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Port Essington

Port Essington is an inlet and historic site located on the Cobourg Peninsula in the Garig Gunak Barlu National Park in Australia's Northern Territory. It was the site of an early attempt at British settlement, but now exists only as a remote series of ruins.

Port Essington
class=notpageimage|
Port Essington, Northern Territory
New Victoria in 1839. Lithograph from Voyage au Pôle Sud et en Océanie by Jules Dumont d'Urville
Port Essington as illustrated in Ludwig Leichhardt's account of his expedition
Nautical Chart of Port Essington, showing the Victoria settlement, surveyed by Charles Tyers in 1839

Settlement edit

In August 1618 Lenaert Jacobszoon, the captain of the Dutch East India Company vessel Mauritius, marked the point on the entrance to what was later called Port Essington, on the Dutch charts as Kape Schildpad (Cape Turtle).

In the early 19th century, the British government became interested in establishing a settlement on Australia's northern coastline in order to facilitate trade with Asia.

Port Essington was named on 23 April 1818 by Phillip Parker King in HMS Mermaid 'as a tribute of my respect for the memory of my lamented friend, Vice-Admiral Sir William Essington',[1] who was in command of Triumph at the battle of Camperdown in October 1797. Sir J.G.Bremer took possession of the mainland on 20 September 1824 and founded the short-lived colony.[2] A local Aboriginal leader Medlone, also known as Jack Davis, acted as a messenger and manager for relations with the local Aboriginal people.

In 1824 Port Essington was proposed as the first such settlement,[3] but was later passed over in favour of Fort Dundas on Melville Island and Fort Wellington at Raffles Bay. In 1831, a small station was constructed in the area, on Wurango clan land, in the hope of using it as a stopping point for ships, but it was rarely used. When both Fort Dundas and Fort Wellington failed within several years, the Port Essington site was revisited. As a result, a settlement, officially named Victoria Settlement after the young Queen Victoria, but popularly known as Port Essington, was established by Sir J. Gordon Bremer in 1838[4] and surveyed by Charles Tyers in 1839. It consisted of 24 houses and a hospital. A description of the harbour and settlement was communicated to the Royal Geographical Society, London, in 1839.[5]

On 24 August 1839 the only play ever staged in Port Essington was performed, the 1797 comedy in five acts Cheap Living by Frederick Reynolds.[6] The set and costume design was by Owen Stanley (1811–1850).[7] The play was performed again in 2010 with a grant from the Government of the Northern Territory,[8] with Tom Pauling, Administrator of the Northern Territory, acting as narrator in the play.[6]

While the British government intended to establish Port Essington as a major trading port, along the lines of Singapore, the new settlement suffered from the same adverse conditions that had previously plagued Fort Dundas and Fort Wellington. The settlement lacked resources and supplies and skilled labour. While some prefabricated buildings were brought from Sydney, many had to be built with what materials could be found in the area, and due to the unskilled nature of the builders, many of these were of poor quality. Disease was also rampant among the small population, and living conditions were poor. Consequently, it struggled to attract settlers, and the post was much-disliked by the troops stationed there.

Setbacks edit

Port Essington suffered a further setback when the settlement was demolished by a cyclone on 25 November 1839. The cyclone killed twelve people, drove the ship HMS Pelorus aground, and caused a 3.2 metre storm surge. The settlement was rebuilt afterwards, with some stone and brick buildings, due to the assistance of a brick maker who had been shipwrecked during the storm.[9]

Despite these setbacks, there was still widespread hope that Port Essington might be able to break the curse, as evidenced by Ludwig Leichhardt's 1844/1845 expedition. The New South Wales government had hoped to establish a direct line of communication with Asia, India and the Pacific, and supported Leichhardt's journey, which successfully charted an overland route between Moreton Bay (now Brisbane) and Port Essington.[10][11]

A detailed map of Ludwig Leichhardt's route in Australia from Moreton Bay to Port Essington (1844 & 1845), from his Original Map, adjusted and drawn... by John Arrowsmith[12][13] was ranked #8 in the ‘Top 150: Documenting Queensland’ exhibition when it toured to venues around Queensland from February 2009 to April 2010.[14] The exhibition was part of Queensland State Archives’ events and exhibition program which contributed to the state’s Q150 celebrations, marking the 150th anniversary of the separation of Queensland from New South Wales.[15]

In 1844, a group of convicts, which included trained masons and quarry men among them, was stationed at Port Essington. They were able to build a hospital of some quality at a beacon. This was followed by the 1846 decision of Father Angelo Confalonieri to found a Catholic mission nearby, in an attempt to convert the local population. He had some success, converting around 400 people, but he died of fever in 1848, and the mission died with him. Port Essington was still failing to attract settlers, and it was becoming increasingly clear both that the 1844 works had come too late, and that the settlement was unsustainable. Visiting the settlement in December 1848, soon before its closure, British scientist Thomas Huxley wrote that Port Essington was "most wretched, the climate the most unhealthy, the human beings the most uncomfortable and houses in a condition most decayed and rotten".

Abandonment edit

Finally, in 1849, Port Essington was, like the two previous attempts, abandoned. The demise of the settlement saw the end of British attempts at occupying the north coast. There would be one further unsuccessful attempt, by the Government of South Australia and Frederick Henry Litchfield in 1864, at Escape Cliffs (also known as Palmerston) near the mouth of the Adelaide River, before the first permanent settlement was established at Darwin (also initially known as Palmerston), in 1869.

The ruins of Port Essington still exist today, and while access is difficult, it is possible to do so by several means. It is possible to fly in through tours that can be arranged in Darwin, or to travel to the area alone by four-wheel drive or boat – although, as the ruins lie on Aboriginal land, a permit must be obtained first. Cabins and some camping sites are available at Black Point Ranger Station.

The Australian industrialist Essington Lewis was named after Port Essington.

References edit

  1. ^ King, Phillip Parker (1827). Narrative of a survey of the intertropical and western coasts of Australia. Vol. 1. Murray. p. 59.
  2. ^ A W Reed 'Place Names of Australia', Reed 1973.
  3. ^ Port Essington Travel Fact Sheet, The Sydney Morning Herald (2 December 2010)
  4. ^ Ritchie, G.S. (1967). The Admiralty Chart. London: Hollis & Carter. p. 288.
  5. ^ Barrow, John (1839). "On the Recent Establishment at Port Essington, on the Northern Coast of Australia. Extract from a letter of Captain Sir J. Gordon Bremer". Journal of the Royal Geographical Society of London. 9: 499–501.
  6. ^ a b "Victoria's secrets reveal death and noble failure" by Mark Day, The Australian (30 October 2010). Accessed 9 April 2011
  7. ^ "Owen Stanley", Dictionary of Australian Artists Online, 25 February 2011. Accessed 9 April 2011
  8. ^ "Art Grants Awarded To Territorians" 2011-03-26 at the Wayback Machine, Media release by Gerry McCarthy, Government of the Northern Territory (18 June 2010). Accessed 9 April 2011
  9. ^ "Port Essington - Northern Territory - Australia - Travel - smh.com.au". www.smh.com.au. Retrieved 25 October 2017.
  10. ^ Leichhardt, Ludwig (1847). Journal of an overland expedition in Australia, from Moreton Bay to Port Essington during the years 1844-1845. London: T. & W. Boone.
  11. ^ "LEICHHARDT". The Sydney Morning Herald. Vol. XXI, no. 2773. New South Wales, Australia. 1 April 1846. p. 2. Retrieved 11 August 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  12. ^ Detailed map of Ludwig Leichhardt's route in Australia from Moreton Bay to Port Essington (1844 & 1845), from his Original Map, adjusted and drawn... by John Arrowsmith. (negative photostat, 12 parts), Queensland State Archives, 1840, Item ID ITM635667, retrieved 11 August 2020
  13. ^ Prescott, Dorothy (18 July 2011). "Arrowsmith's Australian Maps". p. Eastern Portion of Australia, East 1847/1. Retrieved 11 August 2020.
  14. ^ corporateName=Queensland State Archives (5 April 2015). "Number 8 - Map of Ludwig Leichhardt's expedition from Moreton Bay to Port Essington (1844-1845)". Number 8 - Map of Ludwig Leichhardt’s expedition from Moreton Bay to Port Essington (1844-1845). Archived from the original on 5 April 2015. Retrieved 11 August 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  15. ^ Queensland State Archives (2014), "Annual report", Queensland State Archives Annual Report, Queensland State Archives: 6, 9, ISSN 1448-8426, retrieved 4 August 2020

Further reading edit

  • Cobourg Peninsular historic sites: Gurig National Park. Darwin, N.T. Parks and Wildlife Commission of the Northern Territory. 1999–2000. 7 volumes
    v. 1. Cobourg Peninsular historic sites conservation plan – v. 2. Executive summary – v. 3. Raffles Bay heritage precinct – v. 4. Victoria Settlement heritage precinct – v. 5. Port Essington heritage precinct – v. 6. Cape Don Lighthouse complex – v. 7. Cobourg Peninsular historic sites original reference documentation. Record at the National Library of Australia
  • Alan Powell, World's End: British military outposts in the ring fence around Australia, Melbourne University Press, 2016.
  • Jim Allen, Port Essington: The historical archaeology of a north Australian nineteenth-century outpost, Sydney University Press in association with the Australasian Society for Historical Archaeology, 2008; ISBN 9781920898878. A typescript of the 1969 thesis on which this book is based is available at the Australian National University's Open Research Library
  • Mark McKenna, From the Edge: Australia's lost histories, Australian Scholarly Publishing, 2016.
  • Spillett, Peter (1972), Forsaken settlement : an illustrated history of the settlement of Victoria, Port Essington, North Australia, 1838-1849, Lansdowne, retrieved 28 July 2022

External links edit

  • Port Essington, NT Place Names Register Extract
  • Photographs in 2009 from Northern Territory Library
  • Bibliography from Northern Territory Library

11°21′38″S 132°09′12″E / 11.36056°S 132.15333°E / -11.36056; 132.15333

port, essington, this, article, about, early, australian, settlement, settlement, canada, british, columbia, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, finnish, january, 2021, click, show, important, translation, instruc. This article is about the early Australian settlement For the settlement in Canada see Port Essington British Columbia You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Finnish January 2021 Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Finnish Wikipedia article at fi Port Essington see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated fi Port Essington to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation Port Essington is an inlet and historic site located on the Cobourg Peninsula in the Garig Gunak Barlu National Park in Australia s Northern Territory It was the site of an early attempt at British settlement but now exists only as a remote series of ruins Port Essingtonclass notpageimage Port Essington Northern Territory New Victoria in 1839 Lithograph from Voyage au Pole Sud et en Oceanie by Jules Dumont d UrvillePort Essington as illustrated in Ludwig Leichhardt s account of his expedition Nautical Chart of Port Essington showing the Victoria settlement surveyed by Charles Tyers in 1839Contents 1 Settlement 2 Setbacks 3 Abandonment 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksSettlement editIn August 1618 Lenaert Jacobszoon the captain of the Dutch East India Company vessel Mauritius marked the point on the entrance to what was later called Port Essington on the Dutch charts as Kape Schildpad Cape Turtle In the early 19th century the British government became interested in establishing a settlement on Australia s northern coastline in order to facilitate trade with Asia Port Essington was named on 23 April 1818 by Phillip Parker King in HMS Mermaid as a tribute of my respect for the memory of my lamented friend Vice Admiral Sir William Essington 1 who was in command of Triumph at the battle of Camperdown in October 1797 Sir J G Bremer took possession of the mainland on 20 September 1824 and founded the short lived colony 2 A local Aboriginal leader Medlone also known as Jack Davis acted as a messenger and manager for relations with the local Aboriginal people In 1824 Port Essington was proposed as the first such settlement 3 but was later passed over in favour of Fort Dundas on Melville Island and Fort Wellington at Raffles Bay In 1831 a small station was constructed in the area on Wurango clan land in the hope of using it as a stopping point for ships but it was rarely used When both Fort Dundas and Fort Wellington failed within several years the Port Essington site was revisited As a result a settlement officially named Victoria Settlement after the young Queen Victoria but popularly known as Port Essington was established by Sir J Gordon Bremer in 1838 4 and surveyed by Charles Tyers in 1839 It consisted of 24 houses and a hospital A description of the harbour and settlement was communicated to the Royal Geographical Society London in 1839 5 On 24 August 1839 the only play ever staged in Port Essington was performed the 1797 comedy in five acts Cheap Living by Frederick Reynolds 6 The set and costume design was by Owen Stanley 1811 1850 7 The play was performed again in 2010 with a grant from the Government of the Northern Territory 8 with Tom Pauling Administrator of the Northern Territory acting as narrator in the play 6 While the British government intended to establish Port Essington as a major trading port along the lines of Singapore the new settlement suffered from the same adverse conditions that had previously plagued Fort Dundas and Fort Wellington The settlement lacked resources and supplies and skilled labour While some prefabricated buildings were brought from Sydney many had to be built with what materials could be found in the area and due to the unskilled nature of the builders many of these were of poor quality Disease was also rampant among the small population and living conditions were poor Consequently it struggled to attract settlers and the post was much disliked by the troops stationed there Setbacks editPort Essington suffered a further setback when the settlement was demolished by a cyclone on 25 November 1839 The cyclone killed twelve people drove the ship HMS Pelorus aground and caused a 3 2 metre storm surge The settlement was rebuilt afterwards with some stone and brick buildings due to the assistance of a brick maker who had been shipwrecked during the storm 9 Despite these setbacks there was still widespread hope that Port Essington might be able to break the curse as evidenced by Ludwig Leichhardt s 1844 1845 expedition The New South Wales government had hoped to establish a direct line of communication with Asia India and the Pacific and supported Leichhardt s journey which successfully charted an overland route between Moreton Bay now Brisbane and Port Essington 10 11 A detailed map of Ludwig Leichhardt s route in Australia from Moreton Bay to Port Essington 1844 amp 1845 from his Original Map adjusted and drawn by John Arrowsmith 12 13 was ranked 8 in the Top 150 Documenting Queensland exhibition when it toured to venues around Queensland from February 2009 to April 2010 14 The exhibition was part of Queensland State Archives events and exhibition program which contributed to the state s Q150 celebrations marking the 150th anniversary of the separation of Queensland from New South Wales 15 In 1844 a group of convicts which included trained masons and quarry men among them was stationed at Port Essington They were able to build a hospital of some quality at a beacon This was followed by the 1846 decision of Father Angelo Confalonieri to found a Catholic mission nearby in an attempt to convert the local population He had some success converting around 400 people but he died of fever in 1848 and the mission died with him Port Essington was still failing to attract settlers and it was becoming increasingly clear both that the 1844 works had come too late and that the settlement was unsustainable Visiting the settlement in December 1848 soon before its closure British scientist Thomas Huxley wrote that Port Essington was most wretched the climate the most unhealthy the human beings the most uncomfortable and houses in a condition most decayed and rotten Abandonment editFinally in 1849 Port Essington was like the two previous attempts abandoned The demise of the settlement saw the end of British attempts at occupying the north coast There would be one further unsuccessful attempt by the Government of South Australia and Frederick Henry Litchfield in 1864 at Escape Cliffs also known as Palmerston near the mouth of the Adelaide River before the first permanent settlement was established at Darwin also initially known as Palmerston in 1869 The ruins of Port Essington still exist today and while access is difficult it is possible to do so by several means It is possible to fly in through tours that can be arranged in Darwin or to travel to the area alone by four wheel drive or boat although as the ruins lie on Aboriginal land a permit must be obtained first Cabins and some camping sites are available at Black Point Ranger Station The Australian industrialist Essington Lewis was named after Port Essington References edit King Phillip Parker 1827 Narrative of a survey of the intertropical and western coasts of Australia Vol 1 Murray p 59 A W Reed Place Names of Australia Reed 1973 Port Essington Travel Fact Sheet The Sydney Morning Herald 2 December 2010 Ritchie G S 1967 The Admiralty Chart London Hollis amp Carter p 288 Barrow John 1839 On the Recent Establishment at Port Essington on the Northern Coast of Australia Extract from a letter of Captain Sir J Gordon Bremer Journal of the Royal Geographical Society of London 9 499 501 a b Victoria s secrets reveal death and noble failure by Mark Day The Australian 30 October 2010 Accessed 9 April 2011 Owen Stanley Dictionary of Australian Artists Online 25 February 2011 Accessed 9 April 2011 Art Grants Awarded To Territorians Archived 2011 03 26 at the Wayback Machine Media release by Gerry McCarthy Government of the Northern Territory 18 June 2010 Accessed 9 April 2011 Port Essington Northern Territory Australia Travel smh com au www smh com au Retrieved 25 October 2017 Leichhardt Ludwig 1847 Journal of an overland expedition in Australia from Moreton Bay to Port Essington during the years 1844 1845 London T amp W Boone LEICHHARDT The Sydney Morning Herald Vol XXI no 2773 New South Wales Australia 1 April 1846 p 2 Retrieved 11 August 2020 via National Library of Australia Detailed map of Ludwig Leichhardt s route in Australia from Moreton Bay to Port Essington 1844 amp 1845 from his Original Map adjusted and drawn by John Arrowsmith negative photostat 12 parts Queensland State Archives 1840 Item ID ITM635667 retrieved 11 August 2020 Prescott Dorothy 18 July 2011 Arrowsmith s Australian Maps p Eastern Portion of Australia East 1847 1 Retrieved 11 August 2020 corporateName Queensland State Archives 5 April 2015 Number 8 Map of Ludwig Leichhardt s expedition from Moreton Bay to Port Essington 1844 1845 Number 8 Map of Ludwig Leichhardt s expedition from Moreton Bay to Port Essington 1844 1845 Archived from the original on 5 April 2015 Retrieved 11 August 2020 via National Library of Australia Queensland State Archives 2014 Annual report Queensland State Archives Annual Report Queensland State Archives 6 9 ISSN 1448 8426 retrieved 4 August 2020Further reading editCobourg Peninsular historic sites Gurig National Park Darwin N T Parks and Wildlife Commission of the Northern Territory 1999 2000 7 volumesv 1 Cobourg Peninsular historic sites conservation plan v 2 Executive summary v 3 Raffles Bay heritage precinct v 4 Victoria Settlement heritage precinct v 5 Port Essington heritage precinct v 6 Cape Don Lighthouse complex v 7 Cobourg Peninsular historic sites original reference documentation Record at the National Library of Australia Alan Powell World s End British military outposts in the ring fence around Australia Melbourne University Press 2016 Jim Allen Port Essington The historical archaeology of a north Australian nineteenth century outpost Sydney University Press in association with the Australasian Society for Historical Archaeology 2008 ISBN 9781920898878 A typescript of the 1969 thesis on which this book is based is available at the Australian National University s Open Research Library Mark McKenna From the Edge Australia s lost histories Australian Scholarly Publishing 2016 Spillett Peter 1972 Forsaken settlement an illustrated history of the settlement of Victoria Port Essington North Australia 1838 1849 Lansdowne retrieved 28 July 2022External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Port Essington Northern Territory Port Essington NT Place Names Register Extract Photographs in 2009 from Northern Territory Library Bibliography from Northern Territory Library Search for historic photos on Port Essington11 21 38 S 132 09 12 E 11 36056 S 132 15333 E 11 36056 132 15333 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Port Essington amp oldid 1160316630, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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