Sign Up or Log In
Privacy and TOS
Contact Us

GutenbergProject

History of Australia and New Zealand by Sutherland and Sutherland

Provided by : GutenbergProject » Folder : H - Gutenberg Project titles on letter H » Category : Document » e-book

"The Project Gutenberg eBook of The History of Australia and New Zealand from 1606 to 1890, by Alexander Sutherland, M.A. and George Sutherland, M.A. The Project Gutenberg EBook of History of Australia and New Zealand, by Alexander Sutherland and George Sutherland This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org Title: History of Australia and New Zealand From 1606 to 1890 Author: Alexander Sutherland George Sutherland Release Date: June 18, 2008 [EBook #25828] Language: English Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORY OF AUSTRALIA *** Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Anne Storer and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net -1- The Project Gutenberg eBook of The History of Australia and New Zealand from 1606 to 1890, by Alexander Sutherland, M.A. and George Sutherland, M.A. -2- The Project Gutenberg eBook of The History of Australia and New Zealand from 1606 to 1890, by Alexander Sutherland, M.A. and George Sutherland, M.A. Captain Cook. THE HISTORY of AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND -3- The Project Gutenberg eBook of The History of Australia and New Zealand from 1606 to 1890, by Alexander Sutherland, M.A. and George Sutherland, M.A. FROM 1606 TO 1890 by ALEXANDER SUTHERLAND, M.A. and GEORGE SUTHERLAND, M.A. LONDON LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO. AND NEW YORK: 15 EAST 16th STREET GEORGE ROBERTSON AND CO. MELBOURNE, SYDNEY, ADELAIDE, AND BRISBANE 1894 the aberdeen university press. LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. page Captain Cook, William Dampier, Rocks, South Heads, Sydney, Town and Cove of Sydney, in 1798, Matthew Flinders, Cook’s Monument, Botany Bay, The Explorers’ Tree, Katoomba, N.S.W., Governor Collins, frontispiece. 6 13 17 21 24 26 33 -4- The Project Gutenberg eBook of The History of Australia and New Zealand from 1606 to 1890, by Alexander Sutherland, M.A. and George Sutherland, M.A. Governor Macquarie, Blue Mountain Scenery, Wentworth Falls, N.S.W., St. Andrew’s Cathedral, Sydney, Captain Charles Sturt, The First House Built in Victoria, The First Hotel in Victoria, Edward Henty, John Pascoe Fawkner, Governor Latrobe, Collins Street, Melbourne, in 1840, First Settlement at Adelaide, 1836, Governor Hindmarsh, Proclamation Tree, Glenelg, Colonial Secretary’s Office, Sydney, Edward Hargraves, Perth, Western Australia, in 1838, Perth, 1890, Boomerangs, or Kylies, Parliament House, Brisbane, Victoria Bridge, Brisbane, Government House, Brisbane, Robert O’Hara Burke, William John Wills, Sir John Franklin, Queen Truganina, the last of the Tasmanians, King William Street, Adelaide, George Street, Sydney, 39 41 46 51 56 57 61 62 65 66 69 71 74 81 92 114 115 122 123 126 130 144 145 156 163 167 169 -5- The Project Gutenberg eBook of The History of Australia and New Zealand from 1606 to 1890, by Alexander Sutherland, M.A. and George Sutherland, M.A. The Lithgow Zigzag, the Blue Mountains, The Town Hall, Sydney, Collins Street, Melbourne, Town Hall, Melbourne, Port of Melbourne, A Maori Dwelling, Milford Sound, South Island, New Zealand, Rev. S. Marsden, “the Apostle of New Zealand,” Auckland, from the Wharf, Stronghold of the Maoris at Rangiriri, Sir George Grey, Knox Church, Dunedin, Christchurch Cathedral, The Maori King, Rangiriri, from the Waikato, The Cargill Fountain, Victoria Defence Fleet, 172 174 177 182 183 185 191 195 206 222 224 228 230 232 236 243 245 CONTENTS. -6- The Project Gutenberg eBook of The History of Australia and New Zealand from 1606 to 1890, by Alexander Sutherland, M.A. and George Sutherland, M.A. chapter I. The Early Discoverers, II. Convict Settlement at Sydney, 1788 to 1890, III. Discoveries of Bass and Flinders, IV. New South Wales, 1800 to 1808, V. Tasmania, 1803 to 1836, VI. New South Wales, 1808 to 1837, VII. Discoveries in the Interior, 1817 to 1836, VIII. Port Phillip, 1800 to 1840, IX. South Australia, 1836 to 1841, X. New South Wales, 1838 to 1850, XI. South Australia, 1841 to 1850, XII. The Discovery of Gold, XIII. Victoria, 1851 to 1855, XIV. New South Wales, 1851 to 1860, XV. West Australia, 1829 to 1890, XVI. Queensland, 1823 to 1890, XVII. Explorations in the Interior, 1840 to 1860, XVIII. Discoveries in the Interior, 1860 to 1886, XIX. Tasmania, 1837 to 1890, XX. South Australia, 1850 to 1890, XXI. New South Wales, 1860 to 1890, XXII. Victoria, 1855 to 1890, XXIII. The Times of the Maoris, XXIV. New Zealand Colonised, XXV. White Men and Maoris, XXVI. New Zealand, 1843 to 1890, page 1 11 18 25 31 38 48 55 67 75 84 89 98 107 111 119 131 143 155 163 168 175 184 200 215 227 -7- The Project Gutenberg eBook of The History of Australia and New Zealand from 1606 to 1890, by Alexander Sutherland, M.A. and George Sutherland, M.A. [Pg 1] HISTORY OF AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND. CHAPTER I. THE EARLY DISCOVERERS. 1. To the people who lived four centuries ago in Europe only a very small portion of the earth’s surface was known. Their geography was confined to the regions lying immediately around the Mediterranean, and including Europe, the north of Africa, and the west of Asia. Round these there was a margin, obscurely and imperfectly described in the reports of merchants; but by far the greater part of the world was utterly unknown. Great realms of darkness stretched all beyond, and closely hemmed in the little circle of light. In these unknown lands our ancestors loved to picture everything that was strange and mysterious. They believed that the man who could penetrate far enough would find countries where inexhaustible riches were to be gathered without toil from fertile shores, or marvellous valleys; and though wild tales were told of the dangers supposed to fill these regions, yet to the more daring and adventurous these only made the visions of boundless wealth and enchanting loveliness seem more fascinating. Thus, as the art of navigation improved, and long voyages became possible, courageous seamen were tempted to venture out into the great unknown expanse. Columbus carried his trembling sailors over great tracts of unknown ocean, and discovered the two continents of America; Vasco di Gama penetrated far to the south, and rounded the Cape of Good Hope; Magellan, passing through the straits now called by his name, was the first to enter the Pacific Ocean; and so in the case of a [Pg 2] hundred others, courage and skill carried the hardy seaman over many seas and into many lands that had lain unknown for ages. Australia was the last part of the world to be thus visited and explored. In the year 1600, during the times of Shakespeare, the region to the south of the East Indies was still as little known as ever; the rude maps of those days had only a great blank where the islands of Australia should have been. Most people thought there was nothing but the ocean in that part of the world; and as the voyage was dangerous and very long—requiring several years for its completion—scarcely any one cared to run the risk of exploring it. 2. De Quiros.—There was, however, an enthusiastic seaman who firmly believed that a great continent existed there, and who longed to go in search of it. This was De Quiros, a Spaniard, who had already sailed with a famous voyager, and now desired to set out on an expedition of his own. He spent many years in beseeching the King of Spain to furnish him with ships and men so that he might seek this southern continent. King Philip for a long time paid little attention to his entreaties, but was at last overcome by his perseverance, and told De Quiros that, though he himself had no money for such purposes, he would order the Governor of Peru to provide the necessary vessels. De Quiros carried the king’s instructions to Peru, and two ships were soon prepared and filled with suitable crews—the Capitana and the Almiranta, with a smaller vessel called the Zabra to act as tender. A nobleman named Torres was appointed second in command, and they set sail from Peru, on a prosperous voyage across the Pacific, discovering many small -8- The Project Gutenberg eBook of The History of Australia and New Zealand from 1606 to 1890, by Alexander Sutherland, M.A. and George Sutherland, M.A. islands on their way, and seeing for the first time the Coral Islands of the South Seas. At length (1606) they reached a shore which stretched as far as they could see both north and south, and De Quiros thought he had discovered the great Southern Continent. He called the place “Tierra Australis del Espiritu Santo,” that is, the “Southern Land of the Holy Spirit”. It is now known that this was not really a continent, but merely one of the New Hebrides Islands, and more than a thousand miles away from the mainland. The land was filled by high mountains, verdure-clad to their summits, and sending down fine streams, which fell in hoarse-sounding waterfalls from the edges of the [Pg 3] rocky shore, or wandered amid tropical luxuriance of plants down to the golden sands that lay within the coral barriers. The inhabitants came down to the edge of the green and shining waters making signs of peace, and twenty soldiers went ashore, along with an officer, who made friends with them, exchanging cloth for pigs and fruit. De Quiros coasted along the islands for a day or two till he entered a fine bay, where his vessels anchored, and Torres went ashore. A chief came down to meet him, offering him a present of fruit, and making signs to show that he did not wish the Spaniards to intrude upon his land. As Torres paid no attention, the chief drew a line upon the sand, and defied the Spaniards to cross it. Torres immediately stepped over it, and the natives launched some arrows at him, which dropped harmlessly from his iron armour. Then the Spaniards fired their muskets, killing the chief and a number of the naked savages. The rest stood for a moment, stupefied at the noise and flash; then turned and ran for the mountains. The Spaniards spent a few pleasant days among the fruit plantations, and slept in cool groves of overarching foliage; but subsequently they had quarrels and combats with the natives, of whom they killed a considerable number. When the Spaniards had taken on board a sufficient supply of wood and of fresh water they set sail, but had scarcely got out to sea when a fever spread among the crew, and became a perfect plague. They returned and anchored in the bay, where the vessels lay like so many hospitals. No one died, and after a few days they again put to sea, this time to be driven back again by bad weather. Torres, with two ships, safely reached the sheltering bay, but the vessel in which De Quiros sailed was unable to enter it, and had to stand out to sea and weather the storm. The sailors then refused to proceed further with the voyage, and, having risen in mutiny, compelled De Quiros to turn the vessel’s head for Mexico, which they reached after some terrible months of hunger and thirst. 3. Torres.—The other ships waited for a day or two, but no signs being seen of their consort, they proceeded in search of it. In this voyage Torres sailed round the land, thus showing that it was no continent, but only an island. Having satisfied himself that it was useless to seek for De Quiros, he turned to the [Pg 4] west, hoping to reach the Philippine Islands, where the Spaniards had a colony, at Manila. It was his singular fortune to sail through that opening which lies between New Guinea and Australia, to which the name of “Torres Strait” was long afterwards applied. He probably saw Cape York rising out of the sea to the south, but thought it only another of those endless little islands with which the strait is studded. Poor De Quiros spent the rest of his life in petitioning the King of Spain for ships to make a fresh attempt. After many years he obtained another order to the Governor of Peru, and the old weather-beaten mariner once more set out from Spain full of hope; but at Panama, on his way, death awaited him, and there the fiery-souled veteran passed away, the last of the great Spanish navigators. He died in poverty and disappointment, but he is to be honoured as the first of the long line of Australian discoverers. In after years, the name he had invented was divided into two parts; the island he had really discovered being called Espiritu Santo, while the continent he thought he had discovered was called Terra Australis. This last name was shortened by another discoverer—Flinders—to the -9- The Project Gutenberg eBook of The History of Australia and New Zealand from 1606 to 1890, by Alexander Sutherland, M.A. and George Sutherland, M.A. present term Australia. 4. The Duyfhen.—De Quiros and Torres were Spaniards, but the Dutch also displayed much anxiety to reach the great South Continent. From their colony at Java they sent out a small vessel, the Duyfhen, or Dove, which sailed into the Gulf of Carpentaria, and passed half-way down along its eastern side. Some sailors landed, but so many of them were killed by the natives that the captain was glad to embark again and sail for home, after calling the place of their disaster Cape Keer-weer, or Turnagain. These Dutch sailors were the first Europeans, as far as can now be known, who landed on Australian soil; but as they never published any account of their voyage, it is only by the merest chance that we know anything of it. 5. Other Dutch Discoverers.—During the next twenty years various Dutch vessels, while sailing to the settlements in the East Indies, met with the coast of Australia. In 1616 Dirk Hartog landed on the island in Shark Bay which is now called after him. Two years later Captain Zaachen is said to have sailed along the north coast, which he called Arnhem [Pg 5] Land. Next year (1619) another captain, called Edel, surveyed the western shores, which for a long time bore his name. In 1622 a Dutch ship, the Leeuwin, or Lioness, sailed along the southern coast, and its name was given to the south-west cape of Australia. In 1627 Peter Nuyts entered the Great Australian Bight, and made a rough chart of some of its shores; in 1628 General Carpenter sailed completely round the large gulf to the north, which has taken its name from this circumstance. Thus, by degrees, all the northern and western, together with part of the southern shores, came to be roughly explored, and the Dutch even had some idea of colonising this continent. 6. Tasman.—During the next fourteen years we hear no more of voyages to Australia; but in 1642 Antony Van Diemen, the Governor of the Dutch possessions in the East Indies, sent out his friend Abel Jansen Tasman, with two ships, to make new discoveries in the South Seas. Tasman first went to the Island of Bourbon, from which he sailed due south for a time; but finding no signs of land, he turned to the east, and three months after setting out he saw a rocky shore in the distance. Stormy weather coming on, he was driven out to sea, and it was not till a week later that he was able to reach the coast again. He called the place Van Diemen’s Land, and sent some sailors on shore to examine the country. These men heard strange noises in the woods, and saw trees of enormous height, in which notches were cut seven feet apart. These they believed to be the steps used by the natives in climbing the trees, and they therefore returned to report that the land was exceedingly beautiful, but inhabited by men of gigantic size. Tasman, next day, allowed the carpenter to swim ashore and set up the Dutch flag; but having himself seen, from his ship, what he thought to be men of extraordinary stature moving about on the shore, he lost no time in taking up his anchor and setting sail. Farther to the east he discovered the islands of New Zealand, and after having made a partial survey of their coasts, he returned to Batavia. Two years after he was sent on a second voyage of discovery, and explored the northern and western shores of Australia itself; but the results do not seem to have been important, and are not now known. His chief service in the exploration of Australia was the discovery of [Pg 6] Tasmania, as it is now called, after his name. This he did not know to be an island; he drew it on his maps as if it were a peninsula belonging to the mainland of Australia. - 10 - The Project Gutenberg eBook of The History of Australia and New Zealand from 1606 to 1890, by Alexander Sutherland, M.A. and George Sutherland, M.A. William Dampier. 7. Dampier.—The discoveries that had so far been made were very imperfect, for the sailors generally contented themselves with looking at the land from a safe distance. They made no surveys such as would have enabled them to draw correct charts of the coasts; they seldom landed, and even when they did, they never sought to become acquainted with the natives, or to learn anything as to the nature of the interior of the country. The first who took the trouble to obtain information of this more accurate kind was the Englishman, William Dampier. When a young man Dampier had gone out to Jamaica to manage a large estate; but not liking the slave-driving business, he crossed over to Campeachy, and lived for a time in the woods, cutting the more valuable kinds of timber. Here he became acquainted with the buccaneers who made the lonely coves of Campeachy their headquarters. Being persuaded to join them, he entered upon a life of lawless daring, constantly fighting and plundering, and meeting with the wildest adventures. He was often captured by the American natives, still more often by the Spaniards, but always escaped to enter upon exploits of fresh danger. In 1688 he joined a company of buccaneers, who [Pg 7] proposed to make a voyage round the world and plunder on their way. It took them more than a year to reach the East Indies, where they spent a long time, sometimes attacking Spanish ships or Dutch fortresses, sometimes leading an easy luxurious life among the natives, often quarrelling among themselves, and even going so far as to leave their captain with forty men on the island of Mindanao. But at length the time came when it was necessary to seek some quiet spot where they should be able to clean and repair the bottoms of their ships. Accordingly, they landed on the north-west coast of Australia, and lived for twelve days at the place now called “Buccaneers’ Archipelago”. They were the first Europeans who held any communication with the natives of Australia, and the first to publish a detailed account of their voyage thither. Growing tired of a lawless life, and having become wealthy, Dampier bought an - 11 - The Project Gutenberg eBook of The History of Australia and New Zealand from 1606 to 1890, by Alexander Sutherland, M.A. and George Sutherland, M.A. estate in England, where he lived some years in retirement, till his love of adventure led him forth again. The King of England was anxious to encourage discovery, and fitted out a vessel called the Roebuck, to explore the southern seas. Dampier was the only man in England who had ever been to Australia, and to him was given the command of the little vessel, which sailed in the year 1699. It took a long time to reach Australia, but at last the Roebuck entered what Dampier called Shark Bay, from an enormous shark he caught there. He then explored the north-west coast as far as Roebuck Bay, in all about nine hundred miles; of which he published a full and fairly accurate account. He was a man of keen observation, and delighted to describe the habits and manners of the natives, as well as peculiarities in the plants and animals, of the various places he visited. During the time he was in Australia he frequently met with the blacks and became well acquainted with them. He gives this description of their appearance:— “..."

You need to upgrade your Flash Player , or try to enable javascript in order see this document properly.

History of Australia and New Zealand by Sutherland and Sutherland

Download the free eBook: History of Australia and New Zealand by Sutherland and Sutherland Original url: http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/25828...
more

File Name: History-of-Australia-and-New-Zealand-by-Sutherland -and-Sutherl
Provided by: GutenbergProject
Folder: H - Gutenberg Project titles on letter H (H - Gutenberg Project titles on letter H)
Category: Document » e-book
Size: 9863.83 kb
Extension: pdf
Rating: 0
Views: 76
Downloads: 4
Uploaded: 24/01/09 23:18
Tags: Sutherland Alexander Sutherland George History: General and Eastern Hemisphere: History of Oceania (South Seas) Australia -- History New Zealand -


Embed:
Link:
Forum:

Submit to digg
digg stumble reddit Submit to del.icio.us delicio furl facebook
comments Comments : 0
No comments yet..

Add comment: (Sing Up or Log In)

Bought and Paid For by George Howells Broadhurst and Arthur Hornblow (pdf document)
Bought and Paid For by George Howells Broadhurst and Arthur Hornblow
Download the free eBook: Bought and Paid For by George Howells Broadhu...
pdf document From: GutenbergP...
Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine by George M.  Gould and Walter L.  Pyle (pdf document)
Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine by George M. Gould and Walter L
Download the free eBook: Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine by Geor...
pdf document From: GutenbergP...
Black Beaver by George Edward Lewis and James Campbell Lewis (pdf document)
Black Beaver by George Edward Lewis and James Campbell Lewis
Download the free eBook: Black Beaver by George Edward Lewis and James...
pdf document From: GutenbergP...
The Misadventures of George W  Bush and David Rothschild (flv video)
The Misadventures of George W Bush and David Rothschild
Dubya recants his time in the Skull and Bones and later times with his...
flv video From: illuminate...
George Sampson, Nemesis And Signature Dancing Together (flv video)
George Sampson, Nemesis And Signature Dancing Together
Britains Got Talent, Live Tour. 8th June 2008. Nemesis And Signature ...
flv video From: emilex
Frederick George Bailey - Stratagems and Spoils (pdf document)
Frederick George Bailey - Stratagems and Spoils
Published in 1969. Science anthropology Science-Social-Science
pdf document From: Husky
Terre Napoleón; a History of French Explorations and Projects in Australia (zip archive)
Terre Napoleón; a History of French Explorations and Projects in Aust
Download the free eBook: Terre Napoleón; a History of French Explorat...
zip archive From: GutenbergP...
Beacon Lights of History, Volume 01 by John Lord (pdf document)
Beacon Lights of History, Volume 01 by John Lord
Download the free eBook: Beacon Lights of History, Volume 01 by John L...
pdf document From: GutenbergP...
Beacon Lights of History by John Lord (txt document)
Beacon Lights of History by John Lord
Download the free eBook: Beacon Lights of History by John Lord Orig...
txt document From: GutenbergP...
Beacon Lights of History by John Lord (txt document)
Beacon Lights of History by John Lord
Download the free eBook: Beacon Lights of History by John Lord Orig...
txt document From: GutenbergP...
The History of Tasmania , Volume II by John West (pdf document)
The History of Tasmania , Volume II by John West
Download the free eBook: The History of Tasmania , Volume II by John W...
pdf document From: GutenbergP...
The History of Tasmania, Volume I by John West (pdf document)
The History of Tasmania, Volume I by John West
Download the free eBook: The History of Tasmania, Volume I by John Wes...
pdf document From: GutenbergP...
A History of the Nineteenth Century, Year by Year by Edwin Emerson (pdf document)
A History of the Nineteenth Century, Year by Year by Edwin Emerson
Download the free eBook: A History of the Nineteenth Century, Year by ...
pdf document From: GutenbergP...
The Zincali: an account of the gypsies of Spain by George Henry Borrow (txt document)
The Zincali: an account of the gypsies of Spain by George Henry Borrow
Download the free eBook: The Zincali: an account of the gypsies of Spa...
txt document From: GutenbergP...
Ancient States and Empires by John Lord (zip archive)
Ancient States and Empires by John Lord
Download the free eBook: Ancient States and Empires by John Lord Or...
zip archive From: GutenbergP...
"The Gallant, Good Riou", and Jack Renton by Louis Becke (pdf document)
"The Gallant, Good Riou", and Jack Renton by Louis Becke
Download the free eBook: "The Gallant, Good Riou", and Jack ...
pdf document From: GutenbergP...
The Valet's tragedy, and other studies by Andrew Lang (txt document)
The Valet's tragedy, and other studies by Andrew Lang
Download the free eBook: The Valet's tragedy, and other studies b...
txt document From: GutenbergP...
Romano Lavo-Lil: word book of the Romany; or, English Gypsy language by Borrow (pdf document)
Romano Lavo-Lil: word book of the Romany; or, English Gypsy language b
Download the free eBook: Romano Lavo-Lil: word book of the Romany; or,...
pdf document From: GutenbergP...
Oeuvres Completes de Rollin Tome 1 by Charles Rollin (pdf document)
Oeuvres Completes de Rollin Tome 1 by Charles Rollin
Download the free eBook: Oeuvres Completes de Rollin Tome 1 by Charles...
pdf document From: GutenbergP...
Narrative of the Overland Expedition of the Messrs. Jardine from Rockhampton to  (pdf document)
Narrative of the Overland Expedition of the Messrs. Jardine from Rockh
Download the free eBook: Narrative of the Overland Expedition of the M...
pdf document From: GutenbergP...

© 2009 Fliiby LLC