Glimpses of Newcastle in the 1920s

Glimpses of Newcastle (Front Cover)

This small item containing foldout photographs of Newcastle scenes was created sometime during the 1920s.

We know this because the Newcastle Town Hall image is presented as a concept illustration, so it must be prior to 1929, when the building was finally constructed and opened to the public.

The booklet includes various views around Newcastle including the Beach, the Dyke, the Cliff Walk, King Edward Park, Ambulance Station, Post Office, Ocean Baths, Nobbys, Town Hall (in concept) and Merewether.

The full set can also be viewed in various sizes on the University of Newcastle (Australia) Cultural Collections  Flickr site:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/uon/sets/72157630864244266/

It was kindly donated to the University by Mrs Stephanie Turton in July 2012 and is held at Archives Shelf Location A9020 (x).

Glimpses of Newcastle (Cover)The Beach, NewcastleThe Dyke NewcastleThe Beach, NewcastleCliff Walk, NewcastleKing Edward Park, NewcastleAmbulance Station NewcastleKing Edward Park, NewcastlePost Office NewcastleNobbys NewcastleOcean Baths, NewcastleTown Hall (Concept Illustration)Merewether Newcastle.Glimpses of Newcastle (Back Cover with Inscription)

Conrad Martens in Newcastle and the Hunter

The State Library of New South Wales has digitised a selection of Conrad Martens‘ drawings. Among them are drawings that document his travels though the Hunter in the years 1841 and 1852.

Conrad Martens (1801-1878), artist, was born in London England. In 1832 he joined the scientific team aboard the Beagle with Charles Darwin, replacing Augustus Earle as artist. He left the Beagle in October 1834 making his way eventually to Sydney in 1835. There he made his living selling water colour paintings among the Sydney elite. But the 1840s brought hard times and he was forced to travel to find a new market for his works among the settlers and squatters of New South Wales and Queensland. This economic downturn thankfully brought him to the Hunter Region in 1841 and again in 1852 where he was commissioned by a number of local landowners to paint their homesteads and environs. These land owners included Edward Charles Close Esq (Morpeth), Mrs Dumaresq (Port Stephens and Tahlee), Captain P.P. King (Tahlee, Lady Parry’s Seat, Buchan Mountain and Stroud), Alexander Walter Scott Esq (Burwood, Ash Island, Newcastle, Morriset’s Baths, Christ Church), H. Scott (Glendon), J. W. White Esq (Stroud, Tahlee), Captain Marcus Freeman Brownrigg, R.N. (Carrington, Port Stephens and Stroud) and C Kemp (Stroud) [Thanks to Conrad Martens "Account of Pictures Painted in N.S. Wales" Name Index to Patrons 1835-1878 Compiled by Michael Organ (1989)]

We have selected those drawings relating to Newcastle and the Hunter Region, and have re-arranged them in chronological order. The original sketches themselves are included across a variety of sketchbooks and are not in date order. The item number, title and link to the source album’s entry on the State Library’s site is included below each image. This allows us to course Marten’s journey through the region in a methodical manner. We are delighted that the State Library has digitised these works, and hope they continue making these treasures accessible. The drawings were obviously done before the paintings themselves, so it would be an interesting exercise to track down where the paintings of the scenes are now located. An exhibition of these selected drawings and their accompanying paintings would make a great attraction for art lovers and historians of the Hunter Region if it were to ever be assembled and curated.

80. View from Lady Parry’s Seat, Tahlee, 8th April 1841 by Conrad Martens

 Item 80 View from Lady Parry’s Seat, Tahlee, 8th April 1841
from Sketches in Australia, 1835-1865 by Conrad Martens (1801-1878)
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=457268#

View from Lady Parry’s Seat, Tahlee. Unsigned. Undated.

f.74 View from Lady Parry’s Seat, Tahlee. Unsigned. Undated. Titled at lower right.
From: Album of cloud studies, mountain, bush and harbour scenes, ca. 1841-1850 drawn by Conrad Martens
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=825948

Carrington, Port Stephens 10th April 1841

Item 56. Carrington, Port Stephens, 10th April 1841
From Conrad Martens sketches [of New South Wales 1835-1842]
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=446239

Valley of the Glouster

Item 57. Valley of the Glouster [sic] – 16th April 1841
From Conrad Martens sketches [of New South Wales 1835-1842]
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=446239

58. Pass of the Buckan 16th April 1841

58. Pass of the Buckan [i.e. Buchen] 16th April 1841
From Conrad Martens sketches [of New South Wales 1835-1842]
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=446239

69. Tahlee, Port Stephens 21st April 1841

 Item 69 Tahlee, Port Stephens 21st April 1841 from Sketches in Australia, 1835-1865 by Conrad Martens (1801-1878)
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=457268#

23. The Buckan Mountains on the “Gloucester”

Item 23. The Buckan [i.e. Buchen] Mountains on the “Gloucester”, 17th April 1841
from Sketches in Australia, 1835-1865 by Conrad Martens (1801-1878)
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=457268#

59. Tahlee. 23rd April 1841

Item 59. Tahlee. 23rd April 1841
From Conrad Martens sketches [of New South Wales 1835-1842]
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=446239

Mirranni from above the Station

60. Mirranni from above the Station, 30th April 1841
From Conrad Martens sketches [of New South Wales 1835-1842]
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=446239

The Hunter at Glendon 3rd May 1841

Item 6 The Hunter at Glendon 3rd May 1841
from [Album of] Pencil sketches, watercolours, etc.
by C. Martens, O.W. Brierly, S.T. Gill, John Rae, C. Rodius and others, ca. 1823-1863

http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=404878

The Yellow Rock, Wollombi Range, 3rd May 1841 by Conrad Martens

Item 66 The Yellow Rock, Wollombi Range, 3rd May 1841
from Sketches in Australia, 1835-1865 by Conrad Martens (1801-1878)
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=457268#

f.67 Yellow Rock, Wollombi Range. Unsigned. Undated.

Item f.67 Yellow Rock, Wollombi Range. Unsigned. Undated. Titled at lower left.
From: Album of cloud studies, mountain, bush and harbour scenes, ca. 1841-1850 drawn by Conrad Martens
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=825948

83. Tangorrin and Glendon Brook from near the Station, 4 May 1841

Item 83. Tangorrin and Glendon Brook from near the Station, 4 May 1841
from Sketches in Australia, 1835-1865 by Conrad Martens (1801-1878)
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=457268#

f.70 Glendon. Unsigned. Dated 5th May 1841

f.70 Glendon. Unsigned. Dated ‘May 5th, 41’. Titled at lower right.
From: Album of cloud studies, mountain, bush and harbour scenes, ca. 1841-1850 drawn by Conrad Martens
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=825948

46. Harpurs Hill, 7th May 1841

Item 46. Harpurs [i.e. Harpers] Hill, 7th May 1841
from Sketches in Australia, 1835-1865 by Conrad Martens (1801-1878)
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=457268#

f.13 On the Paterson River. Unsigned. Undated.

Item f.13 On the Paterson River. Unsigned. Undated. Titled on back in unknown hand.
From: Album of cloud studies, mountain, bush and harbour scenes, ca. 1841-1850 drawn by Conrad Martens
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=825948

4. Church at Morpeth 10th May 1841

Item 4 Church at Morpeth 10th May 1841
from [Album of] Pencil sketches, watercolours, etc.
by C. Martens, O.W. Brierly, S.T. Gill, John Rae, C. Rodius and others, ca. 1823-1863
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=404878

87. From Burwood near Newcastle, 11th May 1841, Shepherds Hill

Item 87 From Burwood near Newcastle, 11th May 1841, Shepherds Hill
from Sketches in Australia, 1835-1865 by Conrad Martens (1801-1878)
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=457268#

Ash Island 12th May 1841 by Conrad Martens

Flyleaf Ash Island 12th May 1841
from [Album of] Pencil sketches, watercolours, etc.
by C. Martens, O.W. Brierly, S.T. Gill, John Rae, C. Rodius and others, ca. 1823-1863
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=404878

61(a). Staghorn, 13th May 1841

Item 61(a). Staghorn, Acrostium Elkruomi [?], 13th May 1841
From Conrad Martens sketches [of New South Wales 1835-1842]
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=446239

61(b). Staghorn, 13th May 1841

Item 61(b). Staghorn, 13th May 1841
From Conrad Martens sketches [of New South Wales 1835-1842]
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=446239

Newcastle Church 13th May 1841 by Conrad Martens

Item 3 Newcastle Church 13th May 1841
from [Album of] Pencil sketches, watercolours, etc.
by C. Martens, O.W. Brierly, S.T. Gill, John Rae, C. Rodius and others, ca. 1823-1863
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=404878

76. Morrisets Bath, Newcastle, 13th May 1841

Item 76 Morrisets Bath, Newcastle, 13th May 1841
from Sketches in Australia, 1835-1865 by Conrad Martens (1801-1878)
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=457268#

77. Nobby Rock, Newcastle, 13th May 1841

Item 77 Nobby Rock, Newcastle, 13th May 1841
from Sketches in Australia, 1835-1865 by Conrad Martens (1801-1878)
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=457268#

Untitled – Possibly Newcastle Harbour 13th May 1841

Item 78 [Untitled] Possibly Newcastle Harbour 13th May 1841 ?
from Sketches in Australia, 1835-1865 by Conrad Martens (1801-1878)
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=457268#

79. View looking North from Churchyard, Newcastle, 14th May 1841

Item 79 View looking North from Churchyard, Newcastle, 14th May 1841
from Sketches in Australia, 1835-1865 by Conrad Martens (1801-1878)
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=457268#

Humes Craigs on the Gloucester 18th Sept 1842

Item f.75 Humes Craigs on the Gloucester. Unsigned. Dated ‘Sept 18th 42’ at lower right. Titled at lower right in unknown hand.
From Album of cloud studies, mountain, bush and harbour scenes, ca. 1841-1850 drawn by Conrad Martens
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=825948

Hume’s Craigs, on the ‘Gloucester’. Unsigned. Undated.

f.68 Hume’s Craigs, on the ‘Gloucester’. Unsigned. Undated. Titled at lower right.
From Album of cloud studies, mountain, bush and harbour scenes, ca. 1841-1850 drawn by Conrad Martens
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=825948

f.5 Nobby’s Newcastle. Unsigned. Undated. Untitled.

f.5 Nobby’s Newcastle. Unsigned. Undated. Untitled. [1843?]
from Portfolio collection of views, mainly in New South Wales, volume 5, ca. 1836-1873 drawn by Conrad Martens
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=825931#

99. Stroud, 8th May 1852

Item 99 Stroud, 8th May 1852
from Sketches in Australia, 1835-1865 by Conrad Martens (1801-1878)
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=457268#

54. Kerua River, Tilligherry, 8th May 1852

Item 54. Kerua [i.e. Karuah] River, Tilligherry, 8 May 1852
from Sketches in Australia, 1835-1865 by Conrad Martens (1801-1878)
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=457268#

Booral near Stroud, 10th May 1852

f.15 Booral nr. Stroud. Unsigned. Titled and dated ‘May 10th/52’ at lower right.
from Album of sketches in Sydney, New England and Queensland, ca. 1852-1878 drawn by Conrad Martens
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=825940

67. Carrington, Port. Stephens, 11th May 1852

Item 67 Carrington, Port. Stephens, 11th May 1852
from Sketches in Australia, 1835-1865 by Conrad Martens (1801-1878)
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=457268#

64. Valley of the Glocester

Item 64 Valley of the Glocester [1852?]
from Sketches in Australia, 1835-1865 by Conrad Martens (1801-1878)
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=457268#

19b. Newcastle – 16 May 1855

Items 19b. Newcastle, showing the soil reclaimed by enclosure from the sand – 16 May 1855
From Colonial sketches: an album of views of Sydney and NSW by E. West, F. Terry, Conrad Martens et. al.
View Album:
http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=449077#

Pencilled map of a region’s memory – H1 11 Feb 2012 p.14

Conrad Martens drawings digitised by The State Library of New South Wales.
Hunter Region related items sourced and chronologically arranged by Gionni Di Gravio
February 2011

In Search of Nobbys’ Tunnels by Roslyn Kerr, Geologist

Cover of In Search of Nobbys' Tunnels by Roslyn Kerr, Geologist

 

Please download a copy of In Search of Nobbys’ Tunnels – by Roslyn Kerr, Geologist. Report to Coal River Working Party University of Newcastle, October 2010. (6.2MB PDF)

In Search of Nobbys’ Tunnels – by Roslyn Kerr, Geologist.
Report to Coal River Working Party University of Newcastle, October 2010. (6.2MB PDF)

Thank you to Mr Brian Walsh who kindly compiled the author’s files into one document for the web.

Mysterious “Mr Thorn” – Unsung Saviour of Nobbys and Princes

Mysterious “Mr Thorn” – Unsung Saviour of Nobbys and Princes

By Gionni Di Gravio

In 1853 the Government hatched a plan to blow up Nobbys island in order to build a lighthouse.

Newcastle in 1853 from The Illustrated Sydney News 26 November 1853 p.60

Lieutenant Colonel Barney and Gother T. Mann on the 4 March 1853 agreed and embraced the idea of blasting the rock. By April 1853 Barney reports that work was underway to drive galleries into the headland for the planting of the explosives for the ‘demolition’ of Nobbys Island. Colonel Barney & Mann had planned three tunnels, and thought they may have needed a fourth.  However, it seems that only two tunnels were actually dug, both to a distance of 24 metres into the island.

William Keene (Examiner of Coal Mines) Nobbys detail from Copy of Stratigraphic sketch from Nobby’s Island Newcastle to Burwood, showing coal seams and their Order of Superposition. 31 May 1854. Photographed by Bruce Turnbull. Archives Authority Map No. SZ325

This angered the wider Newcastle community who rallied under the leadership of John Bingle to save the Island from destruction. The tunnel excavation was eventually stopped after Newcastle residents protested to the Government.

On what is perhaps the birth of the environmental movement in Newcastle (if not Australia in general according to Dr Glenn Albrecht), on the 22 November 1853, 49 citizens sent a Memorial to His Excellency Sir Charles Fitzroy, the Governor General of the Australian Colonies calling for him to intervene and protect Nobbys Island.

All this, according to John Bingle was to no avail. He attributes the success to another figure, known simply, as ‘Mr Thorn’, who after hearing the details from Bingle, traveled to Sydney and is credited with finally convincing the Governor’s mind.

“The Government at one time acting upon the suggestion of Col. Barney, of the Royal Engineers, intended to remove Nobby’s by blasting, but the citizens becoming aware of their design a public meeting was held in the Court House, on the 21st June, 1854, to petition the Legislative Assembly, to inquire into the particulars of the intention of the promoters, and with a prayer that the ill-advised measure be frustrated. The citizens having taken this public step considered that their prayer would receive the attention it demanded. However, it was a false delusion, for Col. Barney, the promoter of the scheme, was not to be daunted, but pushed on the excavation of the chambers for destroying the ill fated Island, as it was called, and throwing it into the sea. Several of these chambers were completed, and filled with (I am afraid to say how many tons of) gunpowder sufficient not only to blow up Nobby’s, but to seriously injure the city, and a day was fixed for the great display. Fortunately for the citizens the intention was known, but only a few days before it was to have been an accomplished fact, Mr. Thorn, of Prince Alfred notoriety, visited the writer, and entered fully into his views on the matter and on his return to Sydney, at his request, called upon the Governor, inducing him to postpone the day. By this at first sight trivial incident the destruction of Nobby’s -was abandoned, and It remains in the position and beauty that nature assigned it.

John Bingle Past and Present Records of Newcastle, New South Wales (1873) pp. 14-15 .

Bingle states that the meeting in the Court House occurred on the “21st June, 1854″. This could be a misprint in the date for 1853, as according to documents obtained from the New State Wales Parliamentary Archives the matter appears to have been resolved by the 31st December 1853.

See: 18 July 1854. New South Wales. Parliament. Legislative Council. Nobby’s Island. Laid upon the Council Table by The Colonial Secretary, and Ordered by the Council to be Printed, 18th July, 1854. Papers relating to the blowing up of Nobby’s Island [745 KB PDF file] Thanks to the New South Wales Parliamentary Archivist.

Please also see the original manuscript of the above printed papers. The papers include the tabling letter, a schedule, and some 30 pages of letters numbered 1 – 18 dated from 31 January 1853 to 10 January 1854. Kindly located and digitised by Kate Wilson, Processing Archivist at the New South Wales Parliamentary Archives:

1854. Nobby’s Island Return to Address, – Mr Cowper Ordered to be printed 18th July 1854

The original Petition signed by the 49 residents of Newcastle and dated 22 November 1853 does not appear to have survived.

“Mr Thorn”

After wondering about this “Mr Thorn” for years, on the weekend of the 10/11 September 2011,  I focused on John Bingle’s allusion to “Mr. Thorn, of Prince Alfred notoriety”.  Who was Prince Alfred? And how was our Mr Thorn, who in 1853 was responsible for convincing the Governor Fitzroy to refrain from blowing up Nobbys in Newcastle, connected to him.

It is with great honour that we reveal that the mysterious “Mr Thorn” was Mr George Thorne, of Claremont House, Rose Bay, a Sydney business man and merchant who had a number of business interests in Newcastle.

Besides saving our Nobbys Island from destruction, his other claim to fame came later in March 1868 when he took a bullet in the right ankle and thwarted an assassination attempt on the visiting Duke of Edinburgh Prince Alfred by an Irish assassin by the name of Henry James O’Farrell.

This was an important occasion for the Australian Colonies, the first Vice Regal visit to the country. As beautifully portrayed in the pages of The Illustrated Sydney News, The Duke of Edinburgh, Prince Alfred arrived with great fanfare.

Harbour Illumination in honor of the Visit of His Royal Highness Prince Alfred to New South Wales (The Illustrated Sydney News 22 February 1868)

Visit of H.R.H. Prince Alfred to New South Wales - Harbour Reception (The Illustrated Sydney News 22 February 1868)

Supplement to The Illustrated Sydney News 23 March 1868 p.1

Supplement to The Illustrated Sydney News 25 March 1868 p.2

On the Wednesday 4th March 1868 The Prince embarked on the Steamer Morpeth, rounding Nobbys at 10 minutes to 11 o’clock that evening. They were greeted by thousands of people waiting at the wharf, with a Royal salute fired from the hill before and again after the landing at Newcastle along with rockets launched. The Royal party proceeded to the Great Northern Hotel to retire for the evening.

The formal public landing with reception and procession through Newcastle took place on the following day, Thursday 5th March 1868, then onto Morpeth and Maitland. Here is the transcription of his journey from Sydney to the Hunter River District from The Illustrated Sydney News:

 At 3 p.m. the following day, the Prince, accompanied by Earl Belmore, Commodire Lambert, Lord Newry, Lieutenant Haig, and Mr Martin, Mr Wilson, and Mr Docker, embarked aboard the H.R.S.N. Co.’s steamer Morpeth, which had been placed at the disposal of the Prince, and specially fitted up for the occasion. The vessel at once proceeded on her voyage to Newcastle, where she arrived about eleven o’clock. A royal salute was fired. The voyagers landed and proceeded to the Great Northern Hotel. The official landing took place at 10 a.m. on the 4th (should read 5th – Ed).

The Prince, accompanied by His Excellency Earl Belmore, Viscount Newry, Lieutenant Haig, Captain Beresford, the Hons J. Martin, J.B. Wilson, J. Docker, W.M. Arnold, Speaker of the Legislative Assembly, and Commodore Lambert, were received at the vessel’s side by the Mayor and Aldermen of Newcastle; the Right Rev. Dr Tyrrell, Bishop of Newcastle; The Right Rev. Dr Murray, R.C. Bishop of Maitland; Mr Dodds, M.L.A., Mayor of East Maitland; Mr Lee, Mayor of West Maitland; Mr Jaques, Mayor of Morpeth; Mr Munro, Mayor of Singleton; Messrs. Cooper, Wisdom, Eckford, and Lee, members of the Legislative Assembly; the Revs. Mr Selwyn, Mr D. Boyd, Mr Millard, Mr Chapman, Mr Simon, Mr J. Spicer Wood, Mr Coutts, Mr Sterton, Mr Bain, Mr Nairn, Mr E.C. Pritchard, and Mr Canon C. Walsh. On reaching the arch formed by the coal trophy the mayor of the city Mr Hannell, read the address

To His Royal Highness Prince Alfred Ernest Albert, Duke of Edinburgh, Knight of the most honorable Order of the Garter, &c., &c., &c.

We, as the mayors, aldermen and burgesses of the respective boroughs of Newcastle, East Maitland, West Maitland, Morpeth, and Singleton, and on behalf of the warden and members of the Maitland District Council and the inhabitants of the Hunter River District generally, beg most respectfully to bid your Royal Highness welcome to this important portion of the colony of New South Wales.

We can assure your Royal Highness, that in no part of the British dominions has her Most Gracious Majesty more loyal and devoted subjects than the inhabitants of this district, and that by none of the many virtues of the late Prince Consort, your Royal Highness’s illustrious father, held in more esteem and affectionate remembrance and admiration.

We further desire that your Royal Highness will accept of our assurance that, not only as the son and representative of our beloved Queen, do we rejoice in your presence among us, but that we heartily welcome you personally as the Sailor Prince of our country – a character always dear to Britons – and for the many estimable qualities we have already learn’t to recognise in your Royal Highness.

We trust that your Royal Highness will be gratified with the inspection of our district, rich as it is in mineral, agricultural, and pastoral resources, and that you will carry back with you to our distant fatherland a pleasant recollection of your visit to the Hunter River and to this colony.

JAMES HANNELL, Mayor of Newcastle,
ALEXANDER DODDS, Mayor of East Maitland,
JOHN LEE, Mayor of West Maitland,
CHARLES E. JAQUES, Mayor of Morpeth,
ALEXANDER MUNRO, Mayor of Singleton.

Coal Arch at Newcastle - Landing of His Royal Highness (Events of the 5th March 1868 from The Illustrated Sydney News 20 April 1868 p.349)

His Royal Highness read the following reply:-

Gentlemen, the cordial unanimity and kindly feeling towards me which seems to prevail among you has very much increased the pleasure I experienced from the hearty welcome that has greeted my arrival on the shores of the Hunter.

The universal assurances of loyalty to which my arrival in these colonies has given occasion will be the source of sincere gratifications to the Queen, and this gratification will be very considerably increased by observing how general and how deep is the reverence in which the memory of my dear father is held by the people of Australia.

I am well aware that this is one of the wealthiest and most important portions of New South Wales, “rich in mineral, agricultural, and pastoral resources,” it is, therefore, with no small interest that I have looked forward to this visit, nor have I any doubt that I shall carry away with me as pleasing an impression of the country as I have already received of its inhabitants.

ALFRED.

To the mayors, aldermen and burgesses of the respective boroughs of Newcastle, East Maitland, West Maitland, Morpeth, and Singleton, and on behalf of the warden and members of the Maitland District Council and the inhabitants of the Hunter River District.

The Prince took his place in his carriage, and the procession having been formed in the following order:-

The Fire Brigade,
The Band,
The M.U. of Oddfellows, 6 abreast,
The G.U.O. of Oddfellows, ditto,
The Ancient Order of Druids, ditto,
The Ancient Order of Foresters, ditto,
The Band of the Sons of Temperance, 6 abreast,
The Guard of Honour.
The Carriage of His Royal Highness and Suite.
The Clergymen, Magistrates, and Vice Consuls of the District, 6 abreast,
The Mayors and Aldermen of the various Boroughs of the Hunter River District, 6 abreast,
The Citizens, 6 abreast,

proceeded along Hunter-street, to the Australian Agricultural Company’s Bridge, then back along into Bolton-street by Church-street, and down Watt-street to the Great Northern Hotel, where the Prince soon afterwards appeared on the balcony. School children in large numbers, drawn up in front of the hotel, commenced to sing the National Anthem from the boundary of their establishment in Church-street.

Shortly after eleven o’clock the Prince and party went by special train to the Mine of the Australian Agricultural Company, where they were received by Mr Merewether, the general superintendent. After watching the process of raising the coals the Prince, the Governor, Lord Newry, and Captain Beresford, went down the shaft, when Mr. Winship shewed and explained the process of getting out coals from the seam. Having examined a considerable portion of the mine, the party returned to the surface, and were speedily back to Newcastle.

At one o’clock His Royal Highness held a levee, when a considerable number of residents of the district paid respects to the Prince.

At three o’clock His Royal Highness and party embarked on board the Morpeth, and proceeded up the river, followed by the Coonanbara and City of Newcastle, both of which were crowded with passengers. The people assembled on the banks of the river exhibited their loyalty by the firing of guns, &c. His Royal Highness gracefully acknowledged the cheers with which his appearance was greeted. At about half past five o’clock the steamer hauled alongside the wharf at Morpeth, where an immense number of people were awaiting her arrival. When His Royal Highness stepped on the wharf the Mayor of Morpeth, welcomed him. The party then proceeded to the carriages which awaited them. As soon as the procession commenced to move, a salute of twenty-one guns was fired by the members of the Newcastle Naval Brigade. When the Prince reached the arch opposite the Courthouse the school children sang a few bars of the National Anthem. A few minutes afterwards the railway station was reached, and  on the visitors taking their seats the train moved off to East Maitland. Here another crowd had assembled, and manifestations of loyalty as enthusiastic as those of Morpeth and Newcastle were displayed. The train soon after drove back to Newcastle, where the royal party passed the night.

In the evening, Newcastle, East and West Maitland, and Morpeth, were brilliantly illuminated. At Newcastle the police office, the bank, hotels, and large houses of business exhibited large gas illuminations. On the North Shore three large bonfires were burning nearly all night, and at intervals there were displays of rockets.

The steamer Coonanbara, which had followed the Morpeth from Newcastle, was illuminated with lanterns, the line of her hull and paddle boxes being marked by red and green lamps, producing a most pleasing effect; and she also had a good display of rockets and blue lights.

At an early-hour on Friday morning the Prince and suite left Newcastle by train for Singleton, where they arrived about half past nine o’clock. His Royal Highness, accompanied by the Governor, entered the carriage of Mr W. J. Dangar, and the procession at once moved through the town. On reaching the Mechanics’ Institute a number of children sang the National Anthem very creditably. At the termination of the singing the Prince and party alighted and went into the Mechanics’ Hall, where they partook of some refreshments, inscribed their names in the visitors’ book, then drove back to the railway station, and left for Maitland.

The train stopped opposite the Court House in East Maitland, and on stepping on the platform His Royal Highness was received by the Mayor, who, on behalf of the inhabitants, offered his congratulations on the occasion of the royal visit. A salute of twenty-one guns was fired by the Naval Brigade, and His Royal Highness entered his state carriage. The procession then moved through East Maitland to High-street, West Maitland; entering the latter, hundreds of people lined the roadway, and cheered the royal visitor. On reaching the triumphal arch in West Maitland, the Mayor welcomed His Royal Highness to the town, and then took part in the procession, which was arranged in the following order:-

Vounteer Fire brigade.
Manchester Unity Order of Oddfellows.
Grand United Order of Oddfellows.
Ancient Order of Foresters.
Druids.
Sons of Temperance.
Guard of Honor.
H.R.H. THE DUKE OF EDINBURGH AND SUITE.
Guard of Honor.
Bishops and Clergy of all denominations.
Mayors and Aldermen of East and West Maitland, Newcastle and Morpeth.
Members of Reception Committee.
Carriages with two horses.
Carriages with one horse.
Horsemen.

Triumphal Arch at Maitland - The Mayor Reading Address (Events of the 6th March 1868 from The Illustrated Sydney News 20 April 1868 p.348)

Ranged along High-street were a large number of school children evidently delighted to see the Prince, whom they cheered heartily. When the Prince’s carriage reached the Northumberland Hotel, His Royal Highness entered for refreshments, and shortly after arrived at the racecourse to open the Agricultural Show. He was received y the President of the Agricultural Association, Mr. Wyndham, who pointed out to the Royal visitor the principal exhibits. At the invitation of the committee, the party then proceeded to the large marquee and took luncheon. The Mayor of West Maitland, Mr. John Lee, on behalf of the residents, presented the Governor with an address expressive of loyalty to the Queen and respect for his Excellency personally. His excellency responded in appropriate terms.

having an engagement in Sydney for the evening, His Royal Highness left a two o’clock, returned to the railway station, and was conveyed back to Newcastle.

At 3 p.m. the party re-embarked on board the Morpeth, which at once started for Sydney, where she arrived at half past eight, and enabled the prince to attend the complimentary concert given to Mrs. Meillon at the Exchange.

Corroboree held in South Australia in the presence of H.R.H. The Duke of Edinburgh (The Illustrated Sydney News 25 March 1868 p.4)

From the 4th to the 6th March 1868 the Prince visited Newcastle, Morpeth, Maitland and Singleton on his journeys throughout the Colony. An illustration of the Arches erected in his honour at Maitland and Newcastle were published in The Illustrated Sydney News.

Coal Arch at Newcastle - Landing of His Royal Highness (Reported after the event in The Illustrated Sydney News 20 April 1868 p.348-349)

The assassination attempt occurred on the 12 March 1868 at the Sailors’ Home Picnic at Clontaaf. The Prince had left the Royal Tent to hand over a cheque to Sir William Manning as a donation towards the Sailors’ Home.

Plan of Clontarf (The Illustrated Sydney News 25 March 1868 p.325)

The Recent Attempt on the Life of His Royal Highness The Duke of Edinburgh (The Illustrated Sydney News Supplement 25 March 1868)

Attempted Assassination of His Royal Highness The Duke of Edinburgh at Clontarf, Middle Harbour (The Illustrated Sydney News 25 March 1868 p.329)

The assassin fired once, striking the Prince in the back. The Prince fell to his knees, saying “Good God, my back is broken”.  According to William Vial’s Testimony the assassin aimed again at Manning, who was in line with the Prince, Manning falls to the ground, but the gun did not discharge. Mr William Vial then comes forward to restrain the assassin, and a struggle begins and pandemonium breaks out. The assassin fires again hitting George Thorne, who had rushed to the aid of the Prince and placed himself inadvertently in the firing line.

The Wounding of Mr Thorne (Sydney Morning Herald 27 March 1868 p.7)

Thorne family of Claremont, Rose Bay, Sydney, around 1877 (Courtesy of the Historic Houses Trust)

The photograph above was located through TROVE on the Historic Houses Trust website. “Family group photograph of George and Elizabeth Thorne of Claremont, Rose Bay, and Darcey Hey, Castle Hill, and their six daughters. The daughters are Annie Bisdee Pain (1843-1920), Gertrude Mary Naish (1845-1910), Rosalie Ann Watkins (1850-1927), Emily Nuttall Thorne (1851-1903), Melina Julia Thorne (1852-1887) and Ellen Elizabeth Thorne (1855-1938).”

An eye witness account by Emily Nuttall Thorne (1851-1903) sixth child of George Thorne has survived, and is preserved in the Library of New South Wales. A transcription of the account is here.

Another account, by Mr George Thorne’s wife Elizabeth, has recently also come to light, and donated to the University Archives by Newcastle Herald journalist Mr Greg Ray. This is a twelve page manuscript relating to the history of the family, to which is appended a cover note with Elizabeth Thorne’s account of the assassination attempt.

Elizabeth Thorne's account

In March 1868 on the occasion of the Duke of Edinburgh’s visit to Sydney a picnic was given to him at Clontarf, we were all at it and just after lu[nch] the Prince was walking in [the] grounds, when a man named “O’Farrel rushed out from the crowd and shot at him, my husband was walking with two of my daughters, seeing the Prince fall ran to assist him and a second shot fired at the Prince entered my husband’s foot, he did not feel it but saw the blood trickling out, he was carried on board a yacht and landed at our wharf, the bullet being extracted next day. The Queen expressed a wish to see the bullet it was sent home to her and returned to me afterwards.

Read the full manuscript here:

[Manuscript] Bisdee and Thorne Family History by Elizabeth Ann Thorne (nee Bisdee) (10.3 MB PDF)

On the 14th March 1868 the bullet (or ball) was extracted from the Prince by doctors Watson and Young of the Challenger and Gallatea. 

It was found that the bullet had penetrated the back about half an inch to the right of tho vertebral column, on a level with the ninth rib, and, traversing the course of the ribs round by the right, had lodged in the flesh, not far below the surface, within two inches of the breast bone. (ISN 2 January 1869 p.5)

From the West Coast Times (2 April 1868) via the Sydney Morning Herald March 14:

An examination of the pistols has set at rest all doubt of the number of shots fired. After the first discharge, which inflicted the injury on His Royal Highness, there was a second attempt, but the pistol missed fire, the bullet remaining in the chamber. At the third attempt the cartridge exploded, and the bullet entered the foot of Mr Thorne. The pistol is not a Colt, but it is supposed to be of French manufacture. The barrel works on a hinge.

With reference to the injury to Mr George Thorne, this gentleman immediately after the occurrence, was conveyed on board one of the yachts, which took him to his residence, Claremont, Rose Bay, where he was attended by Dr Bennett and Dr Milford. It appears that Mr. Thorne had taken up a position which would enable him to obtain a good view of the Prince, and he was observing His Royal Highness and Sir William Manning, when the assassin stole up behind them and fired the shot. The Duke immediately fell to the earth, and Mr Thorne ran to his assistance. It was when standing at the side of the Prince that he was struck by the ball, aimed (as Mr Thorne thinks) at His Royal Highness, who then lay on the ground. The ball passed through Mr Thorne’s trowsers and the elastic of his boot into the inner side of his right foot, and taking an oblique course, lodged in the muscles of his heel, near the os calcis. The wound has been probed for three inches, but the ball is so placed that it cannot at present be extracted. During Thursday night Mr Thorne suffered the most acute pain, but we are happy to be enabled to state that he was yesterday much better. Dr Bennett saw Mr Thorne again yesterday. The patient is progressing exceedingly well, the foot is not much swollen, and a confident hope is entertained of a speedy and a favourable cure. Much sympathy is very generally felt throughout the community with Mr Thorne in the unfortunate occurrence which has befallen him.

The assassination attempt brought much shame to the wider Australian public that saw themselves as British subjects first and foremost. Australia was portrayed both as revengeful wraith as well as suppliant dame.

Australia, Vindex - Remember the Ides of March "More than thy flesh, our honor felt the wound" - The Illustrated Sydney News 25 March 1868 p331

Australia Supplex - The Illustrated Sydney News 20 April 1868

AUSTRALIA SUPPLEX. New South Wales (loquitur) –
“I pray you, in your letters,
When you shall this unlucky deed relate,
Speak of me as I am; nothing extenuate,
Nor set down aught in malice.”

"All Right Again" - The Illustrated Sydney News 20 April 1868

On the 20th March 1868 a public meeting was held at the Exchange to begin raising funds for the establishment of “Alfred Memorial Hospital” in Sydney, with around £4,000 already raised. The Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, especially founded to commemorate this thwarted assassination attempt, was officially opened in 1882.

By at least 1930 Thorne’s role in saving the Prince had been all but forgotten.

Clontarf Tablet - Sydney Morning Herald 4th July 1930 p.8

It is with great pleasure that we restore this unsung hero back into the Australian Story.

Gionni Di Gravio
September 2011

Related digitised documents:

The Attempted Assassination of His Royal Highness The Duke of Edinburgh (The Illustrated Sydney News 25 March 1868 pp.322-323)

'The Prince's Visit to Australia' - The Illustrated Sydney News p.347

"The Trial of Henry James O'Farrell for the Attempted Murder of His Royal Highness Alfred Ernest Albert, Duke of Edinburgh" - The Illustrated Sydney News 20 April 1868 p.350

"The Trial of Henry James O'Farrell for the Attempted Murder of His Royal Highness Alfred Ernest Albert, Duke of Edinburgh" - The Illustrated Sydney News 20 April 1868 p.351

"The Trial of Henry James O'Farrell for the Attempted Murder of His Royal Highness Alfred Ernest Albert, Duke of Edinburgh" - The Illustrated Sydney News 20 April 1868 pp.354-355

"Execution of O'Farrell for the Attempted Murder of H.R.H. The Duke of Edinburgh" The Illustrated Sydney News 16 May 1868 p.363

Farewell to the Prince - The "Galatea" Passing the Heads (From The Illustrated Sydney News May 1868 p.369)

John Rae and Newcastle

John Rae (From the Illustrated Sydney News 17 December 1853 p.84)

John Rae (Biographical Text from the Illustrated Sydney News 17 December 1853 p.84)

It was an accidental delight this morning to come across an engraving of John Rae in the Illustrated Sydney News of December 1853. John Rae captured Newcastle in two famous panoramas, one painted in 1849, and again in a photograph circa 1880. These two images capture the changing landscape of the town and are among our artistic treasures. I have scanned the image and the accompanying text below to provide some insight into the artist and his work. It comes from the edition of the Illustrated Sydney News 17 December 1853 page 84, just a few years after he completed his painting of Newcastle. For further information please see Ann Hardy’s essay “A Timepiece of History” links are below. Click the panoramas to see the larger images.

 

Gionni Di Gravio
University Archivist and Chair Coal River Working Party

 

John Rae (1849)

Rae, John, 1813-1900. Newcastle in 1849.
(Courtesy State Library of New South Wales.)

John Rae (c.1880)

Rae, John, 1813-1900. [Panoramic photograph of Newcastle, 1878-1882, possibly taken from Jesmond House] — 4 albumen photoprints
from Sketches in New South Wales in the olden time 1842 – 1859 by John Rae, M.A. / album of watercolour panoramas and photographs of watercolour sketches.
(Courtesy State Library of New South Wales.)

For further information see:

Hardy, Ann. John Rae’s Newcastle “A Timepiece of History” (244KB PDF) Please note: The reader of these documents should be aware that further copying and use of images from collections of the State Library of New South Wales, National Library of Australia and the Newcastle Region Art Gallery, should not be done without reference to the particular institution from where they come. Images in this document that belong to the collection of the State Library of New South Wales should not be used or copied without reference to the Library Council of New South Wales, via the Mitchell Library. The Coal River Working Party thanks Ann Hardy for allowing us to publish her research papers on the Coal River Website.

Nobbys Head on Mars

Location of Nobbys Head on Mars - Courtesy of NASA

Exciting news from Col Maybury, President of the Astronomical Society of the Hunter, with the inclusion of the name ‘Nobbys Head’ on a geological feature on the planet Mars.

Col wrote to the NASA team for naming rights a year or so ago as the little Mars Rover Opportunity trundled its way across the Martian desert. He asked that they consider naming a small prominence on Mars located at the aptly named Endeavour Crater after Captain Cook’s sighting of Nobbys by moonlight, while traveling up our coast on the 10th of May 1770.

He wrote that Captain Cook:

recorded its co-ordinates in his journal, marvelously accurately, as behooves a scientist of his stature. The ” Small round rock or island,” still marks the entrance to the Hunter River and Port of Newcastle and, as you can see by the accompanying picture, is loved by Novocastrians which us residents of Newcastle call each other.

NASA replied that  they would look at the request when Opportunity arrived at the Endevour. He again wrote to them recently and sent a letter to the editor published from the Newcastle Herald from Elaine Street with Brett Whitely’s painting of Nobbys Head, and was thrilled to announce yesterday that it did it!

Nobbys Head is immortalised on Mars and in Captain Cooks Journal. The area is reminiscent of the original drawing of Nobbys by Barrallier in 1801.

And here is its location.

http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/mer/multimedia/gallery/pia13708.html

Location of the rim of the Endevour Crater on Mars

Here is a closer look.

Closeup of Nobbys Head on Mars

Email from Ray Arvidson (NASA) to Col Maybury:

Attached is a jpeg showing part of a HiRISE orbital image and covering the part of Endeavour’s rim that we named Knobbys Head. On Mars the central bumpy part is about 100 m wide and a few meters tall. The surrounding flat bench extends out to a diameter of about 200 m. The bumpy parts are part of Endeavour’s rim and the surrounding bench is made of sedimentary rocks that embay the rim. Knobbys Head is south of Cape York and Sutherland Point.

Thanks to Col Maybury for placing Newcastle and its iconic Nobbys on the intergalactic map.

What was the original height of Nobbys?

"Sizing up one of Nobbys tall stories" Newcastle Herald 11 January 2011 p.15

Click here for the online edition:


http://www.theherald.com.au/news/local/news/general/sizing-up-one-of-nobbys-tall-stories/2043452.aspx

Please click below for a copy of the Draft Presentation prepared by Emeritus Professor John Fryer and Mr Russell Rigby to the Newcastle Port Corporation and Land and Property Management Authority.

Reshaping Nobbys Version 2 (3.7MB PDF File)

Let Our History Be The Attraction

'Take the Pasha as an omen for renaissance' by Gionni Di Gravio

Last week as the panic and despair unfolded over the twin decisions of GPT and DJs to leave town, my mind drifted back to July 2007 when the Pasha Bulker left town.

Many CBD retailers and shop owners were sad to see it go, because their sales had doubled while it was here.

At long last Newcastle had an ‘attraction’ that everyone was clamouring to see, and on the way, bought something at their shops.

As the Pasha Bulker floated back out to sea, Newcastle sank back into its usual divisions and arguments.

In ancient times such a dramatic event would have been seen as an omen. Poseidon, god of the sea, threw that ship out of the ocean and smack dab in the middle of Nobbys. His message to us may have been something like ‘Build it and they will come’.

We need to create a beautiful and awe inspiring attraction. Yes, it could be an even bigger shopping centre, but that’s only as good as the next bigger one. But Newcastle has something more to offer, its history, its culture, its natural beauty. All lie at the heart of the Australian nation. Why not glorify that?

Back in 2008 Council unanimously adopted Boyce Pizzey’s Coal River Precinct Conservation and Cultural Tourism Management Plan. This would have created a magnificent visual attraction at the top of town. Imagine the Fort Scratchley search light with 4 other light cannons criss-crossing the evening sky, each beam representing one of the five foundation stories of Newcastle, along with a sound garden. Nothing ever came of it.  Why?

In 2009 a young final year Master of Architecture student Andrew Cavill designed a magnificent discovery centre, a ‘Newcastle Opera House’ style building called ‘The Midden’ adjacent to Nobbys Beach.

Exhibition Panel No. 1 for ‘The Midden’ by Andrew Cavill

Exhibition Panel No. 2 for ‘The Midden’ by Andrew Cavill

The University even commissioned a new symphonic and choral work for Newcastle by Colin Spiers called ‘A Slender Strand of Memories’.

This year has seen our member for Newcastle buy back the former Newcastle Post Office and place Nobbys and the Carrington Pump House into public ownership and management as well as undertake the formal heritage listing of the James Fletcher Hospital site.

Imagine a symphonic work performed outside the Carrington Pump House, at dusk, lit up like a Roman temple, with concert goers sailing across the harbour from the Maritime Centre, to witness the performance under the stars in candle lit gondolas.

Imagine the ground floor of the Newcastle Post Office with a permanent display of Newcastle’s historic records that verify the great accomplishments and our global relations across time. Imagine those beautiful series of Panoramas from 1812 to the present spanning the walls of our city.

We are nothing without our history, and our records, lay testament to who we are as a people.  All these things could become real if we wish them to be. Dreams are always dashed when someone say’s ‘its too expensive’ and the result invariably is we don’t do anything exciting.

The dreams and aspirations of our creative people are the missing pieces of the ‘magnet’ that will attract the visitors, and they deserve all the investment and respect they require.

Egypt has its pyramids, and we have a rich and older Aboriginal culture and unique colonial heritage that is world class if we wish to acknowledge and look after it. I’m sure the Egyptian government doesn’t have to worry about revitalising their Cairo CBD, and neither would we have to worry about our CBD if we choose to promote our unique history on the world stage. Of course we can’t do that if we are clamouring to bury or eliminate it because it’s in the road of ‘progress’ and ‘revitalisation’.

Too often the protection of our heritage is pinned against business will in a fight to the death to build something new and shiny. The new and shiny wins most of the time.  I see a multitude of new shiny apartment buildings boxing the Newcastle skyline. Have they revitalised the CBD?  Perhaps we need to think outside these boxes?

When people speak of the urban renewal, let’s talk about a Novocastrian Renaissance instead. And rest assured that the more we look back, the more inspired our future becomes. Our business is a product of such aspirations and so I solemnly ask we come together for Newcastle. As the poet Vergil declares in his crowning work the Aeneid, let’s do it for the ‘Fame and Fortune of Our Descendants’ .

Gionni Di Gravio

City’s History a hook for tourists by Tim Connell. Newcastle Herald 2 September 2010 p.7

Second blasting tunnel found in Nobbys headland

Tunnel vision of civic leaders by Matthew Kelly

Tunnel vision of civic leaders by Matthew Kelly

Link to online Newcastle Herald story 3 June 2009 – Second blasting tunnel found in Nobbys headland

The Search for the Nobbys Gunpowder Tunnels

The University of Newcastle’s Coal River Working Party is currently preparing a scoping document for the New South Wales Heritage Branch which sets out our goals for archaeological investigations within the Coal River Precinct (NSW State Heritage Register No1674).

A team consisting of Roslyn Kerr (Geologist), Russell Rigby (Geologist), Peter Sherlock (Director, Monteath & Powys), Arthur Love (Coffey Geosciences) and Cynthia Hunter (Historian) are currently working on this Project.

The discovery of the second Nobbys tunnel entrance was made late last month by Roslyn Kerr, whilst investigating a series of maps and photographs and plans with Russell Rigby and Cynthia Hunter.

To bring you up to date with our researches we have prepared the following account.

At the entrance to Newcastle’s Hunter River (originally named Coal River) was a small, but prominently tall, island. It was originally 203 feet high. It was sighted by Captain Cook on May 10th 1770 as a ‘small clump of an island’ and became known as Nobbys.

Sir Thomas Mitchell in 1828 recorded its Aboriginal name as ‘Whibayganba’. The missionary Reverend Lancelot Threlkeld in 1855 recorded the Aboriginal dreaming story associated with the land mark that believed it was the abode of an enormous kangaroo that shook itself from time to time.

Nobbys’ position, directly at the mouth of the fast flowing Hunter River, meant sailing ships had great difficulty entering the harbour. On one side of Nobbys lay rocky shoals and its height could take away the prevailing winds from their sails, causing them to lose steerage and flounder.

With the development of a prison colony at Newcastle in 1801 and 1804 and the frequent passage of sailing ships between Sydney and the Hunter River, the problems, which Nobbys caused to shipping, persisted, with many vessels wrecked on the rocky shoals surrounding the island.

Governor Macquarie conceived a plan to join Nobbys to the mainland with a 650 metres long breakwater, known as Macquarie Pier, working from both the island and mainland.

Convict labour was employed and rock was quarried from the top of Nobbys to assist with this breakwater and thereby assist entrance to the river.

In 1816, just prior to construction of the breakwater, Nobbys was used as an island prison for ‘refractory’ female convicts (seen by the authorities as obstinate prostitutes).

The breakwater was begun in 1818, but its construction was interrupted for a time after Governor Macquarie’s term of office expired in 1823. It was re-commenced in 1836 after a public outcry forced authorities to act in repairing and completing the link from the island to the mainland.

A gang of convicts known as the ‘Nobbys Gang’ was marooned on the island, steadily hacking into it to construct the Pier, while another convict gang, known as the ‘Chain Gang’ worked from the opposite side on the mainland. Some questions surround where the convicts stayed on the island – did they commence the tunnels to live in? How far did they extend? This is just a part of Nobbys mysterious and hidden past.

The colonial government authorities in 1853 eventually cut off the top layers of Nobbys, leading to one of our mysteries.

Today Nobbys stands less than half its height at 29 meters (96 feet) with the one of the oldest continuously operating lighthouses on its summit.

In 1853 whilst leveling off the top of the island to prepare it for a lighthouse, Lieutenant Colonel Barney, who was the soldier and engineer in charge of the operation, enthusiastically supported the suggestion of the Colonial Secretary to use gunpowder to ‘demolish’ the island to speed up the work. By this time Nobbys had been quarried for breakwall material, giving the island an ugly shape, and Barney ordered the two tunnels to be constructed, each 150 ft long, with chambers for explosives, to be driven into the landmark. Barney and his engineer T. Gother Mann had planned three tunnels, and thought they may have needed a fourth.  However, it seems that only 2 tunnels were actually dug, both to a distance of 24 metres into the island.  Tunnel excavation was stopped after Newcastle residents protested to the Government.

One newspaper report from 2 May 1918 states that the name of ‘Lieutenant Sutherland’ is carved at the ends where the two tunnels meet. We do not believe that the two tunnels meet. Another report says the name is that of  ‘Lieutenant Shortland’, the white colonial discoverer of the Coal River (Hunter River)’.

One of the University of Newcastle Coal River Working Party’s goals is to find those mysterious tunnels and that carved inscription which lies deep within Nobbys.

Ralph Snowball Glass Negative with eastern tunnel entrance

Ralph Snowball Glass Negative showing north eastern tunnel entrance

In the recently donated Ralph Snowball Glass negatives an early 1900s photograph which possibly shows the north eastern entrance to one tunnel. Thank you to the family of Norm Barney who donated this important photographic treasure to the University’s Cultural Collections (Archives).

Of this entrance Mr D. Williams (of Bondi) who entered it in 1945 reported:

I had little difficulty in entering the tunnel driven from the eastern face of Nobbys. After I “got my eyesight” I proceeded to the face, sounding the roof as I proceeded. On the face of the tunnel there had been inscribed “Lieut. Shortland,” the name of the discoverer of the Coal (Hunter) River. Each side of the tunnel face chamber was constructed. The end of the drive resembled the capital letter T. Ample space was provided to pack explosives and other materials.

Glass negative from Government Geologist showing south eastern tunnel entrance

Glass negative from Government Geologist showing south eastern tunnel entrance

A second glass negative was provided by David Barnes photographer with the Department of Primary Industries (DPI) to Russell Rigby. It was from this early image that Roslyn Kerr noticed that the second entrance was photographed at the extreme left hand side.

Of this southern entrance Mr D. Williams (of Bondi) who entered it in 1945 reported:

I had to dig myself into the drive, going into Nobbys from the south. It was almost blocked up at the entrance, but inside it was constructed and finished off just the same as was the other drive from the east.

Of both drives Mr Williams said:

I found that the drives were driven in the same bed of rock, above high-water mark – about 4 ½ ft. high and 5 ft. wide. The drives were damp, but there was no water on the floor of either. I saw no coal.

Mr Maurice (Maurie) Lynch

Mr Maurice (Maurie) Lynch (Photographed by Noel Davies 1994)

This evidence is corroborated with research carried out in the 1990s by Mr Noel Davies, historian and author of the book Convict Nobbys. In 1994 he interviewed Mr Maurice (Maurie) Lynch, an 85 year old former resident of the ‘Sandhills’ (Newcastle East) that played in the tunnels under Nobbys as a child. Mr Lynch, along with Mr Hec Scott had also been interviewed by Norm Barney for a story on the tunnels. Both explorers differed in their opinions as to what the tunnels were originally for, Scott believed they were constructed to house convicts during the construction of Macquarie Pier, while Lynch believed they were for the purposes of filling them with explosives. See the article here: The Secrets of Nobbys [Newcastle Herald, n.d. circa 1981?] We estimate that they visited the tunnels as young boys in 1921.

Mr Davies recorded in his 1994 meeting with Mr Lynch on the site details of the tunnels, and photographed him outside the former tunnel entrance. A scan of his report is below dated 16 February 1994:

Manuscript notes relating to Mr Lynch's reminiscences of the Nobbys Tunnels

Noel Davies' manuscript notes relating to Mr Lynch's reminiscences of the Nobbys Tunnels

Mr Maurice Lynch photographed by Mr Noel Davies outside one of the tunnel entrances

Mr Maurice Lynch photographed by Mr Noel Davies outside one of the tunnel entrances

Both entrances are just above high water level. From the detail in the photographs, especially the layers of rock strata, and the testimony of past visitors to the tunnels, it should not be too difficult to re-locate these tunnel entrances which nowadays are covered by rock fall debris vegetated with grass and bitou bush.

Roslyn Kerr's Photographic Superimposition showing the approximate entrance location

[Photographs above] Roslyn Kerr’s Tunnel 2 superimposed location

Gionni Di Gravio
Chair – University of Newcastle’s Coal River Working Party

Edward Charles Close Sketchbook on Sothebys

A sketchbook of Edward Charles Close, founding father of the township of Morpeth, is up for auction on Sothebys. According to the Sothebys website it consists of 30 folios (three cut out), containing 26 watercolours, two monochrome wash drawings and six pencil sketches or rough notations, together with a separate ink drawing by another hand and two handwritten sheets, of Whatman wove paper (watermarked with the date 1816), bound in morocco. The Sketchbook is expecting to fetch between $400,000 – $600,000 AUD.

 

Signal Hill and Nobbys from the Close Sketchbook

Signal Hill and Nobbys from the Close Sketchbook

 

The Sketchbook is believed to have been executed between 1816 to 1840. The illustration above of Signal Hill (now the site of Fort Scratchley) and Nobbys shows no evidence of the construction of the Macquarie Pier.  There is also a scene of Morpeth contained within the book.

It would be fantastic if such a work could be purchased by a consortium of Newcastle and Hunter Regional organisations and businesses. To be realistic we have to hope that the Mitchell Library will purchase it so that the greater public will have access to this treasure.

Here is more detail from the Sotheby‘s site:

PROVENANCE

Private collection, United Kingdom; by descent through the family of the artist.
LITERATURE AND REFERENCES

James Broadbent and Joy Hughes (eds.), The age of Macquarie, Melbourne: Melbourne University Press / Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 1992, pp. 113, 148-149 (illus. pp. 33, 90, 150)

Cedric Flower, Clothes in Australia: a pictorial history 1788-1980s, Kenthurst: Kangaroo Press, 1984, cover (illus.), p. 49 (illus.)

Caroline Jordan, Picturesque pursuits: colonial women artists and the amateur tradition, Melbourne: Melbourne University Press, 2005, pp. 53-60, 85 (illus. p. 56, plates XII, XIV)

Joan Kerr & Hugh Falkus, From Sydney Cove to Duntroon: a family album of early life in Australia, London: Victor Gollancz Ltd, 1982 pp. 12, 24-49 (illus. pp. 8-9, 27, 28-29, 32, 34-35, 36-37, 39, 40, 41, 45, 47, 48)

Joan Kerr (ed.) The dictionary of Australian artists: painters, sketchers, photographers and engravers to 1870, Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1992, pp. 132-133 (illus. p. 132)

Joan Kerr (ed.), Heritage: the national women’s art book, Sydney: G+B Arts International, 1995, pp. 34 (illus.), 324-325.
CATALOGUE NOTE

RELATED WORKS
Edward Close (attrib. Sophia Campbell), Sketchbook circa 1817-1840, 22.8 x 28.9 cm (each sheet), National Library of Australia, Canberra (PIC R7249-7276 LOC 8631)

Edward Close, Album circa 1805-1840, 23 x 33 cm (or less, each drawing), Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales (PXE 868)

Edward Close, Panorama of Newcastle 1821, watercolour, 41.5 x 364 cm, Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales (PXD 576)

(The following descriptions are in order of appearance. Except where specifically described otherwise, all works are watercolours, and are drawn on single sheets. A fully-detailed, folio-by-folio listing can be found on the Sotheby’s website.)

- (inside front cover) Rough sketch map of the southern side of Sydney Harbour. Inscribed: Bondi Bay (lower right) and with the letter C on the west side of Double Bay. Bears supplier’s label inscribed: R. ACKERMANN’S / REPOSITORY OF ARTS / 101, Strand, London. (top left). Pencil

- Panoramic view of Rio de Janeiro from the sea, with the Sugarloaf and Corcovado mountains and the Point São João, a boat with officers in the foreground. Double-page spread

- Panoramic view of Madeira from the sea, with a fishing vessel in the foreground and a sailing ship in the distance. Inscribed Madeira taken on board the Mattilda [sic]. – (upper right). Double-page spread

- Two coastal profiles of the Curtis Group (Curtis Is., Cone Islet and Sugarloaf Rock), Bass Strait. Inscribed Ba∫se’s Straits (upper centre); Appearance of Sir Roger Curtis’ Isle & peaks as pa∫sed at 10 am by Mitilda [sic]. (upper centre); Sir Roger Curtis’ Group bearing N.N.E. (lower centre)

- Two coastal profiles: Porto Santo Island, Atlantic Ocean, and the Kent Group (Deal, Erith and Dover Islands), Bass Strait. Inscribed Porto Santo bearing S ½ W. to S.E. (upper left); Kent’s Group & Judgement rock Ba∫se’s Straits. E.N.E. (centre left)

- Two coastal profiles of Île St Paul, Atlantic Ocean. Inscribed St Pauls (upper left); NE by E. (upper left); E. by N. (upper right); St Pauls (centre left); Bearing N.W. (centre)

- Paddle steamer, river’s edge and buildings – preliminary sketch for detail of finished watercolour ‘Morpeth, from above the new Steam Co.’s wharf’, in National Library of Australia sketchbook, Pencil

- Catalan Bay, Gibraltar, with houses and fishermen in the foreground. Inscribed Cataline [sic] Bay / Gibraltar (upper right)

- The Katra Mosque, Murshidabad, Bengal (after an engraving in William Hodges’s Select views in India, 1788, vol. 2 plate 17). Inscribed View of the Cuttera, built by / Jaffier Cawn at Muxadabad. / East. Indies. (upper right)

- Panorama of Hyde Park Barracks and Sydney Hospital, from the Domain – sketch for finished watercolour in related sketchbook, National Library of Australia. Pencil. Double page spread

- Sydney in all its glory. Inscribed with title (upper right). Double-page spread

- Storm above Red Point and the Five Islands, Illawarra, with Aborigines in the foreground. Inscribed Five Islands (upper right)

- Lake landscape with settler’s hut and Aborigines. Inscribed Tom Thumb’s Lagoon (upper right)

- Lake and mountain landscape with Aborigines in a canoe in the foreground. Inscribed Tom Thumbs Lagoon (upper right)

- Coastal landscape with settler’s hut, Illawarra. Inscribed Five Islands (upper right)

- Settler’s huts and fenced enclosure, with a family of Aborigines, Illawarra. Inscribed Illawarrha [sic] (upper right). Ink and brown wash

- View of Newcastle. Ink and brown wash

- Studies of a hat and two figures – preliminary sketches for ‘The costume of the Australasians’. Pencil

- The costume of the Australasians. Inscribed with title (lower left)

- Sketch: huts, cart, tree, figure. Pencil

- Sydney Church and Regimental Mile from the Main Guard. Inscribed with title (lower left)

- Morpeth, from above the new Steam Co.’s wharf – sketch for finished watercolour in National Library sketchbook. Pencil

- Panoramic view of Barrack Square, Sydney. Inscribed old Barrack Square (upper right). Unfinished – closely related to (though not a direct study for) finished watercolour in National Library sketchbook. Pencil, ink and coloured wash

- Two portrait studies: John Jacques, Keeper of the Sydney Gaol; and Michael Massey Robinson, Chief Clerk to the Colonial Secretary. Inscribed Jaques (upper left, vertical); Michl [sic] Robinson (upper right); bears inscription The Poet Laureat [sic] (upper right)

- Courtroom scene, Sydney: the ‘Philo Free’ civil libel trial, 1 December 1817. Inscribed G. Allen (upper right, vertical); G. Crosley (upper right, vertical)

- Forest landscape with kangaroo and waratah

- Forest landscape with man chopping wood

- Stream running through ravine

- Landscape with crops, fence, stream and distant mountains

- Landscape with cleared paddocks and homestead under mountains

- (separate sheet) Artist unknown (probably Francis Allman, 1780-1860), My house as Police Magistrate, Goulburn, 1834. Inscribed with title (upper right); inscribed View from the / Church Yard (lower centre)

- (separate sheets) Notes by a daughter of Sophia Campbell (Sophia Ives or Sarah) containing a list of witnesses and a transcription of the beginning of William Bligh’s opening speech, from the court-martial of Major George Johnston, 7th May 1811

This sketchbook is one of the most beautiful, charming and significant artefacts of early Australian colonial culture to come onto the art market in recent years. Its early date and direct, family provenance are unquestionable, and its component watercolours constitute a notable part of the rich visual culture of the Macquarie era (1809-1821).

The sketchbook and its companion volume in the National Library of Australia1 have long been attributed (on the basis of family tradition) to Sophia Campbell (1777-1833), née Palmer, sister of Commissary John Palmer (1760-1833) and later wife of the colonial merchant and pioneer pastoralist Robert Campbell (1769-1846). It is here confidently re-ascribed to Edward Close (1790-1866), soldier, engineer, magistrate, Legislative Councillor, Morpeth settler and ‘Father of the Hunter’.

In this period there are relatively few readily identifiable and clearly documented artists working in New South Wales: the convict forger Joseph Lycett; the professional natural history painter John Lewin; the explorer and surveyor G.W. Evans and the military officers Edward Close, James Taylor and James Wallis. However, the often obscure origins of early works on paper, their common topographical subject matter and Picturesque style and the dearth of unequivocal signatures and other inscriptions means that the edges between these artists’ respective oeuvres are somewhat blurred.

Moreover, in early settler Australia the contemporary habit of copying other artists’ work was exacerbated by the need for multiple, accurate copies of singular, remarkable colonial scenes and subjects in order to satisfy the demands of patrons, printers and the public both within the colony and at home in England. Transcription was a common colonial practice: Lewin is known to have copied from the Van Diemen’s Land surveyor George Prideaux Harris; Taylor copied Evans; while Lycett copied Wallis, Evans and (possibly) Taylor. Indeed, the longstanding confusion between the works of Wallis and those of Lycett was only resolved in 2006, with the exhibition and publication Joseph Lycett: convict artist, while as recently as 2005 Close’s panorama of Newcastle was still being attributed to Sophia Campbell.2

Finally, as Caroline Jordan has observed, in the small, even intimate world of antipodean polite culture, the loan of cultural materials was part of an informal but important non-financial economy of gift and exchange, and 19th century sketchbooks and scrapbooks often contain work by multiple hands, executed over a lengthy period.3

In the case of the present work, the provenance (although clear and uninterrupted) does not assist with attribution, as there are very close familial links between the two main candidates for authorship: not only did Edward Close marry Sophia Campbell’s niece (Sophia Susannah Palmer), but in turn his daughter (Marrianne Collinson Close) married one of Sophia’s younger sons, George. The dynastic connection between the two families is further evidenced in the fact that Close gave two of his boys the middle names Palmer and Campbell.

There are, however, a number of good reasons for identifying the book as by Close. First, it should be noted that it is a ready-made sketchbook from the London art materials and fancy goods supplier Rudolf Ackermann, incorporating paper watermarked 1816. Sophia left New South Wales with her husband in 1810, and returned to the colony five years later, arriving in Sydney in March 1815, before the sketchbook was made. Then there are the eight watercolours at the start of the book which describe the voyage to Australia. These island views and coastal profiles match precisely the recorded route of the barque ‘Matilda’, the vessel which brought Close’s regiment (the 48th North Hamptonshire Regiment of Foot) to the colony in 1817; two are inscribed as having been taken from on board the ‘Matilda’.

The seemingly random insertions of views of India and Gibraltar also resonate with Close’s life story. Son of an East India Company trader, he was himself born in Rangamati, Bengal, and he served in the Peninsular War in 1808-1814, being stationed at Gibraltar from September 1808 to May 1809. In New South Wales, following colonial service as engineer at Newcastle, Close resigned his commission and was granted land on the Hunter River. A corner of his river front property ‘Illaulang’ became the township of Morpeth, and Close funded the construction of St James’s Church of England, which was dedicated on 31 December 1840. The town and its church feature in a pencil sketch in the present work and a watercolour in the National Library sketchbook. Sophia Campbell died in 1833, well before the church was built.

Finally, the apparent stylistic inconsistencies, even anomalies between the various component drawings in the twin sketchbooks can be explained by reference to Close’s amateur status. As a military officer he would have had some training in topographical rendering, and the coastal and landscape watercolours are the most detailed, polished and spatially convincing of the drawings in the book. Lacking academic training, he is naturally rather less comfortable with anatomy, which explains the naïvete of his figure compositions. A similar wide variety of subject, theme and finish is also to be found in a third collection, a scrapbook in the Mitchell Library which bears the dedication (in a hand very close, if not identical, to that found in sketchbook inscriptions): ‘The Paintings and sketches of / Edward Charles Close Esqre H.M. 48th Reg.t / His gift to his only daughter Marrianne Collinson Close / Morpeth February 17th 1844.’4

This reattribution represents a substantial shift in the canon of early colonial art. The twin sketchbooks were first published by Joan Kerr in 1975, and Sophia Campbell entered and settled in the art-historical literature as a spirited pioneer and exemplar of that important category of colonial artist, the amateur female sketcher. After more than 30 years, Prof. Kerr’s attribution can be shown to be more optimistic than precise. Not without some regret, the lady vanishes. However, as works by Edward Close, both the present work and the National Library sketchbook can now be matched to his signed Newcastle panorama and Mitchell Library scrapbook, and thus reveal him fully as a complex and intriguing artistic and social personality, and one of the most accomplished of the Lycett-Taylor-Wallis circle of early colonial artists.5

In any event, the remarkable contents and vigorous style of the sketchbook (and its National Library companion) proclaim the artist’s undoubted importance in the history of Australian art. They are eyewitness records of remarkable acuity and wit, and the sketchbook provides a unique and invaluable record of colonial life in the age of Governor Macquarie.

To begin with, it traces the common immigrant’s journey to Australia by way of the ‘Great Circle’. In the initial sequence of watercolours, Close describes his passage from Ireland to Madeira and St Paul’s, across the Atlantic to Rio de Janeiro, then south and east past Porto Santo and through Bass Strait before the final arrival at what an inscription calls (perhaps in some relief after the long voyage) ‘Sydney in all its glory.’

The sketchbook then shows us the layout, architecture and ongoing development of the infant colonial capital in several detailed townscape views: of the convict barracks and the Rum Hospital, the original St Phillip’s Church, and the old Barrack Square. It also documents several tours to more remote settlements: there are a number of views of the newly-occupied Illawarra coast south of Sydney, including Five Islands and Tom Thumb’s Lagoon; and there is one drawing from the north, a study of Close’s military-engineering assignment, the convict station at Newcastle. (Close’s 1821 Newcastle panorama is recognised as a masterpiece of its kind, while an extended group of Novocastrian subjects is the key feature of the National Library sketchbook.)

Finally and spectacularly, the present sketchbook contains two of the most important, well-known and widely-discussed of early 19th century colonial watercolours. The first is that inscribed ‘The Costume of the Australasians.’ In addition to its considerable value as a primary source for the history of clothing in Australia, this drawing is particularly distinctive in its social inclusiveness and its tone of amiable satire. Images of convicts are extremely rare in early colonial art, and this picture of the prisoners’ apparent easy co-existence with free settlers and with their military gaolers is truly remarkable. Here we see a total of ten figures, from the Governor’s aide-de-camp Lt John Watts to an officer, soldier and bandsman of the 73rd Regiment (McLeod’s Highlanders); from wealthy colonial ‘nabobs’ to convicts on government service, all happily going about their business in a bustling, crowded Sydney street.

The other is a courtroom scene, which Joan Kerr perceptively identified as the ‘Philo Free’ trial held in Sydney in 1817, the first libel case heard in the colony.6 In this matter, Rev. Samuel Marsden accused Colonial Secretary John Campbell (no relation to Sophia) of libelling him through a letter published in the Sydney Gazette which suggested that under the aegis of the Missionary Society, the ‘Christian Mahomet’ had operated as a gun-runner and moonshiner in the Pacific islands. This unique visual document of early colonial politics and jurisprudence includes gentle caricatures of several notable figures, amongst them a portly, grumpy Marsden at the right, the defendant Campbell on the left and possibly Judge-Advocate John Wylde behind him, as well as the lawyers Frederick Garling, William Moore, George Allen and George Crossley.

The Edward Close sketchbook is a precious, informative and delightful relic of colonial culture, and has remained in the hands of the artist’s direct descendants for almost 200 years. Sotheby’s is delighted to be able to present this unique object for public sale and ongoing research and discussion.

We are most grateful to Louise Arnmatt, Mary Eagle, Elizabeth Ellis, John McPhee, Heather Mansell, Richard Neville and Michael Rosenthal for their assistance in cataloguing this work.

1. Both sketchbooks are of the same dimensions, and several subjects (the panorama of Hyde Park convict barracks and the Sydney hospital, the Sydney military barracks and the Morpeth river front) are very closely repeated across both books.

2. John McPhee, Joseph Lycett: convict artist, Sydney: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2006. The Newcastle panorama was originally ascribed to Campbell in the exhibition The work of art: Australian women writers and artists (Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales, August 1995-February 1996), and this attribution is maintained in Caroline Jordan, Picturesque pursuits: colonial women artists and the amateur tradition, Melbourne: Melbourne University Press, 2005, pp. 57-59.

3. ibid., passim.

4. This collection includes several subjects clearly comparable to those in the present work, notably a number of views in Spain, several Illawarra landscapes and even a caricature of the New South Wales Corps surgeon and settler Dr John Harris, which parallels the figures and faces in the present sketchbook’s costume and courtroom subjects.

5. It is hoped that the new attribution will be firmly and finally confirmed and explored through continuing documentary research and through the close comparison of pictorial and handwriting manners, both within the sketchbook and by reference to other contemporary watercolours and drawings.

6. In From Sydney Cove to Duntroon…, Prof. Kerr presents a suggested account of the circumstances of the picture’s making, and successfully identifies a number of its various actors (pp. 44-48). However, while she states that the work depicts the criminal libel trial held 21-23 October 1817, it is here proposed that the drawing was made on the occasion of the later (1 December) civil action. On the adjacent page are two small portraits: of John Jacques, Keeper of the Sydney Gaol, and of the Chief Clerk to the Colonial Secretary (and the colony’s ‘poet laureate’) Michael Massey Robinson. Robinson was not in fact involved in the earlier criminal case, but did appear as a witness in the civil trial.

Newcastle Herald 22 April 2009 p.5

Newcastle Herald 22 April 2009 p.5

Newcastle Herald 23 April 2009 p.5

Newcastle Herald 23 April 2009 p.5