1797 in Australia

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

1797
in
Australia

Decades:
See also:

The following lists events that happened during 1797 in Australia.

Leaders

Events

  • 9 February – Sydney Cove wrecked, but some of the crew managed to reach Sydney more than 600 km away, leading to the rescue of other members of the crew.
  • 26 June – HMS Reliance arrives in Sydney from the Cape of Good Hope, carrying stores ordered by Governor John Hunter and 26 merino sheep purchased by Captain Henry Waterhouse and Lieutenant William Kent. Wool pioneer John Macarthur would then acquire his first Merino sheep from them.
  • 3 July – Following Aboriginal attacks on farms in the Hawkesbury region, Hunter dispatches a party of soldiers from the New South Wales Corps to protect settlers there.
  • 1 August – Following advice from the master of the Sydney Cove who observed currents and tides while wrecked on Preservation Island, Governor Hunter writes to Joseph Banks that it seems certain that the yet-to-be-discovered Bass Strait exists.
  • 19 September – John Shortland is the first European to enter the port of Newcastle. On the 9th he discovered the Hunter River estuary and coal.
  • 3 December –
    Wilson's Promontory (2 January 1798) and Western Port (5 January). He returns to Sydney two months later, having greatly increased the settlers' knowledge of the geography of Australia
    .

Births

References

  • Barker, Anthony (1996). What Happened When. St Leonards: Allen & Unwin. .
  • National Library of Australia. "The World Upside Down: Australia 1788 – 1830". Archived from the original on 20 March 2007. Retrieved 9 February 2007.