man being eager to get a view of the women kept following them with the mare; by
so doing he put them in a fright and they screamed loudly...and on my taking
hold of the halter to pull the mare round some of the natives hit her with their
spears and being high mettled she began to caper...I was afraid I should give
offence and create hostilities, but...happily the whole ended in a joke." Some
of the Cowpasture natives escorted Caley for some distance after parting with
the mountain natives, and he says that when Cannabygal and his companions were
out of sight "the others burst into fits of laughter and were highly delighted
by their being so frightened on seeing white people." Caley had noticed that
they themselves were "as mute as mice" when the mountain natives were present,
and he adds, "The strangers are greatly dreaded and reverenced, particularly
Cannabygal, who according to superstition is invincible and more than
mortal."
Continuing his examination of the boundaries of the Cowpastures from Green
Dingle on a westerly course, he found some extensive cattle tracts, "the largest
running N.N.W., which the party followed and came to a creek named by him Brush
Creek. From this creek he traced the northern confines of the Cowpastures. On
returning to Sydney he gave an account of his travels to the Governor, who in
his remarks[*] upon Caley's observations says that "By Caley's journey and chart
he makes the extent of the ground frequented by the wild cattle...about 11 miles
in the north and south direction and about 8 in the widest direction from east
to west."
[* "Historical Records of New South Wales," Vol. V.]
These short expeditions were the forerunners of exploration of a much bolder
character undertaken with the object of trying to find a pass over the
mountains. It was in November, 1804, that Caley first tried to cross them,
having been provided by the Governor with four of the strongest men in the
colony to assist him. On Saturday, November 3rd, taking a boat up the river, the
party landed "at the upper part of Richmond Terrace with the intention of
travelling to the Carmarthen Mountains; but between them and their goal
stretched ranges of hills which had to be traversed before it could be won."
Being resolved to keep clear of the Grose, Caley shaped his course to the
west-north-west. He had gone only a short distance, however, before he was
confronted with deep valleys and rocky precipices, some of which rose to a
height of over 1,000 feet; and wherever a level track was found it was equally
difficult to travel over, the ground being covered with impenetrable bush.
In spite of these obstacles in his path he continued to advance slowly, and
on the 5th from a hillside obtained a fine view of the hills he was trying to
gain; but he describes himself as "thunderstruck with the roughness of the
country that presented itself between them and us." He went higher up the hill
in order to be able to determine the best route to take, and, after scanning the
country resolved to steer as straight for the Carmarthen Mountains as the
roughness of the country would permit. He proceeded down the side of a valley,
and descended it where it was joined by another valley in which there was a
swamp. The valley was surrounded by high-topped trees, and the greenness of the
swamp gave the place a most beautiful appearance; Caley named it Swamp Valley.
The men traversed it by marching sometimes in the valley and sometimes on the
edge of the hills. They then crossed the swamp and halted at the north end of
the valley, where Caley mounted a hill in order to take bearings and to find out
how far they were from the Grose, and "ere long was favoured with a view of
Grose's Head," about seven miles distant. He there caught sight of an increasing
volume of smoke rising from the spot where they had encamped, and, hurrying to
it, found his men in great consternation owing to one of them while kindling a
fire having set the bush alight. The flames burned furiously and spread among
the dead trees so rapidly that for a time the party were in considerable
danger.
Leaving Swamp Valley, Caley travelled on the following courses:
west-north-west, south-west, west-south-west, and west-by-south, and at length,
at the end of the last course, he got another view of the Carmarthen Hills. He
next turned west-1/2-south obliquely into a valley which came from the
northeast, its waters running to the south-west. Here he found plants similar to
those around Sydney. Directing his courses for the most part in a south-westerly
direction, he crossed three more valleys, all of which emptied their waters to
the south-west. The last one, which was very deep, with a steep and difficult
descent into it, Caley called Dark Valley. Fortunately the weather was fine and
on this day he caught sight of some lories,
On December 7th a very fine morning broke, and the party started on a
south-west course, and after ascending a hill advanced along a range until they
arrived at the brink of a valley which came from the northward. Its sides
appeared perpendicular; its depth was about 300 yards, its width nearly a mile,
and Caley says: "I was at a loss to know how to cross this deep valley, which
seemed to bid defiance to man." At length he found a place where by holding on
to the bushes and small shrub-like trees he was able to make a partial descent
and creep along the edge of the rocks. The luggage was lowered by making a rope
of twine, and handed on from one man to another over the rocks. Having so far
got safely down, Caley determined not to cross the valley but to proceed down to
the Grose, which "was joined by another valley that came from the S.W."
Eventually he came suddenly upon the Grose, but was forced to return, "for the
rocks formed perpendicular sides apparently to the water's edge." After trying
unsuccessfully to advance, first at one place and then at another, he says at
last he had "only the northern valley to make choice of." He hastened to it
again and his men were at last able to make their descent a little above the
union of the northern valley with that which came from the south-west. Fine
streams ran through these two valleys, which, after uniting, took a course to
the eastward.
In giving an account of his adventures here Caley writes:
"The dreary appearance, abruptness, and intricate and dangerous route
experienced at this place induced me to call it the Devil's Wilderness." His
party advanced two miles in a south-west-by-west direction, "crossed the
northern branch of the Grose River and went up a very steep and high hill." The
passage was rough and so dangerous that the men were in great peril, often
climbing over ledges of rock where a false step might have cost them their
lives. All fortunately gained the top in safety, but much fatigued, and,
although they had only just left a stream, parched with thirst owing to the
heat. As a substitute for water they ate the native currant. They continued
climbing hilly ground until they came to some high bluff rocks, in order to
surmount which they again took off their loads and handed them from one to
another. An olive-coloured snake about four feet long passed close to Caley,
but, as he had no weapon in his hand, it escaped him.
Having ascended the rocks, which he called Skeleton Rocks, he obtained from
the top of them a fine view of the country to the eastward. Continuing an uphill
journey the party suddenly came upon a very narrow ridge, which gradually
widened until it formed yet another hill "of gentle ascent and descent." Whilst
passing over this, a breach on the left suddenly opened to their view and they
saw a valley below, into which Caley descended to look for water and to seek a
resting-place for the night. He soon found a spot suitable for a camp, and
describes how he had then to humour his tired men, who "were not so overcome by
fatigue as overawed by the dangers through which they had passed." He tried to
raise their spirits by telling them that, although the route was a rough one, he
was of opinion that they had hit upon the range likely to lead them to the
Carmarthen Mountains.
After he had reasoned with them for some time his words had the desired
effect and stimulated them to proceed. Caley was much interested not only in the
plants but also in the birds, insects, and other things new to him that he saw
in this part of his expedition. In particular he found a strange, luminous grub,
a number of which had fastened themselves to a projecting rock above where he
was sleeping. When he awoke during the night, at first he imagined that he was
gazing at the stars. Owing to this circumstance he called the place Luminous
Valley, but he says: "Although I saw so many I was able to catch but few."
On the morning of November 8th the party, in order to get to the range,
retraced their steps for a quarter of a mile, and having altered their course
arrived at a small, oblong hill the shape of which Caley says reminded the men
at once of a pincushion. He therefore gave it the name of Pincushion Hill. From
there they could see the smoke of their last camp fire in Luminous Valley
east-by-north.[*]
[* A little distance farther Caley gives the following beatings:
"Pincushion Hill E. ¼ N., Grose's Head E.S.E. ¼ S., Round Hill in Grose's Vale
E.S.E. ¼ E,, Round Hill of Mr. Dawes S.W. ¼ S. End of the high range or Fern
Tree Hill W.S.W. ¼ W. Courses later upon the range: N.W. by N.W., S.W. by S.,
and S.W. by W., all half a mile."]
On the 9th Caley left the range, which he thought was carrying him too far to
the north, and entered a shallow valley to try and gain an eminence (Fern Tree
Hill). Travelling due west, he had no sooner got across it than another deep
valley appeared, and, thinking this was the last valley, he crossed it in an
oblique direction south-west-by-south 1/2 mile which brought his party to the
point of another range which "we went down a little south," where it ended in a
steep precipice between two valleys. They tried to descend into the one on the
left hand, but found that "the water fell several yards perpendicularly"; and
Caley describes the place as resembling a chasm called Grislefoot between
Whernside and Ingleborough, two of the highest mountains in England with which
he was familiar; and from his experience of climbing English mountains he came
to the conclusion that there must be a "midfitter" which united the range he was
standing on to the eminence called Fern Tree Hill. After much searching he
proved this surmise to be correct by finding the midfitter. The valleys on each
side of it soon became very deep; through the one on the left the waters were
carried to the Grose, while through that on the right they ran "probably into a
branch of Hawkesbury below Portland Head."
Being now short of water Caley went down into a deep valley to look for it,
and found some in another valley which led to the foot of Fern Tree Hill. Here
they encamped. A high wind blew in heavy gusts in the afternoon, threatening
rain. The night was wild and showers fell, causing the men much discomfort. On
the morning of the 10th the sun shone, though it soon became obscured by clouds.
Some lories were seen and Caley also heard the laughing jackass. He describes
the place as a barren spot, the trees sparse, small, and of crooked growth, some
resembling blue gum in colour and others having rather twisted bark. Where there
were patches of treeless ground the land resembled that around Sydney, producing
the same plants, such as Banksia cricaefolia.
From this camp the party went tip to the midfitter to get to Fern Tree Hill.
After some intricate climbing,[*] Caley saw from a height the pivot range, "of
the mountains we had crossed on our first leaving Richmond." From here he led
his men west-south-west to a valley and hill covered with brush, and found that
he had got on the wrong range, as to which he observes "a man might soon be
bewildered." He therefore turned back, and upon again seeing the first range of
mountains resolved "to keep them as the surest guide. For to keep in direct line
by compass was not in my power here to do." The courses afterwards taken
collectively were from south to south-east, and at last the summit of Fern Tree
Hill was gained, as to which Caley writes: "Four miles may be said our whole
day's journey," and "of that, the course S. to S.E. may be called 3 1/2
miles."
[* Their courses then were S.W., S.W. by S., both 1 mile. W. and
S.S.W. across the head of the valley, which had given so much trouble to them
when searching for water the night before. Still going up hill on courses
first S.S.W, and then S.S.E., and lastly E. by N., both 1 mile.]
The summit of Fern Tree Hill was found to be very narrow and covered with
brush, chiefly consisting of, amongst others, "a glaucous leaved Senecio
and a white flowered species of Smilax, which retarded progress very
much, and nettles which grew very high and stung vehemently." The part that "was
void of bush was thickly covered with timber and a species of fern which as it
increases in age forms a tree." Many of these tree ferns were very tall, as were
some of the timber trees. The soil was very moist and commonly of a brown
vegetable mould. From here Caley had a view of the mountains on both sides. On
his left he saw the first range--his "surest guide" and on the right a fainter
view of the ranges in that direction; his bearings were the Grose's Head,
east-1/2-south, western end of Mount Banks[*] south-west-by-west, some whitish
rocky breaches between south and south-south-west, whilst Round Hill bore south.
The whole country from west to east by way of north appeared mountainous, yet
but few peaks were to be seen. The valleys came from the westward, and where
"the rocky breaches" were there seemed to be a large valley.
[* Governor King says that Caley always called Mount King George
by the name of Mount Banks.]
Leaving the summit of Fern Tree Hill they proceeded down the side of it
east-south-east to some rocks,[*] where "there were but few trees," to pass the
night. On the way down the hillside one of the party had a rather bad fall but
soon recovered from its effects. During the night rain fell heavily and all
complained of being cold and wet, although Caley had hoped that they would have
been secure from the rain through "having a hollow rock to creep into," but the
water came trickling down the rock and it was worse than being in the open.
Next day was the 11th--a Sunday morning--clouds of heavy fog prevented the
men leaving the camp before ten o'clock, by which time it had dispersed. The
party went down hill on a south-south-west course to cross a valley and ascend
Saddle Hill or Mount Banks, but on arriving at the bottom of the hill Caley was
surprised to find that the valley formed a "dreadful chasm" with perpendicular
sides the depth of which..."could not...be less than 50 yards...The breadth did
not seem to exceed 15 yards..."He threw some large pieces of rock into this
ravine and records that they made a weird noise and seem to take an endless time
to reach the bottom. There being no way of crossing it, the men returned to
Station Rock. The afternoon was wet and the fog became so dense that they now
could see only a few rods before them, it was therefore thought best to halt for
the night.
[* Afterwards named Station Rock.]
Caley mentions the different birds seen. Two crows flew round them and some
thrushes and redbreasts with black and white heads made their appearance. The
weather of the 12th was as wet and foggy as the previous day, and although the
afternoon was clearer, Caley did not deem it prudent to make a fresh start so
late in the day and spent his time in trying to get views of the country round
his camp.
On going to the top of the rock he found it to be large and to answer his
needs in every respect so he called it Station Rock. He accordingly made a level
with water and found the place was nearly equal in height with the base of the
mount of Mount Banks, nearly also equal with the top of Saddle Hill and with the
top of Round Hill, but Saddle Hill was lower; and he ascertained that Fern Tree
Hill, Mount Banks, Saddle Hill, and Round Hill did not form one range as he had
supposed when travelling there. He writes: "From Station Rock as far, as eye
could trace from the S. to the W. the ground appeared to slope towards us...It
had the aspect of being rough and mountainous. From Round Hill it sloped towards
the N.E. until it met with the opposite branches of the Grose."
While upon Station Rock, Caley observed that Fern Tree Hill was separated
from Mount Banks by a deep valley--the one in which lay the "dreadful chasm"
into which he had cast stones. Saddle Hill and Mount Banks appeared to him to be
on one range but at the west end of Saddle Hill he saw a broken precipice which
seemed to form a valley "most probably...not deep." In the south 1/2 west to
south-south-west there was a high breach, of whitish appearance, and he believed
that at the bottom of it the principal branch of the Grose River passed, though
he says: "It is doubtful to conjecture which is the principal branch of the
Grose, let alone to affirm it."[*] However, he thought that this branch was "the
largest of any that comes from the west by this quarter and is the same as I
have mentioned at the Devil's Wilderness as coming from the S.W., at which place
there did not seem any difference in the quantity of the water as in the one we
crossed which came from the north."
[* Mr. Govett describing the Valley or ravine through which the
Grose River flows says: "The mountains which rise most conspicuously above the
surrounding ridges are Mount Hay, Mount King George and Mount Tomah...the
first is of conical shape...(frowning amidst rugged masses of rock and the
tremendous precipices and gigantic walls which overhanging confine the channel
of this inaccessible river); Mount King George called by some the Camel's Back
from its double figure (3 1/4 m. north west of Mt. Hay) presents on its west
side tremendous walls of rock more than 400 feet perpendicular. Mount Tomah
(of flat and tabular shape) is about four miles north of Mt. Hay. The latter
possesses rich tropical vegetation. The river winds round the basement of the
precipices and divides by a frightful chasm Mount Hay from Mount King George
and Mount Tomah which last are both situated on the north side of the ravine.
The Grose continuing in nearly an easterly direction for about 15 miles falls
into the Nepean and then takes the name of the Hawkesbury which after winding
by a tortuous course discharges itself finally into the sea at Broken Bay 30
miles n. of Port Jackson."]
On the 13th a fine morning burst over Station Rock, though clouds of mist
hung in the valleys below. Gradually rising, they enveloped the camp when the
men were preparing to leave it, but by noon had dispersed. Mountain fogs now
began to hinder the movements of the travellers seriously, and Caley points out
that it "would only have been labour in vain to attempt to travel through them."
He feared them, because, apart from the risk they incurred, the delay
necessarily reduced his stock of provisions. He knew, too, that since he had
come by a zigzag route, he would have to return by it, and the fogs might easily
render it impossible for him to find his former bearings.
Leaving Station Rock when the atmosphere grew clearer the explorers travelled
west-north-west, following a circuitous route towards a valley which appeared to
come from the westward. Their way led them over ground covered with brush,
nettles, and large loose stones, "very heavy and of a blue colour like the
magnetic stone on Prospect Hill," Caley being puzzled to find that he could see
no rocks in the vicinity, "whence they could have been thrown by any
convulsion." He was anxious to reach the valley which he believed came from the
westward; for, he says, he intended "to keep it...on our left until it presented
some favourable place of crossing in order that I might get to Mount Banks."
On reaching the brink of the valley and trying to descend it at this point,
"it was found impracticable and so we returned" to the range. After this
disappointment Caley caught sight of a hill bearing about north-west, which
seemed to join to Fern Tree Hill, and he resolved to make his way towards it, as
it seemed to form a passage to the west, and there appeared to be a small range
that ran from behind it in a western direction. He therefore decided to head the
troublesome valley, and, having done so, took his men through thick brush and
came to a hill which lay on the right. From this hill Caley saw what he at first
thought was a "saddle," but it proved to be a deep valley, and opposite to him
stood the hill he wished to reach. He could now see that from it ran a high
range consisting of small hummocks and he felt sure that upon this another
eminence, called the Haycock, must be situated.
The valley, which he had previously imagined came from the westward, he now
was convinced came from the northward. "To cross this valley was now the grand
object," so he went along its northern edge, and, though he despaired of finding
any place to descend, to his surprise he came upon a narrow cleft. He took off
his load, and, having left his men behind, while he went down it, had not gone
far before he noticed a kangaroo path and saw that the passage gradually
widened. He accordingly returned to his men and all descended, forcing their way
through a bush-like species of eucalyptus, which, in places, covered the
hillside. They then halted at a hollow rock near which there was a rill of
water. Some tall, straight trees with dark green foliage grew there, and at
first Caley could not tell to what species they belonged, but he afterwards
identified them as Sassafras. The party passed the night at a disagreeably damp
place in the depths of the valley, which, as he made the descent, Caley says,
"put me in mind of looking down a coal-pit, and where frogs and toads made such
a hideous noise that I was induced to call it Dismal Dingle." Next day, the
14th, the morning was fine, yet from their situation the men were unable to see
the sky unless they stood upright and looked through the openings in the
trees.
Continuing their journey they went over Table Hill[*] north-west-by-north 1/2
mile to a midfitter. Of it Caley writes: "This midfitter which links Table Hill
and a lower range is much like the one that links Fern Tree Hill and the range
which cornes from the Devil's Wilderness. As we came along it the valley on our
left conveyed its waters direct to the valley...which separates Fern Tree Hill
from Table Hill...Between us and Mt. Banks there seem to be several valleys
which...became...very deep."
[* Mount Tomah.]
Proceeding from the midfitter, Caley lost the range and followed a jutting
spur. On retrieving his mistake he turned abruptly south-west, crossed a valley
and fell in with another range south-south-west (a midfitter), then went
south-west and arrived at a barren piece of land[*] destitute of trees, and in
appearance much like some places in the vicinity of Sydney, such as South Head.
Though this was a barren spot there was a wide contrast between it and Dismal
Dingle. "It commanded an excellent prospect and the country round seemed to
consist of small ranges of hills and valleys that run in a circuitous direction
or as though nature had formed a labyrinth." Caley named this place Bluff Head.
They at last were close to the foot of Mount Banks, but another deep valley
still remained between them and it. They thought at first that this would check
their progress, until Caley again espied a midfitter, and by this means their
goal was won.
[* Bald Hills (?)]
The march from Bluff Head to Mount Banks was tedious, and the tired men
thought that they would never come to their journey's end: "Between Bluff Head
and Mount Banks they crossed two hills, the larger one being named Range Hill."
A thunderstorm took place and they had to seek shelter in a rock house for the
night. From it the Haycock bore north-1/4-east. Table Hill
north-north-east-1/4-east, Saddle Hill east 1/4 mile. Here a piece of bark was
found which looked as though it had been cut from the tree by natives. The only
other signs of the aborigines seen by Caley in these mountains had been the
smoke of their fires up the branch of the Grose which ran into the Devil's
Wilderness.
Next day, Thursday, November 15th, Caley ascended Mount Banks[*] and had
excellent views from it in every direction. To obtain these he says "was his
main object" in journeying to this hill. The sky was clear when he arrived, and
the men who started to search for a place at which to encamp, as near the summit
as possible, soon found a rock house upon its western side.
[* This was Mt. King George, or the Camel's Back, so called from
its double figure.]
The day was set aside as a "rest day for the men," but Caley himself did not
rest and made all haste while the light was clear to take bearings and to make
some observations. Beginning with the south end of Mount Banks he found that its
top formed "an oval about 20 to 30 yards long which was covered with heavy loose
stones...on the eastern side...ferns grow among these...but on the western a
small bushlike eucalyptus"...The sides "break suddenly into rocks and at the
bottom there was a deep valley, which comes from the west-north-west. This
valley takes a circuitous course to the east and appears to run on the western
side of Round Hill." At the bottom was a fine stream, "evidently that which
falls into the Devil's Wilderness from the S.W."
The trees there were small in general of only two sorts...one with a bark
like the colonial mahogany and the other...apple tree. There was an excellent
view from the N.N.W. to the S. but from S. to N.E. the views are interrupted by
the trees and only seen through the openings." He could not be certain whether
he actually saw Prospect[*] as the high land "backwards" prevented him making
out "its true figure."
[* Caley gives these bearings: " Round Hill S.ES. ½ S., Grose's
Head the high point E. a little S. over it is cleared land, which I suspect to
be Castle Hill. Prospect E.N.E. ¼ E."]
He found that the whole length of the top of Mount Banks was about half a
mile, and that the north end was "somewhat the shape of the other...the
top...thickly covered with loose stones...among which fern grows and causes bad
walking." It commanded "a prospect from the S.E. by S. to E.S.E. in general very
good." "From N.E. by E. to N.W. by W. Fern Tree and Table Hill prevent a distant
view."[*] Caley looked again and again for "the conical hill which is called
Mount Hunter," but he could not distinguish it.
[* Bearings from here were: "The Haycock N. 1/4 W. High distant
saddle land N.N.W. A small hummock on Mount S.S.E.]
As he clambered round the mountain he came to a part which he named the
Saddle and its north end "the Middle Hummock," whence he obtained the views he
desired of the surrounding country; and writing of this spot he says. "Though
the lowest part on the top of the hill it has the best prospect owing to its
nakedness." After ascending the Middle Hummock he looked eastward and saw in
that direction "a wide and extensive vale...and the land on the sea coast...a
little hazy."
He then turned and looked westward! Before him lay that hidden region whose
secrets so many brave explorers had vainly striven to discover; where fertile
plains and wide rivers still awaiting the coming of white men were to prove the
goal of those who followed him on his path of exploration--pioneers like himself
whose names are written imperishably in the history of the West.
Having gazed at the mountains, Caley, tired and almost worn out, in spite of
his indomitable spirit, wrote those familiar words which historians have so
often quoted (possibly as paraphrased by Governor King): "On looking to the
westward I saw no large valleys but the one close at hand from which the ground
apparently kept rising gently and gradually as far as eye could trace. In a few
places there appeared...swamps, in others void of trees and only scrubby...The
present appearance would lead one to imagine it might be readily travelled over
provided one was across the inaccessible valley close at hand, yet there is no
doubt...we shall find other valleys of a similar nature as I am too well
convinced of there being such...One comes upon them all at once like a
ha-ha."
Finding his provisions dwindling, his men exhausted, and the mountains
impassable at last he decided to return to Sydney.
Caley noted that Mount Banks[*] possessed but few plants. The trees growing
there were the bush-like Eucalyptus and a species of mimosa; a
glaucous-leaved Senecio mixed with the fern and when climbing the Saddle
he remarks, "The Warrote grows here," referring most likely to the waratah.
[* Mount King George.]
The birds in this region were chiefly lories and crows. On seeing a crow on
the 16th, when the men were on the point of starting on their return journey, he
writes: "We had several times seen a crow...in this part on whichIcould not help
remarking one of the men saying they must be lost or they would never stay in
such a place...which put me in mind of Dr. Johnson's sarcasm when he saw a crow
in Scotland."
The place where Caley stood to look westward may well be called the limit of
his journey. Next day he left Mount Banks and travelled back along his outward
track, the party arriving safely at Parramatta on November 23rd, when Governor
King sympathetically stated that in his opinion the idea of attempting to cross
such a "confused and barren assemblage of mountains with impassable chasms
between was as chimerical as useless."
In August, 1806, Caley again attempted to cross the mountains, but of this
expedition there is no account among his MSS. This is curious, for the
expedition was of sufficient importance for King to write to Governor Bligh on
August 23, 1806: "Caley is just returned and should have waited on you to-morrow
but...he is much fatigued and in want of rest...He has confirmed the existence
of a large tract of forest land beyond Natai which...confirms Mr. Barrallier's
observations...and will be useful in extending the interior establishments by
which means alone the passing of the mountains can be established...If the party
had not taken a liberal supply of provisions they must have starved. The settler
who accompanied Caley is quite knocked up."
It is said that on one of his excursions Caley penetrated far into the
mountains and built the cairn of stones near Woodford to mark the limit of his
journey. In later years there has been much doubt as to this being the work of
Caley, but the fact that Governor Macquarie afterwards called the landmark
"Caley's Repulse" will show that he believed it to be so, and it seems
incredible that one so greatly interested in the exploration of the mountains as
Macquarie could have been misled upon such a point. As Caley did not leave
Sydney until after Macquarie's arrival, he may well have given the Governor a
verbal account of his explorations.
Caley returned to England in 1810 and later was appointed to superintend the
botanical gardens at St. Vincent. He never ceased to regret that he was unable
to find a way over the mountains, and was sceptical with regard to BlaxIand's
party having crossed them. "Will you believe me if I say the Blue Mountains in
New South Wales are not yet crossed..." he writes from St. Vincent to Robert
Brown; "for such...is my opinion. What I mean by crossing the mountains is
having gone as far as where the waters are disembogued on the opposite coast and
if having got to the summit of a range of hills which commands an excellent
prospect of the colony and then descending on its western side, be called
crossing the mountains they have long ago been crossed...Cox's River which we
are now told runs through Prince Regent's Glen and empties into the Nepean I
take to be a river which unites with the Hawkesbury at Mulgoey...Wonder no
longer where the conflux of this river...is, but turn to the Grose and you will
be tolerably correct...Mr. Barrallier crossed the mountains as much as the
others have...The forest he travelled over is much superior, with a main branch
of the Hawkesbury gliding through the middle of the vale, and if coals be an
object I have seen them in that quarter myself...though I walked 18 of his miles
in an hour in as rough a valley as up the Grose, yetIwould sooner trust to his
accuracy than to Mr. Evan's."
BLAXLAND CROSSES THE MOUNTAINS
The three men who finally succeeded where so many had failed were BlaxIand,
Lawson, and William Wentworth. The last-named, then only a youth of twenty, in
after years, owing to his determination and energy in furthering every object
for his country's good, came to be called by his fellow-colonists the Australian
Patriot."
Gregory BlaxIand, who led this expedition into the mountains, had settled at
South Creek some years before, and was already familiar with the danger and
difficulties to be met with among the ranges, occasionally having made short
excursions to the foot of them from his homestead. He was now about to establish
his reputation as a. bold and skilful explorer of them.
Lieutenant William Lawson, the third of the party, was an officer of the New
South Wales Corps and may be termed "a born pioneer," as is shown by the way in
which he aided BlaxIand in this expedition, and by the part he played later,
when he opened up the district around Mudgee.
It has been stated that Lawson often conversed with Caley in England upon the
subject of crossing the mountains, and that the plan of ascending the ridge or
the spine of the main range and following it westward was then discussed for the
first time. On the other hand, it is said that the idea originated with
BlaxIand, who, in a previous tour, had noticed that the backbone of the
mountains ran westward and determined to ascend the ridge and push his way along
the top of it, keeping in sight the heads of the gullies which were supposed to
empty their streams into the Western or Warragamba River on the left hand, and
into the Grose on the right. Whoever suggested it, it was the plan which
ultimately led to success.
At four o'clock of the afternoon of Tuesday, May 11, 1813, the explorers left
BlaxIand's homestead at South Creek with four servants, five dogs, and four
pack-horses, crossed the Nepean at Emu Island (some thirty-six miles west of
Sydney), and after travelling two miles to the south-west halted at the foot of
the first ridge, where they encamped for the night. Next morning they ascended
the ridge, and on reaching its summit came to a spot where there was a
freshwater lagoon.[*] As they advanced, difficulties soon overtook them. Their
horses were constantly stumbling and the rocky hillsides, trying enough for the
men, proved still more so for the animals. After two exhausting days both for
man and beast, it was decided to leave the horses in charge of two men while the
rest of the party cut their way through the bush. The work was unflinchingly got
through, although there was not a man who was not wearied nor a hand that was
not blistered and sore.
[* This lagoon still exists. The explorers reached the summit of
the first ridge somewhere near the station at Glenbrook.]
On this memorable day, Friday, May 14th, a path extending for five miles
through the thicket was completed wide enough to allow the pack-horses to pass
and at five o'clock the explorers returned to camp. On the following day,
leaving the camp as before in charge of the two men, they cleared two more
miles, but, seeing no sign of grass for the horses, they returned again at five
o'clock. On Sunday they rested. Next day, the 17th, the whole party pushed on
and encamped on a narrow mountain ridge between two very deep gullies where some
of the men descended a precipice to a depth of 600 feet to look for water, but
none could be found. On the 18th, two miles farther on, they found their path
flanked on both sides with precipices. Removing on their way some of the larger
pieces of rock, the men crept along the narrow edge of the ridge and eventually
got over in safety, but in the evening returned to camp, tired and out of
spirits.
On the 19th, they ascended the second ridge,[*] and, looking back from it,
caught a distant view of the settlement now a "minute speck " beneath them. Not
far from this spot, while busily cutting trees along the narrow path, they came
upon a cairn of stones, shaped like a pyramid. One side of it had been opened
and the stones scattered around, evidently by natives. It was thought then that
it had been built by Bass to mark the end of his tour and that the exploring
party were now following in his tracks; but, as already mentioned, Governor
Macquarie believed that this pile of stones was Caley's work and named it
Caley's Repulse.
[* This second ridge was the rugged range lying beyond Linden and
separated from it by a deep valley.]
What lay beyond Caley's Repulse was a mystery! The explorers might well have
been overawed by the task they had set themselves. Possibly they remembered the
old stories of the blacks at Port Jackson, who said it was the abode of evil
spirits who hurled thunder and floods and burning winds upon them or, as Caley
had learnt from natives, that beyond the mountains there was a great river
inland and "a plane above the trees," which was nearer the truth.
From Caley's Repulse for some days the travellers advanced step by step
averaging four or five miles a day, and on May 22nd reached the summit of the
third and highest ridge in the neighbourhood of Wentworth Falls. A precipice
here crossed their path and defied their efforts to descend it. At last they
found a way round it and noticed that the ridge they were on was widening before
them. Next day they passed close to the site of Katoomba and cut their names
upon the trunk of a tree growing In their route. New birds attracted them. Emus
were heard calling, and on the 24th the sound of a black fellow chopping wood
excited their curiosity, and told them, although they could not catch sight of
the native, that the mountains were inhabited.[*]
[* On this day they crossed Blackheath.]
On May 25th, the track of a wombat was seen, and a little later the smoke of
native fires rising through the trees to westward, where apparently thirty
natives were moving about but so far off that it was impossible to ascertain
anything regarding them. On Friday, May 28th, as they followed the mountain spur
that juts beyond Mount Victoria, to the explorers' joy, they could see grass
country in a valley below them. It was clear of trees and covered with loose
white pebbles and stones. At first it looked barren and sandy, but they
perceived that it really was grass, long and of a light straw colour. In the
evening they descended the ridge to examine it more closely, but returned again
to their camp on the edge of a high mountain, which was afterwards named Mount
York by Governor Macquarie, though for some time it was familiarly known to
travellers as the "Big Hill." It rose sharply 798 feet from the valley below,
which was called the Vale of Clwyd.
On Saturday, 29th., at seven o'clock in the morning, the men began their
descent into the valley through a passage[*] between the rocks thirty feet wide
which they had discovered the day before. A low, slanting trench had to be cut
with a hoe down the steep side of the mountain for the horses to walk in, since
there was no sort of foothold for them.
[* The passage was afterwards named Cox's Pass, but Blaxland, in a
letter to the Governor, dated June 15, 1815, states that it was discovered
through a suggestion of Wentworth's, and that the river was found by Lawson
while the others were bringing the horses down the mountain.]
From the foot of Mount York the explorers proceeded northwesterly about two
miles and encamped on the banks of a fine stream of water.[*] The natives
evidently were still moving before them, for smoke was again seen to the
westward on the 31st; remains of their old fires were found and traces where
they had been sharpening their spears; and the marks on the trees showed that
their method of climbing differed from that of the Sydney blacks.
[* The River Lett.]
On this day Blaxland and his party passed through forest land and open meadow
and met with two streams.[*] At nightfall they pitched their tents by the
faster-flowing one at a short distance from a high hill, which took the shape of
a sugar loaf.[**]
[* The Cox and Lett Rivers.]
[* The Cox River, named by Governor Macquarie; and Mount BlaxIand,
so called by Evans.]
After once more surveying the newly found pastures, the explorers, now sorely
in need of provisions, prepared to return home. For a time they satisfied their
hunger by eating flowers of the honeysuckle tree, which are shaped like a bottle
brush and are full of honey. The natives still were encamped at a little
distance away, evidently possessing no huts, and would not allow the white men
to approach them. Terminating their journey eight or nine miles from Mount York,
on Tuesday, June 1st, the travellers ascended the ridge and began their journey
homewards; they carefully marked the trees to show each mile of the road, and
crossed the Nepean on Sunday, June 6, 1813, with all their party well.
There still may be seen on the old Bathurst road near Katoomba the remains of
a tree trunk-now fenced in--on which BlaxIand, Lawson, and Wentworth carved
their initials L. B. W. Standing on a high point of the mountains, it forms an
inspiring memorial of a supreme effort of those three men, carried to success
solely by their courage and endurance.
Great was the excitement in Sydney when the news of BlaxIand's success became
known. With one accord the colonists rejoiced that they were no longer to live
hemmed in to the westward by a mountain barrier, covered by giant rocks with
ravines between, which, like some sleeping monster of old, had withheld from
them for so many years the land that rightly should have been theirs to till and
cultivate--a barrier among whose ravines Caley's stubborn will had been of no
avail and against whose rocks the determined spirit of Bass had spent itself in
vain. Had the mountains themselves been removed the hopes of the townsfolk could
not have burned more brightly than when their footsore fellow-colonists,
thoroughly worn out, their clothes torn and frayed and hands covered with
wounds, returned home bringing the good news that their party had passed over
the Blue Mountains and had seen long grass growing on the other side. Little
wonder if, as it has been averred, Governor Macquarie gave an order to ring the
church bells, for the conquest of the mountains was complete.
Perhaps on that day, as the great possibilities for the country's development
dawned upon them, some remembered the words of Captain Tench written on reaching
New South Wales with Hunter in H.M.S. "Sirius" on January 20, 1788: "To us it
was a great and important day and I hope will mark the foundation...of an
Empire," and perhaps, echoing them, some said of June 6, 1813: "This too, is an
important day for it will mark a milestone on our road."
EVANS EXPLORES THE PLAINS
The mystery concerning the Blue Mountains having been solved, the discovery
of the new territory led to important results. On November 19th, acting on
instructions from Governor Macquarie, George William Evans, Deputy
SurveyorGeneral, set out with a party from Emu Island to make a survey of the
road and to explore the country from the point where the discoverers had turned
back. On November 26th he reached the valley through which the rapid stream
ran--the limit of BlaxIand's expedition--and encamped at the foot of the
"handsome mountain like a sugar loaf," which he named Mount Blaxland, calling
two others "similar in figure" Wentworth's and Lawson's Sugar Loaves.
In advancing from Mount BlaxIand, Evans, on November 27th, came upon a
range[*] whose hills were very steep and proved a difficult ascent for the
horses. He then discovered a valley where the grass was thick and halted to rest
them. During his stay in it he remarks that he was unable to find any mimosa.
This flower he evidently greatly admired, for he mentions it more than once in
his journal. Strangely enough, in the country which he was on the verge of
discovering the mimosa grows plentifully, and in some parts in the greatest
profusion. When flowering, its exquisitely scented yellow clusters often form
one of the prettiest features of the landscape. At this point, however, Evans
was yet amid rugged bushland on the side of a hilly range, and could not then
have foreseen, unless BlaxIand had already mentioned the flower to him, that he
would be likely to find it in his path.
[* Clarence Hilly Range, named later by Governor
Macquarie.]
Next day, November 28th, he left the horses in the valley, and sent three of
his men to look for a track by which the animals could proceed on the morrow,
while he crossed over to the north side of the rivulet to survey it. He returned
to the camp at one o'clock and soon afterwards the men also came back, having
been successful in their efforts to find a passage.
On Monday, 29th, in spite of precautions, Evans says that he "stopped quite
out of spirits, having got completely entangled among the hills." All this day
he had great difficulty in fighting his way to the main ridge of the range. The
only path to it led him through wildernesses of scrub and over masses of granite
rock where the horses' feet suffered terribly.
After travelling for two miles and a half, he got upon a lofty hill whence he
could see for about fifteen miles to the north-west. He tells us that the view
he obtained was all forest trees, but in every other direction it was obscured
by high ranges, and the whole journey on this day totalled only three and a half
miles.
On November 30th, he succeeded in mounting the main ridge by a difficult
path, and from it, after walking for two miles, he could see northwards for a
good distance. A peculiar mist rising some twenty miles away attracted his
attention; it was so unlike smoke that he thought a river or large lagoon must
be there. A quarter of a mile farther along the range he took another look
around him from a high mount, and could see for forty miles over what appeared
to be open country.
He then descended the range and passing over huge boulders came upon a river
which took its rise in some large hills to the southward. Here his party shot
wild duck and caught fish, which were large and plentiful in the stream. The
distance travelled on this day was five and a half miles.
Evans then followed the windings of the river, which appeared to lead him
"north of west" and next day, December 1st, discovered on the north side of it a
remarkable hill with a stone on the peak. The hill was "nearly circular in form
or like an Indian Fort,"[*] and this he named Evans's Crown[**] after
himself.
[*Quoted from Oxley's journal.]
[** It is close to Tarana.]
He walked to its summit and, on looking westward, could see for a distance of
fifty miles, then gaining his first view of the Bathurst Plains. His joy was
unbounded. One can well believe the story handed down by the earliest settlers
there who said that when Evans first caught sight of the plains he imagined that
he was gazing at a vast inland sea. He might easily have been misled, for waves
upon waves of grass like ocean billows lay stretched before him as far as eye
could see. Nor can one wonder that Evans was delighted with his discovery. Few
places suited to the wants of civilized man had been so jealously concealed from
observation and approach, more bravely striven for or so hardly won as this
inland prairie. He soon discovered that it was grassland, and of it he writes
"It is a great extent of grazing land!...well watered by running streams in
almost every valley!" This day he travelled five and a quarter miles. The
following day turned out wet, and every one of the party got drenched, the thin
leaves of the eucalyptus affording them little or no shelter; but he took great
notice of the country through which they passed, and wrote: "I think it equal to
Van Diemen's Land, the river winding through fine flats and round the points of
small ridges--that gradually descend to it--covered with the finest grass and
intermixed with the white daisy as in England." On this date he travelled only
four and a half miles.
Next day he found the flower that he had before so often sought in vain--the
mimosa--"in clusters on the banks of the river," and evidently his progress on
this day was a little faster, for his distance was five and three-quarter miles.
On Saturday, December 4th, he came to "an exceeding good tract of country, and
he describes it as "the handsomest I have yet seen, with gentle rising hills and
dales well watered. The distant hills which are about five miles south, appear
as grounds laid out, divided into fields by hedges. There are few trees on them
and the grass is quite green."
He still kept near the river, which provided the men with an abundance of
fish, and the dogs in the meantime killed a kangaroo, of which there were plenty
seen, as well as emus. While tracing the river, which wound over the plains, he
bestowed upon it, a day or two later, the name of Fish River, because the fish
were so easily caught and continued to be so abundant. His men rested near the
banks on the 5th as it was Sunday. It rained most of the day and they had no
shelter, nor did the trees provide them with any bark as a protection.
The first clear tract of land was named O'Connell Plains, in honour of the
Lieutenant-Governor. "At the space of about a mile," says Evans in his diary on
December 6th, "I came upon a fine plain of rich land, the handsomest country I
ever saw, it surpasseth Port Dalrymple" (Tasmania). Again he returns to praise
it: "This place is worth speaking of as good and beautiful: the tract of clear
land occupies about a mile on each side of the river...We saw a number of wild
geese but too shy to let us near them."

EVANS'S ROUTE MAP
Farther on he came to the outskirts of yet another plain which was "still
more pleasing and very extensive." He reached it at three o'clock on December
6th, and observes: "The soil is exceedingly rich and produces the finest grass
intermixed with a variety of herbs. The hills have a look of a park and grounds
laid out. I am at a loss for language to describe the country--I named this part
the Macquarie Plains." He notes the abundance of game, and fish as well, "which
is caught immediately--they seem to bite at any time." This day's progress
amounted to six miles.
Evans continued to advance along the Fish River, and on December 7th, "at
about four miles," his men were stopped by another river from the southward,
which they traced for two miles in order to find a spot where they could ford
it. They were held up by an approaching thunderstorm and had to find a shelter,
for it was a severe one. This day the distance travelled was five and
three-quarter miles.
After a wet night a fine morning broke on December 8th. While employed in
tracing the second river, Evans, two miles farther on, came upon more open
country, which he named Mitchell's Plains. His party managed to cross this
stream by throwing a rough log bridge across it, while some of the men swam over
with the horses. He found the surroundings very beautiful: "No mountains to be
seen. There are high hills at great distances, can observe them green to their
tops."
He named the second river Campbell River in honour of Mrs. Macquarie, it
being her maiden name, and came to its junction with the Fish River at sunset.
The two streams when united formed one river, to which Evans gave the name of
the Macquarie, in honour of the Governor of New South Wales.
The Macquarie River flowed through another extensive plain, and on December
9th Evans in glowing terms praises the scenery: " The hills are fine indeed...I
never saw anything to equal it...the soil is good," and he adds a word of
admiration for some trees he saw there: "The small trees on the lower banks of
the river stand straight not lying down as...at the Hawkesbury." He also
commends the grass:" The grass might be mowed, it is so thick and long,
particularly on the flat lands." He was able to travel eight and a quarter miles
on this day.
On December 10th he again followed the windings of the Macquarie across
country which seemed to excel all the rest in its richness, and which he
describes as "excellent good land with the best grass I have seen in any part of
New South Wales." Even the hills were covered with fine pasture, the trees being
far apart. "At the termination of the plains is a very handsome mount," and
Evans went to the top of the mount which stood at the extremity of the plains,
and says: "I named it Mount Pleasant from the prospect it commands to the
N.E."
As he stood and viewed its surroundings he wrote upon his map: "I can see at
least 30 miles S.W. I could distinguish several plains and the course of a
stream." He certainly makes it plain from his writings that he was pleased with
all he saw, and he observes: "The river now winds itself round the points of
forest hills."
There were numbers of emus and kangaroos now to be seen, but he writes, with
evident disgust, "The dogs will not give chase and I imagine they are bad ones."
The river compensated for this loss, however; for he presently adds: "Nothing
astonishes me more than the amazing large fish that are caught: one is now
brought in that weighs at least 15 Ibs. They are all of the same species."[*] He
thus ends his entry on this day: "I call the plains last passed over 'Bathurst
Plains.'" The distance travelled was seven and a quarter miles.
[* Native Perch or "Australian Bass."]
From Mount Pleasant, on the 11th, Evans continued to follow the course of the
Macquarie. There soon came an alteration in the aspect of the country, and he
thus describes his route:"The river leads me among hills the points of which end
in rocky bluffs near the water. At about four miles I was brought up by one of
them which appears to be the termination of a range of high hills from the south
and is the only mass of rock I have met with since leaving the Blue Mountains."
He halted at this spot for a few hours so that he could examine it and ascend a
peak, which he named on his map the Pine Hill. From its summit he saw that the
river "twined about N.W. round the points of stupendous green hills to the S.
and S.W." On the north side of the river a ridge of pasture hills ranged
westward. To the east he could see the fine plains that his party had travelled
over. He could observe no rocky ranges with pine trees save the one he was on,
and he writes: "The pines have a very romantic appearance...the largest of them
is about four feet in circumference."
He wished to go over the river and explore the north side, but says, "we
could not cross the water." On this day the party travelled where there were
many rocks but good pasture, the distance accomplished being six and a quarter
miles. On Sunday, December 12th, his men rested, while Evans took a walk for a
few miles to the south-west, and was pleased to see "steep healthy hills thickly
covered with grass and water in almost every valley."
On the 13th "the hills were still steep and not so fine as those already
passed"; "they are rather rough with rocks...The gums are much larger and
intermixed with boxtree...the soil...of a stiffer nature having pieces of
alabaster rock among it. The high lands...have a great deal about them that on
the surfaces is quite white in some places and of a yellow cast in others." The
Macquarie's course now grew "irregular." On December 14th the country through
which it ran became more and more barren-looking, and Evans says, "it is the
worst I have been over since leaving the Blue Mountains." Nevertheless, he
managed to travel seven miles on that day. On the 15th the road grew very rugged
indeed, and the only open country to be seen was that from north-west to
east.
The travelling for some days had been so rough that the men were now almost
barefoot: the stones and grass had cut their shoes to pieces. Nor could they
hope to renew them, since the dogs would not chase the kangaroo and, says Evans,
"there is no certainty of obtaining skins for our feet." The horses' backs were
also in a bad condition, and seeing no hopes of getting to the end of the high
range of hills on which he then was Evans determined on December 16th to turn
back on the following day. He writes" "I am now 98½ miles from the limitation of
Mr. BlaxIand's excursion." This he had ascertained through having measured the
whole distance by chain.
On the 17th the party turned eastward and made their way back again over the
open plains. The track on Evans's map shows that he did not follow his outward
track along the Macquarie, and only returned to the river at intervals,
presumably when in need of water. On one of these occasions he was fortunate
enough to meet with some of the natives. He had previously looked for them, and
had found "late traces" of their presence, so that he writes, "I think they are
watching us and keep at some distance."
On the 21st, however, while the men were fishing on the banks of the river,
some were seen making their way towards it. The white men watched the black
party advance over the plain, and quietly waited for their approach in order to
surprise them. There were only two women and four children. "The poor creatures
trembled and fell down with fright" at the sight of the strangers, and Evans
says. "I think they were coming for water, I gave them what fish we had--also
some fish hooks, twine and a tornahawk--which they appeared glad to get from us.
Two boys ran away: the other small children cried much at first. A little while
after I had played with them they began to be good humoured and laugh. Both the
women were blind of their right eyes."
Thus East met West on the Bathurst Plains.
BATHURST AND BEYOND
After Evans had returned to Sydney and had given an account of his travels,
no time was lost in making a road over the mountains to the newly-found
territory. Two hundred and fifty-seven miles of thick bush were cleared
(fifty-eight of which spanned the breadth of the mountains); viaducts were built
round giant rocks; chasms were bridged in a way that even to-day would be
considered remarkable: with the result that when, on April 25, 1815, the
Governor, accompanied by Mrs. Macquarie and suite, left for the settlement, the
general and his wife were able to drive the whole way in their post-chaise. This
notable feat in roadmaking was the work of Mr. William Cox, J.P., of
Windsor.
Upon reaching Evans's Crown and the highlands above the Bathurst Plains, the
Governor obtained an extensive view of the country and of the Fish and Campbell
Rivers. The first glimpse of the former gave him an idea that it was a stream of
considerable magnitude. Owing, however, to the dry weather at the time, very
little water was running and it might have been more properly described as a
chain of pools.
At a distance of seven miles from the bridge which had been made over the
Campbell River, a little to the south of its junction with the Fish River, the
view was again admired. We need not wonder that the general openly expressed his
pleasure at the sight of the open country. Years afterwards it was written of
him that "he constructed roads like a Colossus and covered the Blue Mountains
with corn"! but at this time he knew nothing of the interior, therefore the
fertile grassland heralded prosperity and dispelled any doubts suggested by the
barren regions of alternate rock and thicket.
A little later he saw the Macquarie, when the course of the river could be
easily traced by the tall swamp oaks that grew upon its banks. It is the
Macquarie of the white man; but in past ages the black men had called it Wambool
or Wandering River, on account of its winding course, and out of the wood of the
swamp oaks they had carved their boomerangs, shields, and womerahs. In its
reaches were afterwards found large numbers of that curious animal the
duck-billed platypus, and on the banks grew in profusion shrubs new to the
colonists, strange grasses, and flax with its sweet-scented purple and white
flowers.
A few trees were dotted here and there over the open country, chiefly the
tall white eucalyptus, others being wattle or mimosa and some casuarina, tall
and picturesque as the pine. On each side of the river little dark hillocks or
knolls, and peculiar "fairy rings," had been formed, and long furrows at regular
intervals marked the plains. The furrows were remarkable and would have been
taken for plough ridges in a civilized land, but no ploughshare had yet broken
the soil, and it was conjectured that the water of a flood which had long
receded must have caused them. It was curious that the furrows on each side of
the Dividing Range ran in the same direction from north-east to south-west.
On May 4th the party encamped in an open space on the left bank of the
Macquarie, whence the Governor made excursions along both banks and saw some
natives. He had a portrait of a native chief drawn for him, and in a letter to
the Home Government vouched for its being an excellent likeness. Some of these
natives possessed cloaks of kangaroo skins, stitched together with the sinews of
the emu, which they wore loosely over their shoulders. These had the fur side
turned inwards and were often adorned with curious devices on the outer side.
Governor Macquarie described one to Lord Bathurst which he said bore "as
regularly formed a St. George's cross as could be made."
On Sunday, May 7th, the Governor fixed on a suitable site for the erection of
a town to which he gave the name of Bathurst in honour of Henry third Earl
Bathurst, then Secretary of State for the Colonies. The site designed for the
town was found to be by observation taken at the selected flagstaff twenty-seven
and a half miles north and ninety-four and a half miles west of Government
House, Sydney. Within a distance of ten miles there were "not less than 50,000
acres, quite half of which was fit for cultivation..." On May 11th the Governor
and his party set out on their return to Sydney, where they arrived on the
19th.
As the Macquarie River flowed with such strong current and volume past the
new settlement, the Governor dispatched Evans to trace the river still farther,
and explore the country to the west and south-west. This is known as Evans's
second expedition westward. Accompanied by his man Appledove, he left Bathurst
on May 13, 1815, passed through a valley named Queen Charlotte's Vale, and
discovered a small tributary and then a larger one, which he called Limestone
Creek. On the 25th he fell in with a creek bearing south, which joined the bed
of a stream that came from a north-westerly direction. It was dry, but the banks
were seventy-nine feet apart and the large swamp oaks growing on either side
made it evident that it marked the course of a large river. Evans named it the
Lachlan in honour of the Governor, and established a military depôt at a spot
which he called Byrne's Creek. He discovered many hills and named the highest
three Mount Lachlan, Mount Molle, and Mount Lewin. Emus and kangaroos were seen,
and there were remains of burnt-out native fires, around some of which he
counted no less than twenty-three heaps of emu feathers. A few days before he
started on his return he met three natives, a man, woman, and child; the man ran
to a tree and climbed up it, the woman and child remaining terrified at the
apparition of a white man. Evans succeeded in getting on good terms with the
child, but the man in the tree cried so loudly that he might have been heard
half a mile away. On June 1st Evans, after carving his name and the date upon a
tree, left the Lachlan River on his return to Bathurst, where he arrived on June
12th.
In 1817 Governor Macquarie ordered Lieutenant Oxley, the Surveyor-General, to
trace the courses of the two rivers, the Lachlan and the Macquarie, and to
"ascertain their final termination." In company with Oxley, there went on this
expedition Evans; Fraser, to collect plants for Lord Bathurst; Parr, who acted
as mineralogist to the party; and Allan Cunningham.
CHAPTER VI
ALLAN CUNNINGHAM
Allan Cunningham, who brought back from his travels on land and sea such a
plentiful store of the floral wealth of the continent, was a "Botanical
Collector" for the Royal Gardens at Kew, and was admirably fitted not only by
his scientific training but by his own untiring energy and devotion to his task
for the work which has rendered him famous. The hardships which he endured
during his Australian researches seem to have shortened his life, and indeed a
glance at his portrait, reproduced on another page, suggests that nature had
scarcely equipped him for the tremendous physical strain which his long
explorations imposed upon him.

ALLAN CUNNUNGHAM
His journal, bound in one large volume, is in the Natural History Museum at
South Kensington, and the full extracts which will be found in the following
pages are now published, as far as the author knows, for the first time. It is a
diary of his work day by day for a period of less than two years out of the many
that he spent in New South Wales, where he was to end his life. He sent home
many letters and notes[*] describing discoveries of importance; yet of all the
records he has left this book is the most human.
[* The diary and the reports of Cunningham are too voluminous to
be printed in extenso in such a volume as this, but all essential
portions are either quoted verbatim or in a slightly abbreviated
form.]
It begins shortly after his arrival in the colony, when he had made his home
at Parramatta, and tells of his first advance with Lieutenant Oxley's expedition
into the interior of a country which he was afterwards to penetrate again and
again, exploring its vast distances, making new discoveries, and closely
examining its flora. In turning over the pages of this old book, the very scent
of the flowers, the splendour of their colours, and the delicate tracery of the
ferns, seem to pervade it and carry us back to the time when, as a young man of
six-and-twenty, Allan Cunningham landed in Sydney and first began to make his
collections of plants and seeds.
He was of Scottish extraction, his father, Allan Cunningham, being a native
of Renfrewshire. His mother, whose maiden name was Dickin, came of a Shropshire
family. The elder Allan Cunningham was her second husband; she was married to
him on August 20, 1790, and she bore him two sons, both of whom were to end
their lives in New South Wales: Allan was born at Wimbledon on July 13, 1791,
and Richard on February 12, 1793. Both went to school at Putney, and after
Allan's schooldays were over he spent some time in a conveyancer's office in
Lincoln's Inn, but the study of law did not sufficiently appeal to him and he
gladly accepted a situation at Kew as clerk to Mr. W. T. Aiton, then at work on
the second edition of the "Hortus Kewensis."
Here Allan Cunningham often met Robert Brown (late botanist of H.M.S.
"Investigator"), librarian to Sir Joseph Banks, who had charge of the "Hortus
Kewensis" through the press; and, doubtless from Brown, Cunningham gained at
first hand much information concerning the flora of Australia. In 1814 he
received his appointment as Botanical Collector to the Royal Gardens and left
Plymouth with James Bowie on October 29th, in H.M.S. "Duncan" (74), Captain
Chambers, for Brazil.
Rio de Janeiro was sighted on Christmas Day, and a few days later the two
botanists landed and spent three months collecting specimens in the surrounding
country. In April, 1815, they started for San Paulo, where they arrived after a
month of hard travelling through rough country. They returned to Rio in August
and spent twelve months in collecting plants in the neighbourhood, sending home
both dried and living specimens. Cunningham then received orders from Sir Joseph
Banks to sail to New South Wales, while Bowie was to proceed to the Cape of Good
Hope. The former took his passage in the ship "Surrey" and reached Sydney Cove
on December 20, 1816, after a voyage of ninety-five days. He landed on the
following day and proceeded at once to report his arrival to Governor Macquarie,
then living at Parramatta, who gave him a very kind reception. Shortly
afterwards he hired a cottage and took up his residence at Parramatta, where he
seems to have lived during the earlier part of his stay in the colony.
He tells us that, on paying his first visit to the Governor, General
Macquarie had hinted that an expedition (under the command of Mr. Oxley) to
explore further to the westward of the Blue Mountains was in contemplation; that
it would be composed of ten individuals, and strongly recommended him to join
it, being convinced that "an infinite number of new and interesting specimens of
plants might be detected in the several districts through which it might pass."
Cunningham determined not to miss so favourable an opportunity of seeing the
interior, and, matters being amicably arranged with Mr. Oxley, he began his
preparations for the journey which was to prove the forerunner of many tours of
exploration.
At first Cunningham was content to accompany expeditions as the botanist
attached to the party, but before long he found that he himself possessed the
inclination and skill to become a leader in exploration. On his long journeys
into new and strange country he was gradually attracted, not only by the
fascination of its botany, but by its unknown mountain ranges, its distant
plains, and its curious rivers winding within their deep, torn banks over beds
of sand. He soon seems to have determined to investigate them, and about the
year 1822, starting under his own leadership and using his own methods to
penetrate the bush, he began his work as an explorer, with the same zeal that he
bestowed upon his botanical researches. How well his efforts were rewarded and
how great the measure of success which crowned his labours the discoveries of
Pandora's Pass, the Darling Downs, Cunningham's Gap, the Gwydir, the Dumaresq,
and the Condamine Rivers will sufficiently bear witness.
His long voyages with Captain King to the north and northwest coasts afforded
him increased opportunities for studying the botany of the mainland, and his
visits to Tasmania and New Zealand added greatly to his knowledge of lands
beyond the limits of the continent itself.
Like a true botanist, Cunningham took pains that not distant England alone
should reap the benefit of his toil. During his many journeys into the bush over
miles of trackless country he sowed various kinds of seeds in Australian soil in
scattered areas, choosing localities where he believed the plants would best
germinate and thrive. These seeds he had brought with him from England, from
Brazil, and from the Cape, his last port of call before landing at Sydney. So
that, in after years, many people on perceiving a single specimen of some
strange plant flourishing alone in the native earth in an isolated spot have
wondered why and how it came there. Probably the ornamental Aga\ve
americana growing at the foot of the hill whereon stands the old Church of
the Holy Trinity at Kelso sprang from seed thus sown; and, if so, it is in
itself a fitting memorial to Cunningham.

A PRIMROSE FROM ENGLAND
One day when conversing with Dr. Lang on this subject he said: "I always
carry into the interior a small bagful of peach-stones" (in his journals he
enumerates various fruit stones and seeds), "and whenever I find a piece of good
soil in the wilderness I cause it to be dug up and drop in a few in the hope of
providing a meal for some famished European...or some hungry blackfellow." In
Sydney and around Parramatta he was equally eager to distribute seeds of English
flowers--usually specimens of the commoner kinds--to those earlier generations
of Australians who thus learned to love the primrose, the wallflower, and the
violet, as had their forefathers, and to cultivate the English rose, all of
which gave colour and lent influence in forming the minds of the children, many
of whom were destined to make their homes in that very wilderness, and to plant
their gardens there.
How much the flowers meant too to those British people who had left their
native land perhaps Hopley's picture which we reproduce, best will show.
Though Oxley's "Journal of Exploration into the Interior" in 1817 has long
been printed, we read an entirely new account of his travels in Cunningham's
diary. Fresh as he was from Brazil, he is able to give us with a more
experienced mind his impressions of the plants and flowers that he saw growing
upon the Blue Mountains, at Bathurst, in the country watered by the Macquarie
and Lachlan, and also on the north-west coast, and to compare them with those
already seen by Robert Brown on the eastern side of the mountains and in
Northern Australia.
Cunningham's diary, which begins while he was residing at Parramatta, runs as
follows.
ALLAN CUNNINGHAM'S JOURNAL
BOTANIZING AT PARRAMATTA, MARCH, 1817
1817. March 1st. Saturday. Dull cloudy weather. Prevented from
stirring out of doors. Small mistling rain most part of the day.
Evening fair, light clouds.
2nd, Sunday. Showery in the early part of the morning. Fine and clear
at 9 o'clock. Continued so the whole of the day.
3rd. Monday. Morning very fine; went on board the Brig Kangaroo and
saw Captain Jeffreys who informed me that he could not sail before the 16th or
17th inst. Returned on shore in consequence of an invitation to dine with His
Excellency in the afternoon.
4th. Tuesday. This day was occupied on the Botany Bay Road. Gathered
on the roadside duplicate seeds of Tetratheca sp. On the damp sandy camps
gathered specimens of Banksia oblongifolia and seeds of Petrophila
Pulchella. In dry forest lands near the Bay I gathered specimens of
Dodonaea cuneata, a new species, a small shrub; observed in the deep
waters near the road an aquatic plant in flower, perhaps A ctinocarpus of
Brown's Prodrs. Cor. 3, petals white, anthers and styles yellow.
5th. Wednesday. Papering my seeds and specimens.
8th. Saturday. Ticketing and packing the remaining of my specimens.
Having visited the North Rocks near Parramatta but twice since I had been in New
South Wales and desirous of augmenting my seed list I made an excursion to them
at 12 o'clock. Gathered seeds of Ceratopetalum gummiferum (Christmas
Bush);[*] seeds of an annual plant of the Asperifolia.; Aster sp.,
a very slender herbaceous plant; duplicate seeds of Panax sp., often
before observed with some ferns, among which is a singular Acrostichum
[leather fern]. On my return, gathered species of Epacris sp. [an
Australian heath], flowers very large, white.
[* Although called a bush, it is really a tree, attaining a height
of thirty to forty feet. It belongs to the natural order Saxifrageae.
The generic name is taken from two Greek words meaning a horned petal. It is
confined to the State of New South Wales.]
10th. Monday. I made an excursion early this morning to the Pennant
Hills about 8 miles from Parramatta. In rocky valleys at the base of these hills
I gathered seeds of a handsome shrub of the genus Exocarpus, and perhaps
the species discovered by Labillardière in Van Diemen's Island in 1793 and
called by him E. expansa; much the habit of Taxus, receptacle of
the fruit larger than E. cupressiformis [native cherry] and of a deep
purple colour. Exocarpus cupressiformis, specimens in flower, and
Baeckia densifolia, abundant on damp rocks.
11th. Tuesday. Prevented from stirring out of doors. Heavy rain at
night.
13th. Thursday. Morning fair but cloudy. Repapering[*] my specimens,
seeds etc. Having heard of the arrival of the Ships Fame and Sir Wm. Bensley
from London and desirous of ascertaining whether they had brought any letters
for me, I went down to Sydney but found none had arrived...
[* Changing the papers in which the specimens were dried from damp
to dry sheets.]
17th. Monday. The whole of the day was employed on an immense tract of
land beyond the Camp at Parramatta but met with but little success. The late
heavy rains had destroyed nearly the whole of the seeds that were ripe as well
as the flowering specimens. Gathered seeds of an Elaeocarpus, a small
tree, on the banks of the north creek etc., in low damp situations.
19th. Wednesday.> Took a walk a short distance on the Camp,
gathered seeds of Patersonia sericea; Goodenia sp., a small
herbaceous plant; and a species of Hypoxis, a small liliaceous plant,
found among grass.
20th. Thursday. An opportunity offering of a pack horse going up to
Bathurst, I sent forward a specimen press and some paper to remain at the depo~t
till my arrival.
21st. Friday. Morning particularly calm, fine and clear. I occupied
myself this day examining the botanical productions of a rocky creek in the
environs of Baulkham Hills, about 5 miles north-west of Parramatta; collected
seeds of the following plants:
1. Jasminoides (= Lycium), a twining shrub not unlike Jasminum
gracile(H.K.), but the berry is many seeded.
2. >Veronica sp., a small creeping rock plant, flowers blue.
3. Cissus sp., leaves quinated, leaflets ovate-oblong, glaucous
beneath; a twining shrub.
4. Baeckia sp., allied to >B. densifolia, a low depressed
shrub, in damp situations.
It being far advanced in the afternoon before I could return to Baulkham
Hills, having gone along the margins of the creek several miles, I passed the
evening and night at the little farming establishment of a friend.
22nd. Saturday. I returned to Parramatta this morning.
24th. Monday. This day I finally packed my seeds and specimens.
Writing letters to the Right Hon. Sir J. Banks and W. T. Aiton, Esqr., informing
them among other matters of the shipping of a box of specimens and seeds on
board H.M. Armed Brig "Kangaroo," bound for England direct. Enclosing copy of
journal from September last to the end of last month, together with an account
of my disbursements.
25th. Tuesday. Having placed my box on board the daily passage boat,
in order to be forwarded to Sydney Cove, I went down myself by land. In the
afternoon I ship'd my collection on board the Kangaroo brig, which is expected
to sail in a few days.
26th. Wednesday. Bright clear day. Heat moderate.
27th. Thursday. Waited (on the 26th) on the Governor but could not see
him, His Excellency being much engaged at this period forming his despatches for
England.
31st. Monday. This dayIreceived a letter from the Deputy-Surveyor
stating that next Thursday has been fixed upon as the day on which the remaining
persons composing the expedition should proceed forward from Parramatta and
begging me to hold myself in readiness on that day.
1817. April 1st. Tuesday. Remained within doors all the day--writing
forward journal.
2nd. Wednesday. This day I conveyed my chest and boxes to the
Government store-house and placed them under the care of the storekeeper until
my return from the intended journey.
JOURNEY OVER THE WESTERN OR BLUE MOUNTAINS
Parramatta to Bathurst, 3-19 April, 1817
April 3rd. Thursday. Although I have not received from the Right Hon.
Sir J. Banks or Mr. Aiton any instructions to direct me in my duties in this
country, still I should feel by no means justified in allowing so very
favourable an opportunity now offering itself to pass by, and more especially as
the natural history of the western interior of the continent is becoming daily
more important and interesting to the Mother Country.
Considering the small portion of this vast continent yet known, and that
imperfectly to a few individuals, and the large tract of country we may
necessarily plod over in our endeavour towards accomplishing the primary and
grand object on account of which the expedition (to which I have attached
myself) has been formed, I anticipate much in my department and pursuits, and
have endeavoured to guard against those inconveniences (which I have experienced
on former journeys) by furnishing myself with moderate-sized portable saddle
bags, and specimen cases, well canvassed over and painted, for the reception and
protection of those treasures that the interior of this country may afford me.
Mr. Evans, Assistant-Surveyor, arrived the last evening here at Parramatta in
order to make arrangements relative to an extra cart for the conveyance of the
remaining part of our luggage to Bathurst, intending to proceed forward on our
route for that settlement to-morrow morning.
4th. Friday. About 9 o'clock this morning we sent the two carts with
the people forward, in order if possible to arrive on the right bank of the
Nepean River (a distance of about 21 miles) this evening. We (Mr. Evans and
myself) finally left Parramatta about 10 o'clock, passed the cluster of farms at
Prospect Hill about midday, and were obliged to swim our horses over the South
Creek, which although considerably abated, presents at this time a rapid stream
of water of considerable depth, its wooden bridge having been carried away by
the late floods. About 4 o'clock in the afternoon we arrived at the Ferry on the
Nepean River, where we stopped for the night.
The road over which we passed this day, which is bounded by open forest land,
is tolerably good considering the recent heavy rains that have fallen upon it
and the waters that cross it in the slight hollows formed by the gentle risings
of the country. The botany, with very few exceptions, is the same as that
observed in similar situations in the environs of Parramatta. I have, however,
gathered specimens of a Prostanthera, a dwarfish shrub with small purple
flowers; a species of Persoonia, forming a small shrub with linear leaves
is likewise in flower, and a species of Erodium is abundant in the
pathway. Dodonaea filiformis, seen but sparingly in open woods near
Botany Bay, is very abundant on each side of the river, in young fruit. From the
difficulty experienced in passing the South Creek, our loaded carts, which we
had passed on the road, could not overtake us this day.
5th. Saturday. In consequence of our carts being unable to pass the
South Creek the last evening, we were detained the whole of this day at the
Ferry House. It afforded me an opportunity of examining the botanical
productions on the immediate banks of the river, which, however, were by no
means interesting. These are clothed with spreading trees of the Melia
Azedarach commonly termed by the settlers "white cedar." It was in fruit.
Casuarina torulosa and some common Eucalypti are the whole of the
arborescent plants I observed. The late floods had made such dreadful ravages in
the banks, which had been overflowed to a very considerable depth, as to leave
me no herbaceous plants of any consideration.
6th. Sunday. Our carts and people having arrived this morning, we
ferried our luggage over the river (which at this period is not less than 90
feet wide) and pitched our tent on the opposite or left bank. Our horses, which
had escaped from the paddock in which they were encircled, were not secured till
too late to swim them over to our encampment.
7th. Monday. This morning we swam our horses and bullocks over the
river, and only waited the arrival of the Surveyor-General, John Oxley, Esq.
(the chief of the expedition) to join us, according to agreement, in order to
proceed on our journey. The banks on the Nepean abound with a species of
Arum known in England by the name of A. Orixense [it is now known
as Typhonium Brownii, Schott] differing from A. trilobatum in
having a pedunculated spathe, which is longer than the spadix. Like its
congeners, its flower has a fetid smell, and its root is of the most acrid taste
and irritating quality so common to the genus, but boiled or roasted it is a
nutritive vegetable equal to Caladium esculentum or buckra yam of our
West Indian colonies. It is however but small. In an excursion I made down the
river on its left bank, the following are the most remarkable plants that came
within my notice and observation.
Phytolacca pentandra, an herbaceous plant of the habit of P.
dioica; Native Elder, habit of Sambucus, specimens of which I sent to
England per "Kangaroo," Clerodendron sp., a small tree 12-18 feet high,
in fruit; Senecio sp., a tall herbaceous plant, in low swampy spots. The
forests near the river are at this period altogether unproductive of any
botanical subject for the collector. They abound with an abundance of the white
cockatoo and a few flying squirrels.
8th. Tuesday Morning. We sent our men and carts forward westerly to
the depo~t at Springwood, a distance of about 12 miles in the mountains, and
were ourselves in the fullest hopes of overtaking them at that resting place in
the evening. Mr. Evans and self were detained the whole of the day waiting the
arrival of Mr. Oxley.
9th. Wednesday. Frosty: atmosphere fresh and sharp. Mr. Oxley had not
arrived to join us and aware that we were one day behind our carts, we left
directions with the man at the ford to inform Mr. Oxley we would wait one day
for him at the second day's halting post--at the 28th mile mark--and commenced
our route from Emu Plains about ten o'clock. The road to the foot of the
mountains is through the open wooded flat called Emu Plains, so named probably
from numbers of those birds having been found here at the formation of the
colony, and when the country had been cleared and opened this far inland. The
timber is small and consists of the Eucalypti observed about Parramatta.
The ascent from the plains is very gentle, leading through fine avenues of trees
of tolerable size formed by the new road which is of easy and slightly curved
form and of convenient width.
About one o'clock we passed the depo~t at Springwood, which is remarkable for
the good grassy pasturage and lofty handsome timber with which this resting
place is surrounded. Eucalyptus robusta (white or swamp mahogany) and
E. resinifera; (red mahogany), and Casuarina torulosa (River Oak),
are predominant, with another species of Eucalyptus called by the colonists
"Stringy Bark." Our carts had left this depo~t early this morning for the next
stage, where we were all to meet at night. About 3 miles onward there is an
obvious change in soil and in the appearance of the timber, the former being
barren and rocky and the latter becoming stunted and diminutive. In these
sterile tracts many of the plants common about Sydney and Parramatta appear to
very fine effect. Among them I observed a species of Podolobium
[Oxylobium] in pod, it appears distinct from P. trilobatum in the
formation of the lateral lobes of the foliage, which are entire as well as
bifurcated and spinous.
Near the 18th mile mark, is an open and extremely bleak and barren part near
the road side. Upon a small eminence of rugged ascent stands a pile of stones
supposed to have been erected by the indefatigable and persevering botanist Mr.
George Caley, and suspected to be his farthermost advancement westward in a
grand botanical excursion which he had undertaken with a view of crossing the
mountains. His Excellency in passing this place on his route to Bathurst in the
year 1815 called it Caley's Repulse. The country is now very rugged and
mountainous, and the road difficult, which in one place is formed by means of a
wooden bridge over a gully, reflecting great credit upon the persons to whom its
formation was entrusted by His Excellency for their judgment and perseverance in
this difficult undertaking. Near the 20th. mile is an extensive flat or plain,
which His Excellency in the journey above referred to, has called the King's
Table Land. This exposed situation is covered with the shrub Eucalyptus
microphylla [= Eucalyptus stellulata], forming thick brushes of
underwood. This plain is considered as the summit of the western mountains, and
from them a very extensive panoramic view presents itself of the country around
us. On the S.W. side of the plain the mountain terminates in abrupt precipices
of very considerable depth, at the bottom of which is seen a glen or ravine
which the Governor has termed the Prince Regent's Glen. The length of this
picturesque and remarkable tract of country is estimated at 24 miles.
Onward two miles we arrived at dusk at a wooden house, erected originally as
a store for the preservation of provisions for the use of the men working on the
road, and now converted into an half-way house, being 28 miles from Emu Ford.
Our people had already arrived there and had kindled a large fire. The soil is
now for the most part of a sandy grit, compounded of fragments of iron and
sand-stone, in which, with a little peat, the finest specimens of Australian
botany flourish.
I observed specimens of Persoonia with filiform leaves, agreeing in
specific character with P. microcarpa. Stylidium setaceum, a very
delicate plant, abundant on the wayside. On bare rocks Chloranthus
stoechadis is very luxuriantly in flower. Some shrubs of the habit of
Boronia, with pinnate and ternate leaves, grew very abundant on the
roadside near the 26th mile mark: they were, however, not in flower. This
evening we were joined by Mr. Oxley at our resting place at the 28th mile mark.
Some boggy slopes at the back of our Wooden House have been called Lewis's or
Jamieson's Plains.
10th. Thursday. Mr. Oxley ascertained by the assistance of the
barometer, which he had brought with him, the height of the spot where we halted
the last evening to be 2,984 feet and from the circumstance of King's Table Land
being several feet higher we calculated it to be upwards of 3,000 ft. above the
level of the sea. We availed ourselves of the clearness of the morning and
freshness of the atmosphere, and while our people were loading the carts walked
onward to the 33rd. mile, where, at the top of a hill, an opening presents to us
a grand romantic expanse of country; mountains running beyond mountains to the
very verge of the horizon, striking the beholder with admiration and
astonishment. We have here a S.W. view of the Prince Regent's Glen. On account
of the circular form in which the nearest or fore ground below us is disposed
the Governor in his tour was induced to call it Pitt's Amphitheatre.
We halted here until our people with our carts came up to us. In taking a
general view of the botany of the country around, which is thickly wooded with
brush and small diminutive timber of Eucalypti, there appeared the following
among the many plants very frequent in the environs of Sydney. Platylobium
nova sp., with the habit of P. parviflorum, the leaves however are
ovate, netted and silky beneath. The Boronia seen yesterday is very
abundant in the sterile sands. Stylidium setaceum, with Arethusa
sp., similar to the Arethusa figured in the last collection, were
very fine in flower among the rocky grassy spots on the roadside. We did not
notice Lambertia formosa, which is very frequent on the Blue Mountains,
farther westward than about the 32nd mile mark. Continuing our route on the new
road which runs on the main edge of the mountains and forms one side of the
Prince Regent's Glen, we arrived at an open but low bushy tract of country,
which His Excellency had named Hounslow Heath, although it is frequently termed
Blackheath. Our carts and people were far behind us, occasioned by the rugged
uneven state of the country. We therefore were obliged to halt for the day on
this heath near the 41st mile mark. The water here is far from being good, it is
the drainage of the low black peats which constitute the soil of the slopes from
the heath. I furnished myself with specimens of a species of Grevillea,
remarkable for the beauty of its flowers and the laciniated spinous habit of its
foliage, which I have termed G. acanthifolia: a species of
Pimelea, differing from P. glauca in having long filaments
supporting the anthers, as in P. filamentosa, is likewise abundant.
11th. Friday. Cloudy morning. Proceeding forward on our journey the
road continued for the space of 9 miles on the main range, where it abruptly
terminates in almost a perpendicular precipice, down which a tolerably easy and
practicable road has been formed, which has been called by the Governor Cox's
Pass, and through all its windings cannot be less than ¾ of a mile. By
admeasurement this abrupt termination of the mountains westerly proved to be 676
feet above the valley below it, which His Excellency has termed the Vale of
Clwydd, from its resemblance and local situation being surrounded by mountains
like that in North Wales. The retrospect view from the vale of the overhanging
mountain is exceedingly grand and magnificent. At this point of view is observed
the termination of a ridge that has the appearance of a very lofty distant hill,
which the Governor has called Mount York, and which Mr. Oxley found by his
barometer to be elevated above the level of the sea 3218 feet.
The Vale of Clwydd although boggy in some places has a rich soil, producing
good grass, and in other respects is excellent pastureland. Here we observed the
very remarkable change of country, differing from that on the mountains both in
the vegetable productions and the nature of the soil. Banksia serrata
ceases to exist farther west than the summit of Mount York, and B. compar
succeeds it throughout the vale, of stubby arborescent growth in flower and
fruit. This species of Banksia is perhaps only a variety of B.
integrifolia. Eucalyptus Perfoliata (H.K.) is very frequent, and
another species with some leaves cordate and sessile and others lanceolate and
inserted on a petiole. Podolepis acuminata: Hibbertia cuneata,
with large yellow flowers: Campanula sp., with large blue flowers and
undulate bristly leaves: a species of Buchnera with yellow flowers:
Helichrysum sp., allied to H. bracteatum, are all now very common
plants, from Cox's Pass westerly. The rocks and shaded humid situations in the
Pass afforded me specimens and seeds of Stylidium longifolium. A dwarf
syngenesious shrub, Baccharis arguta is in seed: gathered seeds of
Epacris spicata from plants growing in tufts in shaded situations.
Acrostichum sp., having a sterile frond, a plant observed in glens near
Botany Bay, is found here in great abundance on these shaded rocks with a
species of Polypodium [Polypody Fern], with glossy laciniated coriaceous
fronds. In Cox's Pass there is a kind of indurated pipeclay in lamina that might
be turned to some ornamental or useful purpose by the sculptor. Some specimens
which we collected of it worked as easily as chalk. Our people converted them
into oil stones. We are now about 80 English miles from Sydney.
The mile-mark numbers begin afresh from the Pass to Bathurst. Passing through
the Vale for about 5 miles we arrived at Cox's River, which is formed by a
rivulet of fine water running to the eastward over a very stony bottom, and
uniting itself with another stream at the western extremity of the vale, and
from thence the junction takes its course through the Prince Regent's Glen and
empties itself into the Nepean River. At this river we first observed granite,
of which its bed is composed. Grevillea acanthifolia and G.
asplenifolia, frequent on the margins of creeks on the eastern coast, grow
on the banks of this river in the greatest luxuriance. Here is a depôt and store
house under the charge of a corporal and 2 privates. We pitched our tent on the
right bank of the river and halted for the night. Our barometer informed us that
we had descended about 430 feet from the base of Mount York. In the Vale of
Clwydd I gathered seeds and specimens of a shrubby Aster the flowers of
which are of a bluish white colour.
12th. Saturday. Ascending from the river we continued our route
westerly over a range of hills of difficult and fatiguing descent, which the
Governor has named Clarence's Hilly Range, generally open forest land and
tolerably good for grazing. The plants on this hilly district appear to differ
very little from those before observed. Daviesia latifolia, a shrub first
discovered in Van Diemen's Land is the most prevalent plant: a remarkable shrub,
evidently from its distinct stipulae one of the Rubiaceae, is by no means
rare; it is, however, not in flower at this time. Some large specimens of timber
of the Eucalypti, which from the character of the capsule appear to be of
the genus Eudesmia, are frequent. About 2 o'clock we arrived at the Fish
River, on the western side of Clarence's Hilly Range, a stage of 16 miles--very
severe and oppressive to our horses, the whole being sharp lofty hills and
narrow boggy valleys, alternately. In one of the deep vales I gathered specimens
of a species of Arenaria, with long white flowers and rigid sharp leaves:
a species of Epilobium, agreeing in all its characters with E.
angustifolium, is very frequent.
About 3 miles to the westward of Cox's River three remarkable hills connected
together present themselves. The Governor desirous of commemorating the names of
the three first individuals who penetrated thus far to the westward has called
them Mount BlaxIand, Wentworth's Sugar Loaf, and Lawson's Sugar Loaf. Acacia
melanoxylon [Blackwood of N.S.W.], a native of Van Diemen's Land, is to be
seen occasionally here. It is arborescent, and is remarkable for the singular
character of its seed being attached to the interior of the legumen by a
coloured plicated umbilical cord. We had no time to examine the nature of the
wood, the heart of which is said to be black. We pitched our tent for the night
on the right bank of the Fish River. On the banks of this river, which, like
Cox's River, has a stony bed, I gathered seeds of a Cnicus with
laciniated leaves and a long tap or fusiform root, and seeds of a
Limnanthemum smaller than Helichrysum bracteatum. Grevillea
cinerea is very frequent on the rocky banks of the river in situations that
have been recently inundated. Our people with their hooks caught some fish of
about 2½ or 3 lbs. weight, which we found had a very fine flavour. It has a
strong dorsal fin and appears to belong to the Perca (Perch) family.[*]
Mr. Oxley ascertained by the barometer that the Fish River is 409 feet above
Cox's River, and about 2570 feet above the sea level.
[* The native perch of the inland rivers is named the " Australian
Bass " to distinguish it from the estuary perch (Percalates colonorum)
from which species it seems to have evolved, and because it closely resembles
the "Large Mouth Bass" of North America.]
13th. Sunday. The frost of the last night severe. Proceeding forward,
having previously forded the Fish River, the country continues uneven and hilly,
covered with small timber, and generally speaking is good pasturage in an open
forest land. About 8 miles west of the Fish River is a fine spacious valley
running N.W. and S.E., bounded by hills of easy ascent and thinly covered with
timber. This vale, which the Governor has called Sidmouth Valley, is an
exceeding fine and rich grassy spot. Lotus major [Bird's foot Trefoil],
and Bellis sp. (or Cotula), with some grasses, is here in the
greatest strength and luxuriance, all indicative of the excellence of the soil.
In some wet boggy situations I observed a species of Lythrum, in habit
and character agreeing with L. salicaria [Purple Loosestrife] of Britain,
but differing in the flower not being dodecandrous. Onward, diminutive forest
lands prevail, beyond which are open rising grounds and fine grassy plains.
Banksia compar, Acacia melanoxylon, with Eucalyptus
perjoliata, E. globulus etc., are very frequent. Near the 32nd mile
mark from Cox's River is a small but exceedingly sterile patch of land where I
gathered specimens of Aster speciosus, a fine shrubby plant with azure
flowers: seeds and specimens of Helichrysum albicans; Dianella
speciosa [Broadleaved Flax Lily], a plant with elongated foliaceous stems,
supporting several blue flowers. At a small distance from the Fish River a very
remarkable mountain attracts the notice of the traveller on account of the large
stone or rock with which it is crowned. This singular mountain has been called
by the Governor, Mount Evans. Our cart-horses and oxen being much fatigued with
the labours of this day, we stopped and pitched our tent on the banks of a creek
near the 34th mile mark from Cox's Pass.
14th. Monday. Anxious to reach the settlement on Bathurst Plains early
in the day we rode forward with all possible despatch, leaving our carts and
people to advance more leisurely. The country exhibits a continuation of fine
open grazing lands of the same character in point of timber as was observed
yesterday. At five miles distant from our last night's encampment we arrived at
Campbell River, which is at this period a moderate stream, although in dry
seasons it has been observed to be only a chain of small waterpools. We forded
this river (the bridge having been carried away by the late floods) and
continued for several miles over a gentle rising hilly sheep country with grassy
valleys until the extensive plains of Bathurst opened to the view. A short
distance south from the line of road which crosses the Campbell River is a fine
rich tract of land called Mitchell's Plains. Near the Fish River, which forms a
junction with the Campbell River some miles north of the road, are two very
fertile plains, the one called O'Connell's Plains, and the other Macquarie's
Plain, both said to be of very considerable extent. The botany has the same
appearance as observed yesterday. A species of Indigofera, with short
obovate pinnated leaves, being the prevailing shrub.
The plains around the settlement at Bathurst are a clear and open tract of
campaign country bounded by gentle hills of easy ascent, thinly wooded, and well
watered by the Macquarie River, which winds through them. The course can be
easily traced by the particular verdure of the Casuarinae (swamp oaks) on
its banks, which in fact are the only trees throughout the extent of the plain,
a circumstance which will be the more severely felt as the settlement increases
in population, firewood being brought in bullock carts from the considerable
distance of 5 or 6 miles.
At about 2 o'clock p.m. we arrived at the Flagstaff on the settlement,
erected by order of the Governor when His Excellency visited these plains in
May, 1815. A superintendent's house, public kitchen, and temporary store have
been erected for the accommodation of the residents there. The site intended for
the town of Bathurst, by observation, taken on the spot, is situated in lat.
33°24'30" S., and long. 149°1745" E. of Greenwich, being also about 27½ north of
Sydney and 94 west of it, bearing W. 20°30' N. 83 geographical miles--or 90½
statute miles--the measured road from Sydney to Bathurst being 140 miles or
thereabouts. Somewhat more than a mile north of the road 5 miles west of
Campbell River, near the Macquarie River, is a singular stone of large
dimensions. It is a fine piece of quartz and is usually termed the " White
Rock."[*]
[* The name is now given to the locality.]
15th. Tuesday. Aware that our stay at Bathurst would be short, and
anxious to take a general view of the botany of these extensive plains, I
started in a south-westerly direction over the hills, but found it very
inconsiderable being confined to a few specimens. Pimelea sp., allied to
P. glauca, but differing in having long filaments supporting the anthers,
is exceedingly common, accompanying the two syngenesious plants on the plains.
Gnaphalium sp., suffruticose, leaves ovate, lanceolate, glandulose,
hairy. G. ericaefolium, a small suffruticose plant. On the hills and
forest lands a species of Acacia with oblong-spathulate leaves, are very
frequent, as are now seeds of the Indigofera seen yesterday. Winding
round the plain I intersected the River Macquarie about 5 miles below the
settlement and determined to trace it up, with a view of detecting any plants
that grow on its immediate banks, which are as follows:--Goodenia sp.,
with large yellow flowers and laciniate leaves: Senecio sp., allied to
S. quadridentatus of Labillardière (Erechthites quadridentata),
but the flosculae appear to be 5-toothed: Senecio sp., leaves
linear-lanceolate, serrated: Helichrysum alatum [=Ammobium alatum]
leaves radical, spathulate, stem alated. A species of Gnaphalium,
frequent on the eastern coast in rich soils, is likewise abundant here. On a
lofty rocky hill called Mount Pleasant I gathered a species of Aster. I
likewise observed a species of Dodonae, with narrow lanceolate crenulate
leaves, in fruit. Near the river that species of Eucalyptus usually
denominated Blue Gum is now in flower. I gathered specimens of it. The banks are
covered with Rubus sp., same as near Parramatta and Urtica dioica.
I gathered seeds of a Dianella.
In this day's excursion I had an opportunity of observing the general
character of the soil. The hills are covered with a sandy quartzose grit and
fragments of stone that have evidently undergone fusion, while that on the lower
lands and more especially on the banks of the river is very rich and black and
of a considerable depth, formed of decayed vegetable matter, the depositions of
floods that have accumulated from one period to another. The whole plain may be
termed a good cattle ground, although the sandy light aspect of its surface, and
particularly that of the most elevated grounds, conveys no very flattering ideas
of its becoming a grain country of any consideration. Returned at sunset to the
settlement having passed over about 18 miles in a circuitous route.
16th. Wednesday. A drenching rain set in from N.W. early in the
afternoon with thunder and lightning, which continued all the evening.
17th. Thursday. Much rain fell during the last night which continued
this morning. Confined indoors.
18th. Friday. Being recommended to make an excursion to some brushy
spots north of the Macquarie River I crossed over to the north side in order to
visit the remarkable sterile scrubby tract called Winbourne Dale, bearing N.E.
by E. for several miles, under a lofty range of mountains running nearly east
and west. Having passed over about 5 miles of open rising grassy country I came
to a watercourse termed Winbourne Dale creek, which after many windings empties
itself into the Macquarie River about 20 miles below the settlement. Although
not above 12 feet wide it was deep and the current very strong, occasioned by
the late very heavy rains. Finding it impossible to pass this creek and that the
object in view and the plans laid down in the morning were defeated, I followed
the creek down about 3 miles, in which space it had received 2 or 3 minor
streamlets from the northern hills. Arundo phragmites is common on its
banks. A species of Veronica with terminal spikes, leaves opposite,
lanceolate and serrated, is likewise abundant; it is in capsule and furnished me
with seeds.
Podolepis rugata is frequent on the more elevated grassy grounds. The
Buchnera with yellow flowers is now in seed. These fine pasture lands are
for the most part unprofitable to the botanical collector.
19th. Saturday. The unsettled state of the weather had detained us
longer than we expected at Bathurst but conceiving the waters to have abated
sufficiently to allow our pack-horses to proceed forward to the Lachlan River we
sent five of them from Bathurst this morning laden with provisions, and luggage,
intending to follow them ourselves to-morrow. A species of Xerotes with leaves
round and filiform. and an erect spreading panicle I observed among the grass on
the plains. Near the settlement a dwarf species of Eryngium, much allied
to E. vesiculosum (Labillardière), is common in patches. It is not in
flower. It appears from Mr. Oxley's observations made by means of the barometer
that Bathurst is 558 feet lower than the Fish River, and about 2,000 feet above
the sea level. The nature of the soil of the plains is seen on the bank of a
ditch dug round the Government Domain. The surface is loam, below sandy, resting
on a bed of arenaceous marl.
Bathurst to Farewell Hill, 20 April-17 May, 1817.
20th. Sunday. We left the settlement this morning and proceeded on our
journey westerly to the depôt at the Lachlan River. From the Plains we entered a
valley, termed Queen Charlotte's Vale, of considerable length, and at this
period very boggy, occasioned by the late heavy rains. The risings or ascents of
the hills by which it is bounded were very soft and rotten, rendering the
travelling very difficult and distressing to our burdened horses. In several
places our saddle horses sunk up to their girths and hence it became necessary
to dismount and lead them. A considerable portion of sand forms a component part
of the soil of the hills which resting on a bed of clay is sufficient to retain
the humidity near the surface. The herbage of these hills is a grass
(Bromus) interspersed with Gnaphalium cricaefolium (Everlasting),
and with Lotus major [Greater Bird's foot Trefoil] sparingly, all which
plants are likewise abundant in the richer valleys.
Daviesia latifolia [Bitter leaf Bush] continues very abundant on the
rising ground. In the wet bays in the valley I observed an Erodium allied
to E. hymenoides [Heron's Bill], with leaves ternate, flowers blue.
We halted for the night at the usual resting place, 18 miles from Bathurst,
near the extremity of the valley. Our people with the pack horses had arrived
some hours before, and had pitched the tent. Eucalyptus cornuta, rising
about 20 feet, with obovate leaves, at this period is just expanding its flowers
on the sides of the hills.
21st. Monday. Fine weather. Resuming our journey about 8 o'clock, the
road continues over a hilly country, in many places boggy, and heavy travelling
for the horses. Among the brush or under shrub with which the hills are covered
I discovered a singular species of Veronica, with glaucous leaves. A
papilionaceous shrub allied to Oxylobium, with cordate villous leaves was
in great abundance. Of the timber that species of Eucalyptus usually
termed "Stringy Bark" with others common on the Eastern Coast, are common on the
hills, and although fine lofty trees were apparently generally hollow and
decayed at their base. The higher lands, which are stony, are nevertheless
tolerable good grazing tracts. We stopped for the evening at the foot of a hill
near a water hole, having travelled about 15 miles from our last night's
encampment and about 321 miles from Bathurst. On the hill, which is covered with
rugged fragments of granite, I saw the shrub of the order Rubiaceae which
I noticed on Clarence's Hilly Range, and on its summit Banksia compar [=
B. integrifolia] is very strong and abundant. It however ceases to exist
beyond this hill westerly. On our left hand two remarkable points are to be
observed. The one called Mount Antill, in honour of Major Antill (Major of
Brigade of the 46th Regt.), and Mehan's Sugarloaf as a compliment to Mr. James
Mehan, Deputy-Surveyor-General in New South Wales.
22nd. Tuesday. The frosts of the last night considerable. Water
standing in our vessels throughout the night was covered with ice. A strong rime
on all vegetation. Leaving our last night's halting place we continued our route
over lands slightly elevated and grassy, thickly wooded with timber,
Eucalyptus (Blue Gum) chiefly. In thickly brushy spots Daviesia
latifolia prevails. The soil is a red sandy loam which was here and there
thrown up by the roots of fallen trees. Throughout the whole of this day's
journey there appeared an uniformity in the route observed, being exactly the
same as seen yesterday. About noon we passed a wet grassy valley, from which
Mount Lachlan bore northerly about 3 miles. Its summit appears very sterile
having on it a few stunted trees. Ascending a hill, we had a noble view of a
vast expanse of country to the westward, alternately hill and valley. Descending
the eminence to the valley below, we climbed to the top of Mount Molle (so named
in honour of a late Lieut-Governor), from thence the country already observed
appeared to better advantage. Among the remarkable points noticed, Mount Lewin
and Jamieson's Table Land were not the least conspicuous. In rocky fissures on
Mount Molle I observed a small succulent plant of the genus Sedum.
Descending the western side of the Mount (Molle) into a very rich and fertile
valley, well watered by a running stream in a creek, we halted for the night.
Among the plants seen here, the following are the most remarkable for the
luxuriance of their growth. Lotus sp., suffruticose, allied to L.
australis, flowers large and almost white. Lotus major with
Sonchus oleraceus are very abundant also Linum usitatissimum. At a
remarkable cascade near Mount Lachlan on the humid rocks is a slender shrub of
the class Syngenesia, and is perhaps a Cacalia, leaves linear,
which, with its branches, are smooth. Our dogs in chasing some kangaroo killed a
large forest buck. Our journey this day was 16 miles. Afternoon fine, a slight
incrustation of ice was on the water left in the pots at night.
23rd. Wednesday. Crossing the creek we resumed our journey up a fine
open forest, very little encumbered with timber, of a reddish loamy rich soil,
and thickly clothed with grass. This has been termed Warwick Plains. Observed
westerly, on some elevated grounds a brushwood presents itself, the timber is
closer, and the view much circumscribed. I had often regretted that Southern
Australia affords so very few parasitical plants, which in South America are so
extremely beautiful. I this day observed a cluster of foliage hanging from a
moderate sized Eucalyptus, having the appearance of young leaves that had
been nipped by severe frost. It, however, proves to be a species of
Loranthus, in good health but not in flower or fruit. In a chain of
ponds, on the margin of which we travelled a considerable distance, I observed
Ornithorhynchus paradoxus or water mole occasionally rising to the
surface of the water for respiration and in an instant disappearing. Crossing
these ponds at a rocky creek the country becomes again brushy and barren. I
gathered specimens of the following among others of less moment in these scrubby
tracts.
Grevillea sp., allied to G. Phyllicoides of the eastern coast,
a fine flowering shrub of low stature. Bursaria sp. larger in all its
points than B. spinosa (Cav.), young branches without thorns.
Pullenaea ericaefolia (Dwarf Pultenaea), a handsome shrub. Hibbertia
sp., discovered before, near Cox's Pass. Acacia obliqua (Persoon), a
shrub about 3 feet high. Descending to the creek called Limestone Creek we
halted and encamped on the opposite bank about 2 o'clock. I availed myself of
the fineness of the day and the early hour and traced the creek through its
various windings about a mile. Metrosideros saligna was fine in flower in
the channel of the watercourse, accompanied by a new species of Crolon
with cordate 3 lobed leaves which I have termed C. acerifolius, and
Cystopteris, [Bladder Fern]. Ascending from the creek upon the rugged
Limestone rocks I discovered a tree of very stunted growth forming a stem of
about 30 inches in diameter or about 7½ feet circumference, which we suspected
to be Sterculia. The same plant was shown us in June 1815, growing in the
Palace Gardens at St. Paul, where it had grown to the height Of 30 feet but had
not flowered. From the best information we could obtain, and that from a Colonel
in the Portuguese Service (an Englishman lately deceased), I learned that the
plant had been brought from New Holland with others by Captain Woodriffe (not
Witherope), of the "Calcutta," and they were left at Rio de Janeiro on her
passage to England in 1804. From Rio they were transmitted to St. Paul, and they
were planted by the Colonel himself in the Conde de Palmas Garden in that
city.
The trees on these rocks have no appearance of flowers or fruit. The habit
and shapes of foliage in a seedling plant are very different from those of an
old tree. Upon seeing some young plants with palmated leaves (which they lose by
age) I now recollected having seen this Sterculia in some gardens about
London and there considered a Crolon. In shaded damp situations I gathered
specimens of some ferns viz: A crostichum sp., with the habit of an A
dianium, another species with laciniated glandulose fronds, and a
Pteris with simple fronds of slender habit. The Bursaria above
referred to is the most common shrublet of these rocks, and a Clematis,
before seen, is observed twining itself among the large stones and over the
hanging brows of precipices (not in flower). It is a subject of regret that
these limestone rocks are so far distant from the habitation of man as to be of
no use to him. We are now 63 miles westerly of Bathurst. By way of experiment we
produced some excellent lime by calcination:
24th. Thursday. We continued our journey in good time this morning
over a fine, rich, grassy tract of country, which, however, has at this period
rather a bare and naked aspect, having been fired by natives. Passing the burnt
grass and entering thick wooded and high grassy lands we pursued our road,
evidently upon the descent, until we came to a chain of ponds confined in a long
winding deep gully and almost dry. Following these waterholes about 3 miles we
came to a rocky hollow containing water, where we halted and pitched the tent.
The soil throughout this day's journey is good and rich, but with not the least
variation in the botany. The country abounds with emu and kangaroo, of the
latter our dogs killed a fine doe. The emu, however, were too swift to be taken
by dogs. Our journey to-day has been 13 miles.
25th. Friday. The land westerly from the rocky creek for the space of
6 miles is a continuance of rich forest country abounding in grass. From the
summits of a rocky [hill] you had an extensive landscape of the Western country.
A clear plain, free from timber, called Oxley's Plains, bear a few miles to the
southward and westward of us. We had no difficulty in tracing the course of the
Lachlan westerly, by the darkness of the verdure of the timber on its banks.
This hill is covered with large fragments of fine granite. The Sterculia
seen at Limestone Creek is on this eminence very common, but without signs of
flower or fruit. From a large tree of this genus--at the base of the hill--that
had been cut by a hatchet by way of a mark, I gathered some resinous gum which
had oozed out from beneath the bark. It was whitish and of the taste of gum
arabic. Continuing on the descent for about 6 miles due west, over a fine grassy
forest land, the soil of which is a red loam, rather sandy, we made the right
bank of the Lachlan River about 2 o'clock p.m. Tracing the river down its banks
about 5 miles we arrived at the depo^t where the people and horses who form the
expedition had been waiting our arrival some weeks. Its banks are very high and
clothed with lofty timber of a species of Eucalyptus, commonly
denominated by the colonists Black-butted Gum,[*] inclining inward so as to form
in some places a kind of arch with the heads of the trees of the same species on
the opposite bank. The flats on the lower grounds near the banks are exceedingly
rich and excellent for every purpose of agriculture, with this exception that
they are liable to inundation. The river had swollen to a very considerable
height, and had previous to our arrival fallen 17 feet, still retaining a
considerable fresh or flood above its usual level and a strong current.
[*Eucalyptus pilularis.]
Our people reported to us that a troop of natives were on the opposite bank.
We immediately went down to the water's edge and beckoned to them to come over
to us, and as an inducement offered them some meat. Thus tempted, they swam
over, and we all went up to the higher grounds on which the depo^t was built.
They were 13 in number, all males of different ages, from beardless youth to
well advanced manhood, and their general outward appearance seemed to differ but
little from those of Sydney. Their hair the same, but their beards are suffered
to grow very long. Their bodies are regularly tattooed, particularly the breast
and shoulders, which are strongly tubercled in a kind of systernatical diagonal
style. Like those of the Eastern coast they perforate the cartilage of the nose,
but I did not see any stick or reed worn through it. Their dress is simply a
grass network, forming a cover to the head, and a belt of the same network
fastened or tied round their loins, in which they have their "mogo," or stone
hatchet, waddies, etc.
One or two had a mantle of the skin of the kangaroo-rat, sewed together with
sinews of the leg, which reached from the shoulders to the middle of the back.
Independent of this they were perfectly naked. They do not use the wamera in
throwing their spears, which are made of a very hard wood and not of the
Xanthorrhoea arborea as on the eastern coast. Their spears have lateral
barbs, the one above the other, the whole is indurated by fire and is a most
dangerous weapon. Although they swam across the river, in which they had to
contend with a strong current, they had brought fire in their hands, and much
time did not elapse before we could perceive the smoke from it issuing from the
centre of the group in which they had formed themselves for mutual warmth. Our
thermometer stood at 56° about this period.
By way of ornament they wore kangaroo teeth in their ears and cockatoo
feathers in their hair. Those of them who were young men had their beards
divided into three divisions and formed into plaited tails. Their language being
very different from that of our Eastern Coast natives, we obtained from them the
names for several things, particularly the parts of the body. I presented one of
them with an English halfpenny having a hole drilled through it. It was,
however, returned to me with clear signs that a piece of kangaroo flesh would be
more acceptable. In fact they appear to appreciate the value of nothing so much
as provisions, particularly flesh, and our iron hatchets, which would enable
them to procure it much better and with more facility than those made of black
jade. They were acquainted with fire-arms, and had (in an unguarded moment on
the part of the soldiers stationed at the depo^t) run off with two muskets. The
subsequent circumstances connected with this theft they still appear to rue! In
an affair between the soldiers and these natives with a view of recovering the
stolen muskets, a poor harmless lad forfeited his existence. Having abundance of
kangaroo, we presented them with the half of a large buck, which was gratefully
received, and with which they returned to their friends on the opposite side of
the river. I gathered specimens of a Myoporum, smaller than M.
ellipticum.
26th. Saturday. Having previously repapered my specimens and hung them
out to dry, accompanied by a soldier (armed) I made an excursion down the river
a few miles below the depôt. Croton acerifolius, Rubus sp., and
Urtica dioica are very abundant on its immediate bank. The stony rising
grounds abound with a plant of the Asperifoliae, allied to
Lithospermum dichotomum. A dwarf shrub of the Epacridaceae,
perhaps a Leucopogon, with a tomentose white calyx, and drupe, is now
very fine in flower. A delicate species of Pullenaea microphylla, with
small cuneated truncated leaves and axillary solitary flowers is found growing
with a shrub advancing to the flowering state, which I suspect is Daviesia
mimosoides of Hortus Kewensis. I likewise got here a specimen of an
Aster with oblong crowded leaves, which are curved at the apex, flowers
white. The summits of the hills are covered with the tree which is termed Pine
by our people. It is in fruit, and proves to be a species of Callitris
and may be the species termed C. australis by Persoon, and is said to be
found on the north side of Port Jackson Harbour. It is from 30 to 70 feet high,
particularly on the flats. I gathered specimens of a very singular species of
Acacia, A. erythrocephala, = A. aspera with
linear-lanceolate leaves. I discovered another shrub of the same genus, A.
armata, with the flowers in axillary spikes. On the low flats near the river
I discovered a species of Dalea with weak trailing stems; a species of
Aster with oblong cuneated leaves. The smoke rising above the trees from
the left bank of the river indicated the presence of natives.
7th. Sunday. It having been arranged by Mr. Oxley that our two boats
(that had been built here and intended as an assistance to us in carrying the
more heavy provisions of flour and pork on the river) should proceed down the
stream this morning as far as the creek where Mr. Evans, who first discovered
the Lachlan, had terminated his journey, having been ferried over by the boats,
I visited the rocky hills on the left bank in company with C. Fraser of the 46th
Regt., who had been sent as one of our party, in order to form a separate
collection of seeds and specimens for Earl Bathurst. We were both well armed in
case of attack from the natives. Fraser had been before on these hills, in his
pursuits of the Flora (to which he is very much attached) during the period of
time he had been at this depôt, viz: about one month. Having crossed the grassy
flats near the River we ascended the rugged stony hills, where I found the
following interesting plants.
Pimelea linifolia, scarcely in flower, a slender gigantic shrub 5 or 6
feet high. Epacridea,: Leucopogon sp., differing from the species
I discovered yesterday in having a smoother calyx. Campanula sp., or a
var. of C. gracilis.
Bossiaea sp., with the habit and appearance of B.
microphylla.
Hibbertia sp., allied to H. ovata, leaves sharper and
lanceolate, with a minute asperity, as in H. ovata. The flowers are
decandrous. Aster sp., herbaceous, flowers blue, leaves filiform.
Aster echinatus, a shrub with linear leaves glandularly echinated on the
upper surface...flowers white. Acacia obliqua is very common on these
sterile hills. Persoonia sericea, with leaves oblong, cuneated, which,
with fruit and branches, are covered with silky hairs. Epacrideae: a
shrub of same genus as above, flowers red. I likewise discovered a new
Acacia, allied to A. albiflora, the icaves are triangular, and the
head of flowers is rounded; and another species with elongated oblong leaves,
attenuated at base, flowers in axillary spikes.
Gompholobium latifolium is frequent with the above. In the rich flats,
upon my return to the boat, I gathered some grasses, among which is a
Phleum and in low inundated situations a singular dwarf plant, which I
could not detect in flower, it appears to be Adiantum and is remarkable
for its 4-lobed fronds.
Our boats being loaded with the Government Rations of flour and pork we sent
them down the river with the intention of overtaking them to-morrow afternoon.
By observation taken by Mr. Oxley the site of the dep6t is in lat. 33°39'48" S.,
and Long. 148°39' E. By barometrical observation it was ascertained that we were
not above 650 feet above the level of the sea, and that we had descended from
Bathurst Plains upwards of 1300 feet. This small elevation, contrasted with the
great distance we were from the nearest point of the south-west coast,
immediately suggested to us the great improbability of the Lachlan River running
to the sea, and its soft muddy banks and general appearance and character of a
periodical stream affording an outlet to the great body of rain falling on the
Blue Mountains, seemed to coincide in the idea. When Mr. Evans first discovered
it in June 1815, which was a dry season, he crossed it nearly dryshod on the
trunk of a fallen Eucalyptus.
28th. Monday. Previous to my leaving the eastern coast I had provided
myself with a quantity of peach stones of two qualities, some quince pips or
seeds, and a few acorns, with an intention of committing a few of each to the
earth at any remarkable situation where the soil was tolerably good and suitable
for the growth of them. I sowed some of each at the depôt in the very rich soil
on the bank.
This morning about 9 o'clock the following persons, who composed this grand
Western Expedition, left the last human habitation westward in order to survey
the river downwards and trace it to its supposed junction with the Macquarie,
and the disemboguence of their union on the south-west coast:--Oxley Esqre.
Surveyor-General; Mr. G. W. Evans Assist. do.; Charles Fraser of 46th Regt., as
collector for Lord Bathurst; S. Parr, a boat builder; and seven persons as
loaders of pack horses, and myself. Thirteen in all, with 14 horses and 2
boats.
We passed over the fertile flats, which have been inundated as we ascertained
from the marks of flood on the timber, and stubble having been washed against
the large Eucalypti, with which the banks are clothed. Travelling about 7
miles we arrived at a creek running in a serpentine form from the river in a
north-easterly direction. As our baggage horses would not overtake us for some
hours, we proposed to halt and pitch our tent on the opposite side of the creek
for the night. The soil of the higher lands at a short distance from the river
is of a stiff loam, and in some situations rocky and sterile, but the lower
grounds are rich and covered with strong grass.
Between the depôt and the creek, which Mr. Oxley had named Lewis's Creek,
Lotus australis, Swainsona coronillaefolia, and a creeping
Hedysarum are occasionally to be met with. The marsh mallow is very
abundant, Callitris australis is now very common on the hills, although
of no size or bulk. Casuarina stricta (usually called Swamp Oak) is
likewise very fine and large on the muddy banks. By the assistance of our boats
we conveyed our baggage over the creek, which although not above 12-10 feet wide
is very deep, and swam over our horses. I took a walk on the rocky barren hills
in the neighbourhood and discovered the following plants:--Grevillea sp.,
a beautiful shrub, with a calyx covered exteriorly with a ferruginous tomentum,
and smooth and green in colour inside; Ajuga sp., with large blue flowers
and much of the habit of A. pyramidalis; Phyllanthus sp., a low
shrubby plant; another species with narrow, obtuse, cuneated leaves, revolute at
the margins; Bidens sp.; Dodonaea cuneata, with cuneated leaves;
and Astroloma humifusum, a trailing plant, is abundant in flower and
fruit. We gathered on the hills some fine specimens of crystallized quartz, some
fine crystals, and some dark specimens of granite. Mr. Oxley wrote to the
Governor upon the subject of the river. Richard Lewis, a superintendent at
Bathurst, who accompanied us to the creek which takes his name, returned to that
settlement. Our people caught some fine large fish of the same kind as those
before noticed.
29th. Tuesday. Continued our journey westward on the right bank of the
river and, travelling from point to point rather than follow the stream through
all its abrupt windings, I found the plants to be nearly the same with little
variation as those observed some days previously. The following are the
specimens collected in this day's route:--A drooping melancholy shrub of the
genus Stenochilus, which I have termed S. longifolius, now
presents itself in brushy sterile tracks near the river. Gnaphalium sp.,
much allied to G. carnatum, is common among the grass; and Podolepis
rugata, the peduncles of which near the insertion in the calyx are scaly. On
the immediate bank of the river I gathered seeds and specimens of a species of
Viola, with leaves on elongated pitioles; also a shrub of the order
Rubiaceae, 4 feet high, branching, diffuse, leaves oblong, seeds covered
with an arilla. Persoonia spathulata, discovered first on the S.W. coast,
is now in fruit on the rocky hills. On ascending a rugged height covered with
loose fragments of stones and hence rendered difficult of ascent, we had an
extensive view of the western country commanded by such an eminence. The country
appeared exceedingly low and flat with a few hills or ascents scattered on its
surface. On this elevation I discovered a new species of Acacia, forming
a small tree 25 feet high, the leaves are linear-lanceolate, and the flowers are
in axillary spikes, which are cylindrical. It is much allied to A.
longifolia, except in the shape of the foliage and their gray colour. From
the circumstance of this tree being the wood of which the natives in the Western
Country make their spears (which I have proved), and of which I shall state more
particulars hereafter, I have called it A. doratoxylon. It is scarcely in
a flowering state. Cupressus australis is common on these heights.
Hovea sp., this is a slender shrub, frequent on the mount.
Mr. Oxley having taken the necessary bearings, we all descended to the river
and traced it down about three miles, halting for the night a few miles short of
our intended resting place at the creek where Mr. Evans terminated his journey
westerly in June 1815. The river now began to show its true character. Our
boat's people found it shoaly and narrow in some places, and in consequence of
its numerous and very abrupt windings they did not overtake or arrive at the
spot on the immediate bank of the river where we were encamped till a late hour.
I gathered specimens on the flats of a fine species of Bromus, and these
plains were covered with clumps of Acacia decurrens [Queen Wattle].
The rocky hills are covered with a twining shrub, a Bignonia but it
was not in flower fit for examination. With it I observed a plant with the habit
of an Aster, resembling A. argophyllus [= Olearia
argophylla], but without that musty scent with which their leaves are
furnished. Our people shot a long-necked water bird like a cormorant.
Eucalyptus robusta or Brown Gum disappears, and chiefly Stringy Bark
(Eucalyptus sp.) and Blue Gum prevail. A beautiful species of
Acacia, a small tree with bipinnate leaves, and flowers in elongated
spikes; the whole plant has a glaucous hue. In consequence of its beautiful
appearance I have called it A. spectabilis [Mudgee Wattle].
April 30th. Wednesday. Having sent our baggage horses forward and
despatched our boats down the river directing them to stop at the creek that
runs from the river on its right bank, we struck across the country a few miles,
in order to examine some Callitris, said to be abundant on the lands
distant from the river, which Mr. Evans had noticed on his tour before referred
to. These Cypress trees we found of various sizes and dimensions from seedlings,
generally growing in clumps, to lofty trees of about 60 feet, and about 3 feet
in diameter at the base. It has been suggested that stems might be procured that
would form good spars or booms, it is, however, much to be feared that in
consequence of the many knots on its trunk or stem it would be found extremely
brittle and short.
A species of Xerotes, with round filiform leaves, common on Bathurst
Plains, is frequent among the grass. The standing waters abound with an
Actinocarpus [Water star] remarkable for its capsule. Returning in a
westerly direction we made the creek which has taken the name of Byrne's Creek,
and we traced it up to its mouth at the river. Here I discovered a new plant of
the liliaceous family of the genus Pancratium. The flowers are small, of
a whitish flesh colour, varying to a bluish and light orange colour. They are
when fresh, May or White-thorn scented. It is now in flower, and is viviparous,
producing a small bulb instead of a capsule, which in time falls to the ground
and taking root ensures the future offspring. It being a new species I have
named it P. Macquaria [= Calostemma purpureum][*] in honour of His
Excellency Lachlan Macquarie, Esqre., our worthy and much respected Governor,
during whose arduous administration the colony of New South Wales has been
enlarged and beautified in an eminent degree, and by whose meritorious and
praiseworthy exertions the western part of the Continent has been laid open, as
well to the labours of the industrious agriculturalist as to the no less
laudable research of the unwearied naturalist. This species of Pancratium
delights in a low damp situation, its bulbous roots were with some difficulty
dug up, being so very deep in the rich black soil on the banks of the river. The
woody lands are alternately grassy and bushy, with slight inundations.
[* The name Pancratium macquaria is only mentioned in the
"Botanical Magazine," under Calostemma purpureum, at t. 2100, as a
synonym of that plant.]
Near the river we fell in with a large and spacious lagoon of considerable
length and breadth but not deep. On its surface were swimming great numbers of
waterfowl, such as swan, duck, teal, which we fired at in vain. Such was the
steepness and muddiness of Byrne's Creek that it became indispensably necessary
to form a kind of sloping road for our horses to descend to the water. Our boats
having carried over our horse-cargoes, we swam the animals over and pitched our
tent on the bank.[*] About a mile down the creek, in shallow water, we saw a
bark canoe, and the remains of small fires in the woods adjoining are
indications that the natives had recently visited this part of the country.
[* Near Eugowra.]
1817. May 1st. Thursday. Mr. Evans having finished his surveys in 1815
at this creek on its right bank, Mr. Oxley commenced his labours in that
department from the left bank down the river. As previously arranged, Mr. Evans
accompanied by a person with the perambulator proceeded forward, taking the
bearings of all remarkable points, windings and curvatures of the river, as he
advanced, endeavouring to cut off any deep bight by stretching from angle to
angle and steering as direct a course as the nature of the country would admit.
About 2 o'clock in the afternoon we had penetrated about 10 miles, when it was
deemed advisable to halt for the day. The latter part of this day's journey
being difficult, on account of the lofty brome-grass with which the low lands
near the river abound. In swamps, tracks, and low inundated spots, great
abundance of a species of Lobelia was observed, of the habit of L.
purpurascens, but larger, and not purple beneath the leaf. It is in flower
and capsule. In such situations I gathered specimens of an Achyranthes,
with flowers around a quadrangular stalk. Lythrum sp., before observed,
much allied to L. salicaria, grows very strong, with all the
preceding.
The higher grassy lands furnished me with seeds of Aster sp., with
blue flowers and oblong spathulate leaves. In sterile brushy situations I
detected the following plants. Pimelea sericea allied to P.
curviflora; Cotula sp., much allied to Bellis, is in
flower.
Bellis sp., a shrubby plant with cuneated 3-5 toothed leaves, whose
flowers are ornamental and blue. The seeds of this plant are furnished with 2
small aristae which are minutely barbed. I gathered specimens in fruit of
another species of Callitris, different from the species discovered in
the country near Lachlan Depôt in having a larger round fruit, branchlets and
leaves finer and of a glaucous hue, a tree of the same height as its
congener.
Dodonaea cuneata and Acacia obliqua are frequent. Some small
lagoons, supplied from the inundation of the river, prevented us from travelling
always on its immediate banks. The direction of the stream at the commencement
of our journey is southerly. This however is counterbalanced by its winding
round to the north towards the close, making a true west course. The freshly cut
bark from some of the large gum trees (Eucalyptus) informed us that the
natives had recently passed by.
2nd. Friday. We advanced westerly from our fires about 9 o'clock
through grassy flats, passing to the left of a large winding lagoon, which from
general appearances we had taken for the river, nor were some of us convinced
otherwise until we found it terminated in a swamp covered with Arundo
phragmites and other lofty grasses. Tracing the river down upwards of 10
miles, which had run somewhat northerly, we stopped for the day and pitched our
tent.
On some barren rising ground I gathered specimens of a Xerotes,
remarkable for its slender juncous leaves, from the angles of which membranceous
threads are produced. A species of Saturcia is common in low lands; like
other species of Ibis genus it has a mild aromatic penetrating taste, and
is in common use as tea among our people. With the preceding, I gathered
specimens of a weak herbaceous species of Justica. Some tolerable
specimens of Callitris glauca that we passed in this day's route assumed
much the habit of Pinus sylvestris. The timber is the Eucalyptus
usually called Blue Gum. Near the river I collected the following
grasses:--Panicum sp., a slender plant; a Cenchrus, a
Phleum, and a species of Imperata, allied to Saccharum.
3rd. Saturday. Leaving our last night's resting place and following
the river southerly, the country we travelled over is occasionally grassy,
wooded, and has the same flat character as that already passed. The soil at a
small distance from the river is poor and barren and covered with brushwood.
Callitris glauca is a much finer, handsomer tree than we have hitherto
had, and, accompanied by Casuarina (swamp oak), approaches very near the
river. We now find from experience that 10 miles is a fair day's journey,
therefore having made good that distance we halted on the bank of the river,
which ran nearly west.
A very considerable portion of this day's stage is through a barren tract of
brushwood, presenting to us many plants frequently seen in similar situations,
among which I distinguished the following new plants. Jasminum sp.,
leaves opposite and alternate, forming a scandent or reclining shrub.
Scaevola sp., bearing fleshy drupes, one seeded. Acacia
homalophylla, leaves lanceolate, flat and smooth, flowers axillary, a tree
25 feet high. Pittosporum sp., a new and slender shrub in fruit.
Myoporum strictum, leaves lanceolate and stiff, flowers solitary and
pendulous. Some parts of the river were extremely shoaly and narrow, and having
numerous bends and obstructions of fallen timber its navigation was rendered
extremely difficult.
4th. Sunday. We had determined to rest ourselves and horses the whole
of this day, and were the more particularly obliged so to do on account of the
detention of our boats, occasioned by the difficulties of working them in the
shallow windings choked up with decayed fallen trees, which it was found
literally necessary to clear away in order to form a passage for the boats. The
larger boat had unfortunately been stove by a sunken stump. Fearing to advance
further after dark, and not knowing where we were, our boatmen had stopped the
preceding evening about 4 miles at least short of our encampment. It was well
advanced in the afternoon before they were able to drop down to that part of the
river on the bank of which our tent was pitched. Hubbert, our boat-builder, soon
repaired the damage sustained by the boat. About half a mile northward of our
tent is a large lagoon forming a fine and spacious sheet of water, thickly
clothed with gum trees on its margin, and abounding with swans, ducks, etc. I
gathered seeds and specimens of Actinocarpus sp., growing in company with
Potamogeton natans. In a little excursion I made westerly from the tent I
discovered the following:--Tetrandria, a spreading twiggy small tree
10-20 feet high. Pentandria, a shrub with oblong narrow leaves.
Myoporum sp., Pittosporum lanceolatum, duplicate seed. Gathered
seeds of Acacia pendula, nova sp., a tree 25 feet high, with much the
habit and growth of Salix babylonica, leaves simple, lanceolate, the
whole tree has a gray hue; common on the low flats near the above mentioned
lagoon. From the summit of a gentle rising hill we could just distinguish a very
lofty range to the northward and eastward. A remarkable point on this range we
have called Mount Sorrell, after the Lt. Governor of Van Diemen's Island. This
hill is covered with a reddish slaty stone, and the soil is a light loam. Some
large specimens of Cupressus australis were observed on it, with
Casuarina macrocarpa, a new species, a tree about 30 feet high. Our
hunters brought in a fine young buck kangaroo.
5th. Monday. We departed from our last encampment about 9 o'clock, and
having crossed a small creek which intersected our course, we ascended the
gentle rising hill which I had visited yesterday. The view even on this eminence
being much confined, Mr. Oxley took bearings of the most remarkable ranges of
hills around it at a distance from the top of a lofty Callitris.
Descending to the flats we were again deceived by a long chain of ponds or
lagoons which we fell in with, but perceiving our mistake we crossed it in a dry
situation and came to the banks of the Lachlan. Such was the confusion created
by this mistake that we were all scattered and divided and taking different
courses. Our people in the boats fired guns to inform us of their situation.
Calling to one another we were answered by strange voices, which left us in
no doubt of natives being near us. It was a great point we should all join
again, which at length we did, after some of us had passed over several miles on
a cross-course, the labour of which might have been saved. Our people came up
with seven or eight of the natives, who were clothed with mantles of skin
reddened with a pigment from the river. There appeared not the most distant
symptoms of hostility among them! They evidently had seen a horse before, and
could pronounce some words of English, such as bread, and they had every
appearance of having been with those at the Lachlan Depôt, from which we are now
54 miles west. From the columns of smoke ascending from the trees to which these
harmless beings were advancing there is no doubt of their encampment being there
situated, and it might be inferred that their gins or wives were there, from
their evident objection to our people attempting to accompany them to their
fires. The delay and loss of time occasioned by the above adventure had allowed
our boatmen to work themselves through all the numerous windings of this
intricate river and overtake us.
We all started again in a body, travelling immediately on the river bank
about 4 miles, when we were stopped by a deep muddy creek connecting the river
with the chain of ponds above alluded to. We passed this gully with considerable
difficulty, being obliged to unload our horses. Accompanied by Mr. Oxley I went
to an extensive open plain about half a mile N.W. of our course, which we found
of very considerable extent. It is a flat that receives the inundations of the
Lachlan; it is of a light loamy soil and at this time very damp and slimy, in
consequence of the recent rain.
This plain, which is clear of timber and is skirted by Acacia pendula
we have called Solway Flats, from its slight similarity to a place of that name
in North Britain.
The following are the plants discovered on it:--Salsola sp., leaves
linear, with the habit of a Mesembryanthemum. Mimulus sp., leaves
oblong-ovate, peduncle filiform, one-flowered. Richea sp., agreeing with
this genus in the plumose pappi with which the seeds are crowned. Loranthus
nutans, leaves ovate-oblong, obtuse, peduncle axillary, 2-3 flowered,
parasitical on Acacia Pendula. I gathered a few good seeds of this
singular Acacia. The purple Bromus, a diminutive Panicum,
and a small purple-flowering Arthropodium, frequent on the Eastern Coast,
are common on these flats. Pancratium macquaria [= Calostemma
purpureum], delighting in such situations, is scattered over the whole of
the boggy plains.
The dimensions of the visible part of these plains are four miles by seven. I
here observed a thick dense bushy shrub, of the Atripliceae, probably a
Rhagodia. It is, however, not in flower or fruit. Continuing our journey
southward of west, over a broken bad country of low scrubby aspect, having
hollows filled with putrid water, we entered a thick sterile brush about four
miles from the plains, and halted for the day in a situation where our horses
could provide themselves with but little grass! No variation in the timber. Our
boats were aground several times, such is the shallowness of the river, which
together with difficulty of clearing sunken timber renders the navigation
dangerous. We made ten miles clear on a northerly course. The course of the
river is southerly.
6th. Tuesday. The country through which we penetrated this day has the
same character and appearance as that already passed. The timber is the same,
with not the smallest diversity of scenery, a gloomy sameness pervading the
whole of the solitary woods near the river. At 3½ miles on our journey our
progress was again stopped by a small, trifling, but deep gully filled with
water, the drainings of the land.
Passing this creek, having been obliged to unload the pack horses on this
occasion, our course led us through high grassy and in some spots swampy land of
difficult penetration, until we came out upon a bend of the flats discovered
yesterday, which is bounded by a rugged but most romantic picturesque rocky
range of hills. A change of scenery was very agreeable at this period. Crossing
the flats, we arrived at the base of this elevated range, and ascending to the
summit of this hill a most extensive panoramic view of the country around us
presents itself, of which the following ranges have been named:--A range of
lofty hills to the northward and eastward of us, of which Mount Sorrell is a
part, we have called St. Andrew's Range. A second range to the southward and
eastward we term St. Patrick's Range. The range we are now upon (which is
singularly divided allowing the river to run through it) Mr. Oxley distinguishes
by the name of St. George's Range. The bluff headland points on each side the
river; the one on the right bank is called Mount Stewart, and that on the left
side of the river has been nominated Mount Amiott, after two gentlemen in the
Secretary of State's Office. The whole three ranges, bending round, form a
crescent like a half moon, of which the two last mentioned mountains are its
horns. It has been entitled Queen Charlotte's Crescent. Some extensive plains on
the left side of the river, not seen before, Mr. Oxley has called Hamilton's
Plains, in honour of Wm. Hamilton Esqre. the Under Secretary of State, and are
contrasted with Solway Flats on its right bank.
The country for upwards Of 50 miles is flat and low, and to the westward a
distant range of hills with singular bluff abrupt terminations have been
distinguished by the name of St. David's Range, of which Mount Melville and
Mount Cunningham are the most remarkable. To the southward of us is the point of
a range termed Mount Gill, in honour of Captain Gill of the 46th Regt. and civil
engineer at Sydney. The river (as Mr. Oxley had suspected from its appearance
and observations taken by him on the morning of yesterday) runs between the
rugged Mounts Amiott and Stewart, and takes a course generally southerly of
west. We are now only 425 feet above the level of the sea, which was ascertained
by our barometer. Mount Stewart is composed of large blocks of granite, and the
following are plants discovered on its elevated summit:--Persoonia
scabra, a species first discovered on the S.W. Coast, in fruit. Persoonia
spathulata, observed before in such situations. Persoonia curvifolia,
a remarkable curling-leaved shrub, Styphelia sp., allied to S.
tubiflora, the flowers of which are very deciduous, and a Leucopogon,
Cryptandra sp., differing from C. ericaefolium, by its floral
bracts being deciduous. Tecoma Oxleyi (nova sp.), leaves pinnated;
leaflets lanceolate, entire; flowers white with purple striae, and bearded
inside. The capsule is oblong and cylindrical, as in Tecoma, which, with
several remarkable species at present termed Bignonia, discovered in
Brazil, constitute as many genera of the Bignoniaceae. This new and
beautiful species I have presumed to dedicate to the memory of our worthy and
persevering chief in the present expedition.
The eye is much relieved, from the sterility of the overhanging rocks grey
with lichens, by the great profusion of flowers which this ornamental shrub
produces. Phyllanthus revolutus is common here. A delicate-leaved
Eriostemon, scarcely in flower, grew very profusely, accompanying a shrub
of the same natural order of Rutaceae, the flowers of which were scarcely
expanded. It is a glandulous shrub, with scattered obcordate leaves, silvered
beneath, flowers terminal and yellow. Cupressus australis, with some
common Mimosa, particularly Acacia doratoxylon, are abundant on
this mount, but stunted in growth.
Our lat. is 33°23'0" S. and long. 148° W. or thereabouts. Following the
windings of the river on its high grassy banks about 2 miles, we halted about 4
o'clock, having travelled 12 miles in the course of the day. A curious species
of Fungi, Agaricus, of a yellowish colour, which upon being broken and
exposed to the air immediately assumed a blue tint. Our fishermen were
uncommonly successful; they caught from 190-200 lbs. weight, consisting of 13
fish, of which the largest weighed 70 lbs. with the entrails and 65 lbs. gutted.
Its length was 3 feet 5 inches, curve of shoulder 2 ft. 6 in. Fin to fin over
the back 1 ft. 5 in.; breadth of tail when expanded 1 ft. 1½ in., and depth of
mouth a foot. It may be considered as the largest that has been caught.
7th. Wednesday. We rested our horses and selves the whole of this day,
which gave me an opportunity of repapering my specimens and drying my seeds.
Desirous of examining Mount Amiott, I, accompanied by two of our party, crossed
the river by one of our boats and directing our course to the base of the range
we arrived at its foot about 1 o'clock. The botany of this point is nearly the
same as that observed on Mount Stewart. I, however, gathered specimens of a
species of Prostanthera, with linear leaves, in capsule, affording me
seeds. A species of Azorella with ovate leaves, found on the Eastward
coast is likewise common here. Goodenia sp., a shrubby plant (specimens).
The flats near the river abound with Pancratium Macquaria [=
Calostemma purpureum]. At dusk we returned to our encampment on the
opposite side of the river.
8th. Thursday. We left this resting place about 8 o'clock, following
the river over some good tracts of land of a rich dark loamy soil, but in
consequence of its general flatness and the marks of flood on the stems of the
trees it cannot be of any service to the farmer. The river has several large
fine reaches, and its general tendency is northerly. There is no variation in
the timber that species of Eucalyptus called Blue Gum being most
predominant. At a remarkable bend or elbow of the river, in a bushy barren spot,
I gathered duplicate seeds of Pittosporum lanceolatum, the rest of the
plants being uniformly the same as previously observed. About 2 miles to the
northward and westward extensive long plains opened to the view, bounded
southerly by the Lachlan, and northerly by small eucalyptus woods. They wind
round with the river, are soft and boggy, and in fact have the same character as
Solway Flats.
On account of the many emus seen feeding on these plains we have been induced
to term them Cassowary Plains. The river is much narrower than we have hitherto
seen it, the banks are low and very naked. The Casuarina or swamp oak with which
they are clothed nearer the depôt now disappears, and Acacia Pendula
succeeds at regular wide distances on the banks. The shrubs of the
Atriplicina [Silver Saltbush], now in flower, abound on Solway Flats. It
appears to be a Rhagodia, leaves angularly toothed, subrotund, bilobially
cuneated. Our day's journey was about 14 miles when we halted on the plains at
an early hour.
We had scarcely pitched our tent and made a fire when we were surprised by a
large male emu, who, unconscious of danger, came stalking across the plain near
our tent. It, however, cost him his life, for our dogs after a chase of 15
minutes brought him down. At my suggestion our people gathered a quantity of the
young leaves of the Rhagodia, which they boiled and found them to be an
excellent substitute for a better vegetable, which, with the emu made us an
excellent dinner. I found on these plains a species of Cyperus, of which
I gathered seeds, also a species of Euphorbia, an annual plant, leaves
obovate, oblique, with a filiform stem. Such were the numerous obstructions in
the river that our boats were obliged to stop at nightfall 6 miles short of our
encampment. At sunset we fired some musketry in order to inform our boatmen of
the situation of our encampment.
9th. Friday. Our boats came down to us about 10 o'clock. The principal
cause of their detention it appears was their having been obliged to saw through
four large trees that had fallen across the stream and had completely blocked up
the passage. One of these trees was a large specimen of the Casuarina or
swamp oak, whose hard close-grained wood gave much resistance to our cross-cut
saws. Proceeding forward westerly on our journey, having the river in sight for
upwards of two hours, during which period it ran to all points of the compass
and its windings in some instances formed parallel lines with each other. The
country is alternately plain and brushy, barren tracts producing plants of which
mention has been made. At 2 o'clock we arrived at an extensive plain, being part
of the chain of plains of which Cassowary Plains and Solway Flats form some
parts or divisions. This spacious flat Mr. Oxley has called Fields Plains, in
honour of Barron Field Esqre., our judge of the Supreme Court, and from these
the singular and pointed hill called Mount Melville bore N. Westerly a few
miles, being the termination of St. David's Range.
From the plains we advanced north of west, which is the river's general
inclination, a few miles but, doubting whether our boats would be able to keep
pace with us, we stopped at dusk on the river bank near another continuation of
these plains. The river is free from fallen timber but in some places shoaly,
the current is scarcely perceptible, and the banks generally lower, being not
above 10 feet in some places, and bare of timber, what there is being
Eucalyptus or Blue Gum and the Casuarina. Callitris glauca
is now more frequent, and Eucalyptus micrantha very common, forming a
tree 40-50 feet high remarkable for its leaves which are deformed, very flat and
glossy; the flowers are in umbels, and very small. The tetrandrous shrub,
producing a nut, before observed, is very frequent, with Pittosporum
lanceolatum.
10th. Saturday. The pasture being very indifferent, our horses had
strayed away during the night in search of a better grazing place, and were not
overtaken and brought back to our encampment until too late to proceed on our
journey. We therefore remained at this resting place the whole of this day. Our
lat. is 33°16'23" S., Mr. Oxley and Mr. Evans took some observations while I
employed myself among my plants that required attention. In the afternoon I took
a walk on the plains and collected the following interesting plants:--A new
genus, Arthrotriche. A. speciosa, a small herbaceous plant, common
in low boggy spots, of the same natural order as Dr. Smith's genus
Brunonia.[*] Rubia sp. Goodenia sp., leaves radical.
Mimulus sp., of a larger growth than the species discovered on the 5th.
Arabis sp., a cress, frequent in wet situations. Chrysanthemum
sp., stoloniferous, flowers large, white. I gathered specimens in fruit and
seeds of a species of Hakea allied to H. rugosa, forming a shrub 6
ft. high, with filiform leaves, as in H. pugioniformis of Hortus
Kewensis. I likewise gathered seeds of Salsola sp., and a species of
Rhagodia with rhomboid leaves. Pancratium Macquaria [=
Calostemma purpureum] is very abundant on the plains...and the small
Euphorbla is very common in humid situations. Gathered some grasses,
among them were a Stipa and a Melica. It was observed to-day that
the river was rising, having increased 2 inches (?) in a few hours. Served
provisions of flour and pork to ourselves and people.
[* The plant of this name described by Mueller belongs to a
different order.]
11th. Sunday. Being detained the whole of yesterday in consequence of
our horses having strayed, Mr. Oxley determined to proceed forward with all
possible despatch, advancing westerly about the usual time; on a continuance of
the chain of plains (called Field's Plains) we experienced much inconvenience
from the bogs and grassy marshes with which they abound. In about 6½ miles we
arrived at the base of Mount Cunningham. The river bore to the southward of this
Mount, and from it runs a creek winding itself under it. From the summit of
Mount Cunningham the land to the westward is low and flat, with several open
plains appearing through the trees. A range of hills to the southward and
westward of us Mr. Oxley has named Hurd's Peak, Mount Allan, Mount Edwards and
Mount Merrick. Mount Cunningham, which is not less than ¾ of a mile in length,
is a detached hill, having its highest point at the northern extremity. It is
remarkable for its extreme rocky, sterile, aspect. The plants discovered upon it
are the following:--Psychotria punctata, leaves ovate (a specimen in
fruit); a grass, Lolium(?) Gathered some duplicate specimens of Tecoma
Oxleyi; I likewise noticed a Grevillea, allied to G.
sphacelata; Prostanthera nivea, and some common Epacrideae.
Acacia doratoxylon and Cupressus glauca are very common, but
small. The whole of the vegetation on this rocky hill has been lately burnt by
the natives in search of game. The remains of their fires and huts we observed
at its base on the S.E. side of the mount.
I must here acknowledge my obligations to Mr. Oxley for the honour he has
conferred upon me in naming a remarkable mount after me. Tracing the creek to
its connection with the river we ferried our horse loads over, swam the animals,
and halted for the day. Our boatmen reported to us the division of the river
into two grand arms, near the commencement of our journey, which accounts for
its obviously narrow channel and low banks, being in some places not above three
feet. Mr. Oxley, Mr. Evans and self rode back on the river bank to the division,
and found that the other arm ran away S.W. by W., Mount Melville bearing N.E. by
E. 3 miles.
May 11th. Sunday. It is as large as the northwest river which we
intend to continue upon, and which we are induced from appearances to conclude
will not be of long existence as a river. We fathomed the deepest part and found
it did not exceed 19 ft. It is evident that these plains are inundated by the
river in great floods from the eastward, for in fact the highest land (the few
rocky hills excepted) is on the immediate bank of the river, so that the floods
rising over the banks descend down upon the plains on each side this channel. On
the plains we observed two native companions (Grus australasiana), and
our people shot two swans. From the circumstance of having seen two bark canoes
moored among the reeds on the river's left bank, and from the body of smoke
ascending above the small trees at the base of Mount Melville on the opposite
side of the plain, it is evident that there are some natives existing in these
parts. We, however, saw none.
It was a matter of surprise that we fell in with so very few natives, whose
marks are daily before our eyes, but it appears sufficiently obvious that
experience has taught them to retire from a river where a supply of food is
extremely precarious, and where a sudden inundation would in a moment sweep them
away. Choosing rather to retire to the hilly country where they are enabled to
obtain a daily subsistence with greater facility, and are not liable to be
surprised and overtaken by floods.
N.B. It appears they only visit the river in great drought, when there is but
little water in its channel, and are then able to procure the large horse mussel
from its muddy bottom, which they cannot possibly obtain in floods and strong
currents. They have no idea of angling or have any method to catch [fish?] that
we know of. The viviparous Pancratium [= Calostemma purpureum]
grows extremely luxuriant on these slimy plains. An unfortunate accident
happened us this day. The horse that usually carried the barometer fell beneath
his load and broke that valuable instrument.
12th. Monday. Having our resting place on the margin of the creek we
commenced our route down the north-west arm, but had not proceeded westerly a
mile before we were stopped by an outlet, a small branch running from the river
northerly. It is evident we are not far distant from its termination, from the
perceptible descent of the country and the lowness of the banks. We were obliged
to unload the horses, and with the assistance of our boats carried all our
luggage over in the usual manner. Travelling on the immediate bank, which we
found much firmer and harder than the more distant lower land, about half a mile
from the last creek, Mr. Evans, who had gone on before us in his surveying of
the river, discovered first that it was impossible to proceed farther, that the
river had risen level with the banks, and the flats as far as we could see were
an immense swamp. Thus are dispersed in different directions, and particularly
westerly and north westerly of us, these great bodies of water that descend from
the eastern country through the channel of the Lachlan River, which
substantiates our suspicions respecting it prior to our departure from the
depôt.
We crossed the rivulet (now no river), which is about 25 or 30 ft. wide and
has a strong current, and walked to the summit of a hill a short distance to the
westward of us. From there we observed the land to the southward and westward
appears more elevated than that in a more northerly direction over which these
waters are dispersed, the river being totally lost in permanent marshes. It is a
subject of very considerable regret that a river upon which much has been
calculated and respecting which many flattering hopes have been entertained
should have such a termination. Mr. Oxley has determined therefore (since
further surveys on this arm are useless and impracticable) to return to the
mouth of the Southern Branch and explore it down. Previous to leaving this
rising ground, which we have called Farewell Hill, we took the bearings of the
following hills:--A hill bearing S. by E. we have called Mount Campbell, in
honour of the Colonial Secretary, John Thos. Campbell Esqre. A hill near it
bearing nearly south, has been called Mount Edwards; another hill bearing S.S.E.
Mr. Oxley called Mount Falla, after a nurseryman at Newcastle-upon-Tyne. Two
other hills, bearing westerly a few miles, have received the names Mounts
Merrick and Abbott. Farewell Hill bears S. by W. 2 miles of Mount
Cunningham.
Returning on the left bank we met with several difficulties, as well as from
the low swampy flats as from the narrow deep creeks which we intersected in our
route. Our horses were so much exhausted by swimming over the creeks and rivers,
and by the subsequent severe exercise over these marshes, that we were obliged
to halt on some dry ground a mile short of the spot on which we intended to
encamp, being about half a mile from our last night's resting place on the
opposite side of the river. Farewell Hill, like other elevated spots of the same
nature, is covered with Callitris glauca, Acacia doratoxylon, some
dwarf trees of Eucalyptus (Blue Gum), Indigofera sp., and the
Grevillea allied to G. sphacelata. In the swampy lands I gathered
specimens of a species of Arenaria; a syngenesious plant allied to
Aster, the flower is blue with many linear rays; a trailing plant of the
Rutaceae, having the habit of a Zygophyllum, with conjugate and
obovate leaves, the flowers are yellow, octandrous and decandrous, capsule
4-lobed; a beautiful dwarf species of Mimulus, which decorated the dull
places with its delicate purple flowers. I sowed some peach stones and quince
seeds on the opposite side of the river previous to leaving our last night's
encampment.
13th. Tuesday. This morning we returned to the head of the southerly
arm of the river where we encamped, intending to take a survey down this branch
a few miles in order to ascertain how far it would be practicable to travel on
its banks before we should attempt to continue our journey with the baggage
horses, all of which required rest.
14th. Wednesday. Mr. Oxley rode down on the right bank of the river
about 3 miles when he found it gradually decreasing in breadth, its banks very
low and its inclination northerly in the same direction as the other branch. He
could not advance further on account of its ramifications into minor streamlets,
all tending to the lower lands westerly and northwesterly. From these
circumstances as well as from the appearance of the main channel being choked up
with Arundo phragmites no doubt existed in his mind that it terminated
and dispersed itself in the same low swampy flats as the other or northerly
branch so that we are encamped on an island. Mr. Oxley conceives he cannot act
up to the spirit of his instructions more fully than by commencing a journey to
the S.W. coast in hopes of learning something respecting the Macquarie River
which we have not seen since we left Bathurst. We therefore propose to rest the
horses in order to enable them to recruit their strength for such an
undertaking.
15th. Thursday. I formed one of a party destined to visit Mount
Melville bearing N.E. by E., 8 miles distant. We left the tent about half past 9
o'clock, and in our route across Field's Plains, which we found extremely
swampy, I gathered specimens of a Polygonum, a rushy shrub with
lanceolate leaves and diaecious flowers; also an aphyllous shrub with the habit
of a Thesium, having dichotomous branches, the fruit is a superior nut,
half enclosed in a persistent calyx.
About 1 o'clock we came to a creek running east and west, about 16 feet broad
and of considerable depth. Our huntsman was the only person who was able to
cross it, from whose report, having climbed to the summit of one of its peaks,
it is a barren rocky (red granite) hill. The timber upon it is small and
stunted: its surface had been recently fired by natives, and it has that
self-same aspect of sterility its Mount Cunningham. We observed marks of flood
on the steins of the Eucalypti on the verge of the creek upwards of 3 ft.
The same aquatic plant of Alismaceae allied to Damasonium frequent
on the Eastern coast, abounds in this creek. Here is a species of
Myriophyllum, scarcely distinct from the British M. verticillatum,
it has its lower leaves which are immersed, pinnated and capillary. I gathered
specimens of a species of Casuarina tree, 30 feet high, with flaccid
smooth branchlets and a strobile smaller than that of C. macrocarpa, with
much stronger branches. Parasitical on the Eucalyptus globulus, usually
termed Blue Gum, I discovered a species of Loranthus, which I have named
(L. aurantiacus), whose leaves are lanceolate, and the whole plant is of
weak pendent habit. I have gathered fine flowering specimens of another species,
L. nutans, of more stiff growth. having peduncles 2-3 flowered, and
nodding or bent downwards.
The soil of these flats is of a tenacious cold stiff clayey quality. We
passed the spots where the natives had had their fires, the smoke of which we
had observed on the 11th inst. The freshness of the ashes suggested to us that
they had not left them 24 hours. It is likewise evident that mussels which they
procure from the creek constitute a part of their viands, from the great numbers
of their shells being scattered around their gunyas or bark huts. At dark we
returned with the small collection of specimens I had gathered in the course of
the day's excursion. The country for a very considerable distance northward and
westward of Mount Melville is low and exceeding swampy. The natives had removed
to the opposite side of the creek in a hollow between Mount Melville and Mount
Cunningham, for we could occasionally perceive the smoke of their fires among
the trees.
16th. Friday. Arranging and packing up plants throughout the whole of
this day. By observations taken this day by Mr. Oxley we find the site of our
encampment is in lat. 33°15'35" S., and long. 147°45'00" E., the variation of
the compass being 7°08'00" E. Mr. Oxley sent two persons to a range of hills, of
which Mount Maud forms a part, in order to look out for a good track round a
lagoon on the opposite side of the river for our horses to pass, as also to
observe the nature of the country in our intended course in that direction. By
this report we learned that the country to the southward and westward is more
elevated and the soil firmer for travelling than that of the plains. They
ascended to the lofty eminence of Mount Maud, which appears to be not so barren
as others in its vicinity. The Grevillea allied to G. sphacelata
is found here extremely luxuriant, forming a shrub 8 ft. high; with a
linear-leaved Solanum entirely covered with long-orange thorns.
Clitoria sp., with pinnated leaves, which are retuse and silky, produces
an elongated spike of blue flowers, was found at the base of the mountain. They
gathered specimens of a shrub of the order Rutaceae, of the genus of
Eriostemon, differing from E. squameus [= E. Billardieri]
not only in the shape of the foliage, but in the absence of scales on their
underside. The whole shrub is covered with glandular tubercules, and has the
scent of Black Currants. I have this day ascertained that the heterophyllous
tree seen at Lime Stone Creek is a species of Sterculia, as that genus
now stands. Our people brought me some old capsules of it, which are pea-like,
distinct from one another, bursting on the side, and are many seeded.
17th. Saturday. Our carpenter having planed a flat surface on a large
stem of a eucalyptus we left our marks upon it as follows. J. Oxley; G. W.
Evans; A.C. May 17th, 1817.[*] This morning we removed from our encampment to
the opposite side, about 2½ miles down the river, carrying over our luggage,
provisions etc., and swimming the horses. Pitched our tent for the day and
served out rations of provisions to people.
[* Mitchell's artist turned A.C. into A.D. in sketching the tree
in 1832.]
CHAPTER VII
CUNNINGHAM'S JOURNAL
OXLEY's LAND JOURNEY--Cont.
Journey Southward:-Farewell Hill to Mount Flinders, 18 May--21 June,
1817
May 18th. Sunday. Our boats being of no further use to us we hauled
them up on the bank leaving them with keel upwards; barked them over in order to
preserve them as long as possible from the action and effects of the weather, in
case we should be obliged to return to them in consequence of any unforeseen
accident. We likewise divided the provisions that had been conveyed by the boats
equally among the whole of the horses (both saddle and pack), leaving under the
boats. all weighty iron tools that we might reasonably conclude we should not
require on our new course. I here sowed--near the spot where we left the
boats--some peach stones and quince seeds.

JOHN OXLEY
This arranged, we commenced our journey on a true S.W. course by compass
towards Cape Northumberland,[*] Mr. Evans taking the lead, accompanied by two
persons, the one having the perambulator, and the other marking the trees with
an adze as a guide to our pack-horse leaders. The horses groaned beneath the
weight of their loads, which was not less than 300 lbs. weight each. Having
passed the heads of some lagoons the country becomes exceeding brushy, and
assumes a greyish gloominess in consequence of the great numbers of Acacia
pendula and Rhagodia dilatata, which are the two predominant shrubs.
The soil is a loose red earth, with a large proportion of sand. About 3 o'clock
we had made good about 10 miles on the given course when we stopped at a gully
containing stagnant, white, muddy water.
[* From Oxley's journal we learn that where the river formed two
branches he left it and began his journey to the south-west.]
The plants are the same as those already noticed and made mention of.
Eucalyptus micrantha (Bastard Box) was more frequent. The Cypress grows
occasionally in large clumps about 40 ft. high. I gathered duplicate seeds of
Acacia Pendula.
19th. Monday. Continuing our route from our last night's resting
place, the general character of the country we passed over is brushy and
sterile. We passed the rocky range of hills at Mount Maud through a stony rugged
gully. At this spot I discovered the following:--Pimelea colorans, a
beautiful plant, whose involucre and flowers change from white to bluish colour
according to its age and exposure. Zieria sp. [a kind of Sandfly Bush] a
shrub 2½ ft., with white and purple flowers. Solanaceae, a suffruticose
plant, flowers blue. Eutaxia sp., Sida sp., and Aster
decurrens (= Olearia decurrens), a slender shrub.
We passed some fine specimens of Sterculia heterophylla having the
last year's capsules on them, forming stems about 30 inches in diameter. A
creeping shrub probably of the Asclepiadaceae is very abundant twining
among the small cypress. In an open space having marks of inundation the holes
were very dry, and gave us but little encouragement to hope for water at any
resting place where we might halt at night. Acacia Pendula [Myall], is
common with another species. A. homalophylla [Curly yarran], remarkable
for its lanceolate, smooth, flat leaves, which have a solitary gland on the
interior margin. A tree 25 ft. high.
Our journey was unavoidably lengthened in hopes of finding water; we had
travelled 12 miles and found none or the appearance of any! We managed 2 miles
farther and encamped among some burnt grass which had been fired by natives.
Having pitched the tents and unladen our poor horses, who felt the privation
infinitely more than ourselves, we sent our people in several directions in
quest of water, when, after a diligent search, some was discovered about half a
mile westerly of our tents, where the natives had encamped some time since,
their bark huts being still in existence. It is a great relief to the eye to
observe a deviation, however slight, from the dull gloomy sameness--the want of
diversity in the timber of Western Australia.[*] At the base of the range of
hills at Mount Maud some tolerably fair specimens of the western iron bark
(Eucalyptus sideroxylon) were noticed, being easily distinguished from
its congeners by its extremely rugged, furrowed, bark, containing like others of
the Eucalypti a strong astringent styptic gum.
[* Cunningham's name for the country west of the Blue
Mountains.]
20th. Tuesday. Our people had [taken] the precaution to fill all the
vessels we had with us suitable to carry water, in case we should not be so
fortunate to find any at our next resting place. Continuing our course due S.W.
over a most sterile dry, flat country notorious for the uniformity of its
productions, being the same as passed yesterday. The only timber of any
consequence is a few scattered specimens of Callitris glauca Of 50 or 60
feet high and about 2 feet in diameter, the smaller trees being the
Casuarina before mentioned, and Acacia pendula, on which I
detected a new species of Loranthus [probably L. linophyllus],
with round linear foliage. I likewise discovered a monaecious shrub allied to
Croton, a slender tall shrub with linear lanceolate leaves and triangular
branches. At 8 miles on this day's journey we came to a tract of country full of
water holes or hollow places not quite dry, but the whole of the land had
evident signs of having been flooded, although at no recent period. Penetrating
three miles further we traced the same miserable wild country that we had had
all day, when, having cleared 11 miles, we came to an anchor for the night. The
whole of us went out in search of water as usual; after some time expended in a
fruitless search one of our people procured some miserable filthy water by
digging a hole on some low damp ground. We had taken the precaution to supply
ourselves by filling a keg previous to leaving our last night's encampment,
which we served out at 1½ pints per man.
21st. Wednesday. We had hitherto been tolerably supplied with water,
nor was it till this morning that we learnt to appreciate the value of good
water, which like other great blessings are only estimated by the loss of them.
All the water we could procure, which we brought from distant corrupted holes,
was very foul and muddy and filled with animalcules, to destroy which we boiled
and strained the water. We had scarcely left our resting place when we found
water in a small hidden hole, tolerably good at which we supplied our horses.
The country south westerly on this day's journey has an equally barren red soil,
and the timber produced is very diminutive and stunted. The eye rests with
pleasure upon the Native Cherry, our common eastern coast plant, Exocarpus
cupressiformis. The plants were but few, as follows:--Pentandria;
Monogynia; Rutaceae, a beautiful tree about 30 feet high, of very
spreading habit, with branches very slender and pendulous. Dodonaea
cuneata is very frequent. This day's journey afforded me duplicate specimens
of the monaecious shrub collected yesterday allied to Croton.
At nine miles a burnt grass tract induced us to halt and look for water, of
the existence of which we had some hopes, from the circumstance of having seen
recent foot impressions of natives, and a swan having flown over us led us to
conclude that water is not far distant. Mr. Evans, who had gone forward two
miles beyond this place, returned to us, having found some stagnant water holes.
After a diligent search we discovered some fine clear water in a lagoon or swamp
about 5 miles to the westward of our tent. One of our people came near to a
native who was of a very strong athletic habit, he however escaped. One of their
spears was likewise found.
22nd. Thursday. In order to rest our horses, who had by reason of hard
labour through an intricate country with little provision and still less water
become much debilitated, we remained at this place where is good grass. A small
pentandrous plant (of the Gentianaceae) is now very frequent in damp
situations. The flowers are light brown, it is frequent on the arid sandy
flats.
23rd. Friday. It was well advanced in the day before we were able and
ready to proceed forward on our journey, occasioned by the distances we are
obliged to fetch water. At about two miles on our route, arriving at a small
opening, we could distinguish some high mountains to the northward and westward
of us. Passing through a country covered with the melancholy Acacia
pendula we came to a gentle rising, but rugged sterile tract covered with a
tall thick brush, chiefly of plants before observed.
The Western Iron Bark and Cupressus glauca are the timbers of the
stony ascent. I here gathered specimens of a species of Daviesia with
linear rounded leaves, which are spinescent, the flowers are axillary and
bracteated. I likewise procured the following specimens:--Leptospermum
sp., forming a slender spreading shrub 6-8 feet high, the flowers are in
pairs and axillary. Eucalyptus acmenioides, shrub about 12 feet high,
allied to E. saligna. Eucalyptus dumosa, leaves alternate,
ovate-lanceolate, fruit rough. This plant forms the principal shrub in a tract
of confined brushy scrub. Melaleuca sp., allied to M. uncinata.
And a shrub of the class Syngenesia, a species of Cacalia, a
slender, twiggy shrub.
We saw some fine specimens of a tree which our people termed Snakewood; it is
not in flower, but has a small fimbriated capsule and its bark is rough and
scaly. Descending through a thick brushwood we came to a water channel (now
dry), but which from the recent appearance of water here we concluded some might
be discovered in the bottom to which the water course leads. Having travelled
nearly 10 miles we halted in this descent for the night. Our people found some
holes of excellent standing water about half a mile westerly of us to the no
small joy of the whole of us. Recent marks of natives on the trees. Kangaroo
were likewise observed at a distance. Much water has an outlet to the lower
parts of the country by this channel which is evident from the marks of flood
and the deep excavations formed (now dry) and no rain of any consequence has
fallen for a considerable period. Day continued fine, sultry, and the night
clear. On the brush or small timber the parasitical Loranthi are
common.
24th. Saturday. It was deemed advisable to remain at this place the
whole of the day in order to rest our horses, all of which required that
indulgence. The barren brushy country around us appeared to afford me some scope
for botanical investigation, my time therefore was now occupied throughout the
day. The following are specimens collected:--Goodenia sp., closely allied
to G. ovata, differing in having a leaf not too finely serrated.
Prostanthera nivea, a beautiful slender shrub with large white flowers.
Prostanthera sp., a depressed shrubby plant, Myoporum gracile,
allied to M. armillaris a shrub 8-10 ft. high. Melaleaca sp.,
differing from M. squamea in the nerveless leaves, and the spike of
flowers apparently cylindrical, from the dispositions of the remains of
capsules.
This tract of country is covered with several Eucalypti, and
Callitris glauca. The Brushes (Eucalyptus dumosa) are overrun with
the Cassytha, whose filiform stems had so matted together as to render a
passage very difficult. I gathered seeds of the large blue-flowered shrubby
Aster, and also of the two species of Melaleuca above mentioned.
To my surprise I found a few plants of Goodia lotifolia hitherto only
known to be indigenous in Van Diemen's Island. The country is now one continued
level.
On our way back to the tent, which we did not reach till after dusk, we
passed some small holes of water, near which we disturbed a large emu and two
young kangaroo, which were feeding upon the trifling herbage which the sterility
of the country can only produce in small patches.
25th. Sunday. Travelling over a continuance of brushy country for a
space of about 4 miles, the plants of which are duplicates of what I have
already collected, we came out upon a more clear open tract of land thinly
covered with Icacia Pendula, from whence we took bearings of a lofty hill
opening upon us, bearing S.S.W., distance about 7 miles. It may be worthy of
observation that among other signs of humidity this Acacia is one; hence
whenever we observed this grey tree we might on all occasions rest assured that
water was or had been in existence near it. The waterholes here were but just
dry! This kind of country continues about 3½ miles, on which I discovered a
delicate blue-flowering Erodium with ternate leaves, allied to E.
hymenoides.
Entering again a thick and intricate brush, matted strongly with
Cassytha, I detected the following plants:--Aster aculeatus of the
East coast, and some other syngenesious plants abound. I gathered seeds of a
Rhagodia, a low depressed shrub, with rough seeds; and Westringia
triphylla, a stiff shrubby plant with angular stem and ternate leaves.
Advancing near the base of the Mount before us the Grevillea allied to
G. sphacelata observed on all rocky hills since 28th April last, again
presents itself. Approaching its ragged rocky foot we found some water in small
portions, in the excavations formed by the rapidity of the waters descending
from the Mount during the rainy seasons, and there being some good grass for our
horses we determined to encamp under the hill. Round its base and on the lower
lands the print of the feet of natives (of children as well as of adults) were
very visible. They had passed over it when the soil had been softened by rain,
and some of the impressions were of ankle depth.
We had travelled 11 miles, and our horses were much fatigued, more
particularly while passing the last Cassythian brush, where some of the
lighter laden horses had their burdens pulled from their saddles by the strength
of the plants. Mr. Oxley, Mr. Evans and myself ascended this hill on the western
side (which is highest and steepest), from whose summit we had a very extensive
view of the whole country around us. Mr. Oxley took several bearings to the
southward and westward of this Mount. A lofty range of hills bearing about
N.N.W., about 60-70 miles distant, he has called Mount Granard. A range
commencing at N.W. northerly, and terminating at about W.N.W. has been termed
Goulburn's Range, in honour of J. Goulburn Esq., of the Colonial Office. A long
range of hills commencing at W.N.W. and ending at S.W. by S., distant about 25
miles, Mr. Oxley has named Peel's Range, in order to commemorate the name of the
Secretary of State for Ireland. Some hills lying behind one, and from the point
of view bearing southerly about 5 miles, are called Jones's Hills, after a
merchant at Sydney. At my suggestion Mr. Oxley has named the commanding eminence
Mount Aiton, in honour of W. T. Aiton, Esqre. at Kew, author of the Hortus
Kewensis, whose extensive knowledge in botany and horticulture is well-known in
the botanical world and needs no comments here.
The lower flats of Mount Aiton have been fired by the natives, but the upper
range is covered with a great profusion of valuable and interesting plants, many
of which I have seen before, such as the Aster, whose beautiful radiated
blue flowers have decorated our dreary path more or less since we left the
boats. Grevillea spacelata, at its summit; Tecoma Oxleyii is rare
on the western face of this mount. I, however, detected the following new plants
Correa sp., a shrub 4 ft. high; leaves ovate, obtuse, lanigerous beneath;
flowers terminal and solitary; corolla campanulate and green.
Prostanthera atriplicinifolia, a shrub strongly scented with
turpentine. Callitris sp., a small tree 25 feet high.
The perpendicular height of Mt. Aiton is presumed to be 250 feet, composed of
an indurated sandstone. To the northward we observed the smoke from several
native fires, and the country to the south and westward appears more open and
less bushy. The numerous tracks of emu and kangaroo suggested to us that this
eminence is frequented by these animals in search of water.
26th. Monday. Our horses having strayed into the thick brush we were
detained the whole of this day under the mount.
It afforded me an opportunity of examining its rocky declivities with more
leisure and more minutely than I was enabled to do on the evening of yesterday.
I discovered a species of Xerotes, with linear canaliculated leaves;
panicle compound, loose and horizontal. Hibbertia sp., with willowy
branches; flowers large and yellow. A species of Goodenia is very
frequent on the N.W. side. Tetratheca sp., a shrubby juncous plant,
forming close bushes, smaller in habit than the species termed T. juncia,
in capsule and flower. Lobelia erinoides, producing a beautiful long
tubular blue flower.
Exocarpus cupressiformis is a fine shrub on the rocks here. A species
of snake, chequered on the back like the common diamond snake of New South
Wales, but shorter and of a lighter brown colour, is by no means infrequent in
Western Australia on rocky hills. I killed a fine large specimen lying in a
dormant state on this mount. Two of our people who had been out 12 hours
returned with two of the horses and reported to us that the other three men, who
had been sent by Mr. Oxley in another direction, had fallen in with their tracks
and were tracing them back to our last encampment. Our dogs were on the alert
throughout the night. Some natives who had heard us from their encampment
westerly of us, induced by curiosity, had come in a circuitous route to the
lower range of rocks under the Mount in order to observe our motions. Some of
the people could hear them distinctly in conversation.
27th. Tuesday. Fine clear weather. This morning we sent out two men to
their comrades with provisions and also to assist them in the search and
securing of our horses. At 2 o'clock p.m. two others returned unable to give an
account of the animals. At 5 p.m. the other men absent, who had with a
determined unwearied perseverance continued the pursuit of the beasts, returned
with seven horses, but could not find the other five. The delay occasioned by
this unfortunate affair enabled me to examine, ticket and pack my specimens. One
of our people, who had been sent with the dogs in search of kangaroo and emu for
us, saw a fine tall young man (native) not far distant from our tent. The dogs
had seized him before the person was able to call them off, but the moment he
was released from their grasp, he made a quick precipitate retreat in a westerly
direction. He was unarmed and perfectly naked, having a few cockatoo feathers
stuck in his hair. This sufficiently convinced us that our last night's
conjectures were not unfounded.
May 28th. Wednesday. This morning we despatched four men mounted on
horseback in search of the five beasts missing. A large flock of emu descended
from the rocky heights of the Mount, but unfortunately we were unable to secure
any of them, our dogs being in another direction. We shot an owl which was
hovering around our tent. It was large and the feathers of the wing were
beautifully speckled with brown and darker colours.
29th. Thursday. During the last night I was seized with a violent ague
(originating in a cold), which increased this day and obliged me to remain at
rest. The men sent in search of the horses returned without them. Our dogs
killed three emu which we found to be an excellent change from the salt
provision upon which we have of late entirely subsisted. Much wind at night.
30th. Friday. Found myself much relieved by the physic I had taken
last evening. We are still detained by the loss of the horses. Mr. Oxley,
accompanied by two others, left the tent in search of them, while Mr. Evans,
Fraser and Parr went on foot in a north westerly direction. They found the
following plants. Brunonia sp., allied to B. sericea of Dr. Smith,
but smaller in all its parts; on grassy flats. A stroloma sp., allied to
A. humifusum, having erect branches; in fruit. Dodonaea sp.,
leaves oblong, entire, margin revolute. Mr. Oxley returned with the five horses
about noon, which was a great subject of joy to us all. They had strayed in
search of water but a short distance from our old line of road N.E., and were
stopped at about 7 miles distant from the tent. The party discovered a nest of
emu's eggs, amounting to ten in number; they are almost as large as an ostrich's
egg, and of a dark green colour. Mount Aiton is situated in lat. 34°30' S.,
long. 147°00'00" East, and distance from Sydney 420 miles West Southerly.
31st. Saturday. The whole of the horses having been found that had
strayed, and been secured the preceding evening, and having been detained five
days, Mr. Oxley was determined to proceed on our journey this morning with all
possible speed. Although not sufficiently strong and scarcely recovered of my
late attack, still I was unwilling to become the instrument of further delay,
and as the whole of us walk, all our horses being very heavily laden, I had no
other resource or alternative but to walk likewise.
Leaving the richer patches of good grassy land immediately around Mount
Aiton, the country again assumes a sterile and dreary aspect, covered with small
timbers of Eucalyptus micrantha and small cypress. Onward about two miles
we passed a small rising mount, near which is a water hole, now perfectly dry.
From the remains of a fire and grass burnt near the base of a cypress tree, and
from the fresh impression of human feet, it is clear that natives had not left
it two days. The country S.W. again becomes brushy, producing plants of which
frequent mention is made. Hakea sp., allied to A. rugosa, is
observed here--a small tree 20 feet high. Jasminum sp.; Stenochilis
longifolius; Bursaria spinosa are all common plants of these wastes.
Crossing some lone rocky elevated spots, covered with fragments of a red
granite. Mount Aiton bore N.E. 6 miles. Descending on some woody grassy lands of
considerable extent, Jones's Hills appeared in sight, of which Mr. Evans took
bearings. Some old venerable Sterculiae of considerable magnitude appear
near this open situation.
At 9½ miles we entered a very thick brush, which from the glaucous hue of
Eucalyptus dumosa, the usual and principal shrub of this miserable tract,
has the appearance of extensive plains from a distant view. We had already
performed the usual daily number of miles, which upon the average we generally
found prudent not to exceed, but we were led on under the impression that the
brush was not of any extent and that possibly we might fall in with water and
grass for our horses in the range of a mile or two further on our course.
Continuing through this thicket which we named Euryalean Scrub (after one
of the Gorgons), we found it grow thicker and exceedingly difficult for our
horses, so much so that a man led the way and cut an opening for them. The whole
is strongly matted together with Cassytha and other climbing plants. At
sunset we had travelled 19½ miles but were not clear of this scrub when we
arrived at a small open space, where we were obliged to halt for the night,
although no water could be found for our horses or ourselves.
Dismal as the brush was to all of us it nevertheless afforded me some new
plants, which recompensed me at least for the severity of the march through it.
They are as follows:--
Pimelea diosmaefolia, a delicate shrub. Grevillea acicularis,
nova sp., a dwarf dense pungent shrub: Leucopogon sp.,
(Epacridae). Viola sp. Dodonaea sp., a very small flowering
shrub. Daviesia microphylla, a small shrubby rigid plant. Bossiaea
sp., distinct from B. scolopendria in the size of its flower and
fimbriation of its calyx and bracteae. Callitris verrucosa, a slender
tree 10-20 feet high. Acacia conferta, leaves broad, ovate and carinate,
capitulum of flowers axillary and crowded; forming a large dense bush. A
spinescens with the habit of Daviesia in having spiny
branches.
Among the combination of plants annoying us in this brush were a prickly
Daviesia, observed near Mount Maud, and a strong prickly grass (not in
flower) growing in large tufts about three feet high, and with the habit of
Astragalus tragacantha. We had taken the precaution to carry some dirty
water with us from Mount Aiton, which we served out at one pint per man.
1817. June 1st. Sunday. The want of water obliged us to leave our
present station at an early hour in hopes of arriving at a more hospitable tract
of country affording us grass and water. At a distance of about 1½ miles we
cleared this intolerable brush and came out upon an open forest country equally
sterile and covered with a coarse grass (Dianella divaricata) and some
other plants by no means interesting. Continuing our journey about 8 miles, a
miserable prospect before us (not a symptom or a sign of the least running or
stagnant water to be seen) we came to some rising ground on which several naked
bald rocks make a romantic appearance. From this elevation we had a view of
Peel's Range, three miles distant, which we determined to make and halt for the
day. At midday we encamped within half a mile of it. We sent out people in
search of water, which they found in some holes at the immediate base of the
Range. Served portions of dry provisions to the people.
2nd. Monday. Our horses were so much enfeebled and debilitated by the
late severe exercise and want of water that it was considered advisable to
remain the whole of this day under the range. Having attended to my plants, I
accompanied one of our party, Fraser, on a botanical excursion over these rocky
hills, which upon examination afforded me very few novelties, being chiefly a
repetition of the plants I have already collected of which Dodonaea
pinnata, Grevillea sphacelata and a Phyllanthus are most
predominant, We bore away S.W. to a very remarkable bluff point, distant about
3½ miles. From the rugged declivities of Peel's Range I gathered fine flowering
specimens of Eriostemon sp. The country is broken with small rocky hills,
and covered with brushwood, which furnished me with the following specimens.
Dianella sp., a new and beautiful plant.
Pimelea microcephala, a new species, with large involucre to the
flowers. Sida sp., Acacia sulcata, discovered on the S.W. coast.
The capitulurn of flowers is solitary, as well as geminate. Acacia sp.,
specimens in flower; this species differs from the preceding in its deciduous
bracts, and from A. acicularis in its geminate capitula. Ascending to the
summit of this elevated point, I gathered specimens of Pomaderris sp.,
Ceanothus globulosus, a strong shrub. Glyceria sp., a grass of the
Festuceae. Tecoma Oxleyi is very common on the naked rocks, in
fine flower. The country to the southward and westward of us, as seen from this
hill, is exceedingly flat and barren.
This mount has been named in honour of Mr. George Caley a most accurate,
intelligent and diligent botanist, who laboured on the Eastern coast of this
continent a number of years with considerable success, and who well merits such
a mark of distinction. A corresponding mount southerly has been called Mount
Brogden, in honour of Charles Brogden, Esq., of Clapham.
Gathered Stenochilus sp., Croton sp., Euphrasia sp.,
leaves opposite, flowers blue.
The majestic bluff front of Mount Caley is very grand. The large granite
stones of which it is composed being covered with a red lichen, giving it a tint
and appearance of old brickwork. An inference may be drawn from the deep gullies
and rugged country we passed over at the base of the range of the great bodies
of water that fall on Peel's Range and descend, forming these excavations, whose
general inclinations are westerly. We searched in vain for water; all the creeks
are dry now. We returned to our tent at dusk. One of our horses from debility,
and in an attempt to rise up under his load, having fallen down was so strained
as to be rendered useless which obliged us to shoot him. Our lat. is 34°08'08"
S., and long. 146°42'25" E. Variation of compass 7°18'00" E. Our people made
shoes of the skin of the horse.
3rd. Tuesday. About 10 o'clock we departed from our encampment on a
S.W. course along the valley dividing a part of Peel's Range and arrived at the
base of Mount Caley about 1 o'clock. Being almost surrounded by the range and
finding the country somewhat on the ascent, Mr. Oxley went up to the summit of
Mount Caley in order to observe and discover any opening that would allow us to
pass to the flat country S.W. of Mount Caley and Mount Brogden. We, however,
found a ridge too elevated to be passed, especially in the present enfeebled
state of the whole of our horses. Descending into the lower lands, and passing
several large muddy holes now dry, skirted with Acacia pendula, we came
upon a patch of burnt grass about 4 miles S.E. of Mount Caley, where we stopped
for the day, having travelled about 9½ miles. [This was Oxley's farthest
South.]
Eucalyptus sideroxylon (western iron bark), specimens in flower and
some duplicates of others. We found water (after diligent search) in small
quantity, in a well that had been dug by the natives, about 5 feet deep. It was
of an indifferent quality.
4th. Wednesday. Continued our stay at our present halting place. Mr.
Oxley sent two of our party to observe the general appearance of the country to
the southward of S.W. Occupied myself at my plants, ticketing my specimens, etc.
The small quantity of water discovered yesterday being expended, we sent men
with seven horses to a considerable waterhole discovered by myself yesterday,
about seven miles on the road back to our last encampment. Upon the return of
the two persons, they gave a very unfavourable report of the country they had
seen, in point of sterility and drought, as well as the intricacy and difficulty
of penetration, in consequence of the thick brushwood with which it is covered.
The native or wild dogs that were howling around us kept our own continually
upon the alert,
5th. Thursday. Our latitude now is 34°13'33" S., and long. 146°39'50"
E.; the variation of the compass 8°08'06". Unwilling to proceed in a particular
direction until we have ascertained the nature of the country to the northward
and westward, I made an excursion in that direction. Crossing the first range S.
of Mount Brogden I descended into the valleys or flats, which are in patches
covered with brome grass, and of a tolerable good soil, where I sowed some peach
stones and quince seeds. Ascending a lofty range (being a part of Peel's Range)
running north and south, the view of the north-west country is in a great
measure hidden by other ridges still to the westward. I descended the elevation
on the western side, which furnished me with no new plants, and passed through a
small narrow valley, and reached a third range (running S.W. and N.E.) of very
steep and rugged ascent. The country to the westward as seen from its summit is
much broken with hills and rocky declivities. I took bearings at upwards of 40
miles distant of hills and mounts.
The bleak exposed rocks on this range are covered with an Acacia in
flower that has much the habit of A. armata found on the south coast. The
leaves, however, have scattered villi on their surface, and the spinescent
stipules longer.
The Zieria is in great abundance, and the rest of the plants are the
same as those seen previously. On my way back I gathered seeds of the following
plants:--Camera eremophila, a simple pinnate-leaved plant (shrub) 6-7
feet high. Pimelea micrantha, involucre of flowers scaly, an irregular
growing shrub. On the flats I gathered specimens of a Lavatera, differing
but little from L. Africana; frequent with a species of Senecio,
with the stalk purple, and the flowers yellow, large and radiated.
No marks or signs of natives except on one tree which was very ancient, The
summits of all these ranges are covered with Cupressus glauca. Returned
about 7 o'clock in the evening. The country at the verge of the horizon
southerly is in flames, being fired by natives.
6th. Friday. Our horses having acquired considerable strength in
consequence of two days' rest and good provender, we commenced our route on a
westerly course, working our way round the lower base of Peel's range through a
thick brushwood of seedling plants, of Cypress chiefly. The country
becomes more grassy and thinly covered with small timber of Eucalyptus
micrantha and Cupressus glauca. In these flats I gathered specimens
of Pimelae linifolia a slender gigantic shrub and Dodonaea
heterophylla, of which I gathered seeds. Having penetrated about 8½ miles on
a W.N.W. course we halted at a spot where there was some tolerably good grass
for our horses. We found some fine clear water in a sandy hole under Peel's
Range, to the northward and eastward of our tent. Hitherto we have seen no
animals except a few kangaroo-rats in these wastes, however, some black
cockatoos saluted us as they passed over our tents. The creeping shrub, which I
had suspected to belong to the order Asclepiadaceae, I observed this day
(from a decayed flower) to be one of the Rubiaceae it has likewise the
stipules so characteristic of this extensive tropical order.
7th. Saturday. We did not leave our halting place under Peel's Range
till a late hour, occasioned by the wandering of our horses. Continuing on a
course N.E. we arrived, after travelling about 8 miles, at some rising ground of
gentle ascent, covered with quartz and small pebbles of iron-ore stone. Passing
this elevation we approached the base of a small range of hills running almost
north and south, and finding grass we proposed to stop, being about 10 miles
distant from our last night's encampment. The difficulty of passing through the
thick brushwood is very distressing to those of our horses whose backs by the
great friction and heavy burdens were not in the best condition.
We had for some time seen the necessity of carrying water with us rather than
trust to the contingency of failing in with any holes at those places where
necessity herself might oblige us to halt. We had therefore filled, previous to
our departure, an empty keg with the excellent element found yesterday, which we
divided equally among the whole of us. After a long wearisome and fruitless
search none could be found here, although experience had taught us to examine
those places where probably it might, if it existed, be detected.
I gathered flowering specimens of a Cassia, which is now the greatest
ornament of these deserts and might be termed eremophila from its being
found in such places; also a species of Sida, with lanceolate, ovate,
crenulate leaves; peduncles very long, 2-3 flowered. The timber is a small
cypress (Callitris), and Bastard Box, (Eucalyptus micrantha). The
grass, clear of the hills, is very dry and wiry, chiefly of a species of
Bromus. Our dogs had procured for us two kangaroo-rats which offered us a
fresh meal. Native dogs are frequent about the hills.
8th. Sunday. Remained at the spot the whole of this day and sent our
people in different directions in search of water. I took a walk on the rising
ground near us, but made very few new discoveries, the country being covered
with Acacia homalophylla. At the base of the grassy hills near our tent,
which Mr. Oxley has termed Disappointment Hills, I found a species of
Myoporum, differing from M. ellipticum in the throat of the
corolla being more villous, and the anthers extended, the leaves are nerved as
in Hakea dactyloides. It is an observation I have frequently made that
the heads of the trees incline to the northward and eastward, indicative of the
prevalence of the south-westerly winds. Mounts and terminations of ranges are
bluff-like to the westward, generally evidently from the action of the air and
wind upon these points.
Our people are returned from different points after a fruitless search for
water. One small hole was discovered, with a quart or so in it. Our poor horses
are languishing for the want of this precious element. The arid appearance of
the country to the westward, has unavoidably obliged Mr. Oxley to change his
course again, rather than unjustifiably continue our journey over a country that
would destroy our horses and endanger our own lives by extreme drought. It is
therefore proposed to return to our last encampment where the grass is good and
where there is water for the horses and having renewed their strength to proceed
northerly and make the Lachlan River on the swampy lands occasioned by its
distribution, and we might hope to intersect the Macquarie River, respecting
whose course little or nothing is known.
9th. Monday. Our journey this morning, independently of the painful
idea of tracing out steps back a stage, was rendered more disagreeable by the
continuance of small rain, which did not cease until we had arrived at the foot
of the range near our old encampment at the waterholes. The travelling is
excessively heavy and fatiguing to the horses, being very boggy, by reason of
the present wet weather, from which we might infer that a rain of two days would
render the whole tract of country wholly impassable. Mr. Evans and three others
who had gone on before us had made a large fire of cypress by the time we
arrived, and we were enabled immediately to shift and dry our clothes. While our
horses were enjoying their new pasturage, we were feasting ourselves upon
kangaroo-rats (secured by our dogs) and excellent good water.
10th. Tuesday. We rested ourselves and the horses under the range the
whole of this day. In the afternoon I took a walk and examined the range above
us, and detected the following interesting plants:--Indigofera sp., a
shrub 6-7 feet high. Anthocercis albicans, a slender twiggy shrub.
Tecoma Oxleyi, a few good seeds. The seeds of this plant are extremely
difficult to be procured, the moment they are ripe they are scattered and
eagerly devoured by the kangaroo-rats. Acacia armatoides [= A.
armata], some good seeds. Teucrium sp., a species of Goodenia,
is very abundant on the ridge. The soil on the sides of the gully is rich, dark
and loamy. Returned at nightfall.
11th. Wednesday. We continued at this resting place until we had
received some information respecting the country northerly of us. For this
purpose Mr. Oxley despatched two of our people in that direction and also
requested them to look out for a resting place where we might enjoy water of any
quality. Mr. Oxley has adopted this mode of proceeding rather than advance on
any particular course, with the doubt of finding grass or water to the very
serious injury of our horses. I availed myself of this opportunity, and was
occupied on the rocky summit of the range by which we are partly surrounded. I
gathered some seeds of a Hibbertia, so common in similar situations. The
Zieria is now richly in flower, from which I furnished myself with
handsome specimens. Among the seeds I collected this day the following are most
interesting:
Prostanthera atriplicinifolia. Bellis ciliaris [= Brachycome
ciliaris], specimens in flower. Lobelia senecioides [= Isotoma
axillaris], seeds and specimens. Senecio anethifolius, fine
specimens, in shaded damp situations. The Pomaderris observed on Mount
Caley is common here, with another of the same natural family, a rigid shrub
with a white, hoary corolla. The hanging rocks are adorned with Tecoma
Oxleyi whose great profusion of flowers will always render the plant
valuable in Europe. The brush on the rocky declivities is very thick and
difficult to pass being held together by the wiry arms of the Cassytha.
On the highest part of the range I found two long pieces of the heart of an
Acacia, which I have called A. doratoxylon. These pieces of wood
were about 9 feet long, and had been split out of the centre of some trees of
this species that had been broken down by natives, and doubtless intended for
spears, as the wood agreed exactly in point of grain and texture with that of
all finished spears we have had opportunity of examining. Our presence at the
foot of the range had doubtless disturbed them at their work, which appeared
very new and fresh. The manufactory of these weapons must be a very laborious
task. When we consider that their tools are a mogo or stone hatchet and a cockle
shell.
A shower obliged me to return to our tent about 3 o'clock. Fraser and the
other man who had been out to reconnoitre returned at dusk, having found a good
halting place about 10 miles northerly. He brought me specimens of Nicotiana
undulata, whose long tubular corolla differs so materially in shape from the
other species of this genus, to which it was first referred by Monsieur Ventenat
and adopted by other botanists. He likewise brought me specimens of a
Loranthus with oblong-ovate, obtuse, wrinkled leaves and axillary
peduncles, parasitical on the snakebark, and a Lotus, with obcordate
cuneated foliage and red flowers. Our dogs killed several kangaroo-rats, among
which I observed a species of pigmy kangaroo with the head of a hare, it has
five toes to the forefeet as in Macropus elegans, it, however, stands
only about 14-16 inches high when resting upon its hind legs and tail. The skin
is dark gray, and the fur of a very fine texture.
12th. Thursday. In the anxious hope of soon arriving at a tract of
country where the doubts of finding water and grass would scarcely exist, we
left our last two day's encampment, winding round the base of Peel's Range in a
northerly direction. The country now is of a grassy, woody character and broken
by gullies from the range in which we discovered running water. Passing some dry
water courses that intersected our course, the land is open and less encumbered
with timber, which is of the Bastard Box and Cypress. Tracing the ridge to its
base through tracts of the above description and bushy alternately, we arrived
at a small grassy creek furnished with a stream of running water, where we
stopped, having advanced about 10 miles by 2 o'clock in the afternoon.
Jasminum sp., Cryptandra sp., Grevillea sphacelatoides,
Hibbertia, 2 species, etc. are all common plants observed in this day's
route. A pentandrous tree of the order Rutaceae, remarkable for its
spreading habit, is covered with flowers; beneath its shade some of the
Atriplicinae and Pimelea linariifolia grow very luxuriantly.
The Salsola so common on the plains of the Lachlan River was observed
this day, on this grassy land, which has evident signs of having been under
water in the rainy season. We noticed the recent impressions of the feet of
natives on the soft soil, which is less perforated by the kangaroo-rats than
some tracts of country to the southward and westward. Brunonia sp.,
before seen, is very common among the grass with some trifling Gnaphalia.
I gathered several pretty specimens of crystallized quartz from some hills, over
which our course led us. One of our people shot a bronze pigeon.
13th. Friday. Continuing our course about 9 o'clock this morning under
the range we crossed several small gullies, of which some had running streams.
The country has the same aspect as observed yesterday, being a continuous brush
and open forest land alternately. We had travelled about 14 miles when we came
to a creek furnished with grass, and stopped for the night. Water was found
about 1½ miles nearer the range. In a barren brush, of which a Meleleuca
(allied to M. squamea) and a species of Leptospermum are most
abundant. I gathered specimens of Eriostemon brevifolius with linear,
short, rough leaves. Scaevola spinescens. Anadenia anethifolia a
dense bushy plant. A Loranthus with linear-lanceolate leaves in fruit,
parasitical on snakebark.
Some very fine trees of Sterculia heterophylla were observed to-day,
one of which I measured, and found it 3 ft. 10 in. in diameter, although only 20
ft. high, with very strong horizontal spreading branches, forming a very
agreeable shade. Acacia conferta is now very common, first observed on
the 31st ultimo. Some patches of soil that had been inundated and in which I
observed Pancratium Macquaria [ = Calostemma purpureum], is rich
and good, being the deposition of the waters. The shelving, rocky appearance of
the creek on which we encamped suggested to us that considerable bodies of water
descend by this gully to the lower lands. We could clearly distinguish from some
rising ground over which we passed the low flat brush to the westward, forming
an impenetrable barrier against us. The latter part of our course was N.E.
14th. Saturday. Resuming our journey on a north west course for about
4 miles through an uninteresting scrub, we descended from the barren slopes of
the hills to a rugged creek containing small rocky excavations and standing
water. Unwilling to halt at so short a distance from our last night's
encampment, we continued our journey over a more open grassy and apparently
better tract of country, with timber of cypress of tolerable size, interspersed
with Eucalyptus micrantha (Bastard Box) of larger bulk than we have seen
them since we abandoned our boats. Arriving at a dry sandy watercourse, on the
margin of which grew some fine patches of grass (Avena), and,
luxuriantly, Sonchus oleraceus, our people who had traced the creek up
found plenty of water about half a mile out of our line of course, where we
halted and pitched our tent. Dianella divaricarta, Prostanthera
nivea, a Hakea allied to H. rugosa, Tetratheca dumosa,
Boronia pinnata, etc., are all common plants. I gathered some specimens
of Sterculia heterophylla in pods, and Eucalyptus sideroxylon is
observed sparingly near the creek, in which I detected a large flowering
Goodenia, with radical spathulate leaves.
15th. Sunday. We remained the whole of this day at the creek and I
employed a few hours in repapering my specimens and booking the seeds that had
been collected some days previous. I took a walk to the continuance of Peel's
Range, about one mile distant, but discovered nothing new. Among the plants
frequently observed I recognised Calythrix tetragona of the Eastern
Coast, but a miserable stunted shrub, like the whole of the plants on this
sterile front of the range. I gathered some duplicate seeds of a
Phyllanthus and of Persoonia scabra, and a Tetratheca. The
summit of the range is covered with Acacia doratoxylon, Cupressus
glauca and Casuarina macrocarpa, all starved pigmy trees. The margins
of the creek are clothed with the western iron bark. Returned to the tent about
2 o'clock.
One of our people who had been out in search of game came very near to a
solitary native, who was in the act of making his fire. He ran off with all
possible despatch, with a long spear with which he was armed. The afternoon,
which was very cloudy, produced a shower at dusk. To the northward and westward
some very singular ranges having some remarkable peaks can be seen from the
summits of Peel's Range. Mount Aiton bore S.E. by E., distant about 30 miles. By
observation taken this day our lat. and long. are as follows 33°49'00" S.,
146°33'00" E., variation of the compass the same as the last observation. We are
two miles north of Sydney. Showery at night.
16th. Monday. In consequence of the wet weather and the very doubtful
appearance of the atmosphere we were prevented from stirring from our present
position. Our people reported to us the death of one of the most able
pack-horses of the whole troop. The animal had been strained in the loins, and
died of internal mortification.
17th. Tuesday. About 9 o'clock we commenced our day's journey N.W.
northerly from the creek over a very barren rugged country, broken with
water-courses from the hills, now perfectly dry. Some grassy lands present
themselves, thinly covered with tolerable sized timber. On our left hand a range
of hills ran parallel with our course, and Peel's Range on the right hand, above
the usual level of which is observed a rising woody point bearing about N.E., a
few miles from us. Mr. Oxley has termed it Mount Barrow, in honour of Barrow
Esqre., author of "Travels in Southern Africa," and now of the Admiralty
Office.[*] Passing round the S.W. termination of Peel's Range we continued our
route about 1½ miles and halted on a grassy open flat. Our journey was about 10¼
miles, and as naturally might be expected the ground was excessively soft and
boggy. After a diligent search for water, about a quart was found at dusk in a
rocky hole of a small range, N. of Peel's Range.
[* John Barrow.]
18th. Wednesday. At daybreak we sent two others to the range of hills
near us in search of water, with directions to continue in the course of Mount
Barrow should they not be so fortunate as to find any nearer on the range or in
the gullies proceeding from it. They returned with a small quantity, enabling us
to distribute to each a pint for our breakfast. Our people who had been sent to
bring up the horses reported that there was some good grass a mile and a half
distant in a valley between the hills. Anxious to remove to a more hospitable
spot where water would in all probability be found, sufficient for ourselves and
horses, we proceeded forward with the most necessary and the lightest of our
provisions and luggage, leaving five casks of pork, which we could send back for
in the course of the day. About 2½ miles N. easterly over some rocky hills we
descended to a fine rich valley of good grass and some holes of rain water in
the gullies, enough for ourselves and horses. We accordingly pitched our tents
in the valley and turned our horses out to feed. Mr. Oxley sent the strongest of
our animals for the casks of pork left at our last resting place.
As a proof of the badly watered condition of the country we discovered a hole
that had been made with great labour by the natives very recently, and
containing a little dirty water. It is obvious that the gullies were dry three
days since, and that the late rains have supplied these cavities with the water
we now enjoy!! Our dogs killed a native dog, which was devoured among us! The
natives had not left the valley many days, because their huts of green branches
and remains of fires were so fresh.
Upon taking a survey of our dry stock of provisions in hand there appeared a
deficiency of a considerable quantity of flour, which at first view could by no
means be accounted for. It appears, however, from a little investigation that
took place this afternoon, that when on the river our boatmen hauled up one of
the boats too short--by her painter--to a tree on the bank, and in the course of
the night the water had fallen a foot, leaving the boat resting on her stern
whereby many casks were rolled out into the river and 300 lbs. weight of flour
totally lost. It was an accident they were fearful to communicate to any of us
till now by dint of cross-examination. This is a severe loss to us and will
oblige us to be content with a half ration.
June 19th. Thursday. The country has been softened and bogged by the
late rains to such a degree as to prevent us quitting our encampment in the
valley this day, which is of essential service to our horses that are in very
bad condition. The hills bounding the valleys have been lately fired by the
natives. In the declivities I gathered the following specimens. Gentianaceae:
Pentandria: a second sp., of the same genus gathered on the 22nd ultimo;
this is of a smaller habit. I likewise gathered some specimens of Eucalyptus
micrantha or Bastard Box, the common timber of the country.
Mr. Oxley took bearings of some remarkable points. Two very singular hills,
appearing to form a part of Goulburn's Range, bearing at N.W. about 12 miles he
has named Mount Brown and Good's Peak, in honour of Robert Brown Esqr. who
accompanied Capt. Flinders round the continent, and whose extensive knowledge in
the most refined and scientific parts of botany justly entitles him to that
degree of prominence in which he ranks among botanists in London. The peak is
thus entitled to commemorate the name of the late Mr. P. Good, the valuable
assistant of the above mentioned gentleman, whose death was a subject of such
regret to all who knew him. A species of Solanum, beginning to shoot from
its burnt stump, is very common in the hills.
I observed a small Drosera similar to D. rotundifolia in all
the gullies from the hills, in which grew some species of Sterculia. The
valley in which we are encamped receiving the washing of the hills on both sides
of it, north and south, if of a very rich soil. I sowed some quince seeds and a
dozen good stones of peach, which induced our people to call it "Peach Valley."
It appears less troubled with kangaroo-rats burrowing in it, and consequently
the seeds committed to its soil have a fairer chance of succeeding than perhaps
in a few other situations where I have sowed these seeds.
20th. Friday. In order to lighten our baggage we overhauled the
ironwork that we had carried with us from the river, under the idea it would
have been found useful in our journey to the coast. On a tree we left ten pairs
of horse shoes, and some of the less useful parts of the boat builder's tools.
Following Peach Valley in a winding course for a distance of about two miles to
the rising point of a small stony hill thickly covered with some seedling
Casuarinae and western iron bark.
We observed the country to the northward and westward is a low flat tract of
land thickly covered with a dense scrub, and exceedingly sterile, which induced
Mr. Evans, who usually led the way, to change the course by turning up a low
foresty valley between the hills, in a northerly direction. At its extremity we
entered a very barren brush of small trees and shrubs, in a deep red soil, which
afforded me a few nice specimens viz:--Stenochilus serrulatus, a shrub 4
feet high. S. ochroleucus, gathered duplicate specimens. Cacalia
sp., leaves linear, a shrub observed on hills and rocky mounts. Aster
cunealus [= Olearia stellulata]. The Loranthus [probably L.
linophyllus] is now in fruit on the tree of the Rutaceae, whose
capsules are 2-valved, observed before. Dodonaea heterophylla, a shrub
with lanceolate leaves, was in flower, of which I gathered specimens. Also a
monaecious shrub allied to Croton, but having a different capsule.
Passing this confined brush and entering the flat deserty country, covered with
a low dense scrub, I observed a new Bossiaea and Anadenia
anethifolia, discovered on the 13th inst., to be the most common plants of
these gloomy wilds. I likewise noticed some of the Atriplicinae,
particularly a species of Rhagodia, with small fleecy leaves and
spinescent branches, forming a depressed horizontal spreading brush. The whole
is overrun with the beautiful Clematis occidentalis, with pinnated
ternate leaves, which are lanceolate and entire. I gathered seeds of a
Pimelia, with some others and a few duplicates, particularly of Isler
decurrens [= Olearia decurrens] and a herbaceous species with reddish
purple flowers. The thorny aculeated grass abounding in the Euryalean
scrub is frequent here.
Arriving at an extensive tract of burnt grass we traced it to the foot of
Peel's Range, near which we gave chase to a flock of about 20 emus. The dogs
killed one in the thick brush, but it could not be found. Following the range
about 1½ miles we halted and pitched our tent beneath the shade of the
Pentandrous tree of the Rutaceae. I accompanied Mr. Oxley to the
summit of' the range. He is very anxious to lead us to more elevated country
clear of this sterile brushwood. Mount Brown and Good's Peak bore N.E. distant
1½ miles. Upon another part of Peel's Range, divided from that on which we
stood, lay a narrow deep valley. Fraser crossed this valley and ascended the
western side of Good's Peak, which with Mount Brown and the whole of the range
is exceedingly rocky and barren. The plants found on Good's Peak are a species
of Cacalia, and an Eriostemon. Our day's journey is 10¼ miles.
We could only find water in the holes of the gullies sufficient to serve all
and each of us one quart, but unfortunately none for our horses. The eastern
side of the Peak has been lately burnt by natives, whose fires we could
distinctly see at the base of a hill a few miles to the eastward of us. We sent
back a horse and man in search of the emu which the dogs had killed this
morning. In about an hour he returned to us with a fine large bird standing 8
feet high, which was distributed equally among ourselves and dogs. No variation
in the timber which is very much stunted.
21st. Saturday. As our horses could not be supplied with water at this
station we were the more anxious to leave it at an early hour, proposing to stop
at the first spot where we might naturally conclude from appearance it might be
found by diligent search. Passing the burnt flats under Peel's Range, we came to
an elevated open but burnt country full of gullies and water-courses, now dry,
on which I observed the following plants. Helichrysum, two new species,
one a beautiful white flowered herbaceous plant. Erodium sp., scarcely
different from E. cicutarium. Solanum sp., a very narrow
lanceolate-leaved species, crowded with prickles, in fruit. Solanum, sp.,
allied to S. lanceolatum, but without prickles. Nicotiana undulata
[= N. suaveolens] is very frequent on these flats, the lower leaves of
which our people gathered, and when dried found them not a bad substitute for
its congener N. tabacum, although not so strong a narcotic. A
Senecio is likewise very common, together with a species of Goodenia,
whose leaves are oblong-lanceolate, and serrated; flowers yellow.
The country again becomes bushy, presenting us with the same plants as have
been observed yesterday. Passing a mount that has been fired on our left hand,
and another equally rugged and sterile on our right, we continued over a flat of
burnt grass and scrubby spots alternately, until we arrived at a lofty mount
about 5½ miles from our last night's halting place. We here stopped, and sent
out the whole of our people round the mount in search of water, which was found
near its summit on the eastern side. It is very rocky and barren, and has been
named by Mr. Oxley Barron's Hill, in honour of Barron Field, Esq., judge of the
Supreme Court in this Colony. [Oxley calls this hill Barrow's Hill.] From it he
took several bearings. Mount Bowen, so named in honour of Bowen Esqre., of the
Navy Board, which forms a part of Goulburn's Range, bore northerly about 7
miles. We could perceive considerable bodies of smoke ascending from the small
timber, indicating natives being there.
A most romantic rugged bare range runs south and north. Mr. Oxley has called
it Macquarie Range, in honour of His Excellency the Governor. A lofty hill,
distant about 1½ miles west, has been named Mount Flinders by Mr. Oxley, to
perpetuate the memory of the Australian circumnavigator, whose name it bears.
Barron's Hill is composed of quartz, pudding stone, and indurated sandstone. We
were obliged to drive our horses up the sides of this hill in order to water
them, which we did by serving it out to them in vessels.[*]
[* Oxley wrote in his journal on this day that the land he now
passed through was uninhabitable for civilized man, but he afterwards came
upon the rich country watered by the Lower Lachlan, his farthest point being,
33°57'7" S., long 144°31'15" E. E.]
MOUNT FLINDERS AND BACK TO THE LACHLAN RIVER, 22 JUNE--11 JULY, 1817
22nd. Sunday. We rested ourselves and horses at this Mount the whole
of this day, which gave me an opportunity of attending to my specimens which I
had found in consequence of the late humidity of the atmosphere dried very
little. The day appearing to brighten up about midday, I determined to visit
Mount Flinders which bore from our tent west-northerly about two miles. On my
way to the east point I had to pass through a confined arid brush-wood, where I
discovered the following plants.
Cassia sp., leaves simple, linear-lanceolate; the flowers axillary in
pairs, Cassia sp., specimens and seeds. Rhagodia sp. The
Psychotria, first observed on Mount Cunningham forms in the bush some
fine strong young trees, in fruit, but all abortive. It is a singular
circumstance that Pimelea linearifolia [= P. micracephala] is
uniformly found under the shade of a Pentandrous tree of the order
Rutaceae in company with some of the Atriplicinae; I observed it
in the bush in such situations. Acacia pulverulenta is frequent in fine
flower. The space between the outskirts of the brush to the foot of the mount is
open and covered with several syngenesious plants (Compositae) and Nicotiana
undulata.
Ascending the mount on the eastern side, which is very rugged, I found the
whole of this part to its summit and the southern side had been recently fired
by the natives, consequently it afforded me nothing, the whole being burnt to
the ground. Descending the northern and western declivities which are covered
with quartz and beautifully overrun with the showy Tecoma Oxleyi, I
distinguished a few new plants; among others less rare and previously observed:
Croton sp. a shrub 3-5 ft. high, which appears to be the same as Labillardière's
C. viscosus, which was discovered on the south coast of this continent.
Like that species my plant was viscid, and had triquitrous branches and
incrassated peduncles. It is diaecious. I invariably found the male and female
on separate trees. Cassia sp., leaves pinnated, with 3-4 pairs of linear
leaflets; flowers axillary; a greyish shrub common with preceding. Acacia
doratoxylon, Stenochilis longifolius, Aster cuneatus [=
Olearia stellulata) and the Tetrandrous Australian nut are very common
with the preceding on the brow of these hills, with the shrubby slender
Leucaena and Dodonaea. I procured a few more seeds of the
Tecoma.
The gullies leading from Mount Flinders were very dry. The great bodies of
water evidently are absorbed in the red sandy flats at its base. The lat. and
long. of this mount are lat. 33°26'30" S., long. 146°20' E., and the variation
of compass 7°45' E.
The country to the westward is an extensive flat, with a few small hummocky
hills scattered on its surface, having ranges at the extremity of horizon.
Finding the afternoon well advanced, I went round the south side of the Mount
and bore easterly for our tent. I gathered specimens on the grassy flats of a
small-flowered glutinous Gnaphalium. About 6 o'clock I reached our
encampment. Fraser, who had been to Mount Bowen, returned at about the same
period and brought me a new Eriostemon, with linear tuberculated leaves
and white flowers. The Pancratium macquaria [= Calostemma
purpureum] so prevalent on inundated flats is found on the summits of this
range in a very rich decayed vegetable soil. Also Sterculia heterophylla
and Acacia doratoxylon.
23rd. Monday. We again watered our horses from the rocky excavation on
the Mount [Barrow], reserving some for our keg and bottles, previous to breaking
up our encampment and departing from the hill. About 10 o'clock we pursued our
route northerly, with the faintest hopes of falling in with any water for our
horses in the low tract of flat country before us. Passing a sterile brush for
the first 4½ miles, we entered upon an extensive clear plain free from timber
trees or shrubs, and as we advance there is an obvious change of soil, being
much darker than the dry hard deserts behind us, and of a clayey and binding
nature, retaining the rain water on its surface. At length the same description
of vegetables so common on Field's Plains, on the Lachlan River, began to
appear, inducing us to form many conjectures as to the probable country to which
this sudden and remarkable change might lead us. Our dogs got on the scent of
game, and it was not long before they ran down two kangaroos and an emu. The
plains are skirted by a species of Eucalyptus, which takes the place of
Acacia Pendula, so abundant on Field's Plains. The northern extremity of
Peel's Range, of which Mount Brown forms a part, presents from a retrospect view
a noble bluff point, which Mr. Oxley has called Dryander's Head, in honour of
the late Jonas Dryander Esqre., of Soho Square, London. The northern termination
of Macquarie Range runs out into a singular headland, entitled by Mr. Oxley Cape
Porteous, after his friend Captain Porteous, of the Royal Navy, and late of the
Porpoise Storeship. Having crossed the plains we observed some swans flying over
our heads, a circumstance, when considered with the extraordinary change of
country, which induced us to conclude we could not be far from bodies of water.
We immediately came to a lagoon of water, which we traced up a short distance to
its connection with a river or stream about 20 feet wide and of moderate depth,
running generally westerly and at the rate of 2½ knots per hour. This singular
and surprising circumstance gave rise to many conjectures what this stream is,
whether the Lachlan or Macquarie or distinct from either.[*] When we left the
N.W. branch of the Lachlan River on the 18th ultimo, there was a considerable
and increasing fresh or flood, the water rising to the level of the banks and
beginning to disperse its waters on the flat country, now N.E. of us. Had it
found an outlet this increased body of water must have gone with it through all
its windings to this spot where we have intersected it. It appears, however,
very evident that there has not been any flood for a considerable time, from the
circumstance of holes containing white clayey water appearing in the creek that
runs from the river to the lagoon, and through which it is supplied by the
river. Mr. Oxley observed that it might be the Macquarie, which was likewise the
opinion of Mr. Evans. If it is the Lachlan, the two arms join again in the swamp
and form an outlet running through all its windings not less than 100 miles to
this remarkable spot, which is about 8¼ miles N. of Barron's Hill of our late
encampment.
[* Oxley had now reached the Lachlan again.]
The banks of this river are high and clothed with the Eucalyptus or Blue Gum
of very large size, and the whole of the plants are duplicates of those I have
seen on the Lachlan River. The flats had signs of inundation. We encamped on the
bank and turned our horses out to feed on its rich herbage, among which I
discovered a species of Senecio remarkable for its short calyx being half
the length of the florets. I gathered seeds of Aster decurrens [=
Olearia decurrens], and duplicates of a species of Cassia, and
specimens of Dodonaea heterophylla. The Eucalyptus skirting the
plains is about 20 ft. high; branches slender and drooping, and has much the
habit of Acacia Pendula. The plains have been called by Mr. Oxley,
Strangford's Plains, in honour of Lord Viscount Strangford, our late minister to
the Court of Brazil. They produce a species of Anthericum with a
fasciculated root and a fistular leaf, and a pigmy species of
Sowerbaea.
Our people by way of experiment threw some baited hooks into the river, and
they caught five fine fish of the same kind of perch as that of the Lachlan
River, enough for the whole of us. Among the high grass we found a bark canoe,
and Mr. Oxley, who was the first of our party that arrived at the bank, observed
a native man running off down the river. The day continued fine, and the
travelling, when we arrived on the plains, was tolerably good. Mr. Oxley intends
to trace this small river for three miles, as far as our provisions will allow
us to advance westerly. Trusting, from general appearances, we shall be able to
arrive at its termination or learn something more respecting it that will enable
us to clear up the doubt at present existing.
MOUNT PORTEOUS. OXLEY EXPLORES THE LOWER LACHLAN
June 24th, 1817. Tuesday. Relieved from the dreadful uncertainty of
finding water, which has of late harassed us, we commenced a new course this
morning on the bank of the rivulet. We found, however, it much better to leave
this stream and take the margin of the plain in order to make a true westerly
course. The plains are uninteresting in this day's journey, the soil is a stiff
clay, sufficiently retentive to hold rain water upon its surface, rendering the
travelling fatiguing. The gullies, of which we passed several in this day's
route, all have their inclination from the river, and were dry, showing
evidently that the lagoons with which they are connected derive their supplies
from the river's inundation through those channels, all tending to establish the
hypothesis that this river is not the Lachlan. Our courses were variable, at
first S. and S. by E., in order to clear the low swampy lands, and lagoons, and
afterwards S.W. and westerly, when having cleared 11½ miles we struck in for the
river and halted on its banks. It appears at this spot wider, being about 25
feet, having a current running half a knot per hour. I observed its channel
frequently choked up with fallen timber, so that if we had had the boats it
would have been almost impossible to have formed a passage for them. I observed
marks (scarcely a day old) made by natives on the Eucalypti, of which
E. Pendula, allied to E. paniculata of Dr. Smith is frequent. The
plants of the plains are an Erodium, before observed; Pancratium
Macquaria [= Calostemma purpureum]; Sowerbaea juncea, and two
species of Mesembryanthemum, fine in flower; one M. aequilaterale,
so frequent in arid sands about Port Jackson, and well known by the colonists
under the strange title of "Pig's face"; the other species is of much smaller
habit. and appears to differ from glaucescens and nigrescens, to
which it is very closely allied. In some bushy barren spots, I gathered seeds of
Cassia lineata, and some duplicates of Pittosporum lanceolatum and
Stenochilus longifolius. In order to take bearings and observe the
appearance of the country westerly, Mr. Oxley, Fraser and myself proposed to
walk to the northern extremity of Macquarie Range, which has been as before
stated, called Cape Porteous, distant from our tent about 8 miles westerly. In
passing through a wood skirting the plains we came to a native encampment of
many bark huts of recent erection. Of the many hypotheses formed upon matters
connected with this expedition, the use to which the natives appropriate the
oblong square pieces of bark (cut from the stem of the Blue Gum and so
frequently observed on the river) is one. There were two of these "Barks" at
this Australian Camp, perforated with holes in lines after the following
manner.

FACSIMILE OF THE BARK
Fraser who had seen similar pieces of bark round the native fires under Mount
Bowen on the 22nd inst., found them with little wooden pegs in the holes. Those
found at this place had none. Mr. Oxley is of the opinion that they might be
conversation cards, by which one division of a tribe is enabled to give
information to another party coming after them, the course they are pursuing or
any other matters that they may deem necessary. Their different ideas may be
expressed by a transposition of the pegs understood by each party? These cards
when perused by the succeeding troop of natives are destroyed and the pegs taken
out which we observed in one of the pieces that had been broken.
Passing round a lagoon of considerable magnitude at its head near the river,
where it was dry and muddy, we came to the edge of the plain, and took a bearing
of the highest point of the cape. In not less than an hour we arrived at its
base, which is composed of shelving rocks overlapping each other, over which we
had to climb in order to gain the summit of the lower range. This was the only
part of the mount I was able to examine. It was interesting, although productive
of nothing new or not before observed. Correa speciosa, enjoying the
shade of the overhanging rocks, now very luxuriant, so much so that I was
induced to furnish myself with better specimens than I was in possession
of--gathered at Mount Aiton. Anthocercis albicans, rich in flower.
Croton viscosus in flower and fruit. Acacia doratoxylon advancing
to flower. Grevillea sphacelata, Scaevola spinescens and
Dodonaea heterophylla are all abundant. We had underrated the distance of
this mount from our tent, and the afternoon being far advanced before we could
reach it, prevented us from descending to its extreme elevation. Mr. Oxley
having made his observations, proposed to return by the same route to the tent.
On our way I gathered the following new plants:--I discovered a new
Amaryllis, it was in its winter habit, a few decayed leaves above ground
enabled me to trace its roots below the surface which are very large. It appears
to be a white flowering species and the corolla is about the size and figure of
that of Conostylis aemula which I ascertained from the remains of a
flowering stern. Fearful of being benighted in these wastes, I was only able to
procure 6 large roots. I gathered specimens of a new and remarkable Acacia,
whose long narrow leaves have induced me to propose the trivial name of
stenophylla. Also of another species of Acacia, a small tree 20 ft. high,
with long lanceolate leaves, slender pendulous branches, and axillary heads of
flowers. Acacia acicularis, A. calamifolia, and A. pulverulenta
are common in the brush. Our dogs killed a little animal of the kangaroo family,
with a long tail, singular for its flat hairy formation at the point. A native
dog was killed, which had approached too near our tent. I discovered on the
slimy plains a new species of the triandrous genus Arthrotriche with a
dense pyramidal head of flowers. We did not return to our encampment on the
river before 7 o'clock p.m.
25th. Wednesday. We had passed the night in a swamp. Upon resuming our
journey down this river we steered a course south of west, in order to head the
lagoon seen yesterday and to avoid bogging our horses by attempting to pass it
on the river's bank. Passing the Cape Point we travelled northerly over a
considerable tract of descending flats, on which I discovered a new species of
Cryptandra, having the largest corolla, which like its congeners is
white, and the greatest profusion of flowers of the whole of the species I have
seen. We discovered a few more of the new Amaryllis near the northern
extremity of Macquarie Range. The scrubby parts consist of the new
Bossiaea, Scoevola spinescens Anadema sp., with some
others, common in such situations. Passing a brush of seedling Cypress
(Callitris), a considerable flat opened to the view, which Mr. Oxley
named Smith's Plains in honour of Sir James Edward Smith Kt., botanist and
physician and author of several most valuable works, as well on the botany of
Australia as of countries less remote. On these plains is a plant allied to
Bellis, perhaps a Cotula, with an elongated cuneate leaf and
stipitate seeds. I gathered specimens of a Bellis with a solitary flower
on a long naked stem. Penetrating through another brushy tract at the extreme of
the plain we made the river, but our people and horses, who had continued
northerly, had halted one mile above us on the bank. Mr. Oxley, Fraser and
myself returned to them.
In the circuitous route we had travelled to-day we had made upwards of 11
miles, which on a true west course is about 9½. The twining shrub frequently
observed proves to be an Asclepias. I detected it with a pod or follicle
upon it. The river has much the same appearance in point of width, and is
tolerably clear of dead timber, but subject to many abrupt windings, and the
banks in places are high. Acacia sp., and A. stenophylla are very
strong on the immediate banks of the rivulet, the herbage of which is the same
as on the Lachlan River. The timber is the Bastard Box or Eucalyptus
micrantha, Eucalyptus allied to E. paniculata, with pendulous
branches, and Callitris glauca. The rivulet has a course considerably to
the northward of west since our last encampment. A little Euphorbia
covers the ground where it has been inundated.
26th. Thursday. Being desirous to continue our journey this day as
much on a westerly course as the nature of the country would admit, we left our
resting place and entered a dense brushy scrub, abounding with the same
description of plants as I have frequently observed. I gathered 5 specimens of
Eriostemon rotundifolius, forming a round dense bush. I likewise gathered
seeds of Stenochilus ochroleucus and its congener S. longifolius.
Several species of Rhagodia appear among others in this scrub. The
Bastard Box is frequently much encumbered with the twining adhering Loranthus
aurantiacus which
"Scorning the soil, aloft she springs
Shakes her red plumes and
claps her golden wings."
Having passed the brush, we travelled over large clear plains, which are
boggy and fatiguing for our pack horses. They are skirted by Acacia
Pendula and dwarf eucalypti and the herbage is chiefly the Erodium
and some new syngenesious plants already observed. Continuing our route about 9
miles, having passed several short brushy spots and small open grassy plains
alternately, we approached close upon the banks of the river and halted for the
day. The last mile of our journey is through a thick grassy open swamp, where I
gathered a species of Artemisia. The river now presents to us another
appearance. The banks are not so high, the timber is more diminutive, and the
land or flats on each side bears clear marks of inundation, although not recent.
This, considered with the current being scarcely perceptible, induces us to
conclude that we are fast approaching to its termination. A species of
Satureia grows strong in the swamps, which our people gathered and made
use of as tea. A species. of Senecio is very common.
27th. Friday. In order to rest our horses we remained the whole of the
day at our present encampment. By observation taken by Mr. Oxley, the site of
our tent is in lat. 33°32' S., and long. 145°56' E., and the variation of the
compass 7°20'00' E. Our huntsman, who had been in pursuit of game about 3 miles
down the river, returned and reported the extreme swampiness of the land on each
side, rendering it impossible to continue on its banks in our advancement south
westerly. The fishermen were unable to secure any fish, the weather being too
cold. Great abundance of black swans, native companions, (Grus
australasiana) wild ducks etc., are on the lagoons. One of our party shot a
pair of ducks; the bronze of their wings is exceedingly beautiful.
28th. Saturday. In consequence of the unfavourable report of our
people respecting the inundated country before us, Mr. Oxley rode on horseback
on the immediate bank of the river about 7 miles, until he was unable to
advance, by a creek running from the river to lagoons in the background. Mr.
Evans, who led the way for our horses, kept well out southerly from the river in
order to head the swamps and lagoons, among which it is impossible to travel. On
the boggy lands I gathered specimens of seeds of a Teucrium. Salsola
sp., leaves round and fleshy; capsule hoary. Sida sp., with very
narrow lanceolate leaves and axillary small flowers, forming a small branching
shrub. Polygonum junceum [= Muehlenbeckia Cunninghami] overruns
all other plants in these gloomy swamps. The passing eye rests with pleasure on
a a beautiful tree of the Bignoniaceae, frequent in the solitary shades
of a brushwood surrounding these bogs, From these sterile spots we continued our
route northerly, in order to make the river, but we only entangled ourselves in
swamps; and Mr. Evans found after penetrating 7½ miles that it was impossible to
proceed near the river's bank. The whole country south and south-west being
under water for at least 3 feet, we were obliged to return to the brush, where
we halted and pitched the tent near a very extensive inundated tract of Blue
Gums in several feet of water, above the level of which we observed on the
timber marks of floods 2½ and 3 feet higher. The natives had cut out several
conversation cards or barks from these trees, which doubtless they find are more
easily extracted from the Blue Gums in water than any other species of
Eucalyptus on dry spots. This immense sheet of water, which shines through the
trees westerly as far as the eye can see, has great numbers of swan and all
other kinds of waterfowl upon it. Those most invaluable, faithful animals and
bush companions, our dogs, caught a fine large emu, which was equally divided
among them and us. The plants on the margin of the lake are the same as we
observed near Farewell Hills, viz: Mimulus sp., Lythrum sp.,
allied to L. hyssopifolia, and a little Adiantum. The plains we
travelled over to-day have been called Harrington Plains in honour of Lord
Harrington. We did not make above 4 miles on a true west course.
29th. Saturday. We continued our journey on a true westerly course,
determining, if possible, to make the river, but we are rather inclined to
suspect that we are not far from the spot where the river ceases altogether, or
where from the depression of the country, its banks being too low to contain it,
a general inundation commences. Having crossed a grassy woody swamp, with
occasional scrubby spots, we arrived at a large expanse of open country, a
continuance of Harrington Plains.
Crossing this flat we came to the banks of the river, which are much higher
than could have been reasonably expected. The channel is in some places very
shoaly and narrow and blocked up with drifted decayed timber. Its inclination
being considerably southerly of west we changed our course and crossed the
plains in that direction. The loose hollow nature of these plains was very heavy
for our horses, and in some measure fatiguing for ourselves. The animals
frequently sunk under their loads up to their knees in its poor sour soil which
produces a plant of the genus Galium, and a new plant[*] of the same
order as Brunonia with remarkable undulated leaves. I likewise gathered
specimens of a species of Xerotes (aspen). The scrub afforded me a new Acacia,
with linear, round and sulcated leaves, in pod. We had advanced about 11 miles,
when Mr. Oxley proposed to halt in a dry situation about 2 o'clock.
[* Cunningham named it Arthrotriche. He first saw it on
Field's Plains, but it has no connexion with the plant of that name described
by Mueller, and seen during Gregory's expedition of 1861.]
We now see the fallacy of forming any ideas respecting this stream; all our
conjections of yesterday are overthrown by observations of this day. We have (by
a little perseverance) passed the swamps that obliged us to turn back yesterday,
and have now before us to all appearance a considerable journey if we are
determined to see the termination of this stream. The bank on which we encamped
is very high, and of a red sandy marl, and the soil of the flats very rich,
being the depositions of floods, and producing an abundance of a species of
Anthericum before noticed. The opposite bank, which is lower, has been
lately flooded, and the whole country inundated at no very distant period. I
gathered seeds of an Aster, an herbaceous plant with blue radiated
flowers, and an Achyranthes from the swamps. Some plains on the right
(north) side of the river we termed Holdsworthy's Plains. Those unwearied
purveyors, our dogs, provided for us two of the largest emu we have ever seen on
the expedition, standing at least 8 feet high. We are not likely to starve,
although our flour and pork ration is exceedingly scanty. Our fisherman caught
only one small fish Of 3½-4 lbs. weight.
30th. Monday. Advancing over the plain westerly, on the edge of which
we had encamped last night, we continued that course about 7 miles; bushy
country affording me nothing interesting; the plants being the same as those of
which so very frequent mention has been made. We made the angle of a large
lagoon of considerable depth, thickly clothed with trees that had marks of
inundation about 4 feet above the present level of its waters, and a few inches
above the general flatness of the plain. I here gathered specimens of a species
of Eucalyptus having a submucronated hemispherical operculum, and flowers
of two colours, red and white, in terminal panicles, a tree about 30 feet high.
I observed a little cryptogamous plant, called Azolla pinnata, floating
on the surface of these waters in considerable abundance. Near our 8th mile
Harrington Plains are in some measure terminated by a few scattered trees of
Eucalypti stretching themselves across to the opposite brush in an
irregular manner. Its continuance, open and extensive, evidently descending at
its south western extremity, from the circumstance of our being able to
distinguish the heads of trees and not their stems. Mr. Oxley has called them
Molle's Plains, in honour of the late Lieut.-Governor, Colonel Molle. Passing
through a small tract of the burnt scrub called Polygonum junceum [=
Muehlenbeckia Cunninghami] we continued our journey about a mile and a
half, when we considered that our horses, which were far behind, would scarcely
be able to come up with us, in consequence of the bogginess and decayed nature
of these plains. We passed through a thick brush of the rushy Polygonum
and came upon the bank of the river, intending to halt for the night. On these
plains I gathered seeds and specimens of a shrub with fleecy, sulcate crowded
leaves. These leaves are like the succulent Salsola. Also another shrub
entirely clothed with wool, having an echinated nut, many seeded. I observed a
singular grass, dead, with long beards [stigmas] as in Zea; and the
little recumbent Zygophyllum, which is sometimes very common, and in some
instances appears to differ in habit, which may be caused by the shade or being
smaller in all its parts, or which may be effected by increased sterility. The
appearance of these plains is that of a gloomy desert with stunted trees and dry
wiry tufts of grass. But if anything tends to enliven the scene or relieve the
eye it is the bright golden flowers of a Senecio, with pinnately
laciniated leaves. I gathered seeds of a shrub of Anredera sp., producing
a bladdered capsule, 2-winged, containing a single seed in the centre. The river
is as broad as ever! With little alteration, current slow, but the banks appear
not so high as where we left it in the morning, and are muddy. We started two
native dogs on the plains before us. We observed the marks of the natives on the
trees, and the old impressions of their feet on the soft clayey soil. We
likewise passed an old native bark hut. The general inclination of the river is
south-westerly. Its banks are furnished with tolerable Blue Gums and Acacia
stenophylla. One of our party caught a species of lizard on the plains,
having on the back very rough scales, which are not imbricated but distinct from
each other. It has no tail. Its body being terminated in a wedge-shaped
stump.
1817. July 1st. Tuesday. In consequence of the heavy bad country we
passed over yesterday we considered it advisable to rest the horses the whole of
this day. By observation it appears our lat: is 33°32'22" S., and long.
145°38'30" E., and the variation of the compass is 6°49'00" E. The river at our
encampment is 20 ft. wide, and upon sounding, we found 6 ft. to be the greatest
depth. Our people caught a few fish 2 or 3 lbs. in weight.
2nd. Wednesday. The native dogs, which were howling around us during
the night, kept ours upon the lookout. A small hailstorm, seconded by a shower
of rain, detained us a few moments. At 10 o'clock our baggage-horses and
ourselves left the banks of the river and proceeded in a south-westerly
direction over the plains, which are not much softened by the morning showers. I
gathered duplicate seeds of Lobelia sp. (closely allied to L.
purpurascens), from the swamps; in which humid situations Haloragis
tetragyna accompanies a species of Achyranthus, with whorls of
flowers. At 10 miles on a south-westerly course we struck in for the river, at
which we arrived in 4 miles and halted, the horses considerably behind us. The
river here is very shallow and muddy, not exceeding 3 feet; the banks are low,
and the current runs about half a knot per hour, the water of which is turbid
and of a fetid scent. The Blue Gums we daily observe do not appear upon the
plains and are only to be seen on the immediate banks of the river, which they
clothe pretty thickly, forming large heads and bulky timber, but, like many of
its congeners, hollow. It may not be altogether amiss to mention here that the
tubular stems of several species of Eucalyptus on the eastern coast, when
well selected, have proved tolerable good conductors of water and have been
turned to good account in draining land. The plains now appear very extensive
and of considerable width, and of such continuance to the southward and westward
as to be lost in the horizon, forming one continued dead flat.
3rd. Thursday. We were enveloped in a very thick fog, by which we were
unavoidably detained until the mist had in some measure evaporated. Leaving the
river about noon we advanced on a course southerly of S.W. over the plains,
which are an immense expanse of flat open country. They are exceedingly barren
and naked for the first 8 miles. About 3 o'clock p.m. we altered our course,
steering westerly in order to make the river, but we were much deceived in its
distance from us. On this course we saw Stenochilus longifolius,
Acacia Pendula, Rhagodiae and some Salsolae miserably
stunted.
Arriving at the angle of a wood near an old native encampment we halted at
sunset, having travelled 11¼ miles, about 11 miles southward of the river, where
we found plenty of water in a lagoon abounding with wild fowl. We noticed very
recent impressions of the feet of some natives, one of them was very small, and
might have been that of a woman. We were induced to hope that, from the very
recent marks of the feet of emu upon the clayey soil, our dogs would have been
able to secure one or two of these birds, which would have very materially
benefited the whole of us, the ration that could only be allowed us being by no
means sufficient to satisfy the keen appetites augmented by hard corporeal
exercise. We shot a brace of pigeons of a new species, wings brown, with pinion
feathers white, slightly bronzed, and green breast, slate colour; and they are
rendered more handsome by reason of the small tuft or topknot of feathers on
their heads. Some other strange birds were observed (supposed to be Parrots),
about the size and flight of a pigeon, with beautiful red breasts; they were
noticed to fly generally in pairs to and from the northward.
4th. Friday. The birds observed last night, and which I suspected to
be of the parrot kind, flying to the northward, returned this morning, flying in
flocks to the southward. They are of a light ash colour on the back and wings,
and have rich pink breasts and heads.[*] Resuming our route westerly about 2
miles we came to extensive low swamps and inundated woods of Blue Gum, on the
margin of which were several native huts, built rather stronger than usual,
evidently in the wet season, and having a loose thatch of red grass. Upon
entering these abandoned Aboriginean houses, I found several conversation cards
or barks perforated as before described, some fish, a snake bone and some mussel
shells. Obliged to change our course, we passed about 6 miles southerly of west,
until we were stopped in our progress by a small creek running from the swamps
or wooded lagoons. Finding it impossible for our horses to pass it at this spot
we struck south, over a flat covered with high grass and herbage and full of
clear water-holes, in order to pass round this boggy creek, which we
accomplished in a circuitous route of 3 miles. Continuing to the angle of a wood
or line of gum trees, we stopped for the day, having travelled 14 miles. The
plains are very heavy and boggy, and not so bare as we have observed them in
other parts, but afford few new plants, the majority being duplicates of what we
have already seen. The following plants, however, appear new:--Gnaphalium
sp., allied to G. apiculatum. Dalea sp., with terminal blue
flowers. Helichrysum polygalifolium, nova sp. Aster sp., 4
flowers, rays many, white. I observed the remains of a plant of an
Orobanche in capsule (the whole of the root was dead), sparingly on the
flats, in the waterholes of which Polamogeton natans and Polygonum
junceum [= Muehlenbeckia Cunninghami] abound. Mr. Oxley, who had rode
on before us, descried a pair of emus, male and female, with several young ones.
Our dogs gave chase and, after a good run, secured the male, and our people ran
down 6 of their young, which made us an excellent dinner. At the southern
extremity of the plains a body of water was standing, of considerable length and
about a quarter of a mile wide. We were all of us more or less seized with
dysenteric affections, the natural consequence of living among swamps.
[* Rose-breasted cockatoos (Galahs): ---The Galah comes in from
sunrise for about two hours, same in the evening for about two hours of
sunset...they fly right into water, settle round...and drink and then break up
into flocks and fly away to feeding or roosting grounds. "--Campbell's "Nests
and Eggs of Australian Birds."]
5th. Saturday. Our two men who were employed as huntsmen were sent
forward in search of game for us. Resolving to make the river this afternoon if
possible, we departed from our encampment in a westerly direction for about 7½
miles, stretching from point to point of the woods formed by the northerly
bights or bends of the river. Making for a point which we found to be the river,
having a current scarcely perceptible, its banks very low, not exceeding 8 feet
and appearing very shallow. Tracing its left bank down to a dry spot, we halted
and pitched our tent. Our journey is about 10 miles. About 200 yards below us
two islands are formed in the channel of the river, which are covered with the
Eucalyptus called the Blue Gum and Acacia stenophylla. We could
clearly distinguish through the spaces between the trees plains of great extent
on the opposite side of the river. The plains are again naked in many places and
the soil dry and hard. A Lavatera, much allied to L. arborea,
afforded me duplicate seeds. Clitoria sp., and another, leaflets
elongated, blunt and silky, with a spike of flowers. Sida sp., a low
depressed shrub, and Galium sp. At 2 miles on our day's journey we
crossed the parallel of latitude of Port Jackson southerly. In order to make the
most of the dry provisions we now have in casks we were obliged to reduce the
ration, particularly the flour, to 2 quarts or 3 lbs. per week per man, in order
to enable us to return home to Bathurst which we calculated upon reaching the
last day of August. We had, as before stated, suffered a very severe loss in our
flour, and our people all saw the necessity of this reduction. Mr. Oxley
likewise stated to them that in all human probability (there was a moral
certainty of it) we should be relieved from this privation in two or three
weeks--from the time we turn our faces eastward--by arriving at a more hilly
country, which would afford us game of all kinds, and that should we continue on
the river banks we should find a resource in the fish, which are large and
abundant in the deeper waters.
6th. Sunday. Considering the small quantity of provisions we are now
in possession of, the great distance we are from any resource, being about 350
or 370 miles south-westerly of Bathurst, and the rivulet still continuing to run
westerly although very slow, Mr. Oxley has resolved to halt at this spot the
whole of this week, during which period our horses would recruit their strength,
and their backs, which are much galled, should be attended to in order to heal
them. And considering he would act up more fully to the spirit and tenor of the
instructions he has received to continue the journey westward on horseback.
Naturally concluding that the river would terminate and totally cease to run,
being spent in low lands in the course of a distance of 70 miles westerly (which
he calculating upon advancing in 3 days), or that it ended in an open lake, he
was the more desirous of continuing his route westerly for 3 days if possible,
because that distance would enable him to cross the parallel of latitude and the
meridian of longitude of a part of the country the coast of which has been but
very imperfectly surveyed, and hence has given rise to the possibility of the
embouchure of a river or rivers there. Mr. Oxley therefore prepared himself to
leave us for a week, taking with him two of the party, with bedding and
provisions for that period, intending to leave us to-morrow morning. A
serviceable packhorse which had been badly strained in the loins was reported to
us to have died in the course of the last night, reducing our number to 11, this
being the third horse that has died in the course of the expedition, and from
singular causes.
7th. Monday. This morning Mr. Oxley left our encampment on his journey
westerly, accompanied by Fraser, Burns and Simpson, with provisions for six
days, and trusting they will be able to clear 25 miles per day for three days,
at the end of which, should the stream still continue to run westerly, they hope
to reach some hills or rising grounds from which they could make observations as
to the nature of the country S.W. and N.W. of them. In their absence our people
will be employed in mending the pack-harness, attending to our sick horses and
preparing for our return home early next week. Economy and necessity had taught
us to turn every accident to some account. The flesh of our deceased horse
afforded our faithful but famishing dogs some tolerable meals, and the skin
furnished our people with materials for mocassins or shoes, which they divided
equally with mathematical niceness. I employed myself in repapering and drying
my specimens. I likewise overhauled that description of baggage which belonged
to me, rendering more compact and repairing my saddlebags, which had suffered
much by friction through a difficult country.
About 2 o'clock in the afternoon, Mr. Oxley and those that accompanied him
returned to our encampment, having advanced about 9 miles on the immediate bank
of the rivulet until they were obliged to desist from proceeding further, the
horses being bogged up to their girths, endangering the lives of their riders
and themselves.[*] About 4 miles from our tent they observed two arms or
branches running from the rivulet in a northerly direction. Onward the current
is scarcely perceptible, and the water is muddy and discoloured. At the
termination of their journey the banks do not exceed 3½ feet in height, its
channel very narrow and choked up by miserable Blue Gums growing in it with
Arundo phragmites, when its current ceases and the water is stagnant. On
the small shrubs of Eucalyptus, which are remarkably strong and mossy,
indicative of the perpetual humidity, the highest water marks do not exceed 4½
feet. The only plants observed at this "Ne plus ultra" of our expedition are the
Blue Gums, Acacia stenophylla, Polygonum junceum [=
Muehlenbeckia Cunninghami], and a long reed grass all on the muddy banks
or in its channel. Its extreme termination was probably not above 10 miles
farther on[**]--19 miles from our tent--which Mr. Oxley doubts not he would have
verified had it been possible for him to have continued on the banks, which
being the highest part was the best travelling. We proposed to continue at our
present encampment until Thursday morning, and then commence our route easterly
home. Our people shot several of the new pigeons.
[* The above will show that Oxley's farthest West was nine miles
beyond his encampment. Mitchell, whilst exploring the Lachlan, came there on
May 5, 1832, and surmised that this part was under water at the time of
Oxley's visit. He saw a tree there marked on each side which the natives
informed him had been "marked by Oxley at the farthest place he
reached."]
[** The Lachlan after passing through the marsh joins the
Murrumbidgee in 34½° S. and 143½° E., the latter river, then turning on a
south-westerly course unites with the Murray and falls into the sea in 35½° S.
and 139° E.]
8th. Tuesday. By way of experiment and as a proof of the immense
expanse of clear flat country, Mr. Oxley took his amplitude of the sun at its
rising, an observation that has never been taken before in the interior of
Western Australia, and it may be the first observed in any country, for want of
an horizon, which is this morning very clear and cloudless. By further
observations taken this day the site of our present encampment is as follows.
Mean altitude 33°53'19" S., computed longitude 145°07'15" E., or the same free
from errors of chart 144°39'30" E., mean var. of compass 7°25' E. The place
where the stream ceased to have motion is in lat. 33°57'30" S., computed long.
144°59'0" E., and freed from errors of chart 144°31'15" E., the hill, an
eminence in a S.W. direction, terminating in lat. 34°22'12" S. and long. 144°
E., that being the calculated extent of our visible clear horizon. I gathered
some seeds of a plant with globular heads of flowers and agreeing with
Richea in the number of its plumose pappi. I dug up some fine roots of a
species of Anthericum before observed, which is very abundant with the
Pancratium Macquaria [= Calostemma purpureum]. I sowed several
peach stones and quince seeds near this last south-westerly encampment.
We wrote a paper stating the latitude and longitude of the spot, the object
of the expedition, with names of those who comprised it, and observed that it
was our intention to return to Bathurst in a northern circuitous route, in hopes
of intersecting the Macquarie River. This paper was carefully enveloped in a
sheet of brown paper, put into a dry wine bottle, corked, sealed over, and its
neck covered strongly with leather, intending in the morning to bury it beneath
a species of Eucalyptus bicolor near our tent.
9th. Wednesday. We buried the bottle, which we had closed the last
evening, beneath the shade of a moderate sized Eucalyptus, engraving on
the solid timber "DIG UNDER," information that could not well be expressed by
less letters.[*] The whole of us left this spot this morning in good spirits and
intend to retrace our footsteps to the place where we discovered the river on
the 23rd ultimo. At 2 o'clock we arrived at our last stage, where we stopped for
the night. I gathered a few specimens:-another species of Sowerbaea, or a
variety of the species discovered on Strangford's Plains. The petals are
generally sulphur-coloured with purple stripes. Lotus sp., a slender
herbaceous plant. Helichrysum, a new sp., with terminal white solitary
flowers. Also specimen of a shrub with linear leaves; the whole plant is woolly,
different from others of the same habit, discovered on these plains. Also a
Callitris and some grasses. I observed a species of Plantago,
scarcely differing from the species found on the flats.
[* The natives led Major Mitchell to the spot where Oxley's tent
had stood. He saw there the stump of a tree that had been recently burned
down, which the natives said had had marks upon it. Mitchell dug under it for
the bottle without success, and he learned from a native tribe that after the
tree had been fired a child had found the bottle and broken it. It had
contained a letter they said, and "this news" be observes "saved us further
search."]
10th. Thursday. It was late before we could leave our encampment, a
delay occasioned by our horses having strayed away some miles back S.W. in the
course of the night. About 3 o'clock we arrived at our resting place of the
third inst. Having pursued a more direct course we made it in 12 miles, which
was 14 on the 4th. I gathered the following specimens: Gnaphalium sp.,
musk scented when fresh. Anacyclus sp., leaves bipinnate and linear;
scape elongated, one flowered. Gnaphalium sp., a delicate diminutive
plant, accompanying Siloxerus humifusus, a dwarf plant discovered by
Labillardière on the south coast, which is abundant with a species of
Gymnostyles, a plant of the same class and pigmy growth. A raised mound
of earth which we passed on the plains, we suspect to be an Aboriginean grave,
near which grew a dwarf shrubby species of Solanum, with narrow
lanceolate leaves. Large flocks of new birds, some of which we have shot and
find to be a species of cockatoo, and the pigeons passed over us in their
diurnal northern and southern flights.
11th. Friday. Continuing our journey easterly we travelled over the
plain passed on the 3rd inst., and although we did not return upon our old
tracks,--launching out upon the open plain,--the soil is equally heavy
travelling. We continued our march 3¼ miles up the river, rather than halt upon
the low swampy spot where we stopped on the 2nd inst. The river presented to us
an appearance that we little expected to see. It had received a sudden fresh
from the eastward; the current ran about 1½ knots, and the waters are far beyond
their usual channel, being within 4¾ feet of the highest part of the flats. It
however decreased ½ an inch in the course Of 4 hours. The old marks of
inundations were 7½ to 8 feet above their present level, which had rendered
these extensive plains a sheet of water upwards of 2 feet deep. The
Satureia, of which our people made tea, grows luxuriantly here. I
gathered seeds of it. It assumes a woody habit and rises to the height of 6 ft.
We shot some of the new cockatoos to-day, but found their flesh hard and rancid.
A small mound of earth having been found near our tents of the same character as
others that we have supposed to be natives' graves, I accompanied Mr. Oxley and
Mr. Evans to it. It was 3 ft. high, of conical shape, and of ancient appearance.
We dug into it with an adze and found the remains of bones, and several rough
pieces of bark placed across each other and apparently with some order and
regularity but very much decayed.
N.B. I must here mention a singular mark of affection in a brute which will
tend to prove the paucity of animals inhabiting these inhospitable plains. Our
kangaroo dogs had been suffered wantonly to destroy one of a native species on
these flats in our journey westerly. His carcase we fixed up in the fork of a
small low tree. The female, his mate, had doubtless taken a range in search of
him, when, having found his dead body, she drew it down from the branch and
coiling herself round his lifeless remains seemed determined there to die! On
our return this, day we passed the spot and found her in an emaciated state,
pining from grief and hunger, and in that debilitated low condition as not to be
able to make the slightest resistance or attempt to escape.
CHAPTER VIII
CUNNINGHAM'S JOURNAL
OXLEY'S LAND JOURNEY COMPLETED
Returns Eastward, leaves the Lachlan and discovers Wellington, July
12--August 21, 1817
July 12th. Saturday. We left the bank of the river about 9 o'clock,
travelling over the plains about 7 miles without a single botanical novelty to
relieve the scenery around us. Passing a low tract, covered with bushes of
Polygonum junceum [= Muehlenbeckia Cunninghami], and continuing
our journey about 3 miles over a stiff part of the plains we came upon the river
and pitched our tent in a narrow peninsula formed by it and a lagoon connected
with it. Our day's journey is about 12¼ miles, or about 1 mile to the eastward
of our resting place on the 30th ultimo. Our horses were much fatigued by the
heaviness of the soil during this day's route. A very strong effluvia assailed
us from the river, occasioned by the flood having disturbed and carried down the
vegetable matter resting on its muddy banks. So accustomed are we to a
continuance of the same objects before us and so little to any diversity of
country that the sight of Macquarie Range, although distant many miles, being
very blue and hazy, caused a considerable degree of animation in us while
toiling over the loose sandy plains to-day.
13th. Sunday. Rested ourselves at the peninsula all this day. I aired
the whole of my specimens and packed them up in an empty flour cask. The water
of the river has fallen almost a foot since last night.
14th. Monday. The river fell upwards of 9 inches in the course of last
night. Our horses had strayed in the night and were not taken when I left the
encampment. Mr. Evans had already started (with his assistant wheeling the
perambulator), and I commenced tracing their steps at an easy pace over the
plains. Crossing the eastern boundary of Molle's Plains, I continued for the
space of 8 miles over Harrington's until I arrived at the resting place of the
29th ultimo. Here I stopped, in expectation of being overtaken by our baggage
horses in the course of the day. Mr. Evans and Parr, who had advanced 2 miles to
the eastward of this spot, returned to me about 2 o'clock. The plains abound
with emu. I observed five large fine birds, and Mr. Evans saw seven feeding on
the flats near the river. Finding that the horses did not make their appearance
and not caring to return to the encampment, 9 miles westerly of us, we
determined to bivouac, and collected wood, making up a large fire for the night,
which relieved us from the action of the frosty air, for we had no bedding or
provision.
15th. Tuesday. In full expectation that the horses with our party
would proceed forward to us we remained at our last night's fires till 11
o'clock, when, suspecting some accident had happened, we determined to return to
the encampment. We, however, met our people and horses 2 miles distant. It
appears the horses had strayed away about 10 miles over the plains in a
southerly direction and were not secured until late last night. We passed our
fires about 3 miles to the eastward and halted on the immediate bank of the
river, the late flood of which had fallen about 3 feet. Our dogs caught one of
the emus seen yesterday.
16th. Wednesday. From the banks of the river we travelled over the
sandy plains, tracing our old footsteps through a very sterile scrub and low
grassy land to our halting place of the 28th ultimo, being 8¼ miles from the
bank we left this morning. It being early in the day we continued our route
about 3 miles further round the lagoon and stopped for the night in a tolerable
dry and (dead) wooded spot near the angle of the lagoon, which abounds with vast
bodies of wild duck and other waterfowl. I gathered specimens of Loranthus
angustifolius, parasitical on the snake-bark, and a little trifling
Arabis. Of a flock of emu, about 20 in number, our dogs secured for us
two fine birds, which were distributed among the people and ourselves.
17th. Thursday. At a late hour we left our resting place at the swamp
and advanced on our journey, over small open plains and scrubby tracts
alternately, for upwards Of 4½ miles, when we turned out of the old beaten path,
which we had traced, in order to make as direct and straight a path as possible
to the margin of Smith's Plains. An Acacia allied to A. suaveolens
decorates these dreary wastes with its great profusion of golden flowers, and
the new genus of the Bignoniaceae having a persistent calyx. A shrub with
succulent short leaves, and much the habit of Bursaria spinosa, is
frequent here as in other situations, not in flower or fruit. Continuing our
route about 5 miles over a country grey with Acacia pendula, and not
caring to pursue our journey through a thick brush on the confines of which we
had arrived and in which we might fare worse in point of herbage and grass for
our horses, we turned in towards the river and halted at a recent native
encampment on the margin of a small lagoon. The soil in this day's route is red
and sandy, and very heavy with the rain of last night.
18th. Friday. In hopes of making a good day's journey to our resting
place of the 24th ultimo, we left the lagoon at an early hour. Tracing our path
through a very considerable brush, at the extremity of which Cape Porteous bore
northeasterly about 8½ miles, we passed an open flat of some extent and entered
a brush of small Callitris and dwarf Eucalyptus, with some low
scrub, in which a new Bossiaea abounds. At 12½ miles we arrived under the
north-west side of Macquarie Range, where I collected the following interesting
duplicate specimens, which are much finer and more luxuriant than I have
observed previously. Indigofera sp., Dodonaea cuneata. D.
heterophylla, Cassia glauca. Under Cape Porteous I gathered
Anthocercis albicans in young fruit, and duplicate specimens of
Senecio anethifolius. Upon examining some shrubs of Correa
speciosa I discovered a capsule with ripe seeds. Callitris verrucosa
of the Euryalean Scrub, a trailing twiggy Solanum, and a small slender
Sida are plants by no means rare under this range. In the flats near the
mount I discovered a new Amaryllis whose bulbs were very near the surface
of the earth. I likewise found a few more of the larger rooted Amaryllis
discovered by me on the 24th ultimo. Pursuing our journey about 3 miles, we
arrived at an old encampment about 4 o'clock and halted our horses; having
travelled the 15½ miles with more than ordinary ease. We could distinctly hear
some natives on the opposite side of the river, but they did not make their
appearance. These woods near the river are full of the little Sowerbaea in damp
situations.
19th. Saturday. Our stage to the spot where we made the river on the
23rd ultimo being about 11 miles, we started about 9 o'clock in hopes of
reaching that bend of the river early in the afternoon. Clearing the wood we
travelled over Strangford's Plains on a course running nearly parallel with
Macquarie's Range--about 6 miles. The Pancratium Macquaria [=
Calostemma purpureum] and Sowerbaea are scattered on the flats,
with a small yellow Hypoxis.[*] I gathered seeds of the pendulous
Eucalyptus (allied to E. paniculata), as well as a few seeds of
E. bicolor. Taking a route more northerly for the last 5 miles we arrived
at our old resting place in good time. The flood from the eastward, which we had
observed down this river, had filled the creek by which the large lagoon is
supplied from the stream. From very recent marks of natives on the trees, and
the removal of a quantity of dry grass from the spot on which we left it, it is
evident this place has been visited by natives since we left it on our journey
over the plain. Our dogs killed a very lofty emu.
20th. Sunday. We remained quiet the whole of this day in order to rest
our horses. Some of our people who had gone out from us early this morning in
pursuit of game returned to the tent about 2 o'clock this afternoon with a
couple of emu and a red haired kangaroo (macropus), distinct in colour
and size from elegans.
21st. Monday. The river rose considerably since last evening,
indicative of much rain having fallen to the eastward. Mr. Oxley intends to
commence his journey up the river for a few days and endeavour to cross its
stream at a favourable and easy place, continuing on the north side in order to
ascertain what this river in reality is, and should it prove to be the Lachlan,
we are at liberty when on the opposite bank to leave it to prevent being
entangled in its swamps, and shall then be able to bear away northerly in search
of the Macquarie, and return on it to Bathurst. This is our present plan of
advancement, which like all others must be governed by local circumstances,
contingencies which no human eye can foresee. About 9 o'clock we commenced our
new route up the river on the plains, making a small clear mount bearing north
easterly 2 miles from the angle of the wood in which we had encamped. From this
elevation Mr. Evans took bearings of some remarkable elevated spots to the
northward of us. The general appearance of the country before us is plain and
brushy spots alternately with some mounts and ranges as far as the eye can see.
Goulburn's Range bore from the mount north-easterly 1½ miles, which is
contrasted with ranges of hills on the opposite side of the river, We observed
some smoke issuing through the trees on the lower lands, which informed us of
the presence of natives, and, it being in our course, we made up to it. Natives
had been there this morning but were gone; their fires were still burning, round
which many fresh bones of the wallabee[*] or brush kangaroo were scattered, and
the gunya or bark hut had been thrown down. These plains or flats produce the
same plants as Smith Plains.
[* Wallaby.]
Stretching over these small plains at 8 miles we came upon the river, which
is considerably beyond its usual and proper limits, as may be seen by the trees
that the increased flood has placed in the middle of the stream--still evidently
rising. Having passed a short scrub, we stopped and pitched our tent at a
remarkable elbow of the river, being about 11 miles from our last encampment.
The travelling over these plains is heavy, being wet and slimy, and the woody
lands soft and hollow. Our course generally was N.N.E. The river has
occasionally several short windings in a small distance, so as to form parallel
lines with each other.
Our huntsmen came up with a native, his two gins or wives and three small
children. They were extremely shy and by no means friendly, showing symptoms of
suspicion and mistrust towards our people, who tried to persuade them to follow
them to our encampment but to no purpose. The man was represented as of a strong
robust athletic habit, perfectly naked, and armed with a stone hatchet and a
long spear of acacia wood, with which he continually kept our people at a
distance when they attempted to approach the females. The women were of delicate
low stature, wore short mantles of skin round their shoulders, but were
otherwise naked and were from 25 to 30 years of age. They carried some wooden
spoon-shaped instruments in their hands, with which they dig for grubs, or
roots. Our people made free and took one of these spoons which they brought to
our tent. It was this little family that had left the fire in the brush this
morning (which we had made up to), and the man was so exasperated with our
people continuing to follow him that he went back to the bark hut, threw it down
and went off with his family precipitately to the river calling to his
companions.
22nd. Tuesday. Fine clear cool morning. We could distinctly hear the
conversation of natives, who appeared to be on the same side of the river on
which we were encamped, but they were not seen. Continuing our route easterly we
desired to reach the base of a mount called Mount Torrens, of which we took
bearings from the clear hill yesterday with a view of making further
observations. We, however, found that the river ran to the southward of it
placing it on the opposite bank and consequently preventing us from approaching
it. At about 4 miles we came to the foot of an elevated hill, which Mr. Oxley
has named Mount Farquhar, in honour of Mr. Walter Farquhar physician to H.R.H.
the Prince Regent, from which several bearings were taken. Mount Torrens bore
about 1½ miles northerly of us. The centre of the three principal eminences
connected together bearing north easterly several miles, has been termed Mount
Davidson, in honour of Walter Davidson Esqre., nephew of the above gentleman.
Mount Farquhar is very bare and sterile, its upper surface being covered with a
species of granite mixed with loose coarse fragments of quartz. Its summit has
some burnt specimens of Casuarina with long fine brittle leaves and some
dwarf Eucalypti. A beautiful white flowered Aster, frequently
observed previously, decorates the slopes of this mount, and the delicate
Tecoma Oxleyi its rocky north side. I observed a species of
Thlaspi differing but little from Thlaspi montanum a diminutive
Eriophorum, a Bossiaea, and an Asclepiad of volubilous
habit on the southern base. I gathered specimens of a Sida filiformis
with a slender procumbent stem. I likewise observed some few plants of
Nictoiana undulata. The country to the northward appears broken and
hilly. Descending this mount we travelled N.E., passing brushy spots and open
slimy tracts of country covered with large bushes of a species of
Rhagodia. I here gathered the following:--seeds of Cotula sp.,
leaves elongated, flowers white; and another species with cuneated dentated
leaves and yellow flowers; a species of Richea, and some grasses.
Entering a clear confined scrub in which I collected specimens of a
Thesium, we halted at 10 miles near the immediate bank of the river in a
damp spot and at a place where there was but little food for the horses.
The soil of the brush is uniformly red, sandy and sterile, and that of the
open plains damp and slimy. The south bank of the river is in many places very
high, and of a red earth, the stream is 30 feet wide and its windings numerous.
The smaller rooted Amaryllis discovered under Cape Porteous we noticed in
clusters near the surface of the soil. The tetrandrous nut-tree is frequent with
Clematis occidentalis, producing abundance of male flowers. Our hunters,
who had lost their way, were wandering in a dense prickly scrub to the southward
of us and did not fall in with our horse-track till late at night, which alone
enabled them to find our encampment. They had killed an emu but were unable to
carry him to the tent, so they left him in a tree till to-morrow. The flood will
prevent us from crossing the river for some days.
23rd. Wednesday. We departed from our encampment at an early hour this
morning, cleared the brush and stretched across the plain to some gentle rising
land that ran down to the margin of the river. We here took away the emu that
had been killed last evening from the tree on which the huntsmen had hung him.
The country north-easterly, in which our route lay, is the same as yesterday, at
7 miles we were obliged to make the river in consequence of a large lake 3 miles
long and about half that space wide, the lower lands in its vicinity being
exceedingly wet and swampy. Changing our course we continued about 3 miles up
the river, but found that a further advancement only entangled us in bogs and
swamps. Crossing some rocky hills, we stayed and pitched our tent near to an arm
running southerly from the river to the above lake, which is supplied by it.
On the late swampy lands for the space of 3 miles were Polygonum
junceum [= Muehlerbeckia Cunninghami] and other plants usually found
in such situations. The open flats abound with the large Rhagodia, the
young leaves of which we found an excellent substitute for cabbage. On the rocky
hills near our tent I observed a species of Psychotria in fruit, but,
being subject to insects or disease, furnished no good seeds; a simple leaved
Acacia, with terminal panicles of flowers, frequent on Bathurst Plains,
is likewise common on the elevated spots. A mount called Mount Byng bore
easterly 20 miles. The stream has been running generally from the southward
to-day, and the flood increases. The present singular surface of the plains is
within 5 feet of the highest flood mark on the Blue Gums on its banks, some of
which are standing in the present mid channel. Our journey was 11½ miles. The
snake-bark is now large and frequent, taking the place of Sterculia
heterophylla, which has not appeared for some time. Our dogs killed 3 emu on
the flats near the river.
24th. Thursday. We ascertained by a mark that the river had fallen
about one inch in the course of the last night. In consequence of the difficulty
of continuing our journey on the left bank, Mr. Oxley has resolved to remain at
our present station and endeavour to form a bridge of trees, enabling us to
convey our provisions, luggage and selves across to the right bank, there being
little or no doubt of its being the Lachlan River or its outlet from the swamps,
which prevented us from proceeding further on the course we were pursuing on the
12th May last. The men were therefore employed in felling such large gum trees
as would reach over to the opposite bank, which, however, we found labour in
vain. The water is too deep and the current so rapid and strong as to carry away
the trees which we had fallen over it without the least difficulty. Upon tracing
its banks down with a view of examining the same in order to find an eligible
place to construct a bridge we discovered another arm 40 ft. wide running N. of
West from the river, which we did not observe yesterday. Not finding any fair
spot either favoured with lofty trees and narrow channel or otherwise, Mr. Oxley
sent the men to the southern arm but it appears their attempts failed in the
formation of a bridge, there being no trees sufficiently large to fall for that
purpose, or where there were any of the ordinary size, the channel was so deep
as to form no lodgment as a rest or stay for the branches, the current not
allowing them to remain stationary.
25th. Friday. Having no resource left (being entirely blocked by the
river and its dependencies) but to try another part of the southern arm, our
people with much labour and perseverance threw a bridge over it in a shallow
part sufficiently strong to bear the weight of ourselves and luggage. The river
has fallen 3½ inches since last night, and in 4 hours it dropped 1½ inches.
Burns, who had visited with his dogs the elevated grounds, brought us a fine
large emu which they had selected from a large flock. He reported that about 2
miles south from us he came to the shores of an extensive lake, forming a very
large sheet of water encircled by a sandy beach. Mr. Oxley visited this water in
the afternoon. The plants on the flats near the southern arm vary not in the
smallest degree from those common on the Lachlan River. By observation taken
this day our lat. is 33°13'28" S., and long. 146°40'20" E.
26th. Saturday. Morning fair. Taking an early breakfast and
accompanied by Mr. Evans, Fraser and Parr, I visited the lake which had been
discovered yesterday, and being only 2 miles southerly we were soon presented
with a view of this truly magnificent body of water. Its breadth is about 3
miles, and its length probably exceeds 7 miles; it is bounded by fine large
sandy shores; the north side is bold and rocky. It is skirted by Blue Gum and
Cypress; its surface is covered with large bodies of pelicans, wild duck, teal,
divers etc., and to add to the general beauty of the scene Goulburn's lofty
range and Peel's range appear at a distance in the background. We proceeded
round the beach easterly in order to obtain a good and favourable view of this
lake, of which sketches were taken. On the bare open rising grounds above the
lake, I observed some small specimens of Sterculia heterophylla, a
blue-flowered Clitoria, and some common Gnaphalia. This lake has
been called the Prince Regent's Lake.[*] A beautiful reclining strong growing
herbaceous plant, of the Diadelphous Leguminasae, I discovered on these
sterile flats, and which proves to be a new Kennedya. The flowers have
much the shape and colour of Kennedya rubicunda, but are twice the size.
The plant is perennial. I likewise discovered on the sands of the lake a species
of Polygonum with dioecious flowers, forming a shrub one foot high. I
also furnished myself with female flowers of the new Clematis: the large
yellow-flowered Goodenia is likewise common. Mount Aiton could be seen from a
particular point of view, and we now estimate Mount Granard to be 72 miles
north-westerly of that elevation. It was 2 o'clock in the afternoon before we
returned to our encampment, which was broken up and all the luggage conveyed
over the southern arm by the bridge; our horses swam forward, tracing the river
up its banks, and there was nothing left for us but to follow their tracks with
all possible despatch. The country appears to rise, although it has signs of
having been inundated. It is alternately woody with high coarse grass and
plains, on which the white flowered stoloniferous Chrysanthemum is most
predominant. About 4½ miles on our line of route we passed another extensive
sheet of water about the same width as the Prince Regent's Lake, but clear of
timber, and so full of water as to be up to the highest mossy water mark. It
appeared to wind to the southward and eastward and in all probability is of
considerable depth. Continuing on our horse-tracks about 3 miles we rounded a
lagoon of remarkable fine clear water and arrived at our tent in a bend of the
river at dusk. Our people discovered a large native bark canoe, which Mr. Oxley
intends to make use of in the conveyance of our provisions over the river, there
being a great doubt whether we shall be able to construct a bridge so long as
the flood continues. Our journey was about 8 miles from our bridge over the
southern arm, generally north-easterly.
[* Lake Cargellico.]
27th. Sunday. The land on the opposite side of the river appearing
high and rising, and hence would afford us better travelling, induced Mr. Oxley
to make the attempt to ferry over our luggage in the bark canoe. It was,
however, too hazardous an experiment to be carried into effect, for the canoe
would not carry two of our men. We had lost two days of the last week in
consequence of detention at the southern arm and therefore considered ourselves
by no means justified to halt this day, especially as the whole of our
provisions in hand would not at the present ration last longer than 7 weeks. It
was late before we continued our journey, which was about 5 miles, and
descending to some grassy swamps we changed our course to the east and continued
half a mile on the margin of a thick scrub bounded by bog. Resuming our course
of N.E. we passed some land that had been fired by natives, and stretching over
a plain came to an angle of a large serpentine lagoon of remarkably clear water,
down which we continued 1 mile and a half to the river where we pitched our tent
having travelled 9¾ miles. I discovered a new species of Stenochilus,
with ovate-lanceolate leaves and axillary peduncles, scarcely longer than the
leaves. It has the largest drupes of all I have seen. The flowers are scarlet
and spotted inside. A small Phleum, and the pygmy plants called
Siloxerus humifusus, and a Plantago with lanceolate, entire-nerved
leaves, are frequent on the wet flats. Fraser, who had gone down to the river,
had noticed several natives cutting bark from the gum trees for their huts. They
were forming an encampment on the opposite side of the river, and desisted for
the moment when they perceived him, but upon his continuing his journey resumed
their labours on the trees. There were 6 men, 2 women, and 2 boys.
28th. Monday. Sharp frost last night. About 9 o'clock we continued our
route easterly, in order to clear a small creek running from the river. We came
out upon a low swampy grassy flat bounded by serpentine lagoons communicating
with the river to the northward of it. Unable to ascertain our distance from the
river we penetrated the brush in order to make the banks, but its stream had
bent in westerly so that in the attempt our men and horses became involved in
deep narrow bights of lagoons, some of which formed serpentine windings round
the N.E. margin of the small plains; at this critical moment we got dispersed
into different parties.
Having travelled about 11 miles on various courses, generally north-easterly,
myself, two men and four horses came to an angle of the river where we halted,
in the hopes that the other part of our company would follow our footsteps and
meet us at this point. The country assumes the same gloomy appearance as it has
for some time past. The plains are, however, firm and hard, and the river does
not appear to fall; its stream in many places is very wide, at this angle 50
feet, and running about two knots per hour. From the plains some hills bore
northerly. It was sunset and not one of the party appearing, we unloaded the
horses and encamped for the night round a large fire. We fired a musket to
inform our people-who I concluded were not far from us-of our situation, and we
were answered by Mr. Oxley's party.
29th. Tuesday. In consequence of the deep bights of the river
yesterday, and not being able to track Mr. Evans, we were separated during the
night. Mr. Oxley with all the horses (except four which were with me) was
encamped 2 miles behind me, when Mr. Evans, who had made good 13 miles on a N.E.
course, had passed the night with five of the party in a brush about 2 miles to
the eastward of my resting place, but without any provisions. I despatched one
of the people back to Mr. Oxley to inform him of my situation as well as that of
Mr. Evans, which I learnt from Fraser, one of his party, who came back to me for
some provisions. It was about 11 o'clock before we all collected in a body at
Mr. Evans's encampment. We proceeded forward in a direction governed by the
inclination of the river, which was about S.E. by E., for the space Of 7 miles
before we stopped for the day. On the damp plains I furnished myself with
specimens of Siloxerus humifusus; Plantago sp., a small delicate
plant; and another species, stemless, with leaves oblong, and petioled, a
diminutive plant of a species of Goodenia; and an Anacyclus, a small
plant with blue flowers.
On the south side of the flats there is a range of hills running east and
west, from which Mr. Oxley took several bearings of points named and seen from
Mount Cunningham. We came to the conclusion that the river having run so far
from the westward and north-westerly would turn out to be the Macquarie but our
ideas are found to be chimerical; the observations of Mr. Oxley tending to clear
up any doubts existing respecting its being other than the Lachlan's outlets
from the swamps. Mr. Oxley's bearings agreed exactly with the mounts and hills
laid down in the charts in May last previous to the abandonment of the
boats.

GRAVE OF THE LACHLAN NATIVE SEEN BY OXLEY
Near our encampment a native grave of modern construction, from the regular
manner and systematical mode in which everything connected with it is disposed,
led us to conclude that this mausoleum[*] contained the remains of some person
of eminence, either a chief or one who had acquired from his skill in hunting,
the respect and awe of his countrymen. It is a mound of earth about 3 feet above
the level of the ground and is bounded on one side by three rows of seats
forming the segment of a circle and of the following dimensions. The inside tier
40 ft. long, the centre 45 feet and the outer one 50 feet. Each tier is 4½ feet
apart and about one foot high. On the opposite side of the grave is a single
tree less than any of the others, and on the north and south side of the grave
are openings to it.
[* The site of this grave of an aboriginal king is now marked by a
stone cairn by the New South Wales Government.]
About 6 feet to the west of this mausoleum stood a cypress on which was cut
out with very considerable labour remarkable characters, the stem having been
previously barked and about 30 feet north west was another having some singular
figures deeply cut on its stem--perhaps a description of the man, his age, and
cause of death. The banks of the river vary in height, from 5 to 16 feet,
clothed as usual with Acacia stenophylla and a few Casuarinae. The
Cypress and Blue Gum are more abundant than they were.
30th. Wednesday. Mr. Oxley having satisfied himself that this river is
the Lachlan and that it would answer no purpose to advance further on its banks
(having already arrived near the confines of the large swamps) has resolved to
try the experiment of falling trees over the stream to form a bridge, or
construct a raft that would convey our luggage and provisions over the river in
a safe and dry condition. The boat-builder with some of the people were
accordingly employed to fall the timber and form a raft with all possible
despatch. Repapered my green specimens that had been collected some days. Rain
without intermission in showers all the forenoon.
As Mr. Oxley is instructed to collect all the information possible respecting
the government, customs and habits of the aborigines of the country over which
we might pass--points on account of the sparse thin population of Western
Australia, with which we had no opportunity to furnish ourselves--he intends to
open the grave in order to ascertain its internal appearance. Removing the whole
of the mound, we found it vaulted with pieces of wood and layers of bark and
came to the body about 3½ feet below the surface of the ground, compressed in a
grave 2 feet by 4, formed in long ovate figure sufficient to contain that part
of a person from head to hip--the legs and feet having been forced over the
shoulders. The body was placed on its right side, and the face looking towards
the East or rising sun. His head was ornamented with the usual netting, and his
opossum hatchet-girdle was placed behind him. From the size of his bones he
appears to have been a man of 6 feet, and might have been 40 years of age, and
apparently had not been dead six months. Our people took up his skull, which had
the hair very fresh upon it. It's upper jaw wanted one of the front teeth, which
loss may be occasioned by the same custom prevailing here as is adopted on the
Eastern coast. The skull Mr. Oxley intends to take with us, as a subject for
study by craniologists.
31st. Thursday. Fine and clear. Our people are employed sawing pine or
cypress for the raft, which being a heavy job will scarcely be finished this
day. Took a walk on the neighbouring hills. The following are the whole of the
plants that came within my observation. Helichrysum bicolor, scales of
calyx tinged with a red colour and the leaves terminated in a naked mucrone.
Gnaphalium fragrans, scented like the Touquin Bean. Brunonia
australis is very common on the hills, at the base of which I gathered seeds
of Dodonaea pinnata. One of the Gentianaceae, frequently observed,
has a variety here with white flowers; and some few shrubs producing orange
capsules, likewise abundant. From the summit of the most elevated bill of the
range (bearing three quarters of a mile south of our tent), which has been
called Piper's Hill, in honour of our naval officer of Port Jackson Harbour,
Captain Piper, we had an extensive panoramic view of the country around us for
about 40 miles. Among the numerous observations and bearings taken by Mr. Oxley,
I'll only note the following. A mount bearing N.W. about 45 or 50 miles distant
has been named Mount Bauer, in honour of Francis and Ferdinand Bauer, Esqres.,
particularly of the latter gentleman whose indefatigable labours in the
illustration of Australian Botany merit a much higher honour than a distant
mount that may never be seen by European eyes again, and doubtless will never be
visited by any. The country between us and the Mounts bearing southward and
eastward appear flat and wooded in some places, and it is probable that the
Macquarie may not run far north of us, and we are in hopes of intersecting it in
about 12 days on a N.E. course, steering for Hurd's Peak [Mt. Tolga]. I observed
some western iron bark, Eucalyptus sideroxylon, on the south side of the
hills, miserably small and stunted. During our stay in this encampment we made
some excellent meals of the large Rhagodia, which is an excellent
substitute for spinach. The river falls rapidly.
1817. August 1st. Friday. The river has decreased about 14 inches in
the course of the night. Our boat builder finished the raft and we launched her.
We intended to convey the whole of our baggage over to the north bank of the
river this afternoon, but we failed in the attempt. We had fixed a line across
the stream, which is not less than 50 feet wide, making it fast to the Blue Gums
on each bank to act as a warp by which the raft might be drawn backwards and
forwards. We however, found it altogether impracticable, The man on the raft, in
the act of pulling himself over, found the midchannel current so strong as to
oblige him to quit his hold of the line, and the raft becoming unmanageable, was
carried with the man nearly three quarters of a mile down the stream before we
could send some of our people to assist to stop her. They found it difficult to
tow her up against the stream, and she was left fast to a stump. Some trees of
sufficient height on its south bank we fixed upon to form a bridge, and we set
our people to work to saw them down, but they could not be fallen to-day, being
thick and sound at their butts. The lat. and long. at this remarkable spot under
Piper's Hill is 33°04'02" S., and supposed long. 146°47'30" E., but by chart
147°05' E.[*]
[* Oxley now decided to leave the Lachlan River, and crossing it
on a raft took a north-easterly course, when be discovered Wellington
Valley.]
2nd. Saturday. A steady rain set in early this morning, continuing
without intermission till about 11 o'clock. With considerable labour our people
felled two large trees, but being turned round they were carried lengthwise down
the river by its strong sweeping current, so that it will be in vain to attempt
any of these works so long as the flood continues, which may not be long, as the
river has fallen 13 inclies since the last evening. Our situation, becoming in
some measure alarming, every day lessens our provisions, and we have not the
means of turning what we have to good account by proceeding forward on our
journey homeward.
Mr. Oxley sent two of our people up the river on horseback to search for a
fair spot to make another trial to form a bridge. They, however, returned after
a ride of about 8 miles upon the banks but found no eligible place to make the
experiment. They observed a stream larger than the river running from the N.E.
and forming a junction with it about 3 miles from our tent, which we suspect to
be the north-west arm of the Lachlan River.
3rd. Sunday. We have now but one resource left and that is our raft
which our people had towed up the river to an eddy that might be of much use to
us, by drifting diagonally to the opposite bank. Mr. Oxley rode up the south
bank of the river to ascertain the nature of the country to the southward and
eastward, as also to observe the arm that our people had reported to run into
it. In his absence we formed a double towing rope of all the halters lashings
and slings we could muster. Combining them together, we ferried over the whole
of our provisions in casks, and our luggage on the raft to the opposite bank on
the north side of the river, and swam the horses, all which operation was
carried into effect with all possible despatch and without any accident
happening, which we considered a miracle; our raft being waterlogged, and when
laden was several inches under water, independently of the rapid whirls of the
stream against which we had to contend. We encamped on the rising grounds of the
north bank. I sowed some peach stones and quince seeds.
Mr. Oxley returned from his ride and came over the river to us. He intends to
lose no more time but strike away N.E. easterly from the difficult river and
pass near Hurd's Peak in our route homewards. He found the higher lands a few
miles up the southern bank very boggy and bad travelling from the late rains.
Our people were all occupied slinging casks and arranging each horse's load. Mr.
Oxley has determined to proceed on the above course to-morrow morning.
August 4th. Monday. We commenced our route N.E. by E. over a tract of
damp slimy country covered with Rhagodia, and plains abounding with Acacia
Pendula and several shrubs heretofore noticed. The land rises gently and
gradually, but assumes no better appearance in soil and timber. At 6 miles the
Acacia homalophylla becomes very common, with A. pendula and
snake-bark and small Cypress forming an extensive lofty brush for several
miles. Passing over some rocky elevated ground, where I gathered some fine
specimens of Acacia doratoxylon, we entered a very confined close
Euryalean scrub composed of Eucalyptus dumosa, and several fine
plants. In this intricate scrub I gathered some new and beautiful plants:-viz:
Pimelea flava, a slender small shrub. Prostanthera, with stem,
flowers axillary solitary and greenish, a low depressed shrub. A species of
Acacia dasyphylla with linear lanceolate pubescent leaves, is frequent,
forming dense bushes. Aster decurrens [= Olearia decurrens] and
A. cuneatus [= Olearia stellulata] and Clematis
occidentalis are likewise very common. Some patches of land that had been
formerly fired by the natives producing some good tufts of grass induced us to
turn out of our course in the scrub and halt upon it. This scrub continues for
some miles with all the sterility imaginable, hence we are extremely fortunate
in having an opportunity of turning out of it to a spot where our horses would
find good grass, and where we found some water in two native wells, added to a
little from the river which we had carried in a keg it was abundantly sufficient
for the whole of us. On the flats I gathered anew Gnaphalium leaves
linear and hooked, flowers crowded and terminal. We had advanced on a variable
route 13¼ miles per perambulator but only 12½ on our true course. The nut trees
(tetrandrous shrub) are loaded with fruit, and the new Jasminum and
several species of Dodonaea present themselves in these lone places. From
some rising ground we observed Hurd's Peak bearing N.E. about 6 miles from
us.
5th. Tuesday. Sharp frost early. This morning we left our halting
place, continuing our course through the Euryalean scrub about 3 miles, with
little or no variation in the botany. I gathered seeds of the Western Iron Bark
and specimens of a new species of Acacia cardiophylla. The spinous grass
and aculeated Daviesia rendered our advancement through this scrub very
painful. Onward the country for 6 miles is rising and covered with a confined
brush of Acacia homalophylla. The timber is of Eucalyptus
micrantha or Bastard Box, and Cypress. The recent marks of natives digging
for grubs, and remains of fires, led us to conclude that water could not be far
distant. Mr. Evans, who as usual had gone on before the horses, came very
providentially to some small holes of stagnant water surrounded by Polygonum
junceum [= Muehlenbeckia Cunninghami] and, although it partook of the
white colour of the clay on which it rested, it was of very essential service to
us. We watered our horses and took the precaution to fill a keg for
ourselves.
The country for the next mile is elevated and stony, and from the sudden
change that is obvious in timber, being Casuarina of lofty height and
tolerable bulk, we were anticipating a fine forest land, but were disappointed.
Passing a range of large granite stones we entered a thick scrub, which
continued for some miles, but were obliged to halt in it, having travelled 13½
miles and no appearance of water. We sent some of our people 3 miles in search
of water, which they found in small quantities in the holes and gullies, and of
a red tinge, from the ferruginous colour of the stones over which it had
run.
In the bush in which we were encamped I observed the little plant of the
habit of Westringia, first observed on the 1st of June of which I
gathered duplicate seeds. The general and sterility and want of water in the
country, as we advance, obliges us to proceed forward by rapid and longer
marches than we otherwise would, in hopes of intersecting the Macquarie River,
should it run so far from Bathurst. Served out half a pint of water each to the
people.
6th. Wednesday. At daybreak sent to the range for water. Continuing
our route on the same course, I accompanied Mr. Oxley and Fraser to the hills
nearest to the Point. Made it in 4½ miles. Mr. Oxley took a few bearings while I
was examining the few plants that grew on its rugged summit. Indigofera
speciosa, Tecoma Oxleyi, Boronia pulchella, Eriostemon
sp., Senecio sp., with aspen-like leaves, papillously rough, with
corymbose flowers. Eucalyptus sp. (Blue Gum), Callitris glauca,
and Acacia doratoxylon, very small, compose the whole of its botany.
The country to the northward is mountainous and broken, but easterly it
appears more flat and level. Crossing the country from the base of the range, we
intersected our horse track in about 3 miles in which we passed creeks, two of
which contained some water where we quenched the great thirst of our horses. In
our route we observed several fine specimens of Sterculia heterophylla,
but not in flower or fruit. Descending from a slight rise we entered a stony
brush (denominated an iron bark scrub), exceedingly close and confined, in which
I discovered a few new plants viz:--Dodonaea calycina, a slender twiggy
shrub remarkable for its large calycinal leaves. Pultenaea sp., leaves
linear-oblong, which are, with the calyx and branches, silky. Dillwynia
sp., allied to D. floribunda. All the plants observed in Peel's Range
are likewise here, of which Acacia sp., allied to A. decipiens, is
very common. The timber of this scrub is Eucalyptus sideroxylon, an iron
bark, cypress and a species of Eucalyptus with long lanceolate leaves,
not in flower.
Having penetrated 3 miles through the brush, we were obliged to halt at
nightfall at a clear spot where there was some coarse grass for our horses,
although no water for them and little for us. Our journey this day is 13½ miles,
which we found a very severe stage. Near our encampment our boat-builder was
sent to drain a few small holes of water into one, in order to secure some for
our breakfast in the morning. Our dogs had killed a small kangaroo, which we
distributed with the water in our kegs among the whole of us. Outside our tent I
discovered a new Acacia, with linear-lanceolate leaves, which are bent by
the indenture of a gland on the interior margin, solitary axillary capitula of
flowers, and elongated filaments.
7th. Thursday. Served out a ration of drained water much discoloured
by the soil. Leaving our encampment our course led us through a continuance of
the same difficult scrub for the space Of 4¼ miles. These gloomy shades are much
beautified by several beautiful acacias, which are now in the greatest beauty
and luxuriance. At the termination of the scrub, the country suddenly changes to
forest grassy land, with a slight brush of Acacia sp., allied to A.
decurrens, among which I observed Pimelea colorans, a shrub whose
flowers change from white to a deep blue colour. The land continues of the
forest description with slight risings for upwards of 6 miles to a considerable
tract of burnt grass, where was good pasturage for our horses. The change of
stone from a quartz to a red variegated granite, common on the Macquarie River,
and the appearance of several of our Bathurst plants, suggested to us that a
change of country was near at hand.
Clearing the more bushy forest an immense expanse of clear open hilly country
opened to our view, with valleys having much the appearance of the rising
grounds between Campbell's River and Bathurst. The hills are bare and grassy,
but the soil is not much better than that already passed. Travelling through the
valley on an easterly course we arrived at a creek, which we traced down and in
it discovered water in abundance for ourselves and horses. Accordingly we halted
for the day and pitched our tent on its high bank, having made good 13¼ miles.
The hills between which this creek runs are rocky and productive of some fine
plants. Acacia spectabilis (a new sp.), with bipinnate leaves, and
axillary elongated spikes of flowers, making a very magnificent appearance.
Acacia sp., with terminal panicles of flowers, common on the Bathurst
Plains. Tecoma Oxleyi; Prostanthera nivea; Grevillea sp.,
allied to G. sphacelata, and an Hibbertia with linear leaves and
fine yellow flowers. We saw kangaroo and emu, of which our dogs secured some for
us. Among some burnt grassy spots I observed an entire-leaved Solamim,
and another with broad ovate glossy foliage, aculeated, and glaucus beneath;
they were not in flower. The timber is Bastard Box and Callitris sp.,
seen first at Mount Aiton, with scales of the fruit sub-calceolated, and some
fine lofty specimens of Sterculia heterophylla.
8th. Friday. Our horses required rest from the labours of the 4 last
days. We therefore continued at our encampment in the vale, which has been
called Hamelin's Valley. In the afternoon I visited some hills in the
neighbourhood, on the rocky summit of which I gathered specimens of a new plant
of the Epacrideae, (Leucopogon).
I gathered likewise some duplicate seeds of Tecoma Oxleyi. We find by
observation our tent is situate in lat. 32°47'58" S., and long. 147°50' E., and
the mean variation of the compass is 5°20' E.
9th. Saturday. Resuming our journey from Hamelin's Valley on a course
N.E. by E. the country assumes an appearance that we hoped to have passed
altogether. At the extremity of the vale we entered a thick brushwood of
diminutive Eucalyptus, Cypress and Acacia, which continues
until terminated by some rising rocky ground, covered for the most part with
iron bark, which is not in flower. These little hills form boundaries to small
valleys, on their eastern sides having abundance of high brown grass. I observed
several unusually large specimens of Sterculia heterophylla from one of
which I procured specimens in pod and a few seeds. The timber, although 20 in.
to 2 ft. 6 in. diameter, cannot be appropriated to any useful or ornamental
purposes in cabinet or other works, on account of its soft and spongy texture. A
short period after it has been bruised or cut a resinous gum oozes from the
wound, and is of the nature and colour of the resin produced by the several
genera of the Coniferae. It was at 7 miles on this day's route we arrived
at a thick brush, through which ran a creek north and south, containing some
stagnant discoloured water. At this providential place we watered the
horses.
Among the interesting plants observed in this brush, a species of
Daviesia with linear round spinescent leaves and axillary racemes of
flowers, which is now very luxuriant, with Acacia obliqua and A.
pendula. The land for the next 6 miles is brushy forest and rocky
Eucalyptian hills, succeeded by a confined brush of Cypress, in which I gathered
the seeds and specimens of a second species of shrub of the habit of
Westringia, with quadrangular sulcated horizontal branches. Clearing the
brush we came upon an open grassy district, and halted at a spot where there was
abundance of wood, and grass for the horses, but no water. Mr. Oxley sent a man
in search of some, but he returned unsuccessful. The water we had had the
precaution to carry in a keg was served out to each of us at one and a half pint
per man.
10th. Sunday. We sent at daybreak two of our people to a small water
hole 2½ miles back on the journey of yesterday for some water for our breakfast.
We were obliged to advance forward this morning in consequence of the want of
water for our horses and selves. About 3 miles at the commencement of our
journey the country is fine and open, grassy and thickly clothed with timber
common about Bathurst, the Lachlan depôt and the Eastern coast. Onward about 4
miles the land exhibits a miserable barren appearance with irregular risings and
scrubs of the description passed yesterday. To our surprise, at 6¾ miles we came
suddenly to a rocky creek containing some fine water, at present stagnant, but
having the marks of flood and hence suggesting the idea of its deriving its
supplies from the hills southward, and running when full northerly and
ultimately emptying itself into the Macquarie. Mr. Oxley rode down it 6 miles,
when its general tendency was northerly in the character of a chain of ponds.
About a mile down the creek (in which Arundo phragmites is frequent),
which is about 8 feet wide, we halted and pitched our tent on the side of an old
native encampment. Here we saw quantities of the horse-mussel shells with which
the creek had furnished them, and some stones on which they had been sharpening
some weapons or instruments, perhaps their mogos or stone hatchets. The very
recent marks of kangaroo and emu among the fine brown grass and forest land in
the vicinity of the creek are proofs of the abundance of those animals in these
fine grassy grounds. I gathered fresh specimens of Callitris glauca,
those that I had formerly collected having suffered from friction. The
Styphelia, first seen on George's Range, I noticed in the brush of this
day.
11th. Monday. We remained the whole of the day at our encampment on
this creek, which Mr. Oxley has termed Gaygarne's Ponds, after a friend of his.
Our lat. is 32°44'29" S., and long. 148°14'15" East, and mean variation of the
compass is 7°18'00" S. Our hunters returned from the chase with three
kangaroos.
12th. Tuesday. We pursued our journey northerly of the course we have
been travelling for some days past in hopes of intersecting the Macquarie River,
which from appearances could not be far distant. Course N.E. Having passed the
grassy forest land near the creek, we arrived at the margin of an open plain,
from which we had a view of a distant range northward of us, which appeared very
lofty. Stretching over the plain about a mile we passed through a very sterile
scrubby district, somewhat elevated, thickly wooded with Bastard Box, Cypress,
and the Casuarina (or Swamp Oak), and having the same character in the botany as
before observed. The Acaciae, which are predominant, are not so far advanced
towards a flowering state as we had seen them some days previously. This brush
continues to the termination of our journey this day (which was 12 miles), and
we pitched our tent near some holes of water, where was burnt grass for the
horses. I gathered duplicate seeds of Scaevola prostrata and of a species
of Myoporum, a common shrub in the brush. The travelling was for the most
part soft and boggy this day. The small Adiantum; Lobelia sp.,
allied to L. purpurascens; and a species of Satureia, all plants
of swamps, were observed on the plains. In clear water-holes at our present
resting place I discovered a second species of an Alisma, it appears of
stronger growth than the species common in running waters in New South
Wales.
13th. Wednesday. Still in hopes of seeing the Macquarie River we
continued our route on the same N.E. course on which we had travelled yesterday.
In about 2 miles from our halting place we came to a creek or small rivulet from
12 to 14 feet wide, and between 5 and 6 feet deep, which received the waters
falling from the lofty range to the southward and eastward, whose elevated
summit we occasionally had a glimpse of through the trees. By the motionless
appearance of dead leaves floating on its surface the stream was just
discernible running to the northward. Crossing this water (which abounds with
several common aquatic plants, such as Potamogeton natans,
Actinocarpus, etc.), by means of a fallen tree, but passing our horses
over higher up at a rocky ford, we continued our journey about 7 miles over a
barren scrubby country broken with dry water-holes encircled by swamp oak
(Casuarina), cypress and Acacia Pendula. I had occasion in this
day's route to make the same observation relative to the backwardness of the
plants in a flowering state which we have seen expanded some days past in the
south-westward. The land assumes an improving state, being slightly brushed
foresty country, covered with flint, strong brome grass and timber of
Callitris sp. (common at Bathurst), and Bastard Box of considerable bulk.
At the termination Of 12½ miles, arriving at some holes of water, we stopped for
the night. This water is tinged with the colour of the white sandy marsh through
which it filters, and runs gently over a rushy cypress flat.
14th. Thursday. At an early hour we advanced on our journey over a
continuance of the same grassy forest land on which we had halted last night.
Thickly wooded for about 5 miles, and becoming hilly as we approached the lofty
range before us. On the first rising ground, which is clothed with western iron
bark, I discovered a new species of Acacia impressa and a species of
Leucopogon; the Acacia forming a small tree 10-12 feet high, and
in young fruit and flower. The timber on the succession of hills and grassy
valleys was unvaried until we had passed 8 miles, to another rocky eminence,
where Eucalyptus micrantha or Bastard Box becomes less frequent, but is
succeeded by the stringy bark of the eastern coast. I likewise observed plants
that are indigenous near Sydney, such as Zamia spiralis,
Xanthorrhaea, Hakea, Kennedya monophylla and Calythrix
tetragona. A glaucous, oblique-leaved Eucalyptus, first observed in
the Vale of Clwyd, is frequent in the valley.
Passing several gullies or water courses that ran through the valley, we
ascended a rocky mount near to but detached from the range, whence Mr. Oxley
took several bearings. The country appeared perfectly flat, presenting a clear
horizon from N. to W. and round to the south. Finding it necessary to change the
course to due east, we continued until we had cleared 12½ miles, when we halted
at a creek, whose waters ran through a thick cypress channel.
We had scarcely unladen our horses and pitched the tent, when some of our
people distinctly heard a continual hammering, as of a native with his hatchet.
Mr. Oxley with some of our people went towards the spot whence the sound
proceeded--about a quarter of a mile from our encampment--and discovered a
native upon a tree, cutting out an opossum from its hollow trunk, in which the
little animal had taken refuge from its pursuers. He became alarmed as we
approached the tree, crying out to his companions, which soon brought another
native from the hills--loaded with kangaroo, rats and snakes--to his assistance.
It was with much persuasion, and more particularly when he observed that we were
kind to his comrade, that this native was induced to descend the tree to us. We
led them to our tent and sat them down by our fire, at which they roasted the
fruits of their labours entire, gutting the opossum, and when sufficiently
baked, devouring the entrails first, as a great delicacy, which they appeared to
enjoy the more when powdered and peppered with fine wood-ashes! Although
exceedingly intimidated by our numbers, and lost in wonder at our colour and all
things belonging to us around them their shyness and fears gradually disappeared
when they experienced our kind treatment. They ate of our bread and drank of our
water from a tin pot, which they had never seen before, and became very
loquacious. Mr. Oxley exchanged for a green jade hatchet of theirs an old iron
one of ours. We showed them with what despatch and great ease we could cut
horizontally through a gum tree, which with their mogos or stone axes woould be
a work of great labour, and would be only bruised through diagonally. We showed
them their image a glass, and took them to our horses, the sight of which with
everything about them was a source of much surprise, which they manifested in
wild extravagant gestures and grimaces. Mr. Oxley presented them with a knife
and a handkerchief. They were young men of 5 feet 4-6 inches, of
well-proportioned features, and with large bushy heads of hair, which gave them
a wild ferocious appearance. The cartilage of the nose of one of them was
perforated and a stick or reed passed through it. They did not want for their
front teeth. The pain occasioned by the deep tattooing process on their backs
and breasts must be almost intolerable. Large cartilaginous pieces of flesh
projected from their backs--almost an inch--forming various figures. They were
perfectly naked, and had no spears or weapons of defence. Desirous of departing
to their companions, whose numbers (perhaps their women?) they gave us to
understand by their fingers were five--and whose faces we saw from the rocky
hill to-day, they walked off without the least signs of fear or distrust.
15th. Friday. Resuming our journey easterly about 9 o'clock we were
obliged to steer our course more northerly, in order to avoid some lofty parts
of the range by passing over the lower risings or bends of the same. The whole
of this day's journey was a succession of hills and valleys, well watered by
creeks running in various bends through them, generally inclining northerly; and
throughout the whole there is no want or scarcity of water, although there has
been no rain of any consequence for a considerable time. The timber is Bastard
Box, Western Iron Bark, and some few specimens of the Eucalyptus and
Stringy Bark on the hills, on which there were some fine fragments of red
granite and some pieces of limestone.
The plants observed to-day were not different from any before seen, Acacia
impressa is frequent on the rocky hills, with several others of its
congeners. Our courses from the nature of the country were various, generally
easterly; the continual ascents and descents were very fatiguing to our horses
and ourselves, and induced us to halt at 10½ miles on a spot where we could
furnish ourselves with abundance of dead wood and water from a reed-grassy creek
that was in a running state.
It is a singular fact that we came upon the footmarks of oxen very deep on
the banks of a water course in the valley. We traced them along the creek a
considerable distance in order to ascertain beyond doubt this remarkable
incident. They may be the Government cattle that were missing from Cox's River,
and which were supposed and reported accordingly to have died in the mountains.
Our baggage horses were followed by nine natives (men) during the last 6 miles
of this journey to our tent. They manifested no symptoms of fear when they came
up to us, were very talkative, and expressed their surprise at different objects
around them. They appeared to be acquainted with iron nails, and from this
circumstance it is very possible they had seen some white men in or about
Bathurst, or had been in company with some stock-keepers and cattle drivers on
the Macquarie River, which they appeared to be well acquainted with, and made
signs as to the direction that stream bore from us which gave us hopes of seeing
it in a few days. Our dogs had killed for us some kangaroos; we therefore gave
them the forequarters of one of these animals, which they roasted at our fires.
Having served out to ourselves and people the ration of pork and flour, we broke
up the casks and converted the iron hoops into swords with which we furnished
each of them one, presenting to the most intelligent man (apparently), an old
file, the use of which we learned him by sharpening the edge of his cimetar.
They appeared highly delighted with these pieces of iron, which they would soon
turn to a variety of uses. We likewise gave them each a piece of pork, which
they did not appear to relish--on account of its saltness. After our people had
enjoyed a dance or corroboree with them, these harmless inoffensive natives left
us, returning the road they came. They were two elderly, six strong younger men
and a lad; and their appearances and habits were the same as of those seen
yesterday. They were quite naked and unarmed and the lad appeared to be related
to a person of eminence from the circumstance of his seating himself at a small
distance from the rest, and from the respect they appeared to pay him, and the
tattooing on his back was more diversified and different.
16th. Saturday. Slight frost. We left our last night's resting place,
pursuing an easterly course through grassy valleys bounded by gentle hills,
covered loosely with lamina of red slate substance, fragments of red granite and
some tolerably fair specimens of agate, some of which were, however, fractured.
At 4 miles on our journey we ascended a lofty tree; from thence we had a view of
the country to the N.E. and S.E., which consists of hills and vales thinly
clothed with timber. The general inclination of these hills is from the
southward to the north. A misty line of exhalation arising between the hills
induced us to change our course to N.E., on which route we advanced about 4
miles and a half when to our surprise we arrived at the right bank of a
stream[*] which we supposed might possibly be the Macquarie, the river we have
so long calculated upon and wished to see. The water is clear and there is
enough current in it to state it is not stagnant. It is now about 4 feet deep
and is in places overrun with Arundo phragmites, and had marks of flood
12 feet above its present level. Its banks are rocky, occasionally very high and
perpendicular, of red earth. In some places it formed handsome straight reaches,
which gave to this rivulet a pleasant picturesque appearance. The cattle tracks
were very distinct and deep on its banks, which are now dry and dusty, proving
to us that no rain had fallen for some time.
[* Named by Oxley, Molle's Rivulet.]
We traced the rivulet for 3 miles and crossed it, availing ourselves of a
shoaly rocky part to ford over to the opposite high bank where we encamped. The
hills on this side were fired by the natives, the flames making rapid progress
in the dry high grass. The plants now became exceedingly uninteresting. The
timber is small iron and stringy bark on the hills: several Bathurst plants are
common on the lower lands. Eucalyptus perfoliata of the Vale of Clwyd,
with Persoonia spathulata are common on the grassy flats. Our journey was
12½ miles. A lofty mount seen northerly from the hill on which we ascended this
morning has been called Mount Johnson. The channel of the river abounds with
Azolla pinnata, floating on its surface.
17th. Sunday. Mild morning. We rested the whole of this day.
Hibbertia cuneata, Swainsona coronillaefolia, Croton
acerifolius, Indigofera australls, and Croton, are all plants
on the banks of the rivulet. From a fine grassy hill bearing three quarters of a
mile N. by E. I gathered specimens of a bulbous rooted Cyperus with
woolly leaves; Eucalyptus glauca, forming a tree 30 feet or 40 feet high,
with an angular umbel of flowers, is frequent, and, being now in flower, induced
me to gather specimens. Fraser, who had been sent away a few miles in order to
ascertain, if possible, something more satisfactory respecting the rivulet,
returned having made no new discovery. On the highlands and rising grassy spots
I gathered specimens of an Acacia appearing distinct from A.
decurrens, not only in the habit of its inflorescence but in the position of
its glands and form of its foliage. It is an arbuscula and apt to form thick
bushes.
I accompanied Mr. Oxley and Mr. Evans to the summit of a hill of steep
ascent, which has been called Elizabeth Hill, where some bearings were taken of
remarkable points on the course we intended to pursue. Between a range of hills
running north and south and bearing E.N.E. 10 miles, there is an appearance of a
river, from the steep perpendicular banks descending to a valley or hollow, and
we could trace a line of haze for a considerable length south and north, above
the summits of the hills over the valley. From these appearances we are inclined
to believe that the Macquarie is there situated, running northerly, and that
this watercourse on which we are encamped is only a conductor of the rain in a
body to the river north-westerly of us. We caught a fish in this rivulet.
18th. Monday. Previous to leaving our present encampment I planted
some peach stones on the rich bank of this supposed rivulet. Our course this day
is east-southerly over a country for the first 10 miles appearing somewhat
different from the aspect it presented some days previous, being scarcely so
open and more encumbered with small timber, less hilly, and occasionally covered
with Acacia. The soil is good and the whole fine grazing land, flats or
valleys, producing an abundance of Dalea, with procumbent stems, frequent
at the depôt on Lachlan River. Crossing a deep dry creek, we passed a flat burnt
tract and ascended a range of rocky hills in our course, which there is no
avoiding. From their summit the country to the southward and eastward appears
very hilly and broken as far as the eye could see. We could clearly distinguish
in a north easterly direction, between the opening of the hills, a strip
appearing like a sandbank or a body of reeds on the bank of a river.
It is evident from the uneven and broken nature of the country before us that
there must exist a considerable channel to receive and carry off the great
bodies of water that fall at different seasons on these hills and collect in the
deep gullies below. Our present course being stopped by deep ravines and water
courses, we descended with some difficulty with all our horses, and followed the
windings of the gullies upwards of 3 miles But finding we were not near their
termination we halted at dusk on the margin of a swamp formed by the stagnant
waters. This connexion of ravines, winding in different directions (generally
north-easterly) and bounded by rocky elevated hills on each side, has a very
picturesque appearance, and has been called Glen Finlas. Fragments of limestone
were picked up by our people in a half-burnt st ate.
Some beautiful plants are found in this glen, of which the following are the
most material. Pullenaea sp., rich in flowers--a beautiful shrub--and
Oxylobium sp. The rocky declivities were covered with a beautiful
Acacia, having small, oblong, oblique, villous leaves, and axillary
racemes of flowers, forming a tree 16-20 feet high--A. conspicua.
Bignonia australis is very common, supporting itself on shrubs.
Cryptandra ericifolia is likewise in great profusion.
I here observed with surprise Correa speciosa, reminding us of a part
of Western Australia that none of our party cares to see or visit again.
Croton viscosus of Mount Flinders and Macquarie Range formed here very
strong plants. Pimelea colorans is very fine, and shows its character in
the shaded excavations. A new Helichrysum with slender fine leaves and
terminal white flowers. H. linifolium, is very common. A small
Westringia triphylla, first observed in the low country N.E. of Mount
Aiton, is common beneath the shelving rocks of the glen. A species of
Cassia with 6 or 7 pairs of leaflets, which are lanceolate and revolute,
the glands pedicelled, and the stipules subulate. I gathered specimens of this
shrub in pod. Hibbertia sp., a weak, trailing, shrubby plant, on rocks.
Our journey this day was 14½ miles.
19th. Tuesday. Our journey this morning continued through the Glen,
tracing the several windings of the water-course for the space of 2 miles, where
it terminated, opening to us a most beautiful spacious valley, thinly clothed
with timber of moderate size and covered with brome grass, growing very
luxuriantly in a very rich black soil, and plentifully watered by a rapid,
limpid rivulet[*] winding through its centre, which being connected with the
encircling lofty hills, thickly covered with cypress to their summits,
beautifies the vale exceedingly. The rivulet is about 3½ feet deep and 10-12
feet wide, having the reed grass on its margin, and the Azolla in great
abundance on its surface. Casuarinae are also scattered on the banks--of
large size.
Tracing the rivulet down through the vale, we crossed and continued on its
north bank. Mr. Oxley traced it to its junction with a large fine stream about 2
miles down the vale, which we doubt not is the long wished for Macquarie River.
Its banks are high, shelving and rocky, and thinly clothed with several of the
Eucalypti, among which are abundance of that irregular tree called the
Apple Tree in New South Wales. In the course of our advancement from the north
bank of the Lachlan River to this vale, which is a distance of 150 miles, we
crossed 7 creeks all tending northerly to this river, which accumulates as it
runs the accession of water it receives on both sides from the country around.
The soil continues uniformly rich and good through the vale to its immediate
banks. The bottom or bed of the river is sandy and gravelly, and very large
horse-mussels are found in it. Our huntsmen, who left us early in the glen and
who were the first persons to come upon the vale, saw a large flock of emu
feeding, of which our dogs could only get one bird. There can be no doubt, by
diligent search, that limestone in quantities might be found on the hills, as we
noticed some few fragments yesterday, and there are timbers of various kinds by
which, added to the luxuriance of the soil, all the desires of the industrious
settler are granted. In clear rocky waterholes in the glen there is a species of
Potamogeton with ovate, alternate, broad leaves, and lanceolate undulated
ones beneath the water sheathing the stem. It was not in flower or seed. Tracing
the river up 2 miles we encamped on its banks. The valley is called by Mr.
Oxley, Wellington Vale.[**]
[* Named by Oxley, Bell River, in honour of Major
Bell.]
[** Where now stands the town of Wellington.]
20th. Wednesday. We continued in the vale all the day in order to make
some general observations relative to the natural productions that would be so
beneficial to the settlers in this fertile tract of country. Among the plants
indigenous to its banks, I noticed Solanum laciniatum, common on the
eastern coast, now in fruit, which is ovate and of an orange colour; and a
species of Rubus. Urtica dioica, and Croton acerifolius.
Some of our people, who had been in pursuit of game, brought from the hills some
fragments of stone, which appeared to them to be similar to the limestone of the
creek of that name in long 149°00'00" or thereabouts, which we crossed on the
22nd April on our way to the Lachlan Depôt. This stone very strongly effervesced
on the application of acids. By reference to our situation on the charts it
appears that the doubts we have had respecting our longitude are unfounded; our
computations are correct. We are exactly on the meridian of the Limestone Creek.
It is hence that a singular hypothesis has arisen that the stratum of lime runs
N. and S. on that very particular meridian, which is likewise applicable to the
vegetable productions. Metrosideros saligna, Croton acerifolius,
Callitris sp., and some other plants of the above-mentioned creek are in
great abundance in the vale here and in Glen Finlas.
The stream on which we were encamped on Sunday last we have now called
Molle's Rivulet. By observations taken by Mr. Oxley with a sextant we find our
lat. is 32° 32' 45" S., and long. 149° 20' 00" E. as computed. Mean var. of
compass is 8° 38' E. Mr. Oxley intends to remain at our present station the
whole of to-morrow, which will enable him to ride down the river a few miles.
Our dogs furnished us with plenty of fresh provisions having killed 4 large emus
on the flats near the river, where they abound. We likewise caught some
fish.
21st. Thursday. This morning I accompanied Mr. Oxley and Mr. Evans on
horseback down the river to ascertain its general direction and the character of
the country in its vicinity. Riding down the vale we crossed the rivulet, but
were unable to keep the banks of the river, in consequence of the steep sloping
rocky hills which run down to the water. We were obliged to trace the gullies
through the ravines formed by lofty hills.
At intervals some beautiful views of the bend of the river bounded by rich
verdant flats on each side were presented to us from the openings in and on the
summits of the hills. At one place the river forms a depressed serpentine
figure, and led us at first sight to suspect another stream as large as itself
ran from the northwestward and had formed a junction with it. Having cleared the
hills we followed the river on its immediate bank about 12 miles, in which space
it forms many handsome, bold reaches with occasional easy windings to various
points of the compass but whose general tendency is northerly. Arriving at a
rocky perpendicular bank, perhaps 8o ft. above the river, which runs under it,
we had a commanding view of the rich flats on its banks and the fine grassy land
in the far ground, thickly wooded. About a mile to the northward of this rock
may be seen a very high red bank on the opposite side of the river, to reach
which we rode over some luxuriant tracts covered with a variety of herbage. We
are upwards of 12 miles from our encampment and the whole of the country is a
continuation of that excellence of soil and fit for every purpose of
agriculture. The marks of the flood were about 16 ft. above the level of the
river. The country has been burnt at no distant period, and the grass that has
grown from the old clumps is exceedingly strong and luxuriant.
Returning to the remarkably large rock, which is of a black slaty colour and
nature and has a dip or inclination of about 45 degrees east. I discovered a
specimen of Hovea elliptica, which appeared to be the Poiretia elliptica
of Dr. Smith, gathered at King George's Sound by Mr. Menzies. It is a shrub of
about 5 feet in height, of slender habit, and is in flower. The flowers are
produced from the axils of the leaves. Being the predominant plant of this
singular point we have proposed to call it Hove's Rock, as a compliment to
Antony Hove Esqr., a traveller in Cape Colony. From this point of view are seen
some gentle windings and noble reaches of this wandering stream, which is of a
regular uniform breadth of about 40 yards. Dodonaea heterophylla,
Swainsona coronillaefolia, Haloragis tetragyna, a filiform
Campanula, a viscid Acrostichum, Kennedya monophylla, and
Clematis occidentalis, compose the whole of the Flora of Hove's Rock. We
passed on our route back to the tent several abandoned native encampments on the
river side, from which we picked up some few large shells of the horse-mussel,
which the natives had procured from the reed grass in the river, for the sake of
their fish, which had been roasted. On a Sterculia we observed some ancient
marks of the natives, of the same description and character as at the
Aboriginean Mausoleum under Piper's Hill, but time had mouldered the grave down
to the level of the soil, and we saw no vestige of any remains.
The river, we observed, is apt to divide its stream for a short distance, and
form long strips of islands between the streamlets, which again unite. Near one
of these places we disturbed an emu and four young ones. In our return through
the ravines I gathered fine specimens of Helichrysum linifolium a shrub
of the Myrtaceae, 10-12 feet high, in fruit is rare on the hills; with a
species of Cryptandra, larger than C. ericifolia. Strong marks of
wild or strayed cattle we raced on the banks. Some of the cypresses on the hills
are of large dimensions and excellent for house timbers, and the
Casuarina or Swamp Oak is very strong, of considerable bulk and very
useful for shingling roofs. Bright moonlight night. We discovered abundance of
limestone in rocks and some fragments on the hills; some, that had been half
burnt by the natives having fired the grassy hills, had been changed lime by the
subsequent action of the rain upon it.
RETURN JOURNEY To BATHURST. AUGUST 22ND-29TH, 1817
Aug. 22nd. Friday. Opposite our tent we strongly marked a Blue Gum
tree of considerable magnitude on sides facing the four principal cardinal
points as a mark of our first encampment on the Macquarie River; and I planted
on the bank the two last of my peach stones and the remaining seeds of quinces.
The rain threatened much about the period of our leaving the vale; we were,
however, the more desirous of proceeding forward to Bathurst as our provisions
were daily diminishing. The country as we advanced is a succession of fine
valleys, with gentle rising hills covered with grass and not encumbered with
timber. On a hill running down to the river about 3 miles from our late
encampment we observed considerable quantities of limestone, and some few
specimens of agate, as well as lamina between granite, as we detached loose
pieces of irregular form and slaty substances of divers colours. The rain that
had set in very heavy about noon obliged us, by its incessant continuance, to
stop for the day at about 5½ miles journey. Fair at dusk. The hills around us
abound with a delicate species of Pimelea differing from P.
curviflora in the leaves being more lanceolate, and the lobes of the calyx
(or corolla) being of an orange-red colour and somewhat more acute. Our people
caught several fish of 2 or 3 lbs. weight, and our dogs secured kangaroo and 2
emu.
23rd. Saturday. Continuing our journey on the banks of the river,
which, with the grassy hills, produce a strong luxuriant grass and are thickly
wooded with Eucalyptus sp., Blue Gum and Apple Trees, with very few
Callitris. The travelling near the river becomes difficult, by reason of
some deep gullies that conduct the water from the neighbouring hills to the
river. We noticed some lofty hills on the opposite side, but more distant from
its immediate bank than those on this side, which frequently run down to the
water's edge. The Acacia sp., (allied to A. decurrens), form some
magnificent small trees from 25 to 30 feet high, decorating as well as the hills
the margin of the stream with its tresses of golden flowers. Our dogs chased a
large buck kangaroo from the hills into the river, over which he swam, but was
followed by them and after being turned swam back again and was ultimately
killed. Perhaps there are few instances, as we have seen none in our journey,
wherein a greater tenacity of life had shown itself than in this instance.
We traced the river up about 11 miles, crossing several deep water-courses,
which were very fatiguing and harassing to our pack-horses. The river, which ran
generally from the southward, had formed a gentle wind from the south-west when
we stopped for the day. It was running rapidly over a stony bottom, forming a
kind of slight fall, called a ripple. A species of Acacia oleaefolia [=
A. lunata], and another species, more common on the margin of the
gullies, viz. Acacia sp., with lanceolate, oblique leaves having 3 glands
at equal distances on their interior margin; flowers axillary and panicled. Some
of the Papilionaceae of the class Decandria, before mentioned, are
now very frequent. The height of former flood is about 25 feet above its present
level.
24th. Sunday. Although we had travelled yesterday over about 11 miles
in a winding circuitous route, tracing the river, yet on our direct course to
Bathurst we had not made good more than 4 miles. This delay, added to the great
difficulty of travelling immediately on the river in consequence of the many
deep, sharp gullies, obliged us to quit the river's bank altogether and steer a
course more southerly in order to travel straight to the settlement. We served
out the last of our flour and pork this evening, which ration is to serve us a
week, until our arrival M the plains.
Upon leaving the river the country becomes very hilly, and we were unable to
keep any direct line of course, but chose those elevations easiest of accession.
Had we continued on the river bank, although we might have met with deep gullies
from the hills, we should have generally experienced much better travelling, and
firmer for the horses feet, and a more clear interesting tract of country than
we have had on this day's journey, which only entangled us among hills covered
with loose fragments of granite. Passing the first mile or thereabouts, the land
is thickly burdened with small timber and becomes bushy and scrubby. Daviesia
mimosoides (H.K.), D. acicularis, Oxylobium sp., allied to
0. cordifolum, very common. Acacia sp., allied to A.
armata, but furnished with longer spinescent stipulae, the pubescent variety
of A. obliqua of Persoon: Veronica perfoliala, Dianella
sp., and some common species of Pimelea. The timber is very small, of
Eucalyptus glauca and E. sp., leaves obovate, with flowers in
umbellated racemes, terminal and crowded. On the rocky hills I gathered
specimens of some of Orchidaceae allied to Arethusa; Diuris
sp. Our horses were so much fatigued as to oblige us to halt in a stony
situation on the margin of a gully containing some running water, which we found
very hard, and hence we suspect it originated in a spring. We travelled 8½
miles. Soil excepting in the brushy spots generally good.
25th. Monday. Mr. Oxley rode forward with our tomahawkman, to mark a
road for the baggage and horses to pass over the hills and the easier descents
to the valleys, which expand to a greater extent as we advanced a few miles,
being covered with high brome grass and small timber of Bastard Box. About 7
miles from our last night's resting place we arrived at a small stream of water,
very fine and clear, running westerly over a rocky bottom, and doubtless having
its source in the hills. Passing from this rippling stream of water over some
gentle hills that had been very recently burnt by the natives, the country
becomes less difficult, and the valleys are fine and grassy, abundantly watered
with creeks of running water meandering through the lower lands. The general
inclination of the gullies and water-courses, is to the westward, and hence it
may be inferred that they collect themselves into the rivulet which runs through
Wellington Vale, and ultimately empty themselves into the Macquarie.
The valleys abound with game. Our dogs killed a buck and doe kangaroo. To the
nipple of the abdominal pouch of the latter was attached a small young kangaroo,
which appeared to have grown out of it. It was perfectly naked and blind. By
what means the young of these animals are brought forth and placed in the pouch
is not ascertained and it still remains a mystery. I gathered specimens of a
species of Hakea, a weak twiggy plant, frequent in high grass. In low
brushy spots I observed Cryptandra amara, Dodonaea heterophylla,
Veronica perfoliata, Zamia spiralis and Acacia armatoides.
Exocarpus cupressiformis, a native cherry, is very common on the hills.
Arriving at some running water in a valley our perambulator showed that we had
travelled 11 miles. We therefore halted at 2 o'clock and pitched our tent. Mount
Lachlan bore from us due south very distant.
We could distinguish its lofty summit over an elevated range north of it and
from its blueness of appearance it could not be less than 40 miles from us. We
have made about 10 miles south which was our general course this day.
26th. Tuesday. We left our last night's encampment at an early hour on
the course we travelled yesterday. About 4 miles from our camp a fine creek of
water runs through the valley easterly to the river, which is a few miles
distant from us. Some brushy patches afforded me handsome specimens of Acacia
verniciflua, a new species seen on the Lachlan River, but not until now in
flower; it is highly glossed with a viscid gum. I likewise discovered Acacia
vomeriformis, a new species, with triangular leaves, differing from A.
biflora in the elongation of the exterior angle of the leaf, and the floral
capitulum being solitary, axillary and many-flowered. The flowers are sulphur
coloured. The little Hovea heterophylla is as frequent on the hills as it
is abundant among the grass in the valleys. Several Eastern coast plants now
begin to appear such as Stylidium gummifolium, Tetratheca
ericifolia, and Gompholobium latifolium. I gathered flowering
specimens of a species of Hakea microcarpa, with the lower leaves flat
and entire, while those of the branches are filiform. Loranthus
aurantiacus, parasitical on the Blue Gum, which timber succeeds the
Eucalyptus called Stringy Bark at about 8 miles on this day's journey. We
had advanced about 10 miles when we into a valley, crossed a creek of running
water and, passing through a thick brush of Pultenaea, descended a hill
to the hollow and halted, having made on our southerly course 12½ miles, which
with some to easterly amounted to 13½ miles. Some of the hills produce a slaty
stone, and it is the opinion of some of us that coal might be found beneath its
surface. Abundance of kangaroo in the valleys. They were, however, too fleet,
and only one small buck was taken.
27th. Wednesday. From the valley we pursued our route with an
unwearied perseverance in hopes of reaching the settlement at Bathurst on
Saturday evening next. We commenced our journey over a very rugged broken
country, particularly to the southward; the high lands to the eastward were
enveloped in a thick mist, which however, evaporated as the day advanced. I
observed on a lofty hill some 6 miles on our journey some good specimens of blue
slate, in thick lamina, which I traced down its declivity to a deep running
rocky gully of water. Mr. Oxley was of the opinion that coal might be found
beneath it, but the difficulty of turning such productions found here to any
colonial use or benefit, on account of the extreme rugged nature of the country,
renders its examination scarcely worth the expense it would naturally incur. We
found likewise some specimens of ironstone. On the summit of some small hills,
which are covered with Eucalyptus dumosa, Acacia verniciflua and
A. vomeriformis, very luxuriantly in flower, I gathered seeds of Hakea
microcarpa. Among the grass a secondary variety of the little Hovea
with white flowers appears. At 10 miles ran a fine large deep rivulet of water
on a very rocky bottom. We were obliged to keep along the range for a short
space, until an easy practicable descent enabled us to drive our horses without
danger down the ravine. We crossed this rivulet, which is about 3 ft. deep and
has a rapid current, and encamped on the rocky bank opposite. We noticed marks
of flood 18 feet perpendicular height over the slender waving heads of the
Casuarinae skirting its channel, in which I gathered seeds of a dead
plant of the Umbelliferae, they are like those of Trachymene. The
steep rugged falls abound with Correa virens of the Eastern coast, a
plant I have not seen throughout the whole of the expedition. A rigid stiff
leafless shrub, with apposite spines, not in flower, suspected to be a
Daviesia, is likewise frequent with the Correa. Some fine groups
of crystals were found in the channel of the creek or rivulet. The day continued
fine throughout. Gathered seeds of Hakea microcarpa, with specimens in
fruit.
28th. Thursday. We calculate that we are not more than 36 miles
south-easterly from the settlement and hope to arrive at the plains on Saturday
evening. We had not travelled a mile and a half before we were obliged to change
our course, in consequence of the S.E. rivulet which we had observed yesterday
forming a junction with the other which we had crossed last night, taking a long
winding turn and running southerly. The country in our route is a continuation
of the very broken hilly tract we have travelled over for some days past. The
lower lands grassy, while the more elevated spots are barren and scrubby. I
discovered on these hills a new species of Acacia cuspidata (a variety of
A. diffusa); a shrub of the Proteaceae, which appears to belong to
the genus Anadenia [= Grevillea ilicifolia], and a
Helichrysum with wrinkled calyx, now in flower. Several eastern coast
plants occasionally appear, such as Patersonia sericea, Pultenaea
stipularis, and Billardiera mutabilis [= B. menders], now in
fruit.
About 8 miles on a south easterly course we descended into a valley bounded
by a lofty range running N.W. westerly and S.E. easterly. The valley is very
swampy and covered with very long grass. The timber on the elevated grounds as
well as the surface of the soil, which is very rotten and boggy, has much the
appearance of that at Bathurst. On this range there is a remarkable subconical
point, which Mr. Oxley has called Mount Laver, and another to the northward of
it is entitled Mount Fraser, after His Excellency's collector. Mr. Oxley
ascended the summit of the range and distinguished clearly the plains of
Bathurst above 21 miles distant. The rivulet above mentioned we crossed in the
swampy valley at 10½ miles, at a place where there is a picturesque narrow fall
Of 4-5 feet. It runs to the N.W. parallel with the range. Flood marks are seen
to the height of 6 feet above the level of the river, which of course inundated
the whole of the lands to the base of Mount Laver. Continuing our journey up the
valley, and passing over some short rugged sharp stony hills and small valleys
for about 2 miles, we arrived at a sandy water-course, in which we found some
little water and accordingly halted, having made good 12¾ miles. The Blue Gum is
more abundant now, and, from the dampnes's of he rising grounds, it is evident
rain has lately fallen. The travelling was tolerably good, considering the
rugged hilly parts over which our route led us. The descents, however, were more
gentle and easy.
29th. Friday. We suspect we are distant from the settlement 19 miles
S.E. easterly, and we left our last night's resting place in hopes of
approaching near Bathurst this evening. Crossing several small water-courses
that intersected our course we ascended to the summit of a very rocky eminence
about 1½ miles from our last night's encampment, and from thence the long wished
for plains were presented to our view. On this rugged height I observed
Acacia conspicua, from which I gathered a few more seeds. I discovered
two new plants on this extremely sterile elevation, viz.--Hovea
heterophylla, leaves linear, short and reticulated, furrugineous on the
under side, a new, exceedingly beautiful species, forming a small shrub, now in
flower. I gathered from a plant of it one seed; and Zieria sp., a bushy
dense shrub, with ternate ovate tomentose leaves, and axillary peduncles of
flowers.
We had had a very long campaign in Western Australia, and were literally upon
our last legs in point of dress throughout the whole of us. We all felt a degree
of joy when we cherished the hope that a few hours would restore us to permanent
habitations and to the society of friends and countrymen. Although a hilly long
journey, but having a fine day before us, we determined if possible to reach the
settlement this evening, and accordingly we each set out a fresh man and horse,
with good spirits, and at a brisk pace on an easterly course.
Banksia compar [= B. integrifolia], which we have not seen, or
any of its genus, since April last, is now become very common. Pteris
aquilina or common brake is likewise abundant on the grassy hills. Crossing
several little running waters and particularly the stream running through
Princess Charlotte's Vale we made the Macquarie River 2 miles below the Pine
Hill, and then ascertained that our great anxiety to advance forward had got the
better of our reason and had driven us far too much to the eastward. We are 11
miles from the settlement. The day is well advanced, and a broken track is
before us. I endeavoured on all occasions, and more particularly during the last
5 months, to turn such contingencies to some account. In passing through the
romantic rocky scenery at Pine Hill I furnished myself with seeds of an
Acacia distinct from A. suaveolens, of which I have never before
been able to procure seeds, although repeatedly sought for. Grevillea
sericea, observed at the Fish River, is here in flower, of which I gathered
specimens. Dodonaea heterophylla, so common on the south-westernmost
range of the hills in Australia (Macquarie Range), is here very rich in flower.
The Cypress of the Eastern coast crowns the summit of the hill, and hence
its name. The soil is very poor and sterile, being a course sandy quartzose
grit, in which Daviesia latifolia and Indigofera anstralis (plants
that abound here), grow very strong. We again crossed the water of Princess
Charlotte's Vale, which after many windings runs into the river about 8 miles
N.W. of the settlement, and continuing our route to a clear, thinly wooded hill,
called Mount Pleasant, at the base of which we arrived at 4 o'clock. We had
travelled 15½ miles, and halted here upwards of an hour for our packhorses,
which were far behind. A slender-twigged Sida, not in flower, is frequent
on the immediate banks of the river and in low swampy situations near it.
Casuarina, as usual, is very strong on the river bank, whose stream
forms--below and about the Pine Hill--some very fine picturesque winds over a
stony bottom. Had we bore away more southerly we should not have subjected
ourselves and horses to the inconvenience of our route being intersected by
several deep gullies running into the river. At nightfall we arrived at the
settlement having travelled about 19 miles.
We have been absent from Bathurst 19 weeks and have in our route formed a
circle of upwards of 1,200 miles within the parallels Of 34°30' and 32° S. lat:
and between the meridians Of 149°43'00" and 143°40'00" East, and have
ascertained that the country south of the parallel Of 34° and west of the
meridian of 147°30' East is altogether uninhabitable and useless.[*] We have
all, Mr. Oxley excepted, walked since we left the boats in May last a circuitous
route Of 750 miles.
[* Fortunately sheep and cattle stations have made it rich and
comparatively populous.]
BATHURST-RETURN TO PARRAMATTA, AUG. 30TH-SEP. 8TH, 1817
30th. Saturday. We found the sharpness of the external atmosphere much
more severe than we have experienced previously during the whole of our tour
which is accounted for by the great elevation and nakedness of the plains. The
forced march over gullies yesterday so fatigued our horses that some of them
fell beneath their loads. The horse that carried my cask of plants fell in a
swampy situation and, before the kegs could be taken up, the water had
penetrated between the staves and had slightly injured some of my specimens. I
was diligently employed in unpacking and airing my collection of plants and
seeds. Mr. Oxley wrote a letter on service to His Excellency upon the return of
the expedition.
31st. Sunday. Weather as yesterday. Day fine and clear. Appearances of
a change about 10 o'clock. Wind shifted to the northward. Dark and cloudy. A
storm of hail about 5 o'clock p.m. Showery evening continues till late at
night.
1817. Sept. 1st. Monday. This morning we sent off a large cart loaded
with luggage and collections on its way to Sydney. My collection of plants
forming large packages of bulk in casks, it was found impossible to carry them
on the only cart which we could procure at the plains. Rather than subject my
luggage to accident in passing rivulets, I determined to accompany the whole
myself, giving up my saddle horse to bear that part of my collection that could
not be carried by the cart. About 2 o'clock we passed Campbell's River, which
contained about 4 feet water at the ford--and which is about 9 miles distant
from the settlement. Continuing our journey to the usual halting place 5 miles
east of the river we stopped for the night. Acacia vomeriformis with
Styphelia (triflora) and Daviesia corrymbosa frequent on
the riverside. Wind bleak and cold.
2nd. Tuesday. Our bullocks had strayed away from us to the Macquarie
Valley and were not found and brought back till late. We were in consequence
detained 3 hours later than we intended. At 10 o'clock we left the resting
place, travelling over a gentle hilly country covered with a species of
Eucalyptus with sharp lanceolate leaves, and usually called Box, from the
yellow colour of its wood. Banksia compar is likewise frequent, and is
continually in flower and fruit. At 9 miles we arrived at Sidmouth Valley, where
I gathered seeds of a species of Veronica with apposite lanceolate
leaves. Lotus major and other plants common to this rich vale are now
growing very fine and strong, affording excellent pasturage for the oxen and
sheep that are occasionally turned upon it. It is now very boggy and wet, and
required more than the ordinary exertions of our bullocks to draw the loaded
carts across the swamp running through it. The hills we passed for the space of
7 miles are sterile and sandy, on which I observed Stylidium
grammifolium, the little heterophyllous Hovea, and a yellow
Elichrysum. Acacia decurrens is common and is in flower, and also
A. melanoxylon. At 4 o'clock we descended the hill to the Fish River,
which we forded and pitched our tent on the opposite bank in the old situation.
Mr. Oxley and Mr. Evans, who had remained at Bathurst a day longer than us, left
that settlement this morning and overtook us--being on horseback--at this river.
Cold and chilling. Dull heavy weather.
3rd. Wednesday. From some few observations made in the month of April
last, when encamped on this river, I am now anxious to spend a few moments on
its rocky banks while the bullocks are yoking. Grevillea cinerea is now
in flower, which enabled me to procure more specimens, of which I gathered some
among the rocks of Pine Hill below Bathurst. I then discovered a new
Pimelea, remarkable for its thick woody growth, on which, detached from
its larger foliage, it produces its flowers on long peduncles, which I am
enabled to ascertain by the remaining parts--it not being in flower at this
period.
The journey over Clarence's Hilly Range, which is notorious for its
difficulties when passing with loaded carts is at this period being made more
easy for man and beast. Government men are forming a new line of road in places
where the ascents and descents were short and steep or the bottoms formed by the
waters of the range had become stagnant and boggy. The new road is generally
formed round a rising point when it is safe and practicable--in place of the old
one running over its summit--so that the great horse pulls are in great measure
eased, and the swampy parts have drains cut to let off the waters that formerly
were obliged to remain for want of a declivity to carry them off.
The botany of this range is by no means interesting. The timber is Blue Gum
and the lanceolate-leaved Box (an Eucalyptus), which is of considerable
bulk and is easily distinguished by its dark green shady foliage. I gathered
specimens of the Psychotria observed in April last. Several Eastern Coast
plants now begin to appear; among them Daviesia latifolia, which overruns
the whole; a fine Dedynamous plant, allied to Buchnera, with apposite,
oblong, sessile, serrulated leaves and blue flowers, is common among the grass,
with a Bellis having an elongated scape; and Persoonia pinifolia,
Acacia discolor, Hakea daclyloides, and a Bryonia, are all
common plants about Mount Blaxland.
The difficulty of the road prevented our bullock cart from arriving at Cox's
River, a distance of 16 miles, before the afternoon was far advanced. We were
therefore obliged to halt near the depôt on its banks for the night, although we
had hoped to have proceeded 5 miles up the Vale of Clwyd to Mount York this day.
The horse that carried part of my collection, fell in crossing the uneven rocky
bottom of Cox's River and gave me abundance of employment in rescuing my plants
from destruction. Some black crystals were found at the bottom of the range.
4th. Thursday. From our halting place on the banks of the river we
continued our route up the Vale of Clwyd 5 miles to the base of Mount York,
which we reached about midday. The timber of the Vale is chiefly stringy
bark--of the Eastern coast--of tolerable bulk. The line of road led through
several boggy wet low spots, which had ineffectually been attempted to be
improved by the aid of drains. We were obliged partly to unload the cart to ease
the bullocks in drawing it through the numerous windings of Cox's Pass up to
Mount York, an operation that consumed much time and obliged us to encamp on the
summit of the range. I observed several interesting genera in the pass in April
last, which I did not then collect but left them till my return. The Plants are
as follows:--Epacris reclinata, a beautiful depressed procumbent shrub,
with tubular scarlet flowers, on the bare shelving rocks. A species of
Styphelia, allied to Leucopogon lanceolatus (H.K.), but different
in having its anthera extended beyond the tube of the corolla. Azorella
sp., leaves linear-lanceolate, and corymb compound. Leptospermum sp.,
allied to L. lanigerum, on exposed rocks, and another woolly species of
this genus. The Epacris of which I gathered seeds in April last is now in
flower. The Pass abounds with Podolobium heterophyllum in flower and
seeds.
5th. Friday. Conformable to the instructions received by Mr. Oxley
from the Governor and agreeable to the usual form at the termination of all
expeditions, I gave (sealed up) to Mr. Oxley and Mr. Evans my memorandum for my
journals, which, with other papers they carried with them when they left me this
morning and proceeded forward with all possible despatch to Parramatta to wait
upon His Excellency. In the meantime, while our people were striking the tent
and loading the cart, I descended into the Pass and gathered specimens of
Polypodium sp., a beautiful fern, on shaded rocks. I likewise gathered
seeds and specimens of a shrub of the genus Tetrathera, with angular,
rusty branches, distinct from T. juncea. The plants, as we travelled on
this range, presented to us much variety, but are for the most part well known
Eastern coast species. Banksia compar, which follows us from Bathurst to
the foot of the Pass is succeeded by B. serrata, B. spinulosa,
B. ericaefolia, etc. On the summit of Mount York these continue over the
Blue Mountains whose great sterility contributes not a little to the large
growth and luxuriance of this genus as well as others of the Proteaceae,
viz:--Isopogon, Petrophila, Lomatia and Telopea,
which are now very common--of the latter I gathered a quantity of its seeds. The
Conospermum of the environs of Sydney and Parramatta, and several species
of Persoonia in fruit, are very abundant. Of the Epacrideae, E.
obtusifolia and E. purpurascens, are extremely ornamental on these
arid heights. I gathered specimens of a species of a Staphylea with
obtuse oblong leaves. Of the Papilionaceae, Pultenaea villosa,
P. stipularis, P. retusa, etc., are the most common species.
Platylobium formosum and a new species with ovate, reticulated, silky
leaves, of weak growth are occasionally observed on the dry sands. The
Stylidium, so frequent when I passed in April last, is scarcely to be
traced, having ripened its seeds and died. About 10 o'clock we arrived at
Blackheath, 9 miles from Mount York, where I gathered seeds of a specimen of
Eucalyptus microphylla, a small tree not exceeding 14 feet in height,
forming a close brush and covering the whole of the mountains to the eastward.
The soil of the heath is sterile and sandy, and has much of Casuarina
stricta in a stunted state. Towards the close of the afternoon we arrived at
the (28th mile) wooden house, having travelled 21 miles, from Mount York. A low
repent reclining shrub, not in flower or fruit, with filiform leaves, and which
from its habit I suspect to be a Persoonia, is very abundant in this
day's stage. Lambertia formosa did not appear until we had advanced
several miles on our journey. Of the Rutaceae I gathered some specimens
of a beautiful species of Boronia, flowers small, leaves pinnated and
cuneated, indigenous in the neighbourhood of Port Jackson. Near the end of this
day's journey I gathered specimens of a small shrub of the Proteaceae,
with terminal spikes of pale yellow flowers. The stunted timber is of
Eucalyptus, Blue Gum and Stringy Bark. Hakea dactyloides and H.
saligna form tolerable small trees, in fruit. Xanthorrhea seen in the
brush.
6th. Saturday. From this elevation we could clearly distinguish the
cleared cultivated lands on the banks of the Hawkesbury River. Leaving the 28th
milehouse we continued our route easterly over a barren rugged range of
mountains, the road is bounded by the same description of plants noticed in
yesterday's stage, with others extremely common at Sydney and Parramatta, such
as Bossiaea scolopendria, B. heterophylla, B. microphylla,
Dillwynia ericifolia, and Xylomelum pyriforme, seen not further
west than near the 27th mile mark. Acacia, several species;
Ceratopetalum gummiferum, Callicoma serratifolia, Eriocalia
[= Actinotus] major and minor, and among these gathered the
following plants, viz.: Petrophila diversifolia, Grevillea repens,
much allied to G. Goodii, but differing in having an appressed silky
pubescence on the underside of the leaf--a prostrate plant common on the lands.
Persoonia oleifolia, a species that may range near P. flexifolia,
it produces orange flowers, and is now in fruit. P. microcarpa, a tall
shrub, frequent near Caley's Repulse. P. sp., much allied to P.
mollis, Zieria revoluta. Persoonia abietina [=
curvifolia] a species appearing to be new; leaves linear, channelled and
incurved; in fruit. Styphelia sp. (closely allied to S. reflexa of
Rudge), having a much longer style and mucron to the apex of leaf. Styphelia
sp., perhaps S. reflexa, above referred to. Imbricaria sp., a
dwarf shrubby plant. Boronia triphylla, and B. heterophylla, which
differs from B. pinnata in its ovate leaves, and from B. alata of
Dr. Smith, discovered on the western coast, in being a smooth shrub.
Weinmannia sp., a shrub, common in shaded situations in ravines not far
distant from Mount Banks. Eriostemon sp., leaves narrow, elongated,
cuneated, tuberculated; flowers axillary and solitary. Podolobium
heterophyllum. Pultenaea scabra (H.K.). Daviesia squarrosa of
Dr. Smith. Hibbertia glandulosa. Platylobium reticulatum.
Thelymitra ixioides, and Diuris maculata, in grassy and sandy
situations. Zieria sp., allied to Z. pilosa. Acacia
pugioniformis, a rigid shrub, the seeds of which were sent home by the
"Kangaroo" brig in April last. This is justly considered the most rugged and
oppressive stage of the whole journey to Bathurst, on account of the sandstone
rocks on which the road is formed. The Government carters, who frequently travel
to the settlement at the plains, generally pursue a small circuitous route in
the brush to avoid the joltings of the increased descents, particularly at a
spot called the "Twenty Mile Hollow." About 4 o'clock we arrived at the depôt at
Springwood and halted for the day. The Telopea is very beautifully
bursting into flower, whose brilliant red appearance may be easily traced down
the declivities of the deep ravines shining through the foliage of other plants.
The day continues fine.
7th. Sunday. We left Springwood about 8 o'clock in order to cross the
Nepean River about 10 o'clock. In our road I gathered the following
specimens:--Acacia leptophylla, allied to A. suaveolens.
Dodonea filiformis. Pultenaea sp., allied to P.
stenophylla, and a delicate plant of the Orchidaceae, Serapias
reflexa? leaves scented like the Tonquin Bean. Leptomeria. Thesium
drupaceum or native currant, in flower. About noon we crossed the river at
the Ferry and halted for the day at the Depôt, one mile from the river.
8th. Monday. The tediousness of this day's stage to Parramatta (being
20 miles) was relieved by a few plants presenting themselves in flower, which
furnished me with some fine specimens viz.:--Grevillea juniperina, a weak
reclining villose shrub, with red flowers. Cryptandra sp., a thorny shrub
of much the same habit as the preceding, with crowded obovate-spathulate leaves,
and the lobes of the corolla acute. Commersonia echinata, common in N.S.
Wales. Prostanthera sp., leaves lanceolate, with revolute margins;
flowers axillary and solitary (habit of Westringia). Aster
aculeatus of Labillardière, fine in flower. I arrived at Parramatta at dusk
with the whole of our collection, having been absent on this expedition from
this place about 23 weeks.
PARRAMATTA AND VICINITY, 9 SEPTEMBER-20 DECEMBER, 1817
9th. Tuesday. This morning I waited upon His Excellency the Governor
in order to report my arrival here, who congratulated me, in common with the
rest of our party, upon my safe return and presented me with letters from the
Right Hon. Sir Joseph Banks, of dates 10th and 13th February. The Governor
suggested that he had received instructions to fit out a naval expedition to
survey the north and northwest coasts, under the command of Lieutenant P. King
(son of the late Governor), who had recently arrived, and the letters he had
presented to me contained instructions from home directing me to join Mr. King.
Dined with the Governor in the evening. Upon perusing Sir J. Banks' letters, I
find they contained his commands to that effect. As there are no vessels here at
present suitable for such an enterprise the Governor, who is instructed to
purchase one, is of the opinion that it could not be fitted out before the
beginning of the year, so that sufficient time will be given me to prepare my
collection and write forward my journal relative to the late expedition into the
Western interior.
17th. Wednesday. I waited this morning upon His Excellency, to request
that the packet of memoranda for the journal (which I had delivered into the
hands of John Oxley Esqre. the chief of the late expedition) might be returned
to me as early as convenient to enable me to arrange my collection of plants in
good time to be shipped on board the "Harriet" brig, bound hence to the Cape,
and from thence direct to England, which vessel is expected to sail in about 8
weeks. Received the journals and dined at Government House in the evening.
18th. Thursday. The Superintendent of Government stock having demanded
of me the horse, which had been furnished me to assist in the conveyance of my
collection found during the last expedition over the mountains, I wrote a letter
to His Excellency upon the subject begging as a Government indulgence he would
grant me an order warranting me to retain the horse, which I have now for the
first time in my possession, in order to afford me that assistance which the
nature of my distant botanical pursuits required. This afternoon I received His
Excellency's answer stating that he very much regretted that he could not,
consistently with the nature of his instructions from home, comply with my
request. That it was a sort of indulgence even refused to surveyors and medical
officers of the Government, where various public duties frequently required the
use of a horse, and he concluded with observing that were this indulgence
extended to me "they would have reason to complain of so mortifying
distinction." Although I should not immediately stand in need of a horse, still
I am well aware of the difficulty existing in obtaining any assistance of this
nature from the Government (or from the Governor) when I might require it, and
hence I was determined to avail myself of this apparent favourable opportunity
by applying in a regular manner to the Governor. I returned the horse forthwith
without delay of time, and occupied myself at my specimens.
19th. Friday. It having been intimated to me that the "Matilda" and
"Lloyd" transports, having troops on board, were expected to sail from this port
on Sunday, I wrote to the Right Hon. Sir J. Banks and W. T. Aiton, Esqr., by way
of India, informing them of my return from the late Western Expedition...
23rd. Tuesday. Occupied at my specimens. Visited by Philip King, Esq.,
with whom I had a slight interview upon the subject of the voyage of discovery
now in contemplation. The colonial vessel "Lady Nelson," being the only ship now
in harbour suitable for such an expedition, has been taken up for this service
and is about to undergo a thorough repair.
3rd October. Friday. Having heard of the arrival of the "Lord Eldon"
(Captn. Lamb) I went to Sydney in hopes of receiving letters by her, I found,
however, that this ship had sailed from England prior to the "Lloyd" and "Dick"
which had brought me letters from Sir Joseph Banks. Many interesting plants were
in flowering state by the wayside, of which the following are the most
remarkable, and have afforded me no opportunity of examining them previously.
Comesperma volubile, rich in flower, meandering its slender branches on
erect shrubs. Prostanthera sp., and Xanthosia pilosa (Rudge).
Sphaerolobium vimineum, remarkable for the singular formation of its
style. Pomaderris ferruginea, a small Phyllanthus, and
Patersonia sericea, the seeds of which I sent to England per the
"Kangaroo." Stylidium graminifolium; some Orchidaceae, such as
Thelymitra and Diuris were fast advancing to flower. Tetratheca
glandulosa is now no mean ornament on the wayside, being thickly clothed
with its rich purple flowers. Returned in the evening to Parramatta.
22nd. Wednesday. At the invitation of a friend I went out to his farm
near Liverpool, which gave me an opportunity of examining the botanical
productions of some sterile land on the verge of his estate. I discovered a
beautiful species of Stylidium, leaves linear, revolute; spike elongated,
branching, bracts ovate lanceolate, suffruticose. Daviesia corymbosa,
very frequent in the forest land, in flower. In clear waterholes I observed
Actinocarpus sp., in fruit, appearing larger than the plant discovered on
the Lachlan River in May last: also another aquatic, flowers spiked, one of the
Alismaceae. In the forest land I gathered seeds of a Helichrysum,
leaves linear, flowers white. Like other farms in the neighbourhood it is
overrun with the Bursaria spinosa, now in fruit. Returned to Parramatta
in the evening.
Nov. 14th. Friday. Finished seed and specimen list. Copying journal.
Received the information that the "Mermaid" cutter would be ready for sea about
the 1st of next month. She is now fitting out for Mr. King's Expedition to the
N. and N.W. coasts...Made arrangements relative for mess on intending
voyage.
Dec. 1st. Monday. Waited upon Lieutenant King to ascertain if any day
had been definitely fixed for the sailing of the cutter on the voyage of
discovery. He spoke in an equivocal manner of sailing in 10 days.
2nd. Tuesday. This morning I waited upon His Excellency, according to
appointment, in order to superintend the execution of a few drawings of plants
discovered in the interior, which the Governor intends to transmit to Earl
Bathurst.
15th. Monday to 20th. Saturday. The whole of this week was occupied
with several arrangements necessary to be made for my voyage on board H.M.
Cutter "Mermaid" which was reported ready for sea last Saturday, and Wednesday
was fixed for the departure of the vessel. In consequence I shipped on board the
whole of my luggage on the 16th. I likewise waited upon His Excellency to pay my
humble respects and take my leave of him previous to my departure from the
colony on a voyage of discovery under the direction of Mr. King. On this
occasion the Governor availed himself of the opportunity and asked me whether I
was satisfied with the assistance he had offered me during my residence in the
colony. I thanked him for that species of indulgence. His Excellency has
afforded me assistance by placing myself and a Government servant on the stores,
by which means a ration of beef and wheat was advanced me weekly. I observed
that I had hoped to have been provided with a small house or hut, a Government
horse, and other little assistance that would have prevented a part of that
expenditure on my part which has actually and unavoidably existed. His
Excellency hinted to me that his instructions referring to me were in the most
common and general terms, and that the indulgences I did enjoy were afforded me
more from a favourable impression he had received of me upon my first arrival in
the colony, than from any particular commands from home. His Excellency finally
concluded by charging me with having written to Sir Joseph Banks against himself
upon this subject, and that he had obtained his information from very good
authority. I attempted (with becoming respect on my part) to explain the subject
of my letters, that it was by no means intended as an accusation or charge
against himself, but simply a communication to Sir Joseph Banks, whereby it will
be seen how far those store indulgences and other aids are calculated to render
my expenses in this colony lighter than they were in South America, where I
purchased every necessary. His Excellency left me abruptly, and I returned to a
temporary lodging I had taken until I sailed, determined to write another letter
to Sir J. Banks, stating this interview and its result, doubting not that His
Excellency would likewise write to my Patron on this subject. The sailing of the
"Mermaid" is postponed until the 21st inst.
CHAPTER IX
CUNNINGHAM'S JOURNAL
KING'S WEST COAST VOYAGE
Departure from Port Jackson on board H.M. Cutter "Mermaid" on a voyage of
discovery on the N. and N.W. Coasts of Australia, under the direction of P. P.
King, Esq., Lieut. and Commander.
Dec. 1817. 21st. Sunday. Cloudy but fair. This morning I sailed from
Sydney Cove agreeable to instructions from Sir Joseph Banks. Cleared the heads
of Port Jackson harbour in order to stand out to sea, but was obliged to return
in consequence of foul winds. Came to an anchor in Camp Cove, within the heads,
in about 5 fms. water. The individuals on board H.M. Cutter "Mermaid" engaged in
this service under the command of Lieut. P. P. King are his two officers, Mr.
Bedwell and Mr. Roe,[*] myself, twelve able seamen, two boys and Bongaree, a
chief of natives of a tribe of Broken Bay, who accompanied Captain Flinders in
the "Investigator", and who was taken on this voyage at his own particular
request.
[* Frederick Bedwell and John Septimus Roe. The "Mermaid" was of
eighty-four tons burthen.]
22nd. Monday. We got under way about 6 a.m. and stood out to sea. The
"Harriet," which had sailed from Sydney Cove on her voyage to England, passed us
under our lee with a heavy press of sail.

CAPTAIN PHILLIP PARKER KING
26th. Friday. We bore up N.N.E. yesterday and headed in for land. We
made Green Cape, entered Twofold Bay and anchored about 11 o'clock in Snug Cove,
being completely landlocked. I landed with Mr. King, and on the slopes of the
hills I gathered specimens of a Stylidium with broad lanceolate radical
leaves. A plant with the largest foliage of this genus I have seen, scape and
spike glandulously haired. Lomatia sp. or a variety of L.
polymorpha of Mr. Brown; Trachymene sp. (= Azorella,
Labill); a syngenesious plant; Cacalia (Senecio), with obovate
wedge-shaped leaves, white beneath, and flowers in corymbs; Goodenia sp.,
a shrub of irregular growth, leaves elliptical-obovate-oblong, smooth, flowers
axillary.
On the immediate shores in confined wooded situations I observed a
Melaleuca appearing distinct from M. armillaris. I gathered
specimens of Myoporum sp. agreeing with M. ellipticum, but leaves
rather more acute. Many Port Jackson plants present themselves, but none so
remarkable as a Pittosporum, at this period in fruit. It forms a tree
21-25 feet high and about 14-15 inches diameter.
The fresh water is procured from a low swamp formed by rains from the hills
finding there a lodgement, and although of no great depth (and hence the
operation of filling casks tedious) it is of good quality. Its surface is
covered with Azolla, and Menyanthes exaltata was growing in it in
great luxuriance. On the boggy land near this water place I detected a very
long-leaved Dianella, and flowering specimens of a species of
Veronica with a compound spike of white flowers, which I discovered first
in the Western Interior on the Fish River and margins of creeks running into the
Macquarie River. The wooded slopes and higher lands, covered with
Eucalypti and Casuarina stricta, are of a good rich soil, which is
abundantly indicated by the luxuriance of the herbage and strength and height of
its grasses. The beach has Pelargonium australe and some
Atriplicinae, as also a small Casuarina in fruit, of which I
gathered specimens, with the seeds of an Acaena. Zieria revoluta,
a species discovered at View Rocks at the extremity of plains beyond Bathurst, I
have observed accompanying Aster dentatus [= Olearia dentata] on
the sides of the hills. Distant smokes ascending over the trees indicated
natives, and towards evening, whilst our people were hauling the seine, some
natives came down from the wooded lands to the watering place, but made a
precipitate retreat upon finding they were noticed. The lat. of the anchorage is
about 37°04'30" S_ and long. 150°04'00" E.
27th. Saturday. On the return of the jolly boat, which had been sent
on shore for a few more barecas (breakers) of water, we got under way with a
favourable wind. As we were rounding Haycock Point (of Flinders) we noticed
several natives on the high grassy banks, who hailed us, making many ludicrous
challenging grimaces as we passed. The shores southerly are spacious, and the
sterile hills of deep white drift sand from Cape Howe towards the Ram's Head are
clothed with small low dense bushes. The distant background is well wooded
mountains and irregular presenting points, bearings of which were taken.
28th. Dec. 1817 to 15th Jan. 1818. Between the spaces of 19 days we
had frequently much bad squally weather, which opposed us very considerably as
we passed through Bass Strait on the 3rd of January. We found on the 15th we
were drawing near the land on the south coast[*] called the Archipelago of the
Recherche, but nothing could be distinguished from the masthead and no soundings
were obtained in 80 fms.
Friday, January 16th. 1818. At 5 a.m. we saw the S.E. islands of the
Archipelago, and the wind being at S.W. Mr. King determined to anchor for a few
hours under the lee of Middle Island until the wind became fair, which we
accordingly did, abreast a sandy beach within a half a mile of the shore. It was
late in the afternoon before we anchored, and about an hour before dusk,
affording me some time to observe the botany of the sandy shores of the island.
I gladly accompanied Mr. King and his 2nd officer Mr. Roe to the beach. The
vegetable kingdom here has a very distinct character from that of the East
coast, and it was with very much pleasure I noticed plants that I had previously
only seen in a cultivated state. Stylidium fruticosum is frequent in
quartzose rocky situations, at this time not in flower or capsule;
Scottea (= Bossiaea) dentata, with the preceding, forming a
handsome dense shrub. On the shores and sterile sandy hills I gathered the
following specimens. Pimelea sp., leaves ovate-lanceolate, alternate,
capitulum small conical, calyx woolly on its exterior. Polygonum sp.,
leaves cordate, undulately curved, 3-nerved, stem fruticose, twining, flowers
axillary. Ceanothus sp., leaves ovate, entire, hoary beneath; flowers in
terminal racemes; a shrub 6-8 ft. high. Baeckia sp., leaves linear,
flowers clustered, axillary, solitary. Malaleuca sp., a shrub in fruit.
Atriplicinae, a procumbent reclining shrub with a terminal spreading
panicle, in fruit. Westringia sp., appears to be the W. Dampieri
of Mr. Brown, afforded me a few seeds. I gathered seeds of an Acacia, forming a
close bushy plant, with narrow lanceolate leaves.
[* Of Western Australia,]
No marks or signs of natives appeared, but we observed numerous impressions
of the smaller kangaroo on the higher grassy parts of the island, as well as
several deserted nests of sea fowl. At 8 o'clock p.m. we all returned on board
in the jolly boat. No fresh water was found on this island.
17th. Saturday. At 4 a.m. we got under way, with a fair wind and stood
a course direct for King George's Sound under a heavy press of sail.
KING GEORGE'S SOUND AND OYSTER HARBOUR, 20-31 JANUARY, 1818
20th. Tuesday. This morning our course for the land was E. to E. by S.
and we got soundings in 38 fms. At noon the haze cleared off and we entered King
George's Sound. Doubling Bald Head we anchored for the night off a white shore
bounded by a very remarkable ridge of sand,[*] and Mr. King proposing a visit to
Seal Island (bearing E. by N. about 1½ miles from us) I joined him in the boat
with Mr. Bedwell, our first officer. In consequence of the heavy surf rolling in
from the open sea against this rocky island, it was not without some difficulty
we landed on its lee side. Several seals of a large size were asleep on those
parts of the rocks near the water's edge and, with others which were ambling
among the brushwood on the higher parts of the island, they made a precipitate
retreat headlong into the sea on being disturbed, with the exception of one
which was killed with clubs, and proving to be of the hair kind was nothing
worth.
[* "Between Seal Island and the first sandy
beach."--King.]
The plants on this naked granite rock are very inconsiderable. An ornamental
plant called Candollea cuneformis, of Labillardière, is the most
conspicuous; it was in flower, and I gathered with it the following species.
Lavatera sp., flowers axillary, white. Lobelia sp., leaves ovate,
glossy; flowers, solitary and small. This plant is abundant beneath large stones
and under the immediate shade of rocks. The shrub of the Atriplicinae
noticed at Middle Island, from its density, affords a comfortable refuge and
habitation to a small blue-backed penguin, of which our people secured several,
with some gulls. The bottle left by Captain Flinders was not found, but the
square bottom of a case bottle was picked up;[*] from which circumstance it may
be inferred that subsequent vessels might have touched here, and landing upon
the island had destroyed it. We quitted the island and returned to the cutter,
and thence landed on the sandy western shore near our anchorage. We ascended to
the summit of the deep loose sandy ridge, and from there we had a good view of
the sea to the southward and westward and of Vancouver's Breakers. A
Scaevola, with oblong serrulated leaves and elongated terminal spike of
blue flowers, grew extremely strongly and luxuriant on these and slopes, with
Pimelea decussata (= ferruginea), having the habit of P.
nivea, and the following interesting plants covered the sides of the ridge.
Adenanthos sericea in flower, a large close shrub. Malaleuca sp.,
leaves linear, rigid, roundish, sulcated. Several shrubs of the
Epacrideeae, but not in flower. Acacia biflora (H.K.), some
Gnaphalia, and a Trachymene with remains of flowers, probably the
Azorella compressa of Labill.
[* Left on the island by Lieutenant Forster of H.M.S. "Emu" in
1815.]
We found some shells on the highest part of this sandy ridge, and in our
descent, knee deep in the sand, we picked up specimens of the petrified branches
of trees, observed before by Captain Flinders, which were light and sonorous
when struck against each other. It was dark when we left this beach for the
cutter, on board of which we arrived at 8 p.m.
1st. Wednesday. We weighed, and stood over to the entrance of Oyster
Harbour, and, having previously sent a whaleboat into the narrow rocky channel
to sound, we entered through the mouth of the harbour and anchored near the
shore in 5 fms. It was early in the afternoon when I landed with Mr. King, who
was anxious to take in as much water and wood as our small vessel could well
stow. An old well was found nearly filled upon the beach, which our people
opened and enlarged, and the water that oozed through the ground soon afforded
us an ample supply of a deep colour but good quality. Aware that our stay here
would be but short I was the more anxious to employ my time as profitably as
possible.
On the barren, dry, stony hills and grounds rising from the beach Banksia
grandis arrests the attention of the collector more particularly than any of
its kindred indigenous around it. It forms a small tree of irregular growth, is
very abundant, and at this season is in flower and young fruit. B.
marcescens and B. attenuata; Dryandra armata, fruit and
flowering state; and D. nivea, I noticed in these exposed sterile spots.
Of the Proteaceae I gathered 5 specimens; they were of several of its
established genera--Petrophila rigida, and a shrub of like stiff habit,
which I suspect is Mr. Brown's Isopogon attenuatus, Adenanthos
cuneata, a large silky shrub, near the shore. Hakea oleifolia and
H. linearis, in partly humid situations on the hills, Dasypogon
bromeliaefolius, a suffruticose plant with a globular head of flowers and
rough foliage, furnished me with seeds and flowering specimens. An
Oxylobium is at this time in flower and fruit and decorates the brush on
the sands of the immediate beach. Jacksonia spinosa was also in flower,
of which, I gathered a few seeds.
Other specimens I collected this morning were the following. Leptospermum
linearifolium, tree 12-14 feet high, with pendulous branches, on the
immediate shores. Hibbertia perfoliata, a feeble shrubby plant, in humid
peaty places near the watering place. Baeckia speciosa, a beautiful,
delicate plant. Epacris sp., with large white flowers and attenuated
leaves, in similar situations; and a species of Tremandra, a genus allied
to Tetratheca, whose purple flowers were particularly conspicuous among
the grass and herbage near the well of water. Anigozanthos flavida is of
most luxuriant growth in the deeper peaty spots, where the overhanging branches
of Banksia attenuata protect and shade it from the more immediate rays of
the sun. I gathered its seeds.
The stunted timber trees of these hills are of the Eucalypti, of which
I have not seen any flowering specimens. Having returned to the vessel and taken
care of the specimens collected, I accompanied Mr. King to an island in the
harbour (the Gardener's Green Island of Captain Vancouver). We could not
discover any trace of vegetables that might have been produced from the seeds
sown by that navigator. The island in many parts abounds with rats, which might
have (long since) destroyed any vegetables raised thus; and their deep burrows
in the hollow soil render walking upon it somewhat difficult. The
Rhagodia, a plant of the Atriplicinae, of Seal and Middle Islands,
abounds here in fruit. I circumambulated the island while Mr. King was occupied
in his observations, but made no discoveries in botany. A Salicornia and
a Mesembryanthemum, perhaps the M. glaucescens of Haworth, with
purple flowers, prevail on its shores, as they do on some parts of the mainland.
Of the genus Xanthorrhea I have this day noticed 3 if not 4 species, but
none in flower. I gathered seeds of a species with an arbusculous caudex, the
plant observed by Mr. Brown in 1801, having the caudex and foliage of the
arborescent Xanthorrhea, but with a different inflorescence. It would
appear that the end of March and the beginning of April is the season of
flowering of this very remarkable plant.
22nd. Thursday. Early this morning several of our people were sent to
the flats, where they procured quantities of fine large oysters and fair mussels
at low water. I landed with an intention to spend the whole of the day on and
about the shores on the west side of the sound. Mr. King and one of his officers
were fully occupied, with all the hands that could be spared from the duty of
the vessel, on the opposite shores at the wooding place, in measuring a base
line for a survey of Oyster Harbour. Tracing the sandy beach to the foot of the
hills I found many of the plants I had noticed yesterday, with other well-known
species, viz:--Dryandra plumosa, Hakea prostrata (=
glabella), H. florida, also Acacia alata and A.
pulchella, of the latter I gathered seeds, with another species having
simple, linear, angular, mucronated leaves and twisted pods.
The rocky shores abound with a blue-flowered Billardiera, probably
B. fusiformis, and with it Myoporum appositifolium afforded me
specimens for examination. On the hills I gathered specimens in fruit of two
species of Eucalyptus, the one with very large capsules, and the other
with fruit smaller and hemispherical, forming trees 12-16 feet high; they were
the same species as those observed yesterday on the opposite shores,
Melaleuca sp., in fruit, allied to M. gibbosa. Pimelea sp.,
leaves ovate-lanceolate; calyx pubescent and villose outside.
Dodecandria, a stunted shrubby plant. I gathered seeds of a specimen of
Patersonia, the leaves of which are woody inside, and a twining plant of
the Asphodeleae, of the habit of Eustrephus.
About 4 o'clock I returned to the vessel, having made a circuitous round of
several miles with little success. I had observed on the Eastern shores, as we
passed in the vessel, a remarkable tree on the hills, whose profusion of orange
flowers rendered it very conspicuous, and this afternoon I landed to discover
what it was and to collect specimens of it. To my surprise I found the shrub I
was in search of was a Loranthus, and the more remarkable as it is
arborescent and terrestrial, so contrary to the usual habits of this parasitical
genus. Its flowers are generally hexandrous. This species appears to be the
L. floribundus of Labillardière. I have traced a considerable analogy
between some American species of this genus and those of genera of
Proteaceae indigenous on this coast, particularly of some species of
Hakea, in the pale colour and diversified shape of foliage, with the
corolla not very unlike the long calyx of Adenanthus and the remarkable
insertion of the stamina on or near the apices of the petals. In
Loranthus may be one proof of its near relation to this extensive
Australian family, which had been already suggested by a very eminent botanist.
In returning along the rocky shore I gathered specimens of a glutinous shrub of
the class Didynamia, a species of Anthocercis with large white
flowers; the whole plant is extremely viscid and very graveolent. The
Mesembryantheum noticed yesterday being in fruit on the sandy shore I
gathered ripe seeds of it. Having occasion to ascend over some fragments of
rocks and loose stones, I discovered this afternoon a large nest of very small
concavity, built on the summit of an elevated rock 30 or 35 feet high,
perpendicular on all sides and hence inaccessible to the emu by which I had
suspected it to have been formed. It was deserted and old and might have
belonged to the eagle family.
23rd. Friday. Occupied some time in the shifting of my plants. About
10 o'clock I landed and employed myself on the east and north east shores of
Oyster Harbour, where I gathered the following specimens:--Patersonia
sp., leaves long and narrow; seeds large and glossy. Lobelia sp.,
larger than L. alata, flowers blue. Haemodorum, spike elongated,
and another species with spreading panicle. These grew in a black peaty soil,
generally beneath the shade of trees, particularly Banksia attenuata,
whose stems, although short, were 24-30 inches in diameter, and at this time in
flower and young fruit. On the immediate shores and sides of the hills I
gathered Comesperma virgatum (Labill). Olax sp., a slender shrub,
with small, solitary, white flowers. This plant agrees in habit with
Spermaxyrum phyllanthi of Labill., and may be the plant he has figured.
Scaevola sp., allied to S. crassifolia, corolla very woody
outside. Epacris sp., a shrub of low stature, on the sandy shores.
Styphelia sp., leaves cordate; flowers small; in dry rocky situations.
Xerotes sp., with Gompholobium tomentosum, in shady peaty spots.
On the sides of the hills in exposed situations I gathered specimens of a
Stylidium clearly allied to Candollea glauca. Lasiopetalum
purpureum and Acacia ciliata were but just past a flowering state, on
the rocky, sandy shores. Toward the close of the afternoon I returned on board,
having made no further discoveries in botany. The small flies were becoming
exceedingly troublesome on board as well as on shore.
24th. Saturday. Every person fully employed in wooding, or in the
necessary duties of the vessel, or engaged with Mr. King's party on shore. And
such was our shortness of hands that it would have occasioned Mr. King much
inconvenience had he allowed me one or two seamen, at my request, to accompany
me in this day's distant research, for protection and assistance. Taking my gun
with me I left the cutter with an intention to visit as much of the west and
north west sides of Oyster Harbour as the day would admit, passing over
considerable downs of land, whose point or cape forms a species of promontory
between the Sound and the harbour in which we are at anchor, I observed some
aged specimens of Dryandra cuneata advancing to a flowering state. It
rises to a tree of rugged, irregular growth 14-16 feet in height, with
Banksia quercifolia, a shrub in young fruit. In some boggy hollows near
these extensive sands, occasionally inundated by the sea, I gathered specimens
of Scaevola sp., leaves linear, short; a shrubby plant. An Aster
with small oblong linear leaves; flowers terminal, hoary, solitary. A genus
intermediate between Westringia and Satureia, leaves ternate, lanceolate,
obtuse, upper lamina of corolla villous; a shrubby plant. Stylidium
glaucum, this appears to be Candollea glauca, Labill., and is easily
distinguished from the plant gathered yesterday by its more attentuated growth
and slender smooth spike of flowers.
Avoiding a tract of brushwood on the skirts of the harbour, which had lately
been fired by the natives and hence could afford me nothing, I stretched over
the shelly flats, being low water, to Bayonet Point of Captain Flinders, a
remarkable elevated angle of the harbour, on and in the vicinity of which I
procured the following interesting specimens:--Petrophila fastigiata,
Br.; Anadenia pulchella, a rigid shrubby plant, remarkable for its
glutinous follicles; Adenanthos obovata, a twiggy shrub with red flowers;
Hakea ellipitica, specimens in fruit; Hakea ceratophylla;
Persoonia longifolia, leaves elongated, linear and falcated; Persoonia
articulata, with the preceding; Conospermum coruleum, of tufted
growth. The summit of this point abounds in the beautiful plant named
Beaufortia sparsa, in flower with others of the Melaleucae,
particularly Melaleuca stiata and M. thymoides, described by
Labillardière. The latter has small capitula of flowers yellow. Casuarina
nana, a dwarf, stubby shrub.
On the immediate shores a very remarkable species of Daviesia, forming
a shrub about 5-6 feet high, is by no means common. Another specimen D.
flexuosa, branches zigzag, spinescent, the strophiola of the seed bilobed. I
gathered a few seeds of a Gompholobium, whose legumen is very large, a
dwarf shrub. Kennedya sp., leaves ternate, ovate, hoary. A
Myoporum allied to M. viscosum, but distinct in having
ovate-lanceolate acute leaves, and glandless peduncles, I found growing on the
rocky beach in flower and fruit. The soil of Bayonet Point is of a red, dry,
sandy nature, with a very small proportion of loam. The wind at S.W. was very
strong about 3 o'clock and, the country in that direction being in flames, the
Sound was completely enveloped in smoke from that quarter. I returned on board
at the close of the afternoon, and having placed my plants out of danger I
accompanied Mr. King to the rock where I had discovered the large nest. The
country is now in flames around us in various patches, but none of us have seen
any of the natives, although no doubt they are watching our movements.
Sunday. As the French Commander Baudin[*] and Captain Flinders lay
down in their charts a river having its embouchure at the bottom of Oyster
Harbour, Mr. King proposed a boat excursion up it in order to ascertain its
course, depth, width and soundings, with the general character of the land on
its banks. Having attended to all my plants that required it I joined the party
consisting of Mr. King, Mr. Bedwell, our friend Bongaree, the native, and four
able hands. Our course to the supposed river's mouth, as laid down on the
charts, was much impeded by the flats in Oyster Harbour, over which in some
places we had scarcely water to float us over. Working into the deep water, we
ran down to the extremes of the harbour into a narrow bend, which we supposed to
be the river we were in quest of, but soon found our mistake by shoaling our
water to 3 feet. Clearing this bight for the deep water and trending easterly
Mr. King took several bearings of our situation and then stood in for the shore,
when, upon closing with the land, we found the mouth of the river which we
entered. It might be 250 yards wide, although very shallow, 6-9 feet deep, but
advancing we got 2 fathoms, and a width from 100-60 yards. The windings are not
abrupt or numerous, but easy, the banks are elevated, sloping and grassy. The
river abounds in waterfowl of various descriptions, but none were shot. About 3
a.m., having advanced about 4¼ miles up the river, we stopped and landed on its
left bank in order to take some refreshment.
[* Rivière de Franc_ais of Baudin.]
While our people were lighting a fire I took a range in these sandy woods and
detected the following plants:--Billardiera sp., flowers terminal
clustered, leaves ovately lanceolate, undulate, stem subvolubilous (rather
twining). Trackymene compressa (Azorella compressa, Labill:) a
small weak alated plant. Dasypogon bromeliaefolius was very abundant and
strong on the banks.
Previous to embarking in the boat I left a few peach stones in the best spot
these banks would afford me as an indication to future navigators that this
river had been visited. Its inclination was from the N.E. Pushing off, we
descended this river, and after grinding over beds of oyster shells in the flats
of the harbour we arrived at the cutter at dusk. This river doubtless receives
much fresh water in the rainy seasons as well from the interior as from the
hills bounding it. The tributary streamlets being conveyed into it by the small
creeks we noticed as we sailed up it. On the flats in the harbour our native
chief caught us a large fish weighing 22½ Ibs.
26th. Monday. Shifting my plants till 8 a.m. and afterwards on shore
with Mr. King, who was desirous of taking some necessary bearings from the
highest range of hills to the eastward of our anchorage. Following the range
northerly, inclining to the westward, I examined many plants of the arborescent
Xanthorrhea habit, before made mention of, for specimens of perfect
inflorescence, but with no success. In rather damp shaded spots on the slopes of
the hills covered with timber I discovered a. species of Dryandra in
considerable patches, its involucrum of flowers in decayed condition. It has the
foliage of D. blechnifolia and D. pteridifolia, and perhaps may
prove these singular fern leaved species to be but one genuine kind and not
specifically distinct. On the rocky sandy shores I gathered specimens of a
Viminaria, scarcely distinct from our Port Jackson V. denudata,
but of more slender growth. Several new smokes issuing from the woods above the
trees indicated the presence of natives, but none made their appearance.
27th. Tuesday. I have been looking around me these few days past for a
fit situation for planting the seeds of European fruits, the only spot to be
chosen for that purpose is near the water-hole, where the soil is a sandy
heath-mould. I accordingly marked off a small patch a few feet square, cleared
it of the brush and small plants and prepared the ground for the seeds I intend
to sow. In the afternoon I accompanied Mr. King to Green Island, where he wished
to take a few more bearings and observations. The many sea birds that pass the
night on this island were beginning to flock around it in order to take
possession of their several spots of rest. Leaving the island we sailed over to
the mainland and landed at Bayonet Point. Whilst occupied in taking some angles
I rambled on the elevated point among the many interesting shrubs with which it
was covered, but having already visited this spot I found at this time nothing
but what I had previously detected. The little delicate Stylidium allied
to S. glaucum, with lanceolate-spathulate leaves, afforded me good
duplicate specimens. Ispogon attenuatus is very fine in the rocky
background. I gathered duplicate seeds of Patersonia sp., as also seeds
of a Kennedya. The natives, who (from the fires) appear to be all round
us, continue to be very shy, and so far from allowing us to communicate with
them they keep altogether out of sight, although we noticed this afternoon their
fresh fires lighted among the trees near the beach, about half a mile to the
southward of us, between us and the cutter.
28th. Wednesday. This morning I went on shore and sowed the following
seeds, stones etc., peach, apricot, lemons and loquats, with scarlet runners,
long-podded beans, marrow-fat peas, celery, parsnip, cabbage, lettuce and
carrot. Round this small garden I formed a slight hedge of green boughs and
large branches. I occupied myself on the western shores of the harbour, chiefly
in low woods subject to the encroachments of the sea in spring tides. I gathered
specimens of Leptospermum linearifloium (= Agonis linearifolia),
with some other of this genus not in a flowering state. Our people struck the
tent that had been fixed up on shore, and with all tools were brought on board,
Mr. King intending to get under weigh so soon as the wind became favourable. At
night our people drew the seine at the bottom of the harbour in the mouth of the
river and were tolerably successful.
29th. Thursday. It was the intention of Mr. King, should the wind have
continued steady at S.E., to have cleared out of Oyster Harbour if not to stand
out to sea, but the wind would not allow us to get under weigh. I went on shore
to procure a few more seeds on the rocky hills on the Eastern side. Banksia
grandis, so very fine and rich in flower at this period, could not be found
in ripe fruit. I gathered fine flowering specimens of Tremandra sp., with
apposite elliptical leaves and purple flowers.
This afternoon I accompanied Mr. Bedwell and Mr. Roe to Seal Island (distant
at 5 miles), who were sent in the whale boat to leave a sealed bottle containing
a memorandum, written on parchment, stating our arrival, in a safe and secure
situation on the island. Having wooded and watered here, our intention was to
proceed by the first fair wind on our voyage to the N.W. coast, and finally that
we should leave a similar document on the first accessible island on that coast
stating more particularly our future route. I furnished myself with some seeds
of Candollea cuneiformis, Labill., the ornament of this solitary rock;
and seeds of a reclining shrub of the Atriplicinae. Two seals, a female
and a cub, were shot by our people, and others only wounded rolled down into the
surf and disappeared in an instant. The bottle was well corded up and fixed
securely to the shelving part of a large stone at once visible and at the same
time perfectly secure from the action of strong winds or other natural
destructive causes. Our boat people plundered the nests of the penguins, of whom
sixteen were taken. Leaving the island we hoisted our sail to the light breeze,
which wafted us to the cutter about 8 p.m.
30th. Friday. Expecting that Mr. King would get under weigh every
hour, should the wind become fair, I was prevented going away from the shore
immediately abreast the vessel. Acacia biflora and A. marginata
are now in flower on the beach: Dryandra formosa, common near the
watering place is past a flowering state. I gathered some fair specimens in
flower of Olax Phyllanthi (= Spermaxyrum phyllanthi); also a dense
stunted shrub of the Diosmeae, flowers decandrous; style elongated, apex
glanduliferous; leaves linear, angular, glandulous. The rocks of the immediate
shores are covered with a shrubby plant of the Epacrideae, which appears
to be Andersonia sprengelioides.
31st. Saturday. The present unfavourable points from which the wind
prevails (S. westerly) rendering exceedingly doubtful whether the cutter could
leave the harbour to-day, I landed and directed my course to Princess Royal
Harbour, a part I had not yet visited. Tracing my former route along the beach,
I ascended the deep, barren, stony hills that bound the Sound to the westward.
In making the rocky north point of the entrance into Princess Royal Harbour, I
gathered the following specimens and seeds on the rugged hilly country in its
vicinity:--A species of Hakea, larger than H. elliptica, leaves
more broadly elliptical, rounded at point, triplinerved, Leptospermum
marginatum, Labill., a tree 10-12 ft. high. Hovea rhombifolia, a
shrub 4 ft. high. Gastrolobium sp., a spreading tree. Oxylobium
sp., leaves lanceolate-ovate.
This rocky point of entrance is covered deeply, chiefly with Eucalypti
and common Banksia, but the whole side of the harbour being entirely
recently fired by natives I added nothing more to my few plants already
gathered. Ascending to the highest point I had a fine view of the two harbours,
sound, and the lagoon laid down in the charts. I observed the smokes of natives
some distance beyond the lower ranges of the hills to the northward and
westward. I descended to the lagoon, on the margins of which I hoped to make
some further botanical discoveries. I gathered specimens of a Comesperma,
with leaves linear, elongated, obtuse; flowers yellow. Comesperma sp.,
leaves linear, scattered; flowers in a capitated spike, allied to C.
calymega Labill. Lobelia sp., flowers terminal, and blue stem.
Epacris sp., leaves sheathing, lanceolate, acute; flowers solitary,
scarlet; Santalaceae, a shrubby plant, flowers very small.
Leptospermum sp., leaves lanceolate, attenuated at base; branches and
calyx smooth; flowers axillary, solitary. Leptospermum sp., leaves
lanceolate, rigid, and crowded; flowers in racemi, calyx teeth shorter than the
calyx-tube. I made a diligent search for the curious Pitcher Plant,
Cephalotus follicularis, Labill. around the lagoon and in the boggy parts
near it, but without success.
Returning over some downs of sand I observed a succulent plant, with
linear-lanceolate acuminate leaves, in fruit; the capsules angled, and sulcated
habit of Crassula. I gathered a few more seeds of Candollea
cuneiformis, frequent near the beach, forming an irregular stunted shrub.
Dryandra nivea and D. armata with Lasiopetalum solanaceum,
the latter at this period in flower, and fruit in a very young state, is
frequent on the hills I passed over in the day's route, on which, in thick
brushwood, I started a kangaroo of the size and kind called Wallabaa[*] in New
South Wales. At 4 p.m. I returned to the cutter. Fresh native fires seen in
Oyster Harbour near the entrance of the river, at dusk.
[* Wallaby.]
BeforeItake my leave of the rich botanical repository of sterling worth--King
George's Sound--a few remarks may not be altogether unuseful and unnecessary.
The extensive family of Proteaceae, whose genera and species occupy a
considerable portion of the shores of the Sound, have a varied diffusion.
Banksia grandis is only to be found on the above mentioned dry exposed
sides of the hills, where it flowers and fruits in a limited but healthy state
of luxuriance. B. attenuata has been observed on the shores, in a deeper
peaty soil, forming a tree of some bulk. B. marciscens, B.
cocinea, and B. quercifolia grow near the immediate shores in and dry
places, but rarely on the hills, and never in loose sand. Excepting Dryandra
pteridifolia and D. blechnifolia the whole of this genus inhabits dry
sterile hills with Banksia grandis. Other genera such as Isopogon,
Petrophila, Hakea, Anadenia, Adenanthos, are
likewise found in and rocky and sandy situations, while Franklandia and
some Persooniae enjoy the moist peaty levels or damp heathy spots on
these hills...Thus the culture of these interesting plants will be better
understood in England at all events their native habits and soil whereof little
or no loam forms a component part.
It is a well-known fact that our pride of New South Wales, Telopea
speciosissima, so tenacious of life in its natural, sterile, rocky places of
growth, seldom retains it when removed by the settlers into the richer loamy
soil of their gardens.
OYSTER HARBOUR TO ENDERBY ISLAND, 1-25 FEBRUARY, 1818
1818. February 1st. Sunday. The wind shifting to S.E. by S. induced
Mr. King to get under weigh. By the assistance of a kedge-anchor we hauled out
of Oyster Harbour about 10 o'clock a.m., and after many tacks we beat out of the
Sound. At 4 p.m. we had rounded Bald Head and stood westerly along the
coast.
The hills overlooking the immediate coast were one grand blaze of fire,
having been kindled by the natives, and its running course before the wind
illuminating all around, these sterile elevations had a brilliant effect.
2nd. Monday. No land in sight.
3rd. Tuesday to 9th. Monday. The slight dysenteric (and other)
complaints which had afflicted the whole of the crew are less violent. Early
this morning we passed the Tropic of Capricorn in about 113° East Long.
Expecting from our situation that we were drawing near the land, we wore ship at
8 p.m. and stood off for a few hours. No soundings in 80 fms.
10th. Tuesday. At 5 a.m. we stood in for the land, and at 8 we got
soundings in 35 fms. The land, which is called Terre d'Endracht by the French,
is extremely sterile, is somewhat elevated and hilly, gradually tapering at its
extremes and, with the immediate shores, is very sandy and covered with low
stunted shrubs. At 1 p.m. we approached the northern low extremity (N.W. Cape)
which extends out westerly in a depressed point of sand, with apparently a deep
bight or bay behind it. Passing some very dangerous breakers half a mile from us
we stood on for the cape and got a bottom in 7½ fms. The latitude of the North
West Cape is 21°52'43" S. and long. 114°30'30" E.[*] We saw a sea snake, several
large turtle and some dolphin near the vessel. Several large fine butterflies
and small flies came off to us from the land. The latter became very
troublesome. No fires or appearance of natives were observed on this dreary
coast. The deep bay which trends in here to the eastward from the cape and which
we are about to examine is entitled Exmouth Gulf, in honour of Lord Viscount
Exmouth. Falling calm we sounded and got a bottom in 13 fms. when we dropped an
anchor with coir (made of the fibre of the cocoa nut) cable for the night, about
7 miles distant from the land and 2 miles from a sand island.[**] Violent gusts
of wind with heavy cross swell made the vessel labour considerably.
[* 21°47' S. 114°10' E.]
[** "Three or four miles eastward of the Cape."--King.]
11th. Wednesday. In heaving up our anchor we most unfortunately parted
from it, and having but an indifferent buoy lost it altogether, with some fms.
of cable.
12th. Thursday. Tacked at 6 a.m., being close on board an island from
which ran a reef of rocks.[*] Our leadsman had 9 and 8½ fms. In the course of
the morning's examinations several islands were seen from the mast head, of
which some were distinguished from the deck, low and barren. These islands are
no doubt much visited by turtle, of which we have now abundance floating around
us. Stood in for the main. Anchored in a bottom of sand and small shells.
[* Baudin's Muiron Island.]
13th. Friday. In consequence of the foulness of the bottom we had the
misfortune to break one of the flukes of a second anchor upon weighing this
morning. It appears it is a rock crusted over with mud, sand, and shells, a few
inches thick. Mr. King was in consequence under the necessity of running back to
the last anchorage in hopes of being able through the medium of the buoy
attached to the lost anchor, to find the particular spot and endeavour to weigh
it. The buoy not "watching" (or floating over the water) the anchor was not
discovered. Occupied at my specimens. Several large turtle, and seasnakes of an
orange colour are seen around us.
14th. Saturday. At 7 a.m. we made sail and stood on for the mainland,
our soundings varying from 12-8-7-½ fms. within 1½ miles of the shore; some
islands observed from the mast head are low banks of sand, bare of vegetation,
but the shores of the main are bounded by sandy hills or ridges and covered with
small shrubs. The heat was very oppressive during this day. The thermometer in
the face of the sun rose to 119½° on deck.
15th. Sunday. At 6 o'clock a.m. we were within half a mile of the
shore, tacked and stood along the coast northerly, sounding continually. We had
a slight breeze from southward and westward. This day we carried on our survey
among an archipelago of sterile sand islands, in various depths of water. At 5
we anchored in 3 fms. in a little bay[*] about 1½ miles to the westward of a
long low island. I accompanied Mr. Bedwell, 1st officer, on the shores of the
bay; he was sent to procure turtle and make some observations as to the
resources for wood, water etc. The beach is rather steep, rocky and clothed with
the mangrove, Avicennia tomentosa, forming large round bushes, which at
sea, in other situations, had been mistaken for clusters of rocks. It was dark
when we landed and few observations could be made. The vegetable kingdom
appeared from the sands to be very inconsiderable, some species of
Salsola, Mesembryanthemum, with Salicornia and some of the
Atriplicinae scattered on the shores. Some Acacias of very humble growth
were flourishing in these sterile flats, but none were discovered in flower; and
a very noxious Spinifex seemed to overwhelm all other vegetation. Our
people dug in the sands a few feet deep, but could find no trace of water; on
the contrary, a dry heat prevails. At half past 8 we left the shore, being
obliged to launch the boat about half a mile over shallow rocky coral flats
before we could find water enough to float her.
[* Bay of Rest or Jogodor, on west side of Exmouth Gulf and thirty
miles south of North-West Cape.]
16th. Monday. Mr. King intending to remain at the present anchorage so
long as the southerly winds prevail, I went on shore with Mr. Roe, second
officer, wishing to employ myself in examining the botany of the extensive sands
in the vicinity of the bay, and make such collections as the apparently scanty
materials would afford me. Beyond the beach, commenced a low depressed and tract
of sand dunes, covered with attenuated brush and bounded by distant elevated
land. In a northerly route over this flat I gathered the following
specimens:--Acacia sp., a small tree, on which I discovered a
Loranthus parasitical. Hakea longifolia. Hakea oleifolia of
King George's Sound, a small tree 12-16 feet high, afforded me seeds. Hakea
stenophylla, a small tree of the size of the preceding. Acacia sp., a
spreading small tree 10-12 ft. high. A round, dense, junceous, aphyllous shrub
allied to Thesium or Leptomeria. I noticed a species of
Acacia, with small, oblong, wedge-shaped, obtuse, smooth leaves, having a
gland inserted upon the tendrils in the upper surface, but I could not discover
it in flower. On the sandy ridges I gathered specimens of Melaleuca in fruit;
leaves alternate, small, cordate, sessile, many-nerved; capsule and branches
smooth; and Olax sp., a slender shrub. On the depressed flats a junceous
shrubby plant of the Asclepiadaceae is very frequent; it forms round
close bushes, but has no appearance of flowers, fruit or leaves, and is very
lactescent when bruised. I gathered seeds of a Gnaphalium. The loose sand
hollows in the soil, in consequence of being bored by kangaroo rats, and the
abundance of the prickly spinifex, were no little inconveniences when passing
over this sterile waste, which were increased by the great reflecting heat from
it. My pocket thermometer rose to 115°, although not exposed to the solar ray. I
measured some ant-hills of brown and blackish colours, according to the tinges
of the soil on which they are situated; their average dimensions were about 8
feet high and 81 feet in diameter. They have at a distance the appearance of
native huts--were abandoned by their original tenants and were fast mouldering
away--forming nurseries for lizards and several species of insects, particularly
the wasp, hornet and others of the Hymenopterous order. Making the coast,
we traced it to our boat over extensive beds of dead shells bleached by the
weather--the remains of once beautiful specimens. I observed fragments of coral,
madrepores and shells scattered over the whole of the distant flat land in our
route, this morning, all proofs of the sea having receded from it at no very
distant period.
[*] A doubt having arisen whether this expanse of desert formed a part of the
main or was an island detached from it, I wished to clear up the matter by
proceeding across the same towards the distant highland. Mr. Roe had gone off to
the cutter and had taken the specimens I had collected this morning. After
walking 3 miles in a S.E. direction over these burning sands, the heat became so
extremely oppressive as to oblige me to relinquish my object, in some measure
although the appearance before me being a slight ascent towards the high land
left little or no doubts as to its belonging to and forming part of the main,
and as a presumptive proof of this, numerous tracks of emu were noticed on those
parts where the sands had been crusted together, as if by the effect of water
upon the surface. Seeking shelter and shade from the steady fervid heat of the
sun, among some close mangrove trees, my thermometer was stationary at 105° in
the shade, being influenced by the cool fanning sea breeze then setting on the
land. During the route the same plants presented themselves to me as I observed
this morning, but less frequent. Dense masses of spinifex covered this tract
almost to the exclusion of other vegetation. I, however, observed a recumbent
plant with broad, elliptical leaves. It has the character of an Acacia,
with a glaucous hue (A. oteaefolia = I. lunata). I could not discover
flowering specimens. At 4 P.m. the jolly boat took me off to the cutter.
Bongaree, our native, had with great skill speared some fish, which afforded us
a fresh meal. Large smokes were observed near the higher lands, proving to us
that natives exist in these extremes of sterility.
[* Cunningham, having heard that this peninsula was called Cloates
Island, attempted to clear up the mystery.]
17th. Tuesday. In the afternoon Mr. Bedwell, First officer, was sent
on shore, and I availed myself of the opportunity and landed, trusting I might
procure a few more seeds, and perhaps specimens. I discovered some small trees
of the Hakea with long filiform leaves, seen yesterday, loaded with last
year's capsules, of which I gathered some specimens. In similar situations I
furnished myself with specimens in fruit of a shrub with filiform, rounded,
channelled, succulent leaves; the capsules are many, collected in a small
pyriform figure, each unilocular and 1-seeded. I gathered seeds of an
Iberis, a shrub with obovate, emarginate, glaucous leaves; and a dead
syngenesious shrubby plant afforded me a large paper of seeds, which are large,
compressed, and membranaceous. The greater part of the flat over which I passed
this afternoon is of a pale loose soil, compounded partly of decomposed shells,
sand and decomposition of vegetables, but approaching the boundary ridges this
description of soil disappears and a beautiful glittering red dry sand succeeds,
in which the Acacia grows with considerable luxuriance, throwing out long
sappy branchlets, which appeared the more surprising as we found the sand so
extremely hot as scarcely to allow us to stand upon it any length of time
without inconvenience. I gathered seeds of an Acacia growing thus in the
sand, with ovate-lanceolate, obtuse, mucronated leaves,having a gland inserted
on the interior margin; legumen small, compressed, seeds round. We chased a
lizard about 5 feet long, on the flat, but running under the excavated base of
an ant-hill he found a secure retreat and could not be dislodged. Having
procured a few shells of no consideration we returned on board at dusk. This
bight is called the Bay of Rest, by Mr. King, who has ascertained it to be in
lat. 22°17'05" S., and long. 114° E.
18th. Wednesday. At 5 a.m. we got under weigh and stood out of the
bay. I shifted my specimens and exposed them to the air. Having surveyed the
gulf, Mr. King intends now to run north east along the coast and examine those
parts more particularly not observed by the French.
19th. Thursday. We passed several sand islands thinly covered with
alkaline, succulent plants. Water snakes of brilliant colours afloat near the
vessel. At 4 p.m. we changed our course and stood on for the mainland, in
consequence of a break in the beach appearing like the mouth of a river.[*] From
the masthead this opening appeared more clear and evident, presenting a large
bay or inlet of water bounded by wooded shores, whose verdure forms a striking
contrast to the sparse stunted vegetation of the coast in general. At 5 p.m. we
dropped anchor in 2¼ fms. muddy bottom; having previously worked in shore a
quarter of a mile from the beach, which is rocky and bluff, with a heavy surf,
rendering the landing very difficult and dangerous. The sandy ridge bounding the
beach is covered with brushes and small shrubs, beyond which are large swampy
flats or salt marshes distinguished from the masthead of the cutter. Mr. King,
accompanied by the second officer, took some bearings round the vessel and along
shore, the results of which showed that the same depth continues close to the
rocks of the beach, from which we might anchor the length of the vessel. He also
went to the mouth of the Inlet, across which is a bar of sand . At dusk he
returned to the vessel with an intention of examining the opening in the
morning.
[* Ashburton or Curlew River. "We succeeded in finding an
anchorage three miles to the eastward of the inlet."--King.]
20th. Friday. About 5 a.m. I went on shore (on the mainland) with Mr.
King, who was desirous of ascertaining the nature of the low swampy country at
the back of the beach and of giving me a few moments to make some observations
as to the botany of the immediate shores. The water had fallen 6 ft. and we
landed without any difficulty. The Convolvulus was decorating the sandy
hilly ranges with its large purple flowers, spreading its elongated branches in
every direction on the beach. I gathered the following specimens:--Gyphia
sp., a suffruticose plant with blue flowers. Tribulus sp., a
procumbent villous plant with pinnate leaves and echinated capsules; flowers
yellow. Euphorbia sp. Crolon acerifolius, this species appears to
be the same as the plant discovered by me on the banks of the Lachlan River in
May, 1817, and of which specimens were sent home by the "Harriet."
Asphodeleae, a small liliaceous plant. An arbusculous Acacia,
before stated, indigenous in the Bay of Rest, is the only woodIsaw, mangroves
excepted, and it is singular that neither here nor in the Bay of Rest were any
specimens of Eucalyptus seen. Beyond the boundary line of sand the flats
are very low, almost level with the sea, which has, at spring tides,
communication with them by the breaks and small inlets on the beach. We returned
on board at 7 to prepare for the examination of the river supposed to lead into
the interior or terminate in the lagoon seen this morning.
Mr. King, Mr. Roe, self, Bongaree and four of the crew left the cutter in the
second whale boat about 9 o'clock. We kept within the sandy islands (forming
projecting low points to the sea), being almost surrounded by mangroves.
Crossing the bar at the entrance to the mouth of the river or inlet, which is
about 150 yards wide, we pulled up in a fathom to 11 fms., although frequently
on the left shore we had 2 and 2½ fms. At 2½ miles from the entrance, the
shores, which had been thickly clothed with Rhizophora and
Avicennia, are very low, gradually becoming somewhat higher, and are
nearly bare, with here and there small sapling Eucalypti. We all landed
to look around. Mr. King and myself went over the scorching flats to a sandy
elevation in hopes of taking some bearings and to make a few observations
relative to this channel of water. No information could be gathered from this
ridge, and it being the highest part we could see we returned to the boat.
Mr. King was satisfied that it would only be a waste of time to examine
further up this inlet, inferring from its red muddy bottom, its effects among
the mangroves and its general shoaliness, that it was a body of water of no
consideration; that the whole of the flats crusted with mud and white with salt
(crystallizing, the sun having evaporated the stagnant salt water) had lately
been inundated; that its decrease of width, its many little channels running
from it, indicate its termination to be at no great distance; and that the whole
flat country on this coast is one general salt marsh, continually subject to the
inundations and encroachments of the sea.
On these sandy flats I gathered fine flowering specimens of an Acacia
with obovate oblique leaves, first observed in the Bay of Rest. Scaevola
spinosa, discovered in the western interior in June 1817, is common on the
banks of this inlet in flower, with a shrubby plant of spreading depressed
habit, allied to the genus Saponaria. The sandy hills produce a shrub of
the Asclepiadaceae having decayed folicles and elongated lanceolate
leaves, but not in flower. I gathered a few specimens of grasses on the
immediate banks. Our boat people had been busy in our absence and had caught
some fish, but chiefly of the kind called catfish. In our return we traced the
impressions of the feet of natives on the soft mud in and about a small inlet or
branch of the river, the mouth of which had been stopped with twigs, in order to
retain the fish in a basin within them at low water. It was hence presumed that
fresh water could not be far distant From the great numbers of curlews observed
on this large salt water inlet Mr. King has given it the name of that bird. Our
first officer had landed on the main and had visited the salt marsh at the back
of the beach, and reports the quantities of crystallized salt he saw on these
flats. He brought me specimens of a Dolichos with axillary stalks, which
he had gathered on the sand (D. foliolis).
21st. Saturday. This morning at 6 o'clock our water was reduced to 9
feet. We weighed anchor and stood off E.N.E. Nothing can convey to us the idea
of smokes of natives better than the spiral manner in which large bodies of sand
are carried into the air by whirlwinds. We have seen several this day, and had
we not been witnesses of the ascent of a column of sand near us yesterday on
shore, we should most naturally have allowed ourselves to be deceived to-day,
concluding them to be the smoke of native fires.
Very large turtle 3½ and 4 ft. diameter over their backs, and abundance of
albicore are observed around us. Passed several small islands, and frequently
tacked in consequence of shoaly water. At half past 5 we came to an anchor in 5
fms., on a bottom of small stones.[*] The connection of sand islands chained
together by banks of sand prevented us from standing within sight of the
mainland, but from the circumstances of the tide setting in the N.E., a bight or
bay is expected in that direction. We had a good run of 45 miles to-day.
[* Under "an island of larger size about four miles off the
main."--King.]
22nd. Sunday. At half past 8 we weighed, with a light air, and stood
in for the main (which appeared at noon to trend in deeply to the eastward); it
is very low, and from the masthead has a broken rugged shore. The land around us
is either covered with salt water in a chain of lagoons or is dry and white with
salt as seen at Curlew River. The breaks in the line of coast are clothed with
large bodies of mangroves, and appear to be drains to the inland marshes, which
to the eastward are bounded by high hills, distinguished from the deck. Several
new islands were observed to windward, of which bearings were taken. At half
past 7 we anchored in about a quarter of a mile from a slightly elevated sandy
island, bearing N.W. by W., lat. 21°13'01" S., long. 115°58'35" E.
23rd. Monday. The closeness last night was very oppressive. Between 5
and 6 a.m. we got under weigh, but the calms obliged us to re-anchor. At half
past 9 we weighed again, with a slight breeze from the S.W. We stood along the
coast at a considerable distance from the shore, which is low and broken.
Bearing up for a projecting rocky cape, we doubled it[*] and stood in for the
land, which runs in deeply and forms a bay. Reefs warned us of imminent danger,
and obliged us to tack instantly. The more elevated or rising parts of the coast
assume a new feature, being thickly covered with brushwood from the water's edge
to the ridge of these small hills. We could clearly distinguish some high land
in the interior from the cutter's deck, and should hope and trust a change for
the better is about to take place. About half past 9 p.m. a sudden squall came
on from the south-eastward and the wind blowing with incredible force from the
elevated sandy hills was exceedingly hot and accompanied by much sand. Our
leadsman reported 10 and 11 fms., which gave us great scope to the swell that
was getting up to drive us off shore. The thermometer during the squall was
stationary at 91°.
[* "We steered close round Cape Preston."--King.]
24th. Tuesday. Favoured with light airs we weighed and steered for an
island 2 or 3 miles to the northward, which we have suspected may be the
Rosemary Island of Dampier, situated according to the French charts in Dampier's
Archipelago, and while standing on for the island were suddenly shoaled and
immediately hauled off. Steering awhile on a new course, Mr. King still desirous
if possible of anchoring under this island, we again stood in for it. The
soundings were very irregular, till close in upon the island, when we anchored
at 6 o'clock within three quarters of a mile of the shore.
This island[*] is very different from the low sandy flats which we have been
accustomed to, it is hilly, hummocky, and very irregular, appears covered with
grass and small plants, and with large fragments of rock or stone of a red
ferruginous colour. The gullies appearing deep, suggested the probability of
fresh water being procurable. Several small whale were observed spouting close
in shore. Our lat. is 20°44'30" S. The wind was blowing fresh from the S.E.,
whence thunder and very vivid lightning appeared. We struck our topmast, dropped
another anchor, and prepared to meet the blast. It being a matter of very
considerable doubt whether we shall be fortunate enough to discover water, it
became necessary to reduce our daily allowance to a gallon per day each
person.
[* Enderby Island.]
25th. Wednesday. At anchor off a sandy bay.[*] At daybreak 4 a.m. I
accompanied Mr. King and the second officer in the jolly boat to the sandy
beach, and whilst they were engaged in taking angles from the highest parts of
the islands, I employed myself on the lower sandy flats and on the rocky stony
hills. The following specimens I gathered in such situations:--Ficus
orbicularis, a shrub 4 ft. high. Ficus sp., a small tree in ravines
and rocky gullies. Acacia sp., a low spreading shrub. Acacia sp.,
a shrub frequently seen at the Bay of Rest. Solanum sp., Echites
sp., a slender shrub. I discovered on the gritty, coarse sand near the
beach, at the base of the hills, a shrubby plant, perhaps of the genus
Triumfelta. About 9 a.m. we all went off on board, and having then
secured my specimens I returned to the shore. A party of our people were sent
from the vessel to search for water, either by digging under the hills or
otherwise, presumed to be found in the gullies which they were to trace. I took
a walk round to the N.E. side of the island, but added only one or two specimens
to my collection. In sterile heated valleys of sand a twining plant of the
Asclepiadaceae (Cynanchum sp.), with cordate leaves and small
white flowers, is most predominant. A syngenesious plant, the Sphaeranthus
indicus, Linn., is frequent but not in a flowering state. I gathered some
specimens of the shrub Dampier had many years ago published in his voyage Vol.
3, p.m. L4, f3., under the title of rosemary, and which, from its abundance on
an island in this archipelago on which he landed, suggested the name of Rosemary
Island. It is a large shrub of lax habit, and may be a Conyza, leaves
linear, entire, margin revolute, villous beneath. A species of Cassia,
with large ovate and elliptical leaflets, oblique at their base, rounded at
their points and mucronated, the glands pedicelled and inserted at the base of
the petioles, and terminal spike, is a rare shrub on rocky exposed
situations.
[* "Anchored off a sandy beach to the eastward of Rocky
Head."--King.
]
The people had been digging in vain, they could not penetrate to any depth,
in consequence of the stony shallow soil, but they discovered in the deep
excavations of a rocky gully a quantity of about 12 gallons of water that had
been stagnant for some time, but had acquired a sub-putrid taste, and was
exceedingly soft, and although shaded from the intense heat by the branches of
the Ficus above mentioned was very warm. It was very acceptable, and a
bareca was filled with it and carried on board. Upon returning along the shore
to the boat I found our two officers had just come on shore, and the one
proposed an excursion across the island to the opposite shore, whilst the other,
with our worthy friend Bongaree, intended to search the beach for shells. I
accompanied Mr. Roe inland. We followed the windings of a gully to an elevated
flat between the shoulders of the higher hills, where it is evident, from the
number of small dry channels concentrating at the mouth of this gully, that
immense bodies of water descend into the lower flats and thence over the beach
into the sea. Passing over the highest hills, which are extremely rugged and
stony, covered with spinifex, we gradually descended through a ravine and came
out upon a sandy beach to the westward of the shores we had intended to have
made.
The evening was too far advanced to proceed further from the vessel, it was
therefore determined to range about and then return to the boat. There are
remarkable concentrations of gullies and deep furrowed water-courses at this
small sandy shore, and a slight humidity being observed on the soil on the more
shaded parts, induced us to search the gullies and leading channels. It was,
however, fruitless, the water apparently had but just sunk below the depth of
the earth a few days previously. A species of Dolichos, in fruit and
flower, was spread over the sands. It seems distinct from D. gladiatus,
to which it is allied. I gathered one specimen of a papilionaceous plant, a
Swainsona, with purple flowers. The Croton of the Interior of
Australia and Curlew River is here likewise in the gullies, the shrubs I
examined, had all of them male flowers. A very strong scented glutinous plant,
of the class Didynamia, with a bilabiated purple corolla, is frequent on
the hills among the rocks, in round bushy forms.
Pursuing a rugged route over the hills we arrived at the boat at dusk. The
tide had fallen several feet, and the people were therefore obliged to carry the
boat over the rocky shore to float her. Among the loose fragments of ironstone,
with which this island abounds, numerous pigmy kangaroo find a secure retreat,
and the higher cliffy parts are inhabited by numbers of the white cockatoo,
whose figure and cry pronounce them the same as those of New South Wales. The
bay abounds with fish of various kinds. Sharks are in schools. Sea snakes and
turtle are frequent, but the season of the latter visiting the shore being past,
we could take none at sea. This island not being the Rosemary Island, as laid
down in the charts (French), Mr. King has named it Enderby Island.[*]
[* "An island to the northward on which are three hummocks was
soon recognized as Captain Baudin's Ile Romarin."]
AMONG THE ISLANDS oF DAMPIER ARCHIPELAGO, 26 FEBRUARY--4 MARCH, 1818
26th. Thursday. At half past ten got under weigh. In standing between
the islands of the group we discovered three natives in the water, appearing
from the distance we were from them, to be wading over shoaly flats from one
island to another.[*]
[* "Wading towards Lewis Island."--King.]
Making more sail, we steered direct for them, whereupon approaching them we
observed they were each seated on a canoe-afloat, and were making as much way
for the nearest shore as possible, paddling along with their hands. About 2
p.m., coming up with them, we wore ship and lay to, and lowering the jolly boat
we sent it after them with four able hands. Our people soon overtook the third
man who had not been so active in working to windward as his comrades, and, with
difficulty and with as much care as possible, he was seized and lifted into the
boat[*] but not before he had dived 2 or 3 times under her bottom in attempting
to escape. Upon being brought on board we were presented with a fine figure of a
man, of rather thin, spare shape. About 6 ft. 2 inches high, of a good visage,
as an Australian, strong bushy beard, tolerably well-proportioned limbs, and
apparently 27 or 28 years of age. He was not wanting in the incisive or front
teeth, nor were the signs of circumcision, spoken of by authors, visible. He was
perfectly naked, tattooed on the breech, wore no ornaments, having only a
pointed stick about 7 inches long stuck in his hair, that might be useful to
extract fish from their shells or other purposes,
Although sullen and much alarmed at first, he soon assumed a degree of
confidence when he experienced the kindness and attention paid him. He
occasionally made signs towards the land and talked, but his language was not
understood by Bongaree, our Port Jackson native, or ourselves. We decorated him
with glass beads, which we hung round his neck, but, like the natives of other
Australian tribes, he was not disposed to admire these ornaments, preferring
rather useful and beneficial things. He ate but sparingly of our biscuit, but
drank freely a quart of fresh water. He took much notice of Bongaree, who had
reluctantly at our persuasion stripped and exhibited a scarified body--a
counterpart of his own. By this time we had approached so near an island as to
be within 1½ miles of its shores, on which were many natives patiently watching
us,[*] and apparently in anxiety to know the result of the capture. We therefore
shortened sail and anchored in 5 fms.
[* On seeing them, the captive immediately exclaimed, in a loud
voice, "cõmã nëgrä."-King.]
We gave the native an axe showing him its use; a bag containing beef and
biscuit, a red cap and some small cordage, and, expressing a desire to depart,
he was taken off in the jolly boat for the beach, on which his countrymen were
sitting, the officer on the boat having directions not to land him, but to
approach the shore, place him with the gifts round his neck on his float and
launch him off. He soon landed on the beach, but his comrades approached him
very cautiously, with their spears poised over their shoulders, while others
were timid and ran back behind the bushes. This strange symptom of fear and
distrust entirely originated in the figure the captive native made with the bag
at his back and the red cap on his head; but soon disengaging himself of these
encumbrances and throwing the whole carelessly on the sand he joined his
comrades, whose numbers, including women and children, were between 36 and
40.
We were at a loss to know the kind of wood of which his simple kind of float
or bark was made. It is about a foot in diameter and might be 7 or 8 feet long,
solid and cylindrical, or tapering slightly towards the extremes, which were
detached pieces, joined by the means of sticks forced into the ends of the
mainpiece. They sit upon it, about the middle, astride, allowing their legs to
hang down in the water, or can at pleasure place their feet horizontally along
the float, resting the heel on its forepoint. Practice and habit have enabled
them to sit so in equilibrio as to prevent their bark turning with them,
and when they wish to advance rapidly they incline the body forward, put their
feet in motion and paddle with their hands. Only the head of the float is seen,
the greater part being under water, diagonally to its horizontal surface.
At 5 o'clock p.m. our second officer with Bongaree and four of the crew, all
well armed, were sent towards them, with a view of landing and effecting an
amicable interview and communication, I accompanied Mr. Roe in the boat. On our
near approach they came to meet us making signs to us to land, but the heavy
surf rolling over the rugged rocks lining the shore altogether prevented us. We
stood off and on, rowing along the rocky beach, answered the calls of the
natives, who waded up to their breasts towards us, and gave some ornaments to
those who ventured within the length of their spears from the boat, but their
whole desires and wishes were that we should land among them. Finding it
altogether unsafe, in consequence of the rugged shore and great swell, we left
them for the vessel, when they expressed their disappointment by shouting loudly
as we rowed off.
A friendly interview would be very desirable, as it might be the means of
discovering the spot where fresh water is to be procured, the existence of which
the very presence of these poor creatures, with their wives and children,
plainly indicates. Among the natives we distinguished some aged grey bearded
men, some athletic adults, and some full grown boys; and the captured native was
observed among the group and appeared rather shy, and he had left his axe on the
beach when he came into the water towards us.
Their spears are very thick and stout, round, sharp pointed, but barbless,
and appeared 9-10 ft. long. At sunset a fire was observed near the water's edge
on an island to windward.
INTERCOURSE ISLANDS[*]
[* The group between Lewis Island and the main was called
Intercourse Islands. Seven in number, they are situated in the south-east
portion of Mermaid Strait.]
]
27th. Friday. The natives still continue at their temporary encampment
on the rising parts of the island, some of whom were observed bathing in the
course of the forenoon. Immediately after dinner, Mr. King, Mr. Bedwell, and
myself, left the cutter in the large whale boat for the island, in order to get
an interview with the natives, and by signs endeavour to obtain the information
where fresh water might be procured. We landed on a sandy beach at nearly the
lee side of the island, but found the natives had left it in the course of the
forenoon, nor was it until some time had elapsed that they were discovered on
the shores opposite to us to the eastward. Their huts were of green boughs, very
temporary, and could form no shelter in rainy weather, and their fires were
small and many in number. It was with no small surprise we found near the huts
the axe and other things we had given the native on board, the bag with
provisions appeared not to have been even opened. This island is sand, chiefly
of a red colour, over which large pieces of ironstone are scattered. I gathered
the following specimens:--Stylosanthes sp., a pinnated-leaved prostrate
plant. Velleia sp., a suffruticose plant. Leschenaultia sp., large
yellow flowers. Cleome sp. Vicia sp., a weak plant, frequent with
the Dolichos of Enderby Island. The more rocky exposed parts are covered
with a plant of the Asclepiadaceae. The Spinifex is frequent on
the island, and Convolvulus pes-caprae is stretched over the sands near
the beach. A small plant of the Cucurbitaceae and some shrubs of the
Atriplicinae, before noticed, and of which the native huts were made,
were abundant on the shore. Leaving the place and stretching over to the
opposite shores, on which we could distinguish several natives, as well as two
in the water on their barks, we made for a sandy beach; the natives came to meet
us, shouting and making many signs, inviting us to land. Mr. King, and Bongaree
(naked) landed first, and walked up to them, and a friendly conference took
place, one of the natives advancing and receiving Mr. King with open hands.
We all landed, and found our commander with the natives, who, including the
two who had been in the water, now amounted to about a dozen. We decorated their
persons with beads, and the reflection of their frizzled visages in a glass
created much laughter among them. To the one who had advanced towards us first,
we gave the cap and axe and, having found a piece of wood on the beach, Bongaree
was directed to show him how to use it. Some old rusty nails, files, sharpened
chisels, were also presented to this person, who although he appeared the most
intelligent among them, received all with a careless indifference and unconcern.
It is evident they never saw iron before, and knew nothing of its valuable uses.
The captured native was not among them, nor did we observe any so well
proportioned as he was.
The eyes of most of them are bad, and affected much with watery humours,
occasioned by their habits of sitting over the smokes of their little fires.
Some of their faces were covered with fish oil, over which they had sprinkled
the dust of powdered charcoal, rendering them still more disgusting than they
naturally are. The whole of them were scarified on the back and shoulders, and
one poor lad, on whom the operation had been recently made, still smarted under
its pains, which were aggravated by the myriads of small flies continually
annoying him. We attempted in vain to form a vocabulary of their language, but
they understood our desire to find fresh water, and pointed to some elevated
rocky islands. We did not attempt to leave the beach to look around the low land
lying beyond it, whence a few stragglers came unarmed seemingly from their
encampment, where probably their women were, for we saw none.
Pulling off, we set sail for the sandy beach of another island, where we
intended to land and search for water. Upon approaching the shore we noticed
several natives descending from a steep rocky point to the little bay, where we
wished to have landed. Their numbers were upwards of 20, all armed with spears
and appeared bold and courageous. Four men left their companions on the right
entrance and ran over the sands to the left side. and wading in the water
informed us by their gestures that we should not land. And their wild defying
grimaces and vociferous yells were clear and palpable proofs that their
intentions were decidedly hostile. It was considered much more prudent to leave
them than occasion bloodshed. In consequence of its being the first
communication that we have had with natives since we left Port Jackson, the
first island on which we saw natives, the second on which we had an interview
with them, and the third where they opposed our landing, have collectively been
called Intercourse Islands, whereof the first is in about lat. 20°35' S.[*]
[* East Intercourse, West Intercourse, and Intercourse Islands are
the largest of of the group.]
28th. Saturday. At 9 we got under weigh and stood among the islands,
and at half past eleven, having got well to the eastward of this group, we
anchored in about 5 fms. I accompanied Mr. Roe, who was sent at 3 p.m. to
examine the bottom of the bay before us,[*] and if possible to discover water.
We sailed to its extreme end, which is bounded by mangroves, and passed up a
salt water inlet in hopes of coming out upon the back land, but impenetrable
thicket of lofty mangroves of Avicennia and Rhizophora mangle
obliged us to return. Rhizophora mangle was in flower, the fruit is long,
subulate and clavated.
[* Probably King Bay.]
We landed at a rugged rocky small opening, and walked over the salt plains,
now dry, to somewhat more elevated parts of this sterile coast. Scaevola
spinescens is very strong, and resists the and barrenness around most
surprisingly.
Arriving under some hills, consisting chiefly of rugged heaps of ironstone,
we dug in the valleys between each range for water, but our people were
prevented from penetrating deep, it being very shallow and rocky. The idea was
therefore abandoned of procuring the invaluable desideratum by such means. On
the margin of the stony water channels, now dry, and in the rocky valleys, I
discovered many specimens of a small tree, which from habit and a decayed
capsule being found on one plant, proved to belong to the Proteacae, of
the genus Grevillea. I was not fortunate in my search for flowering
specimens. I gathered specimens of a species of Scaevola, with oblong
spatulate acute leaves, bilobed, at the base; raceme axillary, three-flowered.
Phyllanthus sp., leaves simple, oblong, blunt, decurrent, attenuated at
base; flower axillary, the lower ones pedunculated and female; an annual plant.
Gomphrena sp., an annual plant. Verbena sp., leaves linear;
flowers in a spike. Boehmeria sp., stem hoary, procumbent, diffuse;
leaves elliptical, oblong, obtuse, undulate; panicle loose. I likewise furnished
myself with specimens of a long slender-stemmed shrub allied to Dalea.
Among the large fragments of ironstone a species of Trichosanthes was
very conspicuous, fruit small, flowers white and ciliated; the whole plant is
fetid as in some Bryoniae.
Our people traced the water-courses between the rocky hills, but all was dry
and miserable. The more elevated points of these heaps of stones are crowned
with the larger fig of Enderby Island, and the whole is covered densely with
spinifex and other grasses, of which I gathered specimens. Returning to the
boat, we fell in with the track of natives on the sand, evidently on the same
errand as ourselves. One of the boats crew traced their steps to another gully
between the rocks, but barely the appearance of humidity existed among the
stones. From this situation we rowed over to a sandy beach, where dry channels
were followed among high wiry grass between the small rising grounds to no
purpose whatever. We therefore returned on board about 7 p.m.
1818. March 1st. Sunday. Mustered the people, and the church service
was read on board as usual. At half past 10 we weighed and stood out, with an
intention of running northerly. At 2 p.m., being abreast of an elevated rocky
island, whose highest points commanded a good view of the numerous islands
around us, and a small sandy bay opening to us, we tacked and stood in for it,
anchoring at about half a mile from the shore in 5 fms.[*] About 4 p.m. Mr. King
and Mr. Roe went on shore, to take some angles and bearings of the island, and I
accompanied them, to examine its scanty vegetable produce. We landed on a fine
sandy beach, and the tide was just about the turn (ebb). This island presents to
me nothing different in point of character. It is for the most part of the red
ferruginous-coloured ironstone, with the same irregular rugged disposition and
the same sterile gritty sands so prevalent on the islands visited. Acacia
oleaefolia, first seen at the Bay of Rest, of glaucous hue, is very strong
on the exposed parts of this island, but not in a flowering state. The aphyllous
plant of the Asclepiadaceae, habit of Ceropegia, is very abundant.
I gathered the following specirnens:--Opercularia sp., a trailing
herbaceous plant, among the rocks. I was not a little surprised to find the
Kennedya I discovered in July 1817, in sterile bleak open flats near the Regent
Lake on the Lachlan iver, in lat.33°13' S. and long. 146°40' E. It is not common
I could only see three plants, of which one was in flower. I gathered some ripe
seeds of a Cucumis, fruit red, hispid, small and globular, size of a red
currant. The vine of this plant has been seen on all the islands of this
Archipelago visited, but never in fruit before to-day. On the rocky margins of
the dry water-courses, a harsh shrub, perhaps of the Urlicaceae, with
clusters of small male flowers, was observed and induced me to gather a few
specimens in the imperfect state it was then found. I also gathered seeds of a
curious lateral flowering grass .[**] The same signs of rain water having been
running in considerable bodies and standing in the hollows, appear here as
throughout the archipelago, but not a drop of fresh water now exists! The
necessary bearings were very fortunately taken by Mr. King in time before we
became enveloped in gloom, occasioned by the action of a strong wind upon the
sands, which being raised were blown over to the northward and westward in
clouds like smoke. These false appearances of native smoke have no doubt
deceived preceding navigators, and perhaps the French, tempting them to conclude
parts from whence the clouds arose were inhabited, however arid and
inhospitable. We have seen and proved this fallacy, having been on a sandy flat
within a quarter of a mile of one of the columns of loose sand when it was
ascending. Several large whales were seen spouting among the islands. No tree or
shrub above three feet high was observed on this island, the highest (a south)
point of which is called Courtney Head.[***] This island is Isle Malus of the
French.
[* At Malus Island the cutter anchored in a bay under the west
side of Courtenay Head.]
[** Here too was discovered the Clianthus Dampieri A.
Cun.]
[* Dampier's bluff point.]
2nd. Monday. Some turtle having been seen in the evening making for
the island, a party was sent on shore at dusk to secure them, and this morning
they returned without any success. Mr. King sent the second officer on shore,
with some hands, to dig for water. They returned in two hours, having penetrated
10 feet with no signs of humidity. We got under weigh immediately, and bore up
S.S.E. for a point of land where we dropt our anchor till the morning.[*]
[* Under north-west end of Baudin's Legendre I.]
3rd. Tuesday. The atmosphere is much more sensibly temperate than we
have felt it for some days past, although the mercury of the thermometer was not
so materially affected. A thermometer on deck not exposed to the sun, but from
its situation somewhat affected by its rays, rose at 4 p.m. to 116° Farenheit. A
report was made from the mast head that we were approaching shoaly water, but it
appeared that the surface of the sea was covered in patches with a reddish scum,
usually termed sea-sawdust, from its resemblance to that of cedar or other light
coloured woods. It may in reality be the spawn of minute fish. Not intending to
anchor at night, we stood out, the vessel's head being N. by W. Upon comparing
the islands of this archipelago, now laid down by Mr. King, with the published
charts of the French, we find that several of them have been named by these
navigators, although very badly and inaccurately surveyed, while others of them
that we have been round were considered by them as part of the main.
4th. Wednesday. We steered outside several islands forming the
Archipelago, some of which are long strips of low sand, while others more
distant are rocky, rugged and lofty. We attempted to round these islands and
steer in among them, but a dangerous rock running off from the weathermost
warned us to luff up to windward, and an opening appearing in the land from the
masthead we bore up for it with a light breeze. At sunset we were in a bay,
having the supposed opening or channel to the back of the islands passed to-day.
This bay is called Nickol's Bay.[*]
[* In Nickol Bay the pearl fishing of Western Australia was
started.]
DAMPIER'S ARCHIPELAGO TO POINT TURNER, 5-26 MARCH, 1818
5th.
Thursday. The supposed opening is clearly seen from the mast-head this
morning to be only a slight trending of the land, which is exceedingly low, with
some patches of mangroves. About half past 6 a.m. we left Nickol's Bay, with a
breeze from S.W. A projecting point of the mainland, whose shores to the
northward trend in easterly, has been named Cape Lambert, in honour of A. B.
Lambert, Esqre., of Grosvenor Street, London.[*] We ran along a very low and
dangerous coast, whose adjacent islands could be traced from the mast-head to be
chained together by reefs and sandy shoals. Some rocks had their points just
above the surface of the water, allowing the waves to beat over them and warn
the cautious mariner of the dangers around him.
[* Cape Lambert is on the north-west side of approach to Port
Walcott.]
Tracing the coast north-easterly, we bore away for an island seen by the
French (Baudin), who in passing kept well out to sea, hence could not
distinguish the low mainland as it really exists. At 5 p.m. we were about 2
miles to the westward of the island, which is laid down in the French charts
under the title of Isle Depuch, it appears one body of bare naked ironstone,
with scarcely a trace of vegetation, and its general aspect cannot under any
view convey to the mind any flattering ideas of its fertility, or its springs of
water, which have been represented by the authors of the voyage under Commodore
Baudin.
6th. Friday. In this morning's run we passed to windward of several
low, flat, sandy and rocky islands named by the French, although only seen by
them at such a distance as not to enable them clearly to distinguish between
islands and mainland.
7th. Saturday. Suspecting from the steadiness of the wind from that
quarter that the north-easterly monsoon would set in altogether by the latter
end of this month or beginning of April, and fearful should we continue longer
on this coast we would not be able to beat up to the eastward, and in that case
would be wholly cut off from the means of obtaining fresh supplies of wood and
water at Timor or elsewhere, Mr. King has determined to leave the coast and run
as far as possible to the eastward on the north coast, and at the change of the
monsoon survey westerly.
8th. Sunday. Divine Service as usual on board. Being in the latitude
of a reef laid down in the charts, but to the westward of it, a good look out
was kept at the mast-head, and we sounded hourly. At 8 p.m. we found no bottom
in 80 fms.
9th. Monday. Tropic birds accompanied us this morning, nine were
hovering over the mast-head. Dead calm, and a sultry afternoon. Our lat. is
17°34'28" S., and long. 117°58'06" E.
10th. Tuesday. At half past 5 a long narrow water spout was observed
to leeward of us, issuing from the clouds in a slender curved form. At intervals
it was not seen, and again reappearing we traced it distinctly to the surface of
the sea, the clouds at these moments were very dark and heavy, pregnant with
water, which is disembogued by means of the spout.
11th. Wednesday. A fine sperm whale made his appearance near the
vessel, round which he swam twice and disappeared.
12th. Thursday. The clouds bounding the visible horizon, particularly
to the westward, are very romantic in their disposition, in them many wild
irregular shapes and warm delicate tints may be traced. Their singular tendency
to form into cones, spires and pyramids, may be peculiar to this Australian
coast, as also may be said of these dark threatening clouds whose lowering heavy
aspect induced us on several occasions to shorten sail and await the approach of
the squall, but which in the sequel had no evil tendency, the hovering storm
resolved and cleared off in a few moments, to our great surprise, until
accustomed to these phenomena.
13th. Friday. We made sail, but it was of little use, making but
little way through the water. Aware we were upon the site of the shoals and
rocks laid down on the charts of this coast, a good look out was kept at the
mast head, but we could discover nothing, or could we find bottom in 23 fms. Our
situation at noon, as deduced from many sets of solar and lunar observations, is
17°35' S. and 118°41' E.
14th. Saturday. At half past 5 p.m. the surf of a reef of sand bank
was seen from the top-gallant-mast head, bearing due east, distance 5 miles.
From the nature of the waves breaking it appears to be mostly sand. Wore ship
and passed to windward; we got no bottom in 200 fms.
15th. Sunday. In consequence of our discovery of the shoal last
evening, we lay to at night, and at 5 a.m. tacked to southward. At 7 we saw the
breakers from the masthead bearing S.E. by S. Prayers as usual on board to the
vessel's company. At 3 p.m. we lost sight of the shoal, and at 6 hove to. Wind,
W. by S. These shoals are extensive flats of sand, perhaps 5 miles long from N.
to N.W., with some rocks of small elevation on their margins.[*] Their surfaces
as presented to us from the mast-head are shallows covered with water, perhaps
2-20 feet, of great breadth, but no spots were perfectly dry.
[* Named Rowley Shoals, after Captain Rowley, H.M.S. "Imperieuse,"
who discovered the westernmost in 1800.]
16th. Monday. From the mast-head another shoal was discovered, of
considerable extent, and of like appearance of those seen yesterday.
17th, Tuesday to 23rd, Monday. Between these periods we have had winds
from S.W. to W.S.W. Fine with succeeding squalls, and a damp moist
atmosphere.
24th. Tuesday. At 7 we hove to for bearings of some islands in sight.
It was doubtful which of the islands now seen was New Year's Island of Captain
Flinders.[*] They appear from the deck clothed with trees, and more green and
grassy than those of Dampier's Archipelago. Great flocks of seabirds were
hovering about these islands, of which one has been called Fowler's Island by
Captain Flinders, and another Oxley's Island by Mr. King, the former in honour
of the Lieutenant of the indefatigable navigator, and the latter as a compliment
to John Oxley, Esqre., Surveyor General of New South Wales; and the whole
collectively are called Flinders Group.
[* "The north-easternmost proved to be New Year's Island of
Lieutenant McCluer." King. This isle is still called New Year Isle, and an
isle nine miles to the southward McCluer Isle.]
25th. Wednesday. During the forenoon the breeze slackened and again
sprang up due cast. We therefore tacked ship and stood southerly for the coast.
Some curious Zoophytes were floating around the vessel, particularly Porpita
gigantea of the French.
26th. Thursday. At 8 a.m., land that had been seen from the mast-head
some hours before was plainly distinguished from. the deck. We tacked and stood
into a bight in the land thickly enveloped in mangroves, but shoaled to 2½ fms.
although 3 miles from the shore. The coast here appears in patches very barren,
low and sandy, several of its points were named by Mr. King, who now commenced
his survey running westerly. At 6, the soundings, from a rocky hard bottom
changed to soft mud, and the appearance of the horizon to windward being
favourable, Mr. King resolved to anchor, which he did at half past 6 in 15 fms.,
off Point Turner.[*]
[* Which forms the western entrance point of King
River.]
CHAPTER X
CUNNINGHAM'S JOURNAL
("Mermaid's" Voyage Completed)
GOULBURN ISLANDS, 27 MARCH--7 APRIL, 1818
27th. Friday. At 7 a.m. we weighed and bore up west, taking bearings
of points as we passed along. The general depression of this part of the coast,
the mangrove beaches, and the bodies of water noticed inland behind the
immediate banks of the shore, are evident proofs of the coast being subject to
the encroachments of the sea. At noon we approached an island of very distinct
features from those of the N.W. coast. It is slightly elevated, covered with
small timber, appears very grassy, and of easy rise. Its S.W. sides in
particular are cliffy, parts of which appear argillaceous, of a ferrugineous
tinge. Rounding the points of the island we anchored off a sandy bay in 5
fms.[*]
[* South-West Bay, of South Goulburn Island.]
About noon I accompanied Mr. King and our second officer on shore. We landed
on a part of the beach which, from its low grassy appearance, tempted us to
conclude fresh water might be discovered near. Our boat people were directed to
make a diligent search by tracing this apparent water channel inland. I took a
range around among very lofty grasses, and the following are the most remarkable
plants I detected this afternoon. Clerodendron sp., a shrub of the habit
of Leea sambucina, having an angular stem and bipinnated foliage. In
humid, grassy situations with the preceding plants Tacca pinnatifida is
very abundant, in fruit at this time, whose roots I observed had been dug up in
several spots, either by natives or some animal; and several convolvuli,
particularly a species with long white tubular corolla, an Ipomaea with
large cordate leaves. The rising grounds are covered with very large fragments
of stone-ironstone, (heavy, and of an iron grey colour), which being hid from
the sight by the thick high grass, renders the penetration into the island
somewhat difficult.
In these drier, barren, stony spots I gathered specimens of a
Crotalaria allied to C. linifolia. C. sp. (allied to C.
anthylloides Lamarck.), specimens and seeds. Justicia sp., flowers
axillary and terminal, bracts elliptical, acute, mucronated, villous.
Justicia sp., spike axillary and terminal, bracts ovate-lanceolate; an
ornamental slender shrub. A tree about 30 feet high of spreading irregular
growth, fruit drupaceous, one-seeded each seed having a groove on its side.
Strychnos sp., in fruit, a small tree 10-12 feet high. The most general
timber, which is small, is a Eucalyptus from 30-35 feet high, it was not
in flower, but from its habit appears different from any I have seen before. In
exposed iron stony soils, near the edge of a perpendicular cliff, I discovered
an Acacia with simple very oblique half-rounded leaves, which are
5-nerved, petiole one-glanded, spike cylindrical. Cyperaceae, habit of
Eriocaulon or Xyris but petalless, a small gramineous plant, the
seeds having a membranaceous fimbriation round them. A very frequent plant is a
species of Vitis, fruit small and black. A species of Kennedya,
twining among the high grass, afforded me some seeds, and also a twining
Clitoria, with narrow, ovate, ternate leaves. Pandanus spiralis
has a fine effect, as well on the higher parts of the island as on the sands of
the beach. It has a caudex, frequently 10-12 feet high, which is crowned with
its spirally disposed foliage. I saw some specimens in green fruit.
We traced very recent impressions of naked feet on the sands, but saw no
natives, even doubting of there being any on the island at this time. Bongaree,
the native, was with me all the afternoon, and upon our return to the beach we
found the jolly boat had gone back to the cutter, but returning at sunset it
took us both off. Our people found some water, but it was brackish and in small
portions. Continuing their search they found some better, and in order to
collect it they dug a well about 6 feet deep, trusting it would be filled in the
course of the night. Native fires were observed at dusk, on the main to the
eastward of us.
28th. Saturday. At an early hour Mr. King and Mr. Roe landed, to
measure a base line on the beach, and I was occupied till 8 o'clock shifting out
my specimens. I went on shore with a wooding party, intending to penetrate some
distance from the beach to ascertain the character of the botany inland. Passing
through a thickly wooded land, among lofty grass, on an iron-stony soil and in a
north westerly direction, I discovered but little variety, several I had seen
yesterday appearing more generally around me. I gathered, however, the following
specimens:--Grevillea Dryandri of Mr. Brown, a beautiful spreading shrub
of low stature. Polygala sp., a small pigmy annual plant.
Combrelaceae, a shrub of the habit of Sterculia, with a drupaccous
acute 1-seeded fruit. Sterculia sp., a dwarf strong shrub, with large
coriaceous 5-angled leaves; this plant has only some last year's fruit on it.
Bidens sp., an annual plant with linear leaves. Phyllanthus sp.
Celastrus sp., a shrub 6-8 feet high. Verbesina dichotoma.
Grewia sp., allied to G. verrucosa, a very common plant among the
high grass, in flower and fruit. The Crotalaria discovered yesterday, a
species with simple elongated lanceolate leaves; raceme terminal; calyx very
hairy, longer than the legumen. A. Convolvulus, differing but little from
C. medium. Vitis sp. I discovered this vine to-day laden with
fruit. Euphorbia sp., a shrub with glossy leaves; berry red, 2 seeded.
And the Strychnos observed yesterday, a small tree.
A continuation of the same grassy, thickly wooded barren land appearing
before me after I had advanced about 2½ miles inland, and not meeting with any
more plants but what were duplicates of those I had already gathered, I made a
circuit westerly to that part of the beach where our wooding party were
employed. In this route I gathered a few more plants viz:--specimens from a tree
20 feet high, with elliptical, glossy leaves, allied to Hippomane.
Amyris sp. Achyranthes sp. Periploca sp., a volubilous
shrubby plant. Sapindus, a small tree, with oblique pinnate leaves and a
terminal cyme of fruit, on the beach beneath a cliff of marl or pipe-cIay.
Hibiscus ficulneus is fine in flower and fruit, of which I gathered
seeds.
Our native, Bongaree, in his rambles on the shores of the island, made a very
valuable and seasonable discovery. He found fresh water running into a natural
basin under the cliffs, above noticed, in such abundance as to afford us two
puncheons per hour. The well dug the last evening was full this morning, but,
upon testing, it was found too bad and brackish to be drunk. Our woodmen
complained of the hard timber turning the edges of their axes, though they found
it to be hollow at heart, like some of its kindred on the Eastern coast. I went
on board to secure my specimens, which were already beginning to wither, by the
intensity of the heat. In my absence, Mr. King had gone away to a small island
about 2 miles to the southward and westward of our anchorage (and which at my
suggestion has been named Sims Island), to take a meridian altitude and make
other observations relative to the survey. He returned at 3 p.m., bringing with
him a few specimens he had noticed there, and among them a Tournefortia
with a compound recurved spike of white flowers, ovate-oblong large silky
leaves, and thick short succulent stem. Triumfetta sp., imperfect. A new
Grevillea, and a suffruticose plant of the Aselepiadaceae, having
all the habits of Hoya, a stoloniferous reclining plant; leaves as in
H. carnosa; the flowers however are white; corolla smooth and
sweet-scented.
The north point of Sims Island forms a remarkable rocky elevation, named
Sanson's Head. At 4 p.m. I returned to the island on which I had employed myself
this morning, which Mr. King has entitled Goulburn Island, and made some further
discoveries in botany, in the vicinity of the depressed moist land where we had
dug the well viz:--Hedysarum sp. Asparagus racemosus.
Tabernaemontana sp. Tracing a beaten path made by the natives, I observed
the roots of Tacca pinnatifida, a plant abundant in low shaded situations
had been taken up in quantities, which tempted me to conclude they are eaten by
these Australians, as are also those of a plant of the Aroidae [Arum
orixense] by the natives about the banks of the Hawkesbury and Nepean Rivers
on the Eastern coast.
Observing an arborescent Melaleuca in flower in the hollow somewhat
below me, I was advancing towards it, when I was suddenly and agreeably
surprised by the discovery of a lagoon of fine clear water, which is so much
concealed by the high grass as not to be seen until you are at its margin. Many
fine large specimens of this Melaleuca were growing in this water, which
is 2½-3 feet deep. It appears to approach near M. leucadendron. I
discovered a Nymphaea covering the waters of this lagoon, of the size of
N. pygmaea. The flowers are white, of which I was only able to procure
two or three specimens, and no capsules were discovered. I took up some of the
roots, which are likewise small, and very deep in the stiff clayey bottom. These
I enveloped in soil, and having no other means, could only risk them, being
desirous of transporting the plant to Port Jackson, although, from our expected
detention on the coast and the subsequent voyage thence, they have but little
chance. I gathered specimens of a species of Polygala, of a small
Euphorbia; and a species of Hedysarum, with seeds of Tecca.
The sandy shores abound with a succulent plant now in flower. It appears to be
an Aizoon, with narrow oblong-lanceolate smooth leaves; flowers axillary,
solitary. Flagellaria indica is a very common plant in confined
brushwood, climbing over the whole through the medium of its cirrhiferous
(tendril bearing) foliage, and in similar situations Dioscorea bulbifera
has been observed, bearing axillary bulbs and small male flowers. Finally I
thought in like places I could trace something of the Bignonia in a
twining shrub with glossy ovate conjugate leaves, and its bark, which is
spotted, as in some species indigenous in Brazil. I, however, saw no signs of
flowers. I planted some peach stones in a deep rich soil near the lagoon. At
dusk the boat came for me, and I went off, with a specimen of the fresh water
and reported the discovery to Mr. King.
29th. Sunday. Soon after noon some of the people on deck observed five
natives among the high grass on the island approaching the spot where our party
had been cutting up wood, and our tools, axes and cross-cut saws having been
rather neglectfully left there by our people, they carried all off, and our
station flags stuck up at regular distances on the beach likewise attracting
their attention were also seized. At the firing of some muskets they fell down
among the grass, but rising again they walked off with their booty and wholly
disappeared. It was suggested they might be a part of a body of natives seen on
the main yesterday, and might have crossed over in a canoe.
Mr. Bedwell. and five able hands were despatched in the large whale boat
round the south part of Goulburn Island to examine the little bights and capture
any canoe he might find. About 3 p.m. he returned with a very fine one, about 17
feet long and 2 feet wide, formed of an entire piece of timber, and sufficiently
large to convey six natives from one island to another. It was hauled up on the
beach, and near it were seen 7 or 8 natives, armed. They had an encampment of
gunyas or huts on the rising ground, and several small fires were smoking around
them. It being evident this canoe had been made by persons in possession of
sharp iron tools, the circumstance created a doubt of its being of Australian
manufacture, and this doubt was not a little strengthened by a piece of Malay
rope being found attached to it. How the people became possessed of it we know
not. Captain Flinders found the natives on this coast to the eastward great
thieves, and these to the westward have this day thus far proved their
consanguinity in character with them in carrying off our wooding tools.
At 4 p.m. I accompanied Mr. King to the west point, to examine the soundings
of the newly discovered watering place in order to return the vessel nearer to
it for convenience and protection to our people while occupied in taking in a
fresh supply of water. We landed to examine Bongaree's discovery, which is under
a range of perpendicular cliffs or elevated forest land. The fresh water runs
from rocky perforations near the ground into a kind of well or basin, deepened
by our people, and rendered more convenient for the purpose of filling our
casks. Oozing through the white clay it has a pale tinge, is soft but good
water. Whilst Mr. King was taking angles and bearings I examined the plants of
the overhanging range of cliffs. I gathered better specimens of a volubilous
plant of the Asclepiadaceae, observed yesterday in fruit. Periploca
sp. Santalaceae; Exocarpus, or allied to that genus; leaves
elliptical and broad; spikes axillary, crowded, shorter than the leaf; a tree
not exceeding 20 feet in height. Achyranthes pungens, in sterile, sandy
spots. A fine leaved Casuarina, with small fruit, forming a tree 30-40
feet high, on the immediate beach, afforded me some specimens and seeds. I
discovered a single specimen of a low spreading tree with a compound fruit,
perhaps of the Urticaceae.
At the extremity of our walk, a point of the island opened to us, truly
picturesque; it was covered with the Pandanus, with stems 20 feet high,
bearing their compound drupaceous fruit. At dusk we returned on board, and
suspecting the natives might swim off in the night and endeavour to carry oft
their canoe, we hauled it up to the davits out of their reach, had muskets
ready, and directed a good and vigilant watch to be kept. Numerous white and
black cockatoos, several pigeons, and some rich plumed parrots were observed on
the shores of the island. Among the volubilous plants seen on shore an
Ipomoea is very common under the cliffs. It has a long tubular corolla of
a white colour, capitated stigma, and smooth woody stem, agreeing with a species
figured by Andrews in his Botanical Repository as Ipomoea grandiflora,
but differing from the Convolvulus grandiflorus of Linnaeus (supplement),
which is described as having an arborescent pubescent stem. At 11 p.m. our whale
boat, which had been (at dusk) well secured astern, was discovered drifting
towards the shore, and suspecting the natives were carrying her off, muskets
were fired, and the jolly boat manned, well armed, was sent off to bring her
back. It appears one or more of these mischievous natives had silently swam off
to recover their canoe, but being disappointed in not finding her within their
reach, had cut through the thick painter or rope of the whale boat, and were
either towing her away or allowing her to drift on shore.
30th. Monday. Clear morning. About half past 6 a.m. we weighed anchor
and stood to the northward and westward, to a more convenient place for watering
the vessel. Our people were sent on shore to the cliff abreast of us in the
whale boat, well armed, to fill casks with water; a carronade was ready loaded
on board, and every precaution was taken on deck to protect the people, from the
assaults of the natives, of whom seven were seen early this morning, skulking
about under cover of the high grass. In a short time they were seen running to
the spot on the edge of the cliff above our watering party's heads. A musket was
fired from the cutter to warn our people of their danger. In an instant they
were assailed with a shower of large fragments of ironstone and broken wood,
which was returned by our people's muskets without effect. In this affair two
seamen were slightly bruised, and the whole embarked and came off.
Another party, consisting of Mr. King, myself and three others, left the
cutter to protect the watering people by standing off so as to command the line
of the cliff's edge, and the fillng of the casks was carried on with despatch,
in peace, no natives daring to make their appearance. At noon we brought off 180
gallons. It was fortunate that I have either collected or ascertained the
greater part of the botany of the island previously, for now, in fact, I could
not venture to carry on my pursuit of flora, excepting under the protection of a
strong guard, which could not on any account be spared. The small fly is
extremely troublesome. The skins of none of us are proof against its penetrating
proboscis.
31st. Tuesday. No appearance of natives. At 10 a.m. I landed with our
watering party and went to the summit of the cliffs in sight of our boat. All
was quiet, and I examined and collected the few plants around me, as well as
those of the craggy descent at its eastern extremity. On the cliff, specimens of
an annual plant of the Gentianaceae, Exacum sp. Verbena
sp., a beautiful delicate blue-flowering annual plant, with linear leaves. A
small creeping Portulaca, with apposite orbicularly cordate carnose
leaves and terminal yellow solitary flowers, is generally dispersed over this
stony soil, with a Spermacoce, gathered on the 27th. In the descent,
among a confined brushwood and small trees, I gathered the following
specimens:--Loranthus sp., a parasitical plant. Dioscorea sp.,
which appears none other than the Linnean D. bulbifera, originally
figured by Hermann. Rubiaceae, Psychotria sp. Verbenaceae,
an annual plant with pale bluish flowers. Cetharexylum? a tree 12-20 feet
high. After a range of about three hours, with but little success I returned to
the boat, which was awaiting my arrival, and we all went on board. The flies
still continue very troublesome, so much so that some of us while writing are
obliged to wear veils. These insects scruple not to enter our eyes and nostrils,
to our very great annoyance, nor have we found the means of wholly destroying
them. They do not appear to lessen in numbers though very many pay daily for
their presumption.
1818. April 1st. Wednesday. This day we completed our supply of water
for 8 weeks, but the variable winds had almost determined Mr. King not to wait
here for a supply of wood, which can easily be provided at other islands. The
cry of a native dog was heard in the course of the last night, and this morning
one was seen on the beach, prowling about for food. At 2 p.m. some natives, who
had been seen in the morning at an encampment among the high grass, were
observed in motion, and were about thirteen in number, walking briskly to the
part of the cliffs over our people's heads, evidently with mischievous
intentions, most of them being armed with long spears. A signal was hoisted at
the masthead of the cutter to warn the people beneath, and a 6 lb. shot was
fired from the cutter over the summit of the cliff, which dispersed the natives,
who finding we were ready for them, walked off altogether, and we were no more
molested by them.
I accompanied Mr. King and Mr. Bedwell to some Rocks called The Brothers, to
the northward and westward of our anchorage. They are bare, naked, shelving and
very irregular: a thin wiry grass in tufts on them afford a nest to seabirds,
and the only plant else was a species of Cassia, whose dead twiggy stems
were laden with pods, of which I gathered seeds. A bottle was left on these
rocks,[*] containing a paper stating the arrival of the vessel and the
disposition of the natives who visited the islands around.
[* The smallest of the Goulburn Group.]
2nd. Thursday. Fine at 8, when we got under weigh and stood northerly
round the island. The wind was light, from the eastward, but afterwards veering
to northward, which obliged us to put about and return anchoring nearly on our
old ground. A proposal being made to visit Sims Island[*] this afternoon, I most
readily and gladly joined the party, to examine the botany of a spot which, from
Mr. King's account, might afford me much novelty, and some interesting subjects.
On the beach on which I landed I gathered specimens of a large spreading bushy
plant of the Salicariae, a Lythrum. The nearly decayed foliage of
an Amaryllis (probably) on the warm sands directed me to the treasure
below; the bulbs were deep in the soil and wedged in between large immovable
pieces of rock, which rendered it difficult to take them up without bruising
them. I procured 8 good roots. Ascending over rocks and large stones to the more
elevated parts of the island, I detected the following plants:--Grevillea
ilicifolia, a shrub 3 ft. high. Hibbertia sp. Bossiaea sp., I
observed this plant in a less perfect state on S. Goulburn Island. Indigofera
sp., a shrub with purple flowers. Pimelea involucrata, a small
slender plant with scarlet flowers. Haloragis sp., allied to H.
racemosa, Labill. Psychotria sp., observed likewise on Goulburn
Island. Flagellaria indica, specimens in flower and fruit. Diosma,
a shrub with linear leaves and small flowers: Sterculia sp., Glycine
sp. I gathered some fine specimens in fruit of the Tabernaemontana
discovered on Goulburn Island.
The Cucurbitacious plant Cucumis,[*] with a scarlet round
hisped fruit about the size of a red currant, is common, hanging over and
covering large stones. The suffruticose carnrose plant of the
Asclepiadaceae, of reclining habit, is frequent among rocks in barren
sandy places. It has the habit and inflorescence of Hoya carnosa, but its
flowers are white and smooth, and very fragrant. I gathered a specimen that had
expanding flowers, doubting of being able to preserve it. A Scaevola,
allied to S. lobelia, but differing in the division of the calyx, was
observed on the beach within the influence of the surf, forming a large
spreading shrub, with obovate glossy entire foliage. The Convolvuli of
the shores of Goulburn Island are likewise noticed on those of this island,
which is about three quarters of a mile in length, rugged, covered with rocks of
sandstone, shelving and perforated by the action of the weather. The elevated
parts have much pudding-stone, and the shallow sandy soil is sprinkled with
small fragments of quartz.
[* Seaberry of Australia.]
The centre of the island, is a grassy hollow, which in heavy rains forms a
swamp. Here, in this periodical humid situation, some fine specimens of
Pandani present to the eye a pleasing appearance, being now laden with
green fruit. Its western side is sandy, less stony, and productive of high
grass. I saw the Tournefortia before mentioned, it forms a small tree 10
feet high, of irregular but robust growth, which, with some Eucalypti of
small growth, not in flower, and those above mentioned, appear to be the whole
of the arbusculae of the island. Bamboo joints and broken earthen vessels, found
by our people, are indications of the Malays having visited the island. The
situation of this small but interesting island is 11°38' S. lat. and 133°25' E.
long.
3rd. Friday. Mr. King intending to land upon Sims Island to take equal
latitudes this morning gave me an opportunity of examining those parts I could
not visit yesterday. At 11 a.m. I landed on the S.E. side, where the rocks are
covered with the Vitis and some Convolvuli, of which one small
woolly specimen, being in capsule, furnished me with seeds.
The arurldinaceous stemmed Flagellaria is frequent in fruit, climbing
over all other plants. Among some rugged loose stones, sunk in the sand, I
discovered a few more bulbs of the same kind kind as those discovered yesterday,
and as I had promised to meet the boat on the opposite. side of the island in
half an hour, I could only allow myself time to take up a dozen fine roots.
Guilandina bonducella (the nuts are called the Bonduc nut) and a species
of Boehmeria with ternate leaves, unequally round, obtuse, nerved, were
shrubs on the beach; and of the latter I gathered specimens in fruit.
In crossing this island from S, to N., I detected the following new
specimens: Daviesia sp., a twiggy shrub. Grevillea ilicifolia.
Also seeds of a Solanum, a shrub with oblique tomentose leaves, large
blue Cowers' and pale yellow berries, containing shining black seeds. Beneath
the shade of small trees of Metrosideros in fruit the Amaryllis
was observed in small patches and with the Grevillea seems to be
scattered profusely over the island. Soon after noon I had passed hastily over
to the beach, where the boat was awaiting my arrival. Embarked and returned on
board. N.B. I could have wished to have spent the whole of this afternoon on the
island, but it was necessary the boat should return to the cutter with Mr. King
at 1, and much inconvenience would have resulted had the crew of the whaleboat
been sent in the evening from the distant anchorage to the island to take me
off, when the vessel required the whole of our little company either on board or
elsewhere.
4th. Saturday.[*] At half past 8 we got under weigh, with a light air
from the southward. Attending to my specimens and drying seeds on deck. At 6,
shortened sail and dropped an anchor in 10 fms.
[* On this day the "Mermaid" left South-West Bay.]
5th. Sunday. Early this morning we weighed anchor and stood off for
the island seen some days ago to the northward of the one from whence we had
taken in a stock of water, and being with it, called Goulburn Islands, this, by
way of distinction, is called North Goulburn Island. At 8 a.m. we tacked, and in
half an hour came to with the best bower in 6 fms., muddy bottom. In the
afternoon I went on shore with Mr. King and our second officer; we landed at the
south point of the island which is rather rocky, being connected with a long
chain of reefs running parallel at some distance with the beach. The,
Scaevola allied to S. lobelia is very abundant on the shore, in
flower and young fruit. I passed over a narrow strip of low land, chiefly sand,
and gathered in patches of undershrub and brushwood the following
plants:--Smilax sp. Verbenaceae, Dicrastyles, allied to
Premna, a shrub of procumbent trailing habit, flowers spiked, blue.
Diadelphia, allied to Psoralea, a strong scented shrub.
Diospyros sp., a tree 30 feet high. Solanum sp., a shrubby smooth
plant, with occasional tetandrous flowers, and small orange fruit, allied to
S. nigrum. The Tournefortia of Sims Island with other plants of
the South Goulburn Island were observed this afternoon, particularly
Tabernaemontana sp., before noticed, of which I gathered seeds.
At the back of the beach is a low grassy hollow, a marsh in the rainy season
but at this time dry. Pandanus spiralis is here abundant, and the grass,
which is of gigantic growth, appears to be a Bromus, of which I gathered
some specimens. The shores, although rocky in some places, have likewise some
fine clear spots for dragging the seine, and they are lined with fish,
particularly the mullet, whence the name of the bay in which we are at anchor.
Some fine large specimens of Casuarina, of arborescent growth, on the
beach, will afford us some good firewood.
6th. Monday. Having attended to my plants, I landed with a party who
were sent to cut down Casuarina. Crossing a hollow sandy flat parallel
with the shore, I rose to some land entirely covered by the high grass, and of a
much better soil, over which some Eucalypti of small growth were thinly
dispersed. In this situation, among the grass, I gathered a few specimens,
viz:--Drosera sp. Stackhousia sp., a delicate plant. Verbena
sp., an annual plant. Crotalaria sericea, a small suffruticose plant
with scarlet flowers. Glycine sp., this specimen agrees much with G.
caribaea of Jacquin, a twining plant. The soil in which these plants were
discovered is of a loamy character, with a small proportion of sand, and being
rendered fit by the rains of this morning, for the recaption of some European
seeds I had with me. I sowed many peach stones and several apricots.
About noon the day was well cleared up, and the sun became very powerful and
oppressive to the wooding people, one of whom was so much overcome by the
intense heat of the beach, as to be obliged to return on board-sick. Some water
was discovered in a ditch on the north end of the bay in which we are
anchored--in a small quantity. And five gunyas or huts were discovered near the
beach, of depressed form, made of large sticks, so cut and placed as to rest on
one another at the points and form the top of the hut. The interstices were
filled up with dry bark and dead grass, and the whole was covered with a thick
coat of sand, forming at once a depôt for provisions and a safe and dry retreat
from bad weather.
It has been doubted whether they were built by Malays or natives; some
bamboos and nets found near them suggest the probability of the former visiting
the island and encamping on its shores to dry and prepare their cargoes of
trepang for transportation. We, had left the shore for the cutter but a short
period, when seven natives and a dog were observed passing very leisurely over
the spot on which we had been clearing wood, and continuing their route to the
south point on which we had landed yesterday. Although very hot on shore, the
thermometer on board showed nothing unusual, and the small pocket one I usually
carry with me I found broke by some accident upon taking it out to ascertain the
temperature of the beach.
7th. Tuesday. I went on shore with the wooding party, taking with me
an assortment of vegetable seeds, which I had procured at Port Jackson for the
purposes of sowing in favourable situations on the coasts. Of fruits I sowed the
following. Peach stones--a considerable quantity-and apricots and lemon seeds,
and of vegetables, marrowfat peas, long-podded beans, scarlet runners, large
homed carrots, parsley, celery, parsnips, cabbage, lettuces, endive and spinach.
Of ornamental plants, broad-leaved Virginian tobacco, sweet and everlasting
peas, Spanish broom and Astragalus falcatus, (plants lately introduced
into the colony). A cocoa nut, found on the sands near the watering place at the
other island, I planted near the beach. The weather cleared up about noon and a
scorching sun succeeded. In the afternoon I took a walk towards the north point
of the island. In a considerable confined mass of small trees, densely overrun
and matted together with scandent and volubilous plants, of which a species of
Vitis is most predominant, I discovered Psychotria sp., a small
slender tree with orange berries. Eugenia sp., parasitical on a rough
leaved Ficus. I also discovered a remarkable species of Loranthus.
Abrus precatorius is now in flower and fruit, covering the brushwood with
its hanging ornamental seeds. No appearance of emu or kangaroo or other
quadruped (native dog excepted) has been noticed.
GOULBURN ISLANDS To RAFFLES BAY, 8-15 APRIL, 1818
8th. Wednesday. Repapered my green specimens and anxiously await
settled fine weather to expose them to the air on deck.
9th. Thursday. During the last night we had so drifted from North
Goulburn Island that it was scarcely distinguishable at daybreak. I availed
myself of the general fine appearance of the day and placed all my damp and
green plants on deck to dry, the late damp and unsettled weather had benefited
them nothing. About three strange sails were observed on our lee bow between
Sims Island and the main, and were soon discovered to be Malay proas, which were
beating up towards that Island, and as we advanced towards them others were
distinguished having Dutch colours. We hoisted our ensign and pendant at the
mast-head, and examined the state of a carronade, ready loaded on the starboard
quarter. They anchored in the bay near Sanson's Head (the N. point of Sims
Island), and were a small fleet of 16 sail. Most valuable information might be
obtained from these Asiatics as to their seasons of fishing and detention on
this coast, the success of their fisheries, the value of their cargoes, their
opinion of the natives, could we have conversed with them through the medium of
an interpreter. Our small numbers suggested the necessity of keeping at a
respectable and safe distance from individuals whose numbers with ours appear to
bear a proportion of about 8 to one. Mr. King steered away to the westward. At
dusk several native fires were seen on the main.
10th. Friday. About 6 a.m. several proas were observed to windward. We
trimmed sails and bore up W.N.W. At past 7 o'clock the whole of the Malay fleet
were seen bearing down upon us, we however continued running along the coast,
not appearing to notice them, and about 9 a.m., as they were passing under the
land, we hoisted an Ensign and Pendant, and they shewed Dutch colours. It was
the intention of Mr. King, afterallowing these Malays to pass him to the
westward, to steer into a bay or bight observed in the land, to examine it, as
it appeared of some moment. The proas however ran in themselves anchored and
thus debarred us from entering. At 11 a.m. the vessel was put about; we passed
the Malays steering westerly and at half past 12 we anchored in 6½ fms. between
the main and some islands.[*] The land of the main is low, but in parts rising
gradually to grassy thickly wooded ranges, apparently of Eucalyptus. We
have had fine breezes favourable for drying my plants.
[* Between Cape Cockburn and the south extreme of Croker
Island.]
11th. Saturday. The proas that anchored in the bay yesterday were
observed standing down towards us, no doubt actuated by curiosity to know what
we were and the object of our voyage. We immediately weighed anchor, made sail,
and stood to the N.N.E., the wind being scant from S.E. by S. Some of the proas
passed within 50 yards of us, and on the deck of each from 20 to 30 persons were
observed. Seeing we were prepared for them they contented themselves with
calling to us (in Malay language), frequently repeating Macassar, Trepang,
etc.
Their departure from the bay gave us an opportunity of examining it. We
accordingly steered for it, but found the whole (although spacious) so shoaly as
not to be worth any consideration. We anchored at half past I near our last
night's ground--a little to the westward of it.
12th. Sunday. The bay formed by the trending of the mainland, in which
we are now at anchor, has been entitled by Mr. King, Mountnorris Bay. Prayers
having been read to the cutter's company, Mr. King left the vessel at 11 a.m.,
accompanied by Mr. Roe and myself, for an island to the westward of our
anchorage, which has received the title. of Copeland.[*] We landed on its south
side, and from its similarity to those recently visited I was but little
impressed with ideas of discovering new plants on it. Copeland Island is
remarkable for its compact rotundity and although of small size is high above
the level of the water. The basis is coral, above is sandstone, and the soil of
an ironstony character.
[* Copeland Islet, 125 feet high, toward the head of Mountnorris
Bay, was used by the Malays for boiling and drying trepang.]
I discovered the following very interesting plants:--Bignonia
filiformis, a small tree of the habit of Hakea, exposed situations.
Hibiscus radiatus, an annual plant, on sloping grassy banks.
Arthropodium sp., barren exposed spots. Velleia sp., peduncles
filiform, a delicate and tender procumbent plant. Velleia sp., flowers
yellow; leaves entire, lanceolate. Terminalia or Chuncoa sp., a
shrub a foot high; leaves obovate, smooth; spike erect; capsule ellipsoid.
Crotalaria sp., habit of Hedysarum. Eucalyptus sp., a shrub
8 ft. high. Metrosideros or Angophora sp. Hakea sp., a
shrub, in exposed cliffy situations with the preceding. Polygala sp., a
pygmy plant, among grass. The most remarkable and singular Acacia
dolabriformis, observed on Goulburn Islands, here enabled me to gather fine
flowering specimens. I procured seeds of two species of Convolvulus. The
lat. of the small island is 11°27' S., and about 132°54' E. long. Copeland
Island, like others on this coast, has much fresh water after rains, which is
indicated by its deep furrowed rocky gullies, conducting the water into the sea
on the south side.
13th. Monday. Getting under weigh we made sail; at 8 a.m. we shoaled
water very fast, and immediately hauled to N.E., and scraped along the ground in
1¾ fms., hard sandy bottom. Tacking again, we shoaled to 10 feet in stays and
took bearings of our perilous situation. Clearing ourselves by getting into
deeper water, we shortened sail, to meet a squall which gave us some small
showers at intervals. At half past 4 we came to an anchor in 11¾ fms., between
the main and an island (named by Mr. King Darch Island),[*] having with
difficulty found some safe ground to depend upon during the night. Native fires
were seen abreast of us on the mainland, in the night.
[* "After my esteemed friend, Thos. Darch, Esq., of the
Admiralty."--King.]
14th. Tuesday. We left our situation off Darch Island at an early hour
and steered N.E. by N. We sailed along a coast, generally westerly, over a
bottom very uneven, varying from 5 to 11 fms. At noon we passed a low sandy
island covered with small brushwood, and hauled south, and at 3 P.m. we anchored
in 5 fms. Mr. King proposed to visit a rock on the shore, in order to take some
cross bearings, and I accompanied him, with our second officer. The rock on
which we landed was covered chiefly with a species of Lythrum, of which I
gathered seeds. The Vitis, some Convolvuli, and the Smilax
of North Goulburn Island, are all blended together and form a secure cover to
pigeons and other birds that were disturbed on our landing. On the main shores
Hibiscus (= Fugosia) punctatus is frequent and rich in
flower, and among plants common on Goulburn Islands I discovered the following
in sandy ridges above the beach. Glycine sp., a fetid, shrubby plant;
Achyranthes sp., allied to A. corymbosa. A small spreading tree,
which perhaps may be of the Microsperma, the Eugenia of Goulburn
Island I have observed of arborescent growth 25-30 ft. high. The
Eucalypti are the prevailing timber, of ordinary size and chiefly of the
species already mentioned. In these forest lands, elevated above the beach 30
feet at least, I discovered a Fan Palm, Corypha (= Livistona)
australis, about 10 feet high, with remains of the flowering branch. And
I gathered the fruit of another palm (probably rising to the height Of 40 feet),
the fronds are pinnate and the fruit much smaller than that of Areca
catechu, and red. From the ground I gathered some fruit beneath a tree 40 or
50 feet high. Perhaps in these solitary shades nothing exceeds the beauty of a
splendid Grevillea, forming a slender tree, varying in height from 8-14
feet. It belongs to Mr. Brown's section, Cycloptera, of that genus.
The soil of this forest land is rich, of some depth, reddish in colour,
having a small proportion of sand, with much decayed vegetable matter, in which
I planted about a score of peach stones. The rocky shores abound with the large
Scaevola, laden with white drupes. A snug picturesque bay is formed by
the trending in of the line of coast at this particular spot, but unfortunately
being of no depth could be of no use to shipping as an anchoring ground; from
the numbers of the Areca above referred to, scattered on the slopes of the land
near the beach, it has received the name of Palm Bay. Our people (on board) saw
three natives making towards us. We, however, only noticed the impressions of
their feet on the sands. Some doubts have arisen whether the land is an island
or part of the main. From its appearance as laid down on the charts it is
supposed to be an island of large dimensions. At dusk we returned on board.
15th. Wednesday. In the afternoon I joined Mr. King in an excursion to
a point of the shore bearing S.W. from our anchorage, from whence Mr. King
expected he would be enabled to draw some conclusion what this island or main
might prove to be. As we sailed to the point several fine small bights opened to
us where vessels might ride in safety almost land-locked, and a deep bay or
mouth of a strait[*] presented itself, through which a strong tide ran, tending
to convince us that this land is an extensive island. Mr. King set some high
hills distant in Mountnorris Bay, but the closing of the day would not allow
further remarks to be made. On the rising ground above the beach on which I
landed the plants were nearly the same as observed yesterday. I gathered some
fine specimens of the new Grevillea, whose brilliant orange flowers are
very conspicuous in the darker shades of these elevated Eucalyptian woods. Also
the following:--Verbesina sp., leaves lanceolate; flowers yellow,
axillary, solitary. A small brushy plant of the habit of Xerotes, with a
terminal capitulated inflorescence; and a blue flowered Spermacoce,
before noticed. No palms were observed this afternoon, but Pandanus is in
great abundance. A deep bay formed from the point at which we landed and running
in deep to the northward and eastward is called Raffles Bay, in honour of Sir S.
Raffles, late Governor at Java.
[* An opening which trends round the south head of Palm Bay proved
to be a strait communicating with Mountnorris Bay and was named Bowen Strait.
Bowen Strait separates Croker Island from the mainland and leads northwestward
from Mountnorris Bay to sea.]
RAFFLES BAY, 16-18 APRIL, 1818
16th. Thursday. This morning, early, some Malay proas were seen to the
southward, standing under easy sail to the N.W. We therefore continued at anchor
till late, watching their motions. They were standing off the strait seen
yesterday, and from the occasional tacking disposition of some canoes it was
inferred that they were waiting for others. At 8 we weighed anchor and made
sail, with the wind from the east. The doubt as to what were the real intentions
of these Malays induced Mr. King to lay to about 11 and hoist our Pendant and
Ensign, in order if they were disposed to communicate in friendly manner with us
they might come off in a canoe. They, however, took no notice of us.
It was deemed prudent rather than stand on towards the Malays, to put back to
our last anchorage and allow them time to pass before us westerly. We therefore
returned and anchored near the spot we occupied last night. It is rather an
unfortunate circumstance having fallen in with this squadron, as our necessary
caution and diffidence, arising from the smallness of our numbers, prevent our
continuing the survey where they are, and nothing can be gained from running
before them westerly, because in that case they would be continually in our
rear, to our annoyance. About 7 p.m., suspecting the Malays might be tempted to
visit us in the night, we left anchorage and stood off to the northward and
westward 2 or 3 miles, and again anchored. This cautious step of Mr. King may be
deemed the more necessary as it is a known fact that no dependence can be placed
in the friendly assurances ssurances of this treacherous people, where numbers
would soon overpower our most strenuous and active efforts.
17th. Friday. The proas were observed in motion, standing westerly out
of the strait. Mr. King determined if possible to obtain an interview with them
this day and present the Malay letter he had received from Sir T. Raffles to the
captain of any proa with whom we might communicate. About half past 9, sixteen
proas, under a press of sail, were distinctly seen, exclusive of small canoes,
running close under the opposite shore of the strait. Approaching them within a
mile, having a white flag at the masthead, we lay to, in hopes they would see
our desire of an amicable interview. Fifteen proas passed us at 10, and the last
being considerably behind the rest of the squadron we bore up towards him, and
in half an hour came close under his counter, and hailing the people on board,
made signs that we wished to communicate with them, showing them the letter.
They referred us to the Commodore of the squadron before them, and would not
heave to, to allow us to go on board their proa. Being thus disappointed, we
tacked the vessel, and the proa continued her course N. westerly, after the rest
of the squadron. At noon we anchored off Raffles Bay[*] and took a meridian
altitude for our latitude. In the afternoon I went with Mr. King and the second
officer to examine the bay, whose depth is about 4 miles, and width from point
to point about 6. The extremity is bounded for the most part by mangroves
through which some whitish low cliffs are seen bounding the slightly elevated
forest-land in the background.
[* Raffles Bay, west of Croker Island, penetrates five miles into
the mainland here known as Coburg Peninsula.]
At one of these cliffs where we landed I examined the plants in its environs
with some little success. The small Fan-palm is very frequent; its caudex here
is from 5 to 8 feet; the fronds are not large, generally extending about 18
inches and inserted on an aculeated rachis. I gathered specimens of it in flower
and fruit, which are small black ovate drupes. Hibiscus punctatus,
closely allied to H. Patersonius and Monoecia Hexandria, a shrub
with apposite elliptical leaves. Leguminosae, a tree with spreading
branches and compressed legumen. Diospyros sp., of Goulburn Island is
here very strong. On the edge of the cliff I discovered a small tree with
lactescent woody branches, leaves lanceolate, verticillate, glossy, and white
beneath. I suspect it may be an Euphorbia or one of the Asclepiadaceae;
it was not in flower or fruit. At sunset we returned on board, having
ascertained the shape of the bay, its inlets, etc., and made other observations
relative to its survey. Our people discovered some running water of a good
quality, of which they filled a bareca.
18th. Salurday. At 11 a.m. a boat with casks was sent to the watering
place discovered yesterday, and I embraced the opportunity and landed through
this medium. I took a walk to a water-course discovered by our people yesterday,
which I found to be about 12 feet wide, very shallow, of fine clear fresh water,
the drainings of the higher lands. It cannot, however, be turned to any account
in point of watering a vessel, the approach to it by boats being entirely
obstructed by large bodies of dense arborescent mangroves, so very prevalent on
the north coast. I gathered seeds and some specimens of a plant of the habit of
Leea sambucina, strong on these damp lands. In the forest-land I detected
another Grevillea, a small tree 12-16 feet high. It appears to be G.
heliosperma of Mr. Brown. A shrub of very small foliage, habit of
Thuya, but whose imperfect flowers proved it to be a second species of
our Port Jackson Calythrix, is frequent on the exposed edges of the
cliff. I detected a species of Celastrus in fruit, a slender tree 30 feet
high. In the dry barren ironstony soil of the cliff a delicate little
Stylidium was very plentifully in flower. I found some good soil in the
forest land distant from the beach, but it appears subject to inundation from
the rains descending upon it during the wet season, signs of which were, on the
herbage and leaves of the trees. Fires of the natives were seen on the main at
night.
PORT ESSINGTON AND POPHAM BAY, 19-26 APRIL, 1818.
19th. Sunday. About 9 we got under weigh and pursued a course N. by W. The
line of the coast continues very irregular, point after point opening to the
view. Passing several small bays[*] guarded by rocks and dangerous chains of
breakers, we were, towards evening, off a fine handsome bay, trending in very
considerably, whose shores are frequently, or in parts, cliffy and picturesque,
and whose natural beauty is not a little shown off by the thick green woods of
Eucalyptus stretching to the verge of these eminences; sandy beaches
alternate with those of mud and dense stretches of mangroves. Wore ship and run
into the port and about 6 p.m., we anchored in 4 fms., about a quarter of a mile
from a perpendicular red cliff. Evening cloudy, with appearance of rain. A few
drops fell about 8 p.m. Native dogs were howling on the shores near us in the
night.
[* The "Mermaid" passed round Smith Point, the east side of the
entrance to Port Essington.]
20th. Monday. Fine and clear. At 7 o'clock I landed under the cliff
with Mr. King,[*] having previously got the boat aground and with some
difficulty hauled her to the beach. Within the reach of the tide I observed a
tree of the mangrove character. It was showing flower buds, and appears to be
the Linnaean Rhizophora caseolaris, or Sonneratia acida of Willd:
On the cliff little or no variation takes place, either in the soil or
productions of Croker's Island or Raffles Bay.
[* "At the mouth of a small salt-water inlet."--King.]
I, however, gathered specimens of a species of Pleurandra [=
Hibbertia], a low spreading shrub. Numerous recent impressions of the
natives (and native dogs) were traced on the sands, and their fresh fires, at
which they had been very lately roasting quantities of cockles, tended to
suggest to us our presence in this bay had precipitately driven them from their
repasts. Shifting our berth southerly, we anchored at 11 a.m. off the entrance
of some harbours in this port.[*] In the afternoon I accompanied Mr. King and
Mr. Roe to a cliff abreast of the vessel, and while they were occupied in taking
bearings I ranged round in the wooded land, but found chiefly duplicates of the
plants I had seen before. However, I added the following specimens to my
collection. Indigofera sp. On the immediate shores I discovered a
spreading tree with vermilion coloured flowers. This tree perhaps is Cordia
sebestena [= C. speciosa] originally figured by Dillenius. A
fine-leaved Bidens furnished me with seeds. In some close thickets on the
beach I distinguished Guilandina bonduc [= G. bonducella], and a
species of Rhamnus, with elongated branches, twining among other plants,
rendering these brushes the more intricate; also a species of Sterculia,
observed on Goulburn Island, with large 5-lobed leaves and old capsules, which
assumes on the grassy point land here the same robust habit. The mark of natives
were observed on the trees.
[* Having got under weigh, King steered for a narrow opening at
the bottom of the port; after anchoring at its entrance, he entered the inner
harbour of Port Essington, where he spent some days off Middle
Head.]
21st. Tuesday. It being the intention of Mr. King to remain at anchor
the whole of this day, an excursion was planned to examine the west harbour of
this port, with a view of ascertaining its general indentations, although from
the prevalence of mangroves on its shores it cannot be of any consideration. Mr.
Roe, second officer, was sent on this survey, and I accompanied him, to collect
any new plants the shores on which we should land might afford me. We left the
cutter at half past 6 and rowed down the east side to a spit of sand which runs
nearly over to the western shore, leaving only a small channel to pass to the
bottom of the harbour. Landing on this spit I amused myself on the beach while
our officer was otherwise engaged. I entered a close confined thicket, where I
gathered several fine specimens:--Growler sp., a slender tree with
horizontal branches, allied to G. mallococca. Didimeria (Correa
rufa), a volubilous plant with cordate leaves. Diospyros sp., a
slender shrub.

PORT ESSINGTON (FROM A CHART SENT HOME BY SIR J. G. BREMER)
The sandy shores afforded me seeds of a Boehmeria, before discovered
on Sims Island, and some fine flowering specimens of Cordia sebestena,
very abundant on the beach at the bottom of this harbour. Abrus
precatorius [the black-tipped red seeds of which are known as crab's eyes]
is frequent in the brushy thickets at the back of the beach; and the
Strychnos of South Goulburn Island, and the Psychotria bearing
orange fruit, more sparingly. An Erythrina-looking plant with ternate,
rhomboid leaves and aculeated petioles, a small tree, is rare in open grassy
sub-humid situations, with Pandanus spiralis. Beneath the shade of a
large specimen of the Cordia, I found the bones of a human being, most
probably a native.[*] The skull and jawbones were partly perfect, they wanted
some teeth--those that remained in the jaw were entire and in good condition.
Leg bones and one of the ribs were discovered, all of which were carefully taken
on board and delivered to Mr. King.
[* "At the bottom of the western basin."--King.]
Departing from this shore, and having examined some salt water inlets bounded
by mangroves 40 feet high, we returned towards the vessel up the western shore,
landing at the base of a steep white cliff, the elevated forest-land of which
furnished me with several new plants. Hovea lanceolata, a twiggy plant,
seldom exceeding 18 inches in height. Zieria sp., a slender shrub.
Tremandra sp., a shrubby plant, habit of Bossiaea. Crotalaria
stenophylla. Calythrix miciophylla, first observed in Raffles Bay, a
delicate conspicuous shrub; and Haemodorum sp., with long narrow
leaves.[*] Acacia dolabriformis, and another species with plain leaves
are extremely fine in flower, and tempted me to gather some duplicate specimens.
Besides the palms before mentioned, found in this prolific spot of Australian
botany, I discovered Cycas circinalis, a sago palm, of which I saw both
male and female, about 10 feet high, and the latter laden with fruit. The soil
has nothing to recommend it, and the Eucalyptian timber is small, but not in
flower. Traces of natives were observed on the trees and some baskets were found
rather neatly made, supposed to be of the foliage sheaths embracing the stems of
the Pandanus spiralis. Sonneratia acida was seen growing in deep
salt water.
[* A Yam eaten by the natives.]
22nd. Wednesday. To complete the survey of another harbour in this
port Mr. King and Mr. Roe left the cutter at 8 a.m., and I accompanied them. We
landed at a small white cliff, composed chiefly of a crumbling gritty soft
sandstone, with a dry indurated red pigment. In a range I took in the
forest-land above the cliff, I did not detect an individual new plant. A
delicate leaved Bauhinia was found in luxuriant growth, but not in
flower, on the sides of the cliff beneath were some large specimens of Cordia
sebestena. Leaving these slimy shores, we landed at the eastern point of the
harbour, where I added one specimen to my collection viz. a species of
Achyranthes, very frequent on the low sterile sands of the point. It was
very remarkable and it furnished much matter for conjecture that, upon landing,
a tree of a species of Casuarina was discovered, with the branches and
head cut away with a sharp iron instrument, as if intended for a mark, as the
branches so lopped off were not taken away for any use, but remained under the
tree; and at a short distance from the beach several trees were cut down.
Whether the Malays or the French have visited this sandy point is a matter of
doubt among us. A good meridian altitude being very essential to the survey of
this port, we crossed its entrance to a rocky point to take it, being about
noon. At the back of the sandy ridge bounding the beach, the land is ordinary
and thick wooded. A Eugenia is now frequent, a tree 20 ft. high, in
fruit. It afforded me some ripe seeds. I gathered specimens from a tree 16-20
ft. high, with leaves like Melastoma, and a one-seeded drupaceous fruit.
Celastrus sp., a tree 30 ft. high, of slender growth. Convolvulus
sp., a prostrate plant with small blue flowers. Didimeria [=
Correa] sp. Phlomis sp. Ceanothus sp., a tree of
strong growth, 25-30 ft. high, frequently observed on the islands of this coast,
but never seen in flower or before in the present state of capsule. As a proof
that these shores are visited by natives we found a spear about 7½ ft. long,
ingeniously pointed with a long triangular fragment of red granite, very hard
and of a close fine texture. A canoe of singular formation was discovered by one
of our people on the beach--almost buried in the sand--made of bark and sewn
together at the ends, and about 13½ feet long. Our lat. is 11°17'31" S.
23rd. Thursday. This morning we got under weigh and beat to the
entrance of the port, and anchored in 4 fms., in a bay at 10 a.m., on its
western side. I landed with Mr. King about 11 o'clock at a cliffy point. The
sterile stony soil of this eminence is covered with Stylidium
absinthmoides, some of which were forming capsules. A tree of ordinary size,
common on all the islands and mainland of this coast, and which I could never
detect in flower, furnished me with a specimen in fruit, which is oval, crowned
with a persistent 8-cleft tubular calyx, as in Gardenia.
In the afternoon I accompanied Mr. King and Mr. Roe to examine the bay off
which we are at anchor and which has received the name of Knockers.[*] We had 4
or 5 fms., and a good bottom to the extremity of the bay, where a saltwater
inlet, having the appearance of a rivulet opening to us, we entered to examine
it. ft was near high water, and we had 2 and 2½ fms. at its mouth, which is
about 50 yards wide. We soon found that it divided and formed channels
insulating large patches of arborescnt mangroves. Following the leading branch
through its windings, we advanced until it became impossible to work the oars,
and finally were obliged to stop, the channel being completely closed by the
encroachments of mangroves 40 feet high . With some difficulty we put the boat
about, to return, and we passed an opening or two in this in this Rhizophorean
forest, which allowed us to be satisfied that a great extent of flat is
inundated after this manner, affording a fine soil and nursery for the growth
and luxuriant densityof these maritime woods.
[* In an inlet between Curlew and Oyster Points.]
In a moment we were most suddenly surprised by the yells and shouts of
natives, who were in the mangroves, and immediately we made every preparation to
meet them in this contained channel, discharging some muskets merely to
intimidate them. They seemed determined to annoy and intercept us, and and while
we were winding round to its mouth or outlet into the bay, they took a straight
course through the mangroves and awaited our passing out of this disagreeable
opening, when we were assailed with stones and spears with granite heads. None,
fortunately, touched us, although one struck the boat and others flew over us
and one passed between the midship oarsmen. This unjustifiable outrageous attack
was quickly returned with a volley of shot from our muskets, and perhaps with
some effect. We immediately got clear out into the bay, some of the natives
still following us on the main shore.
On our way to the cutter, observing a canoe among some mangroves on the
beach, we, by way of retaliation, pulled in there and towed her off. In it we
found some waddies and hand clubs of weight, with a quantity of live cockles,
very lately procured and probably for the evening's meal. The canoe was of one
piece of bark, its extreme length was 18 feet, and 22 to 24 inches in width. Its
ends were sewed up with pieces of cane, and a pole on each side of its gunwales
was lashed to the bark to support and strengthen its sides. Some cross pieces of
inner bark, laid across inside, rendered it more firm and substantial.[*]
[* A similar canoe was found by King at Blue Mud Bay, Gulf of
Carpentaria. At Blomfield Rivulet, at Endeavour River, Cape Tribulation, the
canoes seen were all hollowed out of trees.]
Among these mangroves I gathered specimens of a species of Bruguiera,
appearing to differ from B. gymnorhiza in having a red calyx. It has the
habit of some Magnoliae. This large and spacious port in which we have
been since the evening of the 19th, is called Port Essington, whose harbours
afford shelter and protection to shipping, but the land being so deeply overrun
with mangroves, and the want of fresh water, render it useless for agricultural
purposes. The situation of this point is about 11°16' S. lat., 132°22' E.
long.
24th. Friday. At half past 9 we got under weigh and stood towards the
port entrance, re-anchoring off a low rocky point in 5¾ fms.[*] Mr. King went on
shore for a few moments, to take some observations, and a singular rock there,
in the shape of a table of large dimensions, suggested a name for the point.
Scaevola sp., allied to S. lobelia, covers Table Point,[**] but no
other plant was observed here of any moment. In the afternoon a canoe was seen
near Table Point, but no natives were observed. In the squall of the evening she
drifted towards the cutter, and a boat was sent to bring her alongside, when she
was hoisted on board. She is the length and model of the canoe captured
yesterday, but of more recent construction.
[* "A little within Point Smith."--King.]
[* Table Head is 7½ miles S.S.E. of Point Smith.]
25th. Saturday. To prove to the natives who (for ought we know to the
contrary might be watching us) that we were peaceably disposed, the canoe was
lowered and towed on shore again. In her we put some old iron, such as spike
nails, chisels of kinds, a tomahawk, etc., for the use of her owners and she was
hauled up on the bank out of the reach of the tide. At 8 a.m. we weighed, made
sail, and stood out of Port Essington. Clearing the point of entrance, we sailed
westerly along the coast, which is irregular and full of small trendings and
projecting points, of which bearings were taken. Some Malay proas were observed
at anchor in shore, and some tents or bamboo huts were observed on the
beach.
About 2 o'clock p.m. a mangrovy bay of moderate depth opened to us, and in a
sandy bight we saw four other proas, whose people were encamped on shore. We
accordingly ran in and anchored in 7½ fms. at half past 3, being about 25 miles
to the westward of Port Essington. At 5 p.m. a canoe was seen, with five
paddles, pulling from the proas towards us; we therefore got firearms ready, in
case of any appearance of hostile intentions. Coming alongside, they were six in
number (of whom four were boys), prompted by curiosity to see us and obtain what
they could from us. Little or no invitation was requisite on our part to induce
them to leave their canoe and enter the vessel. The two men came on board and
soon became very loquacious, but none of us understanding the Malay language,
very little information could be procured from them.
We gave them wine and some ships' biscuits, which they enjoyed exceedingly,
and we showed them the letter written in the Malaya character by Sir T. Raffles
but they were too illiterate to read their own language. They made many
observations upon the ropes, sails, etc., of the vessel, and, observing our
carronades, they intimated that the large proas carried smaller ones (probably
swivels). Their canoe, which they had sent away, returned at dusk (8 p.m.) and
brought some fish, which they presented to us for our hospitality. Their request
for gunpowder was granted them, and the remainder of the wine in the bottle and
some tobacco were given them for the commandants of the proas. Their teeth were
very black and discoloured, and the whole chewed the betel nut in the usual way.
Mr. King wrote a few lines stating the object of his voyage, and the extent of
his survey, information that must be interesting to any persons reading English
to whom these Malays might show the letter. It was 9 o'clock before they left
us, to return to their proas. This trending of the coast has received the name
o. Popham Bay.
26th. Sunday. As the report of the favourable and hospitable reception
the Malays met with from us might induce them to pay us another visit upon the
same terms, and not wishing to receive their further salutations en
masse, we got under weigh and left Popham Bay, steering S.S.W. Several
canoes were observed fishing to windward. We had a strong eddy tide against us,
which made the cutter labour considerably. Our leadsman gave us a bottom at 22
fms., and at one p.m. we had deepened to 50 fms. The day's sail brought us to
the entrance of a deep bay of great width. We bore up and entered, but the wind
becoming foul we made but little progress, and the deep bad rocky bottom obliged
us to continue under weigh. We suspect this opening may prove to be the Van
Diemen's Bay of the Dutch charts. It appears to be very extensive, and may in
the result of examination turn out to be of some consideration. We kept sight of
the land's loom during the night under easy sail. Hitherto we have not been
fortunate in the discovery of any freshwater river, and should any be found
emptying themselves into this deep bay or gulf, it may enable us to see
something of the interior, and gain some interesting knowledge unattainable on
the coast.
VAN DIEMEN'S GULF AND THE ALLIGATOR RIVERS, 27 APRIL-13 MAY, 1818.
27th. Monday. Although very cloudy in the earlier stages of the
morning we had a very fine day. The wind was E.S.E. At 11 a.m., having made
several tacks, we came to an anchor in a small bay on the east shore of the gulf
we have entered, which appears will require some time to survey the whole of its
deep trending shores. This bay, although small, has good anchorage, but, like
the coast, in general, its shores are densely clothed with mangroves, the
sameness of which is much relieved by the picturesque aspect of two high hills
near its south point of entrance, and from our present position one appears to
be a depressed cone, and the other assumes the character of elevated table-land,
thickly wooded and very rocky. They have been entitled by Mr. King, Mounts
Bedwell and Roe, after the two young gentlemen, his officers, and he has named
our anchorage Aiton Bay, in honour of W. T. Aiton, Esqre. of Kew. The lat. is
11°16' S., and 131°56' E. long.
28th. Tuesday. About 7 a.m. we left the bay and steered southerly
along the shore. The morning is rather sultry, and the wind light, from the
eastward. Having made about 4½ miles, we anchored in 7 fms., muddy bottom, about
noon.[*]
[* "Near the land about six miles east of Mt.
Roe.--King.]
29th. Wednesday. At 11 a.m. we passed to leeward of one of several
islands[*] seen this morning, and suddenly shoaling to 3 fms., we hauled up and
gradually deepened to 5 fms. At one we anchored on a bank in 3¾ fms., muddy
bottom. Our lat. at noon was 11°32' S., and long. 132°30' East.[**] The
appearance of the shores, the shallow water, parts of mangrove bushes floating
on its surface, and the depressed character of the islands remind us of the N.W.
Coast. Mr. Roe was sent to sound around for a channel. He reported on his return
the extent of the shoal varying from 2½ to 4½ fms. water.
[* Named by King, Sir George Hope Islands.]
[** King writes: "The land eastward of this anchorage is an
isthmus 4 or 5 miles in breadth, separating the body of water from the bottom
of Mountnorris Bay." This land was given the name of Coburg
Peninsula.]
30th. Thursday. About 9 we had a slight air from the E.S.E., and got
under weigh, steering S.W. southerly. The rise and fall of the tide is 6½ and 7
ft., and at the ebb, extensive mud flats appear along the shore, rendering a
landing impracticable. At 4 p.m. we anchored in 5¼ fms.[*]
[* Under one of Sir George Hope Islands named next day, May-day
Island.]
1818. May 1st. Friday. Soon after 7 Mr. King landed upon the low shore
of an island near us to take sights for the chronometer, and I accompanied him.
Here we have a specimen of a growing island (called May Day Island), whose basis
appears to be a reddish sand with shells, ironstone, pebbles, etc. cemented
together, which by the action of the air are so indurated as to become rugged
stone, and of such large masses that small cliffs, observed through the
mangroves, are formed. The encroachments over the annual accumulation of drifted
land gradually increases the size of the island, whose sandy soil is covered
with plants. Eugenia acuminata is most surprisingly strong, being 40 feet
high, with a stem 30 inches diameter. The Grewia with tomentose fruit
afforded me some fine specimens and duplicate seeds. The tree I have hitherto
called Cordia sebestena is frequent, and its flowers have an indefinite
number of stamina. I saw some perfectly octandrous.
The tree of the Santalaceae (Exocarpus?) with the foliage like
that of some Brazilian Piper, is very large; with a shrub of the
Meliaceae, discovered first in Port Essington, perhaps Turraea;
the leaves are elliptical and glossy, and the calyx pubescent. A species of
Ficus, 30-35 feet high, was observed, but not in fruit; its leaves are
ovate, smooth throughout, veined, their margins are minutely glandulously
denticulated. I gathered seeds of a small white-flowered Convolvulus, and
Achyranthes sp., an annual plant. This island abounds with an
Acacia, a tree from 12-20 feet high, distinct from any species I have
before seen, leaves falcated, superior margin glandiferous; flowers globular, in
axillary racemes. Very recent traces of natives were noticed on the sands, but
none were seen on the island. On our return to the cutter we got under weigh,
steering S.S.W., but shoaling our water we re-anchored and sent the jolly boat
to sound ahead of us. It, however, proved that we were upon a large flat,[*]
with barely enough water to carry us over. Mr. King weighed, being determined if
possible to push over it into the deeper water to the southward and westward. We
stuck fast in 9 ft. of water, and were obliged to get an anchor out to haul
ourselves over the bar of sand, and this we continued, touching and swinging off
in 10 and 11 ft., with a strong tide against us. Steering north at one p.m. we
ran back to our anchorage of the 27th ultimo,[**] where we brought to in 7½
fms., at 4 o'clock in the afternoon.
[* Between May-day and Greenhill Islands.]
[** Eastward of Mount Roe.]
2nd. Saturday. We left our anchorage about 8, with a very light
breeze. At I we tacked to eastward. The western horizon was much gloomed by
extensive bodies of thick smoke of natives, who appear to be burning off the
bush and grass of the country in that direction. At 5 anchored at 10½ fathoms.
We are about 30 miles to the southward of Popham Bay.
3rd. Sunday. It was past noon before we got under weigh. Vast bodies
of smoke ascend to the westward. We hope and trust another day will furnish us
with materials for observations, to determine the extremes of this gulf. Its
muddy shores are low, and water shoaly.
4th. Monday. We weighed very early this morning and steered E.N.E.,
but the tide obliged us to anchor in 15¾ fms. at 8 a.m. Calm with intense heat.
The thermometer exposed to the sun rose at noon to 131½ degrees, being a dead
calm. At 2 p.m. we weighed anchor, which was wholly buried in the mud, and made
as much sail as would draw, the light airs fanning us from the S.W. The land
trends easterly in the most extraordinary manner. The meridians of the ports and
bays we have already surveyed lead us to suspect they were formerly islands
which have been, by the encroachments of the mangroves, joined to the
mainland.
5th. Tuesday. We stood towards the land at the bottom of the gulf,
which is very low, no beach appearing--but mangroves to the water's edge. To
windward, openings or deep bights appear, and to the southward a lofty range of
hills are distinguished, very distant inland. At 8 p.m. we anchored in 5 fms. An
eclipse of the sun, stated in the Nautical Ephemeris to take place to-day, was
not seen at the given time. It may have no occullation in this part of the
Globe.
6th. Wednesday. Soon after 5 a.m. a party consisting of Mr. King, Mr.
Bedwell, myself and the crew of the large whaleboat left the vessel to examine
an opening to the S.E. Mangroves bound it on both sides with their usual density
and arborescent growth. Passing the bar of this river-like opening, its width
becomes contracted and its depth increased to 5 and 6 fms., and the mangroves
being much thinner as we advanced allowed us a glimpse of the flat land behind
them. The windings which are by no means abrupt, present us with fine bold
reaches 400 yards wide with a depth frequently 8 fms. Mr. King had determined to
penetrate up this channel as far as the tide would carry us. He therefore pulled
in about its turn and landed on an open grassy bank perfectly free from
mangroves, but low and muddy. From some hills distant about 2 miles we might
have made some observations, but the difficulty of reaching their bases through
a low swampy flat covered with a matted thick grass and more especially our care
not to lose the benefit of the returning tide, which was now ebbing rapidly,
prevented us from visiting these elevations.
On this muddy bank I gathered the following few specimens and
seeds:--Clerodendrum inerme (H.K.), which likewise furnished me with
seeds. Hibiscus. Stenocarpus sp., an annual or biennial plant.
Convolvulus flavus, very abundant among the grasses. Sida sp.,
small narrow leaves; and Cassia sp., plant dead. The width of the stream
at this halting spot is about 250 yards, its depth is 31 fms., and its
inclination from the S.W. The banks are bounded by extensive flats of low
country, subject to inundations, and this depression was unfortunate for us, as
no bearings of any consequence could be taken. White cockatoos abound in large
flocks on its banks, with a large bird of the Anas family, with a very
long neck, some perfectly white; others very dark, and even of a black colour,
were likewise numerous. Their nests were built very thick together on the
Avicennia mangroves of the banks, and in some we saw the young unfledged
birds, over which some beautiful hawks were hovering, watching an opportunity in
the absence of the parent birds to seize their offspring. The turbid discoloured
waters of this winding river[*] abound with alligators 6 and 7 feet long, whose
terrific ghastly heads appeared occasionally on the surface of the water. We
returned on board at 3 p.m. The fires of the natives continue; large columns of
smoke were rising from the grassy flats behind the mangroves, the soil of which
is sour stiff tenacious clay.
[* "This river has received the temporary title of Alligator
River."--King. It is known as East Alligator River.]
7th. Thursday. Fresh breeze E. by S. At half past 6 we weighed anchor
and stood along the shore, and at half past 10 bore up for an opening in the low
land that appeared of magnitude, and whose trending we suspect may approach
towards a distant range of hills visible to the S.E. from the deck. Soon after
11 we came to an anchor near the entrance of a supposed river. The country from
the mast-head view presents us with an immense flat of depressed low country
thinly wooded, and only bounded by the very distant clear horizon. I accompanied
Mr. King on shore, who was anxious to get a good meridian altitude, landing on
the muddy bank opposite the vessel, which is a perfectly dead level for many
miles, over which the sea at springtide flows. It is very thinly wooded, covered
with a wiry grass, with patches of Sonneratia acida and Avicennia
tomentosa. Clerodendron inerme and indeed all the plants discovered
yesterday appear on this flat.
At 4 p.m. we weighed and stood to the bottom of a bay, where we came to in 5¾
fms. about 6 p.m., off the mouth of a second river.[*] About a mile inland from
the shore the dry wiry grass of the extensive flat was on fire, but no natives
could be distinguished.
[* Now called South Alligator River.]
8th. Friday. Having made preparation for an excursion up this second
channel, we left the cutter at half past 5 a.m., having a flood tide in our
favour, although the breeze was against us. Passing the bar of 3 fms. we
gradually deepened to 7½ and 8 fms., with banks (as the other river) covered
with mangroves of Rhizophora, Avicennia and Sonneratia,
whose dull uniformity was much relieved and enlivened by the yellow flowers of
Hibiscus populneus. The width of this stream varies from a quarter of a
mile to 200 yards, expanding frequently in the bends of the reaches, which (when
their inclinations were from the southward and westward) presented us with views
of the summits of distant high land.
About 25 miles up this river some slightly rising ground approached the
mangrovy banks, the principal wood of which appeared to be the stunted
Eucalypti, whose dreary aspect is not a little enlivened by the
picturesque appearance of the Areca of Croker's Island, whose waving
heads, towering over the tops of these small woods, give an effect scarcely to
be conceived in such low uninhabitable tracts. Advancing with a strong flood
tide, we had 9½ fms. in some parts in mid channel, and banks frequently clear of
mangroves exhibiting an extensive flat, covered with lofty grasses. At such
places a similarity of appearance might be traced with the Thames below
Woolwich, and the slender leaves of the Avicennia bearing some analogy to
the willow of that river, adds considerably to the simile.
Soon after 11 the tide was at its highest, and we landed at a clear low spot
on the banks, and, in the interval of time between that period and our
departure, while Mr. King was taking a meridian altitude, I rambled among the
gigantic grass with scarcely a hope of making any discovery in botany. I
gathered a few plants:--Sphaeranthus sp. Jussiaea sp., the first
species of this swampy genus (so frequent in South America) I have observed in
Australia; and Senecio sp., a small annual plant. I discovered a few
bulbs and from their long thick foliage suspect it is a new species of
Amaryllis. Their depth in the stiff clayey soil occupied some time in
digging them up safely, and I was only able to procure four bulbs. There can be
little doubt that this liliaceous plant is thinly scattered over the whole
extent of this flat grassy country, as those I saw were at a distance from one
another.
It was unsafe to venture far from the boat, where alligators abound, whose
numerous inroads and intersecting paths among the grass were observable to the
whole of us. I had exceeded my limited time and was hailed to return to the
boat. Our meridian altitude gave us for lat. 12°38'47" S., which is about 20
miles to the southward of our vessel's anchorage, and with the windings of the
river we estimate our distance to return as little short of 40 miles. The water
at the turn of the tide was brackish, and at its lowest ebb we doubt not of its
being perfectly fresh; indeed, the flights of freshwater birds seen this day
indicated its connection with bodies of fresh water at a distance inland. Its
width at this place is about 160 yards its depth upwards Of 3 fms. and its
general tendency was from the southward.
About a quarter past 12 we embarked, the ebb tide having begun some time and
the water had fallen some inches. At 7 in the evening the tide had changed and
was flowing very strong against us, we therefore were obliged to pull inshore,
to come to at a grapnel for a few hours, until the flood tide had in some
measure slackened. At half past 10 we weighed grapnel and pulled for the lights
hoisted at the masthead of the cutter, as a guide to us and we got safe on board
at about midnight. We saw several alligators in the water and on the muddy banks
of the river basking in the sun, none exceeding 8 feet in length. The fires of
the natives continue to be numerous in various directions; these conflagrations
extend over immense tracts of flat country, at intervals bursting into large
flames as the wind rises, and continuing until a heavy shower extinguishes
them.
9th. Saturday. Mr. King went on shore to take a meridian altitude,
which gave us 12°19' S. At 1 o'clock we left our anchorage and stood N.E. out of
the bay. The rise and fall of the tide is about 12 feet.
10th. Sunday. Prayers having been read to the people we got under
weigh and stood over a flat towards two islands; the one having been called
Field's, and the other Barron's, in honour of Barron Field, Esqre., judge of the
Supreme Court in New South Wales. Our soundings gave us 3½ and 4 fms., and at
half past 10 we suddenly got 13 fms. between the islands, but we were no sooner
in deep water than crossing the winding narrow channel we shoaled to 3 and 2½
fathoms, which obliged us to bring to. About 4 p.m. Mr. King accompanied by Mr.
Roe left the cutter, to sound towards Field's Island and endeavour to find a
channel or line of deep water for the vessel to pass. At dusk they returned,
having ascertained a sufficient depth of water situated to the N.E. of our
present anchorage, between Field's Island and the main.[*] Our lat. is 12°05'
S., long. 132°25' E.
[* Cunningham Channel separates Field Isle (the larger island)
from the main. South Alligator River has an approach through this
channel.]
11th. Monday. We weighed anchor about 9, steering along the shores of
the gulf, still trending southerly; a 3rd and 4th opening appeared in the beach,
which possibly may be connected inland with the two rivers already examined, but
our short stay on the coast now, and Mr. King's desire to survey the whole of
this gulf, would not allow us to enter and trace them.[*] The coast sailed along
this afternoon is a long line of sand, for several miles without a single point
or rising of which we might take bearings; and, in consequence, meeting with
nothing to detain us, and a fair wind, we made good 40 miles to the westward. At
6 came to anchor.
[* The Alligator Rivers are three in number: East, South, and
West. King says: "As this opening to the westward bore a similar appearance to
the river last examined, the name of Alligator Rivers was extended to
it."]
12th. Tuesday. Weighing anchor about half past 7 we steered westerly.
The coast now trends northward and N.N.W. proving to us that we are approaching
the entrance of the gulf up its west shore.
13th. Wednesday. About midnight we found we were being carried in upon
the shore by the tide, we therefore hauled off and by daybreak[*] we had drifted
considerably out of the Gulf. The line of coast is for some distance low, and
clothed with mangroves, excepting where a small sandy beach intervenes. At 10
a.m. a deep trending was observed to the northward and westward from one of the
points of which a dangerous reef extends. At noon we passed a long sandy beach
with a few scattered Casuarinae upon its margin, but thickly wooded in
the background. Very distant smokes were distinguished inland, proving the
existence of natives remote from the shores, on which, however, two could barely
be seen with the aid of our glasses. At 2 p.m., an opening or bight of the land
appearing, we hauled to the wind to fetch it and anchor. At dusk we were still
under weigh, labouring against a strong tide that was setting us to leeward. We
therefore shortened sail and continued under weigh all the night.
[* Having passed close to the easternmost point of Melville
Island.]
MELVILLE ISLAND TO APSLEY STRAIT, 14-21 MAY, 1818
14th. Thursday. During the last night we had drifted much to the
westward, and this morning we bore up for the bight of the land which we could
not make the last evening. The wind was from the southward and eastward, and we
were close hauled upon it. At 8 a.m. we entered a fine handsome bay (named
Brenton Bay, in honour of Sir Jahleel Brenton), bounded by cliffy shores, which
appear freer from mangroves than those we have of late examined. Its shoaly foul
bottom, however, prevented us from anchoring, the vessel was therefore put about
and we steered N.W. Steering into a fine spacious bay a few miles to the
westward of the other we got good soundings in 3 fms., and came to anchor on a
muddy bottom. This bay, which has received the title of Lethbridge, has some red
cliffy shores thickly wooded with Eucalyptus. The lat. is 11°10'10" S., and
long. 131°04'23" E. Four natives were seen on the western sandy beach of this
bay; some canoes were observed in motion at its extremity, and their fires were
blazing in the background at dusk.
15th. Friday. About half past 6 we got under weigh and steered N.W.
The coast westerly forms a beautiful range of cliffs of a reddish tinge, with
intervening banks from which the rising grounds are thickly wooded, apparently
with Eucalyptus. By observations and Captain Flinders' chart Mr. King
calculates we are within 4 miles (to the S.E.) of Cape Van Diemen, and a
projecting point of land seen (4 p.m.) before us, led us to suspect that it will
prove to be the cape. Approaching within a mile and a half we were obliged to
haul to the wind, steering north in consequence of a very large dangerous shoal
extending off this headland.[*]
[* Mermaid Shoal.]
N.B. An island passed to-day of small extent and covered with brushwood is
named Karslake's.
16th. Saturday. At 6 a.m. we bore up to ascertain the extent of the
breakers off the cape, and also to work round them. At 8 we had soundings 10
fms. on the edge of a bank, and immediately got none in 12 fms. These breakers
extend from the cape N.W. 14 miles at least, and in our run outside the large
shoal we approached within 50 yards of the outer bank, having from 6 to 2½ fms.
Wishing to anchor in the evening, Mr. King steered for a deep bight in the coast
with appearance of a river, but our water shoaling again to 4 and 3½ fms. we
were obliged to tack and stand-off into 8½ fms., and afterwards 22 fms., proving
to us we were passing over a bank of sand, which our lead showed us was of a red
colour. Tacking again into the opening at dusk, we entered and anchored in 7¼
fms. off a fine elevated projecting point, which has been named Luxmore Head;[*]
and the bay in which we are at anchor has been entitled St. Asaph's Bay. The
northern point of entrance into this bay is very picturesque, being a high and
striated cliff, perpendicular to the sea and wooded on its summit. It is named
Piper's Head, as a compliment to Jno. Piper, Esqre., Naval Officer at
Sydney.
[* In honour of Dr. Luxmore, Bishop of St. Asaph.]
7th. Sunday. The very flattering appearances held out to us in this
bay induced Mr. King to remain the whole of this day at anchor, to take some
observations on shore, for which necessary purposes Luxmore Head, on account of
its elevation, will be particularly serviceable. About 10 o'clock Mr. King, Mr.
Roe and myself landed upon the rocks beneath this point and climbed up its steep
loose ironstony slope, reaching its summit without any suspicion or alarm. Mr.
King had scarcely taken a bearing, and myself prepared for a walk around, when
one of our people armed, and who was keeping sentry near, reported the approach
of several armed natives. A slight confusion instantly took place by this sudden
and unexpected alarm, when it was deemed most advisable to make good our retreat
to the boat (having but one musket up with us), which we accordingly did rather
precipitately down the rugged side of the hill we had ascended. Our retreat gave
these Australians boldness, and we had scarcely time to secure our instruments
in the boat and push off from the shore when 7 natives appeared, hailing us from
the height, and in the end descended to the rocks on the shore. They made signs
to us to land but the appearance of spears among them (which they endeavoured to
hide from sight) prevented us from committing ourselves by venturing among human
beings as perfectly wild and savage as ever Nature herself had formed them. At
these moments we found we had left behind us on the summit of the Head the
theodolite stand, which we afterwards saw on the shoulders of one of the
natives.
We spent much time and patience in endeavouring by friendly signs to recover
this useful stand, but in vain. We pulled round the projecting rocks in St.
Asaph's Bay, wishing to land, but these Australians followed us, shouting and
vociferating in such a manner that brought others to the number of 18 from the
woodlands behind the beach. Their total numbers were 25, of whom 5 were women,
with 2 or 3 boys.
They made signs to us that they wanted hatchets or instruments to hew or cut
wood, and seeing that we might by bartering iron (of which they undoubtedly knew
the value) get possession of the instrument stand, we pulled off to the vessel,
intending to return to them in the afternoon. The small Fan Palm (Livistona?),
and Acacia dolabriformis, are common plants of Luxmore Head beneath the
prevailing timber of Eucalyptus. A species of Dianella, with small
panicles of blue flowers, is frequent on the sides of the hills and, being in
fruit, I gathered some ripe seeds on the lower grounds near the beach. Exclusive
of Eucalyptus and Casuarina (of Goulburn Island) I noticed the
arborescent simple-leaved Acacia (Sims Island), the Gardenia of
this coast, and Cycas circinalis, or Sago Palm, laden with fruit. A small
lizard, the ground cover of whose skin was dark brown and yellow spotted, was
caught at Luxmore Head and brought on board.
In the afternoon at 2 p.m., two boats armed and provided with tomahawks, and
old iron, left the cutter for the shore, having previously arranged that while
the jolly boat should stand in among the natives to barter iron for the stand,
the other would act as a guard boat. The natives, who had returned to the shade
beneath the trees upon our departure in the morning, now came out and waded in
the water towards us. Mr. King held up a tomahawk to them, the sight of which
gave great satisfaction to the natives, which they manifested by their noisy
exulting acclamations. But it was a considerable time before they understood by
our signs we wished to make an exchange for the stand, which we could see stuck
up on the sands of the beach. Two canoes of bark, with three natives in them,
joined the main body, who were all fearful of approaching near us, but received
(through the medium of one of these barks which was pushed towards us) a
tomahawk and some old iron, to encourage and open a correspondence with them,
which compliment was returned with two baskets, the one containing the fruit of
the Cycas beaten to a pulp, and the other with bad rain water. The whole
of this afternoon was consumed in vain solicitations to redeem the stand. We saw
it taken and carried away.
Some of the men had their faces and bodies painted with an ochre or pigment
of a yellowish colour, and it is an inference, drawn from its not washing off by
their frequent immersions, that it was rubbed on their skins with strong fish
oil, with which perhaps it had been previously incorporated. The whole of these
people had spears, either exposed, stuck on the bank, hidden behind trees, or in
the water near them; they could not be said to be directly hostile; fear, as
well on our part as on theirs, prevented a close communication. In truth we have
had reason to act cautiously towards all natives previously visited by the
Malays. This is advancing as much as possible for the Australians, but very
little in favour of those Asiatics--their enemies. We returned at 5 o'clock to
the cutter. Three native dogs of a red colour[*] were observed on shore with
these people; they appeared very quiet, and by no means alarmed by the
appearance of strangers.
[* The natives also had black ones.]
18th. Monday. We got under weigh about 9 and worked up the opening at
the S.E., which we have suspected may be a strait.[*] The character of the shore
we passed is moderately high and cliffy, thickly wooded with Eucalyptus,
beneath which the two palms seen yesterday and Pandanus spiralis are
abundant. We passed a small island[**] in the mouth or entrance of this opening,
well wooded with small trees, but difficult of access, in consequence of the
thick mangroves by which it is surrounded. Our water was frequently very deep,
and, in passing a narrow gut where the shores contract, we found a bottom only
in 22 fms.
[* It was Apsley Strait, a cove in it was afterwards named King's
Cove by Captain Gordon Bremer in honour of Captain King.]
[** Harris Island, which divides the south part of Apsley Strait
into two channels.]
19th. Tuesday. About 9 o'clock we made sail and proceeded on our
voyage up the opening. The banks continue uniform with those passed yesterday
and offering no inducement to land, which in many places would be impracticable.
The windings are easy, and its width varies from half a mile to 2½ miles, In the
background, thick wooded rising hills are not infrequent, and were by their
bearings of great assistance in carrying on the survey. The bottom is very
irregular, and its surface of various qualities. From 15 fms. we would shoal to
6 fms., 3½ and even 2 fms., but hauling off we would deepen our water
considerably, a proof that there are banks and shoals that would be dangerous
for vessels passing and drawing more water than the cutter.
Previously to making our tacks we were naturally obliged to approach very
near the one shore to take a good diagonal stretch over to the opposite banks;
this enabled me to observe the plants of the cliffs, which happened not to vary
from those so frequently mentioned. The Sago Palm becomes more frequent. I have
no idea that any opportunity will offer itself affording me a few moments on
shore in this channel, and it appears very probable the few plants that may be
discovered by diligent search would not compensate the valuable time such an
excursion would expend. Several broad inlets of salt water were observed running
from this channel inland. After a succession of projecting angles or points of
land had opened and passed, about 2 o'clock, to our surprise, the sea presented
itself, proving to us we had been passing a strait, bounded by mainland on the
east side, and an island (named in honour of Earl Bathurst) to the westward, and
its length through it from north to south may be 40 miles. At 3 p.m. we were
beating well up to the south entrance, when the tide turned, and running at the
rate of 2½ knots per hour obliged us to put the vessel about, and run back into
the strait, where we anchored for the night in 8 fms. We saw an island off the
mouth of the south entrance, very low and sterile.[*]
[* One of the Buchanan Isles.]
20th. Wednesday. The tide rises and falls in this strait about 15
feet; and a bank near our anchorage, extending along the shore at high water,
having 2 fms. of water over it, is this morning dry 3 or 4 feet. Upon the return
of the boat, which had been sent away to sound round some rocks and shoaly
patches appearing at low water, we got under weigh about 11 a.m. and steered
back north easterly, Mr. King not deeming it prudent, from the nature and result
of the soundings this morning, to attempt a passage through the southern
entrance. Anchored in 10 fathoms.
21st. Thursday. Leaving our last night's anchorage at 6 a.m. we passed
the Central Island, and at half past 9 anchored off Luxmore Head. Our situation
is about 11°28' S. lat. and long. 130°20' E. dead reckoning, the weather being
dull and obscure at noon not allowing us an observation. The strait is called by
Mr. King, Apsley Strait.
BATHURST ISLAND, 22-31 MAY, 1818
22nd. Friday. At 9 we weighed and stood out of St. Asaph's Bay,
steering a course southerly down the west coast of Bathurst Island. Upon an
examination of our provisions and water in the hold, made yesterday, it appears
we have beef and pork for three months, but our little rice is become musty; and
that an unfortunate leak has taken place from the pork-casks, and had rendered
many gallons of water unfit for use. It appears necessary therefore that we
should soon quit this coast and endeavour to obtain some little supplies at
Timor or elsewhere. This side of Bathurst Island is low, with red cliffs and
mangrovy patches alternating each other. Anchored in 8 fms.
23rd. Saturday. Weighed anchor soon after 7 a.m., tracing the shores
of the island southerly. About 1 o'clock a shallow trending of the line of coast
with an opening in its centre induced us to tack and stand in towards it, and at
half past 5 we anchored off its entrance in 3½ fms., mud and sand. The fires of
natives numerous. Some were blazing along the shores to the water's edge towards
the close of the evening. Our lat. by meridian observation is 11°32'04" S.
24th. Sunday. Mr. Bedwell was sent to sound off the north of this
opening to find the channel, and upon his report we got under weigh at half
flood tide in the afternoon and beat up for it, and off the north point of
entrance, within 60 yards of the beach, we had 12 fms. What this opening may be,
another day will prove, but from the light of the evening it appears to be
bounded by mangroves, having on its eastern side elevated ranges of hills well
wooded.[*]
[* King called it Gordon Bay.]
25th. Monday. We continued at anchor the whole of the forenoon. Mr.
King went on shore at a sandy point to take a meridian altitude, and I landed
with him to examine the low woody parts near the beach. Some very fine
Casuarinae skirt the shore, behind which is a considerable, low, sandy
jungle-like waste, on which some coarse reedy grass, Avicennia tomentosa
and Hibiscus populneus are most prevalent. In this sterile situation,
almost level with the sea, I gathered specimens of a Clerodendron with
long cylindrical tabular corolla of a light red colour, in flower and young
fruit. Others were the same as seen in similar low situations. Returning on
board at half past 12 we weighed, stood further into this snug harbour, coming
to in 6½ fms. Very recent impressions of naked feet of all sizes (men, women and
children) seen on the sands, convinced us that natives had passed very
lately.
Soon after 3 p.m. I went with Mr. King and our second officer to examine the
southern continuance of this port, of which several conjectures have been
formed. We followed the windings and turnings 7 or 8 miles, when it divides into
small channels, the one running northerly and the other to the southward of
east, which last we traced, but it dwindled to a confined passage, 40 feet wide,
and scarcely 7 feet water, and throughout the whole these shores are thickly
covered with mangroves. From this day's observations we are led to infer that
Bathurst Island is greatly inundated by salt water in high and spring tides, and
in that case the higher Eucalyptian wooded lands are mere islands; and that the
salt water inlet on the other side and those on the west possibly may meet and
intersect one another, and hence form so many little islands, clustered together
by mangroves. The harbour is small, but safe for shipping, but the entrance is
shoaly and ought to be approached with caution. It has been named Port Hurd, in
honor of T. Hurd, Esq., of the Hydrographic Office, Admiralty.[*]
[* Port Hurd is the inner harbour.]
26th. Tuesday. Intending to lead out to the Port Entrance and take in
some wood for the use of the cutter, Mr. King left the vessel to sound in that
direction, and about half past 8, we shifted our berth to the north side of the
entrance in 10½ fms. close in shore. Having well secured the vessel, a boat's
crew was sent on shore to cut down some of the Casuarina lining the
immediate beach, and I landed with them. The botanical subjects of the shore are
Cordia sebestena, of which I gathered some ripe fruit. Scaevola
sp., Hibiscus populneus, and the small tree with white tubular
octandrous flowers and drupaceous tomentose fruit, fibrous within, frequent on
all the shores of the main and islands of this coast. Exocarpus[*] sp., a
tree with leaves like those of some Piper, furnished me with ripe seeds;
the receptacle is red and fleshy. The little Bauhinia of Port Essington
was noticed, but not in flower or fruit; and a species of Psychotria,
with black berries, first observed on Sim's Island, is on these shores advancing
to a flowering state, together with a climbing shrubby plant having all the
external habits of Passiflora. I was not successful in my search for
flowers or fruit. This scandent shrub is very abundant, ascending to the tops of
the small trees of the beach.
[* It may be allied to Podocarpus of Labillardière. (Author's
note.)]
I passed a very thick barrier of mangroves (Rhizophora mangle) that
bounds the ridge of sand next the beach, and was surprised to enter a sandy
desert thinly clothed with timber of Eucalyptus and the following:--
Acacia sp. (of Sims Island), 30 feet high, with cylindrical spikes of
flowers, Melaleuca sp., allied to Leucadendron (South Goulburn
Island), 40 feet high, not in flower. Guttiferae, a small tree 20 feet
high; leaves ovate-oblong, obtuse, smooth throughout, shining above,
parallel-veined, branches angular, subsulcated; habit of Garcinia; it was
not in flower or fruit.
Some venerable specimens of Cycas circinalis in fruit appear in this
desert, some of which measured 13 inches diameter and at least 40 feet high.
This valuable Palm is here very abundant in all its stages from stemless infancy
to caulescent maturity of various ages and heights, and as far as the eye could
see it is, with Pandanus spiralis, very prevalent. Calythrix
microphylla (a new species of Port Essington) is no mean ornament of these
sterile wastes. It was so rich in flower and in such expanded perfection that I
gathered a few duplicate specimens. With the fine Grevillae of Palm Bay,
Croker's Island was no less remarkably conspicuous. A species of Banksia,
never seen before by me; it appears to be Banksia dentata of Linn.
(supplement), discovered at Endeavour River, on the East Coast, and being in
flower and young fruit I gathered specimens. The herbage is a Spermacoce
and Achyranthes of Croker's Island, with which I collected specimens of a
Xyris with angular scape and yellow flowers.
I observed several marks made by natives on the stems of the trees,
particularly on a large Melaleucae, the bark of which had been stripped
off at no distant period to form gunyas or huts. During the whole of this day's
excursion I was accompanied by our worthy native chief, Bongaree, of whose
little attentions to me and others when on these excursions I have been perhaps
too remiss in making mention, to the enhancement of the character of this
enterprising Australian.
At 5 p.m. our people having stripped a sufficiency of wood for use on board,
we all went off, leaving some old iron chisels on the stumps of the trees we had
cut down, for the natives who were seen on the opposite shores this day, and who
were watching our operations. Our lat. by observation on shore is 11°38' S. and
130°23' E. long.
27th. Wednesday. At half past 8 weighed and stood out of the port. We
had scarcely made sail and cleared Port Hurd when 9 natives ran out from their
covert among the trees at our working place, hailing us to return, and making
signs that they wanted hatchets. At the northern extremity of the sandy beach of
the bay and in other parts, small groups of natives were observed walking
leisurely along, having seen us out of the Port. Mr. King wishing to make
observations anchored at 10 o'clock in the bay in 5 fms.
28th. Thursday. About 6 o'clock we departed from the bay along the
coast of Bathurst Island. The shores are frequently low, and bounded by ridges
of sand thickly covered with a brushwood, and occasionally rising in irregular
points, when the white sand is most conspicuous. In the afternoon we observed
the land trend in easterly, but from the masthead it was traced very low to the
S.W. We are approaching the termination of the French surveys northerly, and
suspect we have seen their capes Fourcroy and Helvetius, although Mr. King does
not agree with their latitudes.
29th. Friday. Nearly calm during the whole of last night. By the
bearings of the land we are nearly in the same situation as we were yesterday
afternoon.
30th. Saturday. From the masthead, the land is seen much depressed and
abounding with mangroves; and several low islands are distinguishable and have
been called Warriors.[*] We had hauled off considerably during the night and
were this morning not within sight of land till about 8 a.m. At 2 p.m. we
approached an island, which Mr. King wished to pass to windward, however, shoaly
water obliged us to haul off W.S.W., and in half an hour we bore up again
southward and deepened our water. The south end of Apsley Strait was seen from
the masthead, but extended reefs from the Islands prevent us from approaching it
this evening. At 7 p.m., being obliged to continue under weigh, we hove to and
allowed ourselves to be drifted to the northward with the tide, and by its
return we should be carried back nearly to the same situation, and be ready at
daybreak to beat up to the land about the southern entrance of the strait, to
make all necessary observations previous to our final early departure from the
coast for Timor. Our lat. is 12°04'47" S., and long. 130°57' E.
[* They are situated in mid-channel of the strait separating
Melville Island from the main which was named Clarence Strait.]
31st Sunday. Having stood north-easterly we (at half past 7) clearly
ascertained the south entrance into the strait by the remarkable island, now
seen from the deck, which was noticed when in the strait on the 19th inst. At
noon Mr. King obtained a good meridian altitude, which made our lat. 11°57'18"
S. He then took his departure from the Australian coast, steering for Timor.
VISIT To TIMOR AND RETURN TO SYDNEY, 1 JUNE-30 JULY, 1818
June 1st. 1818. Monday. We had a very fair run during the last night
on a W.N.W. course, and this morning crowded all sail. Our situation at noon was
11°14'28" S. and 128°20' E.
4th. Thursday. Having gone rather too far to the westward, we hauled
up N.N.W. at 6 a.m. The land of Rottee being 8 or 9 miles distant at 10, we
entered the strait under light sail. The mountainous character of the islands
around is a very pleasing change to us, ranges towering over ranges, crowned on
the ridges with clumps of cocoa-nut trees, and having gentle easy wooded slopes
to the water, now form the romantic relieving scenes about us. A Malay proa was
ahead of us in the strait, but the fear of us obliged its commander to run to
leeward under the western land of Samao or Samow.
At ½ past 11 the bold cloud-capt land of the western shore of Coepang Bay,
Timor, opened to us, and about half past 2 we anchored off the Dutch Fort
Concordia. Mr. King, accompanied by his second officer, went on shore to wait
upon the Resident, Mr. Hazaart, who received them in the most friendly manner,
and having stated our object for visiting the island, namely to obtain fresh
water, and any other necessaries, the Resident observed that Coepang was a very
poor place, that at this season fruit and vegetables were bad, but if he could
be furnished with a list of our wants he would make arrangements for the supply,
as much depended upon the mountaineers who were to be sent to, and from whom
sheep could only be procured. The Resident spoke English tolerably well, which
rendered the communication the more pleasant, and at the request of Mr. King he
gave me permission to range about the environs of the town in my pursuit of
flora, and very obligingly observed he would appoint a Malay to attend me in my
several excursions. Several Malay proas were at anchor in the bay, having lately
returned from the Australian coast with cargoes of trepang.
5th. Friday. Clouded heavy damp atmosphere occasioned by the influence
of hills, whose lofty tops gather and retain the clouds pregnant with humidity.
About 9 it cleared off. I accompanied Mr. King on shore, and through his medium
was introduced to the Resident, who received me in a most polite and friendly
manner. He received our list of wants, which undergoing some alterations, such
as sheep for buffaloes, that were too large for our small daily consumption. He
promised to give immediate directions for our supplies, and would employ Malays
to water the vessel. The day having been considerably broken into by this
morning's visit, I proposed to accept his kind offers of assisting me with a
Malay to-morrow morning, to make an excursion a few miles inland to collect any
interesting plants such a route would afford me.
Leaving the Resident's house we took a walk round the town. The inhabitants
are Chinese and Malays, of whom the latter claim the majority. Since the town
was destroyed (in 1815) by the Phoenix, little has existed but misery, and on
the site, perhaps, of goodly habitations, low dreary bamboo huts are erected.
The streets, if they may be so termed, are very narrow and short, intersecting
at right angles others of like dimensions, wherein, if a tolerable clean decent
house presents itself, it is certain the tenant is a Chinese, of whose persons
the same character for neatness and pure cleanliness is equally applicable. They
are polite to excess, and are exceedingly profuse in their bows to us
strangers.
There are remains of some goodly buildings and of a small Company's garden,
now altogether neglected and overrun with unprofitable wild plants.
Tamarindus indica and a large arborescent Ficus (F.
benghalensis) with a radicant stem and branches, form agreeable shades to
some of the streets. To the summits of these trees Piper betle was
ascending. Carica Papaya is a common tree, at this period in young fruit,
and within an enclosure I saw Plumeria acuminata. Heliotropium
indicum, an annual plant, and Calotropis gigantea are ornaments on
the rock on which the Fort of Concordia is built. A species of Capparis,
of low humble growth, is frequent on old walls and on the wayside in byepaths in
rocky exposed situations. It was suggested to Mr. King, on shore, that our
anchorage was bad holding ground. He therefore unmoored and hauled nearer the
Fort.
6th. Saturday. This morning I went on shore at 8 a.m. and joined the
Malay, who was to accompany me, at the Resident's house. Ascending the rocky
hills above Coepang by a beaten path the following old genera presented
themselves.
Barleria prionitis (?), a thorny ornamental shrub. Helicteres
isora, in fruit. Jasminum hirsutum, a round bushy plant in a
flowering state. Zizyphus jujuba, a small tree with spreading elongated
branches, used by the Malays for hedges, as Crataegus oxyacantha or white
thorn is in England. This plant is the food of a species of Curculio
covered with a yellow powder, which abounds on it, adhering to the underpart of
the leaves.
Caesalpinia sp., closely allied to C. sappan, Roxburgh, but
different in having a densely villous calyx and a few scattered hairs on its
foliage. Cathartocarpus (Cassia with cylindrical legumens), a
slender tree, pods 12-16 inches long, frequent on the hills.
In close thickets several leguminous twining plants were conspicuous, more
particularly Clitoria ternatea, whose large azure flowers could be traced
over the tops of the brushwood to some distance. I gathered pods of
Stizolobium pruriens (Dolichos H.K.) from the dead plant, and of a
Clitoria with ternate ovate leaves. A tree of moderate size, discovered
at Port Hurd on the north coast of Australia, I detected to-day in flower, which
is polyadelphous and appeared allied to Garcinia or Xanthochmus of
Roxburgh; the foliage is very glossy and large, parallel-veined as in
Calophyllum. I gathered likewise specimens of a species of Sida
with whitish flowers. These sterile rocky hills abound in a shrub of the habit
of Phyllanthus, with leaves elliptical and alternate, at the axils of
which the flowers are produced in racemes.
Descending to a valley between the first range of hills next the sea and this
island, my guide took me to the house of a friendly Rajah, which was surrounded
by a high stone wall (not cemented). I found the petty king seated beneath the
shade of a large specimen of Areca catechu, surrounded by slaves and
other attendants. My guide having been previously instructed by the Resident,
satisfied the curiosity of the Rajah as to the object of my pursuits, who was
desirous of putting questions to me relative to my native country, could I have
conversed with him in the Malay Language. He appeared to live perfectly at ease
in this retired valley, surrounded by Gorypha umbraculifera, a large Fan
Palm (of the fronds of which the Malays make baskets to carry water) and
Artocarpus incisa, or bread fruit, which was then growing on the margins
of a stream of water meandering through his grounds, furnished from the springs
in the hills.
Leaving the Rajah's house, we ascended a second range, following occasionally
the public road into the interior, on which I passed several troops of
mountaineers, who were carrying Gulah or Sago syrup and fruits, the produce of
the interior, to Coepang. In these wooded elevations some large species of
Anona and a species of Carolinea, or Bombax, are frequent.
The latter of which was in flower at the extremity of the branches, rendering it
very difficult to be procured, and my Malay was struck with horror at the idea
of ascending and risking his neck for such trifles. I gathered specimens of
Kleinhovia hospita, a branching tree of like bulk, it afforded me some
seeds; and of a specimen of Cynanchum I gathered young fruit.
Triumfetta Bartramia and Plumbago zeylanica are frequent in flower
and fruit. At 4 p.m. I took a circuitous route back to the town, and on my way I
passed several moderate sized trees, with ternate leaves and large round hard
green fruit, which appears to be a species of Crataeva. At dusk I
returned to the beach and was taken off by one of our boats to the cutter.
7th. Sunday. Shifting my specimens and exposing them on deck to air.
Mr. King, Mr. Bedwell and myself, by invitation, dined with the Resident in the
afternoon, at whose table we were introduced to several English captains or
masters in the trading service among the islands, whose vessels are now at
anchor up the river and in the bay.
8th. Monday. At 7 a.m. I left the cutter, with an intention to spend
the whole of the day on the banks of the River and the lands near it. The Malay
was unwell and could not leave his bamboo hut; in truth he was a thin, meagre
man, and the corporeal exercise of last Saturday seems to have agreed but
indifferently with him. I continued along the river bank beneath the cool shade
of the trees on its immediate verge, until I had passed the town, when my
progress was stayed by Poinciana pulcherrima covering the slopes of the
hills to the water's edge. I ascended the hills, when a species of
Strychnos of stubbly stunted growth indicated the shallow rocky soil.
In patches of close brushwood I gathered the following. Nepeta sp., a
shrub of slender growth, with blue flowers. Acacia sp., bipinnate;
branches aculeated; the aculea are in pairs; capitulum axillary; pod round as in
seeds. Some Inga, a divaricate, irregular shrub. Smilax sp., a
scandent aculeated shrub. Cytisus Cajan (plant dead). Upon a Ficus
I discovered a species of Loranthus, with flowers like those of
Louicera. Arriving at the chateau of a Malay I was much struck with the
large bread fruit trees within the enclosure. I gathered some fruit of a slender
tree of the genus Bignonia. This may be Bignonia indica or
Spathodea indica.
Wishing to pass through the valleys which are formed into paddy grounds and
inundated at pleasure by the channels of water from the hills, I followed a path
leading through the enclosed ground and descended to a much cooler moist
atmosphere, where I expected to discover ferns in the bottom. I, however, only
saw an Aspidium, frequent likewise on the banks of the river.
Flemingia strobilifera delights in such dark shades in the close woods on
the slopes of the hills, of which I gathered specimens in flower. The timber is
the large Ficus and the Carolinea seen on Saturday last in flower.
Crossing several artificial water-courses I descended to the paddy grounds,
which I passed over upon the little muddy raised paths. The rice looked
extremely well, it was young, but the blade strong and luxuriant, and flooded
about 10 inches. Near a run of water I gathered specimens of an Echites,
with spindle-shaped horizontal folicles, allied to E. costata, a strong
irregular shrub in low humid situations; and a small tree of the same natural
order furnished me with specimens in fruit (Nerium or Wrightia),
follicles long, united at their base, seeds compressed, comose at their
extremity. A twining pendent plant with ovate alternate leaves, entire and
undulated, flowers axillary, crowded, decandrous, I discovered on the wayside in
coppices, in which I also gathered specimens of a Banisteria, which
appears distinct from any species I have before observed. A Gardenia,
scarcely distinct from G. florida, being in fruit, I collected seeds.
At 2 p.m. I halted beneath the shade of a large Fig, having found the heat
very considerable during the forenoon. The specimens I had collected I packed
chiefly in the paper I had taken with me, to protect them from the influence of
the sun, and then commenced a new route back to Coepang, from which I may be
about 5 miles northerly. A strong twining plant of the Bignoniaceae was
ascending the highest trees, and laden with a great profusion of flowers. On the
hills near Coepang I collected specimens of a tree of the Sapindaceae,
leaves pinnate; leaflets obovate, obtuse emarginati, venose; fruit racemose.
About half past 6 I returned to Coepang and went on board.
9th. Tuesday. It having been reported on board during my absence that
a fair opportunity would offer itself of forwarding letters to Europe by way of
India, occasioned by the early departure of some Chinese vessels sailing from
this port to Batavia, I determined to avail myself of it and write to the Right
Hon. Sir Joseph Banks and W. T. Aiton, Esqre. reporting the progress of this
voyage of discovery and my success in obtaining specimens of the Flora of the
north and north-west coasts of Australia. Two of the vessels sailed this day
before any of us could prepare our letters, but a third brig still continues in
the bay.
I visited the Resident to thank him in the name of Mr. King (who was unwell)
for his kind present of a buffalo and pumpkins, which had been sent on board for
the vessel's company. The Resident had detained the Chinese vessel for us, which
afforded us time to finish our letters for England. Mr. Hazaart showed me a
specimen of the coffee of the island, which he procured when on an expedition to
Daily, a small Portuguese settlement on this coast. It is found on the sea coast
in great quantities, considerably to the northward of Coepang.
June 6th. Wednesday. Having shifted the whole of my specimens, I
finished my letters, waited on Mr. Hazaart with them and others in the
afternoon, who very obligingly promised to forward them by the Chinese brig
under an envelope to the Consul at Batavia. In a walk I took with our first
officer towards the close of the day, I gathered seeds of an Erythrina,
now deciduous; Celosia argentea, and fruit of the Carolinea before
mentioned. The fruit of the tree, when fresh, is red and contains 8 seeds at
least, each covered with an arillus, kernel esculent, oily.
11th. Thursday. Repapering my green specimens. This morning I went on
shore, intending to employ myself on the hills north-west from Coepang, and the
following are the results of the day's observations in specimens and seeds.
Sida sp., flowers panicled, yellow. Specimens, collected before, of
Zizyphus jujuba, a quantity of the fruit. Cassia sp.
Buettneriaceae, a shrub 8-10 ft. high, allied to Commersonia Varronia
sp., an ornamental small tree with fragrant white flowers. Myrtaceae,
a tree of large dimensions; flowers axillary; leaves alternate. And a species of
Pteris, with pinnate lanceolate fronds, on rocks in the fresh-water
river. On the sides of the hills I discovered several specimens of the large
fruited Bignonia indica, of which I gathered several siliquae as
specimens, with seeds. Also Convolvulus sp., leaves small, lanceolate,
cordate at the base and C. bracteatus (plant dead). Cucurbita sp.
Solanum sp., leaves aculeated; berries orange. Cucumis sp., fruit
large, ovate. Cissus sp.
I traced a water-course, now dry, whose rocky uneven bed indicated the
rapidity with which water had passed from the hills through it to the sea in the
rainy season, and near it I discovered three bulbs of perhaps an
Amaryllis, but could find no others. Making the beach I passed through
the plantations of the Resident's secretary, Mr. Tinmann, a Javanese. They
contain cocoa-nuts and bananas chiefly, and a number of thatched huts are
occupied by his slaves.
12th. Friday. This day we received most part of our sea stock on
board, and made preparations for taking our departure from Coepang to-morrow
morning. Delay follows delay, our sheep for the vessel's use, which had been
penned up on shore until the day previous to sailing, escaped during last night,
on the hills, and three are not to be found. We now find it much better to make
the little purchases for our cabin mess ourselves, rather than trust to others
on shore. Received the visits of some English commanders of vessels at anchor in
this bay, in the evening.
13th. Saturday. It was the determination of Mr. King to have taken his
departure from the island this morning, but many things remained unsettled and
unprovided for on shore, for a voyage of 8 or 9 weeks to Port Jackson. We were
all occupied on shore, either procuring limes or yams, for our mess. I
accompanied Mr. King and Mr. Roe to take our leave of Mr. Hazaart. Mr. King
thanked him for his liberality and attention paid us during our short stay here,
and stated his intention to get under weigh in the morning. Settled all affairs
and returned on board.
14th. Sunday. About 7 o'clock this morning, weighed and took our
departure from Coepang Bay. Steered S.W. to the westward of Pulo Samao.
20th June to 30th July, 1818. On the 20th June we made the Montebello
Islands (of the French, under Baudin), where some observations were made,
tending to correct the surveys of their original discoveries. On the 13th July
we doubled Cape Leewin in very squally bad weather; on the 24th we entered the
Bass Strait, and anchored in Sydney Cove on the 29th.
PARRAMATTA AND NEIGHBOURHOOD, 30 JULY-18 OCTOBER, 1818
July 30th. Thursday. His Excellency the Governor and suite had
departed from Sydney three days since, upon a short visit to Newcastle, Hunter's
River, to be present at the consecration of a church recently finished there. I
hired a horse and rode to Parramatta, and made many inquiries respecting a small
house, as a temporary residence for 2 or 3 months, where I could retire and
prepare my collection and journal from material collected during the last 8
months. Remained at Parramatta all the morning, not having succeeded in hiring a
small habitation.
July 31st. Friday. Sharp hoar frost during the night. Morning fine.
After many further inquiries I have fortunately been accommodated with the old
house I occupied previous to my departure on the voyage of discovery, at the
same rent. Returned to Sydney and hired a passage boat for the whole of
to-morrow, to carry my collection and luggage from the cutter to Parramatta. The
country is very dry, and it appears there has not been any rain of consequence
these 3 months past.
1818, August 1st. Saturday. This day I got the whole of my collection
and luggage up the river to Parramatta, and lodged them in the house I had
taken.
3rd. Monday. This day I took possession of my house, received rations
of beef and flour, which are supplied from His Majesty's Store.
4th. Tuesday. I received my Government Chest etc., from His Majesty's
Storehouse, where I had placed them under the charge of the store keeper during
my absence. Employed within doors.
5th. Wednesday. I opened and unpacked my collection and aired my seeds
and otherwise employed.
13th. Thursday. His Excellency having returned from his visit to
Newcastle, I rode down to Sydney and waited upon him at Government House,
Sydney, to pay my humble respects upon my return to this colony from the coasts
lately under survey. I drew cash from the merchants, and intend to give my bills
on the Right Hon. Sir J. Banks. I made inquiries respecting shipping in the
harbour, and what opportunities are likely to offer of transmitting my
collection direct to England, but found none.
14th. Friday. This morning I returned to Parramatta, and employed all
the afternoon among my specimens.
15th. Saturday. Fair but cloudy. Showery during the forenoon, heavy
rain towards the close of the day. Ticketing and examining my specimens.
17th. Monday. Having received the information this morning that the
"Indian," whaler, Captain Swaine, would depart from this port in 2 or 3 days,
and perhaps might revisit the coast for a very short period previous to her
steering a direct course to England, and being advised as to the eligibility of
the opportunity, I intend to transmit originals of my collection to England by
her. I wrote on service this morning to His Excellency, requesting he would be
pleased to grant me orders upon the Deputy-Commissary-General for stationery,
and upon the Superintendent of His Majesty's lumber yard, for the making of
packing cases of dimensions therein stated, for the purposes of transmitting my
plants to England.
31st. Monday. This day I finally packed and closed a case containing
original specimens and seeds, together with some bulbs, and sent it to Sydney by
the passage boat to be shipped on board the "Indian" whaler; writing to Captain
Swaine thereon.
1818, September 1st. Tuesday. The weather appears more settled, fine,
with some light flying clouds.
3rd. Thursday. I closed my letters and went down to Sydney, with a
view of seeing the Captain of the "Indian," and suggest to him the nature of the
contents of the box, and the necessity of its being placed in an airy dry
situation in the ship. Captain Swaine expressed his regret that his ship was so
much encumbered with oil casks that he had no room for the box in any safe
situation, that having only 2/3rds of a cargo, he was now determined, before he
steered to England, to return to the coast of New Caledonia to effect a
completion of his cargo. I have therefore been under the necessity of receiving
back the case, considering myself much more justified in retaining it until a
more direct opportunity offers, than risk its contents to detention on a
tropical fishing coast. My letters, being written, will require some alteration,
and I shall transmit them via India by the "Magnet " (late a schooner), Captain
Vine, who sails in a few days. Returned to Parramatta at night.
15th. Tuesday. Bright morning. The "Glory" and the "Isabella" have
arrived from England, but have brought me no letters. Afternoon cloudy.
25th. Friday. Having heard that the "Magnet," Captain Vine, was
reported to sail for China on Sunday next I availed myself of the offer of a
gentleman returning to England by that route, and now forwarded letters to Sir
J. Banks and Mr. Aiton, recapitulating the subject matter of my letters to them
from Timor and reporting my return to the Colony. Went to Sydney and waited upon
Mr. Jones with my packet.
1818, October 1st. Thursday. I brought up my journal and copy to the
present day.
2nd. Friday. This day I had an interview with Lieut. King, in order to
ascertain whether he had settled the period of departure on another voyage. He
could say nothing with any degree of certainty, as his charts and journal would
still occupy much of his time. December was mentioned. I have 6 or 7 weeks to
employ myself, in which period I hope to make up another case of specimens. I
have purposed therefore to occupy a few weeks in an excursion to the Five
Islands (The Red Point of the charts), to the southward, on this coast, and have
written this day (on service) to the Governor, requesting His Excellency would
he pleased to allow me an order for a light Government cart, a horse, a spare
pack saddle, etc., during this service.
5th. Monday. This morning at an early hour I left Parramatta for the
farm to which I had sent out paper, where I arrived at 8 p.m. At ½ past 8 we
departed for Curdunnee, where I expect to find several plants indigenous in that
remarkable valley, in a different state from that observed in February 1817. In
the forest lands we passed, as well as in the sands of and bushy spots, several
of the common Orchidaceae are now very conspicuously in flower,
viz:--Thelymitra ixioides, with another blue flowering species. Diuris
maculata and D. aurea, with several others; particularly one plant
with a reddish-purple cucullated flower, whose labellum is fimbriated. On the
margins of a creek I gathered specimens of an Acacia of very slender
growth, allied to A. longifolia, the leaves are much longer and more
filiform. Also Zieria macrophylla, and Hibbertia sp., allied to
H. volubilis (H. dentala Br.).
About 10 o'clock we arrived at the rocky wooded verge of the valley called
Curdunnee, to which we descended through large bodies of Fern, chiefly of the
Pterides. Smilax australis, observed here when I visited this spot
before, is in the same condition, without any signs of flower or fruit.
Trochocarpa laurina (Cyathodes) is in fruit, nearly ripe. I
gathered some specimens of Passiflora sp., allied to P. aurantia
of Norfolk Island and New Caledonia; flowers solitary, orange, red and
green.
I likewise collected the following: Solanum sp. (S. pungetium
Bn.), a rather suffruticose small plant, aculeated; leaves angular; flowers
solitary and blue. Clematis sp., leaves ternate, cordate, 5-nerved;
flowers corymbose; frequent in various parts of the colony. Santalaceae,
a slender shrub, with the habit of Olax, leaves alternate, elliptical;
specimens in fruit. Pittosporum sp., this plant is now in flower, and
when seen formerly I had named it P. revolutum (H.K.), it however appears
to be P. fulvum of Rudge, and has more acute leaves than the Kew plant,
to which, however, it is closely allied. Meleaceae, flowers scarcely
perfected, in elongated spikes; leaves petioled, oblong, shining above, but,
with the young branches, are very hoary beneath. A specimen of Smilax
assisted much to render the thickets of this vale the more intricate, and, being
in flower, I gathered specimens. No other plants peculiar to these shaded
situations were observed in flower, of which the large Fan Palm (Corypha
australis), the large Fern Tree (Alsophila australis), and a shrub
with depressed dentated leaves, slender stem, branches spiny, covered with a
substellated tomentum, perhaps of the Buettneriaceae, but without flower
or fruit, are the most remarkable.
At dusk we returned to the farm, my headquarters.
6th. Tuesday. I visited some ravines about three miles to the
southward and eastward of the farm, through whose rocky beds a permanent stream
of water runs, which, after numerous windings, crosses the Windsor Road and
ultimately empties itself into the Parramatta River. Among the many plants
inhabiting these shaded humid situations I noticed Lomatia longifolia,
sent home per "Kangaroo" as a Grevillea.
A species of Stylidium, (S. tenuifolium), with linear leaves,
rather crowded on the stalk, is very abundant, but not in flower at this period.
Podocarpus sp. (native Plum), a low, humifuse, spreading plant, of the
habit of Taxus, with a large purple fleshy receptacle, not yet arrived at
a flowering state.
Diosma (same genus as last year's list) a slender tree 10-12 feet
high. Grevillea stricta (Br), a slender shrub. Zieria pilosa
(Rudge), remarkable for its solitary, axillary flowers. Ceanothus sp.
(allied to C. globulosus), flowers terminal and crowded; and another
species, with smaller panicled flowers, Dianella sp., flowers simply
panicled (not expanded). Smilax glyciphylla. The rocks are ornamented
with Dendrobium speciosum in flower; and are covered with the small plant
Poranthera ericifolia of Rudge. In the brushy country surrounding the
ravine I gathered specimens of a Baeckia, (Imbricaria of Dr.
Smith). Thesium drupaceum (native currant), is now laden with fruit, of
which I gathered some seeds. Lomatia silaifolia. Crowea saligna;
with several species of Pultenaea, Dillwynia and other
papilionaceous plants. A small shrubby plant, perhaps of the Diosmeae,
with pentandrous flowers, furnished me with flowering specimens. In the
forest-lands we passed in our return I gathered specimens of a
Helichrisum, allied to H. papillosum Lobelia sp. (L.
dentata), with small laciniated leaves; and a species of Stylidium,
which appears to differ from S. graminifolium H.K. in having longer and
narrower (denticulated) leaves.
7th. Wednesday. Returned to Parramatta at noon.
8th. Thursday. Last evening His Excellency arrived at Parramatta from
Windsor, but leaving Government House at this place at an early hour this
morning I was unable to see him as I intended, and, as His Excellency has not
answered my letter of the 2nd inst., I am still kept in suspense.
9th. Friday. Examining and ticketing the specimens recently
gathered.
10th. Saturday. This morning His Excellency arrived at Parramatta from
Sydney, and having received no answer to my letter of the 2nd. inst., begging
the Governor would be pleased to allow me the use of a Government horse and
cart, and a spare pack-saddle, I waited at Government House but was not able to
see His Excellency, who was stated to be from home. I left my name. There
appearing no favourable direct opportunities likely to offer for transporting my
collections, formed lately on the coast, to England, I was under the necessity,
for the safety of the bulbs there collected, to unpack the case and plant them
in the garden of a friend, trusting a future eligible conveyance would present
itself, enabling me to transmit them home when they would bear removal.
12th. Monday. This day being advertised in the "Gazette" for the
muster of persons on and off the store belonging to the district of Parramatta
before the Governor at the Court House, I attended and reported myself and
servant. From the circumstances of having received no answer to my letter, I had
suspected it had miscarried. His Excellency, however, had not thought proper to
write me and enclose an order, but stated to me to-day that he had given
directions to Major Druitt, Acting Engineer at Sydney, to furnish me with a
Government horse and cart.
13th. Tuesday. This morning I went down to Sydney and saw the
engineer, Major Druitt, at the lumber yard, where I found my demand far from
being in a forward state of readiness. The pack-saddle was not beginning to be
made or even thought of; and the Governor having only given directions to the
Major to provide me with a Government horse (cart-harness I presume I did not
specify in my demand), a cart and spare pack-saddle. I find I am under the
necessity of writing His Excellency again for an order for a tarpaulin, a pair
of spancels and a rope of moderate size! ! The Major assured me all
should be ready for delivery on Saturday next. Although the "Isabella " arrived
here four weeks since, it was by mere chance that I heard of a case directed to
me, which came by her from England. The box had been lodged in H.M. store, from
whence I forwarded it to Parramatta per Passage Boat. The "Isabella" (Capt.
Berry) being about to depart for Bengal, and thence to England, I have
determined to avail myself of the Captain's kind offer to take charge of a case
for His Majesty's Gardens. Returned to Parramatta.
17th. Saturday. This morning I sent my servant to Sydney with a letter
to Major Druitt, Acting Engineer, for the horse and cart and other necessaries
that were to be ready this day at noon. At a late hour at night my servant
returned with the horse and cart, spare pack-saddle and all the other articles,
for which I had made my demand, which has now determined me to start early on
Monday morning, without further loss of time.
18th. Sunday. The long wished for "Tottenham" ship has at last
arrived, and bringing me a most satisfactory letter from W. T. Aiton, Esq., of
date 17th. February last, the original of which I have not received.
CHAPTER XI
CUNNINGHAM'S JOURNAL
THE FIVE ISLANDS AND ILLAWARRA
19 October--19 November, 1818
19th. October, 1818. Monday. At an early hour (6 a.m.) I left
Parramatta with a laden cart of luggage and provisions, intending to make good
an 18-mile stage before I halted for the day, travelling leisurely in order the
better to make an observation on the botany as I passed along. In my route
towards Liverpool, on a line of road, about 9 miles, bounded by open forest-land
and confined dense brush, many interesting (already described) plants were in
flower, among which I gathered the following Pomaderris betulina, flowers
panicled axillary and terminal. Diosmeae, habit of Correa, a shrub
with white flowers, also a genus of this order allied to Eriostemon,
stamina smooth, leaves oblong, narrow, obtuse. Dampiera undulata, a
suffruticose blue flowering plant. Colletia sp., a small tufted leaved,
spinous shrub, suspected to be allied to Cryptandra, and sent to England
per "Harriet," is now frequent, in flower and fruit, in the vicinity of the town
of Liverpool. In moist situations I gathered a small plant of the order
Gentianaceae, Erythraea australis. To the southward of Liverpool
the country is an open forest-land of common Eucalypti, in which
Exocarpus cupressiformis, and the papilionaceous tree Jacksonia
scoparia, at this period laden with yellow flowers, are very conspicuous.
Pimelea spicata and P. glauca of Mr. Brown; a small
Daviesia with cordate leaves (D. squarrosa, Smith); with a
Helichrysum, allied to H. papillosum and prevalent in this
description of country. And on the banks of George's River, which empties itself
into Botany Bay I gathered flowering specimens of Casuarina sp., a tree
of moderate size, with smooth bark. In situations on the roadside, more or less
subject to inundation, a delicate, tufted small Lobelia (L.
inundata) is in flower, and Ruellia australis is common in grassy dry
spots, decorating our path throughout this day's route. I halted at the farm of
a settler, an old resident, who liberally allowed me to put up at his house.
20th. Tuesday. We commenced our journey from the farm we had stopped
at during the night, travelling over the high beaten road, bounded by
forest-land of fine grassy rich appearance, but by no means profitable to the
botanical collector.
Finding myself obliged to make arrangements for the charge and care of my
Government cart, which I intend shall convey the whole of my luggage to the
verge of the Mountain Range bounding the fertile country, in the vicinity of the
Five Islands, I stopped at the last farm, previous to entering upon the rocky,
sterile or damp, morassy country, extending southerly 15 miles to the mountain.
Rather than leave the cart 4 weeks on its summit (beyond which I can only avail
myself of pack-horse carriage), and subject it to be burnt or destroyed
otherwise for the sake of the iron work, I have determined to send it back to
this farm, whose proprietor has kindly promised to take charge of it till I
might send for it on my return from the excursion.
In a rocky creek which waters this little farming establishment I employed
myself for a few hours in the afternoon, in which I gathered the following:
Xerotes aemula (Br.) which is frequent, with another species of the same
genus X. flexifolia. Senecio sp., with laciniated leaves, large
yellow flowers, and of gigantic herbaceous growth. Notelaea longifolia
(var.), in fruit, of which I gathered ripe seeds. Haloragis sp.,
extremely abundant beneath rocks. Pleurandra acicularis of Labillardière.
The rocky bed of the running water gully is in many places choked up with large
tufts of Xerotes. A dense low branching shrub of the Epacridae,
now in fruit, appears either to be the Leucopogon setiger or Lissanthe
strigosa of Mr. Brown. I likewise gathered specimens of Leptomeria
acida in fruit. Dampiera sp., allied to D. stricta. Logania
Pusilla (Brn.); and the following two ferns, Schizaea bifida (Brn.)
and Blechnum striatum. Among the many plants prevalent on the margins of
the creeks throughout the colony, the Stylidium discovered on the
Liverpool Road, and of which I forwarded ripe seeds to Kew per "Harriet " last
year, is now most rich in flower; and the rocks are covered with the delicate
white-flowering Dendrobium linguae forme. Podolobium heterophyllum
of the Blue Mountains, and Stypandra glauca, prevail in the dry rocky
brushes on the verge of this line of creek.
21st. Wednesday. Leaving the little farm we resumed our journey at an
early hour, continuing our route southerly about 2 miles, when the road abruptly
terminates, or rather continues by paths or partially beaten ways, striking east
and west. Taking the former, we arrived at once upon an entire change of
country, of a rugged sandstony character, alternated by extensive tracts of
spongy bogs. Crossing a run of water, the drainings of a morass called King's
Fall, which empties itself into Botany Bay, we pursued our course generally
S.S.E. over this diversified bad country, affording me much variety of common
Port Jackson plants. Bauera rubioides and Sprengelia incarnata are
particularly attractive on the margins of the Fall.
The swamps afforded me some specimens of Euphrasia speciosa. The dwarf
Banksia latifolia abounds in these bogs, of which it is difficult to
discover fruit with ripe seeds; and the whole was bespangled with Utricularia
uniflora, and the common Xyris. Large clumps of the stately
Doryanthes excelsa presented themselves on the roadside, generally in a
sub-humid situation, bearing at this period the remains of last year's flowering
stems, varying from 10-15 feet high. The Government horse, afforded me by His
Excellency's order, not caring to face the rugged boggy country in this day's
stage, could not be induced to proceed from the King's Fall onward. It obliged
me to avail myself of the fortunate circumstances of an empty cart passing to
the mountain for red cedar, which I hired to carry my luggage 14 miles, sending
my servant back with the Government cart to the little farm I left this morning,
with directions to follow me with the horse as speedily as possible.
About 2 o'clock we arrived at what is termed the Mountain Top, along the
ridge of which the road runs before it strikes down to the sea coast and country
in the vicinity of Five Islands,[*] of which we have a bird's eye view from the
immediate edge of the mountain summit. A sudden change again takes place, for,
in an instant, upon leaving the morass with stunted small Eucalypti, we
entered as it were, within the dark shades of a tropical forest, composed of
very lofty timber of the red cedar Tristania albens [= Syncarpia
laurifolia] or Turpentine Tree; large Eucalypti, of the species
called Blue Gum, and many other trees--only existing in such situations.
Epacrideae (Trochocarpa); with large specimens of Corypha
australis and Alsophila, a tree-fern of New South Wales; the whole
being strongly bound together with immense scandent and volubilous plants, that
cannot fail to arrest the attention and admiration of the most indifferent
observer.
[* The Five Islands being the Red Point and Tom Thumb's Islets
(five in all), which are to be seen off the coast.]
After settling myself beneath a hut of cabbage tree thatch (Corypha),
where we intend passing the night, and having secured my plants in paper, I took
a walk down the side of the mountain, by the little beaten steps of the
Government sawyers, and was much struck with the abundance of the
Filices, whose great exuberance is wonderfully promoted by the perpetual
humidity that exists in these deep woods, which the solar ray never has any
direct chance to exhaust. I gathered some very fine specimens of a species of
Pimelea with a conical capitulum of flowers, whose involcrum consists of
8 leaves; a shrub 6-8 feet high. Aster viscosus, Labill. [= Olearia
viscosa], having smooth elliptical leaves and terminal corymbs of flowers,
with a shrubby stem, I discovered growing on the overhanging rocks, in flower.
An aculeated shrub, perhaps of Pittosporeae of Mr. Brown, of slender
habit, with subrotund or cuneated leaves, toothed at their points, with
pentandrous solitary axillary flowers, is in these shades a frequent plant.
Rubiaceae, a spreading branched tree, with dark green serrulated leaves,
racemes of green tubular flowers, and purple angular drupes, appears to be a
nondescript. I discovered another strong plant of the habit of Cunonia,
probably a Weinmannia. Myrtus trinervia [= Rhodamnia
trinervia]; Eugenia elliptica of Smith; and Pittosporum fulvum
of Rudge (scarcely distant from P. revolutum H. K.), are very common
shrubs, in flower or young fruit. A plant of the Iridaceae, with white
flowers, and a flat-stemmed plant of Aroideae, which I have not seen
since I left England. Gymnostachys anceps abounds in these leafy damp
woods, and some little parasitical plants of Orchidaceae, Sarcochilus
falcatus and Dendrobium rigidum are rare, adhering to the bark of the
trees, of which I gathered some specimens.
About the time I returned to my hut my servant arrived with the Government
horse, when we made up a good fire for the night.
22nd. Thursday. Early this morning I sent the packhorse down the
mountain to a small farming establishment at its base, with as much of the
luggage as the beast could conveniently carry, and I kept with the remainder
till the return of my servant and horse. I was not a little agreeably surprised
to discover Aster argophyllus of Labillardière, accompanying an
Acacia with much the habit of A. sauveolens. This Aster is
of arbusculous growth, from 10-16 feet in height, with a stem, in some aged
specimens, 7 and 8 inches in diameter. It is now in flower, which are disposed
in a terminal corymb, and more remarkable for the musky scent of its foliage
than others of its shrubby kindred, or Australian Gnaphalia of that
savour. I gathered a quantity of the ripe fruit of Podocarpus sp. and
some of Eustrephus latifolius, whose diversified foliage led me to
suspect I had detected the tropical species of this, but its aggregated
monadelphous flowers determined the plant. I discovered a slender tree with
alternate veinless coriaceous leaves, in fruit, allied to Diospyros,
which proves to be Mr. Brown's Cargillia australis.
At noon the man and horse returned to me, having left part of the luggage in
the charge of a new settler, who had erected a temporary hut on the sea-shore,
about 2 miles east of the mountain's foot. Finally, leaving our encampment with
the remaining part of the luggage, we followed the beaten horse road about a
mile through the same continuance of thick matted forest of various descriptions
of timber till we arrived at the pitch of the descent down the mountain, which
is at present, in many parts, very abrupt, steep and rugged. Corypha
australis, now laden with large bunches of ripe black fruit, and
Alsophila australis, with other of the Filices, are very luxuriant
on the roadside down the mountain. On my way I gathered specimens of a small
tree of Celastrus, flowers pentandrous, in terminal panicles.
Prostanthera incisa (Br. Prod). The Passiflora of New South Wales,
which frequently abounds in deep shaded situations a few miles north of
Parramatta, decorates the wooded descent with a profusion of its orange and
green flowers, having its slender scandent branches laden with young fruit.
About 5 p.m. we had descended to the base of the mountain, which is abundantly
indicated by the marshy grounds and runs of limpid water we crossed a little
elevated above the level of the sea, but not before the horse was completely
worn out with the severe exercise of the day. Arriving at the palm-thatched hut
of the settler, who very liberally offered me a part of the same, we halted for
the night, intending to reach our ultimate headquarters early on the morrow. In
the sandy open arid spots near the sea, Dillwynia glaberrima and others
were in flower, and in open forest land I detected a small plant Schelhammera
undulata (of Mr. Brown), of which I gathered specimens. Rain at close of
evening (8 p.m.), which the slight roofing of our hut, without the aid of my
tarpaulin, would barely keep out.
23rd. Friday. My specimens, prior to our departure, having been
slightly injured by the rains of the preceding night, I placed the whole into
dry papers, packed up all my luggage, and proceeded forward to my ultimate
destination at Mr. Allan's farm, Illawarra, 10 miles to the southward. The horse
road continues along the lengthened beach, which is broad, and bounded by
brushes or small woods, in which Banksia integrifolia and Fabricia
Lawvigata at this period in flower and young fruit, are particularly
remarkable. Scaevola suaveolens (Brown), Hibbertia volubilis, and
a tufted plant of the genus Stackhousia, with thick succulent leaves and
spikes of pale straw-coloured flowers, decorate the dry scorching sands. With
the latter, I gathered other specimens of the following. Hibbertia sp.,
an erect shrub. Phyllanthus sp. with elliptical leaves; and a large dense
shrub of Epacrideae in flower and fruit. On the several projecting rocky
points in the coast line (exposed to the sea), I observed abundance of
Westringia Dampieri, Samolus littoralis, and a dwarf shrub of
Casuarina, in fruit. Having passed several lagoons, formed of waters from
the mountains, and two salt-water inlets, one of which is connected with Tom
Thumb's lagoon, visited originally by the late indefatigable Bass, in his voyage
to the westward, we arrived at the farm about 3 p.m. In the environs of this I
intend to employ myself for about three weeks, in the examination of the botany
around. This farm, for which the native name Illowree or Allowree is retained,
is the property of David Allan, Esqre., Deputy-Commissary-General, and comprises
2,000 acres of fine grazing land, whose western boundary or extremity is the Red
Point of Cook and the charts. The good land extends inland from the sea westerly
10 miles, till it terminates at or near Point Bass, southerly towards which, in
either direction from Illawarra, the land gradually decreases in breadth.
24th. Saturday. I destined the whole of the day to the examination of
the country around me, and especially to the westward, inland. From thence alone
it appeared I would be most likely to meet with botanical novelty, and
accordingly we left the farm-house in a north-westerly direction, taking with us
an assistant and guide, the nephew of the chief of the Lake Allowree,[*] whose
services I purchased for the day, for a small piece of tobacco.
[* Flinders's name for Illawarra.]
We passed through a large portion of very fine rich forest, but very
unprofitable botanical land, about 2½ miles before we reached a thick wooded
bottom, about half a mile in diameter, having a running stream passing through
it, where I noticed several trees of various dimensions, very different from any
seen before, and although few were in flower or fruit, I gathered some
specimens.
On the margins of these woods I observed a slender tree of the habit of
Taxus, a Podocarpus, with long lanceolate leaves; it was, however,
not in flower or fruit; and in a like state I detected a slender tree (a
Bombax), 20-30 feet high, having the leaves and habit of a
Gossypium. In these very damp hollows I discovered a Caladium with
large cordate leaves acute at the point, with rounded lobes at the base, and
many strong nerves. I could not find any appearance of flower or fruit on the
many plants I examined, some of whose clear stems were 3 feet high. Ferns abound
in these situations, but are by no means numerous in species; of those I found
in fructification I collected specimens. A robust habited tree (in stature)
having a very soft woody stem, large cordate leaves, and densely covered with
stinging spines or soft herbaceous aculeae, evidently allied to Urtica,
forms thick and dangerous woods to attempt a passage through, of which I regret
I was unable to discover either flowers or fruit, and that it produces
abundance, appears to be sufficiently demonstrated by the many small plants of
all sizes and ages in the boggy bottoms, where among the superabundance of
scandent and volubilous plants (unknown to me) I gathered duplicate seeds of
Eustrephus latifolius, while my native guide was furnishing himself with
long pieces of the tough stringy bark of Currajong (Hibiscus
heterophyllus), for fishing lines.
About 3 p.m. we took a circuitous route southerly, towards the sea coast,
with little or no further success, for, having once left these shaded hollows,
the forest land commences, which carried us to the sandy beach. On the bounding
ridge I gathered seeds of Persoonia sp., hardly distinct from P.
lanceolata, the leaves however are scarcely smooth. In these exposed dry
situations Pimelea glauca and Dianella revoluta abound, with
Eriocalia major [= Actinotus helianthi], Correa alba,
Stylidium graminifolium and Rhagodia hastata. During my return to
Headquarters, on the immediate shores, I gathered specimens of Spinifex
(= S. hirsutus), with dioecious flowers, growing luxuriantly in the sand,
with a species of Convolvulus, closely allied to C. soldanella
(Calystegia reniformis of Mr. Brown).
25th. Sunday. Visited the last farm southerly, in this range of
country, about 10 miles from Illawarra, situate on the small river called
Merrimorra by the natives.
[* The Minumurra of modern maps.]
26th. Monday. We were prevented from returning to Mr. Allan's farm
last evening in consequence of the high tide, its great depth and strong current
of water at the mouth of the Lake through which our route ran. I therefore
availed myself of this detention and took a range over the forest grazing lands
westerly, to the shaded hollows under the mountain belt, the plants of which I
found, however, were for the most part of the same description as those already
observed in similar situations. Rhipogonum album, with its variously
inserted foliage; and the slender shrub of Pittosporeae, being the most
predominant. I collected specimens of the following:--Ficus sp., forming
a slender tree; leaves scabrous, oblique; fruit being calyptrated.
Asclepiadaceae, Tylophora barbata Br., a twining slender plant.
Anonaceae allied to Eupomatia, a small tree with glossy serrulated
leaves; flowers in axillary racemies, scarcely open. Commelineae,
Aneilema crispatum (Br.), this plant is very abundant, but rare at this
time in a flowering condition. Gymnostachys anceps is exceedingly common.
I gathered from one plant a ripe seed. Renealmia paniculata [=
Libertia paniculata], noticed on the mountain top, and Crinum
pedunculatum of Mr. Brown, with the caulescent Caladium and
arborescent Urtica are prevalent plants in these shades. I was not
successful in procuring specimens in flower or fruit of a climbing plant, which
I suspect, from its knotted stem and large, reniform, glossy, strong-nerved
foliage, of a warm pungent taste, may belong to the Piperes or
Cissi.
Amongst a group of fourteen natives from Shoalhaven who were encamped near
the Merrimorra River Farm, I observed they had their fresh water in baskets made
of the leaf-sheaths of some palm, which they called Bangla, and which they
informed us grew under the mountain range. With a view of ascertaining the point
whether or not any palm exists in New Holland--without the Tropics--beside
Corypha australis, I persuaded one of these people to become our guide
(under the promise of tobacco on his return), and conduct us to the woods where
this doubtful tree existed. We travelled about 4 miles over forest land, in
which I gathered specimens of Croton sp., a tall shrub, with subrotund
cordate serrulate leaves, and axillary racemes of flowers; and a parasitical
Loranthus with obovate leaves, growing upon Casuarina totulosa. We
passed through some low swampy grounds covered with Arundo phragmites as
we approached the mountain base, and entering some dark moist woods, some few
plants of the palm presented themselves. Its fronds are pinnated and large; it
has all the habit of some smooth Areca or cabbage tree, and appears to be
the identical species of palm of which I obtained seeds on the North Coast,
during the late voyage of discovery, which I suspect is Seaforthia
elegans of Mr. Brown. Their stems are very slender, and some I observed were
50 ft. high, without any signs of fructification. The Banglas or lower part of
the petioles, which embraces the stem at the head of the palm, are very large,
and some of them that had fallen to the ground were 5 feet long and 3 ft. broad,
of sufficient dimensions to make small catamarans. Alsophila, a tree
fern, and the common fan palm (Corypha australis), are companions of this
tropical species. In our course direct for our Headquarters, after discharging
our guide, I fell in with brushes of the tree before noticed, of the same order
as Melaleuca; and perhaps a Turraea, in fruit, in which state I
gathered specimens, but met with nothing else particularly interesting.
27th. Tuesday. The greater portion of the afternoon was employed on
the margins of Tom Thumb's Lagoon, and in shaded woods in the vicinity, with
very small success; Crinum pedunculatum of Mr. Brown is common in all
situations and exposures, while Salicornia indica and Mesembrythemum
aequilaterale skirt the margins of the water. In the woods I gathered a few
seeds of Tylophora barbata of Mr. Brown, specimens of a small tree in
fruit (Myrsine), and some ferns. A repent plant adhering to the bark of
trees, with cordate oblong leaves, I suspect to be of the Asclepiadaceae,
on account of its habit and lactescent character. I could not discover it in any
stage of fructification. At dusk we returned to the farm hut, having met with no
other plants of any moment.
28th. Wednesday. I have examined the shaded hollows or bottoms
westerly, towards the mountain belt. On land occupied by various settlers, for
the most part as runs for cattle, I find I am generally a month too early for
flowering specimens. I have, however, procured a few in rather an unexpanded
state, and others have afforded me ripe fruit. I now purpose to spend two or
three days on or immediately under the range; and this morning I removed my
headquarters to the stock-keeper's hut near the mountain, taking with me a
sufficiency of salt provisions and abundance of paper for the limited time I
intend being absent. About 8 a.m. we left the hut, with an intention, if
possible, to reach the summit of Hat Hill, bearing about 8 or 9 miles
(apparently) W.N.W., and as a guide through the more intricate woods, I had
induced an intelligent native to accompany me. About 11 a.m. we had penetrated
through much confined thicket and small patches of clear open forest-land
alternately, when my native guide, seeing the more rugged and difficult part of
our route before us (and in truth not caring to be absent long from his wives
and children), complained of sickness and finally abandoned us, returning back
to the hut with all possible speed.
The botany of these thickets varies in nothing from what I have of late so
frequently observed. Rhipogonum album is by no means a trifling ornament
in these woods, being laden with a great profusion of its white flowers on a
smilacine plant. I gathered duplicate seeds of Eustrephus latifolius, and
of the aculeated slender plant of Pittosporae. With some difficulty we
descended to the rocky bed of a water gully, which is supplied by springs in the
belt, particularly from one that has its rise near Hat Hill, which, failing over
rocks, passes through this channel into lagoons at the foot of the range.
In an opening through the trees we could clearly distinguish the bold rocky
summit and perpendicular face of the hill, which we intend to ascend, although
the densely wooded and brushy rising grounds, broken with ravines, between us,
are no small barriers against the attempt. After crossing two deep
water-channels, and passing over several minor elevations, we arrived at the
back of the lower part of the range considerably to the left or southward of Hat
Hill, and tracing it continually upon the ascent we at length reached the rugged
summit of this flat-topped mariner's landmark at 3 p.m.[*] I cannot state
otherwise but that I was much disappointed upon finding this eminence entirely
covered with very common Port Jackson plants, affording me nothing interesting.
The plants were Banksia serrata; Epacris obtusifolia, E.
grandiflora; Lomatia silaifolia; the common Tetratheca;
Tristania albens, and some common Eucalypti of stunted growth.
Comesperma sp., and a Polygala with large purple flowers, common
at Parramatta.
[* Mount Kembla.]
From this elevation we had a very extensive view to the seaward, of the whole
of the farmed land occupied by various settlers, and bounded by the ocean,
comprising from north to south an expanse of near 40 miles. The view westerly on
the contrary, is very confined, the country being a succession of lofty ranges
behind each other, from among which, large smokes of native fires were observed
ascending. The rocks are of sandstone, much excavated by the weather, and the
general rugged aspect much the same as that presented to the traveller on each
side of the road over the Western or Blue Mountains. After a range of full one
hour on this summit, I thought it advisable to descend, and make the most of the
daylight and sun, which was much obscured by the dark clouds blowing from the
eastward and enveloping the summit of this lofty hill. About 5 p.m. we descended
to some rocky holes of water, and being surrounded by Corypha australis,
I determined to halt for the night till daybreak, and while my servant was
constructing a hut or gunya of its fan leaves, I kindled a fire to prepare us a
meal, which at this time of the evening we found very acceptable. We experienced
some disagreeable annoyances by being obliged occasionally to pass through large
bodies of Urtica dioica, and large clusters of sharp edged
Restiaceae. In this route through damp woods, filled with some few ferns,
I detected a slender tree about 16 feet high, bearing flowers in panicles,
axillary and terminal, scarcely distinct from Cryptocarya obovata of Mr.
Brown; also a parasitical plant, Dendrobium aemulum, with a quadrangular
stem.
29th. Thursday. At an early hour we left our fire and followed the
descents from the mountain, in a direction to the northward of east, that
enables us to avoid all the deep creeks intersecting our route yesterday. In
this course I gathered specimens of the following:--Crotalaria sp., a
slender tree having the habit of Coronella. Glycine clandestina.
Ornitrophe sp., a large spreading tree; the red arilloe of the seeds of
the tree are eaten by the natives. Croton sp., (or Aleurites ?),
specimens in flower, observed in fruit in the vicinity of Port Jackson.
Melaleuca sp., closely allied to M. viridiflora (H.K.), a slender
tree 20 feet high; with some ferns, particularly a Polypodium allied to
P. tenellum, scandent on trees; and Davallia caudata (Brown). The
Taxus, a Podocarpus habited tree. Crinum pedunculatum, and
the caulescent Caladium, are common in these woods, which are matted
together with Rhipogonum album, Smilax australis, and other
volubilous and scandent plants. I gathered specimens of a species of
Rubus, growing with the British Urtica in large bodies. We saw
numbers of the lyre-tailed pheasant, but they were very shy, not allowing us any
chance of shooting them. My servant, however, ran down a young hen bird unable
to fly. I set out with my servant and a native as a guide and assistant from the
hut at 7 a.m., for another remarkable eminence on the ridge of the mountain
belt, called Cap or Molle Hill, which has a round top from a near land view of
it, but at a distance out at sea appears at particular bearings perfectly flat,
and has been frequently taken for the Hat Hill of Captains Cook and Flinders.
Our guide directed our route over a large portion of rising rich pastureland,
thinly wooded with common Eucalypti, till we entered the brushes
conducting us to the base of the hill, comprised for the most part of plants
already observed.
In the steep ascent many interesting specimens made their appearance,
particularly Aster argophyllus of Labillardière [= Olearia
argophylla], of large growth, in an abundant flowering state; and a tall
gigantic shrub with long terminal branches, panicles of pentandrous flowers, and
woolly petioled oblong leaves, observed elsewhere in New South Wales.
A spreading tree, 20-25 feet high, of Laurinex of rare appearance, in
young fruit, with large broad elliptical triple-nerved leaves, glacuous beneath,
proves to be Tetranthera dealbata of Mr. Brown [= Litsea
dealbata], (the Laurus myrrha of Father Loureiro), figured by
Plukenet from specimens sent him probably by Mr. James Cunningham, a surgeon in
the East India Company's Service, resident at Canton, of whose extensive
knowledge in botany that author makes frequent mention in his "Amaltheum
Botanicurn." Throughout the whole ascent Bignonia australis [= Tecoma
australis] overruns the tops of the other shrubs, to whose dark foliage its
clusters of flowers give an air of lightness.
About one p.m. we arrived at the summit of Molle Hill, which, by no means so
elevated as Hat Hill, nevertheless commands an extensive view to the seaward.
Being much more to the southward, the true formation of Lake Illowree can be
well traced from the sea to the westward, and presents from this elevation a
beautiful sheet of water. As on Hat Hill, this mount has little novelty, being
chiefly clothed with the vegetation of Port Jackson. The declivities and
overhanging rocks furnished me with specimens of Blandfordia grandiflora
(Brown). Xanthorrhoea sp., with a few seeds. Epacris crassifolia
(Bn.), a beautiful flowering plant; and another rigid plant of the same kindred
family, Dracophyllum secundum, of which I sent seeds to England per
"Harriet." Xerotes tennifolia. A purple-flowered Solanum, a
suffruticose plant. With a few ferns, particularly Gleichenia speluncae
of Mr. Brown. I again noticed the Podocarpus-looking plant. Some trees we
passed this day were 35 and 40 feet high. The rocks on the summit of Molle or
Cap Hill are bold and bluff to the northward and eastward, and are of the
prevailing sandstone of Sydney. About 4 p.m. we had descended and had returned
to our temporary quarters, the thunder from the mountains hastening our
despatch.
31st. Saturday. I took a walk in the confined brushes in the environs
of the farm, but found, in consequence of the quantity of rain that had fallen
this morning, it was vain to collect flowering specimens, and in reality the
route I took furnished me with nothing but what I had seen before, excepting a
twining shrub, perhaps of Urticaceae. About 2 p.m. I packed up all my
specimens and returned to my original headquarters at Illawarra, or Five Islands
farm.
1818. November 3rd. Tuesday. This day I visited Lake Allowree, on the
margins of which I expected to make some further discoveries in botany. The
woods and close-shaded bottoms we passed afforded me little variety or deviation
from the individual specimens of which frequent mention has been made. The
following few interesting plants, however, are the results of this day's
investigations. Achras australis of Mr. Brown, a slender timber, beneath
which I gathered a quantity of the seeds. A twining plant of
Asclepiadaceae, Marsdenia rostrata of Mr. Brown. The
Podocarpus so often examined, I found to-day bearing last year's male
flowers upon it, of which I gathered specimens. Hibiscus heterophyllus
skirts these woods, also the Gossypium-habited tree, and another with
ternate, oblong leaves, having much the appearance and character of Mr. Brown's
Flindersia; I saw but a single tree, but that without any appearance of
fruit or flower to determine its genus. Descending through a brush of dwarf
sapling Casuarina, the ground being covered with the native Viola
sp., we came out upon the margin of the Lake, which is extensive, but very
shoaly on its expanded surface, Pelicans, ducks, teal and some other aquatic
birds were swimming, and in detached parties I observed natives of the
Lake--their hereditary property in possession--in canoes, spearing fish, which
is said to be abundant. The most moderate calculation of the dimensions of this
lake is, from east to west 12 miles, and from north to south about 16 miles. Its
supply from the sea is over a flat low part of the beach not exceeding 100 yards
wide, whose channel has about 9 feet of water at the flood tide, sufficient to
allow some small shark and an abundance of porpoises to pass to the lake. Its
margins are covered with a dead seaweed and Salicornia indica, with a
delicate plant in tufts, the Mimulus repens of Mr. Brown.
On the more elevated grassy lands I gathered specimens of some small plants
of Melanthaceae and Asphodeleae, viz. Burchardia umbellata,
and Tricoryne elatior of Mr. Brown, with a small flowering Craspedia
Richea (Labillardière). Approaching rain with thunder warned us to return,
which we did by shaping our course along the sea shore, where I gathered
specimens of an Acacia in fruit, a shrub of depressed growth, frequently
procumbent on the sands. A genus of Solanaceae (Duboisia of Mr.
Brown), I found in flower, of which I gathered specimens. Myoporum
ellipticum and M. acuminatum, the latter a small tree, furnished me
with ripe seeds. Barely outside the high water mark, Calystegia
reniformis of Mr. Brown, Atriplex halimus and Spinifex
sericeus, clothe the beach, the former bearing abundance of its purple
flowers. In some low boggy grounds on the western side of the boundary ridges,
Menyanthes exaltata or Villarsia parnassifolia was noticed, and I
detected a new species of Stackhousia, with slender filiform leaves and
small yellow flowers.
4th. Wednesday. In a walk I took southerly in the afternoon, on the
beach, I added some few specimens and seeds to my gradually augmenting
collection:--Dolichos reliculatus (H.K.) Apium prostratum of
Ventenat and Labillardière. Spinifex sericeus, female flowering
specimens. Croton sp., leaves linear, male flowers, large white seeds.
Leontodon sp., specimens in flower, and ripe seeds; on rocks. On the
rocky points besides Correa alba, Westringia Dampieri, Scaevola
suaveolens, Plectranthus australis, I gathered seeds of a dwarf
stunted shrub of Casuarina.
5th. Thursday. Repeated observations prove the necessity of leaving
the immediate shores to seek for botanical novelty, which appears only to exist
in the deep recesses of dark woods under the mountain range, where the most
luxuriant vigour of vegetation is contrasted with its final dissolution, and
where the mind is presented with a striking picture of the operations of nature,
who, when thus left to herself, never destroys but that she may again create. I
have now determined to spend 5 or 6 days in these shades as profitably as
possible, and intend therefore to make my headquarters at the bark hut of a
friend, whose frequent kind solicitations to be allowed to assist and forward me
in my pursuits, I am happy now to afford the pleasurable occasion. Having
therefore made arrangements relative to the airing of my green specimens on
hand, which I leave at the Five Island farm till my return, I set out with my
servant and packhorse, laden with paper and other necessaries for the period I
propose being away.
My intended headquarters is on the south west side of the Lake, distant about
12 miles from Illawarra, towards which we commenced our journey at 9 a.m.
Nothing can exceed the rich luxuriance of the grasses of the fine grazing land
we passed over in the first 4 miles, the great nourishment of which is
abundantly demonstrated by the many head of large well-bodied cattle grazing
thereon. Arriving at a small rivulet that intersected our course, running
easterly from the range, we forded it and passed through an intricate but
interesting brush, where I observed some shrubs not in flower or fruit different
from any previously detected. From these thickets southerly, the forest grazing
grounds continue, occasionally interrupted by small brooks or creeks of running
water. The many well-beaten cross-paths of cattle intersecting one another,
having led us imperceptibly off our own true course, it was late before we even
reached the borders of the western extremes of the Lake, and being overtaken by
a heavy drenching rain, with thunder and lightning, I thought it advisable to
halt for the day, 5 miles short of my ultimate destination, at a temporary hut
on the lake.
6th. Friday. Wishing to examine some close confined thickets in the
neighbourhood of the hut, I did not change my headquarters this day, which was
for the most part occupied in the investigation of the botany around. Among the
many valuable trees already made mention of, I discovered the
following:--Asclepiadaceae, Lyonsia straminea (Brown), a large
twining shrub, in fruit. Xylocarpus sp., a tree of moderate size.
Acalypha sp., a shrub. Logania sp., allied to L.
Longifolia, the plant agrees with L. revoluta in habit, but has no
perceptible pubescence about it; a slender shrub. Rhamnus sp. Cissus
sp., very nearly related to C. antarctica, of which I gathered seeds.
Myrtus trinervia [= Rhodamnia trinervia] in young fruit.
Eugenia elliptica forms a large tree in these woods, and Sterculia
heterophylla, very frequent in the Western Interior, I found full of fruit,
from which I gathered ripe seeds. A large twiggy shrub with ovate attenuate
toothed scabrous leaves, but in no stage of flower or fruit; its acute terminal
bud and bleeding character when broken, would indicate its genus to be
Ficus. A twining shrub of Cunoniaceae, intermediate between
Weinmannia and Ceratopetalum, afforded me very handsome flowering
specimens. Its branches, with Clerodendron tomentosum, of very luxuriant
growth, and Bignonia australis = Tecoma australis] top all other
plants, frequently climbing over the robust lofty arms of the Red Cedar trees,
and reclining on the heads of the smaller arbusculae. Nicotiana undulata,
Myosotis australis, and a plant with a small single seeded fruit in small
clusters,[*] are common plants on the verge of these thickets.
[* This climbing plant agrees with Sicyos angulata (Linn.),
originally figured by Hermann.]
7th. Saturday. About the hour of 8 we departed from the hut on the
lake, directing our course over fine forest land to our intended headquarters
with more than ordinary caution, to prevent being led a second time out of our
road by the many paths leading to all points of the compass. At 11 a.m. we
arrived at our destination, after a long route through much rising uneven
ground, and taking possession of a comfortable spare apartment recently attached
to the bark hut, I prepared myself to visit the woods near the farm. About half
a mile to the westward of this Australian farm house, some extensive confined
thickets, to which I directed my attention, employed us during the remaining
part of the day. I gathered the following:--Tetranthera dealbata (Brown),
a tree 25-30 feet high, in young fruit. Duboisia myoporoides, some finer
specimens than I have before possessed; this tree which varies from 12-20 feet
in height, has a remarkably thick corky bark. Buettneriaceae, a
subvolubilous plant with a terminal raceme of yellow flowers; leaves alternate,
minutely denticulated, and smooth. On the banks of a muddy stream I gathered a
small plant which appears to be Mr. Brown's Heliotropium asperrimum. A
large volubilous plant of considerable length, which I suspect is related to the
Menispermaceae, is common in the dark forests to which we penetrated,
wherein the tropical palm Seaforthia elegans, Corypha australis,
and the arborescent Urtica in all stages, are very abundant. Of the
latter I could discover no traces of fructification, but I gathered a quantity
of the Fan Palm (Corypha australis). Of the ferns, of which these humid
shades are productive, I collected the following:--Pteris nuduiscula,
P. falcata (Br.), P. umbrosa (Br.), Adiantum hispidulum
(Br.), Lindsaea microphylla (Br.), Asplenium flabellifolium,
Dicksonia davalloides Br., and Doodia caudata Bn.
8th. Sunday. Particularly fine and favourable weather for drying my
specimens.
9th. Monday. I prepared this day to visit (if possible) the summit of
the main range overhanging the extreme boundary of the farm, although from the
elevated, bluff, perpendicular appearance of its rocky face, I had little hopes
of reaching this lofty part of the ridge. To ensure the most practicable ascent
I secured, for a little tobacco, the most useful assistance of a native, with
whom we started at 8 a.m. on a south-westerly course for the eminence in view.
At 11 a.m., having passed over much hilly fine grazing forest land, we arrived
at the base of the range, where on rocks in the bed of a running creek, taking
its rise in the mountains, I commenced collecting the few interesting plants
detected in this day's route. Urticaceae. Boehmeria sp., a
succulent plant with procumbent radicant herbaceous stems, appears allied to
Forster's Elatostemma. A species of Piper, the first I have
observed in Australia, very abundant on the mossy decayed stems of trees, with a
species of Pteris. The pepper appears to be the same as Piper
reflexum of Linn. and Swartz, already found on islands in the Pacific Ocean,
as well as in the West Indies, and at the Cape of Good Hope.
Ascending the steep sides of the mountain through thick brushes of
Croton and the same description of plants as observed on the sides of
Molle or Cap Hill (particularly Aster argophyllus and Bursaria
spinosa) we reached the summit early in the afternoon, and found scarcely
any other than the common plants of New South Wales, presumptive proofs that the
whole ridge is of the same character, and that the most rare, desirable and
valuable plants are inhabitants of the shaded ravines at its base, I gathered
some papers of seeds of the following:--Deeringia celosioides, a genus of
Amarantaceae. Ficus rubiginosa, a large tree 60-80 feet high, with
very extraordinary alated base. Trochocarpa laurina. Pimelea sp.,
allied to P. ligustrina, capitulum of flowers conical. And Helichrysum
sp., a tall suffruticose plant.
The native, our guide, espied, on a tree, an opossum (Didelphis),
having many of the habits of the ring tailed species (caudivolva). It was
a female and her cub. They were asleep, hanging by the claws, among the topmost
shoots of a slender Eucalyptus piperita. It has no tail; it has the thick
bluff head of the wombat, with strong incisor teeth, but does not burrow in the
earth as that harmless, easily domesticated animal.[*] The length of the mother
was 28 inches, and its weight upwards Of 30 lbs.; the cub was about half grown,
its length not exceeding a foot; it was covered with a fine thick grey fur. The
Australian killed the parent in order the better to carry her down the range,
but the young one, at my suggestion, and request, was suffered to live, and was
carefully brought to the Farm hut. The heat of the day had brought out snakes
from their retreats in the hollow trunks of fallen timber, and it required the
utmost caution to avoid treading upon them as they lay basking in the beaten
paths among the high grass. At dusk we returned to the Farm hut, having had a
fine day for the ill-paid excursion we had made.
[* This seems to have been a native bear.]
10th. Tuesday. I employed myself in some gullies under the range, with
a view of collecting any few remaining flowering specimens that might be worth
attention. I gathered the following:--Cryptocarya glaucescens, a tree 40
feet high. Cynoglossum latifolium (Br.), a small plant, on the banks of
fresh-water streams: Gratiola latifolia (Br.), in similar situations.
Prostanthera caerulea (Br.), a large strong scented shrubby plant.
Tetranthera dealbata, I observed to-day in young fruit; and I gathered another
paper of the seeds of Eustrephus latifolius, with finer specimens of the
aphyllous twining shrub of Urtiaceae, having monoecious succulent racemes
of flowers, first discovered on the 31st ultimo.
11th. Wednesday. At an early hour we left the farm, with all my
luggage, for my original headquarters at Illawarra, which I hoped to reach at
midday, in order to pack up all the plants and prepare for taking my departure
for Parramatta early to-morrow morning. In the rich grassy lands I gathered
specimens of Xerotes mucronata and Daviesia sp., allied to D.
acicularis, in young fruit. In some dark woods I detected a small tree of
Cryptocarya sp., differing from C. glaucescens in having a
tomentum on the under surface of the foliage. About one p.m. I halted for an
hour at the bark hut of another settler, having heard I might possibly procure
good seeds of a species of palm (Seaforthia elegans), the Bangla, very
frequent in the moist woods in the neighbourhood, and of which I had made much
inquiry during my stay at the Five Islands. With the assistance of some people
on the farm with axes, I caused several specimens 40-50 feet high to be fallen,
laden with fruit, which I, however, found far from being ripe. They afforded me
specimens that may prove the identity of the plant as being the same observed by
me on the north coast on the 14th April last. It would seem, from the present
state of the fruit, that it ripens about March next, and that as they arrive at
maturity they fall off and furnish a substantial aliment to the numerous large
birds (particularly pigeons) inhabiting these woods.
12th. Thursday. I sent off a pack-horse, laden, to the foot of the
mountain, about 10 miles north of the Five Islands, with directions that the man
and horse should return to me early in the afternoon, in order to be ready to
take off the remaining load of my luggage and collections early in the morning.
I gathered Myostis australis in flower and fruit.
13th. Friday. At 5 a.m. I finally left the Five Islands Farm, with the
remaining part of my collection, for the foot of the mountain, and arrived at
the settler's hut there early in the forenoon. Having made some necessary
arrangements relative to the conveyance of my luggage up the mountain on the
morrow, I took a walk into the shaded woods at its base, of which the plants,
although very interesting, are uniformly the same as those in similar
situations, of which frequant mention has been already made. I gathered
duplicate flowering specimens of Rubus sp., Oxalis sp., a small
creeping pubescent plant; and duplicate specimens in fruit of a large twining
shrub, Lyonsia straminea. In grassy exposed situations of the beach I
detected an annual Hibiscus in flower and fruit.
14th. Saturday. The whole of this day was occupied in carrying up my
luggage to the hut on the mountain top.
17th. Tuesday. At 6 a.m. we left the temporary hut on the mountain top
for the farmhouse of Mr. Middleton where my Govt. cart was left in charge...I
made no discoveries of any moment.
19th. Thursday. The rugged stage of 15 miles from the mountain top to
this farm had so worn off the shoes of my poor horse as to render re-shoeing
indispensable...I therefore determined to lose no time but to proceed with my
cart together with the whole of my collection towards Parramatta where we
arrived at the close of the afternoon.[*]
[* End of journal.]
CHAPTER XII
THE SECOND VOYAGE OF THE "MERMAID" TO THE NORTH-WEST COAST
The "Mermaid" had completed a voyage to Tasmania at the beginning of the year
1819, when Cunningham, who accompanied King thither, brought back with him a
variety of Tasmanian plants. On May 8, 1819, King sailed again from Sydney to
continue his exploration of the north and north-west coasts from where he had
left them on May 31, 1818. Cunningham again went with him. In this voyage King
left the harbour in company with the "Lady Nelson" under Oxley, who voyaged with
King as far as Port Macquarie, and after surveying that harbour and the Hastings
River the "Lady Nelson" returned to Port Jackson.
On landing at Port Macquarie, Cunningham thought three-fourths of the plants
that he saw there resembled those of the Illawarra. On an arm of the river near
Rawdon Island he found, however, a fig-tree of gigantic growth, as well as a new
palm, which seldom attained more than twelve feet in height. The forests on the
Hastings also abounded in rosewood and red cedar and several kinds of
Laurineae and Meliaceae, of small diameter, that he believed would
be useful timbers for building and ornamental for furniture, thickly and
beautifully covered the river banks. On May 31st the "Mermaid" left the
port.
From Port Macquarie, King threaded his way up the east coast, following in
the tracks of Cook and Flinders, and examined its shores thoroughly. Lieutenant
Jeffreys, in H.M.S. "Kangaroo" in 1815, had already surveyed this portion of the
mainland.
In describing the "Mermaid's" route to Sir Joseph Banks, who, since the days
of Cook's voyage, had taken a deep interest in the botany of Australia,
Cunningham wrote:[* Letter dated November 9, 1819.]
"Coasting along northerly up the east coast, our first anchorage was on the
30th May in a bay (Rodd's Bay) just without the Tropic, a little to the
southward of Flinders' Port Curtis, where, during our short stay, I made some
additions to the foundation of the collection formed originally at Port
Macquarie. On the shores of this bay I observed, among others, plants detected
in the last voyage on the north coast, originally discovered in the Gulf of
Carpentaria and elsewhere by Mr. Brown. On the 3rd of June we anchored again
under one of the Percy Isles (No. 1),[*] and remaining there the whole of the
next day, a favourable opportunity was afforded me to examine the botany of this
elevated island. On the 8th of June an opportunity enabled me to land upon one
of the islands in Captain Cook's Repulse Bay,[**] which afforded me, among other
plants, a beautiful nondescript Bossiaea, not observed elsewhere. The
next day a landing was effected under that great navigator's Cape Conway (in a
small bight on the north side), and other parts of Whit Sunday Passage, each of
which furnished me with some increase to the specimens and seeds. At Cleveland
Bay (off whose Cape we arrived on the 14th)[***] our stay to complete our water
from some gullies at its head enabled me to make several excursions on the bold
rocky hills on its shores; each ridge of the hills and even the more depressed
flat...on the spurs presented novelties or interesting specimens."
[* "I anchored in the westernmost sandy bay of No. 1 Percy Island
of Captain Flinders to the westward of the small Pine
Islet."--King.]
[** One of the Repulse Isles.]
[*** Now Townsville.]
No natives were seen at Cape Cleveland, although King counted nine derelict
huts in different places close to the beach and saw footprints on the sand. A
fresh green coco-nut, recently tapped for milk, and some bamboos were picked up.
The air was swarming with butterflies, probably of the same variety as those
Cook had met with at Thirsty Sound: "The stem of every grasstree was crowded
with them, and when they were on the wing the air appeared in perfect
motion."
"On Palm Island, in Halifax Bay, and more particularly on the islands in
Rockingham Bay (where we remained the whole of the 20th)," continues Cunningham
to Banks, "I found plants common to both Indies, viz.: Sophora tomentosa,
Guilandina bonduc, and a beautiful purple-flowering Melastoma
(M. Banksii), a splendid South American genus, of whose existence in
Terra Australis I had not the most distant idea. On the shore of a lofty wooded
island (Goold Island), in the latter bay (Rockingham Bay), we had our first
communication with the natives, who came off to us in their small bark canoes
and received us in a peaceable, quiet manner, having previously sent their women
across the island.[*] In our run along the coast from this bay I landed upon one
of the Family Islands (the north easternmost) for a few moments, and occupied
the whole of the 23rd of June[**] in the elevated woods of Fitzroy Island, off
Cape Grafton, where, among other plants, I detected a species of
Myristica in fruit, which may be an original discovery of your own in
that celebrated voyage of Captain Cook, whose track we followed to Endeavour
River, where we arrived on the 27th of that month,[***] anchoring under the
south shore, about the particular spot where the 'Endeavour' had been hove down
50 years since."
[* "The natives came alongside the "Mermaid" in five canoes and
ventured on board. Upon leaving the ship they pointed to their huts and
invited the English by signs to return their visit."--King.]
[** At this time King traced with great care the coast between
Double Point and Frankland Island, which Cook "passed in the night and did not
see." When the "Mermaid" passed Point Cooper, "the summit of the back hills
were named by Mr. Cunningham's desire after John Bellenden-Ker,
Esq."--King.]
[*** After anchoring successively on the 22nd at Fitzroy Island,
on the 24th at Snapper Island (of Jelfreys), and on the 25th at Weary Bay,
examining Blomfield's Rivulet.]
ENDEAVOUR RIVER
"Our protracted detention till the 12th July at this memorable part of the
eastern coast was occasioned by a temporary loss we had previously suffered off
the cloud-capped mountainous land of Cape Tribulation, by the swamping of one of
our most serviceable whaleboats, which we replaced by building another from the
frames of a spare boat we had with us; and thus the convenient south shore of
Endeavour River--which, most probably has never been visited since the departure
of Captain Cook in 1770--has been a second time converted into a temporary
dockyard .[*] Here was a period of 14 days that might have been wholly at my
disposal, had it not been for the annoyances experienced from the prowling
natives, who made a rather determined but unsuccessful attack upon the
boat-builders while I was at some distance from the cutter on an excursion to
the...ranges of hills bounding the grassy flat land southerly (these natives had
to be dispersed by firing a gun).
[* The "Mermaid" anchored "in all probability in the same spot
where Cook had landed his stores."--King. King now named Mount Cook, in honour
of the great seaman.]
"In my various daily walks...during the first week of our stay, much pleasure
was derived in tracing your steps with those of...Dr. Solander, and detecting
many plants then discovered, that in all probability have never been seen in a
living state since that period; among which you...may call to remembrance the
Grevillea gibbosa, in flower and fruit, so prevalent on the rocky hills;
the beautiful bluish flowering Nymphaea (like the late Dr. Roxburgh's
N. versicolor), expanding itself on the surface of the chains of stagnant
pools in the lower lands; and the ornamental Melastoma Banksii
above-mentioned, clothing the muddy shaded banks of these small ponds. The rocky
gullies, trickling with small runs of water, afforded me scope for much minute
research; particularly the delicate filiform minute Stylidia; some small
Eriocaula and Xyrides appeared to abound, with some others of the
gentian family, delighting in a humid shallow soil.
"Among the plants observed on a strip of sandy desert under the range of
hills to the southward of our anchorage, I was successful in collecting a number
of bulbs, which could be but barely traced by the existence of slight vestiges
of decayed foliage lying on the surface of the sand. The summits of the ridges,
and more especially the northern sandy shore, added some interesting plants. On
the arid wastes...I gathered a most beautiful plant of the Dilleniaceae:
Hemistemma Banksii of Mr. Brown.
"It was a subject of much regret that, in consequence of the rupture with the
natives, my walks were...much circumscribed or else wholly prevented. I had
determined (in an absence of two days, at least, from the vessel) upon an
excursion to the more distant and loftier hills, where woods densely matted to
their summits would doubtless have afforded considerable scope for research.
This however was wholly frustrated by the decidedly hostile dispositions of
these Australians, and the smallness of our company not allowing me two or three
armed men as a guard...in distant walks. I trust, however, that the specimens
gathered at Endeavour River will prove an acceptable renovation of the plants
preserved at Soho Square and originally discovered by yourself and Dr. Solander
in July and August, 1770."
In his remarks upon the inhabitants, Cunningham says: "It appears rather
singular that of a dozen natives, with whom we communicated a day or two
previous to the commencement of open hostilities, and who were very
communicative, they had no idea of the word kangaroo, although they knew the
animal we spoke of, as well by our signs as by its frequency on the rocky hills
around us. The animal bearing the generally established name of kangaroo
throughout Europe they called Mauya (or Menuah)."[*]
[* Banks and Cook both called it kangaroo, and said that it was so
described by the natives seen there. King says he saw the same people and
thought that the word had become obsolete. It is possible that these seen by
King were of another tribe, since the language sometimes differs within the
limits of a small area. Near King's tent some pieces of coal were picked up,
which he says no doubt were relies of Cook's visit, which had lain undisturbed
for nearly half a century.]
He continues: "Having examined the river itself, laid down its soundings,
several miles from the sea[*] and launched our new boat for future service on
the N. and N.W. coasts, we departed on the morning of the 12th July, with an
intention to double Cape York...And in the meantime, in coasting towards that
promontory, to lay down the true trendings of the coast north from Cape Bedford,
about where Captain Cook stood off, on account of the dangerous reefs with which
it was feared its shores were invested, and which, although partially surveyed
in 1815 by Lieutenant Jeffreys in the "Kangaroo", armed brig, required a more
correct definition (owing to its sinuous outline)."
[* This appears to have been the first exploration of Endeavour
River since the days of Cook. Roe, who went in charge of the party, found its
waters fresh at nine miles from its mouth. He followed a tortuous channel
through low country, and passed the mangrove forests described by Banks. Where
the party turned back, the river's width was not more than six yards. Another
arm on the north side was not examined.]
On his way up the coast Jeffreys had drawn a chart which King says did him
very great credit, for he filled in the space between Endeavour River and Cape
Direction, unseen by Cook.
Jeffreys had left Port Jackson on April 19, 1815, bound to Ceylon with a
detachment of troops. On his way to Wreck Reef (of Flinders) he experienced
thick weather, which made it unsafe to steer through the narrow channels in the
Barrier Reefs, and sought a passage by what is now called the Inner Route.[*] On
April 28th he rounded Breaksea Spit and entering Harvey Bay anchored off Sandy
Point. From there he sailed to Port Bowen, where he watered his ship, being
detained in this harbour for several days by a gale. Throughout the month of May
he followed Cook's tracks as nearly as possible within the Northumberland and
Cumberland Islands, and to-day two rocks in the Duke Group are called, after
him, Jeffrey's Rocks. While passing through Whit Sunday Passage he gave its name
to Port Molle, and on Molle Island a grassy hill is also known as Mount
Jeffreys.
[* Captain Cripps in the brig "Cyclops," Port Jackson to Bengal,
was the first to pursue the Inner Route in 1812. His vessel being crank he was
afraid to sail the outer passage and followed Cook's track after making the
land at Bustard Bay, but apparently he has left no chart showing his actual
route.]
The parts of the coast which Cook had passed in the night Jeffreys now saw by
daylight, and placed them upon his chart. At Cape Sandwich (Rockingham Bay) some
fruit--wild currants possibly--was obtained from the natives, who were quite
friendly. On May 29th, having passed Cape Flattery and Endeavour River (where
Cook steered away from the coast) the "Kangaroo" continued to sail along the
unexplored part of the land during the daytime, anchoring at night under one of
the innumerable reefs or shoals which line the shore. At one point he saw, seven
to nine miles away, the loom of the Great Barrier Reef; the continuation of this
had been first discovered at Cape Grafton. Snapper Island, seen, but left
unnamed, by Cook, was now named by Jeffreys.
In tracing the coast between Cape Flattery and Cape Weymouth Jeffreys seems
to have been an active explorer, discovering and christening among other places
Cape Bowen, Port Ninian (Ninian Bay) Cape Melville, and Princess Charlotte Bay.
This he observed to be an extensive bay at least thirty miles in depth, its
neighbouring shores presenting a fertile inland country interspersed with trees;
while off its eastern head was a group of five islands which Jeffreys named
Flinders Group. Farther northward a deep indentation in the mainland between
Cape Direction and Cape Weymouth was called Lloyd Bay.
On June 1st, in lat. 13°32' S. and long. 143°47' E., his ship passed within
ten yards of a mushroom coral rock about four feet under water (possibly Obree
Reef); the rays of the sun prevented the red colour of the water being seen
until the vessel was close to it. To the southward of Bolt Head the "Kangaroo"
grounded on another coral shoal, which could not be seen; this is still called
Kangaroo Shoal. On June 6th he rounded the northernmost shores of Cape York, and
found that York Island was a separate island and not a part of the mainland as
hitherto supposed. There he anchored for the night. The native name of this
small island is Wamilug. Jeffreys left it on June 7th, and passing through
Endeavour Strait spent the night at Booby Island. He reached Timor on June 19th,
where he remained until the 26th, and, continuing his voyage, arrived safely on
July 24th at Colombo.
Telling of the "Mermaid's" coming to the scene of Jeffreys' most important
discoveries, Cunningham writes:
"On the evening of the 13th, whilst standing round the outer island of a
group off the coast named by Jeffreys Flinders Group,[*] our progress was
stopped by the sudden appearance of the wreck of a large ship, which had been
hove upon the rocks in a small bay by the force of the surf. We anchored to the
westward of a projecting point of the Wreck Bay, named Cape Flinders in the
"Kangaroo's" chart[**] and upon landing found it was the hull of a large ship
called the "Frederick,"[***] the identical vessel that had been commanded by
Captain Williams, who left Port Jackson early in the year (1818) on his voyage
to India, for a cargo, by way of Torres Strait. As a number of her iron bolts,
blocks, etc., which were lying among the rocks, would be useful to the vessel,
Mr. King determined to spend a day at the wreck, which enabled me to add a few
specimens of plants to my collection, although generally of the same description
as those of Endeavour River.
[* Flinders Group comprises five islands, viz. Stanley, Flinders,
Denham, Blackwood, and Maclear Islands, which form the western head of
Bathurst Bay.]
[** Cape Flinders is the northern extremity of Stanley
Island.]
[*** The "Frederick" was wrecked on the east side of Stanley
Island, the northernmost of the Flinders Group. We read in "The Sydney
Gazette," May 15, 1819: "The ship 'Frederick' was lying at anchor in Torres
Strait (within the Barrier Reef) in company with the 'Wellington' (Captain
Collins), and the' Lynx' (Captain Siddons) in the month of September (1818).
Between six and seven in the morning, when getting under weigh, she went
broadside on a reef and canted on her side. She fired distress signals, which
were answered by the 'Wellington,' who hoisted out her boats, but it was too
late to render help. The 'Lynx' was far ahead, and did not know of the
disaster. The long-boat took 21 persons on board, 5 casks of powder, salt meat
and peas, but neither bread nor water. Captain Williams with five others left
in the jolly-boat. It is feared that the long-boat was lost in Endeavour
Straits. The jolly-boat reached the ' Wellington,' and arrived at Timor en
route for Bengal." When he called at Coepang in the November following, King
learned that the master and four of the crew had arrived there safely, but the
long-boat had been given up as lost.]
"I here collected a few more bulbs of a large kind, apparently the same plant
as that at Endeavour River, which I have suspected may prove to be the Crinum
angustifolium of Mr. Brown, touching at Sunday Island, of the late Admiral
Bligh, near Cape Grenville, on the 22nd July, off which we remained at anchor
all the day in Margaret Bay."[*]
[* King had tried to find an anchorage first at Bligh's
Restoration Island, but the ground was too rocky. Before arriving at this
island he had named Claremont Isles, Night and Young Islands and the Home
Islands.]
On July 24th, continuing to steer northward, the "Mermaid" passed close to
the western shores of the Bird Isles of Captain Cook. Eight or ten natives stood
to gaze at the passing ship and two canoes were seen hauled up on the beach.
Sailing outside Hannibal and McArthur Groups, shortly after noon King came
abreast of Cook's Orfordness and Bligh's Pudding-Pan-Hill. He passed within
Cairncross Island, noticeable for the long reef off its south point, and at 3-30
p.m. steered for Bligh's Turtle Island. Attracted, however, by the river-like
opening near Newcastle Bay, he hauled in to examine it; while he was standing
towards it the water suddenly shoaled and the vessel struck, and afterwards
continued to beat against a hard, sandy bottom, with the result that before King
could bring her into deeper water she was very nearly thrown back on the bank.
To commemorate his ship's escape from the great danger she then encountered,
King named the opening Escape River. He now bore up for Turtle Island; but,
finding no suitable anchorage there, was at last obliged to anchor "in an
exposed situation without protection from wind or sea." At four next morning,
through the ring of the anchor breaking, it was lost, and King stood away to the
eastward of Albany Islands, towards Mount Adolphus.
KING ROUNDS CAPE YORK
In rounding Cape York, the most northerly point of the Australian continent,
King noticed its rugged hills, of which Mount Bremer forms the highest part, and
saw York Island, the little island lying off the cape, "of conical shape and
separated from it by a narrow rocky channel," its cone rising to a height of 275
feet. The "Mermaid" sailed into Torres Strait through the channel between Mount
Adolphus and Albany Island, now known as Adolphus Channel, which is the main
waterway leading from the Inner Route to Torres Strait.
"We doubled Cape York on the 24th," resumes Cunningham and, pursuing Captain
Flinders' track,[*] sought anchorage off (the south end of) Good's Island, one
of the Prince of Wales's Islands, but without finding the particular spot on
which the celebrated navigator anchored.
[* Round the north side of Wednesday Island.]
"An unfortunate circumstance in bringing up, occasioned by the vessel's
dragging her anchor beyond the spot about which she came to, obliged us to weigh
again with a broken anchor; finding shelter under Booby Island,[*] we bore up to
the westward across the Gulf for the Wessel Isles on the north coast. Thus, in a
voyage...more immediately destined for survey, the chart of this easterly coast,
which had remained imperfect since the time of Captain Cook, from Cape Bedford
northerly to Cape York, has been at length completed. And the plants gathered at
different parts...will, I trust, when compared with the journal (that I hope to
transmit from Port Jackson), extend the knowledge of the botany of New South
Wales, as well as enable botanists at home to trace the wide diffusion of many
remarkable intertropical genera through several parallels of latitude.
[* King did not again attempt to anchor at Booby Island, for
having lost two anchors he would not risk losing a third.
On the north coast, after making Wessel's Islands (at daylight on the 27th),
our progress was more rapid to the westward, the line of coast forming but few
bights of importance,[*]...till the 4th August, when we dropped anchor in a bay
with a river at its head, named Liverpool River, in honour of the noble Lord of
the Treasury, which we examined about 40 miles to the southward from our
anchorage. It bears all the character of the Alligator River of our last voyage.
We found fresh water about 12 or 14 miles from the sea, at flood tide, where we
also saw alligators, although by no means so numerous as those seen in the two
large rivers in Van Diemen's Gulf last year. The land on either side this stream
is extensive low grassy flats, subject to inundation, the soil...a stiff clay.
The survey of this coast (carried out in our last voyage) being now completed to
Cape Arnhem,[**] we anchored in our old ground (on August 8th) in South-West
Bay, Goulburn Island, to complete our wood and water, not being certain of
meeting with another supply whilst we might continue on that or the N.W.
coast."
[* "On the 30th July anchored at the bottom of a bay inside a
group of islands which appear to be the Crocodils Eylandts of the old [Dutch]
charts. The bay was called after Viscount Castlereagh. "--King.]
[** Lieutenant John McCluer, while carrying out his surveys for
the Indian Government in 1790-91, brought his ships the "Panther" and
"Endeavour" towards the north coast of Australia and made Arnhem Land. He
steered along this part of the coast until it was found to dip away and then
left it. The point of his turning is placed in 11°15' S. and this is the Cape
Van Diemen of old Dutch voyagers. McCluer did not land anywhere, but he
ascertained the positions of several small islands, shoals and projecting
points, verifying some of the early discoveries of the Dutch.]
On the evening of the "Mermaid's" arrival at Goulburn Island, King landed
with a watering party to dig a well for water that came trickling down through
the cliffs. He then went to Bottle Rock to see if he could find the record he
had left there of his previous voyage. The bottle was gone and the rocks were
now covered with terns' eggs, of which the sailors gathered about eight dozen.
King sent the boat's crew in pursuit of a turtle which was perceived swimming
towards the beach, but they failed to trace it, and on their return reported
that they had seen the footmarks of natives and a dog in the sand. Next day Mr.
Bedwell took another party on shore; he found that the tide had reached the hole
the men had lately dug and spoilt the water, and the work had to be re-done.
Bedwell visited the "Mermaid's" former wooding place, and saw the remains of old
wood-cuttings there, though many had been burnt. On his return to the watering
party, who had begun their operations, a shower of large stones was thrown down
upon them from the cliffs above, on the edge of which a body of natives suddenly
appeared and as suddenly retreated when a volley of muskets was fired over their
heads from the boat.
"After a stay of 10 days," continues Cunningham, "during which I was
prevented landing, partly on account of indisposition and partly from the
mischievous disposition manifested by our last year's friends--the natives on
the islands--we weighed on August 18th and proceeded on our voyage to the
termination of our last year's examination of this coast at Clarence Strait and
Vernon Islands, which we did not reach till the 27th of that month.[*] Thence
the large bight of the coast line, named Joseph Buonaparte's Gulf on the French
charts, commences, at which we resumed our survey of the N.W. coast, viewing
Cape Van Diemen at the western part of the north coast. Our first anchorage was
on the 5th September, in a bay which has a trending off about 10 miles to the
southward and eastward and, being deeply invested with mangroves, was a very
unfavorable landing. It has been named Port Keats" (in compliment to Admiral Sir
Richard Keats).
[* The "Mermaid" on her way passing between McCluer and New Year
Islands, and between New Year and Oxley Islands.]
Before he reached Port Keats, King rounded Cape Van Diemen on August 23rd,
and steered a course down the west side of Bathurst Island, passing on the 26th
Cape Fourcroy of French seamen. On the following evening he sighted the shores
of the mainland on the south side of Clarence Strait. The land here had been
seen by King in May, 1818, and it was the last seen by him before he then left
the coast. "At daylight on August 28th," remarks King, "we found ourselves near
the land to the south-west of Vernon's Islands,[*] which were also in sight. To
the south was a deep opening, trending to the south-east, of a river-like
appearance, but as it did not seem to be of sufficient importance to detain us
we passed to the, westward." When he wrote these words, little did King dream
that on the eastern shores of the river-like opening, in future years, would
stand Darwin, the capital of the Northern Territory, and that the port within it
would become and (to quote from "Admiralty Sailing Directions ") "probably will
continue to be the principal port in the northern part of Australia, and port of
call for the largest steamers communicating with China, Singapore, Java, and
India."
[* Three wooded coral islands: North-west Vernon, East Vernon, and
Southwest Vernon Islands.]
"The land hereabouts is low," we read in King's journal, and thickly wooded
to the brink of the deep red-coloured cliffs...At the bottom of the opening was
a remarkable flat-topped hill, under which the waters of the inlet appeared to
flow in a south-east direction." The flat-topped hill is now designated King's
Table Hill, in his honour.
Sixteen miles to the south-westward of the opening, known to us as Port
Darwin, King saw a deep bight, which he called Paterson Bay.[*] It is now called
Port Patterson, and between these two openings the land appeared to him at first
"like an island," but was afterwards presumed to be "a projecting head
separating the opening (Port Darwin) from the deep bight (Port Patterson.)" This
projecting head was, of course, Cox or Douglas Peninsula, which separates the
two ports.
[* In honour of Lieutenant-Governor William Paterson, who died in
1810.]
Continuing his voyage King kept on a south-westerly course and at this time
seems to have closely compared with his own observations those made by the
French Commodore Baudin in 1801, when he explored the north-west coasts. Péron's
Islands, one of which has a grassy peak nearly 100 feet high, came in sight on
the 2nd. (According to Dalrymple it was here that Tasman had met with Australian
natives.) King now named various parts of the coast, including Point Blaze,
Channel Point, Cliff Head, Anson Bay, and Cape Ford, during his progress along
the shore, and on September 4th saw Baudin's Cape Dombey. The French charts
showed islands in front of this cape under the name of the Barthélemy Islands.
King found that they did not exist, and transferred the name Barthélemy to some
hills seen over the low land on shore. Their summit was named, by him, Mount
Goodwin.
On arriving at Port Keats on September 5th a party put ashore at the only
accessible landing-place; its shores were overrun with mangroves, and, among
other plants, Cunningham found a stunted Eucalyptus six feet high. The usual
traces of natives were noticed, though none were seen, but their large fires
were blazing three miles away. No fresh water was obtained; and on the following
morning, September 8th, the "Mermaid" left the harbour to continue her voyage.
She soon lost sight of land, but next day Cape Hay, and on the 10th Point
Pearce, were visible. Round the last point the land trended to the south-east,
forming a deep indenture. Into this indentation (it has since been discovered)
the Fitzmaurice and Victoria Rivers discharge their waters.
At daylight on the 13th, from the "Mermaid's" track, the land behind her
about Point Pearce bore due east, and on this day a remarkable hill, answering
in position to one on Baudin's Lacrosse Island, was sighted to the
south-westward. King was prevented steering towards it by a shoal which extended
to the north-west and crossed his course. He anchored near it at sunset. In his
remarks he says: "After leaving Port Keats we met with large quantities of a
very beautiful species of medusa...It is from this animal the French have named
their Bane des Meduses." King had to round the north-west end of the Medusa
Banks, and the ship appeared then to have entered a channel, since some shoals
or narrow sand ridges formed another barrier along the opposite side-these being
now called King Shoals.
In this channel many medusae were seen, and also sea-snakes, of which a
curious one with a black back, being yellow underneath and having a striped
tail, was the most remarkable. King anchored two miles from the north-west end
of Lacrosse Island, which lies at the mouth of Cambridge Gulf, dividing its
entrance into two channels, being nearly midway between Capes Domett and
Dussejour.
CAMBRIDGE GULP
From Lacrosse Island (4 miles E. of C. Dussejour)[*] Cambridge Gulf extends
S.-S.-westerly for twenty-three miles to Adolphus Island, where it is divided
into two arms that running westward of Adolphus Island[**] extends for seven
miles, and then is again divided by a projecting point under View Hill. While
one stream runs eastward and unites with the East Arm, the other trends
southward and opens into an extensive basin eleven miles in length, which
contracts as it winds under the base of Bastion Hills. The shore opposite these
hills is low, and the gulf trends round to the south-west, narrowing through the
gorge called the Gut for about two miles, and leading into an interior basin
that terminates, in a narrow stream, which winds under the base of Mount
Cockburn.
[* Three hills named Faith, Hope, and Charity, north-west of Cape
Dussejour, attain a height Of 400 to 530 feet.]
[* The arm westward of Adolphus Island is the channel to the
settlement of Wyndham. The aim eastward of Adolphus Island is the northern
mouth of Ord River,--"Admiralty Sailing Directions."]
From this anchorage King pulled round to a sandy bay, where the sailors found
turtle marks and the remains of a turtle's nest, recently plundered by the
natives, impressions of whose feet lay upon the sand. Nine of the blacks were
observed in the brush when the visitor's took their departure. The ship weighed
and made sail round a bluff point (on the west side of the island), where King
again anchored. At night the whole island was illuminated by native fires, and
from the "Mermaid" presented a grand and imposing spectacle.
Cambridge Gulf was the next inlet in which Cunningham landed and where he was
able to extend his collections. "Continuing to the westward," he writes, "among
dangerous and extensive banks and shoals, we again came to under the north side
of an elevated island named on the French charts Ile Lacrosse, which we
discovered was situate in the entrance of a gulf about 60 miles deep, to the
southward, and in which we occupied several days. This gulf was named Cambridge
Gulf, in honour of the seventh son of His Britannic Majesty; and its rocky,
hilly shores, barren and and as they are, added some remarkable plants to my
collection, particularly of the Mimosae, of which a small Acacia
having sets of small delicate verticillate leaves, in habit like some
Tetratheca, is most novel.
"On leaving Cambridge Gulf on the 29th September[*] we made the outer islands
of a large group lying off the main, and named by the French Iles d'Institut,
which comprise several small islets, with some small but elevated flat-topped
islands, of which each has received a name from those navigators, but of the
identity of many it appears a perfect problem to determine. The deep sinuosities
of the main shoreline occupied us within the Institut Isles till the middle of
last month (October), by which period we had explored two bights named
Vansittart Bay and Port Warrender, both of which afford ample shelter and good
soundings for the anchorage of shipping; the great droughts of the main islands
(it being then the extreme of the dry season) not enabling us to recruit our
stock of water by a solitary discovery of even the smallest portion. Its
existence on these shores at this period, the presence of natives, of whom we
saw eleven-including children-together, and the recent traces of small rock
kangaroo, clearly demonstrated.
[* On this day at sunset, King saw Cape St. Lambert and Mount
Casuarina of Baudin, and at noon on September 30th Cape Rulhières and Lesueur
Island, whence the land trends in a westerly direction towards Cape
Londonderry.]
ADMIRALTY GULF
King gives a more detailed account of how those on board the "Mermaid"
occupied their time throughout the month of October, when the two bights
mentioned by Cunningham were surveyed and added to his chart.
"We had now reached a part of the coast," writes King, "which, excepting a
few islands that front it, the French did not see." On October 1st he sighted a
bay (behind a group of islands), the eastern head of which was named Cape
Talbot, and next morning at nine o'clock the ship was anchored to the north of
the group, which was called after Sir Graham Moore, then a member of the
Admiralty Board, an island to the north-west of the group being christened Jones
Island. At sunset the ship again dropped her anchor at the entrance of a bight
or bay nearly blocked with reefs; at first King thought that he would be unable
to penetrate it without rounding other islands, which on account of an eclipse
of the moon that took place on that evening, were named Eclipse Islands. He
continued to the southward, however, and first landed on the south-east end of
an island called Long Island, where he took bearings and obtained a tolerable
view up the bay. Mr. Cunningham obtained some new plants and saw signs of
natives having been there. The "Mermaid" then passed through a deep channel, and
on the 4th came to an anchorage near the west side of the bay, which King now
named Vansittart Bay. There again natives seemed to have recently congregated in
large numbers, as at one place in one of its inner sandy bays no less than forty
small native fire-places were arranged in one straight line along the beach.
Near these fire-places were some stones on which the blacks had been bruising
seeds, principally the fruit of a new species of Sterculia, the husks of
which were strewn around. Two native huts were here observed. There were also
traces plainly showing that Malay proas had visited the place. On October 5th
the "Mermaid" proceeded to the south-east corner of the bay, where King landed
in the evening on a projecting point and ascended to its summit, which he
christened Vine Head.
While the people were pulling the boat inshore towards the west side of the
bay, the commander was amused to see a native running along the rocky beach
towards the point for which they were steering. On the other side of it there
seemed to be a cove or inlet. This man was alone and unarmed, and as he ran he
sprang nimbly from rock to rock. On one eminence he stopped for a moment to look
round at the boat, but took no notice of invitations that the sailors by signs
were making to him to approach it. Eventually he disappeared into the mangroves
on the south shore, at the bottom of the inlet, where a fire was burning, and
where he evidently gave the alarm to a family of natives consisting of three
men, two women, and four children who were cooking their repast. As soon as the
boat drew inshore the women took up their baskets and movables and hurried away
with the children, while the men seized spears as if to guard their retreat. Not
to frighten them, King pulled over to the opposite shore and with Cunningham
ascended a hill that rose steeply from the beach.
The view from the eminence was disappointing, though King was able to
discover that Bougainville Island was not an island, as the French had surmised,
but a peninsula. While the explorers were descending the hill, natives armed
with spears and short pieces of wood like throwing-sticks, and one of them
carrying a shield, came towards the foot of the hill, but did not intercept the
visitors. After the strangers had re-embarked, however, the blacks rushed to the
water's edge shouting loudly and threw stones at the departing boat. They also
were seen to be preparing to use their spears, so the commander gave orders for
a musket to be fired over their heads. The noise of the explosion struck them
with panic and they fled. Owing to this incident the name of Encounter Cove was
given to the inlet, the bay itself, as already mentioned, being named
Vansittart, after the Chancellor of the Exchequer, who became Lord Bexley.
At daylight on the 8th the "Mermaid" weighed and stood to the north-west,
between Troughton Island and Cape Bougainville. Two flat islands seen in the
south-west afterwards proved to be Baudin's Institut Islands. The ship was
steering down the western side of the cape when she was stopped by a
considerable reef (Long Reef), and dropped anchor in the offing in twenty-two
fathoms. Next day she made her way towards the bottom of the gulf, passing
through an archipelago of islands, whose positions her commander then fixed. At
noon he sighted the hill he had climbed in Encounter Cove. By four o'clock the
"Mermaid" entered an extensive port at the bottom of the gulf and anchored in a
bay (afterwards called Port Warrender) on its western shore. On the following
day (October 10th) a party landed on Crystal Head, at the western end of the
bay, where King made some observations, and in the evening, on ascending the
summit of the headland, took bearings of the land around Cape Bougainville by
which the survey was connected with Vansittart Bay.
Accompanied by Roe and Cunningham, on the 11th, King went in the whale-boat
to examine the port, which was found to terminate in two inlets. In rowing back
to the ship no signs of life were seen save a kangaroo skipping over the hills
and an alligator lying asleep on the beach, which woke up and rushed into the
water. Next day Roe explored both arms of the inlet and the name of Port
Warrender was then bestowed upon it, while the space between Cape Bougainville
and Cape Voltaire was called Admiralty Gulf. After naming Point Pickering and
Walmsley Bay, King left this port on the 13th, and his next anchorage was to the
eastward of Point Bigge. On the 15th, after an ineffectual attempt to pass out
through the islands in the vicinity of Cape Voltaire, he anchored midway between
three of "high, flat-topped form" which he does not appear to have named. The
wind now veered to west-north-west and obliged him to pass to the eastward of
Cassini Island, it had been previously seen by him, and found a useful point by
which to compare his charts with those of Baudin.
Cunningham again takes up the thread of the narrative. He writes to Mr.
Aiton: "The fear of being caught on the coast at the change of the monsoon
obliged Mr. King to take his departure on the evening of the 16th ultimo from
Ile Cassini, steering a N.W. course for Timor. Our survey therefore terminated
in about 13° 24' S. lat. and 123° 32' E. long., having proved the large
Bougainville Islands of the French charts to be a promontory (named Cape
Bougainville) of the mainland, dividing Port Warrender from Vansittart Bay. Upon
a rough calculation my specimens gathered on this coast...will exceed 400 kinds;
my seeds amount to upwards of 200 packets, excellently ripened, which, adding
thereto fifty-five bulbs, constitute the total of my collections...since my
departure from Port Jackson."
In summing up the principal results of this expedition, Cunningham remarks:
"Lieutenant King filled up the blanks in Captain Cook's chart of the east coast
between Endeavour River and Cape York, and it was highly gratifying to my
feelings to reflect that it was left to me to complete several specimens of
plants originally discovered in imperfect condition by those eminent naturalists
who accompanied the Great Navigator in 1770, desiderata that had been wanting
ever since."
The "Mermaid" returned to Sydney on the morning of January 12, 1820, after
having examined 540 miles of coast-line, in addition to the 500 miles that she
had previously explored.
CHAPTER XIII
THE THIRD VOYAGE OF THE "MERMAID" TO THE N.W. COAST
The "Mermaid " left Port Jackson to start her third voyage of exploration on
July 12, 1820, Cunningham being on board as well as a naval surgeon named
Hunter. Shaping her course nearly on the track that she had taken in 1819, the
ship steered along the east coast as before.
It was Lieutenant King's intention to touch at as few ports as possible and
to proceed with all speed to the north-west coast, where he meant to avail
himself "of the remaining portion of the favourable monsoon then already far
advanced"; but the old adage, "L'homme propose mais Dieu dispose," proved its
truth, for we read in another letter written by Cunningham[*] that "on the 20th
July, while standing into Port Bowen (one of Flinders' discoveries on the east
coast), the 'Mermaid' having approached an extensive shoal partly dry, took the
ground and remained practically fast, after bumping a good deal on the sandy
bottom as the sea receded. By dint of hard labour she was at length warped off
into deeper water, when it was found that she had received considerable
injury."
[* To Aiton, dated Parramatta, February 1, 1821.]
"On the following day," writes the botanist, "I landed and began my
collection of plants of this voyage...of which several are already described and
published by Mr. Brown, their original discoverer." In telling of the landing at
Port Bowen Cunningham mentions that "here we passed a line of beach abounding
with the common purple Dolichos." It was a little to the north of this
spot that these beans were eaten by Bligh and his starving men, in 1789, with
rather serious effects.
The letter continues: "With extremely fine weather we...reached Endeavour
River again on the 27th, where I occupied my time during a period of eight days.
I gathered the seeds of many of the indigenous plants of this part of the
coast...with a few additions, among which were specimens (with ripe fruit) of
the Ground Rattan, so frequently met with during...1819 in shaded woods between
Fitzroy Island and Endeavour River...It proves to be a species of
Calamus. I likewise procured a further supply of the bulbs of Crinum
angustifolium."
At Endeavour River, King saw the remains of his last encampment. A
carpenter's bench was in exactly the same state as it had been left twelve
months before, and the "Mermaid's" name carved upon a tree was also legible. Mr.
Bedwell visited Turtle Reef in quest of turtle, but found none, while Cunningham
in seeking fresh plants walked to the summit of Mount Cook, and made a sketch of
the bay on the south side of the mountain, and of the rivulet falling into it.
This was a bay[*] that Cook had first fixed upon as a suitable place to repair
his ship; but, having found it inconvenient for his purpose, he afterwards
"discovered" Endeavour River. Kangaroo were still in numbers round the shores of
the harbour, and the surgeon shot some birds, among them a Blue Mountain parrot
like those of Port Jackson, and a bird that resembled a crane. On August 5th the
"Mermaid" left the Endeavour's old anchorage for Lizard Island, which was now
more thoroughly explored than it had been since the days of Cook. "On the 6th of
August," resumes Cunningham, "I landed on Cook's Lizard Island (where a whaler's
ton butt and several cocoanuts--one quite sound and perfect--were found upon the
beach), as well as at Cape Flinders, which we again visited."
[* According to King. It is the Walker Bay of modern
charts.]
"During his stay at Cape Flinders," King tells us, "Mr. Cunningham ascended a
remarkably rugged-looking hill at the south point of the bay on the east side of
the island, which had received several appropriate names from our people such as
Mount Dreary and Mount Horrid. Mr. Cunningham calls it Rugged Mount, and says it
is thinly covered with a small variety of plants similar to those of Cape
Cleveland. This mount is a pile of rugged rocks, towering above the sea which
washes its base, the stones of the summit being conical, while the masses on the
slopes are deeply excavated, and furnish spacious retreats for the natives. Mr.
Cunningham entered one of the caverns (the walls of which were of a decomposing
sandstone) having a window formed in it, where a portion of the side rock had
fallen. The cave was a large natural chamber, capacious enough to hold a large
tribe of natives, who, from the numerous fire-places, broken turtle shells, and
other relics, had not long since dwelt there. He also found numerous fragments
of quartzose rock lying about, and pieces of a kind of marble of a brown colour
were abundant in the cavities, as well as upon the face of the Mount.[*]
[* King's "Intertropical Australia," Vol. I, P. 378. The mount
referred to as situated on the east side of Stanley Island, possibly was that
known as Castle Rock. On this coast the boulders occasionally assume the form
of buildings. Hume Nisbet, the well-known writer, accurately describes some
seen by him near Cape Melville: "I noticed what I took to be an extensive and
superb mansion close by the shore, the dividing lines and sharp shadows making
perfect resemblances to windows, pillars, and doors...the colour was like that
of sandstone...in design it had a Tudor cast, built with many turrets and
gables."]
As the "Mermaid" passed round Cape Flinders on the 8th the remains of the
"Frederick's" wreck were again seen lying upon the rocks. Cunningham landed at
Cape Flinders--for the second time--on August 9th.[*] He also landed at Pelican
Island, Haggerston's Island, and Cairncross Island. At the last-named he went
ashore with King to the western sandy point, which is covered with a thick
brush, having at its extremity a dark shaded damp wood, where he saw growing
"Guettarda sp., a very luxuriant tree, having a hollow stem 6 feet in
diameter, whose base is much like the spurred butt of a tropical fig. Maba
laurina bearing green fruit. Mimusops kauki in fruit. Cordyline
cannaefolia, and a strong plant of arborescent growth," in addition to
several unknown twining and climbing plants, ascending to the summits of the
highest trees, forming with Flagellaria indica an impassable barrier in
his path. He left this wood in order to return to the departing boat, when he
found a liliaceous plant having an elliptical nerved leaf, as in Pancratium
amboinense...He dug up all the roots he could find, and says, "Little doubt
can exist of its being Mr. Brown's Calostemma album."
[* The "Mermaid" anchored as before to the westward of Cape
Flinders, which formed the west head of Wreck Bay.]
On August 15th the "Mermaid" doubled Cape York and steered to the southward
of Prince of Wales's Island through Endeavour Strait. Before entering the strait
she passed the night under No. 2 Possession Island, and next day reached Booby
Island, where she anchored.
THE POST OFFICE
In the afternoon King landed on Booby Island. We learn from him how the
island first earned the name of the Post Office: "On the summit of the island or
rather rock several piles of stones were observed that had been heaped up by the
crews of various ships passing by as memorials of their visit. Among other
notices of a similar nature we found a board indicating the safe passage through
the strait of the ship 'Sea-flower,' which our log-book informed us had left
Port Jackson on the 21st of May last, and from the memorandum on the board we
found that she took the outer passage and entered Torres Strait at Murray Island
and arrived at Booby Island after a passage of 22 days."
King adds with satisfaction: "A good opportunity was here offered of
comparing our voyage with that of the 'Sea-flower' and of proving the
superiority of the inshore route. The 'Mermaid' left Port Jackson on 12th July,
passed Booby Island on August 16th, which is an interval Of 35 days-- deducting
15 for delays thus:--at Port Bowen 2 days, at Endeavour River 9 days, at Lizard
Island, Cape Flinders, Haggerston Island and Possession Island one day each,
leaves 20 days for our passage, this being two days shorter than that of the
'Sea-flower.'"
Notwithstanding King's figures to show the superiority of the inshore route,
the question whether the outer or inner route (i.e. within the Barrier Reefs) is
preferable for sailing ships remains to this day unsettled. The outer route
stretches off to the east of the Great Barrier Reefs--ships steering between
them and Chesterfield Reef islets, as far as Mellish Reef, then through the
Coral Sea entering Torres Strait by Raine Island, the Great North East Channel
(by way of Bligh Entrance) or other openings in the Great Barrier northward of
Cape Melville. The inner route, now tolerably well lighted--beacons being placed
on all the most dangerous reefs--is always used by steam vessels passing through
Prince of Wales's Channel on their way to and from Sydney and other ports on the
coast. Large sailing vessels, however, seldom use it.[*]
[* "Admiralty Sailing Directions."]
The piles of stones seen by King at Booby Island to record ships' visits were
soon dispensed with, and a small shed was erected, beneath which was kept a
chest containing a book of printed forms, pens and ink, while provisions were
placed in a cave near by for starving sailors. Letters also began after a time
to be left by passing ships, which other ships took away and captains filled up
the forms in the book with the addition of any remarks they considered of
interest when announcing their safe arrival. Then the name of Post Office
appeared upon the maps as the actual designation of the island.[*] The shed was
probably built in 1835 by order of Captain Hobson of H.M.S. "Rattlesnake," who
placed the chest and the book there and who also erected a flagstaff bearing S.
65° E.
[* It is the western limit of the dangerous part of Torres
Strait.]
The officers on board H.M.S. "Beagle" saw the log-book in 1839. In 1841, when
Captain Stokes called again, he found it had been destroyed "by some mischievous
visitors" and the chest much dilapidated. He had the latter repaired and left a
new book, with a supply of pens and ink. During the 'fifties the second log-book
disappeared. When Captain Leeman, of the barque "Ambrosine," called at Booby
Island in September, 1858, he wrote in his journal: "The Post Office consists of
a canvas bag hung on a cask standing on end and screened from the weather by an
old tarpauling which at one time had had the letters 'Post Office' painted on
it: could see nothing of the book said to be there for entering ships' names,
but found several memoranda of shipping which had passed. On the summit of the
island a flagstaff had been erected and a tattered Union jack was flying in the
breeze. At a little cove which forms the landing place there was a ship's boat,
painted black, hauled up but with a large hole in her bottom and the oars had
been taken away. The only natives seen throughout this passage were on Wednesday
Island where they appeared on the beach and waved us to come on shore. Many
turtle's eggs were found nearly hatched, the young turtle being fully formed and
alive, and in every hole and corner we found birds' eggs: there must have been
thousands which would of themselves afford means of subsistence to a shipwrecked
crew."[*]
[* Imray's "Indian Ocean and China Sea."]
King calls Booby Island a mere rock,[*] the retreat of boobies and turtle,
and says: "The number of birds here was incredible; they hovered around the
'Mermaid' as if to drive her from their haunts." Birds from a distance seem to
have come there to breed, and Raine Island formed another breeding ground. In
1843, when the Admiralty gave directions for a beacon to be placed there to mark
the principal channel through the Barrier Reef for ships making the outer
passage, "the whole surface of the island was found covered with birds young and
old: there were frigate birds, gannets (a new species), boobies, noddies and
black and white terns: the only land birds being landrails...As night closed in
it was curious to see the long lines and flocks of birds streaming from all
quarters of the horizon towards the island...when the noise was
incessant."[**]
[* "A valley intersects the N.W. side, in which were seen a few
creepers, some brushwood, and two or three trees with a peculiar broad green
leaf."]
[** Jukes.]
To return to the "Mermaid." Continuing her voyage, she crossed the Gulf of
Carpentaria and, on August 21st, made her old anchorage in South-West Bay, South
Goulburn Island, where she "remained five days, completing her wood and water
under a continued alarm of the natives, who again had to be dispersed by force
of arms."[*] "I gathered bulbs," says Cunningham, "in a swampy wood on this
island, which may be different from any heretofore seen by me, on account of the
particular situation in which they were alone to be found. I likewise landed on
Sims's Island and at Sanson's Head added to my collection...augmenting at the
same time my seed list with packets of very desirable species. On the 3rd
September we made the land of the North-west coast about Cape Voltaire and
Cassini Island[**] (of Baudin), at which place...Mr. King terminated his survey
in October, 1819, whence the examination was resumed to the southward and
westward with redoubled vigour. The shores and island of a bight in the
coast-line, which has been named Montagu Sound, were productive of some curious
plants, particularly of the genus Acacia, and other islets within those
of Buonaparte Archipelago likewise furnished me with some fine plants
and...excellent seeds. On our advancement to the southward and westward we at
length, on the 11th September, entered a very deep bight, tending to the S.E.,
whose examination occupied us the succeeding seven days, and here we discovered
an entirely new feature in this hitherto inhospitable coast."
[* Cunningham to Aiton.]
[* Seen by Baudin on August 14, 1801,]
PRINCE FREDERICK HARBOUR. YORK SOUND
In working his ship round the north coast to the point where the survey of
his previous voyage had terminated, King tells us that he directed his course
towards Baudin's Banc des Holothuries, near Cape Bougainville. He passed between
its south-east extremity and Troughton Island on September 3rd, after which a
good breeze on the following day enabled him to double Cape Voltaire, and at
sunset on the 5th to drop anchor a few miles to the south of the cape. To the
westward were some twenty-three islands supposed to be the Montalivet Isles of
Baudin. A green tinge upon the nearest islet saved them from being condemned as
absolutely sterile.
Next morning a boat visited the north-easternmost islet, named in the chart
Water Island. The boat's crew found "fresh water enough to fill our bareca,"
says King, "a discovery so unusual that the island was complimented with a name
that will serve to record the fact, rather than to imply that water can be
procured here with any certainty." An extensive view was obtained from this
island's summit, and the sound wherein the surrounding islands were scattered
was, at Hunter's request, named after Robert Montagu, Esq., Admiral of the
'White.'"
The "Mermaid" next anchored at the bottom of Swift Bay, in the entrance of a
strait separating Kater's Island from the main. In the evening King landed at
the south-east end of the island, which was covered with spinifex, as were most
of those inspected, making walking painful and difficult. On the 7th Bedwell
examined a small inlet at the bottom of Swift Bay, which proved to be merely a
salt-water creek bounded by rocks and mangroves. Traces of a small species of
kangaroo were found in every part; its principal food being the seeds and leaves
of an acacia. Cunningharn also observed a gigantic nest six feet in diameter,
formed mainly of sticks, which was doubtless that of the bird known as the
Queensland scrub turkey.
On the 8th, after Roe had sounded the strait separating Kater's Island from
the main, the "Mermaid" passed through it; and in rounding Wollaston Island King
named Mudge Bay, an indentation in the coast to the southward. In the evening
the ship anchored off an island, which, on account of the peculiar shape of a
rock lying close to the beach, was called Capstan Island. King climbed to its
summit, and says, that the view therefrom repaid him for his trouble in mounting
it. Montague Sound proved to be bounded on the west by an island of considerable
size, which was named Bigge Island, after Mr. John Thomas Bigge, the Royal
Commissioner who visited Sydney in 1819. It was separated from the mainland by a
strait named after the Rev. Thomas Hobbes-Scott, who recently had been appointed
Archdeacon of New South Wales.
Steering through Scott Strait the tide prevented further progress, so the
"Mermaid" dropped her anchor (on September 9th) off Cape Pond, and the evening
was spent ashore on a rocky island that fronts the cape. Like Capstan Island
this was merely a heap of sandstone rocks clothed with spinifex and small
shrubs. A native path was seen winding through the grass, and on the beach
footprints were observed. To the southward of the cape the coast-line was seen
to trend very deeply into the land, and next morning King, after rounding Cape
Pond, entered the opening, but did not penetrate beyond some islands called
Anderdon Islands. On September 11th he again set sail.
He found now that he was nearing the bottom of an extensive harbour, bounded
by bold and irregular ranges of rocky hills, particularly on its eastern side,
where there were several peaks, two of which were named Manning Peak and Mount
Anderdon. Under these hills there was the mouth of a large opening, and to the
eastward of where he anchored another larger but less interesting in appearance.
Hunter accompanied the cornmander to explore the opening under Manning Peak,
while Roe and Cunningham embarked in second boat to examine the river that fell
into the sea at the far end of the bay. This river was named Roe River, after
the rector of Newbury, Mr. Roe's father, while the opening explored by King and
Hunter received the name of Hunter River. The harbour itself was called Prince
Frederick Harbour, and the sound that fronts it was designated York Sound, in
honour of his Royal Highness the Duke of York.
Allan Cunningham closely studied the botany of this part of the north-west
coast and made many excursions. He writes of Prince Frederick Harbour: "The
shores are bounded with lofty ridges...distant wooded ranges peeping over those
nearer us where deeply grooved gullies on their steep declivities and obvious
breaks among the hills and hummocks as of a channel of a river all operated as
inducements to entertain hopes that sufficient water might be found to relieve
us from inconvenience on the and shores of this coast." Cunningham also gives
the following account of the discoveries made within Prince Frederick Harbour.
These King could claim were all his own, for he did not have to share the honour
of making them with any early Dutch or French navigator, as sometimes was the
case with regard to his surveys of the north-west coast.
ROE RIVER
"I accompanied Mr. Roe, the most intelligent of Lieutenant King's young
gentlemen, who was directed to explore the extremes of this deep bight
south-easterly, and to examine a presumed opening to the interior in that
direction. We were absent on our voyage two entire days, in which space of time
the survey of the channel of a river abounding with alligators was examined to
27 miles from the anchorage, throughout which this body of water is either
bounded by steep rocky hills or perpendicular cliffs fully 300 feet above its
surface."
Roe and Cunningham encamped on the banks of the river, and the latter
ascended to the summit of a leading range, where he obtained a view inland to
the south-east in the supposed direction of the river's course. The country he
saw was one continued series of high, irregular land, almost mountainous in
character. "The river," he says, "is of perfectly salt water as far as we could
possibly discover, and although there did not appear to be any tributary fresh
streams communicating with it, its channel evidently receives vast bodies of
fresh water in the rainy season from the very hilly country on either side." It
was thought that the river must be full of alligators, for on her way back to
the "Mermaid" the boat passed eleven floating asleep on the water.
HUNTER RIVER
Meanwhile Lieutenant King and Mr. Hunter had succeeded in tracing the inlet
under Manning Peak to the north-west, where they discovered "at the end of a
salt-water channel" fresh water oozing through the mud among the mangroves about
twelve miles from the anchorage, but Cunningham tells us that it was not till
the following day, when Mr. Hunter and he, with the watering-party had traced
the salt water to the rocky bed of a river,[*] that "a fine fresh-water rivulet
was discovered silently meandering among large stones to the salt water, which
expanded into large limpid, cool, fresh pools of considerable extent; the marks
of floods were at least ten feet above its present level, so that in the season
of rains the large stones with which its bed is thickly studded are covered, the
whole forming, at those periods, a rapid expanse of rumbling water, at least 100
yards wide. This valuable discovery afforded us the means of filling up our
water, and enabled Lieutenant King to form plans of future operations on his
being able to quit this coast at the breaking up of the monsoon."
[* Writing of this river, King says: "It was called Hunter River
after my companion, Mr. Hunter." It was discovered on September
12th.]
"Among the plants, this new feature of the North-west coast afforded a
species of Callitris crowning the cliffs with its pyramidal picturesque
form, Myristica insipida of Mr. Brown and Cryptocarya triplinervis
were the most remarkable, with Abroma fastuosa of New South Wales and the
Moluccas, bearing flowers on its naked aculeated branches."
PORT NELSON
On September 20th the "Mermaid" passed Hardy, the extreme of the peninsula or
projection of land that forms the western side of Prince Frederick Harbour, and
entered another inlet bounded on the west again by a group of islands. Since it
was the anniversary of the late King's coronation, these islands were named
Coronation Islands, and the harbour called Port Nelson, a high rocky hill
overlooking land to the southward being christened Mount Trafalgar.
"I Having at length examined the deep bay (which has been named York Sound),"
continues Cunningham, "we stood out to the S.W., and on the 20th September the
injury our little vessel had sustained when aground in Port Bowen, not only
became apparent, but was a matter of alarm, for the slight leak had suddenly
increased so much as to render an early survey indispensable, previous to the
period which would oblige us to leave the coasts. Fortunately a safe and
convenient place for laying the vessel on shore was discovered, on the following
day, in a sandy bay where our Commander proposed or careen her." This spot, the
western bight to Port Nelson, was named Careening Bay.
Tents were pitched without loss of time at the back of the beach, and the
vessel, lightened of three-fourths of her cargo of provisions and water, was
warped at flood tide well upon the shore, where she was left dry by the ebb. The
repairs covered a period of nearly three weeks (until the 8th of October),
during which time Cunningham sought for fresh plants on the hills some miles
from the encampment. A number of bush fires then raging in every direction
prevented to a great extent the collecting of botanical specimens.
On one of these excursions Mr. Hunter, who accompanied Cunningham, discovered
the waters of "a deep bay bounded by steep hills." Hitherto this bay had been
unknown, now both Hunter and Cunningham were able to trace the situation of the
entrance to it from the sea. Later, when King had left Careening Bay he took his
ship through the entrance, and it formed one of his most important
discoveries.
In Cunningham's journal[*] appears the following further account of his stay
at Careening Bay "Towards the close of the afternoon I landed with Lieutenant
King and found that the hills beyond the beach had been recently fired by
natives, whose old temporary huts were standing on the sands: I traced two
gullies that came down to the beach, and was gratified with the diversity of
small trees and shrubs that shadowed the rocky edges of these water
channels..."
[* In Hooker's "Journal of Botany," Vols. III and IV, Mr. Heward
gives additional information.]

THE "MERMAID" BEACHED AT CAREENING BAY
And on September 24th he writes: "We were fortunate in our discovery of pools
of fresh water at the base of one of the gullies, whose grooved appearance fully
declared the torrents that pass through it in the rainy season. As far as we
advanced up this gully we found small...holes of clear water...that appeared to
be draining from one pool to another, passing through luxuriantly green patches
of grass...pleasing to the eye and affording food to the kangaroo, whose traces
were observed on the rocks.
"In these situations I gathered specimens of Convolvulus sp. and
Senecio sp. and two species of Capparis in the brushes, as those
seen at Vansittart Bay. An arborescent species of this genus Capparis,
which was first observed on the shores of Cambridge Gulf is frequent here,
growing to an enormous size and laden with large fruit. I measured the stem of
one...tree and found it near 28 feet in circumference and scarcely 25 feet high.
I observed a fine pinnate-leaved Acacia (A. suberosa), found in an
imperfect state last year at Encounter Cove, Vansittart Bay. It bore pods, which
yielded some good seeds. A tree of the Urticaceae, related to
Antidesma, afforded me flowering specimens. Sersalisia obovata of
Endeavour River was remarked among the rocks, bearing neither flower nor fruit;
Acacia stigmatophylla forms brushes clothing the declivities; an
Asparagus, probably A. fasciculatus, rambled over the tops of the
clumps of under shrubs, forming a barrier, with a species of Capparis and
Persoonia velutina...Early this morning, September 25, I took my
departure on an excursion with Mr. Hunter, our surgeon, to strike the river-like
water which had been discovered by that gentleman yesterday.[*] On passing the
ridges above our tents we shaped our course towards the inland water seen from
the hills, whence an extensive view of the country to the southward and eastward
presented us with a succession of hummocky land as far as eyes could
search."
[* Subsequently called Rothsay Water.]
Cunningham now came to a tract ravaged by a bush fire inland. He says, "The
face of the country assumed an unusually sterile appearance, which was
heightened by its starved vegetation...recently destroyed by a fire still seen
raging on the slopes in the distance. We passed several blackened ridges...till
we reached the summit of a flat-topped hill, whose bluff face to the southward
overhung the waters of our new river,[*] which has a very flattering appearance,
trending away to the S.S.E., bounded by elevated land."
[* Afterwards named Prince Regent River, the hill was called Mount
Knight.]
"From the eminence on which we stood important bearings were taken, that
would prove useful to the surveyors of the water before us, which appeared to
have its embouchure on the coast at a supposed bay to the S.W. of the one in
which we are now detained; and we observed a tolerable clear channel trending in
that direction, although some ramifications were remarked to terminate in shoaly
flats clothed with mangroves, and in one part a low island occupies a portion of
its breadth. Upon looking to the W.S.W. over the hills bordering the coast a
considerable archipelago (formed of small sandbanks or islets) invests these
shores, and very elevated land was distinguished in that direction...barely
perceptible on the horizon.
"Large columns of black smoke arose from vivid flames upon the distant hills,
proofs of the continued devastation going on, although perhaps not of the actual
presence of natives. We saw no quadrupeds, only the usual tracks of the
kangaroo; of birds a few were remarked on the wing, chiefly of the pigeon
family. At noon, having satisfied ourselves of the existence of an inland water,
and its tendency southward, and finding nothing interesting in a country over
whose surface the flames were raging in every direction, we prepared to return
to our encampment, distant about 6 miles N. by W. by a less difficult route,
which enabled us to reach our destination in three hours' hard walking, without
adding a single specimen to my collection, except an imperfect one of the family
of Caryophylleae...
"On the 27th, I visited a part of the hills that had not been fired. I
gathered there specimens of Chionanthus axillaris, Hibiscus sp.
and Acacia stigmatophylla. Grevillea mimosoides very generally
bore its viscid green fruit, and some specimens that were 16 ft. high still had
old flowering spikes. In returning to the rocky entrance shore of our little bay
I remarked the picturesque Pandanus pedunculatus heavily laden with ripe
fruit. This genus is not confined to intertropical climates. I have heard of its
existence a few miles north of the Coal River, near Port Stephens, whence some
fruit had been brought to Port Jackson...and I have seen the plant at Port
Macquarie in lat. 31°, and about 28° to the eastward of this part of the coast.
The plant therefore has a wide diffusion thro' all parallels and meridians
between these given points. It is most probably, however, confined (as I suspect
the locality of Araucaria excelsa is) to the sea coast.[*]...
[* Araucaria Cunninghamii. Heward says: "Mr. Cunningham at
this time was not aware of the specific difference between the Norfolk Island
Pine and the one seen on the eastern shores of New Holland."]
"On my return I secured a curious lizard[*] of extraordinary appearance
(Chlamydosaurus Kingii) which had perched itself on the stem of a decayed
tree; four kinds of snakes have been observed on the shores of the bay, and...we
are remarking new insects and reptiles creeping out of their dormitories
daily."
[* "It was sent home by Cunningham to the College of Surgeons,
where it has been preserved."--King. It was apparently the well-known
"frilled" lizard, a picture of which appears in " King's
Voyage."]
Having completed the vessel's repairs, or at least
rendered her somewhat more seaworthy, though the leak still gave cause for
anxiety, the name of His Majesty's cutter "Mermaid" was deeply carved upon the
stem of the largest tree (Capparis) on the shores of this bay, with
certain initials and the date of her visit and, on October 9th, Lieutenant King
left his anchorage, passing out between Cape Brewster[*] and the Coronation
Islands. From Cape Brewster the land was found to extend for six miles
southwestward to Cape Wellington[*] on the other side of which King believed
that there would be found a channel communicating with the water visible from
the hills above Careening Bay, that Cunningham and Hunter had seen. The
"Mermaid" entered a spacious sound, which King called Brunswick Bay,[*] and
after spending the night off Cape Brewster, was next day carried by the sea
breeze round Cape Wellington into a considerable opening trending to the
southward and resembling the mouth of a river.
[* Cape Brewster is a rocky cape five miles westward of Careening
Bay, and Bat Islet a mass of sandstone connected with the Cape.]
[* Forming the east side of the approach to Prince Regent
River.]
[* Brunswick Bay communicates with Hanover Bay, Prince Regent
River, and Port George the Fourth--"Admiralty Sailing Directions."]
Standing on at first with and afterwards against the tide, the ship reached,
at seven miles from the entrance, Rothsay Water, the opening that Hunter had
discovered on the west side, while another opposite to it was called Munster
Water, in front of which were rocky islands covered with trees and grass.
Continuing her course up the main stream the "Mermaid" soon passed a point where
the river turned to the south-east. After running for five miles she entered an
extensive sheet of water named Saint George's Basin, in which were two large
islands called by King Saint Andrew and Saint Patrick. The vessel was hauled
round a point called Strong Tide Point into a strait between St. Andrew and the
main, and there she came to an anchorage. From this point Lieutenant King
carried out the further examination of the river by boats. He called the river
itself Prince Regent River, as he considered it quite the most remarkable
feature of the north-west coast.[*] Cunningham describes this exploration in the
following passages:
[* It trends in a south-easterly direction into the interior for a
distance of fifty-four miles.--"Admiralty Sailing Directions."]
"We entered the supposed opening[*] to the inland water (discovered by our
surgeon Mr. Hunter), which we found of nearly the same character as York Sound,
with very steep flat-topped hills, reminding us of the scenery of Cambridge Gulf
of the "Mermaid's" second voyage. On the summit of the boundary cliffs we
remarked the picturesque pine Callitris with the tall fan-palm
Livistona."
[* Brunswick Bay.]
PRINCE REGENT RIVER
"A river was discovered at the head of this deep bay which Mr. King traced 28
miles to the S.S.E., and in which a beautiful cascade was seen tumbling in small
detached bodies at least 40 feet. I landed beneath some cliffs near the
anchorage, which I ascended, but made no considerable discoveries. The plants
were chiefly those frequently seen elsewhere, with some south-west coast
specimens, particularly a Gompholobium.
"A remarkable Apocynum of Mr. Brown was sparingly seen on the verge of
the cliffs; and the deep shaded ravines descending from them abound in the
Myristica and Cryptocarya of York Sound. As the period of the
breaking up of the monsoon--so favourable for our stay--was clearly indicated by
the regularly clouded mornings and evenings, our early departure from these
shores became a matter of serious consideration. On the completion of the survey
of this deep port[*] we stood out, it having been determined by our commander to
leave the coast, which we did on 14th October." His point of departure was the
Keraudren Island (of Baudin).[**]
[* Brunswick Bay, at which port our survey closed in lat. 15° S.
and long. 124° 30' E.--King.]
[* The last of the mainland seen was named Point
Adieu.]
Having run down to Cape Leeuwin--purposing to run up the west coast and then
return to these shores--the "Mermaid" had not been long at sea before the leak
alarmingly increased and rendered it necessary for King to make his way back to
Port Jackson, which he says he reached on December 9, 1820, with all on board in
good health. The ship herself narrowly escaped shipwreck upon Cape Banks when
nearing the harbour in a storm, flashes of lightning alone enabling her
commander to navigate her out of her dangerous position in the very nick of
time.
On landing in Sydney, Cunningham learned the news of the death in England of
his patron, Sir Joseph Banks, and in his next letter to Mr. Aiton he expresses
the deep sorrow he had experienced "at hearing of the loss of such an excellent
and invaluable friend."
The chief result of this survey, we are told, was "ascertaining the safety of
the in-shore route along the Eastern coast of Australia: the Barrier Reef having
left between its inner side and the shore a space of clear water varying in
width and perfectly smooth."
CHAPTER XIV
KING'S VOYAGE IN THE "BATHURST"
The "Mermaid" having proved herself unseaworthy King had to abandon his
intention of employing her upon his fourth voyage, and the New South Wales
Government then purchased a larger and more convenient ship for his use. This
was an Indian teakbuilt brig of 165 tons register called the "Haldane," which
was renamed the "Bathurst," her complement numbering thirty-three. A surgeon
named Montgomery, who succeeded Hunter, joined her at Sydney, as well as
Percival Baskerville, one of the midshipmen of H.M.S. "Dromedary," then lying in
the harbour. Allan Cunningham again went as botanist to the expedition, and a
Port Jackson native named Bundell took the place of Boongaree.
On May 26, 1821, Lieutenant King set forth to continue his exploration of the
unknown north-west coast in company with the merchant ship "Dick." On July 5th
King anchored once more in South-West Bay, South Goulburn Island.
He wrote home to the Admiralty authorities from this anchorage and gave
precise information concerning the "Bathurst's" voyage. "Since leaving Port
Jackson," his letter runs, "I felt pleasure in proving the strength of the
vessel, for we have made scarcely 12 inches of water although we experienced
much bad weather between it and Breaksea Spit. To the south-east of Cape
Capricorn I discovered four small isles in addition to the one laid down by
Captain Flinders and have every reason to believe that all that space is
occupied by low wooded isles and extensive reefs. At Percy Island (No. 2)[*] I
remained two days (between the Pine Islets and the basin) to shift a topmast
that was found to be damaged, and at the anchorage at Cape Grafton[**] I stopped
two days to await the termination of thick weather, after which, without much
improvement in the weather, we continued our course and anchored on June 21st
behind Cape Flinders, stopping one night, June 20th, at Lizard Island on our
way. In passing round Cape Flinders there appeared to be a considerable
diminution of the 'Frederick's' wreck, no vestige being left of her stern or
forecastle which before were so very conspicuous. At Lizard Island we had a
friendly communication with the natives, but at Cape Flinders we narrowly
escaped being speared, being suddenly surrounded by natives who threw several
spears at us and wounded one of the 'Dick's' people. Here I remained three days,
during which I obtained several useful spars for spare yards and masts from the
wreck of the 'Frederick,' which we had visited on former voyages. We also got
many iron bolts and teak planks."
[* In the "Mermaid's" second voyage she had anchored at Percy
Island, No. 1. No. 2 is the largest of the Percy Islands. Here King met a ship
which had left Port Jackson after him. This was the "San Antonio" (Hemmans,
master), who declined King's offer of guidance through Torres Strait, and said
that he meant to run day and night through the reefs; shortly afterwards he
set sail. The "Bathurst" met the ship again at the largest Frankland Island,
and the master stated that he had been aground at the Palm islands (on a reef
now known as San Antonio Reef). He was now glad to follow King, and never left
him until the "Bathurst" had passed through Torres Strait.]
[** King steered through the strait that separates Cape Grafton
from Fitzroy Island, and anchored about half a mile from its northern
extremity. "It is a little remarkable," he writes, "that the day on which we
anchored should be the anniversary of its discovery; for Cook anchored here on
the eve of Trinity Sunday, fifty-one years before, and named the bay between
Capes Grafton and Tribulation in reverence of the following day."]
CLACK'S ISLAND
While King was salving spars from the "Frederick" in Wreck Bay (a part of
Bathurst Bay) one of the "San Antonio's" boats conveyed Mr. Montgomery and Allan
Cunningham to Clack's Island, three miles north from Cape Flinders. On the
southern part, where the island is most exposed, the botanist discovered some
caves. He noticed that the weather "had excavated several tiers of galleries
there upon which were some curious native drawings. They were executed upon a
ground of red ochre rubbed on the black schistus rock with dots of white
argillaceous earth and represented figures of sharks, porpoises, turtle, lizards
(of which there were several seen among the rocks), trepang, starfish, canoes,
water-gourds and quadrupeds probably intended for kangaroos and dogs. The
figures besides being outlined in dots were decorated all over with the same
white pigment. Tracing a gallery round it brought me to a cave which was large
enough to afford shelter for twenty natives whose fire-places appeared on the
floor. Turtle-heads had been placed in niches in the rock and the roof and sides
of the cave were covered with the same uncouth figures."[*] Cunningham ends
these remarks with the following comment "Captain Flinders had discovered
figures on Chasm Island in the Gulf of Carpentaria formed with a burnt stick;
but this performance, displaying 150 figures which must have occupied much time,
appears at least to be one step nearer refinement than those simply executed
with a piece of charred wood."
[* See Hooker's "Journal of Botany," and King's
"Voyages."]
On taking leave of the east coast, King says "We sailed from Cape Flinders
with line weather, but the same evening thick, rainy weather set in which lasted
without intermission until we cleared Torres Strait and accompanied us even to
the westward of Wessel's Islands. The state of the weather rendered the
navigation among the reefs very intricate and dangerous, but I had the
satisfaction to find that the chart I had previously constructed was tolerably
correct."
After telling how he had lost his anchors, the last one carrying away with it
about a hundred fathoms of chain cable, King continues: "The 'Dick' also broke
her anchor at the same time from having dropped it on rocky ground. Between 12
o'clock and daylight I had to continue under weigh and, being surrounded by
reefs on one side and land on the other, it was not without danger. We managed
however to keep her off the reefs and the following morning cleared the strait
without further accident. I have only one bower anchor now with which to carry
on the survey, but having been twice before in the same predicament without
sustaining damage I feel more confident of being able to continue my proceedings
up to the beginning of September. I had intended to go to King George's Sound
previous to commencing the examination of the west coast; but, as I shall not be
able to effect this without a better supply of anchors, I have...some idea of
going to the Isle of France (Mauritius) which...is more convenient than Batavia.
In anchoring a week ago[*] on the east coast (at Cairncross Island) Mr. Roe who
was aloft had the misfortune to fall from the mast-head nearly 50 feet, but
providentially escaped with a severe wound over the right eye...His loss till he
recovers will be much felt as the whole of the survey will fall upon me...He
however is in a fair way of recovery. I have constructed a chart of that part of
the coast between Cambridge Gulf and Clarence Strait which...I will forward, as
also my journals for the last two voyages."
[* On June 30th.]
In his next letter home Lieutenant King gives the following account of his
proceedings after he had taken his departure from Goulburn Island: "On parting
company with the ship 'Dick,' Captain Harrison, bound for Calcutta, in sight of
Cape Van Diemen on the 9th July, the San Antonio having sailed to the N.W. on
the 8th, I steered towards Cape Londonderry, and on 12th July passed Troughton
Island off Cape Bougainville, and after dark passed round the north-end of the
extensive reefs situated on the west side of the Cape. At daylight next morning
Cassini Island was seen, but having much calm weather we were drifted by the
current in various directions and narrowly escaped being thrown on the extensive
banks to the northward of that island.
"Between the 18th and the 21st we were becalmed near a group of isles which
were seen last year both from Cape Pond and from Careening Bay, and appear to be
noticed on the French charts. They are situated off the north-west end of Bigge
Island.[*] On the 22nd July the brig was near Keraudren Island but I did not
reach the anchorage in Careening Bay until the following evening. As soon as the
vessel was secured I visited our former encampment in order to ascertain if I
could procure water, but...everything was dried up and not the least sign of
what we wanted was found. The next and only resource left to us was the Cascade
in Prince Regent's River...but it was not until the evening of the 25th that I
anchored in St. George's Basin immediately off the entrance of the river." On
the following morning King ascended the river and found plenty of water at the
Cascade, and, the boats being despatched, they obtained sufficient to last the
ship until the middle of October.
[* Maret Group.]
Cunningham thought the Cascade "a singular feature of this unique coast which
had been only partially examined before. It was found to tumble--a sheet of
water--one hundred feet over the rock in a most picturesque manner," and was
evidently fed from "an inexhaustless source situated...in some higher ridges to
the S.W." The watering operations proved a strain on the sailors, who had to
work the boats a distance of twenty miles to the watering place, but the delay
enabled the officers to complete the survey and to make a tour up the river
beyond the Cascade. In this expedition Cunningham, through illness, was unable
to accompany the party. King also made extensive minor observations, "to compare
with those taken last year at the observatory in Careening Bay" by which the
longitude of that place was determined as 125° 0' 46"
HANOVER BAY
The "Bathurst" left Prince Regent River on August 6th for a bay to the
westward that in 1820 had been named Hanover Bay, where King remained for
several days. A point divided the bight of the bay into two openings, of which
the easternmost communicated with Munster Water and Prince Regent River. A few
casks of water were obtained from a fresh stream here. During their stay a
serious affray with the natives occurred which might have had fatal consequences
for at least one of King's party. The commander had landed with the surgeon and
two of his officers when the natives, who had laid down their arms and were
apparently inclined to be friendly, came towards them. Presents were given, but
in a short time it was noticed that they seemed mistrustful, and, retreating
step by step, suddenly picked up their spears.
Having left his muskets in the boat King gave orders to some of his men to
return for them, and they were in the act of descending the rocks that ran to
the water's edge when two natives each threw a spear at them. One fell short of
the midshipman at whom it was aimed, but the other pierced Mr. Montgomery, the
surgeon, in the back. The latter fired off a pistol and the blacks instantly
fled. Cunningham remarks that had the spear been more slender and been
discharged with a throwing-stick the wound would certainly have been fatal, but
fortunately, although it was painful, Mr. Montgomery recovered.
The next morning at eleven o'clock a native was seen on a float or catamaran
paddling round the west point of the strait, and another man, with whom were a
woman and a child, was observed upon the rocks. "In less than a quarter of an
hour the men came down to the spot where we saw them yesterday and began to wave
and call to us. An opportunity, says Cunningham, "now offered to punish these
wretches for their treachery and of disappointing their present plans, for they
were evidently intent upon mischief." Mr. Bedwell was therefore despatched to
secure their catamaran, which was hauled up on a sandy beach near the outer
point, whilst another boat was sent towards the natives.
"When the boat arrived near the shore they were sitting on the rock and
inviting us to land, but it was necessary to convince them that we were not so
defenceless as they imagined and as soon as we were sufficiently near several
muskets were fired over their heads. One of the men fell down behind a rock--the
others made off. The native who had fallen was wounded in the shoulder and was
recognised to be the very man who had speared Mr. Montgomery. He made several
attempts to get away but every time his head appeared above the rock which
concealed him a pistol or musket was fired to prevent his escape. At last he
sprang up, and, leaping upon the rock, vanished out of sight.
"As soon as he was gone we pulled round to the sandy bay where the natives
had landed and overtook Mr. Bedwell...Upon the beach we found two catamarans, in
each of which was a large bundle of spears tied with ligatures of bark; and, on
searching in the grass, we soon secured all their riches, consisting of water
baskets, tomahawks, throwing-sticks, fire-sticks, fishing-lines, and 36 spears,
one being headed with a piece of stone curiously pointed and worked. This last
was propelled by a throwing-stick which we found lying with it."
From Hanover Bay, on August 11th, the "Bathurst" may be said to have begun
her new survey on this voyage. Westward from Hanover Bay she entered yet another
very fine harbour, which was called by King, in honour of His Majesty, King
George IV's Sound. Its western side was found to be formed by an extensive
island,[*] to the westward again of which lay a continuation of rocky islands.
"They are all rocky and barren[**] and are surrounded by reefs which render them
dangerous to approach. The strength of the tide was found to be very great and
its rise considerable."
[* Augustus Island, thirteen miles in length.]
[** King, MS. letter to Admiralty. These islands being Champagny
Isles, Heywood Isles, and Byam Martin Island.]
PORT GEORGE THE FOURTH
Port George the Fourth is a most excellent harbour, and, like Hanover Bay,
King found it very convenient, but the numerous reefs and islands which skirt
the outer coasts of both ports appeared to him likely to lessen their value as
safe havens for ships. An island lying in the centre of the entrance to Port
George the Fourth divides the waterway into two channels. The passage on the
western side between Point Adieu[*] and Entrance Island has several patches of
rocks in it, but that on the eastern side is nearly clear of danger. Two miles
to the southward of Entrance Island is an islet which from its peculiar shape
King named the Lump--it is now called the Hummock--and abreast of this the
"Bathurst" anchored at about a mile and a half from the shore. On landing and
ascending the "Lump" the commander obtained some desired bearings. While he was
thus employed lie despatched Mr. Baskerville to examine an opening at the bottom
of the port, which proved to be a strait and was called Rogers Strait in honour
of Captain Rogers, R.N. Baskerville reported that its waters were dotted with
islands and dry reefs of considerable extent.
[* At the northern extremity of Augustus Island.]
On August 13th King cleared the harbour, passing out of it by the eastern
channel, but having to beat against the wind was soon compelled to anchor again
off Point Adieu. King had first seen and named this point during his third
voyage in the "Mermaid."
At daylight on the 14th the "Bathurst" left Point Adieu and came abreast of a
strait leading between some rocky islands to the southward[*] (this appears to
have been the strait eastward of the Champagny Isles), through which she was
driven by a floodtide with tremendous impetus on the 15th, anchoring at six
miles from the southern outlet of the strait. Here King remained all the
evening. A little before sunset he obtained a good view to the south-east, where
he again saw a great number of islands: beyond these the mainland could not be
traced. A point of the land afterwards christened Point Hall bore from the
anchorage S. 19° E. (the vessel being then in Camden Sound).
[* To the north of these extend other islands one of which named
Vulcan Island is the land seen in 1801 by Captain Heywood, and called by him
Vulcan Point after his ship H.M.S. "Vulcan."]
The direction of the tides at this place led King to suspect that an opening
to the eastward of the bay in which he had anchored, and which he named in
compliment to the Marquis Camden, not only connected it with Rogers Strait but
was also the outlet of another considerable bay or river. This opening was
Brecknock Harbour and its eastern continuation Camden Harbour, the former being
remarkable for the manner in which its coast-line is everywhere indented with
bights. Rogers Strait at its north-eastern extremity was found to lead back into
Port George the Fourth.
On the 16th the "Bathurst" weighed and made sail round Point Hall, steering
towards a group of islands which the commander named Montgomery Isles after the
surgeon of the "Bathurst." Another bight in the coast-line to the southward
where the land again trended in deeply, was called Collier's Bay, in compliment
to the late Captain Sir G. Collier, R.N., and here a few good-sized trees were
noticed growing over a sandy beach on one of the islands at its entrance.
On August 17th the "Bathurst" came to an anchorage off a bay, the east head
of which was formed by several islands. (This probably was in Yampi Sound).
Proceeding forward, though making little progress, towards Buccaneer
Archipelago, the brig at sunset on the 18th hauled to the wind for the night off
the northernmost of a range of islands which King identified as the Caffarelli
Island of Baudin. He was now in the vicinity of Brue/ Reef of the French
commander. Shortly after daybreak on Sunday, August 9th, he passed the "dry
rock"[*] off the west end of Caffarelli Island, and endeavoured to steer between
the range of islands to which it belonged and a group of rocky isles close to
it, but without success. He then approached some other islands to the
south-westward which formed the eastern side of a channel or strait.
[* An islet 120 feet high.]
Here the vessel was soon placed in a perilous situation. The tide which had
been with her turned, and setting with great force first drove her towards some
rocks and then caused her to drift into the channel. In entering this there was
only just enough wind to enable her to clear the rocks, and she had no sooner
avoided them than she was nearly thrown upon some islets. In this unexplored
strait with rocks and islands all around her, with the afternoon far advanced,
and with an unfavourable wind, the "Bathurst" for some time was at the mercy of
the tide, and all that could be done was patiently to await its ebbing, in order
that she might drift out as she had been carried in. Now and again she was
caught in eddies and whirlpools that caused her to spin round so rapidly as to
endanger her masts. At 5 p.m., however, the tides and eddies ceased, and
gradually she began to drift through the channel and to meet again the dangers
that she had experienced when coming in.
To add to the difficulties of navigation in such circumstances the breeze
continued unfavourable. In spite of this King tried to make sail and beat out,
and before long had made progress, the land being lost sight of. At night,
however, a dead calm set in, the tide began to flow and the ship to drift so
near to the land, that the breakers could plainly be heard. Shortly afterwards
the moon rose, and then it was seen that this land consisted of islands which
fortunately were still some distance off. A few minutes after midnight a
favourable breeze from the south-west at last brought her out of danger. King
named the strait Sunday Strait, and in 1838 Captain Stokes called the passage
from which the "Bathurst" made her escape from her perilous position, Escape
Passage. At daylight on the 20th the ship was eight miles to the north-east of
Caffarelli Island, Brué Reef being clearly seen as she passed between them. At
noon the low land of Cape Lévêque bore to the southward.
CYGNET BAY
In one of his letters King says that between Camden Bay and Cape Lévêque the
coast-line was "very indifferently noticed " by him on account of the danger,
and for this reason he was compelled to bear away. At the bottom of Collier's
Bay there appeared to be an opening[*] which he thought was not very
considerable, but, he writes, at the bottom of Cygnet Bay, I think it not
unlikely that there is a very extensive opening.[**] We were becalmed and
carried into its entrance and sunset overtook us before we were extricated from
danger, but the ebb tide fortunately drifted us out clear of the numerous reefs
and shoals which are so thickly strewn over this interesting partinteresting not
only from the rapidity and great rise and fall of the tides as well as from the
considerable depth of the water, being in some parts from 40 to 50 fathoms, but
on account of its being the bay visited and described by our celebrated
navigator Dampier during his voyage with the buccaneers in the'Cygnet'."
[* Secure Bay, the easternmost of two bays at the head of Collier
Bay, is a considerable sheet of water.--"Admiralty Sailing
Directions."]
[* The heads of many of the bays named by King are even to-day
little known, and we read in "Admiralty Sailing Directions" that large
portions of the coast are still unsurveyed. Wickham and Stokes (1838-42) and
Denham (1858), who surveyed these coasts after King, added largely to the
knowledge of them.]
In the story of his voyage King proceeds to quote Dampier's remarks about
this part of the coast when the "Cygnet" came here in 1688, and he adds: "From
this description I have little hesitation in settling Cape Lévêque to be the
point he passed round.[*] In commemoration, therefore, of his visit the name of
Buccaneers Archipelago was given to the cluster of isles that fronts Cygnet Bay,
the latter so called after the ship in which Dampier sailed, the point within
Cape Lévêque being named Point Swan after her captain[**] while to a remarkable
lump in the centre of the Archipelago the name of Dampier's Monument[***] was
assigned."
[* King's "Intertropical Australia," Vol. 1, Part 11, p.
88.]
[** Captain Swan, however, did not visit New Holland.]
[*** The most conspicuous island of the archipelago; it is conical
with a rounded Summit 283 feet high, on which is a solitary bush.--"Admiralty
Sailing Direction."]
King's letter to the First Lord of the Admiralty at this point becomes an
historic document, and shows how anxious he was to investigate Dampier's
landing-place. His lack of anchors, however, prevented him surveying it as he
would have wished to have done, and he writes: "I reluctantly found myself
obliged to leave the particular examination of this part until a more favourable
opportunity[*]...and after fixing the position of all the islands, I rounded
Cape Lévêque and continued the examination of the coast. From that point it took
a decidedly new character and continued low and sandy as far as the part where I
quitted it."
[* He returned in the following February.]
King left the scene of Dampier's first landing on August 20th. He saw no
natives on any of the islands where Dampier had seen them, but noticed their
fires at the back of Cygnet Bay. Continuing his voyage round the coast, next day
at sunset he anchored at about four miles from the shore. During the afternoon
an immense number of whales had surrounded the "Bathurst's " track, leaping and
thrashing the water. The noise, says King, was as loud as that of a volley of
musketry. At noon on August 22nd Cape Borda was sighted, and on the same
afternoon the sloop came abreast of Emeriau "Island" of Baudin; and as this
proved to be a part of the mainland the word "point" was substituted for
"island" on the charts. At five o'clock Lacépéde Islands, a group of four low
islands[*] composed of sand and coral and covered with coarse grass, was
sighted, and at sunset King anchored for the night within them. While steering
along the Australian coast on the 23rd he named a sandy projection Cape
Baskerville after his midshipman. From it the land trended inward to form a bay,
which the commander says he christened Carnot Bay, since no island could be
traced in the position assigned to Baudin's Carnot Island.
[*West Islet, Middle Island, and Sandy and East
Islets.]
The "Bathurst" passed Cape Berthollet, Point Coulomb, and Cape Boileau of the
French charts and came to an anchorage on August 24th, some six miles from a
sandy point of the mainland, which was identified as the Gantheaume "Island" of
Baudin, the name of Point Gantheaume therefore being bestowed upon it. On this
day, after a thick haze had enveloped the shore, a mirage was observed from the
ship, which produced an extraordinary effect upon the coast, causing high chalky
cliffs crowned by wooded hillocks to appear, whereas in reality the land south
of Point Gantheaume is of a low and sandy character, and beyond this point
trends to the south-east. King named the bight between Cape Villaret and Point
Gantheaume, Roebuck Bay, "after the ship that Captain Dampier had commanded when
he visited this part of the coast in 1699."
The "Bathurst" found an anchorage at sunset on August 25th about six miles to
the north of Cape Villaret, and weighing next morning at daylight sighted, as
soon as the breeze had dispersed the mist enveloping it, the hillocky summit of
Cape Latouche-Treville. From here the vessel turned and left the coast.
Cunningham had gathered a few seeds at King George IV's Sound, but found its
botany did not differ from that of the shores examined by him to the eastward,
and he makes the following remarks with regard to this part of his voyage: "Upon
leaving the sound on the 13th we saw little of the main, for, having...stood
outside the many...barren islands...so surrounded by reefs that they could not
be approached, we were...barred from closing in with the coast-line till about
the 20th, when...we stood in and made a low depressed sandy shore. This
miserable line of coast," writes the botanist, who was ill at the time, "trended
rapidly to the southward, and assumes all the extremes of sterility so obvious
during former voyages--a feature that continued to the close of our stay...when
we reached the lat. of 18°S., having recognized some points seen by the French,
to whose names every possible respect has been paid."
In addition to the opportunities for landing in Dampier Land being few and
far between, Cunningham suffered from indisposition for some time, which fully
accounts for the fact that he did little botanizing; indeed, he had gathered few
fresh specimens since leaving Prince Regent's River, although King and his
officers made collections of plants for his benefit, when they went on shore. He
does not seem, however, to have obtained any plants after leaving Cape Lévêque,
for King states: "No opportunity offered, nor was there any inducement for me to
land between Capes Lévêque and Latouche-Treville, but the appearance of the
country was sufficiently indicative of its sterility. It is so low as not to be
visible from a ship's deck at a greater distance than 4 or 5 leagues." The
"Bathurst's" water was now nearly expended, her provisions in a very bad state,
besides which her lack of anchors, having but one left, caused King so much
anxiety that he decided to leave the shores at once. On taking his departure on
August 27th he directed his ship's course to the Mauritius.
THE MAURITIUS
On the evening of September 26th the "Bathurst" reached Mauritius, and
anchored off the town of Port Louis. Captain Fairfax Moresby, of H.M.S. "Menai,"
then in the port, rendered her commander much assistance, helping him to make
the necessary repairs to his ship and to purchase the three anchors and two
cables which he so badly needed. While at Port Louis, Cunningham learned that
General Macquarie had been succeeded by Sir Thomas Brisbane as Governor of New
South Wales. Several excursions on the hills in the neighbourhood of the town
kept the young botanist busily employed, although, the season being
unfavourable, few plants were in flower or fruit. He repeatedly visited the
Botanic Gardens at Pamplemousses and saw the many rare exotics from India,
Africa, and Madagascar. Of these he was able to make a good selection for the
Royal Gardens at Kew, and in return presented the Pamplemousses establishment
with some packets of seeds of such Australian plants as he had in quantity, and
of which he had already sent home specimens.[*] Among the plants then sent to
Kew were some green, well-ripened nutmegs, probably of the kind known as the
Banda or round nutmeg (Myristica fragrans), so highly esteemed by the old
Dutch traders.
[* During his stay Cunningham made the acquaintance of Mr.
Telfair, Founder of the Society of Natural History at Mauritius, and received
his hospitality at Bois Cheri.]
KING GEORGE'S SOUND
Having completed her supplies the "Bathurst" left Port Louis on November 15,
1821 and anchored in King George's Sound, Western Australia, at one mile from
the entrance of Port Royal, on December 23rd, after a passage of thirty-nine
days. Next morning several natives were seen waving to the ship from the north
head of the harbour.
After breakfast King pulled towards them in a whale-boat. Although they
seemed to invite the British to land, he ordered his men to row out into the
harbour while the blacks walked along the beach. It was evident that they were
unarmed; each wore a kangaroo skin over his shoulder, but left the right arm
exposed. When they saw the white party turning off shore they seemed very
disappointed, and upon perceiving the sailors making signs for fresh water,
called out "Badoo" (a Port Jackson native word for water), and pointed to a part
of the bay where Flinders had marked a rivulet. The word kangaroo was also
familiar to them; and as the "San Antonio" had visited here in 1820, King felt
sure that both words had been obtained from the crew of that ship. Their name
for kangaroo was Beango.
Cunningham gives the following account of his arrival
On the afternoon of the 24th I landed with Captain King on the beach, where
our tents had been pitched four years since, and was much surprised at the
change in the vegetable kingdom on that shore. We could discover no trace of the
garden which I had formerly made with so much labour. The breadth of the beach
had considerably diminished, by a great accumulation of decayed seaweed...and
the stumps of large trees (two feet diameter) cut down in 1818 were wholly
concealed from our view by the luxuriant stems that had grown out of them,
exhibiting with every shrub around the most luxuriant growth of vegetation...On
the side of the wooded hills above the beach I remarked almost every plant to be
in a much more backward state than...in January, 1818, the season on the whole
being more favourable for flowering specimens than for ripened seeds. Banksia
grandis and B. coccinea ("the Pride of the Sound") were extremely
fine in flower, as were also several Leptospermae, and among the plants
around I gathered the following: Calythrix sp. a shrub with white
flowers. Lysinema ciliatum. Comesperma sp. allied to C.
confertum, Labill. Hakea ceratophylla and H. florida.
Johnsonia lupulina, a curious plant of the Asphodeleae. Acacia
decipiens and A. nigricans.
"Nothing could possibly exceed the beauty of Pimelea decussata, on
rocks nearly washed by the sea, where Scaevola nitida was also frequent;
upon the lower slopes I gathered fruit of Banksia attenuata; upon the
gravelly ridges I gathered specimens of Leptomeria aphylla and L.
squarrulosa...Some delicate Stylidae were discovered among gramineous
plants, where also I detected Conostylis setigera in flower, and some
specimens of Haemodorum were shooting forth their lurid brown stems.
"The summit of the ridge was wholly uninteresting, the plants being chiefly
stunted Eucalypti, Banksia grandis, and the arborescent
Xanthorrhoea of the shores. Agreeing in habit and producing a stem
similar to this last mentioned species, exists a plant (Kingia australis
R.B.) on these hills, whose fructification. has never been detected in a perfect
condition.
"Having traced the narrow ridge of the highest hill above the anchorage in a
northerly direction, I descended upon the eastern shore of Oyster Harbour, and
in passing through a shaded forest land was furnished by reason of the shade
with a pleasing change in vegetation...On the 26th, in a day's walk, I
gathered:--Synaphea dilatata...Lemcopogon verticillatus, a tall
shrub bearing white fruit...Casuarina sp., a shrub of low stature...A
showy Gompholobium, with numerous ascending stems and linear ternate
leaves, decorate these woods with its unproportionately large flowers...With a
view of avoiding the natives, whom we perceived strolling between their
encampment and the vessel, we kept the leading ridge of the hills, from which we
had a fine view of the distant country west of Oyster Harbour.
"By a circuitous route back we at length arrived at an elevated spongy bog.
In this bog I found later the curious Cephalolus follicularis, a pitcher
plant of very weak growth." Of this he adds, "The plants of Cephalotus
were all in a very weak state...the ascidia or pitchers, which are inserted on
strong foot-stalks, all contained a quantity of discoloured water, and in some
the drowned bodies of ants and other small insects." Whether this fluid was
considered by him to be a secretion of the plant, as with the Nepenthes
or pitcher plant of India, or of the ascidia themselves, or was simply
rain-water, Cunningham does not positively tell us, but appears to have agreed
with Mr. Brown in thinking the fluid was a secretion of the plant. He says: "I
spent much time in fruitless search for flowering specimens," and informs us
that the only edible plants he found here were a creeping parsley, Apium
prostratum (Labill.), and a species of orache, Atriplex halimus,
Brown.
Not being quite so intently engaged, King was able to see more of the blacks,
and found them friendly and amicable. One man in particular showed great
intelligence, and became much attached to the British, who dressed him in
European clothes and christened him "Jack," by which name he was always known.
King writes of Oyster Harbour: "At this place, during watering operations, I had
a daily and very interesting communication with the natives, who conducted
themselves towards me in a most open, confiding, and friendly manner, and I am
happy to say that we left them much pleased with our visit."On Christmas Day,
the blacks speared a young seal, and the whole tribe collected to devour it,
eating the raw flesh in a way which rather disgusted Captain King and Mr.
Cunningham, who, prompted by curiosity, came to watch them consume it. They
possessed neither the fiz-gig, shield, nor boomerang, says King, but their
throwing-sticks or "mearas" were rather ingeniously formed.
The stem of the Casuarina at Oyster Harbour, on which the "Mermaid's"
name and date of her previous visit had been carved was now seen almost
destroyed by fire, the date 1818 alone being visible. The initials of some of
King's people, however, were still quite perfect upon the stem of a large
Banksia grandis, then richly in flower and magnificent in appearance.
Near the stream, from which water was obtained for the ship, felled trees were
lying with the staves of a cask, evidently mementoes of the "San Antonio's"
visit when she wooded and watered there in 1820. On January 4th King went again
to Seal Island to look for the bottle which had been placed there in 1818. It
was found suspended as it had been left by the "Mermaid's" people and on being
brought on board, another memorandum giving particulars of the "Bathurst's"
coming was enclosed, as well as a copy of the vocabulary of the native
language.
On January 6, 1822, the " Bathurst " left King George's Sound and began her
minute examination of the west coast. At daylight on the 10th the dreaded
Leeuwin was sighted from the masthead. King, in his journal, reminds us that
from Cape Leeuwin or the Land of the Lioness, the south-westernmost extremity of
Australia, Flinders had commenced his exploration of the south coast and that
Baudin's ships had twice rounded it. At noon a large, bare patch of sand on the
mainland, the "Tache Blanche remarquable," of Captain Baudin, bore N. 77° E. At
six in the evening the "Bathurst" passed Cape Naturaliste.
On the following day, January 11th, Capes Péron and Bouvard were seen from
the ship, and distant land was visible to the eastward, trending towards the
entrance of the Swan River, which King did not enter. On the 12th, at 9.30, the
ship was steering five miles from the low and sandy shore between Cape Péron and
Cape Bouvard. On this day a remarkable mirage was witnessed; a haze had
concealed the true coast-line, when "land appeared all round us, on which rocks,
sandy beaches, and trees were seen so plainly that the officer of the watch
actually reported two islands on the western horizon." The French had witnessed
just such another magical scene in Géographe Bay. At sunset the haze cleared
away, and the true outlines of Rottnest Island were clearly discerned in the
north-east.
"During the night the "Bathurst" made short tacks, and next morning King
brought her to an anchorage at the northeast end of Rottnest Island, off a point
now known as Bathurst Point. In the afternoon he landed in a bay on the east
side of the island, where a tremendous surf came rolling in upon the beach.
Cunningham, who was included in the landing party, took particular interest in
the botany of this island, so small, yet so famous in the history of Dutch
exploration, and he gives the following description of his visit:[*]
[* Cunningham to Telfair.]
"On the 14th January, 1822, we landed at Rottnest Island...which is situated
about 13 or 14 miles from the main and from the estuary of Black Swan
River...and was discovered by the Dutch navigator Cornelis de Vlamingh[*] when
the main to the northward called Edels Land was also seen and Swan River
examined, of which the sketches of Van Keulen who accompanied that navigator are
still extant. Landing on the island they (the Dutch) observed the soil to be
perforated in every direction as well perpendicularly as horizontally with long
burrows...the operations of rats[**] which appeared to have overrun the island
and have given rise to the name it then received of Rottenest or Rottnest but
which, according to the French, are in reality the retreats of a nondescript
animal forming a distinct genus allied to Didelphis. The true face of
Rottnest is better seen at a moderate distance at sea when it forms into a
series of low hills and hillocks. The soil is intermixed with shells...the rocks
are a grey sandstone coated with coral shells and sand.
[* This should be Willem de Vlamingh.]
[** A species of kangaroo rat described by Vlamingh as having "a
purse or bag hanging from its throat."]
"At the back of the beach upon tracing a declining vale covered with spinifex
(a prickly grass) about 300 yards, I reached the margin of a lake of salt water
having by the marks on its edge a sensible tide[*] on all sides...it is bounded
by hills alike sandy but thickly covered with Callitris or pine of heavy
robust growth...the elevation of these rising grounds being...not more than 150
feet above the sea. The extent of the lake, which appeared very shoally and
wound round the rising land towards the centre of the island could not be
ascertained but, at the extremity I had visited, it did not exceed 200 feet in
breadth and part of that space was occupied by a rocky islet, its shores, which
were 30 feet wide, being formed of shells in beds of bivalves among which the
genus Mya was abundant. No fresh water has ever been discovered on the
island, indeed the loose filtering nature of the soil has nothing in its
component parts tenacious enough to retain that element near the surface, and it
is most probable that the bed of the lake being lower than the level of the sea
the latter finds its way into it through the loose sand at flood tides.
[* Freycinet had named this lake Duvaldailly's Ponds "from the
name of the cadet who accompanied us."]
"No kangaroos were seen by us although very recent traces of these animals
were observed as also the well defined paths of seals which according to the
French (Péron's Voyage, 1811) wander over all parts of the island. But their
skins (at least those killed by our people) were not of the fur kind as is
stated by Captain Freycinet...No parrots were seen and but a solitary pigeon of
a large size seemingly not distinct from Columba chalcoptera of our
colony. Groups of sandpipers ran on the beach and large flocks of boobies (of
our sailors, certainly a Pelecanus) inhabit some rocks in the offing.
"The sad wrecks of once beautiful shells afforded me subject for
contemplation of the riches 'of the unfathomed caves of Ocean' which although
there were no perfect specimens for the cabinet showed the extent and importance
of the conchological subjects of these shores. I recognized there
Buccinum, Bulla, Murex Trochus, Haliotis and
Helix, all of which might be collected alive and perfect immediately
after a westerly gale on the weather shore. The island is situate in lat. 31°58'
S. and long. 115°29' E. and is about 7 miles in length and its extreme breadth
1½ mile. It does not appear to be inhabited nor were any indications observed of
the aborigines of the neighbouring main having crossed the strait to it."
Of the Island-flora, Cunningham remarks: "It is surprising that an island at
so short a distance from the S.W. coast should bear so small a feature of the
characteristic vegetation of King George's Sound as not to furnish a single
plant of the several genera of Proteaceae or Acaciae, and but a
solitary plant of Leguminosae-Templetonia retusa. The timber is a
Callitris, having much the habit of Pinus cedrus, or cedar of
Lebanon, which is found abundantly spread over the island, and to within a few
yards of the sea-beach: I saw also a large spreading Melaleuca and a
narrow-leaved Pittosporum; these three trees constitute the timber of the
island. The ground in some parts if profusely clothed with Spinifex
hirsutus Labil."
HOUTMAN'S ABROLHOS
Weighing on the 14th from Rottnest, King steered up the coast, and traced the
shores of Western Australia to the northward, at from three to six miles off
shore, as far as North-West Cape, without finding them to vary much from the
Dutch chart of Van Keulen. He sighted, on the 15th, Baudin's Cape Leschenault,
and on the 16th his Jurien Bay, in which were noticed two rocky islets,[*] and
on January 17th passed within the "Abrolhos Banks, a part of which he had seen
during his previous examination of the West coast."
[* Favourite and Long Islands.]
The Abrolhos, or Houtman's Abrolhos, form three groups of small islands and
rocks enclosed by reefs, and extend forty-nine miles along the coast of Western
Australia, Wallabi, the northernmost, being separated from Easter Group by
Middle Channel, and the latter from Pelsart Group by Zeewyk Channel. The Dutch
ship "Batavia," Commodore Pelsart, was lost on the south end of Pelsart Isle in
1629. The passage between the Abrolhos and the coast was called Geelvink Channel
by King, in honour of Vlamingh's ship, since she was the first to pass within
them in 1697. Before Houtman's name was added these rocks already had been
christened Abrolhos by some earlier voyagers, for the name appeared on charts
before the Dutchmen arrived there. It is the Portuguese word for cliffs or rocks
rising from the sea, and is believed to be derived from a nautical expression
meaning "keep your eyes open" or "open your eyes"--"mind your eye" would be a
modern paraphrase--and so to have been given by Portuguese sailors to dangerous
places.
Frederick Houtman arrived in the "Dordrecht," which, with another ship with
Jacob d'Edel on board, on the way to Batavia, sailed from the Cape of Good Hope
on June 8, 1619. Houtman wrote, in his account of this voyage: "On July 19th we
suddenly came upon the South Land Beach in lat. 32°20', where we spent a few
days." It is to this voyage that Dedel's Land and Houtman's Abrolhos owe their
names.
On January 18th, at five o'clock in the morning, from the "Bathurst's" deck,
land about 1,000 feet high was seen forming a range of flat-topped hills. This
range, which had been noticed by the "Naturaliste" in 1802, was named by King in
honour of Captain Moresby, who had rendered him valuable assistance at
Mauritius. The summit in the centre was called Mount Fairfax, the hills at the
north end Menai Hills, and three others at the south end were given the name of
Wizard Hills. From here the coast trends to the N.W. by N. and "a large patch of
bare sand terminates the sandy shores, in lat. 27°55' S. A steep cliff then
extends to the Red Point of Vlamingh, behind which is a bight called by the
French Gantheaume Bay."
DIRK HARTOG ISLAND
The "Bathurst" made a very speedy run on the 19th, and on the 20th reached
the parallel Of 25°56' S., when King anchored in Dirk Hartog's Road at the
northern extremity of the island of that name. Of the island's history as then
known to him and of his coming there Cunningham gives an interesting account:[*]
"This island...was discovered by Captain Hartach or Hartog in the ship
'Eendracht' of Amsterdam (1616) as appeared by a platter of tin which was seen
eighty years afterwards by Vlamingh (1696) who subgraved his name and date of
arrival to it.[*] In 1801 Commodore Baudin discovered the remains of Hartog's
original post to which was attached the tin plate and having carefully copied
the inscription replaced the platter on the original spot, erecting a new post
for it.
[* To Telfair, February 15, 1823.]
[** Vlamingh placed another plate where Hartog's had formerly
stood and carried the original back to Holland. See account below.]
"Upon the approach to this memorable extremity of the island,[*] previous to
our arrival at the anchorage in the Road, we most distinctly perceived the spot
whereon Captain Dirk Hartog had erected a cross in 1616. It was on the verge of
a high cliff which we ascended the following morning, each of us being anxious
to behold the original metallic testimonial of the discovery of the island which
had been there at so late a period as 1801. To our disappointment we simply
found two posts of recent erection of different lengths, standing by being fixed
in between the deep fissures of the rocks but without the plate attached to
either which could not be found in or about the vicinity of the spot, although a
very diligent search was made. One of the staffs was of fir seemingly part of a
top-gallant mast, the other appearing to be of the Callitris of Rottnest
and was probably erected by Captain Freycinet of 'L'Uranie' in 1818. The fir
post was probably that to which Baudin had in 1801 again fixed the original
platter. Our conclusions were that, although Dirk Hartog's post which was of oak
had remained undisturbed by natives 185 years it is nevertheless probable that
the appearance of the new one had so excited the wonder and doubts of the
barbarous wandering aborigines as to induce them to deface it...This
island...has the greatest surface of red sandy bare desert I have ever observed
in New Holland, over which I traversed nearly three miles, gathering a few of
those curious plants in my route originally discovered and collected by the
celebrated Dampier."
[* This was Cape Inscription.]
King states that the post of the wood of the Callitris was two feet
high. It appeared broken but the other post was erect, and seemed to have once
been either the heel of a ship's royal-mast or part of a studding-sail boom. On
one side of it were marks showing that a flag had been fastened to it. King,
like Cunningham, thought that the natives had removed the plates, but on
returning to England he learnt that they were preserved in Paris, having been
carried away by Louis de Freycinet during his voyage in the "Uranie" in 1818.
Upon beaches to the eastward of the cape were found varieties of sponges and
coral, and béche-de-mer in the crevices of the rocks.
On the 24th Mr. Roe visited the cape again, to fix on the post (the old
studding-sail boom) a memorial of the "Bathurst's" visit. An inscription was
carved on a small piece of wood (at the back of which was deposited another
memorandum written on vellum), and placed in the sheave-hole of the post, where
it was made secure.

THE TIN PLATTER SEEN BY HAMELIN IN 1801
In the year 1697 William Vlamingh had left the Swan River and was tracing the
coast-line of Western Australia northward when he reached Hartog Island. He
found, as Cunningham has stated, at its northern point, on February 4th, a tin
platter, which Hartog had left as a record of his stay there, and saw other
traces of his visit. Vlamingh brought the plate away and gave it to the
Gentlemen Seventeen at Batavia, and in the account of his voyage, printed in
Amsterdam in 1704, there appears a copy of the following memorandum, sent by the
Gentlemen Seventeen to the authorities at Amsterdam:
"This old plate brought to us by William Vlamingh we have now handed over to
the commander, in order that he might bring it to your Nobilities, and that you
may marvel how it remained through such a number of years unaffected by air,
rain or sun."[Which seems to speak well for the preservative properties of the
Australian climate.]
Vlamingh wrote on the chart [see Van Keulen] which he afterwards made of the
coast: "Here I found the tin platter," placing a cross on Hartog Island to show
the exact spot where he came upon it.[*] [This platter has been discovered in
quite recent years in the States Museum at Amsterdam.] But before Vlamingh had
left Hartog Island the above memorandum continues: "He erected on the same spot
another pole, with a flat tin plate as a memorial, and wrote on it as you will
read in the journals.[**]
[* Alexander Dalrymple has thus translated the Dutch
inscri
ption which is possibly the correct rendering "At this cross
was found a pewter dish."]
[** Log-books.]
On this "flat tin plate" Vlamingh placed together the two inscriptions
recording both Hartog's and his own visits. It was this second plate, on the
post erected by Vlamingh, that was seen by Captain Hamelin in the "Naturaliste"
(one of Baudin's ships) when he called at Hartog Island in August, 1801. The
plate was discovered still nailed to the post but half buried in the sand. The
French commander refixed the plate on a new post, after its inscription had been
copied by the artist on board his ship (inaccurately it is said), and an
illustration of it taken from the picture published in Louis de Freycinet's work
is reproduced. When Hamelin erected the new post in the old position he put up
another, to which was fixed a plate bearing an inscription recording his own
visit; and it was these two memorials that King had hoped to find there.
Many another seaman since King's day has regretted that the two missing
plates were carried away by Louis de Freycinet. The two inscriptions upon the
more ancient one were, of course, in Dutch, of which the following is a
translation:
DIRK HARTOG'S PLATE
"1616
"On the 25th of October came here the ship the' Eendraght'[*] of Amsterdam.
The chief merchant,[**] Gilles Miebais of Luck,[***] skipper Dirck Hatichs of
Amsterdam. On the 27th ditto sailed for Bantam. The undermerchant, Jan Stins;
the upper steersman,[****] Pieter Doores of Bil.[5] Anno 1616."
[* The "Concord."]
[** Supercargo.]
[*** Stands for Luyk (Liège).]
[**** First mate.]
[***** Probably Bril is meant (then an important sea town), now
Brielle.]
WILLIAM VLAMINGH'S PLATE
"1697
"On the 4th of February came here the ship the 'Geelvinck'[*] for[**]
Amsterdam. The commander and skipper, Willem de Vlamingh of Vlielandt:
Assistant, Joannes Bremer of Coppenhagen: Upper Steersman, Michil Bloem of the
Bishopric Bremen. The Hooker the 'Nyptangh'[***] Skipper, Gerrit Colaart of
Amsterdam: Assistant, Theodoris Heirmans of ditto: Upper Steersman, Gerrit
Geritsen of Bremen.
"The Galliot, the'Weeseltie'[****] Master, Cornelis de Vlamingh[*****] of
Vlielandt; Steersman, Coert Gerritsen of Bremen. Sailed from here with our fleet
to further explore the south land, and bound for Batavia."
[* The "Greenfinch."]
[** The text says for, but obviously of was intended]
[*** The pincers, i.e. nipping tongues.]
[**** The "Weasel."]
[***** Son of the Commodore.]
During his stay at Hartog Island, where the "Bathurst" remained several days,
Cunningham worked indefatigably, and while he worked his thoughts carried him
back to "Old Dampier," as he calls him. The island resembles a peninsula, and
shelters the shores of Shark Bay, where the "Roebuck" had anchored in 1699. It
was here, as already related, that Dampier had collected those first specimens
of the Australian flora which are still preserved with others from different
parts of the coast in his herbarium at Oxford. The picture of the shore drawn by
Cunningham is hardly so flattering as that which Dampier has left us, but the
"Bathurst's" visit occurred at the height of a dry season, when the vegetation
looked parched and the whole country was languishing for want of rain. And
possibly Cunningham did not see many of the plants and shrubs, that Dampier saw
there flowering in profusion, the description of whose blossoms forms such an
attractive feature in his account of this place.
Cunningham thus describes it: "Perhaps no part of the coast we have visited
can possibly exceed this island, considering its extent, for its barren
appearance, as upon the shores near us downs of sand appeared, rising to a ridge
perhaps 200 feet high, in most parts bare of vegetation, and those parts which
were covered seemed altogether burnt up."
Cunningham first botanized along the summit of the ridge, and in a walk of
two hours obtained the following plants: "Beaufortia Dampieri (A. Guns.),
Artemisia sp. Westringa cinerea. Sida sp. Euphorbia
eremonophila, a shrub frequent in low brushwood. Gomphrena sp., a
diffuse plant, past flowering, but bearing seed. Hibiscus sp.
Podolepis sp. A shrub of the order Rutaceae seemingly
Diplolaena of Mr. Brown, originally discovered and figured by Dampier;
and a curious procumbent plant of Capparideae."
In Cunningham's collection were the following plants, originally brought to
England by Dampier, viz. "Trichinium incanum Br. Diplolaena
Dampieri, Desf. Solanum, a thorny species. Dampiera incana Br.
A cordate-leaved Melaleuca, figured by Dampier, and a beautiful
Loranthus growing on the branches of Acacia ligulata Cunn. Many
were wrecks of interesting plants which had fallen sacrifice to the
long-protracted drought, but it was impossible amid the languor of vegetation
not to admire the luxuriant and healthy habit of an undescribed species of
Pittosporum oleifolium, Cunn, which formed a small robust tree laden with
ripe fruit."
The "Bathurst" was compelled to remain in Turtle Bay for some days, as the
weather blew a gale all the while she was there. The sailors spent their time
hunting for turtle, and on the 22nd no less than fifty were turned. As only ten
could be taken on board, the other forty were left on shore upon their backs for
the night. All were found dead next day, having killed themselves trying to
escape, but many others were captured afterwards, some of which weighed four
hundredweight. For this reason the harbour was so named. A seal was seen here,
which King thought might have been of a species described as Dugong by Péron. Of
fish two kinds only were caught, the Snapper, a species of Sparus, called
by the French "Rouge Bossu," and a Tetradon, which the sailors would not
eat.
Sharks in great numbers surrounded the ship, and King remarks that the sight
of so many "impressed us with the propriety of Dampier's nomenclature."
The only bird seen was a solitary species of Loxia, but a huge nest,
built of sticks and about five feet high, discovered on a steep ledge of rock,
bore witness to the presence of other feathered inhabitants. The rocks below
were covered with a prostrate Capparis. Near this spot a small black
kangaroo was disturbed, busily feeding on the seeds of an acacia, but the little
animal bounded away at Cunningham's approach, without finding a single bush or
rock large enough to conceal itself, "so bare were these and sandy plains."
On the morning of January 26th the "Bathurst" left Hartog Island to continue
her voyage to the north-east. She passed outside Dorre and Bernier Islands, and
at six o'clock Kok Island bore north-east, distant seven miles. Next day the
ship made Cape Cuvier--formed of light red cliffs 400 feet high--and at one
o'clock saw a sandy projection, which King named Cape Farquhar, another sighted
a little later being designated Point Anderson. On January 29th the land, which
at this time had been concealed by haze, revealed itself, and was called Point
Cloates. King no longer doubted it was that which earlier navigators had
christened Cloates Island, or, as it appears in some ancient East India
documents, "Cloates or Doubtful " Island. At noon on this day Vlamingh Head,
which lies three miles to the south-westward of North-West Cape, was sighted,
with breakers extending along the whole length of the shore.
Having already charted this part of the coast-line, King determined to leave
it and make his way to Rowley Shoals, in order that after fixing their true
position he might examine the bight round Cape Lévêque, which he had been
obliged to leave unexplored during the earlier part of this voyage. The first of
these objects was effected on February 4th, when he passed round the south end
of the Imperieuse Shoal (named after Captain Rowley's ship), and it was found to
extend four miles farther to the southward than he had suspected when surveying
it in 1818.
Continuing his voyage, on the morning of February 8th, the mainland was
sighted in the south-east, and soon afterwards the ship rounded Cape Lévêque. On
her way towards Point Swan the "Bathurst" had to pass through breakers, and
although she remained in them only for the space of about two minutes, so
violent were the shocks of the sea and so great the strain put upon the vessel
that King says he feared for the safety of her masts. He then steered between
Point Swan and Swan Islands, intending to come to an anchorage off the
point.
KING SOUND
At this time King also thought of William Dampier, more particularly because
he wished to chart the exact spot where the "Cygnet" had anchored during her
stay in New Holland. In trying to reach it, however, King nearly lost his own
vessel among the islets in the north of King Sound, and the perils that he then
experienced are recounted in the following letter to the Admiralty:
"On the eighth of February I made Cape Lévêque, which is the westernmost head
of the deep opening of Cygnet Bay, and attempted to anchor under it, but no
sooner were we under its lee than it fell calm, and, the brig being quite
unmanageable, we were carried through a crowded cluster of low rocky islands and
shoals by a terrific tide, which was running in some parts at 5 knots; and in
the narrowest part of the strait through which we drifted (and which was not
more than 100 yards wide) it was running at the rate Of 7 or 8 knots--the stream
of which carried us towards a dry rock, which was in mid-channel, and from which
we were only four yards[*] distant as we passed it by."
[* In his journal he writes: "the rudder was not more than six
yards from the rock."]
When the ship approached this narrow strait the voices of natives were heard,
and soon afterwards some black men were seen on each side of the strait waving
their arms and shouting. One party came so close to the "Bathurst" in their
eagerness to watch the vessel's progress that they easily might have thrown
their spears on board. "These natives," writes King, "had a dog with them, which
Mr. Cunningham remarked to be black, but our situation was too awful to give us
time to notice the motions of the Indians, for we were then entering the
narrowest part of the strait, and the next moment were close to the rock--which
it appeared almost impossible to avoid--when the consequences would have been
truly dreadful.
"As soon as we had escaped this imminent danger we found ourselves within a
group of islands and drifting to southward over a clear and deep channel. But
the tide of flood was nearly done, and I feared lest we should be carried back
by the ebb through the dangers we had so happily escaped. The bottom was deep,
and of so rocky a nature that the loss of the anchor would have been the certain
consequence of such a step. At the moment, however, of the change of tide a
breeze sprang up, and soon removed us far from the dangerous influence of this
rapid tide; and before sunset we were at anchor on the western side of a bay on
the north-west side of a point of land [named by King, Point Cunningham], to the
eastward of which no land, excepting a group of crowded islands was visible, and
even here the tide was setting at 2½ knots." In reading King's letter one is
forcibly reminded of Cook's experiences in the "Endeavour" when he was swept
through Providential Channel into the inner waters of the Great Barrier Reef.
Happily both navigators escaped the dangers which lay in their path.
CYGNET BAY
On the day following the "Bathurst's" coming to Cygnet Bay, King did not
leave the anchorage. He sent Roe, however, to examine the coast round Point
Cunningham and Baskerville, to make soundings about the bay. From the vessel, on
one of the sandy beaches at the back of the bay near Park Hillock--a spot so
called because of its parklike appearance--eight or ten natives were perceived,
evidently searching for shellfish. Some of them were observed to be children,
the others were believed to be women, excepting two or three who carried spears,
while a dog trotted along behind them.
After dark port-fires were burnt every half hour to enable Roe to find his
way back to the "Bathurst," and before midnight he safely rejoined the ship. He
reported that there was good anchorage round Point Cunningham, and that at the
spot where he landed he had found plenty of fresh water. In the meantime Mr.
Cunningham, who had accompanied him, secured new plants, and met with recent
traces of natives and dogs at a camp, around which were strewn many turtle bones
and broken shells, the native fire-places showing that they had been used
lately. Point Cunningham was described as low, wooded, and sandy.
On the 11th of February King got the ship under way and crossed the sandbank
that fronts the bay, when the wind falling he was compelled to drop anchor again
off Point Cunningham. At the early hour of three o'clock on the morning of the
12th Roe and Baskerville went on shore to take bearings, but did not succeed in
landing before the sun had risen. Without loss of time the two officers, with
one of the boat's crew, made their way to the summit of the point, and on
reaching it heard the voices of natives among the trees not more than thirty
yards away from them. The black people, however, could not be seen, nor did they
venture from their place of concealment until the officers had finished their
survey and returned to the beach, where the footmarks of men and boys were
traced on the sand. A number of fire-places of recent date were noticed at this
spot, and some pieces of wood, sharply pointed, suggesting that the natives had
been employed in manufacturing their spears.
From the north-west trend of the point the officers obtained a view to the
eastward, which showed that the islands did not extend farther southward than N.
88° E., and that beyond this lay the open sea.
Some remarkable shells were picked up on the beach, and a few insects
obtained, among them a beautiful sphynx. One of the crew also caught a flying
fox, like those of Port Jackson. Of shells there was not a great variety; they
included a chama (Tridacna gigas, Lamk.), a Pinna, and the
Trochus of Dirk Hartog Island, in addition to a large Voluta,
found close to a native fire-place, which had evidently been used as a vessel
for water.
On the ship making sail again on the 12th the wind was found unfavourable,
and eventually the "Bathurst" anchored in a bay to the south of Point
Cunningham. A remarkable flat-topped hill, a mile and a half from the anchorage,
was named Carlisle Head, and the bay itself was called Goodenough Bay, in
compliment to the Bishop of Carlisle. In the evening four natives, armed with
spears, were seen sitting in the shade upon the beach under Carlisle Head,
watching the ship. At this place the extreme heat affected the whole ship's
company, but not seriously.
Next day, on again sailing, the "Bathurst" experienced calms and light airs,
and was drifted by the tide to the northward of a point which was called Foul
Point, because here the ship fouled her anchor. She was then in the outer part
of a bay, afterwards named Disaster Bay by King, "because of the loss and
perplexity we met with in it," and its southern extremity, off which is a small
rocky island, was called Repulse Point.
On the 14th, since the brig could not proceed further with safety, King
despatched boats to gain further knowledge of his surroundings. In the afternoon
Baskerville and Cunningham set off in the second cutter to Repulse Point. No
sooner had they left the ship than a breeze, freshening to a gale, parted her
cable and King was obliged to weigh with all haste and return to his former
anchorage in Goodenough Bay, which, however, the commander did not reach until
sunset. Meanwhile the safety of the cutter caused him great anxiety. Port-fires
were burned and signal-guns fired, to guide it back to the ship, but it was ten
o'clock before it got on board. Mr. Baskerville had gained useful knowledge of
the coast, although unable to land on Repulse Point, for the gale springing up
had nearly swamped the cutter. Only with difficulty had its occupants been able
to regain the ship, as in addition to the bad weather the light of the portfires
and flashes of signal-guns fired for their guidance had only proved confusing.
In the darkness it had been impossible to distinguish them from flashes of
lightning and the camp-fires of the natives. On the 15th, after searching
without success for the "Bathurst's" lost anchor, and having now but one left,
King was forced to abandon further examination of this "interesting place."
He informs us, however, that during his stay he had examined the western
shores of the large opening for forty miles in a southerly direction. It is now
called King Sound, in his honour: in so naming it, Captain Stokes wrote: "We
gave it the name of King's Sound in full confidence that all for whom the
remembrance of skill, constancy, and courage have a charm will unite in thinking
that the career of such a man should not be without a lasting monument." At the
termination of King's survey the mainland, on the opposite side of the bay, was
not visible. He stopped his exploration "on account of the unfavourable weather
and from having lost an anchor." When he left it he says that he could not tell
for certain what was the nature of this inlet,[*] but it was his opinion that
"it communicates at the back of Buccaneer Archipelago with Collier's Bay,[**]
and forms a deep gulf (or perhaps a river running to the S.E., like Prince
Regent's River), but the greater body of water joins the sea by a narrow strait
at Cape Villaret, making the land from Cape Lévêque to Point Gantheaume an
island.[***]
[* King Sound is an arm of the sea extending about sixty-five
miles southward from Sunday Strait to Derby at the entrance of Fitzroy River-"
Admiralty Sailing Directions."]
[** It does not connect with Collier Bay.]
[*** Later explorations have proved that there is no Strait here
but that the land between King Sound and Point Gantheaume forms a
peninsula.]
"Examination," he continues, "can alone prove the truth of this supposition,
and although I am not sanguine of its turning out to be more than an inlet (like
Prince Regent's River, excepting of a larger size), yet I regret exceedingly
having been twice repulsed in examining it. I trust a third attempt (which I
promised to undertake before I return to England) may be successful. The heat of
the weather during our last visit to this opening was at times almost
insufferable. The thermometer on board indicated a temperature of from 86° to
90° under the main hatchway, but in the sun it rose to 120°. On taking his
departure from this inlet, which from the intricate clusters of islands that
face it caused him to run many risks whilst steering his ship to the open sea,
King writes: "I intended to send a boat to examine the east coast of Collier's
Bay while we were completing our water, but...was prevented by the easterly
winds and rain from S.E...which induced me to finally leave the coast."
On February 17th, after leaving King Sound, Captain King passed out through
Sunday Strait. At the entrance of the strait the ship again found herself amid
perils, nearly striking upon a reef of rocks while being carried through by a
rapid ebb-tide without a breath of wind. In the evening heavy clouds announced
the approach of a storm, and soon after eight o'clock a boisterous gale began to
blow. Early next morning Adèle Island was seen. From there King steered an
eastward course, but the state of the weather growing more and more threatening
as he proceeded in this direction he decided to return to Port Jackson
immediately by a westwardly route. He left the north-west coast on February
21st, and holding on a course to the northward of Rowley Shoals, and from there
steering southwestward, he eventually rounded Western Australia, coasted the
shores of South Australia and passing through Bass Strait, arrived at Sydney
after an absence Of 344 days. In writing an account of his latest discoveries to
the First Lord of the Admiralty, King thus ends his letter: "I experienced a
long and tedious voyage. Our bread was entirely expended and we had three days'
water on board when we arrived at Sydney on April 25th. The only part of the
N.W. coast that I have not seen is contained between Cape Villaret and Depuch
Island, and by a reference to the French charts His Lordship will see that the
shore has been sufficiently examined by the French as to leave no doubt of its
being a shoal and low coast. The mainland of the Archipelago remains yet to be
seen, which I trust I shall be able to accomplish on my way home."
CHAPTER XV
CUNNINGHAM REACHES PANDORA'S PASS
On his return to Sydney--after his long association with Captain King had
ended--Cunningham seems to have been seized with a desire to set out alone to
explore the country inland. At the end of September, 1822, he applied to Sir
Thomas Brisbane for means to make a short excursion and started on what may be
called his first expedition into the interior, for it was carried out entirely
under his own superintendence.
He proceeded "leisurely" westward over the Blue Mountains, driving from
Parramatta in a light cart with two horses and two servants and encamping at
Prince Regent's Glen, Cox's River, and the Fish River. In crossing the mountains
he added many new specimens to his store, and on October 14th reached
Bathurst--that small outpost then beginning to raise its head above the billows
of grass which swept over the plains.
Fatigued by their journey the party rested at the settlement for some weeks,
but Cunningham did not waste his time there. In his rambles over the plains he
collected on the banks of the creeks flowing into the Macquarie River a rich
harvest of plants. He visited the Wombat Ranges, describing them as "a series of
lofty ranges (broken by ravines of considerable depth) whose ridges abound with
wombats."...He came upon piles of stones among the ranges raised by the natives
(as he imagined) "in commemoration of a grand wombat feast," and saw there some
"rock-white quartz." His map also shows that he marked the source of Clear
Creek, a stream which flows into the Winburndale Creek.
In 1818, during Cunningham's absence in the "Mermaid," Oxley had led a second
exploring party to Bathurst, having been ordered by Governor Macquarie to make
yet another expedition to the interior, and with Oxley came Evans, the
discoverer of the plains.
On May 25, 1818, Oxley and his party had left the settlement and proceeded to
trace the Macquarie's winding course to the north-westward. They sailed down the
river in boats beyond the valley named Wellington by Oxley in 1817, and crossed
a stream, the Erskine, which fell into it from the eastward. They continued to
trace the Macquarie until their progress was stopped by marshy swamps overgrown
by tall reeds where the river became shoal; or, in Oxley's words, "It all at
once eluded our further pursuit by spreading in all points from north-west to
north-east over the plain of reeds...the water decreasing in depth from upwards
of twenty feet to less than five...over a bottom of blue mud, and the current
running with nearly the same rapidity as when the river was confined within its
banks. This was in 30°45' S. and 147°10' E."
On its north bank below this point a hill was discovered to which the name of
Mount Harris was given, another on the south bank being called Mount Foster.
Natives were met with who proved friendly. Near here Oxley inspected a
remarkable native burial-ground, and, anxious to ascertain how they buried their
dead, opened a grave which appeared to differ from those of the coast natives.
The body was found lying wrapped in opossum skin beneath numerous sheets of bark
with the head turned towards the east.
From Mount Harris, where the boats were left behind, the party, turning their
backs on the swamps of the Macquarie, struck out in an easterly direction for
the sea-coast, while Evans went off alone to the north-east across the streams
known as Wallis Ponds and Morrisett Ponds, the latter being named in honour of
Colonel Morrisett, of the 48th Regiment, who became later a well-known resident
of Bathurst. On July 27th, when forty-five miles from the Macquarie, Oxley
reached another river, which he christened the Castlereagh, and then fell in
with a range of hills, calling them Arbuthnot's Range, naming the northern
extremity Mount Exmouth, the centre Mount Harrison and the southern Vernon's
Peak--their native name being Warrambungle.
From Mount Exmouth he turned to the north-eastward, passing over many
watercourses and grassy plains alternating with chains and ridges of low forest,
the trees being chiefly eucalyptus and myall (Acacia Pendula) in full
flower. He descended into a valley and crossed a stream which he named Parry's
Rivulet. Continuing to the north-east he sighted another range, and this was
named Hardwicke's Range, its native name being Nandewar. Its two highest
elevations were called Mount Apsley and Mount Shirley. While yet within forty
miles of Hardwicke's Range the country was merely a bog, and, being forced to
turn back, Oxley regained firm ground at Parry's Rivulet.
From this stream he made his way in a southerly direction over entirely new
country, and, on reaching Lushington Valley, to the northward of the Vansittart
Hills, turned eastward. He then discovered Liverpool Plains, which he entered
from the north-west.
After crossing the plains, and fording streams, among them the three rivers
named by Oxley--York, Bowen, and Field--the explorers encamped on the outskirts
of a "flat" bounded by hills which Oxley christened the Melville Range, one peak
being called Mount Dundas. From this they took their departure, penetrating much
bush and many valleys, and on September 2nd found the Peel River (now the
Namoi), which is a tributary of the Darling or Barwon. Leaving it behind them
they continued their journey and came to another flat through which ran a
tributary of the Peel which they called the Cockburn. On arriving at the
Dividing Range, Oxley crossed it and added the Bathurst Falls and Apsley River,
of which the Mackay forms the lower portion, to the list of his discoveries.
He then came upon the Croker River and Seaview Mountain, which is 6,000 feet
high. From its summit an extended view was obtained of land and sea. The
pleasure Oxley and his party felt on first seeing the ocean near Port Macquarie
on September 23rd, after their difficult journey through unexplored country, is
vividly described in his journal. "Balboa's ecstasy at the first sight of the
South Sea," he says, "could not have been greater than ours, when, on gaining
the summit of this mountain, we beheld the ocean at our feet. Every difficulty
vanished, and, in imagination, we were already at home."
He was then about fifty miles from the coast, but between him and the sea the
country took the form of rugged hills and fertile valleys. In one of the latter
he found a small stream which he afterwards named the Hastings River, and traced
it to the coast at Port Macquarie, which he reached on October 8, 1818. Thence
he travelled, partly on land and partly by sea, back to Sydney.
Evans, who had been separated from Oxley for some part of the journey,
reported that the river Castlereagh also flowed through reeds, which stopped his
progress to the north-east. From this information Oxley concluded that all three
rivers--the Lachlan, Macquarie, and Castlereagh--terminated in swamp and that
their united waters formed an inland sea.[*]
[* Sturt proved that the Macquarie and Castlereagh did not end in
swamp, and reported that the waters of the former continued to trickle through
reeds to Morrisett Ponds, which stream falls into the Castlereagh, and that
all three joined the Darling in lat. 30°52' S. But Mitchell found that the
principal outlet of the Macquarie Marshes was not by Morrisett Ponds, as Sturt
had supposed but by Duck Creek, and that this channel is practically the
Macquarie reappearing and pursuing its course to the Darling, or, as it is
called at this point, the Barwon.]
The discovery of the Liverpool Plains had left much to be desired, owing to
the intricate route by which Oxley had reached them; and the opinion that he and
those who accompanied him formed with regard to the termination of the three
rivers may be said, for a time at least, to have checked inland discovery in New
South Wales. A few minor tours, however, were accomplished successfully, and, as
Cunningham says, "some enterprising men crossed several untrodden spaces" that
separated the defined portions of the colony.
Among these tours may be numbered the one which Cunningham was preparing to
carry out from Bathurst--now a growing town which owed its prominence to the
fact that it had formed the starting-point of more than one well-equipped
expedition to the unknown interior. An account of his journey and a rough sketch
(see route map) of the ground traversed by him are given in the following pages.
The map constitutes a particularly interesting record of his route, because at
this time he appears suddenly to have stepped into the front rank as a leader
and explorer.
That he considered this northerly tour an important one he has been at pains
to point out in the report which afterwards he sent to the Governor. In it he
stated that, while the explorations carried out in 1817 and 1818 had made known
a large extent of fertile territory diverging from Bathurst on the south-west
and north-east, and although subsequent discoveries had opened up the land
southerly at the head of Campbell's River, and more particularly that bordering
" Mr. Throsby's country," yet no one had ventured to journey northwards until a
little over twelve months previously. Then Mr. Blackman, the late
superintendent, in advancing in that direction, had discovered "the valuable
limestone at 16 miles on his route; the Cugeegang[*] River at a distance Of 34
miles further; and the fine grazing land in the immediate vicinity of the native
station called Mudgee, 25 or 26 miles down the left bank of that secondary
stream. Although these lands were soon occupied by the flocks of three
individuals, with the approval of the Colonial Government, an intermediate area
of almost sixty miles had been left unoccupied and almost wholly unknown."
Cunningham continues: "Being aware that no outline of the country between the
two rivers [Macquarie and Cudgegong] had yet been made, I bestowed considerable
pains in taking bearings, etc., which have enabled me to submit the accompanying
outline to illustrate the lands through which my small party passed."
[* Cunningham always spells Cudgegong thus.]
On November 18, 1822, Cunningham left Bathurst intending when he had reached
the Cudgegong River to travel down its banks, and he thus describes his
journey:[*] "Having forded Winburndale Creek, at about 5 miles from the
settlement the country, of easy acclivity to the first stage of about 16 miles
at the Lime Kiln, is well watered, not only by Clear Creek [this he crossed] but
also by other channels, some of which have rocky beds and form chains of pools
in the droughts of summer. The grasses and herbage are luxuriant; the timber is
stringy-bark and two other species of Eucalyptus of ordinary size [at
this time Cunningham was following the blazed trees of Lawson[*]] and the whole
stage affords excellent cattle runs.
[* The extracts describing this period of Cunningham's travels
have been taken from the original manuscripts now in the possession of the
Mitchell Library, Sydney, copies of which, with one of the maps, have been
placed in my hands through the kindness of Mr. Hugh Wright, the librarian, to
whom my most cordial thanks are due.]
[* Lawson had preceded Cunningham to the Cudgegong.]
"Onward two miles of the second stage, upon passing beyond the limit of the
limestone...the line of marked trees inclines...to westward and passes over
barren shingly hills clothed with a brushwood in which small stringy barks are
frequent. Beyond...the country improves (until a fine grassy wooded vale with
some deep ponds opens to the view) continuing exceedingly fertile to a spot
abounding in Acacia and denominated by the stock-people Wattle Ground.
During the succeeding five miles, the land...on the rise from the Lime Kiln
becomes exceedingly hilly...rising rapidly to a somewhat difficult packhorse
country...and these hills being short, steep and irregular render greater the
fatigue of travelling. The whole are well wooded and abound in grass excepting
upon the brows of the more elevated hills which are covered with low brushes,
not uninteresting to the botanist."
ACROSS THE TURON AND CUDGEGONG
After a long stage of twelve miles the line of trees descends to a river
named by the aborigines Tu-ron[*]...a small stream or rivulet running over a
pebbly bottom, which, although fordable at all parts of this season of the year
is evidently both from the mountainous character of the country through which it
passes and from the fact of stubble being lodged in the upper branches of the
Casuarina, liable to be much swollen in the season of rains. Its width in the
vicinity of the ford is about 30 feet, the depth 3 feet, the current running
south-westerly, at which point it is said to discharge itself into the Macquarie
40 or 50 miles below the settlement of Bathurst. Some fine pasturage...bordering
upon the Turon, renders that stream a very desirable situation for
stock...Rising from the Turon to the summit of a very lofty steep hill, and
thence through elevated vales of good grassland about two miles, the beaten
route intersects a narrow swamp-oak creek [Swamp Oak or Red Chasm Creek on the
maps]...which dips to the westward.
[* Famous in later years for the gold discoveries made there.
Sofala is on its banks.]
"The line of marked trees continues nearly north during five miles, over land
of sub-mountainous character clothed with small timber and grass, each
intermediate vale having a rocky gully containing water...The marked trees lead
the traveller on to a long, steep, hilly ridge, named by the stock-people
Pleasant Range...Upon the main line of range, the beaten cattle-track continues
north to the brow of a hill; whence, upon looking to the east and north-east,
the eye is struck with the bold appearance of a curious romantic description of
scenery...Barren ridges, upon which rise cones more or less acute rounded
mountains and flat-topped table-hills seem to dot the country for a considerable
extent.
"In a circuit of two weeks made into this eastern country (subsequent to the
loss of my horses) I saw that, although surrounded by sandstone ranges, steep
heads, and rocky conical hills, there were patches of excellent grassy tracts in
the vales...which divide one ridge of hills from another...The disposition of
these separating valleys is generally S.E. and N.W...each having a chain of
pools or a running stream trending to the latter point of bearing and collecting
to discharge themselves into the Cugeegang. The timbers are blue gum and
stringybark and a bastard box; Callitris abietina, the pine or cypress;
Acacia melanoxylon or blackwood: Sterculia heterophylla; and a few
species of iron-bark. The grasses in the vales are luxuriant, but differ from
those about the settlement of Bathurst.
"Descending Pleasant Range...a fine fertile vale opens to the view, usually
called Table Bucco Flat,[*] which abounds in a fine nutritive herbage; viz.,
Crepis, or hawkweed; two species of birdsfoot trefoil; Swainsona
coronillaefolia (A vetch); Acoua, or Aroua, an Australian burnet; Sonchus
oleraceus, a sow-thistle; Ranunculus lappaceus, a buttercup;
Plantago varia, or rib-grass; and Eryngium vesiculosum (Labill.),
the bark of which is much eaten by sheep when young and before its foliage
acquires its hard, stiff, thorny nature. Besides the usual species of
Eucalyptus, a tree about 20 feet high of Mimosa[*] named
blackwood, and valuable on account of the extreme astringency or tanning
properties of its bark, is dispersed upon the declivities of the hills, and on
the verge of Table Bucco Flat (or Vale) in shaded situations.
[* Spelled Tabble bucco in the map. Now Tabrabucka.]
[* Acacia melanoxylon.--Brown in "Hort. Kew," Vol.
V.]
Cunningham's small party continued their journey through this "flat or vale"
which, he says, "winds to the eastward as well as to the westward, with all the
richness of the main vale." They still followed the beaten track made by the
Bathurst settlers in a northern direction, and which doubtless was used by the
stockmen of Wattle Flat (Cunningham's Wattle Ground) and the Turon. Some bushy
hills were then climbed, another vale was traversed and "a long grassy swamp
extending northwards for five miles" was sighted. The beaten path ran across the
swamp and Cunningham says it proved the most level country he had met with since
leaving Bathurst. Great blocks of granite were scattered over it, and quartz in
large pieces was seen upon the bushy hills--quartz which in after years
attracted many gold miners to the neighbourhood.
Cunningham continues: "The line of marked timber passes over a hilly range
lying east and west, and at length leads north down...to the forest land
bounding the Cugeegang River...As it had entered into my plans during the
progress of my little expedition to cross Liverpool Plains to York River and
continue north, as far as...my provisions upon a limited ration would admit, I
forded the Cugeegang at the place...marked on the outline, pitching my tent
about a mile and a quarter down the right bank. Being then on the verge of an
entirely unknown, unseen country, a line of marked route for my packhorses for
the following day was effected the preceding afternoon, and every arrangement
made whereby I could gather such materials as would enable me to give such a
sketch of the country through which we should pass, to afford a complete
knowledge of its geology, productions in natural history, and natural
resources"...
On the evening of this day, unfortunately, all Cunningham's arrangements were
to be upset. The men had tethered the packhorses, as they thought, securely for
the night, and having lighted their camp fire, were resting near it when the
fire caught some dry leaves and spread to the trunk of a large tree, which soon
burned rapidly. Before long it fell heavily to the ground and the crash of the
smouldering branches frightened the packhorses so much that they broke loose and
got free in the bush. Evidently they were not caught again, for Cunningham
states in his letters that through this occurrence all his plans were defeated
and he was compelled to return to Bathurst.
He gives the following account of his first coming to the river, which he
reached three days after he had left Bathurst:
"The Cugeegang (upon which is situated the native 'sitdown' or 'bimmil'
called Mudgee) is a small river which appears to take its rise in the broken
land N.E. of Table Bucco, and, after meandering through an irregular country to
the westward and passing through a small drain named by the
aborigines'Da-vy,'[*] its course is lengthened 50 miles N.W. to Mudgee, at a
short distance beyond which it suddenly winds to the westward and pours its
waters into the Macquarie River above Wellington Valley of Mr. Oxley, At this
season (November) the Cugeegang is at its lowest level, having at the ford we
passed only a breadth Of 12 feet by a depth Of 2½; from which, however, it
immediately widens into long reaches of considerable depth, bounded by bluff
rocky banks and grassy levels affording the following plants, which may serve as
the entire flora of a mile around my tent:
[* Daby, otherwise Dabee, near Rylstone, takes its name from
it.]
Grasses and Herbage valuable to the Farmer.
Potamophila parviflora, strong reedy grass in swamps.
Danthonia
pilosa, an oat grass.
Agrostis, or bank grass, 2
kinds.
Anthristiria australis, an oat grass.
Lotus
australis) 2 kinds of birdsfoot trefoil.
Lotus
major)
Swainsona coronillaefolia, a vetch.
Linum
marginale, a nondescript flax.
Crepis sp., or hawkweed; the silky
tops are fine feed for horses.
Sonchus oleraceus, a
sow-thistle.
Ajuga australis, bugle.
Plantago varia) 2 kinds
of rib-grass.
Plantago hispida)
Shrubs and Herbaceous Plants.
Hibbertia hermanniaefolia.
Dianella caerulea.
Dianella
revoluta.
Arthropodium fimbriatum.
Arthropodium
paniculatum
Anthericum semibarbatum.
Stylidium
graminifolium.
Helichrysum bracteatum.
Persoonia
spathulata (Br,).
Gnaphalium sp., or cudweed.
Epilobium,
allied to willow-herb.
Ranunculus lappaceus) 2 kinds
of
Ranunculus sp.) buttercup.
Campanula gracilis,
bell-flower.
Galium aparine, goosegrass.
Species botanically curious.
(Trees)
Callitris abietina, pine.
Eucalyptus 2 sp.,
box.
Eucalyptus 2 sp., blue gum.
Sterculia
heterophylla.
Angophora cordifolia, apple-tree.
(Shrubs and Herbaceous Plants)
Haloragis racemosa.
Pimelea glauca (Br.).
Pultenaea
sp.
Daviesia ulicina, and a second species.
Gompholobium
minus.
Euphrasia arguta (Br.).
Erodium
petraeum.
Hakea microcarpa.
Melichrus, allied to
Murceolatus.
Podolepsis acuminata.
Xerotes
sp.
Veronica perfoliala, speedwell.
Microtis parviflora
(Br.).
Velleia paradoxa.
Templetonia sp., a curious
nondescript.
Dodonea cuneata.
EXCURSION FROM THE CUDGEGONG
Before Cunningham returned to Bathurst after losing his pack-horses he
carried out, during the following fortnight, an interesting exploration of the
country lying to the eastward of his outward route. To do this he recrossed the
Cudgegong where he had first forded it, made his way back to Table Bucco Flat,
and from there set out in an easterly direction, reaching a hill called Erin's
Head on December 7th. From Erin's Head a remarkable acutely-pointed cone upon a
mountainous ridge was seen to the north-east and named Mount Aiton.
Cunningham now met with one swamp after another, and on the 8th, after
skirting a steep, rocky ridge, came to Mount Stirling, which stood, as did
Erin's Head, to the westward of a long, grassy range of hills faced with
sandstone on their northwestern side. Passing along the west side of Mount
Lethbridge he reached, on the 11th, a hummocky hill called the Sugarloaf. To the
north of it stood Mount Gidley, which forms a part of a range called King's
Range. These last names evidently were bestowed by Cunningham in honour of
Captain King's father. From here he turned south-westward through scrubby hills
alternating with fine pasture-land and came to some rocky ravines. Finding
himself unable to cross these, he set out once again to seek the Cudgegong, and,
entering a valley, he twice crossed a " pretty swamp-oak creek " which ran
through it. On continuing to trace this creek northwards he fell in with the
river at a point where Lieutenant Lawson had crossed it previously, and to the
eastward of where he first had forded it himself.
Here Cunningham met with Lawson's blazed trees, which he says "continued
towards the north-east." After passing over the river, the botanist made a
circuit on its north bank over some grassy, limestone hills covered with
Callitris. He kept on it, following a bend of the river westward, until he
reached his old ford at the spot where he had first encamped. From there he made
his way back to Bathurst, and eventually the party arrived at Parramatta on
January 4th, 1823.
Cunningham's map gives his route and describes the "curiously irregular
country" through which the Cudgegong passes, where ridges "surmounted by conical
peaks more or less acute, isolated bluff heads, tabular hills, and rocks of
sandstone" are dotted over the land. From these peaks and hills and sandstone
rocks one can obtain a good impression of the age of Australia from a geological
standpoint; and, as along the Queensland shores at Cape Melville, there are
ranged rocks and boulders which to those on board the passing ships seem exactly
to resemble ancient castellated buildings, so over the Cudgegong country inland
are to be found scattered upright rocks, isolated peaks, and tabular hills which
take the form of buildings, and some of these also have what Nesbit has
described as "a Tudor cast with many turrets and gables."[*] The lichens and
mosses which spread over the red sandstone, and, hanging down, increase the
shadows, add yet one more touch of age to their appearance. They look like
watch-towers or fortresses, and no doubt in olden days the blacks used them as
places of defence when the tribes were at war with each other. Upon the rocks
and huge stones of many a ridge and conical peak still may be seen rude native
carvings representing kangaroos, fishes and war weapons, and the human hand. In
some places one meets with a single hand upon a rock; in others there are
several hands together, generally showing the fingers widely extended. Since the
tribes of these parts are now extinct, it is to be hoped that the carvings which
are their only memorial may be carefully preserved.
[* These castles of Nature's building can be seen in several
places. Leichhardt, the Queensland explorer, named a creek near Roper Pass,
where he encamped, "the Creek of Ruined Castles," because "high sandstone
rocks, fissured and broken, like pillars and walls and the high gates of
ruined castles" topped the hills on each side of the valley through which it
flowed.--Leichhardt's "Exploration," p. 57.]
When Cunningham became the leader of an expedition, as well as its botanist,
he naturally evinced a deeper interest in the country and turned his attention
not only to its flora, but also to everything else he met with in his
travels.
Although he saw their marks on the hills everywhere, he apparently saw none
of the natives during this trip to the Cudgegong. He adds the following summary
of his observations to his report on the country through which he had
passed:
"The country abounds in kangaroo, Didelphis [= Macropus]
giganteus; emu, Struthio australis [= Dromaeus
novae-hollandiae]; native turkey (evidently an Otis or bustard);
several ducks, etc., of the genus Anas; pigeons, chiefly Columba
[= Phaps] chalcoptera, a bronze-winged species; a small
Ardea or crane; and a spur-winged plover (Rallus) are frequent in
the swamps, where also the small tortoise of the colony (Testudo
longicollis) was remarked. Others of the reptiles, as of the genus
Lacerta, are curious; of which Lacerta ecaudata [= Trachysaurus
rugosus], originally discovered in 1688 on the West Coast. by the
indefatigable navigator, Dampier, is not uncommon on the brushy hills; also
L. variegata (undescribed) remarkable for the unusual length of its body,
short thick tail tapering to a point, and very unproportionate small legs
covered with remarkable scales; also L. orbicularis (undescribed),
singular on account of the manner in which it can inflate its body into an
orbicular depressed form, and instantly contract it into a shrivelled, starved
figure by expelling the air which had previously swollen it. Its manner of
changing colour is curious. L. muricata of the colony is also very
frequent in dry, rocky hills. Of serpents, a black snake with a banded red belly
(Coluber) was frequent, whilst a larger species, brown on the back and
bright yellow underneath, was considerably rarer."
On his return to Bathurst Cunningham found that while he had been away
Lieutenant Lawson, then commandant there, whom he describes as "an enterprising
man" had been exploring to the northward accompanied by Mr. Scott. Lawson
appears to have made three if not four journeys in this direction. As to one of
these he reported to Governor Macquarie (August 29, 1821) that he had found "a
broken and mountainous country " thirty miles distant from the settlement. This
had seemed impossible to travel over with horses, but Lawson stated that he was
satisfied there was a pass to Liverpool Plains."
In a second journey Lawson traversed more than 400 miles, and it is believed
in the course of this expedition he reached Mudgee.[*] In his third journey in
January, 1822, he seems to have established his station at Talbragar. A memorial
which he addressed to the Secretary of State for the Colonies in applying for a
grant of land claims that he was not only the first to have explored to the
north and north-west of Bathurst but to have discovered a passage through the
Dividing Range. This is possibly a reference to the pass that he had sighted in
1821. The Memorial[**] runs as follows:
[* Selkirk: "Royal Aus. Hist. Journal," Vol. VI, Part
6.]
[** Dated June 3, 1826, and written from Veteran Hall,
Parramatta.--Record Office.]
"Your Lordship's Memorialist desires it may not be unknown to you that he was
the first person to explore the country to the N. and N.W. of Bathurst
Settlement having marked a practicable road through an intricate country which
opens to an extensive and luxuriant tract of pasturage...and subsequently he
effected a communication between the settlement of Newcastle and Bathurst by
having discovered a passage through the Dividing Range."
Lawson does not actually mention Mudgee, and Allan Cunningham, as stated
above, attributes the original discovery of Mudgee to Mr. James Blackman in
1821, which is borne out by a memorial addressed by "James Blackman the younger"
to Governor Darling in 1829.[*] In this he also is applying for reward in the
form of a grant of land, and one of the services Blackman puts forward in
support of his claim is that in or about 1821 with a party consisting of four
persons besides himself he "discovered the road to Mudgee which had since become
one of the most fertile and flourishing parts of the Colony."
[* Selkirk.]
Although Lawson may not have discovered Mudgee, as well as being "an
enterprising man" he was a discoverer, for with Blaxland and Wentworth he had
first crossed the Blue Mountains, and he seems to have been again the first to
traverse the territory between Bathurst and the Cudgegong.
JOURNEY TO THE PASS
The short excursion to the Cudgegong proved the forerunner of greater
efforts, and in 1823 Cunningham extended his explorations as far as Pandora's
Pass. When he had sent the report of his Cudgegong tour to Sir Thomas
Brisbane,[*] the Governor expressed his warm approval of it and assured the
explorer that he had followed his route with the keenest interest, since he
believed it would prove an important factor "in directing the tide of emigration
towards the heart of the continent rather than coastwise."
[* Brisbane had succeeded Macquarie.]
It was then agreed that, if Cunningham would continue his investigations
further northward, the Government would provide the necessary equipment for his
journey. He wrote home to the authorities at Kew to inform them of the
Governor's wishes and that he had accepted the offer, and he added: "As I find
that I can blend discovery with botanical research tolerably well, I have
submitted my plans to His Excellency to prosecute my journey on or about the
meridian of Bathurst Town, north as far as the parallel of 29°30' S.; then, in a
returning route south-easterly, to intersect the head streams of the Coal River
in order to ascertain how far a communication can be opened between Liverpool
Plains and the settlement at the upper parts of the Hunter River and again
between the latter and Bathurst."
On Monday, March 31st, 1823, Cunningham crossed the Nepean on his way to
Bathurst. He took with him five servants and "five strong packhorses" to carry
their provisions, and, passing over the Blue Mountains, reached Bathurst on
April 5th, and there spent ten days in making preparations for his journey.
First he had his horses newly shod (by a very bad blacksmith, as it turned out),
and provided himself with sufficient flour to last his party for at least ten
weeks.
On April 15th, on a warm, foggy morning, the expedition left the town.[*]
Following his former route by way of the Lime Kilns, the Turon River and Stony
Creek, Cunningham arrived at the Cudgegong on the afternoon of the 18th. The
recent rains had freshened up the grass, and, though late in the season, the
country wore a springlike appearance. Having crossed the river at the old ford,
his men pitched the tents on a flat on its north bank for the night. From here,
next day, after re-fording the river, he began to trace the Cudgegong on its
south bank eastwards. Abruptly steep hills inclining sharply to the water's edge
forced him to quit the riverside with his heavily-laden horses, and, after
keeping on a route varying south-south-east and east for four hours, he found
that the only way he could proceed at all was by climbing a main range. At four
in the afternoon he left it descending and entering a valley which he had
discovered in the previous year. He again crossed the "pretty swamp-oak creek"
flowing through it, and in an hour found himself among his old marked trees,
which led him to the junction of the creek and the Cudgegong, as well as to
Lieutenant Lawson's old crossing where he himself had passed over in the
previous December. He halted on a flat near the river for the night, which was
very chilly, and resumed his journey next day, the 21st, taking an easterly
course as close as the bushes would permit to the river, whose stream formed at
first basins of deep, stagnant water and then dwindled to a small, glassy
rivulet the channel of which was choked by reeds (Arundo phragmites).
After twelve miles, an encampment was made on a fine reach of the river, some
four miles west of Daby or Dabee. No signs of natives, or of animals, had been
seen throughout the day.
[* "I used an excellent Schmalkalder's compass to direct my course
and take bearings, an odometer or improved perambulator to measure my
distances and base lines, and a good sextant with artificial horizon to obtain
altitudes for my latitudes."--Cunningham to Telfair.]
Next day, heavy rain delayed progress, and Cunningham sent two men eastward
in the afternoon to a flat which he had seen from the ridge the day before, and
which he had concluded was Dabee. In the evening they returned and reported that
they had crossed the flat some three miles and a half distant and had found that
on the western edge of it a grazier residing at Bathurst had built a hut and a
stockyard.[*]
[* Possibly Mr. Fitzgerald, who was one of the first, if not the
first, to settle there according to one of his descendants. Presumably
Fitzgerald's Swamp near Bathurst takes its name from the family. Mr. Cox also
was granted land there, but Cunningham does not give the settler's
name.]
Cunningham's party reached Dabee on the 23rd. They found the river there
twelve yards wide, its banks low and muddy and overgrown with reeds. Draining
through these the water flowed over open grassy plains on which the squatter's
herds were feeding. Several small kangaroos were seen here, but not a trace of
any natives.
Cunningham had to wait some days for the return of one of his men from
Bathurst with a supply of horse-shoes and nails to replace those of two horses
which had fallen off. In the meantime he found several interesting plants around
the camp, and, mounting a double hill east from his tent, was able to take a few
bearings of the surrounding country.
On the 28th the party left Dabee and started on a northwesterly course,
having a semicircle of rocky hills to right of them: the principal peaks of
which were Mount Brace, Rurnker's Peak and Mount Walker. The line of route led
over a succession of moist valleys and stony ridges.
On the evening of the 29th they found a camping ground under a hill named
Mount Burchell. Next day their progress was retarded by mountainous country, of
which one range was covered by dense honeysuckle (Banksia integrifolia)
and abounding in rocky precipices. On this day, on reaching Mount Innes,
Cunningham caught a bird's-eye view of more promising land extending to the base
of a mountain range lying east and west, this being part of the Liverpool Range
and therefore the southern boundary of Liverpool Plains. He had heard of this
range before, for Lieutenant Lawson and Mr. Scott had reached it during the
preceding year but had not passed over it. Cunningham determined to cross it,
and, making his way to north-north-west, descended into a grassy valley, forded
Emu Creek, and travelled first over a thinly timbered tract for about three
miles, and then due north for five miles. He afterwards turned north-by-east one
mile and north-north-east for two miles through brushwood and arrived at a
patchy flat called by the natives, Nandoura, which was bordered with sandy
brushes of honeysuckle where there was little or no water. Progress here became
more difficult, low stony ridges intersecting his route.
On May 6th he descended into good country watered by a stream whose course
could be traced by the river-oaks on its banks. This was Lawson's Goulburn
River. Its outer channel was fifty yards wide, with water-marks showing twelve
feet above the level of its small stream, then almost hidden in reeds, and it
ran to the south-east. In some deep clear pools short, thick, black fish were
numerous, but would not take the bait, and among the grasses on the banks was a
tall species of Danthonia or oatgrass not seen elsewhere. Leaving the
Goulburn on the 8th and striking north-east, Cunningham's path led him to
another river, the Wemyss (also discovered by Lawson and Scott), and yet a third
river was intersected and now named Scott's Rivulet. The party traversed its
banks on a northerly course to the Liverpool Range now only fifteen miles
distant, the country through which they passed becoming very rough and broken by
deep valleys. When only five miles distant from a lofty point to which he gave
the name of Oxley's Peak, Cunningham encamped, and he determined to mount the
Main Range to take bearings, and if possible to obtain a glimpse of the
Liverpool Plains. It proved a hard task, for several streams issued from among
the precipices and formed picturesque waterfalls across his path. At last he
reached a peak which he called Mount Macarthur (now Mount Moan) and obtained a
fine view from its summit. To the south-west there were open plains and, amid a
more irregular country, others appeared to the south-east. To the northward
stretched the Liverpool Plains, which owing to the brown colour of the grass
looked like a desert. The greater part of the land to the north-west ran in
elongated strips into the region of forest ranges. A few detached mounds and
conical peaks were here and there picturesquely dotted over the open country.
Two noticeable peaks of the range were given the names of East Bluff and Mount
Palmer.

CROSS'S MAP OF 1827, SHOWING CUNNINGHAM'S ROUTES IN HIS JOURNEY OF
1823
Although it appeared as if there would be no great difficulty in travelling
along the northern side of the mountains facing Liverpool Plains, the horses
were then too tired to allow Cunningham to attempt the journey across the
barrier, and since the Liverpool Range looked lower to the eastward, he resolved
to continue to trace the southern face of the mountains in that direction and to
seek for a passage through them.[*]
[* "Perceiving from my commanding station" (Mount Macarthur) "the
total impossibility of leading the packhorses through the ravines, or on a
lofty, irregular surface of this belt of mountains, I attempted to penetrate
easterly at their immediate base in search of a gap, but finding (after
exhausting man and horse) the mountains became more precipitous at that
bearing, I regained my original position after a circuitous route Of 3 weeks
and 3 days, and then, having reduced the weekly ration of myself and people,
stood away N.N.W."--Cunningham to Aiton.]
After searching for five days for a pass through the range to the east of
Mount Macarthur and traversing a distance Of 35 miles without seeing an opening
he "halted on the verge of a perpendicular ravine, being unable to advance
another mile to the eastward by reason of the sharp water gullies between which
lay steep ravines. In spite of these difficulties water was easily obtained, as
it had been ever since leaving the Goulburn River, no fewer than nineteen creeks
having been crossed in this journey, all of which ran to the south-east, the
outer channel of one stream "exceeding 20 feet in breadth." He writes: "Since
the whole of these streams have one common tendency southerly towards the
extreme or western end of the trunk or main branch of the Coal River, little or
no doubt can exist of their constituting its principal sources, especially as
the body of water agrees with the magnitude of Hunter's River at that stage of
its ascent."
Seeing that it was impossible to advance further eastward Cunningham, who
must have been keenly disappointed, turned and descended into open forest land
lying farther southward, so that by travelling westward over less difficult
country he might retrace his steps to the Goulburn.
In his route westward back to the Goulburn, on the 19th, he passed over a
stream whose outer banks were forty yards wide, though the stream itself was but
sixteen feet. This was Dartbrook in the county of Brisbane. On the 21st he came
to another which was named the Blaxland, and which, according to his estimate
was to develop at twenty miles distance into the Paterson River. He encamped on
its bank, and, on taking a northerly course next day, again met this stream ten
miles nearer its source. After proceeding five miles, to the westward he reached
open country where a large swamp-oak rivulet wound round the base of a ridge on
its western side, which he named Smith's Rivulet.[*] At this point he was
detained (on its left bank) for four days by the illness of one of his men.
Resuming his journey west-by-north on the 29th, he passed along a valley through
which another stream, a counterpart of the last, descended from the base of the
Northern Mountains. After leaving it, in about eleven miles the party crossed
Scott's Rivulet and came to the Wemyss at the spot at which they had forded it
three weeks previously. When they arrived at the Goulburn on May 31st, rations
were running low and both men and horses were placed on a reduced supply. It was
decided, however, to push on from here to the north-north-west, whither the
ridges seemed to extend in an almost unbroken line.
[* "The situation of our encampment on Smith's Rivulet being in
32°2'6" S. and presumed long, about 150°24' E."]
The men quitted their camp on June 2nd, and passed over fine forest country
and narrow but rich and well-watered valleys. In their next day's advance a
series of lofty ranges, extending from eastward in a north-westerly direction,
forced them into difficult mountainous country and caused them to take a more
westerly course. On the 4th after they had completed a laborious journey of
nearly seven miles they met with a lateral branch of the range trending S.W. and
came face to face with a very narrow deep ravine which entirely stopped their
progress. While halted here Cunningham says that in this route westward, "We
passed the lofty ranges which separate the eastern and western waters" The
country looked closed to them "from east by way of north to almost west," and so
hopeless was the outlook that he tells us he had almost "determined to quit its
blackened ranges altogether."
But he then caught a glimpse of patches of open plain to the
south-south-west. This was the only direction in which there appeared to be any
clear land at all, and he resolved to descend to it at once. At this stage
Cunningham experienced anxiety as to what route he should take, for the wretched
condition of both men and horses, owing to their reduced rations, told him that
they could not long subsist upon so little food. On the 5th, fortunately, he
reached a fine, rich valley watered by a creek issuing from a ravine where
apple-tree, blue gum and swamp oak were growing. Following this valley he found
that it broke into small open plains, clear of timber, stretching
north-north-east, and south-south-west. The steep hills bounding it on the west
side became low towards a patch of plain in the distance which he named Duguid's
Plain.
Over this plain Cunningham steadily advanced westwardly, making his way
through open forest, which brought him to another massive, bold range, and this
range bounded a valley to the southward much more ample at its entrance from the
forest and much more promising in its trending than any other valley he had yet
seen. Taking a course over an apple-tree flat and along the banks of a fine
creek which ran through the valley, he followed it to the N.N.E. for eight
miles, when it became very narrow and intricate. He then decided to mount the
western range and take his bearings. The view he thence obtained filled him with
delight; for, on looking round him and tracing the line of the main northern
range, he saw a considerable depression, and writes: "it was a very low back in
the main ridge distant about 3 miles, and although limited, afforded me a clear
view of the open plains north of this extensive barrier." He also distinguished
several mounts that he had seen previously from Mount Macarthur, further to the
eastward.
On descending from the mountain, Cunningham lost no time in shifting his
encampment to an open valley which ran to the foot or base of the mountains (the
western end of the Liverpool Range). The new encampment was placed within two or
three miles of the "low back" or passage into Liverpool Plains. Having given
directions for a line of trees to be marked from the encampment through the
passage to the verge of the nearest clear land beyond, he climbed to the summit
of a mountain that formed the eastern side of the pass and obtained a most
beautiful view of the hidden plains.
From the northern base of the Liverpool Range a level, open forest-land was
seen to extend from W.N.W. to N. On the eastern side of the woody country was
easily traceable, by the trees on its banks, a small rivulet (Swamp Oak Rivulet)
which, rising in the Liverpool Range, ran due north, its course forming with the
forest the western boundary of the nearest or most southerly extensive patch of
clear plain. This plain formed a considerable expanse of brown grass and herbage
and, excepting a small clump and a few scattered trees at its south-western
angle, was perfectly clear of scrub. He was glad also to see that the declivity
on the north side of the mountains seemed not too rough for his pack-horses and
that it was only one mile distant from the wooded country at its base, which was
watered by streams that ran to the northward.
Cunningham says that he named the pass Pandora's Pass,[*] and that he
"believed it would become the great route of communication between Bathurst and
Hunter River and the Liverpool Plains." His journey now terminated, his men were
fatigued, and his provisions had ran out. The latitude of his tent in the valley
below the pass he gives as 31°43'45" S., and the longitude, by estimation,
149°30' E. Before leaving it, a paper containing the following account of their
travels was enclosed in a bottle and placed under a tree:
[* Now also known as Brennan's Gap.]
"After a very laborious and harassing journey from Bathurst since April last
a party consisting of 5 persons under the direction of Allan Cunningham, His
Majesty's Botanist (making the sixth individual), having failed in finding a
route to Liverpool Plains while tracing the southern base of the Barrier
Mountains before us northward so far as 50 miles to the E. of this spot, at
length prosecuting their research in a westerly direction reached this valley
and discovered a practicable and easy passage...to the very extensive levels
connected with the above plains, of which the southernmost of the chain is
distant about 11 or 12 miles (by estimation) N.N.W. from this valley and to
which a line of trees has been carefully marked.
"This valley, which extends S.W. and W.S.W., has been named Hawkesbury Vale,
and the high point of the range bearing N.W. by W. from this tree was called
Mount Jenkinson, the one a former title, the other the family name of the noble
earl whose present title the plains bear to which from the southern country this
gap affords the only passage. The party encountered many privations in
travelling to and returning from the eastward. In spite, however, of these
evils, a Hope...at the close of their journey induced them to persevere westerly
and this passage was discovered. It has therefore been named Pandora's Pass. Due
east and west by compass from this tree in a direct line of 336 yards were
planted the fresh stones of peaches brought from the colony in April last with
every good hope that their produce will one day or other afford some refreshment
to the weary farmer on his route...North of Pandora's Pass a like planting took
place on the plains 12 miles N. at the last marked tree. A remarkable high
mountain above the Pass eastward, being a guide to the traveller advancing S.
from the plains, has been named Direction Head. The situation of this tree is as
follows: lat., observed on the 7th and 8th June, 1823, 32°15'19' S.; long.
(presumed) 149°30' E. The party now proceed with the utmost despatch S. for
Bathurst."
Signed " A. CUNNINGHAM, June 9th, 1823."
Endorsed: "Buried for the information of the first farmer who may venture to
advance so far to the northward as this vale of whom it is requested this
document may not be destroyed but carried to the settlement at Bathurst after
the opening of the bottle."
The Rev. George Grimm writing in 1888, says: "The bottle was found a few
years ago and the explorer's directions carried out."[*] The writer, however,
has not been able to trace any other authentic record of this.
[* "Australian Explorers," p. 57.]
Beginning his return journey on the 9th, Cunningham proceeded along the
Hawkesbury Vale and found it to consist of a rich flat watered by a swamp-oak
creek and bounded on its south-east side by a ridge of hills, the mountain range
overhanging it to the N.W. The vale opened on a clear patch of plain, the
stream,[*] winding round the fringe of a range on the west side of "the
beautiful, open, level tract which," says Cunningham, "I have named Harrison's
Plain." On the 10th he continued to travel in a south and west direction and had
accomplished fourteen miles from the northern extreme of Harrison's Plain, when
he halted upon a creek which "receding from the base of the western range
assumed the character of a deep-banked rivulet." A level tract between it and
the range was named Alcock's Plain, "in compliment to a gentleman of His
Majesty's Treasury that to the northward having been called after one of its
secretaries."
[* The Coolaburragundy, or northern tributary of the
Erskine.]
Journeying southward about a mile from here, the party on the 11th reached
the edge of another open level plain, which was named Aiton's Plain (its native
name is Bonana), and was bounded on the north by the mountainous range and on
the opposite side by a broken ridge of sandstone rock. Upon quitting this plain
Cunningham pepetrated a forest of box abounding in a brush of native indigo
(Indigofera australis), and the blue vine, (Kennedia monophylla),
and at last reached the foot of a detached rocky head, which he ascended to
obtain a view of the surrounding country. This broken mount or head he named
Station Head. From it he could see to the eastward of Aiton's Plain, and that
there was separated from it by a line of apple-trees yet another and larger one
which he called Hawkins' Plain, The country to the S.S.W. and S.W. did not
appear, as seen from Station Head, to present any great difficulties in the
route of the travellers.
On the 12th a low, heavily-timbered flat, abounding in pools of water where
many bog plants were flourishing, was crossed, and the men arrived at the side
of a small river whose steep, muddy banks, clothed with tall reeds, hid its deep
waters, which ran westward. After tracing it for a mile and a half, Cunningham
forded it: he thought it was formed by the union of three swamp-oak creeks to
the northward which he had crossed before he had discovered Pandora's Pass. It
was about 12 yards wide and subject to flood, when it appeared as if the whole
of the forest-land, from its banks to a pine-ridge a mile distant, was laid
under water. Cunningham tells us that it was called Pubo-batta by the natives.
He named the stream Lawson's River, after the Commandant at Bathurst, "who first
intersected it in January, 1822, to the westward of this point."
On the 13th, having taken bearings of a hummocky range at S.S.E., distant 25
miles, which he recognised as being only a short distance from Mudgee,
Cunningham felt sure the Cudgegong was near at hand. Next day, when descending a
ridge S.E. to a marshy valley, he crossed cattle-tracks of a recent date which,
he says, proved that his surmise was correct. About three miles from here the
party crossed a broad, shoally creek (evidently the channel by which these wet
lands drained to the Cudgegong), where the men, all now greatly fatigued,
encamped.
Starting early on the 15th, the travellers fell in with a stockman employed
by Mr. Cox who, in answer to their inquiries as to where the creek joined the
river, directed them to continue their route along the creek, until it met the
Cudgegong three miles below the homestead at a clear, fertile flat known as
Gurran. Here the stream was swollen and the men eventually crossed opposite the
stockyard (being 23 miles below Cunningham's former point of intersection).[*]
Resting here till the 20th Cunningham began his journey from Menar or Menah (the
native name for the station) to Bathurst, where he arrived on June 27, 1823,
after an absence of eleven weeks, during which we are told that his pack-horses
had passed over 509 miles of measured land; and the capabilities of the country,
the springheads of Hunter River, and the route to Liverpool Plains from
Bathurst, had all been fully ascertained.
[* Cunningham to Telfair.]
CHAPTER XVI
MOUNT TOMAH, MORETON BAY AND THE BRISBANE RIVER. THROUGH PANDORA'S PASS TO
CAMDEN VALLEY
On returning from his western tour, Cunningham set out with a small party to
visit Cox's River. He chose a new route across the Blue Mountains, taking a road
that had been lately marked out by Mr. Bell, and known as Bell's Road. Owing to
unforeseen circumstances, Cunningham could not reach the river, although lie was
able to examine Mount Tomah and other parts of the mountains lying to the north
of the Grose.
As a botanist he was perhaps more drawn to the Blue Mountains than to any
other part of the colony, for an amazing variety of plants grew in the ranges.
It was there that he obtained the rare specimens of mountain flora which can be
seen to-day in the herbarium at South Kensington including those he gathered at
Mount Tomah.
In this excursion he seems to have been most attracted by the "stately"
timber trees, their rigid branches half hidden by creepers; the tall, tree-ferns
in groups beneath the shade of massive rocks with rough brown trunks supporting
fronds of delicate green; the lichens and mosses, in places covering the face of
the sandstone; the tender tiny maidenhair growing in the crevices of the rocks
and under the dripping ledges; and, towering above them all, the waratah or
native tulip (Telopea speciosa), its crimson flower, upon its upright
stalk, visible upon the more distant heights of the mountains. All these he saw
and described in his journal.
Having left Bell's Farm on November 26th, 1823, the little party followed the
marked trees of a surveyor[*] who had reported upon this new route, and quickly
gained the main range. The "road" was bounded on each side by deep ravines, and
in the course of their ascent became very narrow, its surface being covered with
ferns and thicket. At 4 p.m. after having travelled six miles, the men rested
for the night near a gully where they found fresh water. On the following day
their path led them through a brushy forest, then across an open patch of rising
ground which soon reverted to forest, its timber being chiefly Tristania
albicans, the turpentine tree of the colonists. Here they saw some beautiful
tree-ferns, Alsophila, fifteen to twenty feet high, Tetrathera
dealbata, and a tree of Urticaceae bearing compound globular
fruit.
[* This surveyor may have been Mr. Govett, who discovered Govett's
Leap, and was the writer of an interesting article describing the mountains
(signed W.R.G.) that appeared in "The Saturday Magazine" for May, 1836. In the
magazine his name is spelled Govatt.]
{Ebook editor's note:
It was, in fact, The surveyor Robert Hoddle, as shown in the Colonial
Secretary Index, which states:--
"On Sep 23rd 1823, J. Oxley instructing him to survey Bell's track from
Richmond to Cox's River, explore for better road to Hunter River settlements,
report on farms occupied at Kurrajong Brush, make survey of Government lands
at Longbottom, etc." (Reel 6068; 4/1814 pp.91-4)
Hoddle reported on Nov 4th "--on his survey of new route from Hawkesbury
River to Cox's River discovered by Mr Bell, exploration of mountainous
district overlook Hunter River; discovery and naming of Panoramic Hill and
Pyramid Hill" (Reel 6068; 4/1814 pp.109-15).}
Half a mile farther the range came to an abrupt rocky termination to the
westward. From the top of this rocky height, which had received the name of
Bell's View, an extensive landscape from S. by way of W. to E. opened to their
gaze. To the S.W. and S.S.W. a series of moderately broken ranges extended
beyond the Old Western Road, then better known as Evans's Track. From N.W. to
N.N.W. Cunningham found that the features of the country resembled those of the
land on the Cudgegong to the eastward of Dabee, seen by him in his last
tour.
The western face of the rocks where the range ended being too steep and
precipitous to descend, the party followed the surveyor's marked trees along the
slope of a steep ravine that trended to the S.W. and descended into brushy,
level country. The brush now became exceedingly dense, being over twelve feet
high in places and composed chiefly of Pultenaea linophylla, Daviesia
ulicina and Bursaria spinosa, or perhaps a distinct species similar
to some found on the Hastings River. Four miles from Bell's View the party
encamped on the edge of another ravine which they quitted next morning, the
28th, and, following the blazed trees westerly, came to another Pultenaea
brush as lofty and dense as those they had passed on the previous day. The
timber at this point was of regular growth, and consisted of blue gum,
stringy-bark and turpentine trees. No stream crossed the lonely road, but some
water was found in the neighbouring gullies.
At the 14th mile a dry scrub took the place of the brush, in which Banksia
serrata of large size, Lomatia silaifolia (parsley fern), Isopogon
anemonifolius, Telopea speciosa, Lambertia formosa and several
well-known Parramatta plants were flourishing in great luxuriance. Another mile
onward, Indigofera australis, Bursaria sp. and Daviesia
ulicina, bound together by Smilax australis, Cassylha
paniculata and Clematis coriacea, formed a compact thicket and it was
with difficulty the men and the pack-horses got through it. Dense bush continued
until the nineteenth mile, when Cunningham reached the broken country he had
seen from Bell's View. Tracing the blazed trees upward, he and his men ascended
the side of the mountain and climbed the fallen timber and scaled the large
rocks, some of which were concealed by luxuriant ferns, until at last the summit
was gained, and the tents pitched at the spot where the surveyor's party had
previously rested.
"The summit of the mountain is named by the aborigines Tomah," writes
Cunningham, "and is 20 miles distant from the Hawkesbury ford at Richmond." The
appearance of the timber at this height differed greatly from the
Eucalyptus in the open country below, and he was struck by the stupendous
size and extraordinary windings of the climbers, particularly of a
Cissus, and also by the magnificent tree-ferns, Dicksonia
antarctica, some of which were thirty feet in height and six to fourteen
inches in diameter. All were tired out when they reached the top of Mount Tomah
and no grass could be found for the exhausted pack-horses; only among the ferns
was a species of Senecio, the heads of which the animals appeared to
nibble.
Nov. 29th.--"It was my intention," continues Cunningham, "to have
spent a whole day at this encampment in order to examine the summit of Mount
Tomah, but as it afforded my horses no fodder, that determined me to proceed
westward early in the afternoon. As far as I could ascertain the timbers were
two lofty species of Eucalyptus; one called white gum, Ceratopetalum
apetalum (I have not the fruit); Achras australis,. Tristania
albicans; Olea paniculata; Elwaeodendron australe; and by far
the more general tree, growing 60-70 feet, is a species of Atherosperma
(sassafras).
"Twining and climbing plants of vast strength and magnitude hang from the
heads of the loftiest trees and bore upon their pliant stems abundance of
climbing Polypodia and tufts of Dendrobium allied to D.
rigidum. Another plant of this beautiful family, rarely to be met with in
the colony, I observed in flower sparingly; it was Sarcochilus falcatus,
of which I gathered a few living specimens. Hanging in clusters from the highest
branches of the trees, I detected a third species of this family, probably a
Dendrobium, not apparently noticed by Mr. Brown: its long, slender,
almost filiform stems were supported by strong roots which adhered firmly to the
branches of the trees whence these plants swing in the breeze perfectly
unencumbered and clear of the stems. A climbing, rooted-stemmed plant adhering
to the trunks of the tree-ferns is very general in these shaded woods, where it
also covers fallen timber. I was fortunate in detecting it in fruit and flower:
it belongs to that division of Bignoniaceae of Jussieu producing
baccate fruit.[*] The filices are numerous and curious.
[* Field's "New South Wales," p. 363, T. 2.]
"The soil of these shades is a loam blended with much decomposed vegetable
matter. In this earth I remarked, partly buried, large blocks of compact
whinstone, and in the banks of the water gullies I traced an abundance of slate.
Fresh water percolates through the soil into the gullies and, although
impregnated with iron, was of good quality. About 1 p.m. we continued our route
over the mountain by the marked trees along a winding course through the darkest
parts of the forest to the north-western declivity.
"Lofty, densely-timbered, mountainous ranges now appeared before us, peering
over each other in no series or order but assuming an aspect so formidable by
their peculiar faces overhanging deep ravines as to seem to defy all further
attempt to penetrate westerly. However, we traced our way by the line of marked
trees down the declivity, which at every step became more and more dangerous by
reason of the loose fragments of sandstone and shelving rock strewn on the
surface.
"In spite of every care, the heaviest-laden packhorse, in attempting to jump
down a perpendicular fall of rock of three feet in depth, lost his balance and
got off his legs in an instant on the edge of a declivity, down which he rolled
over five times before his descent was stopped by the saddlebags. On being
disburdened of his load, he got upon his legs, evidently much shaken but with no
bones broken. The dangers of the loosely-stoned track along a sharp decline of
the mountains, frequently obstructed by fallen timber, appeared so considerable
as scarcely to warrant our further prosecution of the journey to Cox's River
with packhorses so heavily laden as ours. Unwilling, however, to halt and suffer
myself to be discouraged by a single accident, we continued along the slope of
the mountain another half-mile, when, both my wearied beasts having repeatedly
fallen and the path becoming more rough and dangerous with shelving rocks and
fallen timber, I was obliged to halt in stony scrub on the sharp side of the
mountain, it being dusk, and heavy rain having set in for the night. We pitched
our tent, gave our poor beasts a little corn, frugally issued, and secured them
to the trees around our fire without a blade of grass or herb for them to eat,
the recent fires having destroyed every kind of vegetation.
30th--"Some young rushes being found on a patch of bog by one of my
people, I caused the horses to be shifted and tethered upon it. It however
benefited them nothing, since they partook but little of it.
Dec. 1st.--" The route westerly proving much more rugged and
dangerous, and as my horses are now much reduced and the line of road before me
(18 miles to Cox's River) having been reported by the surveyor to be of nothing
but and brushes, I have been induced from necessity to proceed back to my
encampment at Tomah, where I propose to remain a day to rest my wearied
horses."
The horses having refused to eat the grass found on Mount Tomah, and growing
daily more emaciated, Cunningham despatched the weakest in charge of one of the
men back to his encampment of the 27th, while he employed himself at the
mountain in collecting parasitic orchids, of which three species were diffused
through the forests, though difficult to obtain, since they were hanging from
the highest branches of the largest trees. He collected Sarcochilus
falcatus in flower growing on the branches of Atherosperma;
Dendrobium linguaeforme (allied to D. rigidum); and a third
species hanging from the highest trees. He succeeded in gathering specimens in
flower of a tree forty feet high whose natural habits were very remarkable. It
was seen frequently growing together with the Dicksonia antarctica, the
tree-fern of this mountain, each having its separate stem in the ground, but so
united as to appear a single tree, although on one side could be perceived the
rough bark of the tree and on the opposite the rugged caudex of the tree-fern;
and every specimen of the Dicksonia had young seedlings of this tree
growing from its stem.[*] On the 3rd Cunningham quitted Mount Tomah and began
his homeward journey to Parramatta.
[* Heward states that this tree was Quintinia Sieberi (A.
de Cand.). See "Annals of Natural History," Vol. II, P. 356.]
Another expedition to the Illawarra in July and August was purely a
botanizing tour, and it was noteworthy, like the last, for the number of living
plants Cunningham obtained.
Before starting for Illawarra, he paid a flying visit to Bathurst, and on
returning to Parramatta found that the French ship "Coquille" (Captain Duperrey)
was at anchor in Port Jackson. He accompanied the French scientists in their
excursions over the Blue Mountains; and his knowledge of the ranges proved
helpful to MM. Durnont d'Urville and Lesson, the former then acting as botanist,
while the latter was naturalist to the French expedition.
At the end of March, 1824, the King's Botanist (the title by which Cunningham
appears to have been best known) began a southerly journey through the counties
of Argyle and Camden. At this time he visited Lake George and Lake Bathurst. A
plant of the south coast discovered in 1802 by Mr. Brown (Lomatia
ilicifolia), found growing in great profusion in the Argyle district, and
the singular limestone caves to which he paid a short visit, seemed to him the
most interesting features of this excursion. The distance travelled was about
420 miles, and he returned to Parramatta in May.
Cunningham was botanizing at Illawarra when he heard that Mr. Oxley was
preparing to voyage to Moreton Bay, taking with him a party "equipped with every
necessary store and provision to found a colony there." Included in Oxley's
party were Lieutenant Millar, 40th Regiment, his wife and family, fourteen
soldiers, a commissariat officer or storekeeper, his assistant, and about twenty
prisoners, Lieutenant Millar having been appointed commandant of the proposed
settlement.
On hearing this news Cunningham hurried back to Sydney and joined Oxley, who
sailed in the "Amity" brig on September 2nd, arriving safely at Moreton Bay on
September 11, 1824.
Before relating Cunningham's adventures at Moreton Bay it is necessary at
this point to give some account of the earlier history of the bay wherein the
capital of Queensland is situated.
MORETON BAY AND THE BRISBANE RIVER
FLINDERS, OXLEY AND CUNNINGHAM
It will be remembered that on Thursday, May 17, 1770, Cook had discovered
Point Lookout and had named a wide, open bay on the north side of it Morton's
Bay. Banks, too, had written on that day, "I was led to conclude that the bottom
of the bay might open into a large river," for the sea-water here had turned a
dirty clay colour as if charged with freshes.
In 1799 Captain John Hunter, Governor of New South Wales, aware that Cook's
discoveries of Moreton Bay and Harvey Bay remained unsurveyed, agreed to Matthew
Flinders' proposal to examine both harbours; Moreton Bay at this time being more
generally known as Glasshouse Bay. Hunter, however, informed Flinders that he
must complete the voyage in six weeks.
Flinders and his brother Samuel Flinders, a midshipman in the "Reliance,"
left Sydney on July 8th in the colonial sloop "Norfolk,"[*] the small ship in
which Flinders and Bass had recently circumnavigated Tasmania. She was manned by
volunteers from the "Reliance" and the "Buffalo"; and Boongaree,[**] the Broken
Bay native, made one of the crew. As he sailed northwards Flinders carefully
traced the East coast placing on his chart that part of it which Cook had left
uncharted. On the 9th he named Sugarloaf Point and noted the situation of two
dangerous rocks (Seal Rocks). At Cape Hawke he found that what Cook had mistaken
for two hillocks was in fact the pitch of the Cape itself. On July 10th, the
"Norfolk"sprang a leak which gave all on board cause for alarm. She now passed
the Solitary Islands, and Flinders added five to those on his chart discovered
by Cook. He records that he thought these islands might with equal propriety
have been termed "miserable." On July 11th, he saw a small river-like opening
(Wooli Wooli River) in 29°43' S., with an islet at its entrance, and at sunset
entered a larger inlet, to which he gave the name of Shoal Bay. He went in his
boat to examine this harbour and found it shallow, but missed seeing the
entrance to the Clarence River, which admittedly is not easily
distinguished.
[* Built in Norfolk Island of the pine of the country.]
[** There are variations in the diaries of the spelling of this
name.]
Returning to the sloop at noon he next landed on the South Head and proved
the entrance to be in 29°26'28". On the South Head some native huts were seen,
circular in form, the framework of each being made of vine shoots crossed and
bound together with grass, superior to any at Port Jackson. The palm-nut tree
mentioned by Cook was found growing here.
On the afternoon of the 12th Flinders weighed and made sail, and next day
passed Mount Warning and Cape Byron; and, in order to avoid the reef off Point
Danger, he then kept his ship at some distance from the coast.
On the 14th he again drew near the land at Point Lookout and found its
latitude to be 27°27' S., whereas Cook had made it 27°6'. At dusk Cape Moreton
bore west two or three miles and over the distant land the highest Glasshouse
Mountain appeared W. 3° or 4° N. Two hummocks resembling hay-cocks opened soon
afterwards a few degrees to the southward.
The "Norfolk" stood round Cape Moreton and steered westward to enter Moreton
Bay, but, finding the passage blocked up by sand shoals and there being little
wind, Flinders dropped anchor for the night at eight o'clock, Cape Moreton then
bearing E.S.E. two or three miles. Weighing again on the 15th July[*] the sloop
steered eastward and worked down the western shores of what Flinders afterwards
called Moreton Island until he reached lat. 27°00'29" S., Cape Moreton then
bearing east 10° north two or three miles. While ranging within a mile of the
shore ten natives, some of whom were women, greeted the vessel after the native
fashion, shouting words similar to those used by the Port Jackson blacks; one
waved a green branch from side to side until it touched the ground; others beat
the surf with their sticks and all seemed anxious for the ship to draw further
into the bay.
[* This is an important date, as, according to Flinders he made
his way into Moreton Bay on the 15th. Collins, who wrote his Voyage, makes it
the 14th.]
At eight in the evening Flinders anchored in eleven fathoms of water, two
miles from a low sandy shore on the west side of the bay, off a point at the
southern end of Bribie Island. At daylight next morning, the 16th, the sloop
weighed to sail up the bay, and while she was beating through the shoals
Flinders caught sight of an opening in the low land to westward. He wished to
come to an anchorage there but, shoal water preventing him, he anchored among
the shoals at a quarter past eight in three fathoms. After breakfast a boat was
lowered and Flinders, accompanied by Boongaree, went to examine the opening. "In
approaching the sandy point on the east side of it some dogs were noticed on the
beach," and soon afterwards natives appeared with their fishing nets over their
shoulders. They apparently were unarmed but many carried pieces of wood in their
hands. The boat drew closer in shore and the men lay on their oars while
Flinders by signs tried to converse with the natives.
Boongaree wished to go and speak to them, and on meeting them immediately
began to make friends, exchanging his yarn belt for a fillet of kangaroo hair.
As all seemed well, Flinders took his gun and prepared to join Boongaree, but,
seeing that they eyed his weapon suspiciously, he placed it on the beach before
he approached the group of natives. He gave one man a woollen cap and showed
that he desired a net bag in exchange. Flinders happened to be wearing a white
cabbage-tree hat, at which from the first moment they saw it the blacks cast
longing glances. Its neatly plaited strands drew forth their admiration, for
they were experts of the art, and a little later the hat became the innocent
cause of a sudden display of anger on the part of the islanders. On their asking
for it and its being refused them the man who had accepted the cap threw it
behind him and tried to secure the hat. At first the natives appeared amiable,
and although they followed Flinders and Boongaree too closely on their return to
the boat they were not unduly excited.
Then a native with a long, hooked stick tried to remove Flinders' hat;
another stretched his arm for it from behind. These futile attempts created
laughter, but when they saw the boat putting off from the shore the temper of
the natives suddenly changed. One threw a piece of firewood at the strangers;
another, running into the surf, hurled a second piece at short range. Both
missiles fell short and a few moments later the man in the water threw a spear,
which passed over the centre of the boat close to the gunwale. In reply to this
unprovoked attack Flinders twice snapped his gun at the blackfellow, but each
time it missed fire. At a third attempt the gun went off and the natives,
including the man in the water, fell flat on their faces. As they quickly made
off it was seen that this man went slowly as though he had been wounded. The bay
had to be examined and the leak had to be repaired; so Flinders says that he was
determined to create respect among these people, and therefore he ordered two
shots to be fired into the brush where natives were seen watching the boat
through the trees.
From this low and sandy point, which on account of what had occurred was
called Point Skirmish, the boat proceeded into the opening leading to the
Glasshouses. Unaware that this point was a part of an island Flinders named the
opening Pumice Stone River (it is now called Pumice Stone Strait) because of the
quantity of pumice stone strewn there, from which it was inferred that the three
Glasshouse Mountains were of volcanic origin. The boatmen could not get far up
the opening owing to the strong ebb tide, and Flinders landed on its eastern
side to view the country. Here five or six native huts twelve to fifteen feet
long were standing close together. In one was found a small and very light
shield; in another was an old net with a bag attached--the mesh knotted after
the manner of European seine-makers, and obviously it was a scoop net, which was
unknown on the south coast.
Among the large trees growing on Bribie Island was one different from any at
Port Jackson. Its leaves were dark and resembled those of a pine; its wood smelt
strongly of turpentine and it was red in the centre like an ironbark. Blue gum,
she-oak, and cherry-tree all grew at this place, as well as a tree possessing
the leaves of a gum, yet having the soft bark of the tea tree.
On returning to the ship Flinders found that the leak had been stopped and he
therefore decided to leave the examination of the Glasshouses until another time
and to proceed southwards and explore the southern shores of Moreton Bay. At
daylight on Wednesday, July 17th, the sloop got under weigh, and at half past
ten anchored at a mile and' a half from a point with red cliffs, which was named
Red Cliff Point. He says: "slightly to westward of it the latitude was found to
be 27°16'25" S." This is the latitude of Woody Point. Flinders had now reached
the mainland shores of Queensland.
From Red Cliff Point he pulled over to a green headland (Woody Point) two
miles distant to westward; some small reefs lying off it resembled a miniature
barrier reef. In a native hut on the west side of the headland where he landed
he found a seine 14 fathoms long with meshes larger than any English seine and
the twine stronger, while at each end there was a pointed stick, three feet in
length (a net for catching dugong). Upon a shoal near the house were some weirs
set in a semicircle and made of sticks and branches so closely interwoven that
no fish could get through. Flinders brought the net away and left a hatchet in
its place. The remains of a stringy-bark canoe were lying close to the house,
and footprints of dogs, kangaroos, and emus were seen on the beach. Flinders
shot a curious hawk here of a dull red colour with a milk-white head, neck, and
breast. In the afternoon the "Norfolk" made further progress down the bay,
anchoring for the night over a muddy bottom. It is a pity for the sake of those
interested in the early history of Queensland that Flinders did not publish his
own story of the surveys he now made, for he was the first navigator to examine
Moreton Bay after Cook had placed its outer shores upon his chart. Governor
Hunter, however, delivered Flinders' journal to Colonel Collins to edit, and he
gives the following account of the explorations that were now carried out:
"On the following morning, July 18th, they got under weigh with a flood tide
and a moderate breeze from the northward. In their progress they passed two
islands of from 3 to 4 miles in circuit. The northernmost was the largest, being
nearly level with the water's edge. [This apparently was Mud Island.] The
foliage of the trees upon the southern island was equally dark and luxuriant,
but the interior part of it was higher. [St. Helena Island.] There were two
other smaller islands nearly on a level with the first, but the southernmost was
very small. [These appear to have been Green Island and King Islet respectively;
see chart, which will now best help to identify the discoveries.] In passing
between the two islands [Mud Island and St. Helena] they had deep water, but on
its suddenly shoaling they tacked and stood to the westward. In this situation
the entrance from Moreton Bay was open. To the south-east about five miles
distant was another island larger than any of the four islands above mentioned.
[Peel Island.]
"Reckoning the northernmost of the four islands to be the first in number
they made their course good for the third island [Green Island] and the water
deepened to six fathoms.[*]
[* Collins.]

MORETON BAY, FROM FLINDERS' ATLAS, SHOWING HIS DISCOVERIES IN THE
"NORFOLK'S" VOYAGE
As the "Norfolk" proceeded higher up the bay a number of natives with long
poles like those of the South Sea Islanders appeared to be advancing towards
her. It was thought that they were in their canoes and were coming to attack the
ship which was quickly prepared for defence. The supposed fleet however turned
out to be only a number of peaceable fishermen standing in a line upon a mud
flat surrounding the island and splashing the water with their long sticks in
order to drive the fish into their nets.
Some smaller islands[*] (now known as Fisherman Islands) concealed the
entrance to the Brisbane River, blocking Flinders' view so that he was not aware
that a river opened here into the bay. The flood tide having ceased, the
"Norfolk" anchored at noon in 27°27¼' S. in six fathoms. This latitude confirmed
his previous observations made on the 14th at Point Lookout. The third island
then bore south-west about one and a half to two miles, the centres of the two
northern islands north and north-west and the entrance to Moreton Bay N. 77°
E.
[* Dr. Lang says that Flinders named these islands Fisherman
Islands. Collins's account, however, and Flinders' chart make it appear that
the name Fisherman Islands was first bestowed upon Green Island and its
neighbours. For Collins states: "The third island on which the natives were,"
bore W. 4° S. about one and a half to two miles from the "Norfolk's"
anchorage. The islands now called Fisherman Islands would bear N.W. from it,
and they are not placed on Flinders' chart.]
From the "Norfolk's" anchorage the shores of Moreton Bay looked closed all
round excepting in the south-east, where there was a small opening. A sixth
island was seen in the passage to this opening, and as soon as the ebb tide had
slacked Flinders weighed and made sail, beating up to it against a south
wind.[*] The "Norfolk" passed close to the third island (Green Island), and on
standing round the south part of the shoal which seemed to surround it a native
was observed signalling to those on board, but being anxious to get up the bay
as far as possible while the tide was favourable, Flinders paid no attention to
him. To the east of the sixth island the deep water contracted to a narrow
channel, and a little before midnight the sloop was compelled to anchor
there.
[* "Terra Australis," p. 197 and Collins, Vol. II, P,
240.]
On the following day, July 19th, Flinders landed upon the sixth island (Innes
Island) with instruments to take angles and to observe the latitude. He saw
footprints of dogs and of men, those of the latter barely visible. There were,
however, native fire-places on the island and other signs that it had lately
been visited. "It was two or three miles in circumference...the west side
abundantly covered with mangroves." The trees, "among which was the new pine,
were large and luxuriant." The north-east and south-west sides were chiefly low
and sandy, and here again the nut-palm was growing. Boughs were seen stuck in
the ground and placed round native fire-places to keep off the southerly winds.
A black and white cockatoo, a beautiful lilac-headed parrot, and the
mocking-bird with a bald head (of Port Jackson) were the most noticeable birds
there.
Flinders writes at this time: "The latitude observed upon the sixth island
was 27°35' S...Above this island [i.e. farther southward towards the southern
extremity of Moreton Bay] the east and west shores from being 9 or 10 miles
apart, approach each other within two miles and the space between them takes the
form of a river [here he would be alluding to the space at the mouth of the
Logan River], but the entrance was too full of shoals to leave a hope of
penetrating by it far into the interior...Under this discouragement and
that of a foul wind all further research at the head of Glasshouse Bay was given
up."
These words show that although Flinders afterwards wrote in a general way,
"no river of importance intersects the east coast between the 24th and 39th
degree of South latitude," he had seen signs of an opening into the land. It was
left for Captain Logan, commandant at Brisbane, to discover the river which
bears his name. It is, however, only navigable for small vessels.
Next morning, on leaving the anchorage off Innes Island, Flinders sailed
northwards, again passing between St. Helena and Mud Islands and anchoring at
sunset within two miles of the entrance to Pumice Stone River.[*]
[* Collins.]
Early on July 21st he set out in his boat to explore the river and the
opening which later proved to be a strait, in order to find a spot where he
could lay his ship ashore. On approaching Point Skirmish he saw five or six
natives unarmed on the beach. The shoals in the stream were very intricate, but
he found a place large enough to admit the sloop.
At nearly the end of this boat excursion Flinders went on shore, choosing a
piece of dry sand "out of the reach of native spears" at about six miles from
Point Skirmish, where he shot some swans. Before the boat had reached the sand
at a higher part of the river a man with whom were women and children had hailed
Flinders from the west side calling "Woorah," "woorah." The boat was backed near
enough for a yarn stocking to be thrown at him, and to show him how it might be
worn as a cap, and Flinders and the blackfellow parted good friends.
On the 22nd the "Norfolk" was brought into Pumice Stone River to be repaired.
The place chosen to lay the ship down was "on the east side[*] at a small beach
five miles above Point Skirmish, where the depth was 7 fathoms." On this day
Flinders seems to have seen dugong in the river, and it is strange he had not
met with them sooner as they were very numerous there in early days. He
describes "several animals that came to the surface to blow in the manner of a
seal," they did not spout nor had they any dorsal fin--their heads "resembling
the bluff nosed seal." He fired three musket balls into one and Boongaree
speared another, but they both sank. These animals, observes Flinders, might be
sea-lions. They are, however, better known as sea-cows.
[* Introduction to "Terra Australis," p. 197.]
On the 25th the "Norfolk" was ready for sea. Her cargo having been restowed
and her water completed, Flinders proceeded in her up Pumice Stone River for two
or three miles, intending to visit the Glasshouse Mountains, which, he says,
"had excited his curiosity." In the deepest parts of the river there were four
to six fathoms, but the channel was narrow and much divided. The "Norfolk" was
brought to an anchorage on the west side, at the place where Flinders had been
hailed by a blackfellow on the 21st. Here a fire was seen burning and several
women's voices were heard. Next morning Flinders went by boat "up a small branch
that pointed towards the peaks," but it was found to rejoin the same stream and
form two low mangrove islands the Glasshouses then being "on the left hand."
Leaving the boat at 9.30 and taking Boongaree and two t seamen with him
Flinders set out on a north-west-by-west course, which brought them to a creek
with low muddy banks covered with mangroves. This creek they followed to the
southwest over swampy country towards its head, and as it became shallow they
waded over it. They then steered north-west, occasionally sighting the
Glasshouse mountain with sloping sides, and according to Flinders' description,
"a Stony Mount" towards which, as it was nearer, he turned, and after having
walked nine miles from the time he had left the boat he climbed to the top. The
ascent was difficult, and he was reminded of Mount Direction in Tasmania. The
trees on it were taller and straighter than were those passed on level
ground.
From the summit of this mount Flinders obtained an extensive view of the
southern shores of Moreton Bay and the neighbouring country. "The uppermost part
of the bay (i.e. the southernmost) appeared at S. 24° E. and most probably
communicated with a line of water which was visible at S. 12° E., where there
were several distinct columns of smoke."[*] This last bearing, says Collins,
"Mr. Flinders apprehended to be near the head of the river he was not Permitted
to enter with the sloop from the intricacy of the channel and the shortness of
time which remained for his excursion." In this direction too he must have seen
the High Peak of his chart which was named later, Flinders Peak.
[* See Collins, Vol. II, P. 247. The "line of water" in the
south-east seen by Flinders from "Stony Mount" was most likely the Brisbane
River, and not the Logan which he had been unable to enter.]
From Stony Mount the highest Glasshouse (Beerwah) bore four miles distant to
the north-west. Flinders also saw in the direction of the head of Pumice Stone
River a large sheet of water which seemed to divide into small branches; and
doubtless he then obtained a view of the waters of the channel which led from
the strait to the sea. There was a large smoke near the foot of the mountains
inland.
On continuing their journey, the sun being then below the trees, they
encamped for the night by a stream at about two-thirds of the distance between
the Stony Mount and the Glasshouse with the flat top. At seven the next morning,
July 27th, they arrived at the foot of this Glasshouse Mountain (Canowrin); but
owing to the steepness of its sides it was found impossible to ascend it.
Flinders found there no marks of volcanic eruption, and few traces of men or
animals were noticed at this stage of their tour.
Flinders now turned back and took a south-south-east course in order to get
clear of the head of the creek and the swamps; this course leading him inland,
he altered it, and after crossing a broad stream of fresh water walked three
miles back to the boat. Next morning, Sunday, the 28th, the "Norfolk" proceeded
down the river and anchored about a mile within its entrance, where she was
detained for two days.
At this time natives from both sides of Pumice Stone River visited the
parties on shore. Flinders now seems to have learned more about the natives than
ever before, which, he says, was due to the friendliness of "the gallant and
unsuspecting" Boongaree, who, finding their spears inferior to his own, not only
made them a present of a better one and a throwing stick, but showed them how to
use them. Afterwards they, in turn, were very friendly and sang songs for the
visitors in a most pleasing way. On observing that they were listened to
attentively they each selected a white man, and with much earnestness sang in
his ear as if trying to teach their song to him. Like the natives of Endeavour
River it was the custom for them to introduce strange natives to the white men
by their names. Flinders made them many presents. It was ascertained that they
fished almost altogether with cast and setting nets. Their spears were of solid
wood and they did not use the womerah. Their canoes, one of which was closely
examined, were of stringy-bark, the ends being tied up in a rather clumsy
fashion.
On Wednesday, 31st, Flinders sailed out of Moreton Bay, after having spent
fifteen days in exploring it. He then named the land on which Cape Moreton was
situated Moreton Island, "supposing that Cook would have called it so had he
known of its insularity." Steering northward along the coast he passed Wide Bay
on August 1st and Sandy Cape on the 2nd (placing it in lat. 24°45' S.) and
entered Hervey Bay on the 6th. On the voyage he noticed in the water one of the
spotted sea-snakes with a flat tail such as Banks had seen off Hervey Bay and
like those he himself had seen when sailing through Torres Strait with Bligh in
H.M.S. "Providence." Flinders thought they were a similar kind to those Dampier
had observed on the North-West Coast.
Hervey Bay appeared to be deep and extensive. Flinders sailed round it and
did not find any rivers there; his time, however, was too limited to allow him
to examine it very thoroughly. He tried to take the sloop into one
opening--apparently about two miles wide--but it was full of shoals and he could
discover no channel into it. He anchored half a mile to the north-west of a low
islet rocky sandy spot in 25°17' S.--lying in this opening. On the islet were
seen thousands of curlews, besides other birds, and he named it Curlew Islet. A
cluster of palms and a few small trees grew there and two or three large
trees--of a tough close-grained wood--lay upon the shore thrown down by either
wind or flood. Upon one of these was caught the cap of a whale's skull and in
one of the eye sockets a bird had built its nest. Natives visited Curlew Islet,
for their spears of solid wood--one being barbed with bone--were picked up there
and their fires were burning in different places around the bay.
Flinders found that Hervey Bay was divided into an upper and lower bay; the
shores on the east side of the former being high and bounded by steep white
cliffs. He thought a channel would be discovered, for he "was unwilling to
believe that there was not a good passage even to the head of a sheet of water 6
or 7 miles square into which probably one or more streams emptied themselves."
He left Hervey Bay on August 7th. Owing to unfavourable winds the "Norfolk" did
not reach Port Jackson until the 20th.
OXLEY IN THE "MERMAID"
Twenty-four years passed away and no further survey of Moreton Bay took place
until 1823, when John Oxley was instructed by Sir Thomas Brisbane to examine
various harbours to the northward and to select one as the site for a new penal
settlement.
Oxley left Port Jackson in the "Mermaid," Charles Penson, master, on October
23rd, taking with him Lieutenant Stirling of the Buffs, Mr. Uniacke, and a
Sydney native named Bowen.
After touching at Port Macquarie the "Mermaid" met with a strong gale, from
which she sought shelter on the 31st at Cook Island off Point Danger. Before
coming there Oxley had sighted the mouth of a river to the northward, which he
afterwards named the Tweed. Next day he sent the master to inspect it while
Stirling and Uniacke landed on Cook Island. The island was thought to be of
volcanic origin, for the rocks of which it was composed were full of curious
holes; there were similar rocks upon a bluff headland on the main opposite, and
these were "only inferior in extent to the Giants Causeway"; the headland to-day
is known as Fingal Point. The surf beat upon Cook Island with terrific force,
driving the water up through the holes in the rocks with a deafening noise.
On the north-west point Stirling and Uniacke saw a wreck and imagined that
the ship might have belonged to the expedition of La Pérouse, whose fate was
then still unknown. The larboard quarter, with part of the stern and quarter
deck, were all that remained of a vessel of about 300 tons. The oak planks "were
not yet totally destroyed," says Uniacke, who was of the opinion that the wreck
could not have been a recent one. Oxley closely examined it, hoping to trace the
ship's name, but without success. A piece of slate with part of a name deeply
scratched on it and part of a case of mathematical instruments were all that
could be found. Turtle were so numerous on the island that Oxley was induced to
call this island Turtle Island, a name, however, that has not survived.
On his return the master reported that he had inspected the river which had
been sighted to northward, and that it had a bar entrance; a party therefore
crossed over to the mainland to explore it and found that it ran through "a deep
rich valley clothed with magnificent trees behind which rose Mount Warning's
singular peak." On the right bank of the stream, which was traced for some
distance, a native man with some women and children were seen whose only
defensive weapon was a stone hatchet. The man was curiously scarified all over
his body.
A favourable wind arose, and as Oxley wished to proceed to sea the further
survey of the Tweed River was postponed.
The "Mermaid" hoisted her sails and was preparing to weigh anchor when 200
natives armed with spears came to watch her go, evidently pleased at her
departure. On November 6th at noon Oxley reached Port Curtis. He immediately
went to sound the port while Stirling and Uniacke landed at Facing Island to
seek for fresh water, and found a small quantity. Later in the afternoon they
accompanied Oxley on an excursion. On quitting the ship with two boats and
sufficient provisions to last his party three days, he at first steered to South
Shore Head, six miles from the anchorage. Here the mangroves were impenetrable
and the boats were taken two miles beyond the Head to a sandy beach, where the
tents were pitched--the seamen building a comfortable hut for themselves out of
boat sails.
Oxley left a corporal and three men in charge of the camp, and crossed the
country in a south-south-east direction, when he met with two rivulets, a larger
and a smaller stream. Near the first he discovered a curious native grave lying
at the foot of a large tree. The bark had been torn from the trunk upwards for
about six feet and the wood was deeply engraved with rude symbols resembling the
footprints of kangaroos and emus. It was therefore supposed to be "the grave of
a great hunter."
The outward journey had been a difficult one, but the men having notched the
trees, their journey back to the camp was made easier. Oxley set out next day
with another party to look for the mouths of the two rivulets, and soon came to
a creek which, after he had traced it for six miles, led him to a spot where
there was fresh water, but in such small quantities that he considered the place
unsuitable for a settlement.
Meanwhile the master who had been carrying out explorations elsewhere had
discovered a fresh-water river to the southward. On hearing this piece of good
news Oxley decided to remain longer at Port Curtis. On the following day he
proceeded in his boat with some of his party twelve miles up the newly
discovered river and encamped on a bank forty feet above it. Teal, widgeon, and
numerous wild birds covered its surface, and Uniacke shot two swamp pheasants (a
black bird in shape like an English pheasant), a small dove unknown in Sydney,
and a new kind of owl--with a black head. The mosquitoes here were unbearable,
"their noise alone sufficient to banish sleep--their stings extremely painful,"
so that the party spent a broken night and could get no rest.
Next morning Oxley returned on board the "Mermaid." Before taking his
departure he ascended a hill and from it obtained a good view of the surrounding
country. He gave the name of the Boyne to the river.
The mate, who had been absent sounding the entrance, now announced that he
had found a harbour to the south-east. On the receipt of this information Oxley
decided to abandon the idea of visiting Port Bowen altogether and to investigate
the new harbour. On Saturday, November 15th, he therefore left Port Curtis and
made his way towards it. The inlet, to his disappointment, proved to be Rodd's
Bay, which had already been reported by Captain King. The "Mermaid" left Rodd's
Bay, where the sea was infested with sharks, on November 21st. She experienced
very tempestuous weather and did not reach Moreton Bay until November 29, 1823,
at 6 p.m., when she anchored 150 yards off the shore in the exact place where
twenty-four years previously Matthew Flinders had brought the "Norfolk" to an
anchorage.
PAMPHLET, PARSONS, AND FINNEGAN
The "Mermaid" had scarcely let go her anchor off Skirmish Point than a number
of natives were seen hurrying towards the beach. While they were still some
distance off Uniacke, who was watching them through his glass from the masthead,
noticed a man with a lighter skin than the rest and pointed him out to Stirling
and some others on board, consequently, when the blacks collected there, Uniacke
says, "we were all on the look out for him." To their surprise on coming
opposite the ship the man hailed them in English.
Oxley, Stirling, and Uniacke immediately went ashore, and on their landing
the blacks were overcome with delight and embraced the white man, for such he
proved to be, again and again, while he seemed nearly as wild as they, He was
perfectly naked and covered all over with red and white paint.
He told Oxley his story. His name was Thomas Pamphlet and he had left Sydney
in an open boat for Five Islands with three companions on March 21, 1823. They
had been driven out to sea and suffered inconceivable hardships, being
twenty-one days without water. One of them had lost his reason and perished. On
April 16th they had landed on Moreton Island, where their boat was stove in. His
two surviving companions, named Parsons and Finnegan, were absent, as only six
weeks before all three had started to walk to Sydney. He had knocked up after
walking fifty miles and returned to this tribe again. Finnegan, having
quarrelled with Parsons, had also returned, but was now absent at the south end
of Moreton Bay. Parsons had not since been heard of. The man grew so bewildered
as he tried to tell this story that little that he said could be understood.
Oxley distributed presents of knives and coloured handkerchiefs among his black
friends and took Pamphlet back with him on board the "Mermaid." Next day,
Pamphlet gave Mr. Oxley an account of his adventures, which, as he related it,
Mr. Uniacke wrote down, adding Finnegan's story to it when he joined the ship on
this day, Sunday, November 30th.
They stated that after landing at Moreton Island in a thoroughly exhausted
condition they found fresh water, which had saved their lives. While they
remained there they had met with natives, who treated them in a most humane way.
They left the island in a native canoe and took up their abode with this tribe,
whose principal dwelling-place was at Pumice Stone River. The blacks proved true
friends to the shipwrecked men, not only lending them nets with which to provide
themselves with fish but catching it for them and showing them how to obtain
dingowa or fern-root, which was very nutritious. (Parsons tells us that a larger
root was called bangwa). The three men quarrelled among themselves; Parsons and
Pamphlet were anxious to return to Sydney, while Finnegan, remembering the
terrors he had endured in his last voyage, was just as anxious to remain at
Moreton Bay.
After making vain attempts to get away, Parsons and Pamphlet determined to
build a canoe in which to put to sea. They chose a tree suitable for this
purpose and having felled it started to make the canoe. For nearly three weeks
they, worked from sunrise till sunset with no other tool than an axe saved from
the wreck. The natives watched them and took keen interest in their work. While
the men fashioned their craft they brought them food and left fish in their hut
every day. Finnegan declined either to undertake the voyage or to help the other
two build their boat. When they saw that he would not bear any share of the
toil, the natives frequently would take the axe away from the other two and
offer it to him. On Finnegan's persisting in his refusal to use it they no
longer would bring him food, and he was compelled to dig fern-root for himself.
To the delight of the two men and also of the natives at last the canoe was
finished. They insisted on launching it, and when they saw it afloat with
Parsons and Pamphlet in it their joy knew no bounds. They gave the two men a
store of fish for their use, and on the following afternoon watched Parsons and
Pamphlet set out on their voyage with the flood tide. Finnegan, who had been
firm in his resolve to remain behind, was then forced by the blacks into one of
their canoes, which quickly followed the other men, but not catching them up
Finnegan was put on a sandbank, where the natives left him. He would have been
drowned at high tide had not Parsons and Pamphlet, seeing his plight, turned
back and rescued him.
Following directions given them by the natives, the men steered to an island
at the bottom of Moreton Bay. Here they spent the night. After rounding the
island and laying in a supply of fern-root on the opposite side, they crossed
over to another part of the bay. A strong tide was running which made the
passage difficult, and they did not reach the shore until after dark. They
landed and next morning made their way to some high ground in order to view the
coast and saw another point at some distance to northward, but the land between
appeared to recede so deeply that they were afraid to venture across the wide
opening in their frail craft. They therefore drew their canoe high up on the
beach and started to walk round the bay. The shore was thickly lined with
mangroves, and they soon were forced to leave it and follow a native
footpath.
On the third day they arrived on the bank of a river at a spot that was
evidently used by the natives for a crossing place. The stream was too wide for
them to swim over it, and as the men could find no canoes there they determined
to follow the river's course until they reached a part where it could be forded.
They accordingly traversed the bank of the main stream for nearly a month, their
path being much impeded by a number of salt-water creeks which joined the river,
and as neither Parsons nor Finnegan could swim well enough to attempt to cross
them they were obliged to walk round them.
At length the men reached a creek on the opposite bank of which two canoes
were seen. Pamphlet swam over and brought one back to his companions. It was
very small and would only carry two people, so, he says, "I therefore took
Parsons over the main river first." He afterwards returned for Finnegan.
Then for the first time white men crossed the Brisbane River.
The brush on the opposite side was so thick and the country so rough that the
men could not travel over it with their bare feet. They therefore commenced
their return journey, and having found another canoe paddled down the stream
until they came to its mouth.
On the one hundred and first day after they had left Sydney, that is to say,
on or about June 30, 1823, they reached a point of land which they had
previously seen from Moreton Island, and again recognizing it knew that they
were back in Moreton Bay.
To return to Mr. Oxley. Hearing on Saturday from Pamphlet that Finnegan had
gone on an expedition to the bottom of the bay, he resolved to find him on the
Monday. Next day, however, a man was seen walking on a sandbank off the shore
opposite, who proved to be Finnegan, and he joined Pamphlet on board the
cutter.
THE BRISBANE RIVER
Both these men informed Mr. Oxley of the existence of the large river that
fell into the south end of Moreton Bay,[*] and on Monday, December 1st, Oxley
and Stirling, taking Finnegan with them in the whale-boat and providing
themselves with provisions for four days, set out from the anchorage to explore
the bay and the river. The first day's survey terminated a little above Red
Cliff Point. Writing of this day's progress Uniacke says: "Mr. Oxley told us
that after losing the first day in the examination of a large creek which
Finnegan mistook for the river they had on the following day entered the river
itself by an entrance three miles wide."[**]
[* Pamphlet in his narrative makes it certain that it was the
Brisbane River these men had crossed, for he says: "Mr. Oxley and Mr. Stirling
set out the following morning, taking Finnegan to examine the river we had
been so long in attempting to cross."]
[** "Field's Geographical Memoirs," P. 82.
Oxley thus describes his coming to the Brisbane River: "Early on the second
day (2nd of December, 1823) we had the satisfaction to find the tide sweeping us
up a considerable opening between the First Islands and the mainland. The
muddiness of the water and the fresh-water mollusca convinced us we were
entering a large river; and a few hours ended our anxiety by the water becoming
perfectly fresh while no diminution had taken place in the size of the stream
after passing what I called 'Sea Reach.'...At sunset we had proceeded about
twenty miles up the river. Up to this point it was navigable for ships not
drawing more than 16 feet of water."
Oxley thought the scenery peculiarly beautiful, the country hilly and level,
the soil brushwood on which grew timber of great magnitude. He then noticed a
pine (doubtless the tree mentioned by Cunningham and called after him), and he
writes: "A magnificent species of pine was in great abundance...and to the
south-east a little distance from the river were several brushes...of
Cupressus australis of a very large size." On the following day Oxley
continued his boat voyage for another thirty miles, the river keeping its depth
and width excepting in one place, where a rocky ridge crossed it. From these
sunken rocks to a place called Termination Hill the stream maintained its size.
The day was very hot and the boatmen exhausted after their long pull, so Oxley
determined to end his journey there, being then "70 miles from the vessel and
our stock of provisions expended."
He landed on the south bank of the river and ascended a low hill about 250
feet[*] above its level. (He named it Termination Hill.) From it he obtained a
better view of the river's course, being able to trace the stream for thirty or
forty miles, and seeing a distant mountain ("which I conjecture to be the High
Peak of Flinders") bearing south 1½ east distant from twenty-five to thirty
miles.[**]
[* According to Oxley's report.]
[** There was evidently an error in Oxley's chart, as upon it
Termination Hill was placed within six miles of the Peak. Captain King remarks
"the mountain must be some part of the range north-west of Mount
Warning."]
The place of Oxley's turning on this boat voyage has been a much discussed
point, and it is said that it is impossible to determine the exact spot where
the voyage ended either from Oxley's own report dated January 10, 1824, or from
Stirling's chart of the part traversed. The chart published with the report
shows that the point where Oxley turned back was slightly beyond Termination
Hill, and he himself says that he was then seventy miles from the ship.
(Cunningham, who went with him on his second excursion up the river, states that
"the extreme-point of the former party's penetration was about sixty miles
from the sea," and that on again reaching that point Mr. Oxley "instantly
recognized the clear grassy bank on which he had then encamped.")[*]
[* To Telfair.]
Oxley returned down the river with the ebb tide and spent the night at the
base of the Green Hills, the highest of which was ascended next morning, when he
obtained an extensive view. The high range of Mount Warning appeared to lose
itself westward, and with the exception of the peak before mentioned (which was
the termination of the north end of that range) there was scarcely a hill to be
seen. So much time was spent in examining the country above Sea Reach that it
was dark before the boat reached the river's entrance, where Oxley again
encamped. He named the stream the Brisbane River in honour of Sir Thomas
Brisbane. The whole of the following day was spent in sounding the entrance and
surveying the country in the vicinity of Red Cliff Point, and it was late on the
night of December 5th before the party got back to the "Mermaid." In this voyage
Oxley discovered that Point Lookout was on an island and that the bay extended
as far south as 28°. In five or six days the cutter got under weigh and set sail
for Sydney. Before he sailed Mr. Oxley left a memorandum in a bottle near the
wooding place on Bribie Island for Parsons telling him that he had called there
and had taken his companions away.
CUNNINGHAM's FIRST JOURNEY IN QUEENSLAND
When the "Amity" arrived at Moreton Bay on September 11, 1824, it was Oxley's
intention to establish his colony on some of the islands at the head of the bay.
None of these proving suitable he afterwards fixed upon Red Cliff Point as the
site for his settlement, because "water was found convenient to the beach and
the timber was tall and straight."
Oxley's first thought, however, on returning for the second time to Moreton
Bay was for Parsons, the shipwrecked man who since the day of his parting with
Finnegan "had not been heard of." In an old field notebook of Oxley's[*] an
entry in his handwriting dated September 16, 1824, shows that he lost no time in
making inquiries about him. The entry runs: "After dinner the whale-boat was
lowered and I proceeded in her to our old station on Pumice Stone River for the
purpose of seeing if the bottle left near the wooding place had been removed. It
had been left for informing Mr. Parsons that a vessel had been here during his
absence...[This bottle had been carried away by blacks for a distance of fifty
miles, but eventually reached Parsons safely.] I confess I was by no means
sanguine that he had survived. It will be recollected that he...proceeded singly
towards the north...near twelve months ago, and considering the nature of the
population and the privations he must necessarily suffer...the chances were that
he no longer existed. It was therefore with feelings of the most pleasing
description that among the group on the beach at landing the first man was
recognized as our long lost countryman."
[* Surveyor-General's Office, Sydney.]
Of the three shipwrecked men Parsons had travelled farthest. After parting
from Finnegan he had continued to trace the coast northward on his supposed
route to Sydney, only detecting his error when the heat became gradually more
intense and overpowering. He then guessed that he was far to the northward of
Sydney. At this time he really was on his road to Hervey Bay. In his progress he
met with many different tribes, who at first avoided him, but he says when he
could not "entice" them to him he would if possible get hold of one of their
children and caress it; he adds: "This stratagem usually succeeded and they
would then offer fish and be friendly." None of the women were allowed to bring
him food. The men gave it to him themselves. This jealous feeling with regard to
their females pervaded the whole of the tribes he met with "in a greater or
lesser degree." Often he suffered terribly from hunger and sometimes was three
or four nights without food. Water he generally was able to obtain by bearing
three or four miles to westward. He fared better on his homeward journey through
being acquainted with the blacks. He had had no clothing for fourteen
months.
The country was covered with thick scrub and vines; the land was sandy and
poor. For months he saw no rain. His only method of telling the time was by
watching for the new moon and cutting a notch in a stick. The trees that he saw
were pine, ironbark, swamp oak and spotted gum. The best timber grew on a river
to the northward, and currajong was abundant in the interior. Parsons was three
months on this outward journey to Hervey Bay, where he found the natives
unfriendly, and he took four or five months to make his way back to Moreton Bay.
When still sixty miles from there he sought the hospitality of a tribe of blacks
who were loath to let him leave them. Only by watching his opportunity and
stealing off by moonlight was he able to effect his escape.
The foundations of the settlement at Red Cliff Point were now laid and
building operations were begun. In after years when the settlement was moved to
a more convenient spot on the banks of the Brisbane River, the deserted
buildings were handed over to the natives, and by them called Humpy Bong, which
in their dialect signifies "Dead Houses."
When Oxley had fulfilled his instructions with regard to the settlement, he
started to carry out his further exploration of the river. Cunningham tells us:
"No sooner had we landed the commandant and those connected with his command and
marked off the lines for the little township than Mr. Oxley fitted out two boats
to explore the River Brisbane farther towards its origin than the part at which
a former party under the direction of our laborious and intelligent
Surveyor-General had penetrated last year."
In this second survey of the Brisbane River in the month of September, 1824,
Oxley was accompanied by a party which included Allan Cunningham and Lieutenant
Butler of the 40th Regiment. The botanist has given the following account of the
tour."The mouth of the stream which is two miles wide at its entrance is
characterized by low mangrove shores with a narrow deep water channel on its
south shore. Its reaches soon become picturesque and interesting...the banks
being higher, densely clothed with evergreen vegetation and overhung by twines
of Bignonia, Clematis, Ipomoea, and a new Dolichos
which I have called D. hymenocarpus. The breadth of the stream decreasing
adds not a little to the beauties of the water, whose depths of 5, 8, and 9
fathoms render it important from a commercial point of view, being thus
navigable for vessels Of 200 tons sixty miles from the sea, that distance being
about the extreme point of the former party's penetration...
"We now began a continuance of the survey of the river upwards from the point
where the examination of last year had closed and which Mr. Oxley, on again
reaching it, instantly recognized by a clear grassy bank on which he had then
encamped.[*] The banks hitherto densely clothed with a matted jungle of twining
and scandent plants at length are clear of brushwood, thinly timbered and
showing us the upper or "puniary" banks which define the verge of the ...forest
land on either side. The stream narrows to 800 yards and then to 500 and a
surface covered with aquatic plants that usually inhabit still or stagnant water
showed us...that no freshes or floods had taken place for many months.
Notwithstanding a breadth of 500 yards, the circumstance of our boats having
taken ground off several of the levels of the river (as well as in mid-channel
in the succeeding reaches) after having ascended the river about ten miles of
the new survey, induced the apprehension that its origin would prove to be not
very far in the western interior.[**]
[* To Telfair.]
[** In the course of Oxley's voyage up the river he saw "a large
creek entering the river," and called it Bremer's Creek, this being the Bremer
River. Oxley encamped at its mouth, and the site of his tent is given on the
chart of that river (p. 608).]
"A few miles further confirmed our suspicions. Extensive beds of alluvial
gravel occupied its entire channel putting a stop to the progress of our
boats--a few inches in depth of water occupying a small portion in the centre.
Mr. Oxley, however, with his accustomed perseverance encouraged the boatmen who
in a few hours actually dragged the boats over this barrier into a depth of
about 12 feet water which continued along a short reach where we were again
stopped by rocks in fast and fallen timber entirely choking up the very
contracted channel...the river in period of flood had cut itself another channel
a quarter of a mile wide the limits of which were marked by the gravel deposited
there. These beds of gravel were of a compound character for besides the rounded
pebbles or masses of rock there were torrent-worn fragments of whin of which we
had noticed none in the country around.
"Finding it was perfectly useless to attempt to carry our boats beyond this
second bank and seeing in our examination on foot a further series of
impediment...we regularly encamped and planned a tour on foot to a high mount
distant about ten miles about west, from us in the presumed direction from which
the river proceeded, from which elevation we hoped to gather such facts as would
enable us to determine whether or not this river is an inland or Western stream
communicating with the internal marshes."

CUNNINGHAM'S SHETCH OF RED CLIFFBEACH,BRISBANE RIVER, WHICH HE HAD VISITED
WITH OXLEY IN 1824 AND FOR THE SECOND TIME (AFTER OXLEY'S DEATH) IN
1828
Oxley ended this boat voyage at a spot where the actual bed of the river
measured "one-fourth of a mile in width and the old flood marks on the trees
ranged between 30 and 40 feet in height. This spot is said to have been fourteen
miles beyond the termination of his former survey. He and Cunningham then made
their way to the "high mount" beyond this point and obtained from its summit a
fine view extending over the country known to-day as the West Moreton district
and reaching to the Albert River. They saw a line of native fires marking the
river's course and wreaths of smoke rising against the dark background of the
Macpherson Range.
Cunningham gives the following description of this journey:
"The country...we found very hilly and broken obliging us to preserve our
position on the main ridges winding with them...Thus although we made a
circuitous route we avoided the labour of descending and again ascending deep
cavities and some sharp ravines. About an hour before sunset we reached the
mount which Mr. Oxley had proposed should be our extreme point of penetration.
It was a part of the day best suited for our observation. We therefore (Oxley
and myself, our servants being sent below to make a fire) set ourselves down on
the pinnacle and made the following remarks: You will perceive, (by a reference
to Flinders' Chart) to the southward of Moreton Bay there is a lofty collection
of hills on the coast of which the highest is named Mount Warning Ranges. From
these elevations lateral ranges extend far westerly assuming...an abrupt and
formidable aspect. To the northward of our position are also ranges of
magnitude...these however together with the Mount Warning Ranges were observed
to lower and to soften down in a level flat country bearing from us to the
westward from which this river running at the foot of the mount on which we
stood was traced proceeding. The setting sun throwing over the western country a
vast diffusion of light showed us that so far from there being a dividing range
of waters, there was not even a hill in the distance west of us to prevent one
common communication taking place between...the western waters and those flowing
upon our coasts, but as we were at least 300 miles from that part of the
Macquarie ... at which Mr. Oxley stood eastward for the coast in 1818 and the
present contracted channel of the Brisbane--a part filled up by sand shelves and
beds of gravel--inducing us to conclude its origin is far within 100 miles we
cannot reconcile ourselves to the opinion that they unite without supposing an
area...between the meridians of 151° and 147° to be one immense marsh."
Oxley and Cunningham at this point seem to have reached different conclusions
as to the termination of the Brisbane's course for Cunningham continues: "I
would have wished to have marched another day's journey westward to have set our
little differences of opinion at rest; the state, however, of my friend Oxley's
health would not allow this. We therefore returned to our encampment, struck our
tents and with dispatch returned to the Bay, my friend being satisfied that the
great problem of how the internal waters are disposed (from which it has been
presumed this river would prove to be an eastern outlet) still remains to be
solved...and the origin of the Brisbane is yet to be discovered."
A species of fresh-water fish found only in Western rivers was caught in the
Brisbane, and this circumstance again led Oxley to suspect that its waters might
communicate with Western channels.
Writing of the plants here Cunningham remarks: "Of the flora of this
part...the greater portion is equinoctial or of plants hitherto limited to
tropical regions...such as we observed during our voyage on the north-east and
north coasts." And he adds: "If the valuable tropical produce of other countries
such as coffee, cotton, and sugar cane can be cultivated upon any shore of our
continent, we need not advance farther from the northern coast of Moreton Bay in
search of a suitable spot, seeing that the indigenous vegetation of its shores
is identical with that of the parallels of 19°, 15° 12° and 10°30'."
It was then that for the first time in the dense forests on the banks of the
Brisbane Cunningham discovered the pine known by his name, a new species of
Araucaria (A. Cunninghamii, Sweet), and noted the species as
distinct from the Norfolk Island tree. This tree grew less profusely on the
river nearer Moreton Bay, and since it was thought its timber would be useful as
spars for ships a few trees were cut down and brought back to Sydney in the
"Amity" for the dockyard.
Oxley seldom visited Moreton Bay after he had completed this voyage. A few
years later he was unable to undertake any kind of exploration, for sickness and
infirmity laid hold of him and he could no longer endure the fatigue of covering
great distances on land or the continuous strain of surveying at sea. The
expeditions under his able leadership which had brought back to Sydney so much
knowledge of the country inland and of the harbours on the coast therefore soon
ceased. But Oxley will never be forgotten, for his work has won for him a
lasting memorial in the history of Australian discovery.
CUNNINGHAM GOES THROUGH PANDORA'S PASS
Cunningham returned to Port Jackson on October 14, 1824, and soon we find him
planning and making preparations for another expedition to the northward--the
direction in which so many of his discoveries were made. When he had reached
Pandora's Pass in 1823, the reduced state of his provisions would not permit him
to push beyond the pass or even to examine it. He now determined to approach the
mountain-gap from another direction and go through it to the Liverpool Plains;
and this journey he accomplished to as far as 30°47' S.[*]
[* The account of this journey is extracted from an old issue of
"The Australian" (dated July 21, 1825), and it seems as though the article, if
not written by Cunningham himself, must have been inspired by him.]
He set out from Richmond with a small party, crossed the Nepean on March 28,
1825, and made his way northwards towards the Wollombi along a rugged and
dangerous track previously taken by Mr. Howe. In 100 miles he fell in with the
Hunter River near Patrick's Plains (Whittingham.), and advanced up its stream
for about forty miles, when, its channel taking a bend to the eastward, he
decided to leave it. He proceeded as far as Mount Dangar, a singularly rounded
hill in lat. 32°18'51" S. and long. (reduced from the meridian of Richmond)
about 150°27'30" E., whose summit formed a striking feature in the
landscape.

CUNNINGHAM'S ROUTE IN 1825
From Mount Dangar, Cunningham took a fresh departure: first travelling
north-west and then due west, he passed over tracts of sheep pasture which were
bounded by hills connected with the Liverpool Range.
On April 25th, about the parallel Of 32° S., he reached Smith's Rivulet, and
in advancing westward began to identify from an opposite position from which he
previously had viewed them the principal landmarks seen by him in 1823 after he
had first left the Goulburn. Thus he was able to verify his own earlier
observations.
Continuing his route westward in the parallel Of 32° S ., he crossed the
streams he had already seen, among them Scott's Rivulet, the Wemyss, and the
Goulburn Rivers, and passed over a small lateral range. This separates the
Hunter River streams from the waters that fall into the Macquarie, particularly
those of its tributary, the Erskine. He next turned north-west, crossed Duguid's
Plain, and, rounding the fringe of mountain to the northward of it, passed over
alternate plain and forest ridge on his way to Hawkesbury Vale. At the entrance
to the Vale he crossed his former line of route when he made his way back to
Bathurst from the pass in 1823.
On May 2nd Cunningham went through Pandora's Pass and descended with his
pack-horses into the south-western corner of Liverpool Plains. From the level of
Hawkesbury Vale the rise of the acclivity on the southern side through the open
forest to the pitch of the pass--about two miles distant--was found singularly
gradual. The northern decline was steeper, and measured not more than one mile
from the range to the grazing forest at the foot of it, but proved "very
practicable."
The entire length of Pandora's Pass from the head of Hawkesbury Vale to the
bank of Bowen's Rivulet[*] on the northern side of the Liverpool Range did not
exceed three miles, and it was Cunningham's opinion that only two or three weeks
of labour well spent would be required in constructing a few small bridges over
the narrow but deep channels to enable the team of the grazier to pass
northwards to the extensive open country. He continued to penetrate farther to
the northward, passed along the banks of Bowen River between two high peaks of
the Vansittart Hills (Ker's Peak and Mount Hoddle), and, crossing the York
River, reached the northern portion of Camden Valley at Dunlop Hill, where he
encamped on May 15th, and where he decided to end his journey.[**] Camden
Valley, which he says may be considered the north-west branch of the Liverpool
Plains, was found throughout the last stage of the journey northerly towards
Hardwicke's Range to be "a perfect quagmire," the plants growing there being of
species found only in marshy soil.
[* Bowen River.]
[** At Boonatta.]
It will be remembered that Oxley had entered Liverpool Plains from the
north-west; Cunningham came into them from the south-west and found them
elongated strips of country varying in breadth from five to ten or more miles
and lying between the meridians of 150° and 150°50' E. and within the parallels
30°45' S, and 31°30' S. With the exception of a few straggling trees of
Acacia pendula, or weeping wattle, and Eucalyptus mannifera, or
white gum, scattered singly at long distances upon them, they formed one
uninterrupted patch of level plain from south to north exceeding fifty miles in
extent. Another portion, crossing them from west-north-west to east-south-east,
could not have been estimated at less than fifty or, probably, sixty miles.
From these two principal branches other strips of country stretched north and
south, of which the valleys of Camden and Barrow ran in the former direction;
and Cunningham describes thus the isolated broken mountains which are dotted
over them: "The ridges and rounded mounts that interrupt the plane of the
country appeared to be perfectly isolated and took the form of various figures
of picturesque appearance on the common level of the plains, whose entire arc
will comprehend one million and a half acres, of which four-fifths are rich
grazing land for cattle, while many dry situations (more especially along the
southern side of the plains) will afford healthful, sound walks for sheep."
Bowen River, or Bowen's Rivulet, a brisk stream rising in the Main Range, flowed
through the west side of the plains, and, after a course of fifty miles, united
with the York River, and, bending with the dip of the country at
north-north-west, made its exit at that point down an extensive slope.
"We know of no tract of timberless open country in New South Wales that forms
so perfect a level," writes Cunningham, doubtless proud of the part he had
played in helping to bring these pastures within the reach of civilization. "
The natural consequence is that ordinary rains falling on the southern mountains
cause an overflow at Bowen's Rivulet, and, as the surface of some parts was
observed to be lower than the outer banks of this stream, a great portion of the
N.W. plain, the whole of Camden Valley, together with the boundary forests on
the same level, are laid under water; of which fact the wrecks of floods on the
outer banks of the rivulet, the little pools in the cavities, the clodded nature
of the soil, and the rottenness of the forest trees afforded ample proof."
From the appearance of the ground Cunningham thought that the last
considerable inundation had been as recently as the months of January or
February, 1825,[*] since in some places on the north side of the plains a depth
of twelve inches of water still rested on the muddy surface which, he says,
"determined the limit of my journey to the northward."
[* See also Hooker's "Journal of Botany," Vols, III and
IV.]
Among the indigenous vegetation of the land traversed, the following plants
were noticed: a species of Plantago, or rib-grass; Scorzonera sp.,
or viper's grass; Lotus, or birdsfoot trefoil; Centaurea
occidentalis; Ajuga australis, or bugle; Campanula gracilis,
or bell-flower; Rumex dumosus, or dock; Galium aparine, or
goose-grass; Epilobium, or willow-herb. There were no fewer than eight
distinct grasses, among which a late Danthonia gigantea (giant oatgrass,
resembling wheat in the ear) was most remarkable. Ranunculus lappaceus,
Lobelia inundata, Arundo phragmites, and Indigofera sp., a
proof of a permanent marsh-were also observed.
The soil was found to be a rich loam; the timber trees were stately
stringy-bark, box, and some white gum, while the lower forests on the western
outskirts of the plains were composed of iron-bark and a species of
Callitris or cypress.
On his homeward journey Cunningham followed his outward track back to
Pandora's Pass; but, after passing through it and leaving the Hawkesbury Vale,
he made his way to Talbragar, spending the night of May 28th at Mr. Lawson's
station. Continuing his journey, he crossed the southern tributary of the
Erskine at its widest part, and travelling in a south-easterly direction to the
Cudgegong, crossed Emu Creek, and on June 1st visited the new settlement that
had been founded at Mudgee. Thence he traced the Cudgegong, proceeding down its
south bank, until it bent eastward, when he left it, and, pursuing a
south-westerly course over the Turon River, made his way to Bathurst, where he
arrived on June 7, 1825.
The last three months of 1825 were spent in the vicinity of Wellington
Valley, then a growing settlement that had been first founded in 1823. From here
he botanized in a circuit of 150 miles on each bank of the Macquarie River,
during one excursion visiting Croker's Range, where he obtained a large
collection of seeds and tuberous roots, including twenty-five species of
orchids, for shipment to Kew Gardens. From a note on Arrowsmith's map
accompanying "Sturt's Expeditions," he seems to have journeyed to Mudgee again
before he returned to Parramatta.
Writing of the natives seen in this tour, Cunningham remarks: It is curious
that I should have met with only one small group of native women and children
and seven males who were prowling about in quest of the scanty subsistence in
grubs and kangaroos or opossums afforded by the surrounding country and from the
boundary heights only perceived two distinct smokes of the fires of the
aborigines."
Cunningham made a sketch of the map he had drawn during his expedition to
Dunlop Hill.[*] This sketch, which he sent to Doctor Hooker at Glasgow, is now
preserved among Hooker's correspondence at the Kew Herbarium. A reproduction of
it is given at page 540.
[* Dunlop's Table Head of the old maps.]
CHAPTER XVII
THE NORTHERN JOURNEY
(From Cunningham's Report to General Darling)
DISCOVERY OF THE GWYDIR, MACINTYRE, DUMARESQ AND CONDAMINE RIVERS AND THE
DARLING DOWNS. CUNNINGHAM'S GAP SIGHTED
Cunningham was occupied with botanical researches in New Zealand for the
greater part of 1826. He returned to New South Wales on January 20, 1827,
bringing with him a valuable collection of New Zealand flora.

CUNNINGHAM'S ROUTE MAP SHOWING HIS JOURNEY TO DUNLOP HILL AND HIS
EXPLORATIONS IN QUEENSLAND
On landing in Sydney he learned that it was General Darling's[*] intention to
send an expedition northward to explore what is now Queensland, since he wished
to find out whether the inland country, as yet undiscovered, would prove
suitable for settlers.
[* General Darling had now replaced Sir Thomas
Brisbane.]
The new undertaking evidently attracted Cunningham, for he offered his
services to the Governor, stating that he would be pleased to act as leader of
the expedition. As he had shown that he was very capable and had drawn up his
previous reports accurately and scientifically, his offer was accepted, and once
more he made preparations for a long journey.
It was a journey that became the crowning point of Cunningham's labours. To
the exploration of inland territory which he had already made north of Bathurst
in 1822, north of the Cudgegong in 1823, and northerly again from Pandora's Pass
in 1825, he now added a larger tract still farther northward, where, in his
passage through it, he found the Gwydir, Macintyre, Dumaresq, and Condamine
Rivers, and, besides fertile valleys and rugged mountain ranges, those rich
pastures of which Queensland is so proud to-day--the Darling Downs.
Before he turned again southward he had sighted the opening in the Great
Dividing Range, called after him Cunningham's Gap, which led to the sea and
provided a way of communication from the interior to the coast districts of
Moreton Bay. In making these great discoveries Allan Cunningham reached the
zenith of his career as an explorer.
Before he left Sydney he planned the details of this difficult journey and
submitted a sketch of his intended route to His Excellency. In sending this to
Governor Darling, Cunningham informed him that he proposed to begin his journey
from 31° S., where Oxley had terminated his survey in 1818; thence to proceed to
Peel's River (also discovered by Oxley) at the northeast of Liverpool Plains,
and afterwards to travel to Moreton Bay on a line west of the meridian of 151°,
and, upon reaching the northern point, to turn westward inland in order to
ascertain the extent of the marshes which he then believed swallowed up all the
western rivers. He added that should his supply of provisions not allow him to
go westward he would explore the high levels eastward of 151°, and, proceeding
southward to the parallel Of 31°, make his way home through them.
These plans were approved, and an equipment of six men and eleven horses was
prepared for Cunningham, who took with him a sextant, a Schmalkalder's pocket
compass, a pocket chronometer, an odometer or perambulator, and a barometer
which had been compared with Dr. Mitchell's before he left Sydney. The horses
and men were sent overland to Hunter's River, but Cunningham himself proceeded
with the baggage and provisions to Newcastle by sea, whence they were conveyed
to Segenhoe,[*] the residence of Mr. Potter Macqueen, eleven miles south of
Scone by boat and drays. Owing to the swollen state of the Hawkesbury,
Cunningham did not meet his party at Mr. Glennie's Farm until April 22nd; on
leaving there with his men he travelled to Segenhoe, where he arrived on the
26th. He had determined to cross the mountains at the head of Dartbrook
Creek[**] where they had already been crossed by Mr. Macintyre, who kindly
offered to accompany the explorers to the summit of the Liverpool (or Dividing)
Range.
[* Cunningham writes: "As the various operations of my expedition
commenced from this farm it was of the utmost value to me that its position on
the chart should be ascertained with tolerable precision." He gives the
situation of his encampment as being in 32°6'37" S. and 150°'57'15" E. Var. of
needle 7°24' E. and elevation above the sea 598 feet.]
[** According to Mr. Dangar's map there were then two passes used
to cross the Liverpool Range, one at the head of Dartbrook, the other at the
head of Page's River--the latter being the easier. Dartbrook was so named
because in 1824, when two officials from the Surveyor-General's Department
were surveying it, they were attacked by blacks who wounded one of the white
men with a spear or dart.]
On April 30, 1827, Cunningham took his departure from Segenhoe, and, after
journeying to Kingdon Ponds, passed over Tullong (or Holdsworthy) Downs. On
reaching Dartbrook Creek, he continued his way northwards along its right bank
for three and a half miles, halting for the day at a patch of apple-tree flat
eighty feet above Segenhoe. Next morning, keeping in the same direction up the
right bank of Dartbrook, he descended a grassy valley, and, having accomplished
thirteen miles, encamped near its head. This valley was bounded on the north and
north-east by a range connected with the Liverpool Range.
Here on May 2nd, Mr. Macintyre and a friend who were to act as guides joined
the explorers, and the ascent of the range was begun. Quitting the brook after
three miles, Mr. Macintyre led the way in a north-westerly direction to the
Range. As they advanced the party rested their horses upon tolerably level spots
of grass on the steep hillside. Gradually continuing the ascent they gained a
narrow spine of the ridge (bounded on each side by ravines), which became so
steep that the loads had to be taken off the pack-horses and carried over on
men's shoulders. On this night (May 2nd) they encamped 2,800 feet[*] above the
sea and obtained water in one of the ravines.
[* Cunningham writes to Telfair that he crossed at 2,900 feet
above the sea...to the east of my 'Oxley's Peak.'"]
Next morning Cunningham saw that they had climbed almost to the summit.[*]
While he was still engaged in making observations at the camp Mr. Macintyre and
his companion directed some of his men with their horses safely over the
mountains, leaving them in a valley on the north side of the Liverpool Range,
where there were both grass and water, and from which they easily could descend
the slopes to the plains. Here the men pitched the tent and awaited the rest of
the party.
[* Of the Liverpool or Great Dividing Range.]
On returning to the camp, Mr. Macintyre and his friend said good-bye to
Cunningham after having rendered him very helpful service, and on the following
morning he struck his tent and with his remaining pack-horses advanced
north-westward to the highest point of the range, 3,080 feet above the sea.
Owing to the height of the trees and the density of bush only a restricted
view was obtained, but to the north-west the Liverpool Plains could be seen
stretching to the horizon. From where they looked down at them the men thought
that these rolling grass plains resembled the ocean, and that the detached
mounds and isolated ridges with which they were studded were like groups of
islands.
The mountain top was strewn with fragments of rock and fallen timber, which
made the descent a difficult one for two miles; then a lateral ridge dipping
towards the north enabled Cunningham to reach the head of a gully on the north
side of the range which led to the narrow valley watered by a small creek where
the tent had been pitched and some of his men and horses were resting. This
encampment (at the northern base of the Dividing Range) was found to be in lat.
31°50' S., and long., deduced from the meridian of Segenhoe, 150°35' E. "It
was," he writes, "by barometrical computation 1,859 feet above the sea, 1,222
feet lower than the summit of the range, but 670 feet above the spot where I had
encamped on Dartbrook at the southern foot of the mountains."
Starting forward again on May 5th, on a course to the north-north-east
Cunningham and his companions proceeded up the valley along the banks of the
creek which flowed through it and originated at its head. At the end of five
miles, the creek turned to the north-west, where they left it and continued on a
course east of north with a view to pursuing a direct route to the point at
which Oxley had reached Peel's River in 1818. For seven miles they travelled
through open bush composed of box and iron-bark, crossing shallow water-courses
(the channels of some entirely dry) which wound through "poor and hungry" land.
"In the midst of those desert woods that skirt Liverpool Plains on the
south-eastern side, a meridional altitude of the sun gave for the lat. 31°43'36"
S.," and by the barometer Cunningham determined the elevation of this dreary
spot to be 1,227 feet, showing that he had descended to a level of 350 feet
since leaving his encampment that morning. Having accomplished thirteen miles,
he arrived at the margin of a section of the plains where he discovered a
rivulet,[*] serpentine in form, whose course was marked by the swamp-oaks upon
its banks, as it flowed through the centre of an open flat to the northward.
Stretching north-eastward over the flat, on which plants were growing like those
he had seen in 1825 on the plains farther to the westward, Cunningham in a mile
and a half reached the rivulet; its channel did not exceed a breadth of thirty
feet, though perhaps it would have been difficult to cross in an ordinary
season, its banks of black earth being exceedingly steep. The exploring party
found, however, that, owing to the drought, its stream was now a chain of pools,
and they crossed it easily. Masses of reeds six feet high, and plants which
usually grow on land permanently wet proved abundantly the state of inundation
to which this river was subject in wet seasons. Two miles farther, where rising
grounds bounded this flat on the north-east, the men having travelled fourteen
miles, halted for the day at the side of a pool of water on the edge of the
plains.
[* The explorers crossed Warrah and Quirindi Creeks. It is
difficult to identify positively the landmarks supplied by the
journals.]

MAP SHOWING THE ROUTE OF ALLAN CUNNINGHAM TO THE DARLING DOWNS BETWEEN MAY
21 AND MAY 31, 1827 (DURING WHICH PERIOD HE DISCOVERED THE GWYDIR AND DUMARESQ
RIVERS) AND PART OF HIS RETURN JOURNEY. IT IS TO BE REGRETTED THAT THIS
SKETCH-MAP WITH THE THREE THAT FOLLOW IT AS WELL AS THAT OF THE BRISBANE RIVER,
WERE NOT FOUND BY TRHE AUTHOR UNTIL AFTER THE BODY OF THE WORK HAD GONE TO
PRESS. THE PENCILLED REMARKS UPON SOME OF THEM MAKE IT APPEAR THAT THEY WERE
SKETCHED BY CUNNINGHAM DURING THE PROGRESS OF THE EXPEDITION. THEY ARE DRAWN
UPON ORDINARY WRITING PAPER. THOSE OF THE EARLIER PART OF THE ROUTE CANNOT BE
FOUND.
In writing up the report of his journey for Governor Darling on this day,
Cunningham says: "As we came through the woods we observed marks of the natives
on the trees, also a few bark huts which had been recently occupied. No smoke or
fire was seen, however, or any indication of the presence of aborigines; and,
though occasionally visited, this country did not appear numerously inhabited.
The huts, too, were evidently of long standing." He continues: "On May 6th,
being Sunday, we rested within our tents (lat. 31°38' S., mean elevation 1,128
feet, long. 150°38' E.).[*] The rocks of a low ridge near our encampment were of
sandstone, and some of it had evidently been used by natives (who had left
remains of their fires near by) to sharpen their hatchets." By the marks seen on
the timber, these would appear to have been made of iron. Doubtless they had
become possessed of them in their communications with the natives of the Hunter
River and regions to the southward and eastward of the Dividing Range. "The
possession of an axe of iron by a savage may thus be considered as his first
step towards civilization," says Cunningham, who resumes:
[* Cunningham's route northward across the Liverpool Plains led
him eastward of Warrah Peak and westward of Quirindi according to his own
calculations.]
"May 7th to 12th. At an early hour we began the labours of the week,
prosecuting a course to the northward through broken, irregular country lying on
the eastern side of Liverpool Plains, of which the following is a delineation. A
series of lone, barren forest ridges clothed with a brush of plants
uninteresting even to the botanist and wooded with the usual box, diminutive
iron-bark, occasionally Callitris or cypress, along a space of 6 miles
from our encampment: a patch of plain about 3½ miles in breadth which appears to
be watered on the north side by a small brook declining to the N.W. that in the
rainy season overflows its bank, and places an interesting patch of grassy
meadowland under water.
"Throughout the succeeding twelve miles from our last encampment, stony hills
and narrow valleys, diversified by plains, constitute a tolerable stretch of
sheep and cattle pasture, watered by a rivulet rising in the range (forming
their eastern boundary) which extend in a northerly direction. Onward, after
crossing this creek, the bank of which we quitted on the 9th, we proceeded over
patches of plain, badly parched and without water. On these plains our dogs
disturbed several of the native species[*] that were lying at ambush in the
grass, and, after giving chase, allowed the native kind to retire to the
woods...having sustained no injury beyond that of a dreadful fright. These
native dogs were...exceedingly fat, from which circumstance, coupled with the
position in which they were found, we inferred that many bustards were hovering
about these open flats.
[* Dingoes.]
"Passing beyond these plains, we descended to a narrow valley and in 2¼ miles
came to a water-course which in rainy periods has evidently a small current
running to N.N.W.--at this time being merely a small chain of stagnant pools. It
was noon at the time we were passing these holes; a meridian observation then
obtained gave their lat. 31°12'47" S...Forest ridge and valley succeed for about
four miles, when we descended a stony hill to a reedy creek flowing eastward
from the ranges, which now assume a wild, precipitous character.
"On the morning of the 10th, in our journey northward, we forded the reedy
creek[*] which, bending its course to the base of the open forest, escapes
north-westerly, and, being united to the other two streams we have already
passed, eventually becomes Field's River of Mr. Oxley, by which channel the
entire eastern sides of Liverpool Plains are drained. Pursuing our course still
to the north-west through a narrow, confined, brushy valley, deeply grooved by
the washings from the eastern mountains, we were enabled by great exertion to
accomplish seven miles; but so harassed were my burdened horses that I deemed it
prudent to quit the base of these rocky ranges and, directing our course at
N.N.W., we found forest ground...more favourable for our advance.
[* Probably Werries Creek.]
"At our ninth mile we intersected a small, rocky creek,[*] running westward.
Its channel contained excellent water and its shaded banks an abundance of
grass. I was induced to halt, especially as the shoes of some of the horses had
become loosened by the rugged nature of the ground. I at length arrived at Mr.
Oxley's intersection of Peel's River in 1818, from which point I proposed to
proceed on my journey to the northward. But, observing that the rocky, bold
aspect of the country would not permit my heavily-laden horses to travel
eastward to that stream, I determined, whilst their shoes were being attended
to, to ascend a ridge[**] two miles to the N.W., to make observations.
[* Probably Currabubula Creek.]
[** Of the Melville Range.]
"From this eminence, the country to the N.E. and E. appeared lofty, broken
and sub-mountainous, the ranges thickly wooded and seemingly grassy, yet the
abrupt character of their western acclivities obliged me to abandon the design
of proceeding northward from Peel's River...Upon extending the view further to
the N. and E. I could perceive ranges of lofty hills lying N. and S. to mark
distinctly the direction of a valley through which I had no doubt Peel's River
flowed to the northward, as Mr. Oxley had observed it. Directing the line of
vision to N.W. and N.NW., the eye traversed a vast extent of level, wooded
country, through which run the York and Field Rivers which drain the Liverpool
Plains and flow to the N.W.
"I took a set of bearings to points of Mr. Oxley's survey in 1818 to W. and
W.S.W. which I had identified in my tour along the west side of the Liverpool
Plains in 1825, and perceived that, in order to journey northward with case and
safety, it would be necessary to proceed first to westward round the bases of
the hills. I then returned to my encampment. From the summit of the forest ridge
that I had climbed (which, it seemed, is the group called by Mr. Oxley, Melville
Hills) I could not perceive the least trace of human beings in a range of the
compass from N.E. by way of N. and W.; but at W.S.W. and S.W., in the
neighbourhood of Vansittart's Hills, large smokes rose from the forests;
doubtless...fired by the few aborigines who wander in these regions. I have
therefore determined to journey to the north in or near the meridian of my
present position, being satisfied that (since Peel's River falls into the marshy
interior) my course will cross it, and that the ranges of hills to the eastward
will either terminate or break to admit of its escape to the lower N.W.
country.
"On the morning of the 11th May," he continues, "we quitted our resting place
and pursued a course S. of W. for 3 miles, at length passing round the
termination of the hills through dry, brushy forest to shape a more direct line
to the N.W. The wooded country was level, scarcely over 1,000 ft. above the
sea-level, and at length we crossed the track of Mr. Oxley in 1818,[*] the
observation at noon, taken in the midst of dense, drooping Acacia
pendula, giving us lat. 31°00'34" S., which placed our position about a mile
north of that gentleman's line of route to the eastward after he had forded
Field's River.
[* In Oxley's journey eastward to Port Macquarie. Describing this
part of his journey, Cunningham writes to Telfair: "I continued my course
north and in a day's march passed the limit of known country as shown in the
chart of our Colony which does not extend beyond 31° S."]
MITCHELL'S RIVER[*]
[* This was the Namoi River, a short distance westward from its
junction with the Maluerindie.
"After penetrating brushes of the grey-hued Acacia pendula, we
stretched to the N.W. about four miles over declining country, forest and open
plain, with vegetation destroyed by drought...abundantly indicated by the rents
in the ground, the effect of the sun, as well as by the total absence of water.
Amid these we were not a little surprised to see a striking change in the
condition of the grasses, and other vegetation. We had evidently fallen on a
lower level than that on which our tents had stood. On entering the wooded land
bordering the plain (timbered with large apple-trees) we saw that the forest had
been flooded to a depth of five feet and noticed successive marks of floods on
the tree-trunks. Throughout the entire plains the country southward had been
subjected to the same inundation. The inclination of the heads of certain plants
to the W.S.W. marked the direction the current had taken upon retiring. Have
completed twelve miles and, being assured...that we were in the neighbourhood of
a larger river, we continued W.N.W. towards a range whose S.E. points overlooked
the plain we had traversed. In about a mile we arrived on the left bank of a
river winding round the southern base of the hills on its course westward. The
breadth of its channel exceeded 150 yards, of which 60 or 70 yards was water
forming a succession of deep pools or rapids. The brook whereon I had encamped
last was on a height of 30 feet above the level; and an idea of the vast bodies
of water may be gathered, when flood-marks were observed four feet above the
level on which the tents were pitched. The new stream took its origin in the
hilly ground N.E., which formed a sort of secondary dividing range separating
the country through which we were now penetrating from that watered by Peel's
River. This river, bending round the lofty ridge, winds its way westward and,
without doubt, joins Field's River on its progress to the N.W.[*] To this
stream, which had not been seen previously by Europeans I gave the name of
Mitchell's River, as a compliment to the medical gentleman to whom I was so much
indebted for the valuable detail of barometrical observations he had taken for
me in Sydney during my absence on this journey in the interior."
[* Major Mitchell writes: "The course of the Maluerindie [also
known as Namoi as far up as the falls at Glen Barry] from the junction of the
Peel to that of the Conadilly (or Field's River) is somewhat southward of
west: below the junction of the Commonly, where the well-known name is Namoi,
it pursues a N.W. course."]
Fresh marks of native hatchets on the trees, equally recent fire-places, and
a well-beaten path along the bank of the river "afforded proofs that there was a
blackfellows' encampment on this stream. An hour had not elapsed before the
voices of natives were heard, though none were seen, nor even the glimmer of
their fires through the bush at night."...Doubtless unseen they were tracking
the white men. In a deep, weedy pond of the river beneath the tents Cunningham's
men caught several fine fish--"the cod of all our western rivers"--many of which
seized the bait so eagerly that several hooks and portions of line were carried
away and lost. The end of an eclipse of the moon observed on the 11th gave the
long. of Mitchell's River here as 150°27'15" E. The lat., by an observed
meridional altitude of the sun on the 12th, was 30°57'12" S., mean elevation 84°
above the sea-level.
Continuing forward northwards on the 12th, at two miles the exploring party
crossed the river (running from north-east) and, fording it at a pebbly fall,[*]
pursued their way through a forest of large blue gum, and after travelling a
mile reached an open plain[**] stretching to the north-west. Cunningham here
changed his course to north-north-east, but was unsuccessful in his search for
water and was obliged to return to the river, which he reached at sunset, and
found that the banks furnished an abundance of sweet grass. He rested here on
the 13th and next day advanced northward, again through an and country broken by
watercourses long since dry, which rendered travelling fatiguing both for man
and beast. The only timber was an iron-bark, stunted in growth, and cypress. On
completing the thirteenth mile he turned eastward and then halted for the day.
Pushing north-north-west again on the 15th, at the eighth mile he arrived at the
base of a ridge, over the southern part of which the horses climbed with great
difficulty. Here he discovered a stream flowing rapidly to the eastward which he
crossed and encamped on its north bank. "It runs," he says, "to eastward and is
doubtless a tributary to the Peel. Before this...stream was seen the journey
through the country was depressing: scarcely a bird was seen or heard; no game,
native dog, nor the evidence (even of the most ancient date) of a passing human
being, until we arrived at this rivulet, when our dogs gave chase to a solitary
kangaroo."
[* At the Wallamburra Ford.]
[** Mulluba Plain.]
The signs of severe drought increased the farther the travellers journeyed
northward. On the 17th they were glad to find and cross a small river running to
the eastward, which Cunningham named Buddle's River.[*] Now for the first time
he was afforded an opportunity of meeting with the natives. Being a little in
front of his companions, he had reached the right bank of the stream when he
noticed smoke rising from the bush on the opposite side. Four natives and a
child, who already had caught sight of him, were standing gazing at him wildly,
evidently in a state of consternation and alarmed to a degree. Cunningham says:
"I called to the man who stood in front of the fire (and who had short spears or
other missile weapons in his hands), and beckoned to him by every sign that
would be considered, even by a savage, a pacific, friendly intention; but 'twos
all in vain. To every sign...he simply made a brief reply, at a distance,
however, too great to enable me to judge how far the dialect of the natives of
this part might differ from the language of the aborigines of the settled parts
of the colony; and then, on seeing eleven horses descend in a line to the
river's brink, he took to his heels, and, with the others (among whom were
women), ran off to distant parts...up the river, and disappeared. It was noon
when we crossed Buddle's River; I therefore determined its lat. as 30°22'10" S.,
and long. 150°32'45" E."
[* Buddle or Manilla River.]
STODDART'S VALLEY
Resuming their journey on the 19th the explorers left a rocky creek on which
they had encamped, and at eight miles reached the base of sterile hills deeply
grooved by sharp, narrow gullies declining northwards. A sudden break in these
hills to the north-west afforded a view of level, wooded country, approached by
a narrow vale and bounded by steep ridges. They descended the hills to an
apple-tree flat, and "continued the journey northerly through the vale, which
expands; a small, limpid stream, running through the centre of the vale, murmurs
over the stony bed of its channel, its banks being shaded with swamp-oaks more
or less dense."[*] Here Cunningham and his men rested at a spot where the grass
was fresh and luxuriant. Suddenly he was surprised to see in these unexplored
unknown parts traces, two or three days old, of homed cattle, and the trodden
grass showed where eight to a dozen animals had rested. He supposed they must
have strayed from some large herd, since stragglers were known to be running
perfectly wild on the plains at the base of Arbuthnot's Range, distant about 170
miles to the south-west. The discovery, however, on the homeward journey of "a
shed that had been erected by white men" on a spot three miles to the north-east
of this vale led Cunningham to conclude "that Europeans had been wandering
through that part of the interior." He continues: "Upon the range on the eastern
side of the vale I discovered several undescribed plants and a species of flint
rock of curious laminated figure was observed to repose on large bodies of
serpentine at the base of the range. During our stay here in this vale, which, I
have much pleasure in naming Stoddart's Valley,[*] after an officer of the Royal
Staff Corps, I was enabled to determine the position of my encampment as lat.
29°58'52" S., and long. 150°33'30" E."
[* Bingara Creek.]
Advancing northward on the 21st, the party traced the creek, on whose banks
they had rested, through the valley to north-west, and admired the beauty of its
scenery as they proceeded. At seven miles the creek formed a junction with a
large river (Cunningham writes: "seemingly the Peel," but he subsequently named
it the Gwydir) which, having flowed southward through eastern hills passes the
north extreme of Stoddart's Valley and escapes towards the lower north-western
interior. The channel of this river at the part Cunningham forded it exhibited a
gravelly bed 250 yards in breadth, filled in rainy seasons to a depth of twelve
to fifteen feet, as shown by the flood marks on its banks. Some time was spent
in getting across, and at evening the tents were pitched on its right bank. In
descending Stoddart's Valley[*] to the river, several trees were seen to have
been completely barked recently by natives, the prints of whose feet, including
those of children, were observed in the sand at the ford, while large bodies of
smoke rose from grass which had been fired on the river bank opposite the
encampment.
[* Bingara is its Present name.]
"22nd & 23rd May. Quitting the right or North-eastern bank of
Peel's River [i.e. the Gwydir] which had taken a bend to the westward, we
pursued our route to the N.N.W. immediately, at the base of a continuation of
the Eastern Range of the Hills which again assumed a bold and rocky
character.[*] We travelled through an uniformly barren tract of wooded country,
frequently broken and ridgy, and as the declivity of the several gullies, dipped
considerably towards the channel of the Peel, which extended along the eastern
base of a densely wooded range, bearing west of us, we found the whole of the
day's stage exceedingly badly watered."
[* Passing close to the site of Warialda.]
Fourteen miles north of their ford on the Gwydir the travellers came to a
better country, more lightly timbered, with a darker soil and covered with good
grass. The high range westward of their route soon terminated and "heavily
timbered land lying beyond it could be seen which evidently had a declension to
the N.W."
A rocky ridge of hills at the same bearing also fell to the ordinary level.
Cunningham continues:
"To the North-East the country rises to a considerable elevation, and a very
lofty ridge crowned with cypress lying nearly east and west, and from the back
of which rose a very sharp cone[*] I received the name of Masterton's Range. The
rocks of the adjacent hills of which large masses had rolled down, and studded
the lower grounds over which we travelled, were of sandstone, reposing upon a
large body of pudding-stone which included large pebbles of quartz and
jasper.
[* The cone was named Brace Peak by Cunningham who passed on the
west side of the ridge.]
"About noon on the 23rd we reached the wide but shallow reedy channel of a
river[*] forming simply at this season a long chain of ponds; and having
observed the altitude of the sun at the meridian on its margin, which gave me
for lat. 30°34'44" S. we traced it about 4 miles to the N.N.E. and then halted
on its banks. Some strips of good pasturage appeared on the edge of these ponds,
especially where the apple-tree (Angophora cordifolia) was a prevalent
timber. The marks of the native's hatchet were observable on the trees, but the
few savages, that prowl through these lonely regions in quest of food, appear
evidently to avoid us--the train of laden horses, the number of my men and dogs,
doubtless alarming those who may have seen us from the hills so much as to urge
their flight, rather than induce them to seek a communication with us.
[* It may be pointed out that on the plan of Cunningham's route
(Lands Department, Sydney, I, 537) a river called the Severn is indicated to
the south of the Dumaresq or Severn, and this river appears to be the Severn
referred to.]
"May 24th. Upon crossing the reedy channel of the chain of ponds on
which we had encamped we passed over a stony cypress ridge, and among a mass of
vegetation characterizing the flora of the Bathurst country, I detected a few
plants, which I had not previously met with, of genera, however, fully
established...At our 4th mile we rose by a very gradual ascent to the pitch of a
forest ridge, where we observed a change had taken place in the rock formation,
which was abundantly shown by the dark colour, and superior quality of the soil.
The rock appeared to be related to trap and was exceedingly porous, containing
quartzose nodules. Upon reaching the extreme part of the ridge we observed
before us, a very moderate country extremely open, with patches of plain, clear
of timber. A series of forest hills and intervening valleys, furnishing
abundance of grass, but perfectly destitute of water, succeeded in our course to
the north throughout the succeeding seven miles. At length we arrived at a patch
of forest ground, that had been recently fired, and as I felt satisfied the
water could not be far distant, where natives had been within 2 or 3 days, I
directed a search to be made for it, along the dry sandy channel of a creek,[*]
in the direction of its fall to the northward. In about a mile to our great joy,
a large clay hole was found, containing an ample sufficiency of the precious
element to meet all our demands, and although it had been long in a stagnant
state, it was of good quality...
[* Ottley's or Cunningham's Creek.]
"On the morning of the 25th, as I had been led to conclude, we found the
country, for we had not advanced a mile before a patch of plain opened to us,
bounded by low thinly wooded forest hills, and altogether a pretty picturesque
country. Over the plain we travelled at N. by east to the opposite piece of
forest ground, and passing which, we reached a second plain, stretching as did
the former, east and west several miles, and their breadth being about a mile
and a quarter.
"It was distressing, however, to observe so much fine black soil--sound, dry
and crumbling beneath the foot--as these plains possess, clothed moreover with
an exuberant growth of grasses and herbage, languishing for rain, and without
channels of sufficient depth and capacity, throughout that ample surface, to
retain water permanently throughout the year. A pleasing succession of open
forest hills and waterless downs, characterize the face of the country to the
close of a 12 mile journey, which terminated at a stony gully, where, after a
little search, we were fortunate to discover fine water retained in narrow rocky
cavities,
"Upon reaching the brow of the forest ridge immediately over our encampment
the hills to the westward were observed to terminate and a level open country
(bounded to the N.N.W. and north only by the distant horizon) broke upon our
view, of which, although generally densely wooded, the vast surface was here and
there diversified by patches of open plain. I could perceive from the spot on
which I made these observations, the level country, as far as N.N.E. beyond
which, or more easterly...my further observation was prevented. The mean
elevation of our tents above the ocean was 1228 feet, which placed us upwards Of
300 feet above the ford of Peel's River [i.e. the Gwydirl.]
"26th. Throughout the whole of the last night the temperature of the
atmosphere was perceived by each person of the expedition to be sensibly milder
than had been experienced since its progress from Hunter's River, during which
period slight frosts have generally prevailed, and as some patches of clouds
rose from the distant western horizon, I could not but view these meteorological
variations as ominous, and as there was a new moon at 4 o'clock this morning, I
considered the whole as the presage...of wet weather, which it was natural
enough to conclude would ere long set in, in these vast regions, not simply to
moisten the soil, and revive vegetation, but to fill the channels of its rivers
of which the largest are, at this extremity of drought exceedingly reduced.
"Pursuing our journey to the N.N.E. through an extent (exceeding 5 miles) of
forest ground, in part rather closely timbered and interspersed with thickets of
plants, frequent on the skirts of Liverpool Plains, and again lightly wooded
with a blighted Ironbark we at length intersected the sandy channel of a river
which in other seasons than the present is highly important to the adjacent good
grazing land, and which, at periods of great rains, forms an impetuous stream
ten feet deep, and fifty yards wide.[*] The distress of the year, of which I
have spoken so much, and with which the vegetation of these northern regions has
so long and so strenuously struggled for an existence, appears some time since
to have deprived this ample channel of its water, and as its sandy bed was in
part occupied by a brush of woody plants, that usually usually affect and desert
situation, this circumstance alone appeared sufficient to demonstrate to us that
it had been without water many months.
[* This sandy channel, fifty yards wide, would appear to have been
the Macintyre River, which Cunningham must have passed over, and as the season
was a very dry one, it is not extraordinary that he found only a sandy channel
there.]
"We ere surprised to observe how wonderfully the native grasses had resisted
the dry weather on the upper banks of this dried watercourse. They appeared
fresh and nutritive, affording abundance of provision to the many kangaroos that
were bounding around us. On crossing this sandy channel we continued our
original course N.N.E. over a plain two miles in width, the soil of which we
found excellent, of a black colour, but very dry, the surface being in many
places cracked into deep chasms by the action of the solar rays.
"Apprehensive of difficulty in finding water, I was induced on passing over
the brow of a ridge of forest-land (and observing a hilly country to the
eastward) to alter my line of procedure to E.N.E., in the hope that by advancing
two or three miles towards more elevated grounds, we should succeed in
discovering a sufficiency of that element so rare in these solitudes for
ourselves and horses. Penetrating about 2 miles through an and desert forest, of
a deep sandy soil, and timbered with stately Callitris or cypress, we reached
the rocky margin of a creek by which the waters that occasionally fall from the
hills to the eastward are conveyed to a lower level in the immediate
neighbourhood. Upon tracing this creek a short distance, abundance of good water
was found in its rockv bed, and, as its bank furnished grass of a tolerable
quality, we halted.
May 27th. Being Sunday, I rested my People and horses,[*] a
very lowering morning, the clouds however clearing off early in the forenoon
allowed me to take the necessary observations to determine my position. Lat.
29°00'02" S. Long. 150°40'15" E. variation by azimuth 7°53'E. The mean of
several observations of the height of the mercurial column taken morning and
evening giving me only an elevation of 842 feet above the sea.
[* It will be seen that on this day Cunningham did not advance,
otherwise he would have reached the Dumaresq sooner than he did.]
"We have at length arrived at the parallel of 29° and having consumed more
than the half of the original stock of provisions, with which I had quitted the
colony, it became absolutely necessary, that I should at once determine not only
the extent to which I could possibly penetrate, further to the northward, with
the limited means I have at command after laying aside six weeks full rations
for consumption during the journey homeward, but also the precise direction of
our route onward under all the circumstances of the reduced condition of my
horses, the and state of the country and the aspect of the
weather--circumstances that I must of necessity be governed by, in all my future
movements.
"Upon inspecting my horses I found that notwithstanding the extreme care of
my people the backs of several had become much galled by the saddles, and all
were much reduced and debilitated by the labours of the journey, and more
especially by the parched up state of the pasture, and the general poverty of
the country, through which we have travelled. To these points for consideration
I subjoined the circumstance of the low level to which we had come, the barren
ground it presented, and the probability of descending to an arid region of flat
scrubby country totally destitute of esculent vegetation for the support of my
horses.
"Impressed with these several circumstances of our present situation I felt
bound to determine on a deviation from that line of northern course the plan of
my tour had conditionally prescribed. I therefore resolved to pursue my journey
more to the eastward not only in order to secure to my horses a more certain and
nutritive provision than that harsh vegetation on which they have of late
subsisted, which it was reasonable to suppose the higher lands in that direction
would furnish, but also with the view of connecting (upon penetrating to the
meridian of 152° and north to the parallel of 28°) my sketch of those parts of
the interior through which we have travelled with the country in the vicinity of
Moreton Bay by bearings to each of its fixed points as I might identify, and
especially of the cone of Mount Warning."
It was noticed that the rocks were of a white colour here, and that the few
inhabitants who lived in these tracts took advantage of their softness to
sharpen their mogos or stone hatchets, upon them.[*] Traces of these operations,
of dates both recent and distant, were observed on stony ledges in different
parts of the creek. Among the birds flying round the tents was noticed a parrot
of a large size, never before seen. "The feathers of its head were snow white,
while its body appeared of an uniform green; the wings were also of that colour,
but their outer sides took a brown hue." Only two birds (probably male and
female) were seen, and they were very shy.
[* He called it Moss Creek.]
DUMARESQ RIVER
"May 28th. Cunningham writes: "We had not proceeded three miles to the
N.N.E. through a continuation of barren brushy forest, before we came to the
left bank of a stream, presenting a handsome reach half a mile in length, thirty
yards wide, and evidently very deep. Its bed, which was of a gravel containing
many larger water-worn pebbles of quartz and jasper, was skirted by lofty swamp
oaks bearing on their branches flood marks at least 20 feet above its naked
channel. When therefore its waters are swollen to that height, it forms a rapid
river from 80 to 100 yards in breadth, as I ascertained by the measured distance
of the outer banks from each other. This stream which received the name of
Durnaresq's River[*] (in honour of the family to which His Excellency the
Governor is so intimately connected), rises in a mountainous country to the N.E.
at an elevation (determined in the progress of this expedition) of nearly 3,000
feet above the sea, and after pursuing a western course for about 100 miles
along a singular declivity of country, falls 2,000 feet to the spot at which we
have discovered it, whence it was observed to pass on to the north-western
interior at a mean height of only 840 feet above the level of the ocean. In
tracing its channel upwards in search of a ford, we soon arrived at a part at
which the waters above and those of the reach below us were almost entirely
separated by the dry weather.
[* It runs into the Macintyre and forms a section of the boundary
between New South Wales and Queensland. Cunningham crossed the Dumaresq
between Texas and Bengalla possibly nearer the latter than the former place,
and a little to the south-eastward of Wyemo.]
"From the right bank of Dumaresq River, we again prosecuted our journey to
the N.N.E. and having in the first instance passed over some stony ridges of
trifling elevation, penetrated about 11 miles through an and sandy
forest-ground, wooded with small Ironbark and Cypress. Upon accomplishing our
12th mile the country continued a perfect level clothed with a density of scrub,
underwood, and small blighted timber, but without the smallest indication of
water, which however was not to be hoped for in a region the surface of which we
found so generally coated with white or reddish sand to the depth of several
inches. In this situation, and as the sun was declining to the lower western
levels it became necessary to determine promptly on the course we should pursue,
since by continuing our route to the N.N.E. it was evident, we advanced more
deeply into the midst of the desert.
"Accordingly as we perceived a slight depression of country easterly, I
directed the people to the N.E. dispatching a man forward at that point, to
search for water.
"In a mile, a broad but flat shallow sandy channel was found declining N.N.E.
and in its bed was found a hole, just dry. With renovated hope we traced it
downwards, finding proofs of water being not distant; and in a span of about 1½
miles, a small pool was discovered,[*] fringed around with an aquatic plant "of
our Colony " and as its water although stagnant and discoloured was of a
tolerable quality, we most gladly halted, both men and horses sinking beneath
great fatigue, consequent on a march of ten hours, through an arid sandy low
wood, destitute of water, and in an atmospheric temperature of 75 degrees. The
thermometer at sunset stood at 70°, and the results of barometrical computation
showed us we were lower than the bed of Dumaresq's River. My tent was 811 feet
above the sea."
[* Muddy Creek and Stagnant Pool on the route map.]
On May 29th, quitting this desert wood, the journey north-north-east was
resumed, and in two miles the bank of a small river was met with which flowed
westerly; it was fifteen yards wide but as in the case of other streams
presented the appearance of a chain of ponds or water-holes; some of the latter
were a quarter of a mile in length. Passing over the flat through which this
stream ran, Cunningham's party entered a thick cypress brush, and had penetrated
it for two miles when rain began to fall, so they returned to the river they had
just left, and encamped in lat. 28°45'45" S.
Next day, May 30th, they endeavoured to pass east-north-east round the patch
of thicket of cypress, which in places was twenty-five feet high, and did not
succeed, "for the brushes stretched across our path due east, and so we had to
force a way through to the N.E. At last a patch of open forest enabled us to
proceed, when we came upon the elbow of a rivulet[*] (running from E. to
N.W.)."The land on each side of this was a beautiful sward of grass capable of
forming rich pasturage and permanently watered, so that Cunningham believed that
he had reached a stretch of better country.
[* He named it Macintyre's Brook.]
He continues: "We had, however, difficulties new and fresh in reserve for us
ere the labours of the day were closed. This beautiful stream we found too deep
to pass; but, tracing it up over a verdant carpet...about three-fourths of a
mile, we discovered a pebbly shallow...and, gaining the opposite bank, we
resumed our course to the N.E. over a narrow strip of forest flat which appeared
to stretch along each bank of the rivulet.
"Compact thickets of like description with the patch we had already passed,
again stretched from East to West, over a surface of ground so truly level, as
to afford me, as far as we could observe, not the slightest rise, whence any
observations might be made of the extent of these jungles or the direction
(supposing them to be strips and not extensive masses) in which they were
disposed in these and regions. Finding ourselves thus hemmed in, and although
with every discouraging prospect before us, I nevertheless determined to
persevere in an attempt to force a passage onward to the N.E. bearing however in
mind that should we fail in effecting it in a few hours, we could at least
return on our track to the rivulet, where our horses would rest on fine pasture,
and on the banks of which we might subsequently pursue our way to the eastward
although perhaps on a course in the first instance not better than E.S.E.
"As these thickets from their very margin presented a density almost
impervious to packhorses I directed an active man to follow me with an axe to
remove every obstacle that would prevent their passing forward on a course,
which I endeavoured steadily to pursue by compass to the N.E. In many parts the
quantities of fallen timber were so considerable and the stems of an acacia 5
feet high were so closely grown together and interwoven with other plants as to
present at first view a barrier altogether impenetrable inducing at one stage of
our penetration an apprehension of being eventually obliged to return to the
river.
"A laborious circuitous route enabled me to avoid these intricacies, and as
we subsequently came upon small patches of much thinner brush and more open to
the sun and air whereon we allowed the horses to breathe, we were encouraged to
proceed.
"Thus we continued cutting down small trees and opening the brush for the
horses, for about four miles, when we were gladdened on arriving at an open
clear forest, enabling us to prosecute our route to the N.E. without
inconvenience. Meeting with a chain of ponds in about 3 miles falling to the
eastward, containing good water we again rested, as men and horses were sinking
beneath the labours of the day. The course and distance made from the morning's
encampment, notwithstanding the difficulties of the way, being E. 41 N. 11
miles."
Cunningham extended the 31st day's stage through rising ground to the
north-north-west, where water was found in a stagnant state "by a little
deviation from our line of course to the S.W.," and the party encamped in a
forest flat of blue and spotted gums. Earlier in the day, from the summit of a
range, he had faintly descried another range at a distance of eighty miles, this
being low, detached, and stretching eastward N. 2°W. to N.1° E. Somewhat further
towards the east lay yet another range with a pointed peak in the centre. A high
range which extended to the north-north-east and south-south-west and bore
east-south-east twenty-five miles, he named Macleay's Range. The ranges with
which he was surrounded were too high to admit of an extended view towards the
Mount Warning Ranges, but to the west-south-west-by-west and thence to north was
a vast expanse of level land, bounded only by the horizon.
"June 1-3. Monotonous country, continually rising to the E.N.E." For
twenty miles a barren and uninteresting territory was traversed; on the 3rd, at
a camp on a stony creek, the latitude observed is given as 28°17'49" S., and
long. (by acct.) 151°21' E., and mean height above the ocean 1404 feet."
Cunningham resumes: "Although we have been rising each stage during the last
week progressively to a somewhat more elevated line of country than that through
which we have of late passed, we have yet to arrive at nutritive pasturage, that
upon which my horses have (it may be said) miraculously subsisted being
everywhere seriously affected by the droughts of the year. Nevertheless situated
as we were, it was impossible to pursue a better course than N.E. easterly, we
therefore again continued our journey in that direction on the morning of the
4th ascending a series of rather heavily timbered forest ridges...rough and
stony surface.
"At our third mile whilst in the act of passing over the brow of one of these
hills the voices of natives were distinctly heard, and almost immediately we
perceived several Indians in motion among the timber, not however before they
had evidently had for some moments the first gaze of surprise at us, as the
trunks of the trees being as black as the bodies of these people had prevented
our descrying them as quickly. I happened to be accompanied by only one of my
people, the others being with the packhorses that were working up another part
of the rising ground behind the natives, where the acclivity was more moderate.
On my calling to the packhorse leaders, the natives stood and viewed us at the
distance of about 100 yards, occasionally retiring behind the trees, again
walking about in great uneasiness. The spot was their encamping ground, and as
they had their women and children with them, whose respective voices we could
distinctly recognize, they could not leave their fires with that precipitation
which their great alarm induced by our presence would evidently have urged.
"The instant however the people in charge of the horses had replied to my
call, from the gully whence they were ascending to me, the agitation of the
natives became extreme, they therefore having already hurried away their gins
and little ones, ran off with the utmost despatch through the brushy woods to
the northward. I could have rejoiced to have brought about a communication with
these Indians, had my people been with us, or had we met each other on more open
ground, than a confined brushy forest, for I felt perfectly satisfied that as
soon as their fears had been removed by our pacific overtures to them, they
would have proved themselves of friendly disposition, as they neither made any
reply to us, or appeared in the least disposed to place themselves in menacing
attitudes, or exhibited their weapons to deter us from approaching them. Under
the circumstances however of our meeting, I deemed it prudent, as soon as I
perceived them, to stand still until they had made their little arrangements to
depart, I could have proceeded quickly upon them, but the consequences might
have been serious to us, as we had no arms at the time, and those people might
have been disposed to have disputed the ground with us, on the score of their
women and children which nature teaches even the savage it is a duty in man, as
a husband and parent to protect.
"Ere my people had joined me, they had passed the fires of these aborigines
which were seven in number, and about them they recognized the bones of the
bandycoot and bustard, of which latter, the feathers were strewed around, and
upon the flesh of which these Indians had been feasting.
"Upon joining again we continued our journey, and immediately quitting the
more open forest ground, entered a dense brush of Acacia Daviesiae, the
wand-like stems of which indurated by fire, proving a very serious annoyance to
us. With great bodily exertion to man and horse we penetrated about 4 miles
through thicket ten feet high and upon making forest ground on its eastern
skirts we traced a narrow valley (falling easterly) in search of water."
Following the valley for a little distance the party halted at a rocky
water-hole, where they spent the night.[*] Smoke seen during the day to the
northward and eastward, and the frequent screech of the white cockatoo, told
Cunningham that water was not far away. Next day, June 5th, setting off in an
east-north-east direction, after two miles he crossed a rocky creek,[**] with
pools of good water and green grass on its margin; and from "the pitch of a
ridge"[***] above it he obtained a "most agreeable" view of open country, which
from its aspect he felt would reward him for his toil and crown his labours.
[* Brushy Vale on the maps 1504 feet above the sea.]
[** 1,717 feet above the sea.]
[*** One of the highest points between Thane's Creek and Sandy
Creek according to Sir A. Morgan.]
This was in fact Cunningham's first view of the Darling Downs.
A gap in the forest ridge revealed eight or nine miles of open downs of great
extent rolling away easterly to the base of a lofty range, lying north and south
and distant about three miles. The sight of such a country in the distance
revived the drooping spirits of his people wonderfully, and they proceeded
forward at a quickened pace to the eight mile stage, where they arrived at a
parallel of 28°11'10" S. The timber became thinner and "we had not advanced half
a mile," writes Cunningham, "before we came upon a patch of open plain skirted
by a low ridge on its western side and forest ground at the opposite point. With
great satisfaction we perceived, as we approached the downs, that small patches
or strips of mist extended throughout their length, and a line of swamp-oaks
stretched along their south-western extremes, showing us that these extensive
tracts were not wanting in water."
CONDAMINE RIVER[*]
[* This river rises in the Dividing Range about sixty miles from
the sea, flows north-west for 250 miles, then bends west and south-west. On
being joined by the Maranoa, it runs to the south-west under the name of the
Balonne. Cunningham crossed it near Toolburra.]
"Upon accomplishing a journey of thirteen miles [the last one] we stopped on
the left bank of a small river that comes from the S.E., which appeared likely
to give us trouble to pass, as...there was very deep water...with a current
flowing to the N.W." While the men fished there during the afternoon, at a spot
half a mile above the encampment, they noticed three natives in the bush on the
opposite bank burning the grass. They showed no signs of alarm, but afterwards
walked away at a leisurely pace and passed out of sight in the forest.
Cunningham fixed the situation of his encampment here as being in 28°9'37" S.
(by observation at noon of the 6th of June) and 151°41'30" E., and its mean
elevation above the sea, 1,402 feet.
"After quitting our resting place immediately after noon," he continues, "on
June 6th, proceeding up the river half a mile, we crossed to the opposite bank
by a ford that had been previously discovered by my people. From this stream,
which was named Condamine's River in compliment to the officer[*] who is A.D.C.
to the Governor, we entered upon the extensive downs, pursuing our way to the
E.N.E. along their southern margin. During the afternoon and following day we
travelled their whole extent to the base of the mountains which bound them at
their eastern extreme, and were able to make the following observations.
[* Thomas de la Condamine, A.D.C. to Governor Darling.]
DARLING DOWNS
"These extensive tracts, which I have named Darling Downs in honour of His
Excellency, are situate in or about the mean parallel of 28°8', along which they
extend 18 miles to the meridian of 152°. On the north side they are bounded by a
rise of lightly wooded ridges, skirted on their opposite margin by a level
forest of box and white gum. A chain of deep ponds passes along the central
lower portion throughout its whole length and falls westerly into the Condamine
River[*]; their breadth varies; at the western extremity it appeared about 1½
miles, towards the eastern limits it was estimated at 3 miles. Grasses and
herbage were of the same species in similar situations in the southern country;
no plant appeared more striking than a rib-grass (Plantago struthionis),
the leaves of which measured 12-15 inches in length. From these lower grounds
downs of a rich black and dry soil, clothed with abundance of grass...stretched
on an east and west line, constituting a range of sound sheep-pasture convenient
to water but beyond the reach of floods...Such is the character of the Darling
Downs, which comprise little short of 28,000 acres."
[* The chain of ponds is now known as Glengallan Creek. In
consequence of the drought conditions of 1827 the water here, as in some other
places, had ceased running.]
Towards the close of the afternoon of June 7th Cunningham advanced
north-by-east through open apple-forest when, upon reaching the base of a
curious flat-topped Mount[*] which terminated the range of mountains on the east
side, his party encamped. He writes of this spot: "We found there a narrow creek
with the finest patch of meadow pasturage I have seen in New South Wales, and
determined to remain there two days to rest our wearied horses, some being
reduced to the last stage of debility." He also wished to examine the dark
brushes covering the mount from its base to its summit, since the plants growing
upon it had an intertropical appearance. On the morning of the 8th, accompanied
by one of his people, he set out to climb the Table Mount, at the foot of which
stood his tents; for two hours they had to make their way through a thicket of
plants like those Cunningham had seen on the Brisbane in 1824, until at last
they gained an open spot on the summit, whence an excellent view of the country
was obtained. From north by way of west, thence to south and south-east, he took
bearings of the most remarkable points.
[* Mount Dumaresq.]
CANNING DOWNS
He noticed that at N.N.W., and especially at North, the country formed a
series of densely timbered ridges extending from the chain of mountains
immediately to eastward, which appeared to constitute the main or Great Dividing
Range separating the coast district from the interior. From the N.W. to West and
thence to South the eye traversed a vast expanse of open land--in the distance
apparently tame and uninteresting, but within the scope of twenty miles showing
every pleasing feature of hill and dale, woodland and plain. To the north of
Darling Downs large, clear patches of land [Clifton Plains] were named Peel's
Plains, whilst those to the S. and S.S.E. were christened Canning Downs "in
honour of the Right Hon. George Canning." The extent of these downs, through
which ran a stream bending its course to the N.W., Cunningham was unable to
gather, but the lofty ridge bounding them to southward (which lay nearly east
and north) was entitled Herries Range.
He spent a great part of the day botanizing until heavy weather from the
north and signs of rain made him hasten back to the camp with his specimens. In
describing the Table Mount where his tents were pitched Cunningham writes: "The
rock composing the mountain is whinstone, extremely cavernous, the cavities
containing crystallized quartz." This flat-topped mountain was named Mount
Dumaresq, and on its northern side a grassy valley extending north-east from
Darling Downs to the foot of the Main Range was entitled Millar's Vale.
Rainy weather now set in, and the travellers could not leave their camp until
June 10th, when it had cleared up. Having taken bearings of his route,
Cunningham wished to proceed to some high ranges eastward, and obtain a view
from their summits of different points of the coast. A hill in his path of
square form, similar to Mount Dumaresq, and bearing south-south-east from it,
obliged him to go four miles to the south-east of his course.
LOGAN'S VALE
Upon passing round the south-western foot of this hill, which he called Mount
Sturt in honour of Captain Sturt of the 39th Regiment, his party travelled over
"patches of downs " and then pushed again to the north-east. They came to the
entrance of a valley and in five miles crossed a small swamp-oak creek[*]
winding southerly through it, and halted on its banks in an apple-tree flat
clothed with green. On entering this valley, which was named Logan's Vale in
honour of Captain Logan, commandant at the settlement at Brisbane (distant to
the north-east about seventy-five miles), they observed that the soil round the
foot of a tree had been dug and broken-by natives evidently, in search of the
larvae of insects (a favourite delicacy with them); and that at a short distance
beyond this spot another tree had just been barked. Cunningham looked for the
black woodman, who he felt sure was close at hand, but did not see him. It was
thought, however, that probably he had concealed himself in the dark brushes
extending from Mount Sturt, which bounded the route on the left, or possibly in
a hollow on the right by which the stream, winding through the vale, escaped
southerly. "It was," says Cunningham, "in the brushy forests clothing the slopes
of the lateral ranges on our left that I first clearly and satisfactorily
recognized a pine which I subsequently identified with the species of
Araucaria so frequent in the dark forests that invest the banks of the
River Brisbane."[**]
[* Possibly Swan Creek of the maps.]
[* A. Cunninghamii: See (under date June 10, 1827) Allan
Cunningham's report to General Darling. Cunningham had seen this tree during
his visit to Moreton Bay, and, as already mentioned, he then noticed that
there existed the difference between it and A. excelsa, the Norfolk
Island Pine.]
He continues: "I determined to occupy two or three days in this vale making
observations to enable me to determine my position...whilst my horses were
recovering from...the effects of the scantiness and bad quality of the pasture
during the journey. June 11th.--A sharp frost, the thermometer at 7 a.m. had
sunk to 30°. Having directed the occupations of my people...accompanied by one
man I proceeded to a part of the range immediately above our tents whence I
hoped to make all remarks on the journey to the northward and eastward that I
considered indispensable to a satisfactory closure of my journey. In an hour we
reached the summit of the ridge...we continued to ascend from one tier to
another (generally in a north-eastern direction) until about 3 o'clock we gained
a lofty point. From here we observed through some hollow part of the extreme
range in our front (about 1½ miles away) portions of the country in the vicinity
of the Brisbane River at N.E., also parts of the more distant lands at the base
of the Mount Warning Ranges, the cone of which we distinctly saw crowning the
group of mountains about 65 or 70 miles away. It was with much satisfaction I
took the following bearings. Cone of Mount Warning, E. 9° S. High peak of the
chart[*] N. 50° E. Spot on which the tents stood on Logan's Vale, W. 44° S.
about 5 miles.
[* This was named Mount Flinders.]
CUNNINGHAM'S GAP FIRST SIGHTED
"Had the day continued fine and clear, I should have endeavoured...to have
gained the highest ridge...about 2 miles distant...it would have enabled me in
taking a survey of this...mountainous land to have observed how far a passage
over these lofty ranges could be effected by which the...country passed over
could become accessible from the shores of Moreton Bay or Brisbane River.[*] We,
however, noticed from the station to which we had climbed a very deeply
excavated part of the main range bearing from us about N.N.E. two or three
miles, to the pitch of which there appeared a tolerably easy rise along the back
of a forest ridge from the head of Millar's Valley. So remarkable a hollow in
the principal range I determined not to leave unexamined, since it appeared...it
might prove to be a very practicable pass from the eastern country to the
Darling Downs and thus form the door of a very considerable grazing
country."
[* A passage from the sea-coast to the interior.]
Rain, which fell in heavy showers, obliged Cunningham and his man to leave
the range, descending by a rocky gully. He says: "At 8 o'clock we reached the
encampment perfectly drenched, myself never more disposed to sink beneath
excessive fatigue." And adds: "These forest ridges were covered to their summits
with grasses of luxuriant growth, and were watered by trickling rills. These
mountains, to the bases of which we have approached, form a leading range and
separate the eastern and western waters." From his observations Cunningham
calculated that the height of the Dividing Range was about 4,100 feet.
The night of the 11th was boisterous and wet, and next day rain confined the
explorers to their tents. On the morning of the 13th, the weather being somewhat
clearer, Cunningham sent two of his men to Millar's Valley to examine the
mountain gap that he had discovered in the range, and thence to eastward, to
take bearings. He himself stayed in the bush round his tent collecting specimens
of the plants there, which were for the most part of an "intertropical"
character. The situation of his encampment he places in lat. 28°10'45" S. and
long. 152°7'45" E. This was his most northern point. The height here of his tent
above the shores of Moreton Bay was 1,877 feet.
Not until noon on the 14th did the men return with the account of the hollow
back in the Dividing Range at the head of Millar's Valley. The following report
of their observations was sent by Cunningham to General Darling: "They ascended
a narrow ridge by which they rose gradually seven miles to a distance of about
one mile from the highest pitch of the Gap, when the difficulties appeared to
consist of the ruggedness of the large masses of rock that had fallen from the
heads into the hollow and the brush with which these boulders were covered. On
ascending the south head they observed a rather easier passage over the range
where a road could be constructed, the acclivity from Millar's Valley being by
no means abrupt and the fall easterly from the range to the forest ground at its
foot appearing exceedingly moderate." To the north-east lay an extensive tract
of grazing land, with patches of plain and ridge, and in no part apparently was
there any obstacle likely to prevent direct communication either with the
southern shores of Moreton Bay or with the banks of the Brisbane.[*]
[* Cunningham's Gap lies fifty miles south-west from Brisbane and
sixty miles west of Point Danger.]
THE RETURN ROUTE
Cunningham now began his preparations for his return home. He felt quite
unable at this stage of the expedition to carry out his original plan of
exploring westward from the point which he now had reached, and on 16th June he
left Logan's Vale on his homeward journey and in nine miles reached the northern
skirts of Canning Downs. In a southerly course over these he crossed a winding
creek with steep, soft banks, which flowed westward through the downs and which
he thought fell into Condamine's River.[*] His route passed through fine trees
of red gum (Eucalyptus robusta) and swamp-oak (Casuarina) until,
having completed fifteen miles, he halted at a chain of small ponds. On the 17th
he gave the men and horses a rest. Lat. 28°21'17" S., long. 152°02' E., mean
height above the sea, 1,567 feet.
[* On this day he passed close to the site of Warwick.]
Breaking up his camp on the 18th at eight o'clock, he started again and
reached a mossy plain which ran to the south-east, having a swamp-oak creek
winding through its centre. On arriving on the bank of this watercourse, which
he crossed, marks of natives were seen. After seven miles the party rested here,
and it was noticed that the banks of each side on the creek were studded with
fragments of granite in which were pieces of quartz. At sunset Cunningham found
they were 1,854 feet above the sea. A mile farther, on June 19th, they descended
between large detached blocks of rock to the channel of a brisk rivulet, which
had a considerable dip to the south and flowed among masses of granite, "forming
many a strange grotesque figure." Fording the river again with difficulty, the
route now led them to the eastward, and here the explorers met with a narrow but
deep creek which ran from that direction to the rivulet. After crossing it they
ascended lofty hills on the western side, and encamped for the night beside a
stream falling over some granite rocks.
At eight o'clock next morning they again started in a southerly direction,
and at the sixth mile an extensive view was obtained of lofty, detached hills
beyond which rose the Mount Warning Range, whose cone, however, was not visible.
At three o'clock, to rest the horses, Cunningham halted on higher ground than he
had passed over since leaving the Liverpool Range above Hunter's River, the
situation of his tent by calculation being 2,592 feet above "the seacoast at
Cape Byron," which bore east ninety miles from the encampment. Here the party
remained during continuous wet weather, which ultimately cleared on the evening
of the 23rd.
On June 24th, after following a course towards the east-south-east, they
crossed the stream, which by now had become exceedingly rapid, at a ford
discovered by one of the men; and passed over a succession of lofty ranges (part
of the main or Great Dividing Range), heavily timbered with gum-trees, beneath
which grew large masses of ferns and plants frequently seen at Five Islands
(Illawarra). On quitting these forests, open scrubs and spongy swamps lay in
their path, and at noon of June 25th, at a black, sterile spot on these granite
mountains, Cunningham took his bearings, and found that he was 2,969 feet above
the sea level, in lat. 28°44'48" S. Five miles from here he descended into a
swampy valley and pitched his tents. On the 26th advance was stopped by the
roughness of the country, which became appalling. "Large detached masses of
granite of every shape towering above each other, and in many instances standing
in almost tottering positions, constituted a barrier before us; beyond these a
deep ravine formed a curve from E. to S.W., which was itself bounded by a rocky
ridge at least 250 feet high." Observing an opening to the northward Cunningham
followed a running stream in that direction which (although the party had
travelled eleven miles) brought them back to within two miles of their last
camp, only a rocky ridge separating them from it.
By still following the small stream, at an early hour on the 27th they
reached a point two miles farther north, and, after passing round the northern
end of a formidable ridge, turned westward through brushy forest composed of
stringy-bark, honeysuckle (Banksia compar), and cypress. At the twelfth
mile, descending in a south-west direction to a level flat, the tired men
reached the reedy bank of a rivulet, "which at our eighth mile we had quitted on
its passing southerly through a broken gap in the western stony ridge where,
doubtless augmented by other streams, it appears to be Macintyre's Brook, which
we had forded on the 30th ultimo 60 miles to the westward; the elevation of its
bed above the sea being little more than 800 feet. Here the mean height on which
stood our tents was 2,254 feet."On passing this rivulet Cunningham tried a
course to the south-west along a continuation of the flat to the base of a
forest ridge, and stopped at an early hour of the day (on 28th) to allow the
farrier daylight to shoe the pack-horses (in lat. 28°55' S.), where a narrow
valley provided both water and grass.
June 29th. "The barometer showed that we had ascended 330 feet since the
morning. By far the sharpest frost we had experienced on this journey. Our
thermometer, fully exposed about sunrise stood at 25°, and ice one-fourth of an
inch thick crusted the surface of stagnant pools in the rocky watercourses.
Pushing southerly again, Cunningham soon was obliged to turn to the
north-west--"a deep glen, at least 100 yards wide, with yawning, perpendicular,
rocky sides and a small river[*] at its stony bottom running to W.," cutting him
off from all communication with the country to the southward. Whilst his party
kept along the ridges to the north-west, he sent one of his men to skirt the
ravine and to look for a slope to the bed of the river by which they might
descend and reach the opposite or southern hills. This was found about a mile
away, and, as the day was advancing, their course was altered to south-west
again and they soon arrived at the grassy slope. The latitude, from an
observation taken at noon on the upper edge of the ravine, was 28°59'56" S., and
"as this," says Cunningham, "is nearly the parallel of the creek on which we had
rested on the 26th of last month, and in the neighbourhood of Dumaresq's River,
there can be no doubt about the water of the glen, which we had found flowing
briskly to westward at a higher level of 650 ft., being one of its
tributaries."
[* The Glen River.--Note in MS.]
He continues: "On 30th June our passage over this shallow stream was not
easily effected, for its bed upon examination was found so rocky and irregular
that it became unsafe to lead a laden horse across its channel, the baggage here
being conveyed over on the men's shoulders." The course to the
west-south-west--on climbing the hills from the bed of the glen--now led over
high ridges and narrow valleys. At the sixth mile a valley was seen lying about
east and west, and through which flowed a river skirted with swamp-oaks. The
stream was found to be fifty yards wide, running to the westward and abounding
in water-fowl. After crossing a stony fall to its left bank the party encamped
on a spot where the luxuriant pasture, so necessary for the worn-out horses,
induced Cunningham to remain for the whole of the next day. The river took its
rise in the mountains to the northward and eastward at an elevation of nearly
3,000 feet above the sea, and from its size and tendency he at once identified
it. It was the Dumaresq River, which he had forded to the westward on the 28th
of the preceding month. It formed a handsome reach in front of their tents
three-fourths of a mile in length by about fifty yards in breadth, and had an
average depth of twelve feet. By observation he fixed this part of the river as
being in lat. 29°1'14" S., long. 151°31'30" E. Its height above the sea was
1,040 feet.
July 2-3. "Having remarked from the hills...that the country lying in our
direct line of route to the southward was altogether impassable, I proposed to
trace the river through the vale to the westward with the hopes that we should
be enabled to pursue our course homeward in a more direct line." Some of his
people who walked down the vale in quest of game noticed that the river at first
inclined north of west and afterwards bent to the southward. "We accordingly,"
he tells us, "proceeded along its left bank, which in a mile inclined with the
vale to N.W., the latter becoming larger, presenting wider flats of good grass,
on the opposite bank from which the boundary hills continued lofty, stony and
thickly wooded, and receded considerably to the northward. At the third mile, a
stream from north by east, after passing through a gap in the mountainous land,
joined the Dumaresq, which here bends westward and eventually south-west showing
by its increased width of 60 to 70 yards and more regular depth and the length
of its reaches how much it had profited by the confluence with a stream which
was evidently the Glen River that had been passed two days before."
Open, thickly-wooded flats, one or two miles wide, extended along each bank,
on which were very big blue-gum trees. The travelling proved so easy that
Cunningham says he "ventured to extend our day's journey to fourteen miles,
which the horses have accomplished with great ease."
"We halted on the river at a part where the breadth across to the opposite
bank (which was perpendicular and of a reddish earth) was not less than 100
yards. The flats on the opposite side were on fire, and, as we remarked patches
in flames near us, it was evident there were natives in the neighbourhood. The
river appears to continue its course to the southward and westward towards an
obviously lower country through which our route to-morrow will lie. Our dogs
caught an emu on the flats, and the anglers had scarcely cast their hooks into
the river, which at this part appeared very deep, than their success commenced.
Several fish of the cod of all the western rivers were caught in the course of
the evening, of which one weighed 15 lbs."
July 3rd. "A very cloudy morning with every sign of rain at sunrise: the
wind, freshening at S.W., dispelled the clouds and at noon a fine day appeared.
We continued our journey about 7 miles in a S.W. direction down the river, when
the valley, taking a decided bend to W.N.W. and N.W., turned the course of the
river in that direction. We therefore quitted this fine stream, and, pursuing a
line of route to S.W., arrived (at our ninth mile) upon a small patch of plain,
the lat. of which proved to be 29°12'03" S. Onward we passed, over several stone
forest ridges and narrow valleys, for about three miles, when, observing from
S.E. to S.S.E. before us a lofty, broken country, I deemed it prudent to
halt...our tents were therefore pitched in a barren valley giving us plenty of
water, but our horses had scarcely any grass.
"Before sunset I climbed a high hill in front of our encampment to observe
the country, and on reaching its summit had a fine view. A crescent of lofty,
rocky ranges appeared to stretch from east to south-east, thence to south-west.
As these were fronted by a deep ravine, the whole presented so precipitous and
savage a feature as forbade any attempt to pass beyond them to the southward. I,
however, remarked that as all the hills appeared to terminate to northward and
westward, a course in that direction for about four miles would probably lead me
to a moderately surfaced country, over which horses could travel to the
southward and westward without difficulty. On quitting the sterile valley in
which we had halted, we pursued a steady course to the northward on the morning
of the 4th, and...in about five miles perceived that we had advanced
sufficiently beyond the northern termination of the loftier ranges to allow us
to stand more to the westward. In another mile...we shaped our course to
southward and westward, which we pursued without interruption during the
succeeding twenty miles.
"Throughout an extent of 13 miles the timbers were of ironbark, box and
white-gum...the soil poor and unproductive of grass, and, as no rain had fallen
for many months, it was with difficulty that we discovered sufficient water for
ourselves and horses. At length we crossed, on the afternoon of the 5th, a
stream flowing to southward and westward, to which I gave the name of Anderson's
Brook[*] in compliment to my friend of the medical staff of the colony. Beyond
the stream the grasses appear altogether of a brighter hue. At noon of the 5th
our lat. was 29°24'09" S., and at the close of day we rested on a well-watered
patch of good grass.
[* The Severn of modern maps.]
BURRELL RIVER[*]
[* Part of the Macintyre River.]
6th July. "Upon passing onward to westward through open forest about 3 miles
we reached the right bank of a deep river about 30 yards wide and trending to
the N.N.W. This river, which originates in the mountainous country at N.N.E.,
bore signs of being a channel by which vast bodies of water are carried to the
N.W. interior...at this season it is little other than a chain of large,
canal-like ponds separated by shallows of gravel of which its outer banks are
formed...This stream which was named Burrell River, doubtless augmented by
Anderson's Brook in a few miles further to westward, falls into Peel's
River."
Cunningham continued his journey for twelve miles through gentle, open forest
with good, sweet grass, and then passed the eastern extreme of a cypress ridge,
where again large masses of granite rock were seen. From a spot southward of
Burrell River an extensive view of the line of country lying west of Shoal Bay
was obtained. "Of the capacity of this indentation, discovered by Captain
Flinders in 1799," says Cunningham, "we know little, as it appears not to be
visited by vessels, probably on account of the character of its title and
waters." He describes the inland country at this point, its soil and timbers,
and says: "At our ninth mile the forest ground became broken and a breccia or
puddingstone appeared, and at length we descended to a rocky creek having little
water, but so thickly brushed with tea-tree (Melaleuca) and
Leptospermum as to oblige us to cut a path for the horses."
Difficult country now obliged him to bear away on the 7th to north-west among
ridges, from which he descended to a narrow, woody valley immediately bounded on
the north by Masterton's Range (observed on May 23rd) and watered by a broad,
reedy creek, "evidently the channel by which the streams we have of late crossed
pass to the westward." He had accomplished sixteen miles when he came to a part
of the valley where there was good grass, and there he directed the tents to be
pitched.
July 8th. The marks of natives wandering in quest of food were noticed on the
timber through which the travellers passed on this day. There were steps on the
tree trunks, evidently cut to aid the blacks in climbing, although the bush
furnished few opossum and apparently the natives had been seeking larvae or
pupae, upon which they must chiefly have lived. These were most often found in
the knot at the upper limbs of a straight-grown box. The latitude of the
encampment here on the 8th is given as 29°34'02" S., longitude (from the
meridian of Logan's Vale) being 150°35'50" E. Cunningham writes: "In order to
avoid a rocky part of the valley through which the channel of the reedy creek[*]
wound westerly, I pursued a course to the S.W. over stony boundary hills, and
passed through a barren, scrubby wood productive of many curious plants. In this
sterile forest, which afforded me many specimens, we were not a little surprised
to meet with a shed of most temporary erection, 24 feet long by about six feet
broad, and formed by eight strong posts of young trees having their bases well
secured in the earth, supporting a horizontal wattled roof, slightly thatched
with gum-tree boughs, about ten feet from the ground. Upon examination, it was
evident that it had been set up by white men who knew well the use and
application of the axe, and from the appearance of the ends of the timbers we
judged it to have stood so for four months. There were several small bark huts
of natives in the neighbourhood...I arrived at the conclusion that the persons
who had erected this screen from the sun (for it formed no protection from rain
or bad weather, being narrow and open on all sides), had been cedar-cutters,
who, having escaped from Port Macquarie, distant E.S.E. 165 miles, had joined a
tribe of natives and were wandering at large through this distant interior."
[* He was now again close to the site of Warialda.]
GWYDIR RIVER
July 9th. Cunningham crossed his outward track about the seventh mile of this
day's stage, having ascertained that he had reached the parallel Of 29°35' S. A
very open country now was traversed, thinly timbered, but almost destitute of
water. At the seventeenth mile, near the base of a remarkable range seen in the
outward journey, several other points of known country were recognized. A halt
was made at dusk (on the 9th) at a small creek. The report runs: "We had no
sooner quitted the ground on which we had encamped, than at a distance not
exceeding 200 yards we came upon the right bank of a stream forming a very
handsome reach of deep water, seventy yards wide, with steep, soft bank, and
bending round the northern extreme of the lofty range to open country at N.W.
This river we traced on its right bank upwards to a safe ford, by which we
crossed to its opposite side over a bed of gravel measuring 146 yards in
breadth.[*] Above the bed of the river, which the prolonged season of drought
had reduced to a very low level, we remarked the traces of floods 55 feet in the
branches of the swamp-oaks skirting its channel. When, therefore, in seasons of
great rains, this river is swollen...the rush of the impetuous torrent bearing
logs of timber down its channel to a depressed interior must be awfully
grand!"
[* Cunningham crossed the Gwydir on fallen swamp-oaks on his
homeward journey to the westward of his former crossing.]
This river, named by Cunningham in honour of Lord Gwydir, has its source in
the New England tableland near Armidale, between Guyra and Uralla. From either
of these places to Moree is roughly 200 miles. A few miles below Moree the river
disappears and its waters spreading through numerous watercourses and swamps are
carried into the Barwon. sixty miles further west and thence to the Darling.
HORTON'S RIVER
Continuing his journey southwards, Cunningham on July 11th came to another
river which trended to northward, "having so much the character, magnitude and
appearance of the Peel," that he says he might have confounded it with Mr.
Oxley's discovery, which he thought it joined. He traced it for about a mile and
called it Horton's River, and the valley through which it flowed he named Wilmot
Vale, while the lofty hills bounding this vale on the west he called Drummond's
Range. Horton's River took its rise in the highlands connected with Hardwick's
Range (of Oxley), and on the 12th the explorers, in the hope of finding a less
difficult country to traverse, turned into another valley "at a remarkable break
in the ranges, through whose centre a tributary of Horton's River meandered."
They then resumed a south-west course and spent the night in a solitary spot
amid very steep, stony hills, where the valley grew narrow towards the
south-west. To the westward, not ten miles off, Hardwicke's Range towered above
their encampment.
On the 13th there was a hard frost for an hour after sunrise. From this spot
for two days the route southerly led over very rugged, mountainous country,
during which the horses could only with great exertion gain the summits of the
principal ranges at an elevation of 2,500 feet. At noon on the 16th, from a
forest ridge, Cunningham had an extensive view from south-east by way of south
and west-south-west of Mitchell's River (or Namoi). Mount Tetley, the rugged
outlines of Arbuthnot's Range, and points of Vansittart's Hills, on the
north-west side of Liverpool Plains, were also recognized. On the 17th the party
descended the hills, and, reaching level country, pursued a direct course to the
southward. The country lying north from Liverpool Plains was composed of flats,
wooded lands, and scrub watered by shallow channels. After nine miles they
reached a flat where they found a water-hole of stagnant water, and were glad to
rest there. On the trunks of the trees around them they noticed marks made by
natives with an iron tomahawk, which, says Cunningham, reminded them that they
were approaching the abode of civilized man. At their 18th mile they arrived at
a more extensive flat, which they crossed and believed to be Barrow's Valley of
Mr. Oxley. After encamping on the margin of a wood without finding water, they
started again at sunrise, and about four miles farther, by following a southerly
course, they made the right bank of Field's River, which, having received the
waters of Mitchell's River, now formed a channel within steep banks eighty yards
wide. Tents were pitched on the opposite bank, and its situation by observation
was found to be lat. 30°54'14" S., and long. 150°10' E.
Describing the home-coming of this expedition, Cunningham writes as follows:
"July 20-28. On leaving Field's River, which had taken a bend to eastward, we
resumed our course to the southward, and, having travelled 27 miles...we reached
the northern outskirts of Liverpool Plains soon after noon of the 21st. Over
these spacious levels we travelled 25 miles to the southward, almost to the
northern base of the Dividing Range, before we found water for ourselves or our
horses; and, after resting the whole of the 24th, we climbed over the Dividing
Range by a practicable pass to the westward of that part at which we had crossed
it in May. Pursuing our route to the eastward about fifteen miles, we
intersected Dartbrook and on 28th July returned to Segenhoe, on Hunter's River,
having been absent 13 weeks, in which space we had travelled over 800 miles of
country."
Summing up the results of this journey he says" "To the colonist the chief
gain is the discovery of pastoral country lying north from the parallel Of 31°S.
to almost the shores of Moreton Bay in 27°30' S., and between the meridian of
150° E. and the coast-line; while to the geographer this tour has furnished
material by which 200 statute miles of previously unknown interior may be added
to the general charts of the country." He adds: "Five times only in the progress
of the journey were the aborigines seen, when, either by alarm excited by the
strange appearance of the packhorses or other circumstances, our communication
was entirely prevented...the few that suffered us to view them at a distance
appeared to be tall, well-formed persons of rather athletic features, possessing
the same description of weapons as those who people the shores of our colony,
with whom they appeared to be identified in their wandering habits and the
manner by which they find their food in the trees and their path through the
forest."
Cunningham gave his people and horses a week's rest at Segenhoe and left
there on August 5th to journey back to Parramatta by way of Bathurst. Owing to
the ruggedness of the country near Mount Dangar, round the south-west base of
which their route lay, the party did not reach their old camp at Dabee on the
Cudgegong until August 16th. Having crossed Smith's River they fell in with
ravines, and were compelled to turn back and to seek a route to Dabee by passing
through Bylong Valley, which had been found by William Lee some time previously.
From Dabee they proceeded to Bathurst, where they arrived on the 23rd, and here
again they rested, finally reaching Parramatta on the evening of the 31st. Next
day Cunningham waited upon Governor Darling and laid before him an outline of
the country through which he had penetrated and the report of his proceedings as
related above.
Major Mitchell, in his first expedition (1831-1832), ascertained that the
rivers discovered by Cunningham were sources of the Darling. In his course
northward Mitchell reached a stream called Kindur (the Gwydir) by the natives,
which he considered to be the river discovered by Cunningham. Crossing this
river, and travelling northward, in 29°2' S. he came upon the Karaula or
Dumaresq. Tracing it down, he found that it joined the Gwydir only eight miles
below the point where he had crossed the latter stream, and that, after uniting,
they flowed to the southwest finally, as he discovered in a subsequent journey,
joining the Darling.
CHAPTER XVIII
FURTHER EXPLORATIONS IN QUEENSLAND. DETERMINATION OF CUNNINGHAM'S GAP
(From Cunningham's Report to General Darling)
In 1828 Cunningham renewed a request already made to the authorities at home
that he might be allowed to return to his native land in the following year. He
informed the Treasury, however, that before leaving Sydney he should visit both
Moreton Bay and Tasmania, and accordingly, after visiting Illawarra, the pine
ridges of the Macquarie, and one or two other localities, he embarked in June in
the ship "Lucy Ann" for Moreton Bay. She touched at Port Macquarie, and in due
course Cunningham and Fraser, the Colonial Botanist, who sailed with him,
arrived at Amity Point. Anchor was cast in Rainbow Reach,[*] and on July 1st the
botanists landed in Moreton Bay.
[* Named after H.M.S. Rainbow.]
On July 27th they started with Captain Logan, commandant of the settlement,
for the Mount Warning Ranges in order to examine the discoveries of Captain
Rous.[*]--who when sailing from Moreton Bay in 1827 had passed the entrance of
the Tweed River and had called it the Clarence. He afterwards wrote: "The River
Clarence more properly the Tweed discovered by Mr. Oxley...is in lat. 28°9'.
Mount Warning is very conspicuous...at least 20 miles inland beyond the place
allotted to it on the maps."[**] Rous next discovered the Richmond River in lat.
28°53' and examined Shoal Bay. He steered past the entrance of the Clarence
River, however, without seeing it.
[* Captain the Hon. H. J. Rous, of H.M.S. "Rainbow", was a son of
the first Lord Stradbroke and when in command of H.M.S. "Pique", in 1835, he
sailed his ship home for 1,500 miles without a rudder. The north-east county
of New South Wales is named after him. He is better known to-day as the
Admiral Rous who exercised so much influence in English racing
circles.]
[** Wilton's "Quarterly Australian Journal," Vol. I.]
In this journey Logan's party visited Mount Lindesay, and as Cunningham
wished to reach the Gap seen by him in 1827, they attempted to journey thither
by a westward route but failed, and Cunningham finally investigated the pass
from Limestone Station (now Ipswich) alone.
Beginning their journey from Brisbane they took four weeks' provisions for
the eight persons who composed the party and left the river opposite the
settlement. Their route led over a line of road which lately had been marked out
and ran in a southerly direction to Cowper's Plains. To these plains salt water
flows through Oxley's Canoe Creek from the Brisbane River. The plains stretched
about a mile westward of the explorer's route, and, as the pack-bullocks were
heavily weighted, they halted at Canoe Creek, at a part of it sufficiently
distant from its point of connexion with the Brisbane to afford fresh water, and
pitched their tents on the bank. To the southward of the camp the country was
alternately flat and forest ground, in which honeysuckle (Banksia compar)
and tea-tree were interspersed. The barometer at sunset showed that the land was
of so low a level that its elevation above the seashore was scarcely
recognizable.
BIRNAM RANGE AND LOGAN RIVER
On the following day richer soil was met with, producing good grass. In the
labyrinths of bush several dry channels were found all dipping eastward, and at
last the party came upon the Logan River in latitude 27°28' S. This stream,
after another course of twenty miles, discharges its waters on the southern
shores of Moreton Bay opposite Stradbroke Island. At the spot where they crossed
it, however, it was nothing more than a murmuring brook. Farther on they came to
native huts that had been occupied recently and again met with the River Logan
and followed it southward for two miles, when it was observed to take a bend
"from the westward"...They then mounted the summit of a lateral ridge which
declined to the westward southerly and traced the ridge in this direction till
the close of the day, halting upon it at a spot that was found to be quite
destitute of water. After diligent search some was obtained at the foot of the
range about a mile distant. On these hills, to which the name of Birnam Range
was given, there were seen interesting plants hitherto unknown to Cunningham and
fragments of rock, the latter evidently having been used by natives to polish
their spears. Often the stone was perfectly white, and although it contained
clay appeared to consist of granulated quartz. There were also numerous
footpaths, which showed that the blacks crossed the Birnam Range in their
wanderings from the southern bushland towards the coast regions.
On the morning Of July 28th at the south base of the ridge a passage was
found cut through the bush, and tracks of natives as they passed and repassed
could plainly be seen. From the south-west side of Birnam Range the road
improved, leading to a pretty stretch of plain about a mile in breadth by
perhaps four in length from east to west, called by Captain Logan Letitia's
Plain.[*] It was watered on the western side by the Logan River, which was now
seen winding northwards round the western base of the range. On the south side
of Letitia's Plain a lagoon of considerable depth and about a quarter of a mile
long appeared to be fed entirely by an overflow from the Logan. While Mr. Fraser
was engaged in taking up the knobbed roots of a beautiful water-plant [**]--a
buck bean-that had unrolled its heart-shaped leaves to the sun's rays on the
surface of the water, Cunningham observed the latitude at its southern
extremity, which, "proving 27°56'05" S., placed our position on the chart 271
geographical miles south of Brisbane Town, and its longitude by account 31 west
of the meridian of that settlement, viz. 152°58' E."
[* All three, Logan, Cunningham, and Fraser, seem to have had a
share in naming the various parts of the country now seen.]
[** Cunningham writes: "This fine plant I examined on the spot,
and was, with Mr. Fraser, much gratified to find that it was an undescribed
species of that division of the Linnaean genus Menyanthes, which now
constitutes the distinct one named Villarsia by M.
Ventenat."]
The journey southward was continued by the side of the river, along a path
overshadowed on the fight by a dense thicket of vines and leading over ground
liable to occasional inundation. The country on the opposite bank of the river
appeared altogether more open and better adapted for travelling, and "it became
desirable to cross it at any part where the brush would permit the descent of
the bullocks to the bed of the stream. A ford was discovered at our third mile
from the lagoon. We therefore passed over to the level ground on the western
bank and then, finding the day far spent, it was deemed advisable to rest."
During the whole of the following day, July 29th, the men were confined to their
tents by heavy rain blown over the mountain ranges by the prevailing westerly
winds. When at last the sun burst forth Cunningham was able to take an azimuth,
as also the latitude at noon. "The former gave a variation of 8°35' E., while
the latter showed us that we were within 2' of the parallel Of 28° S. The
results placed our encamping ground 320 feet above the shores of Moreton
Bay."
The morning of the 30th being fine, the journey was resumed to the
south-south-west--a route shaped in the direction taken by the Logan's course.
The party now travelled over a rich flat, and among the plants they observed
native birdsfoot trefoil (Lotus australis). This forest flat extended
north-west for several miles towards a lofty mountain which, Cunningham says,
was marked on the old charts as High Peak,[*] an elevated cone forming a
striking feature of the landscape. Men they had completed the third mile of
their journey across the flat they came to the foot of a grassy hill, under the
eastern base of which the river winds from the south. On climbing the hill in
company with Captain Logan and Fraser, Cunningham found that " it commanded a
very fine and extensive view, embodying as much variety of feature to be met
with in any known part of New South Wales."
[* Note in MS--"Recently named Flinders Peak." It will be seen on
Flinders' chart in Chapter XVI.]
Immediately beneath them a grassy vale stretched southward, bounded on each
side by forest ridges clothed with grassy verdure to their summits. Through this
vale the windings of the Logan could be traced for several miles flowing from a
hilly country at the south, where writes Cunningham: "We subsequently discovered
that stream originated." The view to the south-south-west and south-west
disclosed a bold and singularly precipitous range of mountain peaks distant
about twenty-five miles, the adjacent country being broken and irregular.
TOWARDS MOUNT LINDESAY
He continues: "It was to the base of these peaks that Captain Logan (who had
thought one or other of them to be the cone of Mount Warning) had penetrated
last year from Brisbane Town and...had attempted vainly...to gain the summit of
the highest point. A simple reference, however, to the chart of the
coast...showed me that we were at least fifteen geographical miles to the
westward of the meridian assigned to that lofty peak by navigators, and that
therefore unless we...agree with Captain Rous, who asserts that it is actually
situated at least twenty miles further inland than the situation allotted to it
on the maps[*] (which cannot possibly be the case), it is abundantly obvious
that the lofty points before us bearing S.W. and S.S.W. are perfectly distinct
from the range seen daily from seaward by the passing mariner, of which Mount
Warning of that great navigator, the immortal Cook, is the most elevated
pinnacle."
[* Vide "Wilton's Quarterly Australian Journal," Vol. I, No. iv,
P. 33.]
Making their descent from this hill, which was named Mount Dunsinane, the
travellers pursued their journey southward for five miles through the valley
(Erris Vale) to a small, round, isolated "rocky mount" standing about 150 feet
above the plain of the vale. At the foot of this remarkable hill (Mount Edgar)
immediately on the bank of the river, they again rested. As he climbed the
"rocky mount" to take a few bearings, Cunningham observed that its eastern side
and summit were composed of "trap rock in large masses, while the western slopes
were studded with basaltic columns of regular prismatic figure of five sides, of
which some were 4 to 5 feet in height...The original position of these columns,
which was doubtless an erect one, appeared to have been disturbed by some
violent concussion, as many were thrown down on their sides; whilst others, by
being wedged up, stood so nearly upright as not to incline more than a few
degrees out of a vertical line."
Finding this hill too low to allow him to make further observations, he
descended to the tents. On arriving at the encampment, at the close of the day,
he saw a rising smoke at the foot of the hill, and immediately afterwards made
out two or three natives upon the summit, whither they had retired in haste,
leaving their fire, so that they might watch the movements of their new
visitors. Being anxious to meet them, Cunningham again went up the hill, but on
reaching the top found that they had fled down the opposite side, and in all
probability had crossed the river and taken refuge in the bush on the right
bank. He writes: "An old man who had concealed himself behind a tree near the
bottom of the hill ran off (upon our passing the spot) in that direction in a
state of dreadful apprehension. Such was the alarm induced by our presence that
it totally prevented that friendly parley which we wished to have brought about.
At their fire we found the bags and little paraphernalia of the women, showing
clearly with what precipitous haste these savages had urged their flight, which
had not even afforded them a moment to gather their few articles of economy
together. Around were quantities of the large seed of that exceedingly
ornamental tree of close woods called chestnut[*] at Moreton Bay
(Castanospermum australe. A. Cunn.) Upon these nuts the few natives who
wander through these lonely regions chiefly subsist. Like the English chestnut
they contain some saccharine and much farinaceous matter, and by being well
roasted are rendered easy of digestion." At about two miles south from this
encampment the Logan bends from the eastward, watering on its course a patch of
plain originally seen by Lieutenant Innes, of His Majesty's 57th Regiment, who,
during his residence at Moreton Bay, frequently undertook bush excursions.
Captain Logan accordingly attached that officer's name to it, and so it now
appears on the chart.
[* "This tree, than which there is no plant indigenous to the
shores of Moreton Bay and adjacent country upon which the eye rests with
greater pleasure, constitutes a genus perfectly distinct from any yet
published, and, independent of its highly ornamental habit and refreshing
shade afforded by densely-leaved branches, its nuts are produced in pods in
such abundance as to be ere long worthy of the attention of the farmer, as its
fruit would form nutritive food. The tree affects a rich and moist
soil."--Note in MS.]
Cunningham resumes: "The valley through which we continued our journey south
(named by Captain Logan, Erris Vale) continues from the hill about five miles
and is then bounded on the south by forest hills. On a course southerly we
penetrated a rising country and...at length again sighted the river which had
wound from the eastward...On the 1st of August, in picking our way to the south,
we crossed the Logan, much diminished in size, and, after a fruitless attempt to
continue to the southward, found ourselves so hemmed in by steep, lofty, wooded
ridges that we were obliged to find the river again,[*] which we traced westerly
until...divers streamlets indicated our approach to its source. On the 2nd
August we climbed the hills and pursued a course to westward...Early in the
afternoon of this day we descended to the flat or valley (the Vale of Erris),
where there was abundance of good water, and I directed the tents to be
pitched."
[* Here they evidently retraced their steps.]
The camping place he had chosen was only a short distance from the spot where
Captain Logan had bivouacked in the previous year. Cunningham and his companions
were now within three miles of the high range of mountains, which he had seen
first from Mount Dunsinane, "whose broad, dome-like summits and conical peaks,
for the most part bare and now fully open to view, presented a fine example of
bold and rugged scenery such as is not to be found in any hitherto explored
territory." It was their intention to penetrate no further than to the base of
this colossal range, of which Captain Logan still thought the peak of Mount
Warning formed a part. The bullocks, however, needed a rest and they decided to
spend the spare time in examining the mountain group and afterwards to proceed
towards the Gap or opening in the Dividing Range which Cunningham had discovered
in June, 1827.
MOUNT LINDESAY
He now writes: "The morning of the 3rd of August, dawned with a singular
clearness, and, as its temperature was unusually low and bracing (35°) we were
induced to quit our tents at an early hour to commence the interesting labours
of the day. We proceeded from our encamping ground at 6 o'clock on our journey
to the summit of the highest mountain the easternmost of the range bearing from
the tents S. W. by W. 3 miles...over an extent of thinly-timbered flat recently
burnt by the natives and stretching nearly two miles from the base of the first
range of hills...the back of which we gained by climbing a sharp acclivity.
"Travelling along the ridge about another half-mile, we ascended to the base
of the mountain, whence the difficulties of the ascent commenced. Large masses
of rock forming large blocks and shelving slabs...blocked the path; among these
flourished luxuriantly many tufty plants. Fraser and I culled several previously
unknown species to enrich our collections. With considerable exertion I climbed
to a point...of the mountain where the face became precipitous and our advance
attended with so much danger that I deemed it prudent to proceed no farther,
especially as I had attained a height from which I could make necessary
observations...Whilst I was occupied in taking a set of bearings...our
indefatigable commandant and Mr. Fraser who had both preceded me in the ascent
continued their journey towards the summit, notwithstanding the alarming
steepness of many parts of the mountain.
Cone of Mount Warning
"The cone of Mount Warning (respecting the true situation of which we were
divided in opinion) I was gratified to see distinctly amidst a group of
mountains nearer the coast-line and bearing E. by S. distant from 25 to 30
miles. This most fully confirmed me in what I had already advanced respecting
its position; its bearing...carrying it as far easterly as the meridian under
which...Captains Cook and Flinders have long ago placed this most striking of
all landmarks on this coast to passing seamen. It was now Captain Logan clearly
saw his mistake in supposing one of the peaks of the mountains about us, which
cannot be perceived from seaward, to be the Mount Warning of Cook.[*]
[* Mount Warning is 3,300 feet; it dominates the whole of the
Northern country of New South Wales, and is visible even from One Tree Hill,
Brisbane.]
"A range distant scarcely ten miles and stretching from east-by-north to
south-east, of bold appearance, was named Macpherson's Range in compliment to
Major Macpherson, of His Majesty's 39th Regiment, whilst in its southern extreme
a very bluff rocky head and a rounded mount or hummock about its centre received
the names of Coke and Burrough respectively.
"Along the eastern base of Macpherson's Range I could trace a deep ravine
bounded on its eastern side by a vertical wall of rocks of very rugged aspect.
This ravine, at the suggestion of Mr. Fraser, was named Glen Lyon; and through
it ran a stream (indicated by a line of mist throughout its length) which
doubtless falls southerly into the channel of a river seen by Captain Logan from
the summit of this mountain, and, from the direction of its course towards the
sea at south-east, is doubtless the Richmond of Captain Rous, of H.M.S.
"Rainbow".
"To the E. of Glen Lyon, the entire country extending to the lofty ridges
connected with Mount Warning group appeared broken and irregular. A lofty
mountain bearing N. by E. five miles received from Captain Logan the title of
Clanmorris, whilst to a lofty wooded peak lying about ten miles further to the
north I attached the name of my friend, Lieut. Hughes, of the Royal Staff
Corps.[*]
[* Hughes's Peak.]
"At S.S.E. five miles a very precipitous rocky head, seemingly inaccessible
from any point around us, was named Mount Hooker, in honour of the mutual friend
of Mr. Fraser and myself, the Regius Professor of Botany in the University of
Glasgow. Far to the north other points were distinctly discerned, particularly
the towering peak of Captain Flinders now bearing his name...Having noted all
the more prominent features of the country around, excepting at S. and S.S.W.,
in which direction my position on the mountain prevented my observation, I
employed myself investigating the scrubby, blighted, vegetable productions about
me, and among the many described well-known plants I gathered several yet
unpublished...I also set up the barometer (which I had with much care carried
from Brisbane Town)...I had, however, to regret that in the carriage from the
tents to the point at which I had halted, the instrument had become deranged by
some sudden jerk...and thus rendered perfectly useless." Cunningham afterwards
found that this halting place on Mount Lindesay was 1,500 feet above his
encampment. He continues:
"Mr. Fraser had followed the commandant up the very steep face of the
mountain more than double that elevation above me; but, arriving at the base of
a rock nearly perpendicular, without a bush to assist him to pass over it, he
very wisely stopped; and having rested, and contemplated with pleasure the
grandeur of the surrounding scene from so considerable a height (verging on
4,000 feet above the sea), he began his descent. It was not, however without
great difficulty and...on more than one occasion at a great risk of his life
that he found his way back to my station...in a state of considerable
exhaustion.
"Five hours, however, elapsed before the commandant, who also with great
labour had gained the extreme summit of this formidable mountain, returned to
us. It had afforded him a very extensive bird's-eye view of the entire country.
The sea was seen at E.S.E. over the very low country lying between the southern
extreme of the Mount Warning Range and the coast-line; a fine, open, grazing
country breaking into plains was...perceived to the south-west. The traveller
might reach it by passing over twenty miles of broken, brushy country from the
base of the mountain, a few miles from which a river was observed bending its
course to the southward and eastward, which has since been considered by Captain
Logan to be none other than either a branch or the main trunk of the Richmond,
recently discovered by Captain Rous.
"About the close of the day we returned to our tents, amply rewarded for our
exertions by the...observations we had made. The mountain we had visited...was
named Mount Lindesay as a compliment to the officer commanding His Majesty's
39th Regiment in this colony.[*] Our bullocks requiring further rest, we
determined to remain encamped during the whole of the following day (4th Aug.),
whilst Captain Logan was absent on an excursion to ascertain how far a
communication could be opened round the eastern base of Mount Lindesay with the
apparently fine grazing country seen in the south-west from the summit of that
lofty mountain, I was occupied in taking the necessary observations to determine
our situation.
[* It is one of the peaks of the Macpherson Range on the New South
WalesQueensland border, and is situated between Killarney (Queensland) and
Kyogle (New South Wales). Near here the Richmond River has its
source.]
"These gave the following results. Latitude, by a solar meridional altitude,
28°15'21" S., longitude 152°45'45" E., or 16 geographical miles W. of the
meridian of Brisbane Town. Variation of the needle (by azimuth), 11° E. I also
measured a base of 608 yards on an extensive flat near the tents, and, observing
the angles subtended by the summit of Mount Lindesay, ascertained its
perpendicular height over our encampment to be 4,750 feet. To this, upon adding
953 feet, the elevation of the tents above the seashore (as already determined
by the barometer), the mean height of the mountain above the level of the
seashore is shown to be 5,703 feet, which is by far the most elevated point[*]
(measured) that has been hitherto ascended by any European in Australia. In the
evening our laborious commandant returned to the encampment, fully satisfied of
the practicability of marking a road to the country lying to the south-west by
directing its line to leave the Mount Warning Range to the west."
[* The highest peaks in New South Wales are now known to be Mount
Kosciusko, 7,328 feet, and Mount Townsend, 7,260 feet. Mount Lindesay is 4,064
feet.]
TOWARDS THE DIVIDING RANGE
On the morning of August 5th, Captain Logan's party left their encampment in
order to travel westerly and attempt to penetrate to the hollow in the back of
the Dividing Range now known as Cunningham's Gap. They were surrounded on all
sides by steep hills and lofty mountainous country and they could only push
their way forward on a northerly course with difficulty. They passed through a
glen bounded westerly by forest hills immediately connected with Mount
Clanmorris, and to the eastward by a steep, rocky-sided ridge overhanging a
brook formed by junction of the creek ("at which last we rested") with the
others which ran briskly through it northerly over a bed of large stones, so
much rounded by water attrition as to render the crossing and recrossing its
channel...too dangerous to risk the lives of the bullocks in the passage. The
laden bullocks were therefore sent round among the hills easterly, and joined
the men again on an open, level patch of forest ground. Cunningham writes: "We
then prosecuted our course to the north-west, climbing...wooded ridges, with an
occasional flat...and observing that all the water-courses dipped easterly. They
therefore threw the rains, that are collected in these hills in a wet season,
into the Logan. From several points in these hills, I took bearings to a lofty,
wooded mount, named last year by Captain Logan in honour of Lieut. Col.
Shadforth, of His Majesty's 57th Regiment as also to a conical-shaped hill...to
the W.S.W. about 15 miles, which also Captain Logan had named...Wilton's
Peak.
Seven miles to the north-west we gained the pitch of the hills, whence we
observed...two miles to the W.N.W. a patch of plain bounded on the western side
by a, ridge of craggy hills. The commandant recognized a point at whose base he
had bivouacked in the progress of last year's excursion. Our oxen having
descended the ridge on its western side with considerable difficulty, owing to
the steepness of the declivity from the several rocky heads and abrupt
terminating bluffs, we soon reached the plain, which we found to be a reedy flat
without a tree, of a springy sponginess to the tread and evidently swampy in wet
weather...The long-protracted droughts of the year had, however, dried the
surface sufficiently to allow our burdened beasts to cross it...to the channel
of a rivulet washing the eastern foot of the craggy hills.
"On the western bank of this stream (which is a tributary to the Logan and
named Teviot Brook[*]) we were very glad to encamp, as the sun had some time
dipped below the western horizon. This plain, or marshy flat, which lies nearly
north and south, is about three miles in length, and is (as already observed)
bounded...by rocky hills of singularly picturesque appearance, named, at the
suggestion of Mr. Fraser, Minto Craigs.
[* Now Teviot River.]
South-westerly, beyond these craggy hills, we had a peep at a part of the
Dividing Range, which...formed a beautiful landscape; and, if anything tended to
give a higher effect to the extremely pleasing scene whilst crossing the marshy
flat, it was the warm tints produced by the radiance of the setting sun striking
upon the naked rocks of the Craigs. Just before we halted, five emus, who were
feeding on the plain, met together and, as if prompted by a curiosity to know
what we were, stalked over the flat after us, preserving, however, a respectable
distance from the dogs. We were all too much engaged to give chase to them; and,
therefore, after following us some distance, they filed off, retired with some
little precipitancy to the wooded lands, and, as if fully apprehensive of
danger, disappeared altogether. A hill of square, tabulated figure, bearing
about north 7 or 8 miles, was last year named, by Captain Logan, Mount French;
and a singularly sharp-pointed cone, wooded to its extreme summit, and lying to
the N.E. about 9 miles, received from me the title of Knapp's Peak after an
esteemed friend at this time attached to the Department of the Surveyor-General
in this colony.
"At an early hour of the morning of the 7th August we broke up our
encampment...Passing the northern extremity of Minto Craigs, we pursued our
course to the north-west...until (in about our fourth mile) we reached another
patch of plain on which I observed the meridional altitude of the sun, which
gave for latitude 28°4'26" S., and showed us that we had arrived at about the
parallel of the mountain gap, which bore west from us...The plain was flanked on
its west and north-west sides by densely-brushed rocky ridges connected with
Mount French, and it appeared extremely doubtful whether we could penetrate them
with the bullocks to the foot of the Dividing Range. We therefore proposed to
halt and employ the remainder of the day in determining the practicability of
effecting a passage through to the westward. About one o'clock we set up the
tents on the edge of the plain, near a pond of exceedingly fine water.
"Our commandant, attended by two...of the people, undertook to examine the
rocky western ridge, and I in the meantime ascertained our position."
Cunningham named this beautiful plain Dulhunty Plain, as a compliment to
the...family of that name residing in New South Wales. He says, of the land: "It
lies about S.S.W. and N.N.E. and in extent is about five miles in length by
three quarters of a mile in breadth." He found the soil of the plain in all
parts exceedingly rich and fertile and capable of yielding heavy crops of grain,
and, although he thought it was scarcely sound enough for pasturing sheep, he
believed it would make "a fine range of horse and cattle feed."
At the close of the day Captain Logan returned to the camp having climbed the
rocky barrier to the westward, which he found clothed with a thick jungle of
twining plants, so that it was with the utmost difficulty he gained the height,
whence he saw clearly that it was quite impossible to penetrate westerly to the
Dividing Range. He also saw that there was but one path for him and his
companions to travel and that ran to the north-east, in which direction the
country not only appeared more level but was unencumbered by the thickets that,
in many parts, formed a dense jungle for miles, which, adds Cunningham, "we have
repeatedly satisfied ourselves, is not to be passed by laden bullocks until the
axe has fully effected a passage for them."
"On the 8th we stood away to the north-east across Dulhunty's Plain, and in
two miles and a half reached the forest ground watered by the Logan, which had
become a connected stream. In another two miles to the N.E. we entered a second
plain,...containing about 700 acres, to which was given the name of Rattray,
after a relative of Mr. Fraser. As we continued our journey, we could not but
admire the landscape at E. and S.E.made up of gently-rising forest hills, with
here and there a point more elevated and having in their midst the sharp cone
named Knapp's Peak, which overtopped the whole. The forest ridges continued to
stretch to the north and obliged us to pursue our course to the eastward.
CHANGE OF ROUTE
"At noon, on crossing the channel of the Logan, we found ourselves...in the
parallel of 28° S., and, perceiving that it was not possible to make our way to
the westward...in consequence of the bushy ridges which stretched across the
country northerly to the foot of Flinders Peak, I was induced by the advice of
Captain Logan (who had became anxious to return to the settlement) to relinquish
my design of making the mountain gap from this part of the country, but to
prosecute our journey to the north and north-east, until we should pass the
parallel of latitude of Flinders Peak on its eastern side, on effecting which no
obstacle could prevent our reaching Limestone Station on Bremer's River (a
tributary to the Brisbane), whence the Dividing Range could be approached with
the utmost ease, as the intervening country was known to Captain Logan to be of
very moderate surface.
"Thus determined, we pursued our way to the E.N.E. about 3½ miles over a
succession of forest ridges and narrow valleys, when, again intersecting the
Logan at our 11th mile, we were induced to halt, as our bullocks were much
exhausted. At daybreak of the 9th the commandant despatched two of our party
with letters to Brisbane Town, and by that opportunity I wrote to the Officer in
Charge of the Commissariat to forward to me at the Limestone Hills on the Bremer
a further supply of rations to enable me to perform the journey I had in
contemplation from that station south-westerly to the pass through the mountains
discovered in June, 1827.
"On resuming our journey this day we left the Logan and repeatedly made
attempts to pass to the westward at points appearing likely to afford us a
passage through. All our essays were, however, in vain. The dense repulsive
thicket soon stopped our progress and showed us that the utmost we could do
would be to pursue our course to the northward and eastward. We therefore
continued over low forest ridges, taking care to clear the brush which stretched
down them to the narrow, intermediate valleys, in which again we met the Logan,
and as we had completed our tenth mile we halted on its banks. From this
encamping ground we observed the hills connected with Birnam Range, the central
parts of which bore nearly east from us, and appeared to be distant about 10
miles.
"At our second mile to the north in our stage of the following day, the
Logan, which we had traced from its course, left us, trending to the
east-north-east. Throughout the day we were climbing hills, with Flinders Peak
continually in view. We were unable to approach its base, it being perfectly
surrounded by steep and rocky ridges. It was not until after sunset that water
was discovered for the use of our exhausted bullocks and selves, and, although
it was found in a small quantity and stagnant state, we were exceedingly glad to
close our labours for the day at it."
Early in the morning of the 11th Captain Logan and Mr. Fraser bade Cunningham
good-bye and took their departure for Brisbane Town, distant from their camp
about twenty-four miles. As Cunningham intended to make his way to what is now
Ipswich he set out with his party to the northward and westward. He writes:
"After effecting a stage of ten miles over hilly uninteresting country...we
rested in a valley affording both excellent grass and good water to our wearied
oxen. We had at length passed sufficiently north of the range connected with
Flinders Peak to be enabled to shape a course to the westward...and we
therefore, on commencing our last stage to the Limestone Station on the Bremer
River, penetrated directly west among some stony hills...and at the 7th mile
came out upon the skirts of a plain on the surface of which were scattered
fragments of calcareous rock, flint and agate," and limestone also was seen,
which told Cunningham that he was nearing his destination.
LIMESTONE STATION (IPSWICH)
Having crossed the plain to the north-west, Cunningham arrived at the
Limestone Hills, where he found the provisions that he had demanded from the
Commissariat. They had been brought by boat under charge of one of Cunningham's
servants. He now reduced his establishment to two bullocks, a driver, and two
servants, sending back to Brisbane Town, agreeably to the request of Captain
Logan, the other two oxen, and two servants. He thus writes: "As I shall have
occasion to refer frequently to this station (Ipswich or Limestone Station), I
will make a few brief observations upon its situation and general
productions.
"In the course of the last year Captain Logan, in tracing the Bremer (of Mr.
Oxley, who merely passed its mouth in 1824) from its junction with the
Brisbane,[*] discovered at ten miles through its many windings from that point,
the hummocks on its right bank now named the Limestone Hills.
[* Bremer's River at its junction with the Brisbane is about forty
yards wide.]
"Landing, he was much struck with the singular appearance of the lofty
Xanthorrhoeae, or grass-trees, which abound in the open flats, low hills
and forest grounds at this particular part, and which the commandant had not
inaptly compared to beehives elevated on stools."
Some months after this discovery, a kiln was built and a party, under an
overseer (acquainted with the operations of sapping and mining) and five
convicts were stationed at these hills to commence lime-burning. It was not long
before the station was visited by the wandering aborigines, who, after
threatening the lives of the white men, seized the first opportunity to run off
with their tools. To protect the lime-burners from further molestation from
these savages a corporal and three privates were stationed on the spot, and from
that period no natives ventured to approach the huts of either soldiers or
people, although they were seen prowling through the woods.
The lime burnt in the new kiln, which Cunningham says was excellent, was
conveyed by boat to Brisbane, where it was used for building purposes. His
report shows that the mineral wealth of the newly-formed settlement did not
escape his notice. It runs: "In some specimens of flint which I caused to be
broken, I found beautiful specimens of chalcedony, containing cavities filled
with groups of minute crystallized quartz.
"Chalk is also found among the hills, in which are nodules of flint, and a
stratum or seam of coal has been observed on the Bremer, both immediately above
and below the station; and, as that mineral was noticed three or four miles to
the north in the steep banks of dry creeks dipping to the Brisbane, and again in
another mile, in the bed of that river, it is highly probable that the seam
extends nearly horizontally throughout.
He also describes the soil as being black and rich, if one might judge from
the luxuriant growth of the vegetables in the settlers' garden. The flats too
were covered with grass and supported a flock of sheep belonging to the
Government. He continues:
"During a stay of five days at this station, in which period the rest and
good pasture afforded my bullocks most materially benefited them, I determined
its position as follows, viz. mean latitude by meridional altitude of the sun,
27°37'00" S. longitude of the mean of distances on both sides of the meridian
mean 152°; variation by azimuth, 9°45' E.
"The distance from Brisbane Town by water has been estimated at about
forty-eight miles, whilst its bearing from that settlement is S.W. by W. (true)
only 18 statute miles.
"From a hill in the immediate vicinity of my tents I took the following
bearings to points in the south-western country about to be examined: Mount
Forbes of Mr. Oxley, a remarkable hill, rising from a level country and in shape
ridged like the roof of a house, S. 48½° W., about 16 miles; Mountain Gap, S.
38½° perhaps forty miles; Wilson's Peak of Capt. Logan, S. 12° W., 45 or 50
miles; Flinders Peak, S. 19° E_ 12 miles."
Cunningham at last found himself free to search for the break in the Dividing
Range. This object had been uppermost in his mind ever since his former visit.
Nor can one wonder that he was filled with ambition to rediscover the pass
through the range which runs along the east coast almost without a break
southward from Cape York and divides the interior from the eastern coastal
regions.
THE SEARCH FOR THE GAP
On the morning of the 18th August with his small company he left the
Limestone Hills[*] on his way towards the Dividing Range. He directed his course
up the valley of the Bremer and the streams flowing into it. Immediately on
leaving the limestone country, the land was found to gradually rise and the soil
to change to lumpy grit. At the second mile the track led through open forest
over fairly level country, the rock formation of which was chiefly a coarse
sandstone quartz and very fine specimens of jasper. Occasionally in the thinly
wooded parts the soil became richer and was strewed with "small fragments of
calcareous stone." Passing over a tea-tree flat Cunningham came to the bank of a
narrow but deep creek, falling north-easterly towards Bremer's River. Although
at that time little else than a chain of stagnant pools, its banks showed traces
of floods twenty feet above its then low level. He writes: "We left this creek
winding from the southward and continuing our route to the southward and
westward to our 11th mile, I despatched a man to search for water in the
direction of the remarkable level-topped hills seen from the Limestone Station
(named by Mr. Oxley, in 1824, Mount Forbes)...We were obliged to extend our
stage...to the 13th mile ere we found a sufficiency of water for our
consumption.
[* The route he pursued towards the pass appears to have been a
different one to that now generally used by the people of Moreton Bay, and it
is difficult to identify.]
"No natives were met with in this stage, although patches of the forest
grasses had been very lately fired and the recent traces of these people were
noticed on the trunks of the trees, from which they had torn off the outer
paper-like bark to roof their huts. After some heavy showers of rain accompanied
by thunder, the morning of the 19th (August) broke upon us exceedingly clear,
pleasant and cool...Our route to the southward and westward was resumed about 7
o'clock and, having traversed open forest, on the eastern side of Mount Forbes,
abounding in grass, we reached some hilly ground...On gaining the summit of the
ridge, a most pleasing view was laid open to us from S.W. to S., and thence to
E. and E.N.E.
"At E.N.E. and thence to E.S.E., a large patch of plain lying at N. and S.
appeared as at a distance of about 3 miles, in many parts very verdant, and
watered evidently by a large creek, the course of which was marked by a line of
swamp-oak winding through its centre. To this plain I gave the name of Bowerman
as a compliment to my friend, the officer in charge of His Majesty's Magazines
at Parramatta. The irregular ridge connected with Flinders Peak, still further
to the eastward, was very conspicuous, presenting four distant pinnacles; more
distant points in a southerly direction extending as far as Mount Lindesay,
which was distinctly recognized. On quitting the ridge we descended to a grassy
vale, and then continued our journey to the S.S.W. through a forest tract
plentifully clothed with grass but...destitute of water.
"On completing our tenth mile, the ground appeared on its S.W. side to dip
easterly; I therefore sent one of the people to make a diligent search for water
in that direction. This was almost immediately met with in deep holes, and, as
there was abundance of good grass for our oxen, I again halted. At night a wind
from about S.S.W. sprang up which obliged us to secure our tents by strong guys
to prevent their being blown down; the wind continued with unabated violence
throughout the night and until sunrise of the following morning (20th), when it
moderated. Being by estimation about 12 miles to the N.E. of the pass through
the Dividing Range, it was my intention to have penetrated near to its base in
the course of the day...We therefore quitted our encamping ground soon after
sunrise, but soon the inability of the bullocks to travel over some stony hills,
owing to the tenderness of their feet, obliged me to halt in a valley among the
hills, having made only four miles towards the pass. At noon I found our
latitude to be 27°56'48" S...The smoke of natives' fires was seen curling above
the trees a little to the eastward of us, but these people kept themselves very
quiet: not a voice was heard, nor a person seen.
"August 21st. About 7 a.m. we made another attempt to penetrate to the foot
of the main range: climbing a forest ridge at S.W. without difficulty, the
bullocks descended (by the care of my people), amidst much fallen timber and
loose stones, to a valley stretching north and south, which we crossed,
continuing towards the range to our fifth mile. We intersected the stony bed of
a mountain torrent 12 yards in width, at this season perfectly dry, but
evidently at other periods filled to the depth of six feet. The position of the
driftwood on its shallow bank showed us that its fall was to the south; it
therefore most probably pours its rapid waters into the Richmond of Captain
Rous.
"Passing the stony channel of this watercourse, we traversed an apple-tree
flat, pursuing our way over some hilly ground to a narrow valley where, meeting
with fine weather, we again halted within four miles of the actual mouth of the
Gap. As it was early in the afternoon, I despatched a man to look out and
examine the hollow in the mountain ridges directly open to our encampment. After
an absence of five hours he returned, having failed in his attempt to climb to
the pitch of the Gap...
"From the precipitous aspect of this hollow in the main range, its elevated
appearance, its breadth between the boundary heads, I was induced to conceive
that the Gap, into which I had simply looked from its western side in June,
1827...was distinct from the one now before us. And, as the Dividing Range to
the north of us trended easterly, I felt disposed to believe it was to be
discovered a few miles in that direction. With this impression on my mind we
left the spot on which we had rested, on the morning of the 22nd to proceed
round the lateral ridges, intending to observe attentively as we travelled every
indentation of the main range. We immediately entered the valley and in five
miles reached its head, which to the eastward is bounded by forest hills.
Passing a low, grassy ridge and continuing about two miles, we descended to an
apple-tree flat watered by a creek running to the northward, on which we
encamped. The low, grassy ridge is sufficiently elevated to give opposite
directions to waters discharged on our east coast. We remarked that those
streams falling on its northern side (its direction being east and west)
eventually joined the Bremer, whilst those descending southerly without doubt
are received into the Richmond, the embouchure of which Captain Rous has
recently discovered upwards of 100 miles to the south of Moreton Bay."
Cunningham determined to remain at the apple-tree flat for the whole of the
22nd, possibly because here he wished to add to his botanical collections and he
sent two of his men at daybreak to a very steep forest ridge, directing them to
climb to the highest point of the Dividing Range and from it to view the western
country and its landmarks and to bring back to him information that would enable
him to fix the situation of the pass seen during the previous year, and
especially by any bearings that they might take to as far as the extensive downs
he had discovered on the western side of this formidable range. Meanwhile he
ascertained the situation of his camp to be latitude, by observation, 27°55'45"
S.; longitude, deduced from the meridian of the Limestone Hills, 152°27'30"
E.
He then seems to have spent some time in his botanical researches and writes
on the 23rd "Among the brushes that overshadowed the creek on which we were
encamped, grew most luxuriantly, the native Bignonia and a fine
Clematis being intertwined and abundantly in flower, formed the richest
festoons." He continues:
Whilst on the subject of the flora of this fine country, so generally
interesting in all its features, it may be observed that, barring the vine-clad
banks of the Brisbane, the whole line of country through which we had travelled
after leaving Brisbane Town, proved by no means so interesting to the botanist.
The grasses are chiefly those of the colony, the richest flats and alluvial
grounds being adorned with the vetch (in bloom) called Swainsona, and
with Lotus australis, or birdsfoot trefoil, as also a Geranium and
a Senecio frequent in the Bathurst country. The collections of dried
plants that were found were therefore detected on the barren, rocky ridges and
stony mountains that lay in the way of our expedition.
"In this place I will merely notice the singular association of our common
Eucalypti with the tree of a genus whose splendid scarlet flowers render
it very conspicuous among even the more brilliant subjects of the flora of
intertropical countries. The tree I allude to is a species of Erythrin or
coral tree, which I first observed in an excursion to the foot of Flinders Peak.
Under the Dividing Range I frequently met with it in a forest of blighted.,
uncomely iron-bark forming a tree 35 feet high with a smooth trunk but thorny
branches and, during the winter months, without leaves. Its last year's pods
continued hanging at the extremities of the branches, and, although pigeons
(which abound in these woods) and other birds had eaten most of the seeds, still
many of a brilliant red colour were found among the grass beneath each tree.
It was late in the afternoon ere my two men found their way back to the
encampment, when I learnt from them that from the grassy ridge, which they had
ascended in front of the tents, they had gained a lofty point of the Dividing
Range to the southwest. Here they observed among the very elevated mountains to
westward a valley extending through them in the direction of W.N.W. to a very
low declining country at that bearing; but, as no appearance of plain could be
perceived, and as there did not appear any part of the main range to the north
worth the examination for the Gap so obvious in the winter's journey in 1827, it
was concluded that either the hollow back we had just left was the identical
pass of last year, or that it was in its immediate vicinity. With this view I
concurred; and therefore, on the morning of the 24th, we returned southerly to
it, with the fullest determination to examine leisurely the main range from the
extreme points of which I felt quite certain the last year's Gap would be
discovered.
"About one o'clock we passed a mile to the southward of our last position,
and, entering a valley, we pitched the tents within three miles of the entrance
of the Gap now suspected to be the pass of last year's journey. It being early
in the afternoon, I sent one of the people (who, having been of my party on that
long tour, knew the features of the country lying to the westward of the
Dividing Range) to trace a series of forest ridges which appeared to lead
directly up to the hollow back in the range.
THE PASS THROUGH THE DIVIDING RANGE
"To my utmost gratification he returned at dusk, having traced the ridge
about 2½ miles to the foot of the Dividing Range, whence he ascended into the
pass, and, from a grassy head immediately above it, beheld the extensive country
lying west of the Main Range. He recognized both Darling and Canning Downs,
patches of Peel's Plains, and several remarkable points of the forest hills on
that side, fully identifying this hollow back with the Pass discovered last year
at the head of Millar's Valley.

SKETCHES FROM CUNNINGHAM'S DIARY
"Resting my oxen on the 25th, I determined to occupy the whole of the day in
examining this very important passage as it would lead from the coast lands
through a formidable main range of mountains to a vast extent of pastoral
country on the western side of the mountains. Accompanied by my servant with an
odometer, or measuring wheel, we commenced our labours at 7 a.m.
"From the valley in which we were encamped, we immediately ascended a low
forest ridge at S., trending S.S.W. and S.W. throughout the first mile and a
half...In tracing the leading ridge, we found an ample passage between detached
masses of sandstone which were covered with parasites (of ferns and Dendrobia or
rock lilies) of species heretofore only found within the tropics.
"In another half-mile, the ridge takes a decided bend to the westward and its
surface, becoming wider, presented an open patch of forest-ground, timbered
chiefly with oaks and appletree in quantity sufficient for a small farm. The
ridge at length narrows again, but the acclivity continues most promising.
Patches of brush clothe its sides, and also those of the gullies falling from
it, leaving its back clear of wood, open and grassy. At about 23 miles the ridge
bends to the northward of west, and immediately the summit of the pass appeared
broad before us, bounded on each side by most stupendous heads.[*] These heads
were towering at least 2,000 feet above the Gap.
[* "I had at the time great pleasure in giving names to these very
elevated points of the Dividing Range, which are very distinctly seen over
fifty-four miles of wooded country from Brisbane Town. The south head, which
forms a long backed mount, with a lofty point at each extremity, I have named
Mount Mitchell in honour of the Surveyor-General of the Territory, whilst the
north head was entitled Mount Cordeaux, as a compliment to Wm. Cordeaux, Esq.,
of the Surveyor-General's Department."]
"Here the difficulties of the passage commenced. We had arrived at the actual
foot of the pass without the smallest difficulty; it remained to ascend, by a
steep slope, to the level of its entrance. This slope is occupied by a very
close wood, in which red cedar, sassafras, palms and other ornamental trees are
frequent. Through this shaded wood we climbed up a steep bank of very rich,
loose earth where a very compact rock (of white stone) is embedded. At length we
gained the foot of a wall of bare rock which we found stretching from the
southward into the Pass.
THROUGH THE GAP
"This face of naked rock we perceived (by tracing its base northerly)
gradually to fall to the common level; so that, without the smallest difficulty,
and to my utmost surprise, we found ourselves in the highest part of the Pass,
having fully ascertained the extent of the difficult part, from the entrance
into the wood, to this point, not to exceed 400 yards. We now pushed our way
westerly through this extraordinary defile, and, in less than half a mile of
level surface, clothed with a thick brush of plants common to the Brisbane
River, reached the opposite side of the main range, where I observed the waters
fell westerly to Millar's Valley beneath us.
"Climbing the northern summit of Mount Mitchell, which bounds the pass on the
south, it was with no small pleasure that I looked over the beautiful tract of
country at which my labours of the last year closed. Portions of Canning and
Darling Downs, with patches of Peel's Plain, are distinctly recognised at
distances of 20 and 30 miles; the entrance to Logan Vale, indicated by the
table-topped hill named last year Mount Sturt, was also observed, as was the
forest ridge overhanging that rich valley beneath which my tents stood several
days at that period. My elevated situation on Mount Mitchell enabled me to take
bearings to points on the western as well as on the eastern sides of the Barrier
Range, thus most satisfactorily affording me materials to connect on the map of
the country the northern points of my last year's journey with the settlement on
the Brisbane River. The day was considerably advanced by the time we had
effected these truly interesting observations; we therefore descended to the
pass, and, making the best of our way along the eastern forest ridge, reached
the encampment about eight o'clock, having been occupied in severe exercise
about thirteen hours. The Gap through the Dividing Range is situated in latitude
28°2'40" S., and longitude (reduced from the meridian of the Limestone Station)
152°24'20" E., and lies S.W. from Brisbane Town 54 miles, being also in direct
distance from the sea-coast (near Point Danger of Captain Cook) about 64
geographical miles."
Cunningham continues: "The weather had favoured our operations throughout the
whole of the day, but we had scarcely been seated within our tents half an hour
before the sky became overcast, and heavy clouds passing over us to the eastward
in a rapid succession presaged the storm that was gathering.
I had taken the precaution to secure the tents by extra guys, and therefore
felt fully prepared to meet the impending tempest. The thunder at length
approached in rolling peals accompanied by the most vivid lightning; and a
deluging rain commenced a storm as awful, at the same time as grand, as any that
are to be witnessed. With unabated violence the tempest continued until after
midnight, when, as if suddenly exhausted, the wind moderated, the clouds broke,
gradually sinking down towards the horizon; and a bright moon, just past the
full, now burst forth with many a brilliant star, to assure us, by affording
light to observe the extreme pinnacles of the mountains perfectly divested of
clouds, that at length calm, serene and settled weather was again restored to
us. The thermometer stood at 64°.
"On the 26th (August) we commenced our journey back to the Limestone Station,
distant something under forty miles. The surface of the soil was quite saturated
with the rains, and the vegetation assumed a lively verdure, evidently refreshed
by the showers. We soon reached our last encampment on the creek that ran
northerly to the Bremer, and then pursued a course to the north, with the design
of passing to the westward of Mount Forbes. This line of route led us over
forest ridges, clothed with a luxuriant carpet of grass and timbered with
loftier and statelier iron-bark than we had seen for some time.
"In two miles these undulated grounds...dip to the level of an apple-tree
flat...extend northerly several miles, and form a most beautiful valley, well
watered by the creek on which we had rested on the 22nd.
Continuing north about three miles through this very level valley, a patch of
plain opened on our view, round the skirts of which the creek, which we
had...crossed, bent its course. This plain, which I felt gratified in naming
after Lieut. Bainbrigge, of His Majesty's 57th Regiment, at present the very
active engineer at Brisbane Town, is of an irregular square figure. It contains
about 800 acres of beautiful land of as truly a level as it is possible to
conceive any patch of ground could be, untouched by the hand of man. Nothing can
possibly exceed the richness and mellowness of its fine black soil, and
certainly there is not in any explored part of New South Wales a more beautiful
subject for the pencil of the artist than the landscape presented to the
traveller from the centre of Bainbrigge's Plain, to which no description of mine
can possibly do justice.[*]
[* This plain met with by Cunningham on his route back to lpswich
appears to have been a part of what is now Normanby Plains, which extends to
50,000 acres.]
MOUNT FORBES (OF OXLEY)
"Immediately on the S.E., low forest ridges and some detached hills meet the
eye. One rather elevated and remarkable figure was named Mount Fraser, after my
friend and fellow-traveller. Whenever this country is thrown open to the grazier
and a public road is constructed through the mountain defile just explored to
the extensive western pastures, then will Bainbrigge's Plain become a stage,
being nearly equidistant from the Limestone Station and the Pass, the distance
from each...not exceeding a day's journey. In about six miles further to the
N.N.E. we made the foot of Mount Forbes, where I determined to rest a whole day,
as well to fix its position as to obtain from its summit a full set of bearings
to all points around, and by them to connect and close the sketch of my
journey.
"I...took bearings to every eminence of moment...As these bearings were to
points already frequently mentioned, no observation need again be made of them.
I would, however, simply remark that I was at length enabled to fix the true
situation of the lofty hills, marked on the chart of the country to the
southward, which I named Mount Edwards and Mount Greville, the latter in honour
of a very distinguished Scotch botanist.
"Of certain parts of this curiously diversified country, it may be important
to know that, upon passing to the eastward of the range of Flinders Peak, the
land appears a perfect level to the coast, which an eastern line would intersect
about the southern extreme of Stradbroke Island, so that if it should at any
period be deemed expedient to order a road to be formed from this hill direct to
that part of the coast...there appears to be no difficulty in passing the line
of ridge stretching southerly from Flinders Peak, to prevent its being made.
"The summit of Mount Forbes presents a narrow, level ridge at its southern
extreme, from which it gradually contracts northerly until it becomes a sharp
ledge of rocks, having on the eastern and western sides precipitous falls Of 200
feet. The rock is an ironstone upon which the decomposing effects of the
elements were everywhere obvious, and this doubtless gives the mountain its
sharp figure when viewed either from the N. or S.
"29th. Having ascertained the situation of Mount Forbes as follows, we
prosecuted our journey to the north along a continuation of the valley traversed
on the 27th. (Lat. 27°47'00" S.; long. 52°35'00" E.). At noon our latitude
(observed on the bank of the Bremer) placed us five miles south of the Limestone
Hills, which bore from us E.N.E. about 15 miles. This distance we covered early
in the afternoon of August 30th, after having been absent from that station 12
days."
Cunningham thus ends his report: "It is highly probable that upon the site of
these limestone hills a town one day will be raised." This was a true prophecy,
since here had arisen the town of Ipswich of the Southern Hemisphere, so called
in honour of Captain Rous, who was a native of Suffolk; it is now the centre of
the Triassic coalfield of Queensland.
CHAPTER XIX
CUNNINGHAM'S LAST JOURNEYS
Before he took his departure from Limestone Station Cunningham made some
short excursions, and on one occasion revisited the Brisbane River which he
intersected at Red Cliff Reach, the scene of Oxley's explorations in 1824. He
made his way to a ridge upon which grew Araucaria Cunninghamii in great
magnificence. He was reminded of his first visit to this spot with the late
Surveyor-General, for he writes: "In traversing a pitch of forest ground
formerly walked over by Mr. Oxley, accompanied by Lieutenant Butler and myself,
to the Pine Range, I could fain have recalled to life that lamented gentleman
who so long and so creditably to himself filled this post, and many a pleasing
incident now recurred to me. I passed over the ground and ascended the darkly
brushed acclivity of the Pine Range by the same opening in the thicket which we
had 4 years since penetrated to the higher points where grew those stately
timber trees, the monarchs of these forests--the new Araucaria."

BREMER RIVER. THIS MAP ALSO SHOWS THE SITE OF OXLEY'S ENCAMPMENT ON THE
BRISBANE IN 1824, AND RED CLIFF REACH, THE MOST WESTERN POINT REACHED BY HIM
DURING HIS SECOND VISIT TO THE BRISBANE IN 1824
Cunningham then drew a sketch of the Brisbane at Red Cliff Reach and wrote an
inscription upon it to show that Mr. Oxley had visited this particular part of
the river in 1824. He added another note, writing across one ridge on the sketch
the words: 1 Septr., 1828. A.C. A copy of his drawing has been reproduced (see
ante, page 537).
This sketch was embodied in a chart of Bremer River that Cunningham
afterwards sent to Governor Darling. Not only the course of the Bremer can be
traced upon the chart but two sections of the Brisbane River are also shown upon
it. In a report to the Governor from Parramatta on December 16th, 1828,
Cunningham gives further particulars of his visit to Red Cliff Reach. He writes:
"An excursion made in September last from Limestone Station North to the channel
of the Brisbane which I intersected in five miles at a point visited by Mr.
Oxley and myself, in 1824, and which I clearly recognized, has enabled me to
connect most satisfactorily (as regards geographical position) the westernmost
point to which our late very able Surveyor-General had penetrated on his second
visit to the Brisbane with what I have now attempted to effect. The tortuous
course of the river is therefore carried on upon the accompanying chart to
that point. Beyond this spot the river was subsequently (in 1825) traced up
in a N.W. direction by Major Lockyer." The chart of Bremer River is reproduced,
the writer being unable to find the larger chart of Cunningham's surveys.
On his return to Brisbane Town, Cunningham penned one of his most interesting
letters, now preserved at Kew. It is dated Brisbane, September 16th, 1828, and
is addressed to Mr. Charles Telfair, the friend he had made at the Mauritius,
and, in addition to other botanical subjects, describes the huge timber trees
which he had seen in dense woods on the banks of the Brisbane during this late
tour. He writes: "Among the plants of this river our attention has been
particularly directed to the timber trees: Flindersia australis of Mr.
Brown, who discovered it, I think, at Broad Sound in 1802, where it rises to a
small tree under twenty feet. The tulipwood forms a tree 60 feet high, and in
bulk is from 1 to 1½ feet in diameter. Another tree I think that will prove an
acquisition is here called the silk oak. It is of the order Proleaceae,
and of the genus Grevillea, but of a species yet unpublished; it rises to
a height of 80 or 90 feet, and I have measured the trunks at their base, which
give a diameter of two feet nine inches. The pine, a third species of
Araucaria, towers above all other plants; it exceeds 100 feet in height,
and is fully 4½ feet to 5 feet in diameter. It is so truly cylindrical in barrel
that it preserves this width from its base up to 50 feet, when it begins to
branch off and taper upwards. It furnishes spars for masts. I have seen a tree
here...called the lime, lately discovered in the woods and, in consequence of
its acidity...proved useful as an anti-scorbutic. It forms a tree 30-70 feet
high, with small myrtle-like leaves, and with branches furnished with
spines...It is most clearly of the Aurantiae of Correa (Annales Ile
Mus, Vol. VI), but whether a Citrus or a Limonia I am just now
unable to say. This can only be determined by its flowers. Of the new
Calostemma (a genus related to the Pancratium) of these woods, I
have collected a few bulbs. This interesting plant I forwarded to Kew four years
ago from these forests, where alone it has been sparingly met with; and, as it
flowered in the royal establishment, Dr. Hooker has, through a brother of mine,
been made acquainted with it.
"I have collected some interesting geological specimens," continues
Cunningham "and have prepared several skins of rare birds: these, with the skin
of a woman--an aboriginal, I have obtained with the design of sending them home
to Sir Everard Home. I have in my possession some curious and novel facts
respecting the natives, of their custom of flaying persons of some rank, among
them those who have fallen in battle...The mode of performing this operation is
by drying the skin previous to its being carried about with them in their
wanderings, in order to remind them that a great warrior once lived among
them."
In the following month Cunningham left the scene of his duties and embarked
on October 29th for Sydney in the schooner "Isabella," reaching Port Jackson on
November 14, 1828. He brought back with him an interesting and valuable
collection of living plants and an equally valuable collection of seeds.
For the next few months his movements were somewhat unsettled. Evidently he
was awaiting anxiously the reply from home saying that he might return to
England, but so far none had come. He continued to make some short tours into
the country: and travelled in January, 1829, over the Blue Mountains as far as
Cox's River. The weather was intensely, even disagreeably, hot, and he was glad
to return to his small cottage-home at Parramatta. Here he was saddened by the
news of the death of his father, whom he had been looking forward to seeing on
his arrival in England after his long absence in the colony, and who had died at
the ripe old age of eighty-four.
In May, 1829, Cunningham returned to Queensland, and in a tour of six weeks'
duration carried out further explorations, travelling westward and
north-westward of his former tracks. In this journey he fixed the situation of
Hay's Peak, a conical, densely wooded mountain in 27°36' S. and 152°8' E. (near
Toowoomba)[*], and he "traced the principal branch of the Brisbane River as far
N. as 26°25' S., until its channel assumed merely the character of a chain of
very shallow stagnant pools." At this time he reached Lister's Peak in 26°52' S.
This forms the most northerly point of his discoveries, and he thus, as he
himself states (in a letter to Governor Darling dated Parramatta December 12,
1829), then established two important geographical facts: (1) that the Brisbane
River (at one period supposed to be the outlet of the marshes of the Macquarie)
originated on the eastern side of the Dividing Range, its chief sources being in
elevated lands bordering the sea-coast, between the parallels of 26° and 27° S.;
and (2) that the Main Range which separates the coast waters from those that
flow inland continued to the northward in one unbroken chain. He adds: "My pass,
therefore, seems the only opening into the interior." Explorers who followed
Cunningham, however, complained that the facilities of ascent he reported were
far from being realized. And "it is certain," says a modem historian, "that
several accesses by which the range can be scaled, and which in later years have
been chiefly used, are situated about fifty miles north of Cunningham's
Gap."
[* Named in honour of R. W. Hay, Under-Secretary of State for the
Colonies.]
In this--his last journey in Queensland--Cunningham encountered the blacks
three times and on one occasion, at Laidley Plains, he and his men nearly lost
their lives in a bush fire which the natives had maliciously kindled near their
tents.
He returned to Sydney at the end of September, with seventy boxes of the
choicest specimens of the Queensland flora, which he intended to convey home
himself and deposit in Kew Gardens.
NORFOLK ISLAND
Governor Phillip before leaving England in 1787 had been instructed to occupy
Norfolk Island, which Cook had discovered on October 10, 1774. On March 6, 1788,
Lieutenant King (afterwards Governor of New South Wales), who was appointed
commandant, and Lieutenant Ball with a party of twenty-three, had landed on the
south side from the "Supply" and had taken possession of it.
King named the bay wherein he landed and fixed his settlement, Sydney Bay,
and gave the names of Phillip and Nepean to two small islands off its shores. At
Sydney Bay log huts were built and thatched with bulrushes and flags, which
added to the picturesqueness of the spot. The cabbage palm and flax plant grew
luxuriantly. King believed that the island had been previously inhabited, for he
found the banana tree growing in regular rows and the settlers, when turning up
the soil in the interior, came upon "several stone hatchets, or rather stones
resembling adzes and others resembling chisels." A coconut perfectly fresh and a
piece of wood said to resemble the handle of a fly-flap, like those of the
Friendly Islands, together with the remains of two canoes, were discovered among
the rocks, and these were thought to have been blown there from some
distance.[*]
[* Collins, PP. 41, 149.]
Norfolk Island was afterwards used as a penal settlement, and in 1790 the
population consisted of 149 persons. An order for its evacuation was issued by
the imperial authorities in 1803. The settlers were to have been all removed to
Tasmania and to Sydney, but the fulfilment of this purpose was long delayed. It
was partly carried out in 1803, in 1813, and in 1825; the island, however, is
still a British possession.
In May, 1830, Cunningham, while still awaiting news from home, visited
Norfolk Island, and after landing from the ship "Lucy Ann" at Cascade Bay on the
north side he walked across to the settlement at the southern side. It was La
Pérouse who said of this island that it was only a fit habitation for "angels
and eagles," but he might well have added "and for botanists" so rich did
Cunningham find it in interesting plants.
Of these he writes: "None are more remarkable than its noble pine,
Araucaria excelsa, and a tree-fern, Alsophila excelsa; and, as
these are lofty plants and generally grouped together on every part of the
island, they form a most decided feature of the landscape." He thought that in
habit and general appearance the plants assumed more the aspect of the
vegetation of New Zealand than that of Australia, and he noticed in Norfolk
Island the following which are found in the Bay of Islands, New Zealand:
Phormium tenax, Olea apetala, Areca Banksii (A.
sapida. Forst.), Myoporum laetum, Dracaena australis,
Freycinetia Baueriana (the New Zealand plant is probably distinct and may
be designated F. Banksii), Dodonaea sp., Tetragona expansa,
Polygonum australe, and Samolus littoralis."
Cunningham recalled here that, at the discovery of the island in 1774,
Forster, the naturalist who accompanied Cook on his second voyage, had had an
opportunity of landing on its north shore near Cascade Bay, and that there,
among several unpublished species of plants, he detected two new genera: the
one, his Gynopogon (Alyxia. Br.), of which genus the intertropical parts
of New South Wales furnish several species; the, other being his
Blackburnia. "We hear of no further scientific remarks having been made
on the botany of this beautiful isolated spot," writes Cunningham, "until that
able naturalist and draughtsman, Ferdinand Bauer, visited it, about the year
1804, and who doubtless during his stay collected every plant of its interesting
flora, which, exclusive of a few mosses and lichens, comprehends something more
than one hundred distinct species, belonging to full half that number of natural
orders. Of these, ten furnish timbers that might be usefully employed in
carpentry, boat-building, and even cabinet-work, viz.: Araucaria excelsa,
Elaeodendron australe, Blackburnia pinnata, Hibiscus
Patersonii, 01ea apetala, Croton sp. [= Baloghia
lucida], Kleinhovia (?) sp. [= Ungeria floribunda],
Pennantia corymbosa, Mimusops sp. [=Achras costata],
Coprosma sp. [= C. pilosa],
PHILLIP ISLAND
Colonel Morrisett, late of the 48th Regiment, who was cornmandant of the
island, showed the botanical traveller much kindness, and made arrangements for
him to visit Phillip Island. He made a circuit of this island, in spite of the
ravines which separate the rivers that diverge from its peak and fall on the
northern and western sides of it. "The interior," says Cunningham, "presents
some deep hollows, in parts densely wooded with small trees and an underwood
chiefly of the thorny caper bush, bearing fruit like a green lemon, and very
difficult to travel through." Here were a number of wild goats and pigs, the
progeny of some formerly put on shore at the first settlement of the island. The
produce of this stock had been thinned at various times, but Cunningham saw a
great many there, though the greater body kept in hollow places in the rocky
face of the cliffs inaccessible to man. The plants, with few exceptions, were
the same as those seen at Norfolk Island, among them being a species of
Hibiscus, with a spinous stem bearing withered yellow flowers, and
resembling a similar plant found at Port Macquarie. He was able to collect
flowering specimens of Blackburnia pinnata, not previously met with in
that state, Capparis sp. [= Busbeckia nobilis], and a ripe fruit
of Mimusops sp. [= Achras costata]. In the shades was found a
dark, glossy, pinnate-leaved twining plant, which appeared to be an undescribed
species of Clitoria. He did not leave Norfolk Island to return to Port
Jackson until September 11th, sailing in the "Lucy Ann" and landing in Sydney on
the afternoon of the 28th, after an absence of twenty-one weeks. It had been his
intention to visit the Swan River, but his lengthened stay in Norfolk Island
prevented this.
VOYAGE HOME
On November 16th the looked-for instructions arrived from the Treasury
ordering him to return to England. His long residence in the colony, therefore,
was soon to draw to a close and he went on no further expeditions beyond a
journey to Illawarra in December, 1830, and to Cox's River in January, 1831, on
botanizing excursions.
His time now was occupied chiefly in preparing for his homeward voyage, and a
berth was reserved for his passage home in the ship "Forth," Captain Robertson,
which was due to sail from New South Wales in February to England direct.
Gradually the huge botanical collections, consisting of living and dried plants
and seeds, with specimens of the native woods from various parts of the
continent, in addition to many other interesting objects of natural history,
were packed and conveyed on board the vessel then at anchor in Sydney
Harbour.
Cunningham next disposed of his household effects and his two horses, and on
February 12th vacated the small cottage which had been his home during most of
his stay at Parramatta. He says that he then bade adieu to his friends, "whose
kind offices I can no more forget than attempt to eradicate from my memory the
recollection of the very many agreeable periods I have spent in that quiet
town." From Parramatta he journeyed to Sydney, to find that the departure of the
"Forth" had been postponed, and in the end, owing to unfavourable winds, the
ship was prevented leaving Port Jackson until February 25th.
Not until July 10th did she sight the English coast, when early in the
morning Cunningham had a first view of the Lizard, after having been absent
nearly seventeen years from his native land. He took up his residence at a
pretty cottage at Strand-on-the-Green, on the north bank of the Thames, close to
Kew. Here, we are told, he was ever ready to impart the rich store of
information he possessed, as well as to distribute a portion of the valuable
collection he had brought home. Much of his time also was spent in arranging his
herbarium and preparing for publication the various botanical articles in which
he had recorded his observations.
In 1832, in consequence of the death of Charles Fraser, Colonial Botanist at
Sydney, the vacant position was offered to Allan Cunningham, who was still at
Strand-on-the-Green. He at this time declined the offer to go to New South Wales
in favour of his brother Richard, who had been recommended strongly for the
appointment by Mr. Robert Brown.
RICHARD CUNNINGHAM
His brother arrived at Port Jackson in February, 1833, and, although he did
not live long in the country, Australia owes him a great debt, not only because
it was there that he laid down his life in the cause of science, but also on
account of the way in which, before leaving England, he had devoted his energies
to the arrangement and classification of the flora of the continent. Indeed, the
contents of most of the "cabins" despatched from Sydney by Allan Cunningham had
found their way into the hands of his brother at Kew Gardens. In company with
Mr. Aiton, Richard Cunningham examined these plants and compared them with other
specimens in the Royal Gardens, which had been brought there not only from
different parts of Australia and Tasmania but also from other countries, where
members of the same botanical groups had been found. He therefore came to Sydney
with an ample knowledge of the Australian flora, so that his death at the hands
of the natives, while on a tour of discovery with Sir Thomas Mitchell in 1835,
was an irreparable loss to New South Wales.

RICHARD CUNNINGHAM
At first, when he heard that his brother was missing, Allan Cunningham
cherished the hope that he might have survived; but as the months passed away
and still no news was received of him, this seemed impossible. Not till May 17,
1836, however, did he learn from Sir Richard Bourke authentically that his
brother had been murdered by the blacks. It transpired that Richard had been
separated from the rest of the party, and, having got lost in the bush, had
fallen in with a tribe of natives who had put him to death.
One of Sir Thomas Mitchell's men had accompanied the mounted police to Budda
Lake, on the Macquarie River, and interviewed some of the blacks belonging to
the tribe, who frankly admitted that four of their number had murdered a white
man on the Bogan. They stated that about six moons previously the white man had
come to them and had made signs that he was hungry. They had given him food and
he encamped with them on that night--either April 29th or 30th--but during the
night he repeatedly got up and walked about, talking to himself and wringing his
hands, and listening as if for the voices of his companions. His actions so much
excited their suspicions that when daylight came they had held a consultation,
and determined for their own safety to kill him, since they thought he meant to
betray them into the hands of their enemies. Accordingly, one man struck him on
the back of the head with a club, and others rushed upon him with their spears.
On searching the bags of the tribe the white men found a knife and a glove. Thus
Richard Cunningham died,[*] who, had he lived, could probably have filled in the
blank spaces in the botanical knowledge of the country better, perhaps, than any
other botanist at that period.
[* Heward: "Hooker's Journal of Botany."
Lieutenant Zouch, then at the head of the police, had proceeded to the spot
on the Bogan mentioned by the blacks, and, on November 10th, had reached a place
called Currindine, where some remains of a white man, a portion of his coat, and
a manilla hat were found. Mr. Zouch's party dug a grave there, and raised a
mound over the remains, the officer himself marking a tree to show the spot
where Richard Cunningham was laid to rest.
RETURN To NEW SOUTH WALES
It was shortly after hearing this news that Allan Cunningham was appointed to
succeed his brother in the position of Colonial Botanist in New South Wales. He
took his passage on board the "Norfolk," Captain Gatenby, and joined the ship at
Spithead; she sailed from there on Sunday, October 30, 1836, and arrived at Port
Jackson on Sunday, February 12, 1837. Cunningham took out with him an inscribed
tablet to his brother's memory, which was placed in the Scotch Church at
Sydney.
For the short period that he held the post of Government Botanist the duties
it entailed did not at all appeal to Allan Cunningham, and he was never happy in
the work of superintending what he termed "the Government Cabbage Garden."[*]
Before any length of time had elapsed he decided to resign the post and begin
collecting on his own account, and in January, 1838, he wrote home "I am now
about to enter with all my might on a more legitimate occupation." In the
following April he visited New Zealand, sailing thither in the French corvette
"L'Heroine," 32 guns, Captain Cecille, who had kindly offered him a passage. At
this time Cunningham's health was beginning to fail, and doubtless the exertion
of the expeditions he had formerly undertaken had undermined his constitution,
for he seems to have had little strength to combat a serious chill which he
caught during his stay in New Zealand. Before he left those shores, paralysed
conditions of his limbs and a general weakness attributable to the meagre food
he had had on his travels had so far manifested themselves that the illness
which caused his death seems already to have taken hold of him.
[* He had been asked to supply the Governor's table with
cabbages.]
There was no improvement in Cunningham's condition when he returned to
Sydney. Gradually he got worse. Notwithstanding the state of his health,
however, his enthusiasm for collecting did not forsake him, and he began
planning a voyage with Captain Wickham in H.M.S. "Beagle". The "Beagle", which
had left Sydney Harbour on November 10, 1838, to complete the survey of Bass
Strait, was expected back at Port Jackson in February, and Captain Wickham had
invited Cunningham to sail with him on his return to the north-west coast, where
he had been instructed to complete a survey of the shores--especially of those
which had been left uncharted by Captain King.
The botanist's letters at this time to his friends at home are pathetic.
Referring to Captain Wickham's offer to take him in the Beagle he says in one
letter:[*] "I am undergoing medical discipline in order to be hearty and well
enough to accompany that excellent officer to the examination of a continent
[coastline ?] first seen by old Dampier on Jan. 4th, 1688, and again by King in
1818-24." Instead of getting better he grew worse, until all hope of his sailing
in the Beagle had to be abandoned, and he says in a second letter, dated April
12, 1839:[*] "Captain Wickham is on the point of sailing...I have failed in my
best endeavours to patch myself up, and a consultation of four medical friends
has just taken place...the result being an unanimous opinion that I do not, on
any consideration, go to a tropical climate...in the very enfeebled state of my
limbs "; to this he adds: "I shall now pass a quiet winter here with my
friends."
[* Heward: "Hooker's journal of Botany," Vols. 111 and
IV.]
[** Ibid.]
Another letter, dated from Sydney, May 16, 1839, is addressed to Robert
Brown, and is the last which the present writer has been able to trace.[*] In
this Cunningham writes more cheerfully, and says: "I hope that the winter, now
set in, will brace me up. My plan is to lie by now until January or February
next, and then to embark with my collections and baggage, so as to reach London
in 1840."
[* MS. Letters to Robert Brown. British Museum.]
Alas! Cunningham was destined never again to see his native country, for, in
spite of his hopeful words, his end was approaching. At the close of this
letter, indeed, there is a paragraph which seems to show that he knew how
serious a turn his illness was taking, for he wrote: "I am now exhausted in
subject and literally in body, I therefore close, begging you, my dear sir, to
receive this letter from the hands of a poor, decrepit, prematurely-old
traveller, who if he did not all that he might have with the means he
possessed"--and then adds, as if with a touch of pride, remembering what he had
achieved in New South Wales--"at least strove for years to advance botanic
science here from pure love, blending...the knowledge of the plants of the
country with that of its internal geography." Robert Brown must have received
this shortly before he heard the news that Cunningham had passed away, for there
appears on it in Brown's handwriting, the memorandum: "Mr. Cunningham died on
the 27th of June, 1839, at Sydney, as stated in Captain King's letter to Captain
Washington, dated Port Stephens, July 14th/39. R. B."
Allan Cunningham was buried in Sydney, where so many explorers have found a
last resting-place. In St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church there is a tablet to his
memory, another memorial is the beautiful marble urn placed in the Botanical
Gardens, overlooking the waters of Farm Cove. There are yet other memorials of
him to be found in the geography of New South Wales, for his name has been
frequently bestowed upon portions of its territory. Chief of these is the county
which bears his name, wherein, on the northern bank of the Lachlan, are Mount
Allan and Mount Cunningham.
ERRATA
(The errors have been corrected in this eBook)
Page xii, last line.--For "Cadgegong" read "Cudgegong."
Page 104.--For
"again carved" read again left."
Page 109, Note 1.--For 1810 read
1814."
Page 319 Note 1.--For "Rivière de Franc_ois" read "Rivière des
Franc_ais."
Page 480.--For "Vlamingh Plate" read " Vlamingh's Plate."
Page
527, 4th par.--"On Oxley's return" should read "On his return."
Page 566,
Note.--For "Thomas de la Comindane" read "Thomas de la Condamine."
Page 512,
last par.--For "Lomatia ilicifolia read "Lomatia silaifolia."
Page 615, end of 2nd par.--Read "in 1835" after "tour of discovery with Sir
Thomas Mitchell."
The End