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Hume and Hovell expedition

The Hume and Hovell expedition was a journey of exploration undertaken in eastern Australia. In 1824 the Governor of New South Wales, Sir Thomas Brisbane, commissioned Hamilton Hume and former Royal Navy Captain William Hovell to lead an expedition to find new grazing land in the south of the colony, and also to find an answer to the mystery of where New South Wales's western rivers flowed.

Hume and Hovells 1824 expedition is shown by the broken line

Surveyor General John Oxley asserted that no river could fall into the sea between Cape Otway and Spencer's Gulf, and that the country south of parallel of 34 degrees was ' uninhabitable and useless for all purposes of civilised men,' and for the time exploration in this direction was greatly discouraged. In 1824, newly appointed Sir Thomas Brisbane, who disbelieved this statement, offered to land a party of prisoners near Wilson's Promontory and grant them a free pardon, as well as a grant of land, to those who found their way overland to Sydney.[1]

Alexander Berry recommended the Governor to secure the services of Hume to lead the exploring party. Hume declined to undertake that task but instead offered, if supplied with men and horses, to go from Lake George to Bass Straits. This was not carried out. But shortly afterwards Hume and W. H. Hovell, of Minto, agreed together to undertake an expedition in that direction. They found men and horses and bullocks; the Government furnished them with pack saddles, tarpaulins, tent, arms, ammunition, and skeleton charts.[2]

The party

Apart from Hume and Hovell, there were six members of the expedition.

  • Jeff Barrois (stated as Bossawa in records)[citation needed], became one of Hume's men just before the expedition. He never married and died in the Sydney Convict Hospital in 1841.
  • Henry Angel, was one of Hume's men. Granted ticket of leave in July 1825.[3] He later accompanied Sturt and Hume in 1828.
  • James Fitzpatrick, was one of Hume's men, who later took up land between Cootamundra and Gundagai; later bought 'Glenlee' station near Campbelltown, died at 86.
  • William Bollard, was a free settler who on the ship Providence disembarking in Sydney on 7 January 1822. He was one of Hovell's assigned servants. He later built and kept a hotel called the "Farriers Arms" in Upper Picton in the 1840s. He died on 21 August 1854, and is buried in the Catholic Cemetery, Upper Picton.[4]
  • Thomas Smith, was Hovell's assigned servant. He later married Sarah Dean, had two children and died at Eastern Creek, NSW in 1837.
  • Thomas Boyd, was known to Hume as a well-respected horseman, bushman and swimmer, was at the time indentured to the Kennedy family and Hume arranged for Boyd to join the party as one of Hovell's men. Returned to Tumut district and settled on Gilmore Creek. He married, had 12 children and died at 'Windowie', near Tumut, on 27 June 1885, aged 86 years. He is buried in the Tumut Pioneer Cemetery, where a headstone marks his grave.

Outfitting of the expedition

The expedition is considered to have been privately funded, but the Governor Brisbane furnished six pack saddles and gear, one tent of Parramatta cloth, two tarpaulins, a suit of slops for each of the men, a few bush utensils, a small quantity of arms and ammunition, and two skeleton charts for the tracing of the journey, worth about 50 pounds.[5]

The supplies were as follows: 7 pack saddles, 1 riding saddle, 8 stands of arms, 6 lbs (2.7 kg) of gunpowder, 60 rounds of ball cartridge, 6 blankets, 2 tarpaulins, 1 tent made of Parramatta cloth, 1200  lbs (544 kg)flour, 350 lbs (158kb) pork, 170 lbs (77 kg) sugar, 38 lbs (17 kg) tea and coffee, 8 lbs (3.6 kg) tobacco, 16 lbs (7 kg) soap, 20 lbs (9 kg) salt, 8 gal (30L) rum, 1 false horizon, 1 sextant, 3 pocket compasses, 1 pram, and cooking utensils.

Departure

On 2 October 1824, Hovell and Hume met at Hume's house in Appin, and started upon their expedition. The party, when complete, consisted of eight people, Hume and his three men, Claude Bossowa, Henry Angel, and James Fitzpatrick. As well as Hovell and his three men, Thomas Boyd, William Bollard, and Thomas Smith.

They reached Hume's station near 'Lake George' on the 13th. In those times, 'Lake George' also referred to the district, and Hume's station, Wooloobidallah—later called Collingwood Station—was closer to modern-day Gunning than to the lake. However, some of the party did make an excursion to the lake. On the 14th, "Hume and Hovell, with two of the men, proceed to Lake George, in order to ascertain the bearings and distance of the Lake from Hume's station". They returned to Hume's station at dusk. They started their journey on the 17th. On the 18th, they camped near the site of Hume's later residence, Cooma Cottage. On the 19th they passed Yarrh – or as they are now called Yass Plains.

Their first great difficulty was in crossing the Murrumbidgee which was in full flood at the time. The timber growing on the banks of this river was too heavy to float, so Hume resolved to make a raft of the body of one of their carts. Hume and Hovell's man Boyd, swam across the river first, with a small rope between their teeth, to which was attached a line long enough to reach across the river. It was a work of peril, as the current was strong. But they succeeded, and then, with much labour, got the whole party, with baggage and cattle, safely over.

On 24 October they came up to what seemed an impenetrable mountain barrier. There was an argument between the leaders concerning the best route to take which resulted in the party splitting up. The equipment was divided, and they prepared to cut their one tent in halves. Hume and Hovell fought bitterly over the frying-pan, which broke in their hands. One of them taking the handle, the other the pan itself. Later, however, Hovell rejoined Hume when he found he had made a mistake.[6]

Hume, with two men, following a chain of ponds, came to a chasm through which the whole party afterwards descended. On the 31st they found themselves on the western edge of the tableland. The descent was not accomplished without much difficulty. On 6 November, they came in sight of the snow-covered Australian Alps. They came after this upon a very rich country, abounding in kangaroos and other animals, with frequent tracks of aborigines; and on Tuesday, 16 November, they arrived suddenly on the banks of a "fine river".

Hume was the first to see the river, near the site of Albury and named it the "Hume", (now the Murray River) after his father. This river, where they first came upon it, is about 50m in breadth, and of considerable depth. The current was about three miles an hour, and the water clear.

They improvised a tarpaulin covered wicker boat and they were able to eventually cross and continue into what is now known as Victoria.

They proceeded south crossing the Ovens River and Goulburn River by a route further to the east of the Hume Highway and closer to the foothills of Mount Buffalo.

Crossing the Great Divide

Four days after crossing the Goulburn River, impassable country was reached. The party spent three days attempting to cross the Great Dividing Range at Mt Disappointment but were thwarted. Hume shifted direction to the west and, on the 12 December, reached less hilly country at the future township of Broadford, where they camped.[7]

Hume headed towards similarly low ranges to the south and found a pass in that direction next day. He led the party across the Dividing Range at Hume’s Pass, Wandong, and, on 16 December 1824, reached Corio Bay, an arm of Port Phillip Bay, at Bird Rock, Point Lillias, north of the future site of Geelong.[8]

Hovell claimed that he had measured their longitude on the same day but, in reality, he had read it off the sketch map that they had drafted themselves during the trip.[9] In 1867, Hovell admitted that he did not take any longitude measurements and blamed Hume for it. [10]

Prior to that admission, Dr William Bland, who wrote the first book on the journey in 1831, invented the myth that Hovell made an error of one degree in longitude in order to protect the explorer.[11] It was not the only myth emanating from the pen of Bland. From 1825, Hume wrote on four occasions that he had reached Western Port, his original destination. That was repeated in nine newspaper articles by Bland. It was not until 1827, when it was demonstrated by Hovell that the journey had ended near Geelong, that the pair changed their stories to identify that location.[12]

On 18 December, the party turned back towards New South Wales. Hume chose to travel more to the west to avoid the mountainous country and save considerable time. It was a sound decision because, on 16 January 1825, just as their flour ran out, they reached the carts they had left behind. Two days later, they arrived at Hume's station at Gunning.[13]

On 18 November 1826, based on the discoveries of Hume and Hovell, Colonel Stewart, Captain S. Wright, and Lieutenant Burchell were sent in HMS Fly (Captain Wetherall), with the brigs Dragon and Amity, under orders to proceed to Western Port and establish a colony there. They took a number of convicts and a small force of troops from the 3rd and 93rd regiments. Hovell was sent with the party as guide. While exploring Western Port, it became apparent to Hovell that he had not reached it on his earlier trip.[14]

Both Hovell and Hume were publicly rebuked for their error in incorrectly identifying Western Port. They had become implicated by association with the wasted expense of setting up a new settlement there, based upon their fulsome recommendations of the value of the region.[15] [16]

Return to Sydney

Relations between the "currency lad" (first-generation Australian) Hume and the aloof Englishman Hovell had deteriorated, and they raced each other back to Sydney to claim credit for their discoveries. They arrived in January, 1825, and were both rewarded with large land grants by Governor Brisbane. They later published conflicting accounts of the journey, each claiming leadership.

The Hume and Hovell expedition disproved the widely held view that the interior of Australia was an uninhabitable wilderness. They found abundant well-watered grazing land between the Murrumbidgee and the Murray, on the huge fertile coastal plains around Port Phillip, and then on the plains across North Eastern Victoria all the way to the Murray River during their return journey. It took another thirteen years for settlers from New South Wales to follow their route in 1837, and only after the richness of the territory was confirmed by Sir Thomas Mitchell in 1836. Some parts of their route formed the Hume Highway from Sydney to Melbourne via Albury.

The route

Monuments

Within the Greater Melbourne area, monuments commemorating the route of the Hume and Hovell expedition can be found at Beveridge, Greenvale, St. Albans, Werribee and Lara.[17] There are also monuments in other locations in north-eastern Victoria and southern New South Wales.

Appin, New South Wales [18]

Myrtleford [19]

Beveridge, Victoria

This Beveridge Monument and interpretive panel was built in 1999, at the foot of Mount Fraser, to mark the location from which Hume & Hovell first sighted the sea. The original monument, erected in 1924, is on private land nearby.

Ebden, Victoria

Ebden, Victoria

Euroa, Victoria

Monument at Euroa.

Gunning, NSW

Lara, Victoria

Monument at Lara.

Murmungee, Victoria

Monument at Murmungee, VIC

Notes

  1. ^ "EXPLORATION OF AUSTRALIA". The Illustrated Australian News. Melbourne: National Library of Australia. 1 January 1891. p. 2 Supplement: SUPPLEMENT TO THE ILLUSTRATED AUSTRALIAN NEWS. Retrieved 28 April 2012.
  2. ^ "The Late Mr. Hamilton Hume". Australian Town and Country Journal. NSW: National Library of Australia. 17 May 1873. p. 9. Retrieved 27 April 2012.
  3. ^ "Public Notice". The Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser. 7 July 1825. p. 1. Retrieved 3 November 2010.
  4. ^ "EARLY DAYS OF PICTON". The Picton Post. NSW: National Library of Australia. 14 March 1923. p. 2. Retrieved 7 August 2014.
  5. ^ "HUME AND HOVELL". The Sydney Morning Herald. National Library of Australia. 28 June 1924. p. 11. Retrieved 29 April 2012.
  6. ^ "IN THE PATHS OF EXPLORERS". The Sydney Morning Herald. National Library of Australia. 2 October 1946. p. 10 Supplement: Playtime. Retrieved 29 April 2012.
  7. ^ Hovell, William H., Remarks on a journey from Lake George, Lat. 35 deg. 5 min., Long. – towards Western Port, 2 October – 21 December 1824, Safe 1/32b, IE3447307, 1825, p. 143, SLNSW.
  8. ^ Williams, Martin. Hamilton Hume Sketch Maps: Origins and Modern Treatment, Victorian Historical Journal, Vol. 92, No. 1, June 2021, p. 21.
  9. ^ Williams, Martin. Hamilton Hume Sketch Maps: Origins and Modern Treatment, Victorian Historical Journal, Vol. 92, No. 1, June 2021, p. 13.
  10. ^ William H. Hovell, Answer to the Preface to the Second Edition of Mr. Hamilton Hume’s ‘A Brief Statement of Facts’ in Connection with an Overland Expedition from Lake George to Port Phillip, in 1824, Sydney, J. Ferguson, 1874, p. 8.
  11. ^ William Bland, Journey of Discovery to Port Phillip, New South Wales; by Messrs. W. H. Hovell, and Hamilton Hume in 1824 and 1825. W. Bland, Sydney, A.H. Hill, 1831, Facsimile Edition, Adelaide Libraries Board of South Australia, 1965, p. iii.
  12. ^ Williams, Martin. Hamilton Hume Sketch Maps: Origins and Modern Treatment, Victorian Historical Journal, Vol. 92, No. 1, June 2021, p. 10.
  13. ^ Bland 1831 p. 86.
  14. ^ "Attempted Colonisation at Western Port". Mornington Standard. Vic.: National Library of Australia. 12 August 1905. p. 5 Edition: MORNING. Retrieved 29 April 2012.
  15. ^ ‘A Gentleman on board the Fly’, Australian, 10 January 1827, p. 3.
  16. ^ ‘Another Account, Written by a Gentleman on board the Fly’, Australian, 10 January 1827, p. 3.
  17. ^ Melway Edition 33, 2006
  18. ^ Hume and Hovell Monument, Appin, New South Wales, ca. [picture] / E.W. Searle
  19. ^ Monument to Hume and Hovell, Myrtleford State Library of Victoria

References

  • Hume and Hovell, 1824. Edited by Alan E. I. Andrews: Blubber Head Press, Hobart, 1981.
  • Bland, William; Hovell, William Hilton; Hume, Hamilton (1831), Journey of discovery to Port Phillip, New South Wales by Messrs. W.H. Hovell, and Hamilton Hume in 1824 and 1825, Sydney

hume, hovell, expedition, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, . This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations November 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed December 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The Hume and Hovell expedition was a journey of exploration undertaken in eastern Australia In 1824 the Governor of New South Wales Sir Thomas Brisbane commissioned Hamilton Hume and former Royal Navy Captain William Hovell to lead an expedition to find new grazing land in the south of the colony and also to find an answer to the mystery of where New South Wales s western rivers flowed Hume and Hovells 1824 expedition is shown by the broken line Surveyor General John Oxley asserted that no river could fall into the sea between Cape Otway and Spencer s Gulf and that the country south of parallel of 34 degrees was uninhabitable and useless for all purposes of civilised men and for the time exploration in this direction was greatly discouraged In 1824 newly appointed Sir Thomas Brisbane who disbelieved this statement offered to land a party of prisoners near Wilson s Promontory and grant them a free pardon as well as a grant of land to those who found their way overland to Sydney 1 Alexander Berry recommended the Governor to secure the services of Hume to lead the exploring party Hume declined to undertake that task but instead offered if supplied with men and horses to go from Lake George to Bass Straits This was not carried out But shortly afterwards Hume and W H Hovell of Minto agreed together to undertake an expedition in that direction They found men and horses and bullocks the Government furnished them with pack saddles tarpaulins tent arms ammunition and skeleton charts 2 Contents 1 The party 2 Outfitting of the expedition 3 Departure 4 Crossing the Great Divide 5 Return to Sydney 6 The route 7 Monuments 7 1 Beveridge Victoria 7 2 Ebden Victoria 7 3 Euroa Victoria 7 4 Gunning NSW 7 5 Lara Victoria 7 6 Murmungee Victoria 8 Notes 9 ReferencesThe party EditApart from Hume and Hovell there were six members of the expedition Jeff Barrois stated as Bossawa in records citation needed became one of Hume s men just before the expedition He never married and died in the Sydney Convict Hospital in 1841 Henry Angel was one of Hume s men Granted ticket of leave in July 1825 3 He later accompanied Sturt and Hume in 1828 James Fitzpatrick was one of Hume s men who later took up land between Cootamundra and Gundagai later bought Glenlee station near Campbelltown died at 86 William Bollard was a free settler who on the ship Providence disembarking in Sydney on 7 January 1822 He was one of Hovell s assigned servants He later built and kept a hotel called the Farriers Arms in Upper Picton in the 1840s He died on 21 August 1854 and is buried in the Catholic Cemetery Upper Picton 4 Thomas Smith was Hovell s assigned servant He later married Sarah Dean had two children and died at Eastern Creek NSW in 1837 Thomas Boyd was known to Hume as a well respected horseman bushman and swimmer was at the time indentured to the Kennedy family and Hume arranged for Boyd to join the party as one of Hovell s men Returned to Tumut district and settled on Gilmore Creek He married had 12 children and died at Windowie near Tumut on 27 June 1885 aged 86 years He is buried in the Tumut Pioneer Cemetery where a headstone marks his grave Outfitting of the expedition EditThe expedition is considered to have been privately funded but the Governor Brisbane furnished six pack saddles and gear one tent of Parramatta cloth two tarpaulins a suit of slops for each of the men a few bush utensils a small quantity of arms and ammunition and two skeleton charts for the tracing of the journey worth about 50 pounds 5 The supplies were as follows 7 pack saddles 1 riding saddle 8 stands of arms 6 lbs 2 7 kg of gunpowder 60 rounds of ball cartridge 6 blankets 2 tarpaulins 1 tent made of Parramatta cloth 1200 lbs 544 kg flour 350 lbs 158kb pork 170 lbs 77 kg sugar 38 lbs 17 kg tea and coffee 8 lbs 3 6 kg tobacco 16 lbs 7 kg soap 20 lbs 9 kg salt 8 gal 30L rum 1 false horizon 1 sextant 3 pocket compasses 1 pram and cooking utensils Departure EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message On 2 October 1824 Hovell and Hume met at Hume s house in Appin and started upon their expedition The party when complete consisted of eight people Hume and his three men Claude Bossowa Henry Angel and James Fitzpatrick As well as Hovell and his three men Thomas Boyd William Bollard and Thomas Smith They reached Hume s station near Lake George on the 13th In those times Lake George also referred to the district and Hume s station Wooloobidallah later called Collingwood Station was closer to modern day Gunning than to the lake However some of the party did make an excursion to the lake On the 14th Hume and Hovell with two of the men proceed to Lake George in order to ascertain the bearings and distance of the Lake from Hume s station They returned to Hume s station at dusk They started their journey on the 17th On the 18th they camped near the site of Hume s later residence Cooma Cottage On the 19th they passed Yarrh or as they are now called Yass Plains Their first great difficulty was in crossing the Murrumbidgee which was in full flood at the time The timber growing on the banks of this river was too heavy to float so Hume resolved to make a raft of the body of one of their carts Hume and Hovell s man Boyd swam across the river first with a small rope between their teeth to which was attached a line long enough to reach across the river It was a work of peril as the current was strong But they succeeded and then with much labour got the whole party with baggage and cattle safely over On 24 October they came up to what seemed an impenetrable mountain barrier There was an argument between the leaders concerning the best route to take which resulted in the party splitting up The equipment was divided and they prepared to cut their one tent in halves Hume and Hovell fought bitterly over the frying pan which broke in their hands One of them taking the handle the other the pan itself Later however Hovell rejoined Hume when he found he had made a mistake 6 Hume with two men following a chain of ponds came to a chasm through which the whole party afterwards descended On the 31st they found themselves on the western edge of the tableland The descent was not accomplished without much difficulty On 6 November they came in sight of the snow covered Australian Alps They came after this upon a very rich country abounding in kangaroos and other animals with frequent tracks of aborigines and on Tuesday 16 November they arrived suddenly on the banks of a fine river Hume was the first to see the river near the site of Albury and named it the Hume now the Murray River after his father This river where they first came upon it is about 50m in breadth and of considerable depth The current was about three miles an hour and the water clear They improvised a tarpaulin covered wicker boat and they were able to eventually cross and continue into what is now known as Victoria They proceeded south crossing the Ovens River and Goulburn River by a route further to the east of the Hume Highway and closer to the foothills of Mount Buffalo Crossing the Great Divide EditFour days after crossing the Goulburn River impassable country was reached The party spent three days attempting to cross the Great Dividing Range at Mt Disappointment but were thwarted Hume shifted direction to the west and on the 12 December reached less hilly country at the future township of Broadford where they camped 7 Hume headed towards similarly low ranges to the south and found a pass in that direction next day He led the party across the Dividing Range at Hume s Pass Wandong and on 16 December 1824 reached Corio Bay an arm of Port Phillip Bay at Bird Rock Point Lillias north of the future site of Geelong 8 Hovell claimed that he had measured their longitude on the same day but in reality he had read it off the sketch map that they had drafted themselves during the trip 9 In 1867 Hovell admitted that he did not take any longitude measurements and blamed Hume for it 10 Prior to that admission Dr William Bland who wrote the first book on the journey in 1831 invented the myth that Hovell made an error of one degree in longitude in order to protect the explorer 11 It was not the only myth emanating from the pen of Bland From 1825 Hume wrote on four occasions that he had reached Western Port his original destination That was repeated in nine newspaper articles by Bland It was not until 1827 when it was demonstrated by Hovell that the journey had ended near Geelong that the pair changed their stories to identify that location 12 On 18 December the party turned back towards New South Wales Hume chose to travel more to the west to avoid the mountainous country and save considerable time It was a sound decision because on 16 January 1825 just as their flour ran out they reached the carts they had left behind Two days later they arrived at Hume s station at Gunning 13 On 18 November 1826 based on the discoveries of Hume and Hovell Colonel Stewart Captain S Wright and Lieutenant Burchell were sent in HMS Fly Captain Wetherall with the brigs Dragon and Amity under orders to proceed to Western Port and establish a colony there They took a number of convicts and a small force of troops from the 3rd and 93rd regiments Hovell was sent with the party as guide While exploring Western Port it became apparent to Hovell that he had not reached it on his earlier trip 14 Both Hovell and Hume were publicly rebuked for their error in incorrectly identifying Western Port They had become implicated by association with the wasted expense of setting up a new settlement there based upon their fulsome recommendations of the value of the region 15 16 Return to Sydney EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Relations between the currency lad first generation Australian Hume and the aloof Englishman Hovell had deteriorated and they raced each other back to Sydney to claim credit for their discoveries They arrived in January 1825 and were both rewarded with large land grants by Governor Brisbane They later published conflicting accounts of the journey each claiming leadership The Hume and Hovell expedition disproved the widely held view that the interior of Australia was an uninhabitable wilderness They found abundant well watered grazing land between the Murrumbidgee and the Murray on the huge fertile coastal plains around Port Phillip and then on the plains across North Eastern Victoria all the way to the Murray River during their return journey It took another thirteen years for settlers from New South Wales to follow their route in 1837 and only after the richness of the territory was confirmed by Sir Thomas Mitchell in 1836 Some parts of their route formed the Hume Highway from Sydney to Melbourne via Albury The route Edit Route of Hume amp Hovell expedition 5 to 12 November 1824 Route of Hume amp Hovell expedition 12 to 21 November 1824 Route of Hume amp Hovell expedition 22 to 30 November 1824 Route of Hume amp Hovell expedition 1 to 14 December 1824 Route of Hume amp Hovell expedition 15 to 19 December 1824Monuments EditWithin the Greater Melbourne area monuments commemorating the route of the Hume and Hovell expedition can be found at Beveridge Greenvale St Albans Werribee and Lara 17 There are also monuments in other locations in north eastern Victoria and southern New South Wales Appin New South Wales 18 Myrtleford 19 Beveridge Victoria Edit This Beveridge Monument and interpretive panel was built in 1999 at the foot of Mount Fraser to mark the location from which Hume amp Hovell first sighted the sea The original monument erected in 1924 is on private land nearby The Monument The Plaque The SignEbden Victoria Edit Ebden Victoria Ebden Hume amp Hovell MemorialEuroa Victoria Edit Monument at Euroa Euroa Hume and Hovell MonumentGunning NSW Edit Hume and Hovell Monument Gunning Gunning Barbour Park Hume and Hovell MemorialLara Victoria Edit Monument at Lara The MonumentMurmungee Victoria Edit Monument at Murmungee VIC Murmungee Hume and Hovell MonumentNotes Edit EXPLORATION OF AUSTRALIA The Illustrated Australian News Melbourne National Library of Australia 1 January 1891 p 2 Supplement SUPPLEMENT TO THE ILLUSTRATED AUSTRALIAN NEWS Retrieved 28 April 2012 The Late Mr Hamilton Hume Australian Town and Country Journal NSW National Library of Australia 17 May 1873 p 9 Retrieved 27 April 2012 Public Notice The Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser 7 July 1825 p 1 Retrieved 3 November 2010 EARLY DAYS OF PICTON The Picton Post NSW National Library of Australia 14 March 1923 p 2 Retrieved 7 August 2014 HUME AND HOVELL The Sydney Morning Herald National Library of Australia 28 June 1924 p 11 Retrieved 29 April 2012 IN THE PATHS OF EXPLORERS The Sydney Morning Herald National Library of Australia 2 October 1946 p 10 Supplement Playtime Retrieved 29 April 2012 Hovell William H Remarks on a journey from Lake George Lat 35 deg 5 min Long towards Western Port 2 October 21 December 1824 Safe 1 32b IE3447307 1825 p 143 SLNSW Williams Martin Hamilton Hume Sketch Maps Origins and Modern Treatment Victorian Historical Journal Vol 92 No 1 June 2021 p 21 Williams Martin Hamilton Hume Sketch Maps Origins and Modern Treatment Victorian Historical Journal Vol 92 No 1 June 2021 p 13 William H Hovell Answer to the Preface to the Second Edition of Mr Hamilton Hume s A Brief Statement of Facts in Connection with an Overland Expedition from Lake George to Port Phillip in 1824 Sydney J Ferguson 1874 p 8 William Bland Journey of Discovery to Port Phillip New South Wales by Messrs W H Hovell and Hamilton Hume in 1824 and 1825 W Bland Sydney A H Hill 1831 Facsimile Edition Adelaide Libraries Board of South Australia 1965 p iii Williams Martin Hamilton Hume Sketch Maps Origins and Modern Treatment Victorian Historical Journal Vol 92 No 1 June 2021 p 10 Bland 1831 p 86 Attempted Colonisation at Western Port Mornington Standard Vic National Library of Australia 12 August 1905 p 5 Edition MORNING Retrieved 29 April 2012 A Gentleman on board the Fly Australian 10 January 1827 p 3 Another Account Written by a Gentleman on board the Fly Australian 10 January 1827 p 3 Melway Edition 33 2006 Hume and Hovell Monument Appin New South Wales ca picture E W Searle Monument to Hume and Hovell Myrtleford State Library of VictoriaReferences EditHume and Hovell 1824 Edited by Alan E I Andrews Blubber Head Press Hobart 1981 Bland William Hovell William Hilton Hume Hamilton 1831 Journey of discovery to Port Phillip New South Wales by Messrs W H Hovell and Hamilton Hume in 1824 and 1825 Sydney Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hume and Hovell expedition amp oldid 1148767596, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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