Historic Return of Newcastle Treasures for Exhibition

Invitation to Celebrating the Early History of Newcastle Event

On Friday 26th October 2012 a public announcement was made by Dr Alex Byrne of the NSW State Library, relating to the exciting news that the artistic treasures of early Newcastle would make their historic return to the City for the first time in over 195 years.

The forthcoming “Treasures of Newcastle from the Macquarie Era Exhibition”, scheduled for 2 March to 5 May 2013, will see the return of the Macquarie Collector’s Chest, Wallis Album and Edward Charles Close Panorama, among many other artistic and historic treasures created in Newcastle almost two centuries ago.

The treasures are of immense significance to the people of Newcastle and the Hunter Region, and also of national and international significance in terms of the cultural evolution of the Australian people.

The Exhibition is being made possible through the collaboration of the Newcastle Region Art Gallery and The State Library of NSW with the generous support of Noble Resources. We are delighted with all the people that have made this happen. We applaud their efforts.

The video above was recorded by Gionni Di Gravio at the Event, which was held at the Fort Scratchley Historic Site Centre, and features the following speakers:

Mr Shane Frost – Managing Director – Awabakal Descendants Traditional Owners Aboriginal Corporation

Dr Alex Byrne – NSW State Librarian and Chief Executive

Mr Ron Ramsay – Director Newcastle Art Gallery

Cr Jeff McCloy – Lord Mayor of Newcastle

Click to examine higher resolution image of this view from The Wallis Album (reproduced for Event Invitation)

Illustration of a John Dory from the Wallis Album.

Unveiling the Wallis Album

On the 20th February 2012 a ceremony was held at the Newcastle Art Gallery to unveil the Wallis Album.

The Wallis Album Unveiled

The Wallis Album was compiled by Captain James Wallis, who was Commandant of the Newcastle penal settlement from June 1816 to December 1818. Of the 35 works, the album features many by convict artist Joseph Lycett whom Wallis developed an association with after he was sent to Newcastle in 1815 for re-offending.

Digitised images from the  complete Wallis album are now available on the Mitchell Library web-site:

Catalogue:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=954703

Thumbnails of all pages:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/album/albumView.aspx?acmsID=954703&itemID=957996

This album was a personal copy of a printed book by Captain James Wallis, supplemented with extra paintings, sketches and annotations relating to the Aboriginal people in Newcastle, as well as landscapes,  flora and fauna of the area including an impossibly rare sketch of Throsby Creek. This work was a gift to his wife, and represents not only his love for her, but also his love for Newcastle and the Hunter Region. It is quite unique and a real treasure.

Sample page from The Wallis Album

The printed work is entitled: An historical account of the colony of New South Wales and its dependent settlements : in illustration of twelve views / engraved by W. Preston from drawings taken on the spot by Captain Wallis. To which is subjoined An accurate map of Port Macquarie and the newly discovered River Hastings / by J. Oxley
London : Printed for R. Ackermann by J. Moyes, 1821

see: http://www.flickr.com/photos/uon/sets/72157622518218701/with/4036153890/

This Album is one of the most significant collections of convict-era artworks ever discovered, and was unveiled to the public for the first time at the Newcastle Art Gallery, in the city in which it was created.

Dr Alex Byrne taking the Wallis Album out of its box

Richard Neville, Mitchell Librarian said that the album had been kept in a cupboard in Canada by a Wallis descendant.

Mr Richard Neville, Mitchell Librarian

Richard Neville, Mitchell Librarian said:

One could see immediately how important [the album was] and how vital it was to purchase it. The last time the album was in Australia was on the third of March, 1819, when Captain Wallis put it in a ship and took it back to England.

The Wallis album really is without a doubt the most significant pictorial artefact to have been made in colonial NSW during the 1810s, and is also the only known collection that relates so directly to Wallis’ time in NSW.

Portraits of Aboriginal people from this region and era are extraordinarily rare, and it shows that Wallis enjoyed a certain familiarity with the Indigenous people during his time in Newcastle.

In fact, we have a letter in the Library’s collection where Wallis talks fondly about the beauty of the Newcastle district and his pleasurable hunting expeditions with Burigon, who is featured in this portrait.

In anticipation

The NSW State Library bought the album at auction for $1.8 million.

Wallis Album unveiled by Dr Alex Byrne

Arts Minister George Souris said it was important to bring the album back to where most of its works were created.

The Hon. George Souris, NSW Minister for the Arts

The Hon. George Souris, NSW Minister for the Arts said:

This remarkable album is a vital piece of colonial history for Newcastle and Australia, and I commend the State Library of NSW for securing it for the nation after it was discovered in the back of a cupboard in Canada last year.

The album has a strong link to the people of Newcastle and the local Indigenous communities, so it is wonderful that local residents have been given the first opportunity to view it at the Newcastle Art Gallery.”

Gallery director Ron Ramsey described the album as a treasure ”greater than the jewels of Elizabeth Taylor and so much cheaper”.

Mr Ron Ramsay, Director of the Newcastle Art Gallery

For ABC radio interviews by Carol Duncan see: http://blogs.abc.net.au/nsw/2012/02/the-wallis-album.html?site=newcastle&…

Aunty Nola embraced by Tim Owen, Member for Newcastle

This video represents the highlights of the ceremony. Speakers include:

Mr Ron Ramsay, Director of the Newcastle Art Gallery
Mr Richard McGuiness, Guraki Aboriginal Advisory Committee
Aunty Nola Hawken, Awabakal Descendent and Traditional Owner
Councillor John S. Tate, Lord Mayor of Newcastle
Rob Thomas, President of the Library Council of New South Wales
Richard Neville, Mitchell Librarian
The Hon. George Souris, NSW Minister for the Arts
The Opening and Unveiling of the Wallis Album
Tim Owen, Member for Newcastle Presents Album to Aunty Nola Hawken
Dr Alex Byrne, NSW State Librarian & Chief Executive

Aunty Nola Hawken – Awabakal Descendent and Traditional Owner

Dr Alex Byrne, NSW State Librarian & Chief Executive

According to Dr Alex Byrne, NSW State Librarian and Chief Executive:

The Wallis album is a sensational new addition to the Mitchell Library collection, the world’s largest and most renowned storehouse of records relating to the history of our nation…The State Library is absolutely committed to connecting the original documents of Australia with local communities, and we’re thrilled to be partnering with the Newcastle Art Gallery in sharing this object that has obvious historical and emotional significance to Newcastle.”

Dr Byrne speaking with Aunty Nola, Aunty Kerrie and Mrs Macquarie (Anne Creevey)

Sample page from the Wallis Album

Aunty Nola with family viewing the Wallis Album

This video was filmed and prepared by Gionni Di Gravio, University of Newcastle Archivist and Chair of the Coal River Working Party.

Macquarie Pier Plaque Unveiled

'Plaque Offers A Steeping Stone to Past' Newcastle Herald 5 August 2010 p.7

The Macquarie Pier Commemorative Plaque was unveiled by Her Excellency Professor Marie Bashir AC CVO, Governor of New South Wales at a ceremony at the Nobbys Surf Life Saving Club on the 4 August 2010 at 4 pm.

The occasion was kindly sponsored and organised by the Fort Scratchley Historical Society, The Newcastle Port Corporation, The University of Newcastle’s Coal River Working Party and the City of Newcastle.

Governor Lachlan Macquarie laid the foundation stone for the Newcastle breakwater, named in his honour by Commandant Captain James Wallis as “Macquarie Pier” on the 5th August 1818 at 4 pm.

Where exactly the foundation stone was laid is not known, many believe it was lost, but a map by the A.A. Company surveyor John Armstrong, drawn in 1830, indicates the point of commencement of the stonework with annotations on both sides of the Pier reading on the left “The stonework begins here on this side” and further along the Pier towards the present Nobbys surfhouse sheds “The stone work begins here on this side”. This plan is the key to possibly identifying the stone’s present location.

Macquarie Pier Commemorative Bronze Plaque

The Coal River Working Party has assembled an archaeological ‘Time Team’ team with the professional expertise drawn across Government, Business and community to re-discover the Macquarie Pier Foundation Stone.

To mark the spot a commemorative plaque cast in manganese bronze was commissioned with the financial assistance of the Institution of Surveyors (Hunter Manning Group) and Emeritus Professor John Fryer. This plaque is to be inlaid into the path adjacent to the spot that marks the start of the stonework.

Peter Sherlock (Director of Monteath & Powys Pty Ltd Surveyors) showing peg marking start of Macquarie Pier (Photo: Robert McLardy)

Peter Sherlock (Director of Monteath & Powys Pty Ltd Surveyors) showing peg marking start of Macquarie Pier (Photo: Robert McLardy)

This ceremony blessed the forthcoming archaeological works and honoured the Macquarie Pier as a land bridge safe guarding our Port, and connecting land and all peoples across time.

Macquarie Pier Plaque Unveiled - (l-r) Gionni Di Gravio, Danylo Motyka and Aunty Nola Hawken

Gionni Di Gravio (Chair, CRWP) and Aunty Nola Hawken (Awabakal Descendant) at Unveiling (Photo: Robert McLardy)

Following the unveiling Her Excellency then opened the Quest for Macquarie Pier exhibition at Fort Scratchley, and her husband, Sir Nicholas Shehadie AC OBE launched the search light and fired the guns in honour of Governor Macquarie, Governor Sir Roden Cutler and Her Excellency Professor Marie Bashir.

Firing of the Guns - Mr Doug Lithgow (Freeman of the City of Newcastle), Gionni Di Gravio (Chair of the Coal River Working Party), Her Excellency Professor Marie Bashir Governor of New South Wales AC CVO, and Amir Mogodam (University Conservator) at the dusk firing of the guns at Fort Scratchley

FREE DOWNLOAD

Quest for Macquarie Pier Commemorative Booklet (Web Edition) 6.4 MB PDF

The Achievements of Captain Wallis Commandant 1818

Extract from the Sidney (sic) Gazette 26 December 1818

http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article2178450

The Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser
Saturday 26 December 1818 Page 1 of 4

GOVERNMENT AND GENERAL ORDERS.
Government House, Parramatta, Thursday, 24th December, 1818

CIVIL DEPARTMENT.

HIS EXCELLENCY the GOVERNOR, in relieving Captain JAMES WALLIS, of the 46th Regiment, from the Command of the Settlement at Newcastle, by the Appointment of Captain JAMES MORISSETT, of the 48th Regiment, to that Station, avails himself of the Opportunity afforded by the Relief proceeding to Newcastle, to express publicly his high Sense and unqualified Approbation and Acknowledgment of the various important Services rendered to the Settlement of Newcastle by Captain Wallis during the Period of his Command, which commenced in the Month of June,1816.

The Zeal, Ability, and Judgment manifested by Captain Wallis, as Commandant of the Settlement on Hunter’s River, where the relative Duties were at once so peculiarly arduous, and invariably demanded the most vigilant and prompt Attention ; whilst they merit the highest Commendation for their public beneficial Effects, reflect the greatest Credit upon Captain Wallis as an Officer and a Gentleman.

The humane and judicious System adopted by this Officer towards the large Population of Convicts at Newcastle (now amounting to nearly seven hundred persons), entitles him to His EXCELLENCY’S warmest Commendation, considering in what Degree the Condition of those unfortunate Persons has been ameliorated and improved since he took the Command of the Settlement.

Yielding to that charitable Consideration towards a Description of our Fellow Creatures, however debased in moral Principle and Conduct, and justly appreci- ating that humane benignant Line of Conduct pursued by Captain Wallis during his Command, which was at least calculated to lead to Improvement and Reforma- tion ; His EXCELLENCY feels it equally a Tribute due to that Officer’s Merits, to notice with suitable Commen dation the grand scale of Improvements by which he has advanced the Settlement at Newcastle, from the Appearance of an humble Hamlet to the Rank and Capabilities of a well laid out, regular, and clean Town ; in effecting which Captain Wallis must have had to encounter various Difficulties, which could only have been surmounted by the Exercise of superior Judgment, Perseverance, and Ability.

It would far exceed the Limits of a Government and General Order to enumerate in detail all the Improve merits and Advantages which the Settlement of New castle has undergone by Captain Wallis within the short Space of two Years and an Half: But it would neot be doing him that Justice which his Claim to pub- lic Commendation entities him to, were not some Specification brought to View of the important Buildings constructed and compleated under his Direction, at once interesting, and ornamental to the Settlement, and promising a permanent Footing and Security to Religious and Civil Establishments.

FIRST, A very handsome Church, capable of containing upwards of 500 Persons, with an elegant Spire.

2. An excellent Hospital, well aired and well situated, constructed with Stone with a Viranda round it, and inclosed with a suitable Paling.

3. A large commodious Gaol, well aired and well situated, and strongly built of stone.

4. A commodious Barrack built of Brick, for two Subalterns.

5. A good Brick Barrack for the Assistant Surgeon.

6. A large comfortable Barrack for the Convicts.

7. A Guard-House.

8. A Watch-House.

9. A Boat-House.

10. A Lime-House.

11 A new Lumber-Yard, with the necessary Work Shops for Mechanics and Artificers

13. The old Wharf considerably enlarged and improved.

In Addition to the foregoing useful and permanent Buildings, Captain Wallis has commenced and made great Progress in another most important Undertaking, namely, constructing a strong massy Stone Pier across the Channel dividing the main Land (on which the Town is situated) on the South Side of the Harbour from Coal Island (or Nobby), for the Purpose of confining the Whole of the Water of Hunter’s River to the principal Channel by which Vessels enter the Har- bour of Newcastle, and preventing that Channel from being blocked up, and consequently rendered dangerous, if not impracticable for Navigation. – This useful Work was commenced on early in August last, at the Time His EXCELLENCY was on his Visit of Inspection to Newcastle, and had himself an Opportunity of personally laying the Foundation-stone of the Pier.

Considering the great Skill and Attention necessary, to bestow on Works of such Magnitude and Utility, Captain Wallis’s intelligent and comprehensive Mind; was not only equal to the Undertaking, but led him, highly to his Honor, to devise the best means of effecting the Reformation and Comfort of the Convicts under his Charge, as well as to the instruction and Improvement of their Children. – With this laudable View he established an excellent School, where the rising Generation are taught and brought up in the pure Principles of the Christian Religion ; nor was that Officer less attentive to the moral and religious Duties of his Troops, to whom, as well as to the Convicts, he personally read Divine Service every Sunday at the new Church.

From the Opportunity the GOVERNOR had of witnessing the various Improvements at Newcastle on his late Tour of Inspection to that Settlement His EXCEL LENCY is led duly to appreciate their Importance, and to render this public Suffrage to Captain Wallis’s Arrangements, as well as in respect to the Convicts under his Direction, whose ameliorated Condition was every Day more manifest, and gave every reasonable Hope of eventually producing the wished-for Reformation. These, His EXCELLENCY is persuaded, will long remain honourable Testimonies of Captain Wallis’s Merits,when the Voice of Commendation shall have passed into Oblivion.

The GOVERNOR will consider it his Duty, as it will be his highest Pleasure, to make the most early and favourable Report to His MAJESTY’S PRINCIPAL SECRETARY OF STATE, of the meritorious Conduct and Services of Capt. WALLIS.

By His Excellency the Governor’s Command,

J. T. CAMPBELL, Secretary.

Transcribed and Corrected by Mr Russell Rigby
27 July 2010