Courage and Tragedy in Exploration By A Staff Correspondent The Sydney Morning Herald 4
February 1954 |
From
the tiny foothold of the first settlement to a nation sprawling over the
whole Australian continent was a matter of 100 years. By the 1870s the age of
Australian exploration was drawing to its close as the Forrest brothers and
Ernest Giles were striding backwards and forwards to show that even the huge
expanse from the centre westward could be crossed. But
that first 100 years of exploration was a test of man's curiosity, courage,
and ability to endure. The
remembered names among the exploring expeditions, the leaders whose names are
left now on deserts and ranges, on town-ships and electorates, on wildflowers
and cockatoos, are only a couple of dozen. They
were reinforced by the hundreds of unremembered individuals moving out
quietly beyond the limits of settlement to find new cattle and sheep runs for
themselves. Some
of the exploring expeditions were out after that reward, too. Some were doing
a surveying job for the Government. Some were selflessly helping science, and
others were greedily out for fame. Their
rewards were varied. Thomas Mitchell was knighted for his travels. Successful
exploration started young John Forrest
off on a lifetime of public activity crowned by his becoming Australia's
first peer. But
that reward came to the old statesman, and not to the young, tough, strong
man whose magnificent physique and feats of endurance made him known
throughout the colony as 'The Young Explorer." George Grey, also knighted, had a distinguished career as
Governor of South Australia, New Zealand and South Africa, in which his
discoveries of the Glenelg Murchison, Gascoyne and other rivers in the west in 1837-39 are
submerged, though it was his skill and resource as an explorer that first
brought him into official notice. A. C. Gregory ended his life as Sir Augustus but that was 50
years after his major explorations and after he had settled down to more
routine work as Queensland’s Surveyor-General and then as a member of its
Legislative Council. Edward John Eyre crowned his career by being appointed
Governor of Jamaica and passed into a wider world history when he hanged a
Negro agitator and precipitated a celebrated investigation. It is only
Australians who remember his fight with the desert country north-west of
Adelaide. But
on the other side are two of the Geographical Society's gold medallists, Ernest
Giles, spending his last years as a minor clerk, and John McDouall Stuart, arriving home
from his last expedition blind and paralysed and
struggling only partly back to health on his Government's £2,000 prize. Above
all, the explorers whose names are most vivid in the public imagination are
the men whose only reward was death. The glory of Burke and Wills was the glory of a splendid failure of unequalled
chances thrown away, of courageous but headstrong and blundering leadership
that led only to martyrdom, a sort of Charge of the Light Brigade of our
interior. The
glory of Leichhardt was that he disappeared and so set a
mystery that romance has been able to speculate on ever since. Robert O'Hara Burke and Ludwig Leichhardt were in some respects
two of the more inept Australian explorers, but their fame will remain, among
the greatest. Death
was never far away from any expedition. Mostly it was from hunger and thirst,
but occasionally hostile blacks cost lives, too, just as friendly ones saved
others. But
the story of Australian exploration opens not with blood and the jungle, but
with the first crossing of the Blue Mountains by pastoralists in search of
pasture. This search was itself an act of faith. The colony was still an
intrusion into an inhospitable land, of which Sir Joseph Banks had written: "A soil so barren and at the
same time entirely void of the help derived from cultivation, could not be
disposed to yield much to the support of man." The
early settlers had found it rather more hopeful than that, but the Blue
Mountains seemed a permanent barrier. Then
the drought of 1813 made it necessary to find whether there was fodder and
water to the west. Gregory Blaxland put to the test his belief that the way
over the mountains was not along the valleys but along the top of the ridges.
With William Lawson, a surveyor,
the youthful William Charles Wentworth,
and four convict servants, he set out from his farm on May 11 and after 14
days of strenuous effort reached the western edge of Mount York and looked
down on the Bathurst plains. Less
than two years later there was a road over the Blaxland route, making good
his claim that his discovery' had "changed the aspect of the colony from
a confined, insulated tract of land to a rich and extensive continent." Or
as Ernest Scott says, it changed the aspect of a convict settlement into a
colony. "Gregory Blaxland killed the convict system by breaking down
the gaol walls." Macquarie's
deputy Surveyor-General, George William
Evans, who was sent on the tracks of Blaxland, found the Macquarie
and Lachlan rivers and noted that the flow was "near due west." It
became the preoccupation of explorers to discover what happened to these and
other westward-flowing streams. Any
geographical puzzle is bound to give rise to guesswork and myth. The weird
flattened shape of the continent of medieval cartographers, the dolphins and
the mermaids, find their 19th century equivalent in Australia's vast inland
sea, which was one way of explaining the end of these rivers. John Oxley, the Surveyor-General, in
two expeditions in 1817, found a dozen of these west-ward flowing streams,
but in following the Lachlan and Macquarie he discovered that each of them
petered out in bog. The
man who solved the problem was Captain
Charles Sturt - "the intrepid, chivalrous, gentle, patient Charles Sturt." Born in Bengal
and educated at Harrow, Sturt had come to Australia in 1827 as a captain with
the 39th Regiment, but routine garrison duty gave no scope for his eager
intelligence. He became fascinated with the problems of the settlement and a
desire to perform some useful service. He gravely noted: "I should
exceedingly regret if it were thought I had volunteered for these
undertakings for the love of adventure alone." Sturt's first expedition, of 1828, brought him to the
Darling River, in a year of drought when the river was salt. For his next, in
1829, he determined to navigate the Murrumbidgee, which cattlemen had
discovered more than eight years before. At
the Murrumbidgee he fitted a whaleboat together and decided to send back the
bullocks, drays and stores that had brought them overland. "It
is a magnificent stream," he wrote. "I do not know its rate, but I
am obliged to abandon my cattle and have taken to the boats. Where I shall
wander to. God only knows. I have little doubt, however, that I shall
ultimately make the coast." On
January 14, 1830, the river suddenly swept round the curve in a southerly
direction, the boat was carried along "at a fearful rate" and Sturt and his companions were shot
into a broad and noble river, 350ft wide, which he named the Murray. A
few hours later he passed the junction of the Darling. "I directed the
Union Jack to be hoisted, and giving way to our satisfaction we all stood up
in the boat and gave three distinct cheers," he wrote. "It was an
English feeling, an ebullition, an overflow." Sturt reached the mouth of the Murray, but then had to
face the long 1.000 mile pull back upstream. They had to row 10 and 12 hours
at a stretch to get clear of hostile blacks, and the men's fidelity and
endurance were a tribute to Sturt's leadership. When they reached Sydney, a
period of bad health and blindness followed for Sturt himself. It
is not fair to group these pioneers into degrees of merit, but if we may
quote the late Professor Scott again, Sturt's two journeys were the most
important pieces of inland exploration in Australian history. They
laid down on the map the main arteries of an enormous spread of rivers and
opened a new rich province for colonisation.
"Withal, he was a kind and considerate! Gentleman, brave as a paladin,
gentle as a girl, a leader of men who was followed by his chosen band in any
risk because he was trusted and beloved." Meanwhile,
a variety of other explorations were opening up other rich lands in eastern
Australia. If Sturt's expedition was largely responsible for the beginning of
a colony in South Australia, Hume and Hovell must have the credit of leading
John Batman to believe that a good settlement could be founded in Victoria. Hamilton Hume, a man of 27, born in New South Wales, combined
a love of discovery with an ambition to own more land for himself. William Hilton Hovell was a retired
sea captain. They struck south from Hume's station at Lake George on October
l8, 1824, found a succession of beautiful rivers flowing through fertile
valleys, and reached Corio Bay. On
the north of the Sydney settlement, rich lands opened up after Allan Cunningham, a botanist sent to
Australia to collect plants for Kew Gardens, had first led an expedition
north from Bathurst and discovered Pandora's Pass to the Liverpool Plains
(1823) and then led an expedition to the north with which he penetrated to
the Darling Downs (1827). He went on to discover the Condamine,
Dumaresq, Gwydir, and Macintyre Rivers and Cunningham's
Gap, the pass from the Darling Downs to Moreton
Bay. Cunningham
was an earnest man, with a methodical mind and a selfless love of science.
His route maps were always carefully drawn and his diaries written up
unfailingly. His discoveries enriched the colony immensely. His
reward later was the post of Colonial Botanist which, he found, included the
responsibility of growing vegetables for the higher ranks of the Civil
service in a patch of ground in the Botanic Gardens, "the Government
Cabbage Patch," as he called it. A
far more flamboyant personality of the time was Major Thomas Mitchell, who became Deputy Surveyor-General in 1827
after a period in the Army in Europe, in which he specialised
in mapping. Mitchell's
expeditions were different from any others because he used to go into the
wilderness to fight a battle with it. His parties, 20 to 30 strong, marched
out in military order, dressed in grey trousers and red woollen
shirts, which, he said, "when crossed by white braces gave them
something of a military appearance." His
most important journey was in 1836, when he crossed the Murray and made south
for the coast. Great plains, rich with grass, well watered and fertile
delighted him. He
reached the sea at the mouth of the Glenelg and
turned eastward to Portland Bay. Two
other names prominent in Victorian discovery a little later make strange
bedfellows. They were Angus McMillan,
a Scottish highlander working for a squatter near Goulburn, and Count Strzelecki, a Polish nobleman
and geologist. McMillan's journeys of 1839 and 1840 took him through Gippsland to the coast at Port Albert. Strzelecki in 1840
also followed McMillan's tracks to
some extent. Starting from the upper Murray, he crossed the Alps into Gippsland and emerged at Western-port. It
perhaps indicates Strzelecki's
quality as a bushman that he was frightened of losing his way if he diverged
from a straight line, so he insisted on plunging through every obstacle
rather than go round it. In the end, he and his party were wearily hewing
their way through the bush at the rate of two miles a day and living on
koalas. Both
men earned fitting rewards of a sort. Strzelecki
had a gold medal from the Geographical Society and McMillan found a site for his employer's new station. Turning
from the friendly richer areas to the inhospitable centre, the story of
exploration starts with Edward John
Eyre, an adventurous young Yorkshireman who in
1841, accompanied by one white man named Baxter and three aborigines, struck
west-ward into the desert from Fowler's Bay. For
three months they were in an almost waterless waste, where their lives
depended on digging a little water from the sand or collecting dew in a
sponge. Two of the aborigines murdered Baxter
and deserted. Eyre and the
third black survived to be rescued by a French whaler near Esperance. An
expedition by Charles Sturt, this
time his last, located the Stony Desert and earned him an invalid's
retirement. Then in 1848 Ludwig Leichhardt vanished into the desert while trying to
cross Australia from Moreton Bay to the Swan River. Leichhardt, a German
botanist, had four years earlier taken an expedition successfully from the
Darling Downs to the Gulf country, reaching Victoria on Port Essington. On
another attempt at crossing the continent, starting from Condamine,
he was thrown back without success in six months. There
will always be disputes about his abilities. Ernest Favenc, himself an explorer,
described Leichhardt
as "a man whose character, to judge from his short career, was largely
composed of contradictions and inconsistencies. Eager for personal
distinction, with high and noble aims, he yet lacked that sympathy and
feeling of comradeship that attracts men.
Leichhardt's followers never desired to
accompany him on a second expedition . . . The journal of the (1844) trip
reads to a man accustomed to bush life like the tale of the Babes in the
Wood, yet he managed to blunder through." Equally
unsuited temperamentally was Robert
O'Hara Burke, the Victorian police inspector who led Australia's most
lavish expedition in an attempt to cross the continent from south to north. The
air of excited accomplishment of those days is hard to recapture now, but for
some years culminating in this expedition the colonies had found a challenge
in the still unexplored interior. South
Australia had found that it was not hemmed in by a great crescent Lake
Torrens, which was the early hypothesis. A
man such as A. C. Gregory was
coming into the field. Gregory, it
has been said, "inaugurated a new epoch in the field of discovery. No
one had as yet shown such peculiar ability and ingenuity. Economy marked his
progress: skill and humanity were conspicuous in his conduct." Eventually
he was to traverse great sections of Australia, but one of his important
journeys now took him through from Queensland to Adelaide along the route Leichhardt
had started. John McDouall
Stuart had failed in his attempt to drive north from sea to sea across
the centre but he had reached the geographical centre of the continent and
raised a cairn and planted a flag there. In
this atmosphere philosophical societies were taking up exploration
enthusiastically. In Sydney one lecturer suggested a quasi-military
expedition convoying great herds and flocks and preceded
by an organised force of black trackers. Another
suggested balloons. So
the Royal Society had in hand £12,000 of Government and private money by the
time it was ready to dispatch Burke
and Wills. Ten thousand citizens of Melbourne cheered as the party started
its triumphal progress. But
Burke was too reckless. The final
dash did bring the leaders to the tidal swamps at the Gulf of Carpentaria. To
that extent he accomplished his aim (the last words of I his scrappy notebook
were, "I hope we shall be done justice to. We have fulfilled our task,
but we have been abandoned"). But
the late return to Cooper's Creek depot, the late arrival of Wright with
supplies, the foolish thrust towards Mount Hopeless Station, the death of Burke, Wills and Gray, and the survival
of John King with friendly blacks,
all these are matters now of our national tradition. There
were some incidental results of the expedition. One was that the relief
expedition led by John McKinlay, working north-east from Adelaide towards
the Barcoo and Diamantina and then to tidal waters
of the Gulf and back to Queensland, discovered a valuable stock route.
"To him," wrote Sir Dominick Daly to the Secretary of State,
"belongs the credit of having demonstrated the practicability of driving
sheep and horned cattle across the continent." Eighteen
months after Burke and Wills, John McDouall
Stuart made a south to north crossing alone a line which the South
Australian Government was able to use in 1870 when it built the overland
telegraph. In
that same year the Government of Western Australia sent John and Alexander, Forrest eastward to try to find a practicable
route for a telegraph line to South Australia. That was the start of several
expeditions in which John Forrest
became the first to cross from the west coast to the centre and established
that there was some reasonable grazing land north of the desert route which Eyre had taken. Further
north still the tireless Ernest Giles,
after several expeditions, undertook one in which he covered 5,000 arid miles
in a round trip from Adelaide to Perth and back. This
western area covered by Forrest, Giles,
and the courtly Colonel Egerton-Warburton (who was doing his desert journeys
at the age of 61) was the last large blank space on the map. To-day
we can still find employment for our explorers in one or two corners of
Tasmania so far untrod, but the heroic era of
exploration is over. Like the men of that other heroic age of discovery of
the 15th and 16th centuries, these men proved that there is "no land
uninhabitable, nor sea innavigable" Australia
may have some useless areas, but at least we know more about them, and in the
tracks of those men now we grow or mine or shear our wealth. |