Goulburn's
Growth & Early Explorations 13
January 1940 Daily Advertiser (Wagga Wagga) |
The district of which Goulburn is now
the centre was first explored by Hamilton Hume, Charles Throsby and Surveyor
James Meehan, all of whom had been in the vicinity by the end of
1818. John Oxley wrote glowing accounts
of the locality in 1820, in which year Governor Macquarie made a
tour of the southern districts and passed over the present site of Goulburn
on his way to Lake George and Lake Bathurst. The first road probably followed the track
blazed in 1818 by Meehan and Hume, though Governor Macquarie took a
slightly more westerly road after leaving Bong Bong.
The present road through Marulan to
Goulburn was surveyed by Sir Thomas Mitchell, the Surveyor-General, in 1829,
but it was not completed for many years. The original idea of establishing a
town at Goulburn Plains seems to have been prompted by a scheme for the
settlement of a number of discharged soldiers in various selected country
districts. In 1829 the township of Goulburn Plains
was marked out in a bend of the Wollondilly River and the site ap- proved by Governor Darling. When Governor Bourke visited the
district in 1832 he altered the site to that which the town now
occupies. Assistant Surveyor Govett surveyed
the plan for the design, and Assistant-Surveyor Hoddle planned the
streets and general layout of the town. The plan of the 'Town of
Goulburn' was approved by the Executive Council on January 21, 1833. On November 1, 1836, Sir Thomas Mitchell
wrote: 'I continued my ride through the new township (Goulburn), in
which, although but few years had elapsed since I had sketched its streets on
paper, a number of houses had al- ready been built.' By 1848 the population had grown to
1171. In that year the first news paper
was established and the town ship had become quite prosperous. It was first proclaimed a
municipality in 1859. The 'Gazetter'
of 1866 describes Goulburn as "an Episcopal city (the bishopric
having been recently formed), an assize town, the chief place in the
southern district, and one of the most important townships in the colony." The hospital was singled out for
special mention, it being stated that the buildings and mounds occupied
2½ acres of land. Some idea as to the rate of progress of
Goulburn is given in the following population statistics:- 1840,. 1171; 1866. 3241; 1888, 8500; 1900, 12,000.
Goulburn to-day with a population of
over 18,000, is the third city in New South Wales,
ranking after Newcastle and Broken Hill. It is now a city of importance, being
at the Junction of the Canberra, Cooma and Taralga lines with the
main southern railway. With wide streets, good public buildings,
magnificent churches, and a cool bracing climate, it is not surprising that
Goulburn has become a popular tourist centre. From here it is only 22 miles to
beautiful Lake Bathurst, and 23 miles to Grand Canyon at Bungonia, from
which I obtained a magnificent view of the Shoalhaven River and the
Glenrock Waterfall, both trips being well worth the drive by car. The Wombeyan
Caves (50 miles) provide another easy and justly popular outing. To historians the area known as
the Old Stockade, about sixand a half miles from
Goulburn on the Sydney road, provides a wealth of interest. Here were housed, with their
soldier guards, the convicts who built the Great Southern Road. To-day, in a mass of debris, there exists a cell built into the side of the hill facing
the Wollondilly River. It was a substantial piece of
masonry approached by a low and narrow passage, the only ventilation being through
the door, in which there was a grating. There is also, in quite a good state
of repair, a stone arched bridge, built, according to the key stone,
in 1839. |