Originally Called the Hume Australian Town and
Country Journal 19 March 1881 |
The
River Murray. The Murray, or, as it was originally called the Hume, is
undoubtedly the most important stream in Australia. All
the rivers in the colony of New South Wales, three only excepted,
find their sources in the Great Dividing Ranges, and take their course to the
sea by the eastern or western watershed. The
three chief streams of the western watershed are the Darling, the Lachlan,
and the Murrumbidgee, These unite their waters with
those of the Murray at different points. The
Murray flows into Lake Alexandrina in South Australia, and thence into the
ocean. The estimated length of the Darling and its effluents is 1160 miles,
and the area drained is 198,000 square miles. The
estimated length of the Lachlan is 700 miles, and it drains an area of 27,000
square miles. This
river sweeps round to the west and south west, and
finally empties into the Murrumbidgee, flowing in the latter part of its
course through vast plains. The
Murrumbidgee, rising in the Muniong Range, after a
course of 1350 miles, of which about 500 miles are navigable, falls into the
Murray. It
receives the water from an area of 25,000 square miles. The
Murray, which also rises in the Muniong range, not
far from the source of the Murrumbidgee, flows westerly through the entire
length of New South Wales, and receives almost all its western waters,
draining an area of about 270,000 square miles, and attaining a length of
1120 miles before it debouches into Lake Alexandrina. The
average width of the stream is over 2000 feet, and it has an average depth of
about 16 feet. The
river is navigable, and thousands of bales of the golden fleece of the splendid
pastoral lands on the banks of the Darling, the Lachlan, and the
Murrumbidgee, as well as tons of stores and supplies of all kinds, are
annually borne upon its waters. The steamers are mostly small, but powerful. They
are, however, fitted with accommodation for passengers, and many of them
afford a very comfortable mode of travelling. The
cargo is generally carried in barges of great size, though of light draught. The
wool is sometimes piled up tier upon tier to a great height above the
bulwarks of the barges. In
this condition they afford a striking sight, floating down the stream. The
steamers trade as high up as Albury, on the Murray, as Wagga
Wagga, on the Murrumbidgee, and Bourke, on the
Darling. There
is some doubt as to who really saw the waters of the Murray first; but there
is no doubt Hamilton Hume and W. H. Hovell were the
first to record the discovery. In
1824 the two explorers started from Lake George, and crossed the river known
as the Murray, but which was then called the Hume, following a south-westerly
course. In
1829 Captain Sturt, of the 39th Regiment, after his successful exploration of
the Macquarie, and tracing it through endless swamps to its connection with
the Darling, started on another voyage of discovery, seeking the end of the Murrumbidgee.
He
commenced his journey in the neighbourhood of what
is now known as the town of Wagga Wagga. He traced the river to its debouchure
into a magnificent stream 350ft. wide and about 20ft deep, which eventually
proved to be the Murray, or as it has been poetically described, "the Antipodean Nile, the prince of
Australian rivers." Sturt,
followed the river to Lake Alexandrina, in South Australia; but not being
able to find the true channel into the sea, he was obliged to retur n, after enduring great fatigues, privations, and hardships. He reached
Sydney May 25, 1830. The
2000 miles pull in an open boat, as has been well said, was a very remarkable
exploration. Sturt died at Cheltenham, England, June 16, 1869. On
the banks of the Murray, in the immediate neighbourhood
of Albury, there stands an old tree which recalls many curious associations. It
bears the inscription, rudely hewn out of the wood, a large disc of bark
having been removed to permit of the carving, "Hovell, March 17, '24”. Near the above described a monument raised
to the memory of Hume also stands, and which bears the following
inscription:- “This Monument was erected by the
Inhabitants of the Hume River, in honour of
Hamilton Hume, ESQ., to commemorate his discovery of this river, on the 17th
of November, 1824.” The
view of the River Murray given in this issue is taken very near its rise in
the Muniong Ranges, part of the Australian Alps,
and the infant stream is still hemmed within the wild lofty ranges of its
native home. The
point depicted is near the hills known as the Three Brothers, and is within
sight of Mount Kosciusko, the monarch of Australian mountains. |