morning in Port Essington |
Adams Head Anchorage
11’22.363S – 132’09.337
I had stuffed my back pack with a small medical kit containing a couple of bandages, a few bandaids, some dress, some antiseptic solution and sunscreen as well as a bottle of water and a few vegemite Vita-wheat biscuits. MrJ had his own water bottle and VHF radio and I had put another bottle of water in the dinghy for our trip ashore to do the 2hour hike through the Victoria Ruins. It was 0630hs.
The Victoria Ruins was one of the first
European settlements in Northern Australia along with Fort Dundas and Fort
Wellington. Back then it was known as Victoria Settlement.
With the fear of the Dutch and French
expansion in the southern East Indies, in 1818 Captain Phillip Parker King
explored and named the Cobourg Peninsula and Port Essington. His surveys
determined these three settlements. After the failure and abandonment of the
first two settlements, Victoria was constructed in 1838.
Shortly after its establishment the
settlement of Victoria had developed the appearance of a considerable village.
A Governor’s house, church, hospital and a collection of military buildings
created a British colonial character. Cottages with shingled or thatched roofs
housed the new settlers. Each cottage had its own small vegetable garden with
crops of pumpkin, cabbage and a variety of fruit to supplement the settlements
main gardens. Everything was going well for a while. But by seventh year
progress on the Settlement had ceased. Expectations of trade didn’t happen and
over the following years supplies became infrequent, sickness and death more
common. Gradually the long periods of isolation, the oppressive conditions and
climate drained the settler’s spirits and life. Buildings were no longer
maintained and things became very ramshackle. The fate of the settlement was
sealed. With some mixed feelings Victoria Settlement was abandoned in 1849.
Some settlers were pleased to escape the hardships while others found it
difficult in realizing that eleven years of miserable life had all been for
nothing.
Long after Victoria Settlement was abandoned
the region continued to be used by pearlers. Trepan fishermen, pastoralists, salt
gatherers, buffalo shooter and timber cutters.
MrJ and I started tour walk from the little
stretch of sandy beach around from Adams Head where the walk is clearly marked
by a National Parks sign. Past the beach and inside the bushland is where a few
flagstones remain of the house, stockyards and boatshed built by John Lewis who
came overland from Pine Creek in the early 1870’s. With his partner Lewis
leased part of the Peninsula with the intention of supplying the Darwin markets
with buffalo meat. The stone to construct his building were probably taken from
the settlement buildings.
MrJ and I walked on further to Adams Head;
this is where we came across a solid look structure which was the magazine.
Ammunition for the garrison was stored in the magazine which was sunk into the
ground to minimise damage in the event of an explosion. The magazine is all
that remains of the fortification which once included a large square timber
tower and blockhouse.
Gilbert's Dragon Amphibolurus gilbert or Ta Ta Lizard |
Somehow we must have missed the Government
House which was supposed to be not far from the magazine. Maybe we missed the
track or maybe the remains have been reclaimed by the bush.. (???) Government
House was a series of stone piers with a prefabricated building that was
transported from Sydney place on top. This was found to overcome the problem of
having to level the ground, a raised building kept the termites away and kept
it more comfortable in the tropical climate. A cyclone in 1839 lifted it off
its piers and dropped it three meters away. This was one of Australia’s
earliest elevated dwellings, a style of building now common throughout tropical
Australia.
As the track wound further away from Adams
Head we came across the several semicircular stoned chimneys of the married
quarters. These chimneys were examples of distinctive Cornish round chimneys.
Perhaps there were some Cornishmen amongst the Marines. The ironstone with
which the chimneys were built was used extensively in the settlement and was
quarried on site. Timber was used in the construction of the buildings and the
lime motor and rendering on the interior walls was probably made from coral and
shells in one of the kilns in the settlement.the sawpit |
blacksmith's forge |
A sawpit was dug; the blacksmith made iron implements and fortunately for settlement a crew member of the Pelorus was a brick maker. He produced bricks for the settlement form clay, sand and ironstone while the ship was being repaired.
kiln |
Ironstone was commonly used in the buildings.
The kilns were constructed of ironstone pebbles bound in clay. The kiln near
the hospital is a good example of ironstone boulder construction.
Close by the Smithy, one of the kilns and the
hole where the well once was is the place where the old jetty had been jutting
out over the cliff face. The original jetty was 43mts long and had been
constructed in early 1839. Destroyed by the cyclone later that year a second
jetty was built short afterwards. But
nothing remains that I could see.
hospital |
hospital kitchen |
Up on Minto Head there was nothing left of the gun replacement. In its place was a picnic table for one to sit and look out over the harbour, to ponder on those days gone by while resting your weary feet and quenching that mighty thirst that the tropical heat can cause with the water that every hiker must carry.
the Quartermaster's Store has been taken over by the bush hens nest |
On the western side of the headland MrJ and I found the silent stones in the settlement’s cemetery that covered the remains of those dead from exhaustion or disease. Most people were stricken with malaria, taking the lives of almost a quarter of the residents. There were only a few large monuments for loved ones left standing and they were so weatherworn and aged that the inscriptions were almost illegible.
The main garden had been adjacent to the
cemetery but there was no evidence of that at all. The main garden supplied the
settlement with a range of crops such as bananas, oranges, lemons, tamarinds,
sugar cane and guavas. However, despite the settlers’ hard labour, poor soil
soils produced disappointing crops and unharvested food was often eaten by
rats. Agriculture never really rose above subsistence level.
This is a land that has been left for nature
to take over, taken over by bush, lizards, spiders and termites.
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