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diff --git a/old/exaus10.txt b/old/exaus10.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..5c8f430 --- /dev/null +++ b/old/exaus10.txt @@ -0,0 +1,10100 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of Explorations in Australia, by John Forrest + +Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the +copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing +this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook. + +This header should be the first thing seen when viewing this Project +Gutenberg file. Please do not remove it. Do not change or edit the +header without written permission. + +Please read the "legal small print," and other information about the +eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom of this file. Included is +important information about your specific rights and restrictions in +how the file may be used. You can also find out about how to make a +donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved. + + +**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts** + +**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971** + +*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!***** + + +Title: Explorations in Australia + +Author: John Forrest + +Release Date: February, 2006 [EBook #9958] +[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule] +[This file was first posted on November 4, 2003] + +Edition: 10 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EXPLORATIONS IN AUSTRALIA *** + + + + +Produced by Sue Asscher and Col Choat + + + + +EXPLORATIONS + +IN + +AUSTRALIA: + +1. EXPLORATIONS IN SEARCH OF DR. LEICHARDT AND PARTY. + +2. FROM PERTH TO ADELAIDE, AROUND THE GREAT AUSTRALIAN BIGHT. + +3. FROM CHAMPION BAY, ACROSS THE DESERT TO THE TELEGRAPH AND TO ADELAIDE. + +WITH AN APPENDIX ON THE CONDITION OF + +WESTERN AUSTRALIA. + +BY JOHN FORREST, F.R.G.S. + +ILLUSTRATIONS BY G.F. ANGAS. + + +1875. + + + +TO HIS EXCELLENCY + +FREDERICK ALOYSIUS WELD, ESQ., C.M.G., + +GOVERNOR OF TASMANIA, + +LATE GOVERNOR AND COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF of WESTERN AUSTRALIA. + +MY DEAR GOVERNOR WELD, + +It was during your administration of the Government of Western Australia, +and chiefly owing to your zeal and support, that most of the work of +exploration described in this volume was undertaken and carried out. Your +encouragement revived the love of exploration which had almost died out +in our colony before you arrived. + +With gratitude and pleasure I ask you to accept the dedication of this +volume as an expression of my appreciation of your kindness and support. + +Yours very faithfully, + +JOHN FORREST. + + +CONTENTS. + + +CHAPTER 1. + +Previous Expeditions into the Interior. +Attempts to Discover a Route between South and Western Australia. +Eyre's Disastrous Journey. +Leichardt, the Lost Explorer. +The Latest Explorations. + + +CHAPTER 2. + +FIRST EXPEDITION IN SEARCH OF LEICHARDT. + +Statements made by the Natives. +An Expedition Prepared. +Leader Appointed. +Official Instructions. +The Journal. + + +CHAPTER 3. + +SECOND EXPEDITION. FROM PERTH TO ADELAIDE, ROUND THE GREAT BIGHT. + +A New Exploration suggested. +Proposal to reach Adelaide by way of the South Coast. +The experience derived from Eyre's Expedition. +Survey of Port Eucla. +Official Instructions. +The Start. +Dempster's Station near Esperance Bay. +The Schooner at Port Eucla. +Journal of the Expedition. + + +CHAPTER 4. + +RECEPTION AT ADELAIDE AND RETURN TO PERTH. + +Departure from Gawler and Arrival at Adelaide. +Appearance of the Party. +Public Entrance. +Complimentary Banquet. +Grant by the Government of Western Australia. + + +CHAPTER 5. + +THIRD EXPEDITION. FROM THE WEST COAST TO THE TELEGRAPH LINE. + +Proposal to undertake a New Expedition. +Endeavour to Explore the Watershed of the Murchison. +Expeditions by South Australian Explorers. +My Journal. +Fight with the Natives. +Finding traces of Mr. Gosse's Party. +The Telegraph Line reached. +Arrival at Perth Station. + + +CHAPTER 6. + +PUBLIC RECEPTIONS AT ADELAIDE AND PERTH. + +Procession and Banquet at Adelaide. +Arrival in Western Australia. +Banquet and Ball at Perth. +Results of Exploration. + + +APPENDIX. + +Description of Plants, etc. +Report on Geological Specimens. +Note by Editor. +Governor Weld's Report (1874) on Western Australia. +Table of Imports and Exports. +Ditto of Revenue and Expenditure. +Public Debt. +Population. +List of Governors. + + +MAPS. + +1. General Map of Australia, showing the Three Journeys. +2. From Perth to Longitude 123 degrees in Search of Leichardt. +3. From Perth to Adelaide, around the Great Australian Bight. +4. From Champion Bay to Adelaide. + + +ILLUSTRATIONS. + +Portrait of John Forrest. +The Horses Bogged at Lake Barlee. +Portrait of Alexander Forrest. +Arrival at the Great Australian Bight. Fresh Water found. +Public Welcome at Adelaide. +Attacked by the Natives at Weld Springs. +On the March. The Spinifex Desert. +Reaching the Overland Telegraph Line. + + + +EXPLORATIONS IN AUSTRALIA. + +CHAPTER 1. + +Previous Expeditions into the Interior. +Attempts to discover a Route between South and Western Australia. +Eyre's Disastrous Journey. +Leichardt, the Lost Explorer. +The Latest Explorations. + +As the history of the principal expeditions into the interior of +Australia has been narrated by several able writers, I do not propose to +repeat what has already been so well told. But, to make the narrative of +my own journeys more intelligible, and to explain the motives for making +them, it is necessary that I should briefly sketch the expeditions +undertaken for the purpose of ascertaining the nature of the vast regions +intervening between Western and the other Australian colonies, and +determining the possibility of opening up direct overland communication. + +With energetic, if at times uncertain, steps the adventurous colonists +have advanced from the settlements on the eastern and southern coasts of +the vast island into the interior. Expeditions, led by intrepid +explorers, have forced their way against all but insurmountable +difficulties into the hitherto unknown regions which lie to the north and +west of the eastern colonies. Settlements have been established on the +shores of the Gulf of Carpentaria. Burke and a small party crossed +Australia from south to north, enduring innumerable hardships, Burke, +with two of his associates, perishing on the return journey. About the +same time Stuart crossed farther to the west, reaching the very centre of +Australia, and telegraphic wires now almost exactly follow his line of +route, affording communication, by way of Port Darwin, between Adelaide +and the great telegraphic systems of the world. + +ATTEMPTS TO CROSS THE DESERT. + +The telegraph line divides Australia into two portions, nearly equal in +dimensions, but very different in character. To the east are the busy and +rapidly advancing settlements, fertile plains, extensive ranges of grassy +downs, broad rivers, abundant vegetation; to the west a great lone land, +a wilderness interspersed with salt marshes and lakes, barren hills, and +spinifex deserts. It is the Sahara of the south, but a Sahara with few +oases of fertility, beyond which is the thin fringe of scattered +settlements of the colony of Western Australia. To cross this desert, to +discover routes connecting the western territory with South Australia and +the line marked by the telegraph, has been the ambition of later +explorers. Mr. Gregory attempted, from the north, to ascend the Victoria +River, but only reached the upper edge of the great desert. Dr. +Leichardt, who had previously travelled from Moreton Bay, on the eastern +coast, to Port Essington on the northern, attempted to cross from the +eastern to the western shores, and has not since been heard of. Mr. Eyre +made a journey, memorable for the misfortunes which attended it, and the +sufferings he endured, from Adelaide round the head of the great bay, or +Bight of Southern Australia, to Perth, the capital of Western Australia; +and much more recently Colonel Egerton Warburton succeeded in crossing +from the telegraphic line to the western coast across the northern part +of the great wilderness, nearly touching the farthest point reached by +Mr. Gregory. + +EYRE'S JOURNEY. + +It was in the year 1840, only four years after the foundation of South +Australia, that the first great attempt to discover a route from Adelaide +to the settlements in Western Australia was made. There then resided in +South Australia a man of great energy and restless activity, Edward John +Eyre, whose name was afterwards known throughout the world in connexion +with the Jamaica outbreak of 1865, and the measures which, as Governor, +he adopted for repressing it. It was anticipated that a profitable trade +between the colonies might be carried on if sheep and other live-stock +could be transferred from one to the other in a mode less expensive than +was afforded by the sea route between Adelaide and the Swan River. Eyre +did not believe in the possibility of establishing a practicable route, +but urged, through the press, the desirability of exploring the vast +regions to the north, which he anticipated would afford a good and +profitable field for adventurous enterprise. He offered to lead an +expedition which should explore the country around the great salt lake +lying to the north-west of the settled portion of the colony, and to +which the name of Lake Torrens had been given. Very little was known of +this lake, and absolutely nothing of the country beyond. The general +supposition, in which Eyre shared, was that there existed a large space +of barren land, most probably the bed of a sea which had at one time +divided the continent into several islands; but it was hoped that no +insuperable difficulties in the way of crossing it would present +themselves, and beyond might be a fertile and valuable district, offering +an almost unbounded field for settlement, and with which permanent +communications might without great difficulty be established. Some +geographers were of opinion that an inland sea might be in existence, +and, if so, of course water communication with the northern half of +Australia could be effected. + +Mr. Eyre's proposition found ready acceptance with the colonists, The +Government granted 100 pounds--a small sum indeed--but the colony was +then young, and far from being in flourishing circumstances. Friends lent +their assistance, enthusiasm was aroused, and in little more than three +weeks from the time when Eyre proposed the expedition, he started on his +journey. Five Europeans accompanied him, and two natives, black boys, +were attached to the party, which was provided with thirteen horses, +forty sheep, and provisions for three months. Lake Torrens was reached, +and then the difficulties of the expedition began. Although dignified +with the name of lake, it proved to be an enormous swamp, without surface +water, and the mud coated with a thin layer of salt. The party struggled +to effect a passage, and penetrated into the slime for six miles, until +they were in imminent danger of sinking. The lake, or rather salt swamp, +presented a barrier which Eyre considered it impossible to overcome. The +party turned in a westerly direction, and reached the sea at Port +Lincoln. Here a little open boat was obtained, and Mr. Scott, Eyre's +courageous companion, undertook to attempt to reach Adelaide and obtain +further supplies. This he successfully accomplished, returning in the +Water Witch with stores and provisions, two more men, and some kangaroo +dogs. Thus reinforced, the party reached Fowler's Bay in the great Bight +of South Australia. The map shows that a journey of more than 200 miles +must have been made before the point was reached. Thence they attempted +to make their way round the head of the Bight, but were twice baffled by +want of water. Nothing daunted, Eyre made a third attempt, and succeeded +in penetrating fifty miles beyond the head of the Bight. But the result +was achieved only at a cost which the little party could ill sustain. +Four of the best horses perished, which deprived Eyre of the means of +carrying provisions, and he had to decide between abandoning the +expedition altogether or still further reducing the number of his +companions. Mr. Scott and three men returned to Adelaide, leaving behind +a man named Baxter, who had long been in Eyre's employ as an overseer or +factotum; the two natives who had first started with him, and a boy, +Wylie, who had before been in Eyre's service, and who had been brought +back in the cutter. + +Six months after Eyre had started from Adelaide, he was left with only +four companions to continue the journey. He had acquired considerable +experience of the privations to be encountered, but refused to comply +with the wishes of Colonel Gawler, the Governor, to abandon the +expedition as hopeless, and return to Adelaide. Indeed, with +characteristic inflexibility--almost approaching to obstinacy--he +resolved to attempt the western route along the shore of the Great +Bight--a journey which, only a few months before, he had himself +described as impracticable. + +The cutter which had been stationed at Fowler Bay, to afford assistance +if required, departed on the 31st of January, 1841, and Eyre and his +small party were left to their fate. He had been defeated in the attempt +to push forward in a northward direction, and he resolved not to return +without having accomplished something which would justify the confidence +of the public in his energy and courageous spirit of adventure. If he +could not reach the north, he would attempt the western route, whatever +might be the result of his enterprise. After resting to recruit the +strength of his party, Eyre resolutely set out, on the 25th of February, +on what proved to be a journey attended by almost unexampled demands upon +human endurance. + +Nine horses, one pony, six sheep, and a provision of flour, tea, and +sugar for nine weeks, formed the slender stores of the little party, +which resolutely set forward to track an unknown path to the west. +Accompanied by one of the blacks, Eyre went on in advance to find water. +For five days, during which time he travelled about 140 miles, no water +was obtained, and the distress endured by men and animals was extreme. It +is not necessary to dwell on every incident of this terrible journey. +Eyre's descriptions, animated by remembrances of past sufferings, possess +a graphic vigour which cannot be successfully emulated. Sometimes it was +found necessary to divide the party, so wretched was the country, and so +difficult was it to obtain sufficient water in even the most limited +supply for man and beast. Once Eyre was alone for six days, with only +three quarts of water, some of which evaporated, and more was spilt. But +his indomitable determination to accomplish the journey on which he had +resolved never failed. He knew that at least 600 miles of desert country +lay between him and the nearest settlement of Western Australia; but even +that prospect, the certain privations, the probable miserable death, did +not daunt him in the journey. The horses broke down from thirst and +fatigue; the pony died; the survivors crawled languidly about, "like +dogs, looking to their masters only for aid." After a few days, during +which no water had been obtainable, a dew fell, and Eyre collected a +little moisture with a sponge, the black boys with pieces of rag. To +their inexpressible joy, some sand-hills were reached, and, after +digging, a supply of water was obtained for their refreshment, and for +six days the party rested by the spot to recruit their strength. The +overseer and one of the natives then went back forty-seven miles to +recover the little store of provisions they had been compelled to +abandon. Two out of the three horses he took with him broke down, and +with great difficulty he succeeded in rejoining Eyre. At this time the +party were 650 miles from their destination, with only three weeks' +provisions, estimated on the most reduced scale. Baxter, the overseer, +wished to attempt to return; but, Eyre being resolute, the overseer +loyally determined to stay with him to the last. One horse was killed for +food; dysentery broke out; the natives deserted them, but came back +starving and penitent, and were permitted to remain with the white men. +Then came the tragedy which makes this narrative so conspicuously +terrible, even in the annals of Australian exploration. Two of the black +men shot the overseer, Baxter, as he slept, and then ran away, perishing, +it is supposed, miserably in the desert. Eyre, when some distance from +the place where poor Baxter rested, looking after the horses, heard the +report of the gun and hurried back, arriving just in time to receive the +pathetic look of farewell from the murdered man, who had served him so +long and so faithfully. + +Wylie, the black boy, who had been with Eyre in Adelaide, now alone +remained, and it is scarcely possible to imagine a more appalling +situation than that in which Eyre then found himself. The murderers had +carried away nearly the whole of the scanty stock of provisions, leaving +only forty pounds of flour, a little tea and sugar, and four gallons of +water. They had also taken the two available guns, and nearly all the +ammunition. The body of Baxter was wrapped in a blanket--they could not +even dig a grave in the barren rock. Left with his sole companion, Eyre +sadly resumed the march, their steps tracked by the two blacks, who +probably meditated further murders; but, with only cowardly instincts, +they dared not approach the intrepid man, who at length outstripped them, +and they were never heard of more. Still no water was found for 150 +miles; then a slight supply, and the two men struggled on, daily becoming +weaker, living on horse-flesh, an occasional kangaroo, and the few fish +that were to be caught--for it must be remembered that at no time were +they far from the coast. + +On the 2nd of June, nearly four months after they had bidden good-bye to +the cutter at Fowler's Bay, they stood on the cliffs, looking out over +the ocean, when they saw in the distance two objects which were soon +recognized as boats, and shortly afterwards, to their unbounded joy, they +discerned the masts of a vessel on the farther side of a small rocky +island. Animated by a new life, Eyre pushed on until he reached a point +whence he succeeded in hailing the ship, and a boat was sent off. The +vessel proved to be a French whaler, the Mississippi, commanded by an +Englishman, Captain Rossiter. The worn-out travellers stayed on board for +a fortnight, experiencing the utmost kindness, and with recruited +strength and food and clothing, they bade a grateful farewell to the +captain and crew, and resumed their journey. + +For twenty-three days more Eyre and his attendant Wylie pursued their +way. Rain fell heavily, and the cold was intense; but at length, on the +27th of July, they reached Albany, in Western Australia, and the journey +was accomplished. + +For more than twelve months Eyre had been engaged forcing his way from +Adelaide to the Western colony; and the incidents of the journey have +been dwelt upon because afterwards I passed over the same ground, though +in the opposite direction, and the records of Eyre's expedition were of +the greatest service to me, by at least enabling me to guard against a +repetition of the terrible sufferings he endured. + +EXPLORATIONS BY LEICHARDT. + +It is further necessary to refer to another of the journeys of +exploration which preceded my own--that of the unfortunate Leichardt. He +endeavoured to cross the continent from east to west, starting from +Moreton Bay, Queensland, hoping to reach the Western Australian +settlements. In 1844 Leichardt had succeeded in crossing the +north-western portion of the continent from Moreton Bay to Port +Essington, and he conceived the gigantic project of reaching Western +Australia. Towards the end of 1847, accompanied by eight men, with +provisions estimated at two years' supply, he started on his journey. He +took with him an enormous number of animals--180 sheep, 270 goats, 40 +bullocks, 15 horses, and 13 mules. They must have greatly encumbered his +march, and the difficulty of obtaining food necessarily much impeded his +movements. His original intention was first to steer north, following for +some distance his previous track, and then, as opportunity offered, to +strike westward and make clear across the continent. After disastrous +wanderings for seven months, in the course of which they lost the whole +of their cattle and sheep, the party returned. + +Disappointed, but not discouraged, Leichardt resolved on another attempt +to achieve the task he had set himself. With great difficulty he obtained +some funds; organized a small but ill-provided party, and again started +for the interior. The last ever heard of him was a letter, dated the 3rd +of April, 1848. He was then in the Fitzroy Downs; he wrote in good +spirits, hopefully as to his prospects: "Seeing how much I have been +favoured in my present progress, I am full of hopes that our Almighty +Protector will allow me to bring my darling scheme to a successful +termination." + +THE FATE OF LEICHARDT. + +From that day the fate of Leichardt and his companions has been involved +in mystery. He was then on the Cogoon River, in Eastern Australia, at +least 1500 miles from the nearest station on the western side of the +continent. His last letter gives no clue to the track he intended to +pursue. If a westerly course had been struck he would have nearly +traversed the route which subsequently Warburton travelled; but no trace +of him has ever been discovered. Several expeditions were undertaken to +ascertain his fate; at various times expectations were aroused by finding +trees marked L; but Leichardt himself, on previous journeys, had met with +trees so marked, by whom is unknown. Natives found in the remote interior +were questioned; they told vague stories of the murder of white men, but +all investigations resulted in the conclusion that the statements were as +untrustworthy as those generally made to explorers who question +uninformed, ignorant natives. The white man's experience is usually that +a native only partially comprehends the question; he does not understand +what is wanted, but is anxious to please, as he expects something to eat, +and he says what he thinks is most likely to be satisfactory. + +Leichardt was certainly ill-provided for an expedition of the magnitude +he contemplated, and it appears to be at the least as probable that he +succumbed to the hardships he encountered, or was swept away by a flood, +as that he was murdered by the blacks. Twenty-seven years have elapsed +since he disappeared in the interior; yet the mystery attending his fate +has not ceased to excite a desire to know the fate of so daring an +explorer, and ascertain something definite respecting his course--a +desire which was one of the principal motives that prompted my first +expedition into the unknown interior dividing the west from the east. + +In 1872, Mr. Giles headed an exploring party from Melbourne, which +succeeded in making known a vast district hitherto unexplored; but his +progress was stopped, when he had reached longitude 129 degrees 40 +minutes, by a large salt lake, the limits of which could not be +ascertained. In the following year Mr. Gosse, at the head of a party +equipped by the South Australian Government, started from nearly the same +point of the telegraph line, and at the same period as the Warburton +expedition, but was compelled to return after eight months' absence, +having reached longitude 126 degrees 59 minutes. Gosse found the country +generally poor and destitute of water. He was perhaps unfortunate in +experiencing an unusually dry season; but his deliberate conclusion was, +"I do not think a practicable route will ever be found between the lower +part of Western Australia and the telegraph line." + +VARIOUS EXPEDITIONS. + +At the instance of Baron Von Mueller, and assisted by a small +subscription from the South Australian Government, Mr. Giles made a +second attempt to penetrate westward. He reached the 125th degree of east +longitude, and discovered and traversed four distinct mountain ranges, on +one of which Mr. Gosse shortly afterwards found his tracks. One of his +companions, Mr. Gibson, lost his way and perished in the desert, and +therefore Mr. Giles turned his face eastwards, and, after an absence of +twelve months, reached Adelaide. He encountered many perils, having been +nine times attacked by the natives, probably in the attempt to obtain +water; and on one occasion was severely wounded and nearly captured. + +On the 20th March, 1874, Mr. Ross, with his son and another European, +three Arabs, fourteen horses, and sixteen camels, started from the +telegraph line, near the Peake station in South Australia. He was +compelled to return through want of water, although, soon after starting, +he had greatly reduced the number of his party by sending back three of +his companions, two of the horses, and twelve of the camels. + +Such, in brief, have been the results of the efforts made to cross +Australia between the telegraph line and the west coast, and ascertain +the probability of establishing a practicable route. I have referred to +them to show how persistent has been the desire to achieve the exploit, +and how little daunted by repeated failures have been Australian +explorers. I now propose to relate my own experiences--the results of +three journeys of exploration, conducted by myself. The first was +undertaken in the hope of discovering some traces of Leichardt; the +second nearly retraced the route of Eyre; the third was across the desert +from Western Australia to the telegraph line in South Australia. The +first journey did not result in obtaining the information sought for; the +second and third journeys were successfully accomplished. + + +CHAPTER 2. + +FIRST EXPEDITION IN SEARCH OF LEICHARDT. + +Statements made by the Natives. +An Expedition prepared. +Leader appointed. +Official Instructions. +The Journal. + +Early in 1869, Dr. Von Mueller, of the Melbourne Botanic Gardens, a +botanist of high attainments, proposed to the Government of Western +Australia that an expedition should be undertaken from the colony for the +purpose of ascertaining, if possible, the fate of the lost explorer, +Leichardt. Reports had reached Perth of natives met with in the eastern +districts, who had stated that, about twenty years before (a date +corresponding with that of the last authentic intelligence received from +Leichardt), a party of white men had been murdered. This tale was +repeated, but perhaps would not have made much impression if a gentleman, +Mr. J.H. Monger, when on a trip eastward in search of sheep-runs, had not +been told by his native guide that he had been to the very spot where the +murder was committed, and had seen the remains of the white men. His +story was very circumstantial; he described the spot, which, he said, was +near a large lake, so large that it looked like the sea, and that the +white men were attacked and killed while making a damper--bread made of +flour mixed with water, and cooked on hot ashes. So certain was he as to +the exact locality, that he offered to conduct a party to the place. + +This appeared like a trustworthy confirmation of the reports which had +reached the colony, and created a great impression, so that the +Government felt it a duty incumbent on them to make an effort to +ascertain the truth of this statement, and Dr. Von Mueller's offer to +lead an expedition was accepted. + +I was then, as now, an officer of the Survey Department, and employed in +a distant part of the colony. I was ordered to repair to headquarters, to +confer with the authorities on the subject, and was offered the +appointment of second in command and navigator. This was a proposition +quite in accordance with my tastes, for I had long felt a deep interest +in the subject of Australian exploration, and ardently desired to take my +share in the work. I at once arranged the equipment of the expedition, +but, while so engaged, the mail from Melbourne brought a letter from Dr. +Von Mueller, to the effect that his other engagements would not permit +him to take the lead as proposed, and I was appointed to take his place +in the expedition. + +OFFICIAL INSTRUCTIONS. + +The Honourable Captain Roe, R.N., the Surveyor-General, who had himself +been a great explorer, undertook the preparation of a set of Instructions +for my guidance; and they so accurately describe the objects of the +journey, and the best modes of carrying them out, that I transcribe the +official letter:-- + +Survey Office, Perth, + +13th April, 1869. + +Sir, + +His Excellency the Governor having been pleased to appoint you to lead an +expedition into the interior of Western Australia for the purpose of +searching for the remains of certain white men reported by the natives to +have been killed by the aborigines some years ago, many miles beyond the +limits of our settled country, and it being deemed probable that the +white men referred to formed part of an exploring party under the command +of Dr. Leichardt, endeavouring to penetrate overland from Victoria to +this colony several years ago, I have been directed to furnish the +following instructions for your guidance on this interesting service, and +for enabling you to carry out the wishes of the Government in connexion +therewith. + +2. Your party will consist of six persons in the whole, well armed, and +made up of Mr. George Monger as second in command, Mr. Malcolm Hamersley +as third in command, a farrier blacksmith to be hired at Newcastle, and +two well-known and reliable natives, Tommy Windich and Jemmy, who have +already acquired considerable experience under former explorers. + +3. An agreement to serve on the expedition in the above capacities has +been prepared, and should be signed by each European member of the party +previous to starting. + +4. A saddle-horse has been provided for each member of the party, +together with ---- pack-horses to transport such portions of the outfit +as cannot be carried by the former. A three-horsed cart will also +accompany the expedition as far as may be found practicable through the +unsettled country, and thereby relieve the pack-horses as much as +possible. + +5. All preparations for the journey being now complete, it is desirable +that you should lose no time in starting, so as to arrive at the +commencement of the unexplored country by the end of the present month, +or beginning of the expected winter rains. It has been, however, already +ascertained from native information that a considerable quantity of rain +has recently fallen over the regions to be explored, and that no +impediment may be anticipated from a scarcity of water there. + +6. The route to be followed might advantageously commence at Newcastle, +where some of your party and several of your horses are to be picked up, +and thence proceed north-easterly to Goomaling, and 100 miles further in +the same general direction, passing eastward to Mounts Chunbaren and +Kenneth of Mr. Austin's, to the eastern farthest of that explorer, in 119 +degrees East and 28 3/4 degrees South. Thence the general north-easterly +route of the expedition must be governed by the information afforded by +your native guides as to the locality in which they have reported the +remains of white men are to be found. + +7. On arriving at that spot, the greatest care is to be taken to bring +away all such remains as may be discovered by a diligent search of the +neighbourhood. By friendly and judicious treatment of the local natives, +it is also probable that several articles of European manufacture which +are said to be still in their possession might be bartered from them, and +serve towards identifying their former owners. The prospect of obtaining +from the natives, at this remote date, anything like a journal, +note-book, or map, would indeed be small; but the greatest interest would +be attached to the smallest scrap of written or printed paper, however +much defaced, if only covered with legible characters. A more promising +mode by which the former presence of European explorers on the spot might +be detected is the marks which are generally made on the trees by +travellers to record the number or reference to a halting-place, or the +initials of some of the party. Thus the letter L has in several instances +been found by searching parties to have been legibly cut on trees in the +interior of the eastern colonies, and in localities supposed to have been +visited by the eminent explorer alluded to. It is needless to point out +that metal articles, such as axes, tomahawks, gun and pistol barrels, +iron-work of pack-saddles, and such like, would be far more likely to +have survived through the lapse of years than articles of a more +perishable nature. + +8. After exhausting all conceivable means of obtaining information on the +spot, and from the nature of surrounding country, an attempt should be +made to follow back on the track of the unfortunate deceased, which is +said to have been from the eastward and towards the settled part of this +colony. Here a close and minute scrutiny of the trees might prove of +great value in clearing up existing doubts, especially at and about any +water-holes and springs near which explorers would be likely to bivouac. + +9. After completing an exhaustive research and inquiry into this +interesting and important part of your duties, the remainder of the time +that may be at your disposal, with reference to your remaining stock of +provisions, should be employed in exploring the surrounding country, in +tracing any considerable or smaller stream it may be your good fortune to +discover, and generally in rendering the service entrusted to your +guidance as extensively useful and valuable to this colony as +circumstances may admit. + +10. Towards effecting this object, your homeward journey should, if +possible, be over country not previously traversed by the outward route, +or by any former explorers, and should be so regulated as to expose your +party to no unnecessary risk on account of the falling short of supplies. + +11. In your intercourse with the aborigines of the interior, many of whom +will have no previous personal knowledge of the white man, I need +scarcely commend to you a policy of kindness and forbearance mixed with +watchfulness and firmness, as their future bearing towards our remote +colonists may be chiefly moulded by early impressions. + +12. To render the expedition as extensively useful as possible, I would +urge you, in the interests of science, to make and preserve such +specimens in natural history as may come within the reach of yourself and +party, especially in the departments of botany, geology, and zoology, +which may be greatly enriched by productions of country not yet +traversed. + +13. Direct reference to minor objects, and to matters of detail, is +purposely omitted, in full reliance on your judgment and discretion, and +on your personal desire to render the expedition as productive as +possible of benefit to the colony and to science in general. + +14. In this spirit I may add that the brief instructions herein given for +your general guidance are by no means intended to fetter your own +judgment in carrying out the main object of the expedition in such other +and different manner as may appear to you likely to lead to beneficial +results. In the belief that such results will be achieved by the energy +and perseverance of yourself and of those who have so nobly volunteered +to join you in the enterprise, and with confident wishes for your +success, in which H.E. largely participates, + +I remain, Sir, + +Your obedient Servant, + +J.S. ROE, Surveyor-General. + +John Forrest, Esquire, Leader of Exploring Expedition to the North-East. + +Mr. George Monger (brother of the gentleman who gave the information), +who accompanied me as second in command, had previously been on an +expedition to the eastward, and Jemmy Mungaro was the black who said he +had seen the spot where the remains of the white men were. His +persistence in the statement encouraged me to hope that I might be the +first to announce positively the fate of the lost explorer; but I had +then to learn how little dependence can be placed on the testimony of +Australian aborigines. + +On the 15th of April, 1869, I began the journey. I was well supplied with +instruments for making observations, so as to ascertain our daily +position. A knowledge of at least the leading principles of the art of +navigation is as necessary to the explorer as to the mariner on the +ocean. Our stock of provisions consisted of 800 pounds of flour, 270 +pounds of pork, 135 pounds of sugar, and 17 pounds of tea; and we each +took two suits of clothes. + +The party were all in good spirits. For myself I was hopeful of success, +and my white companions shared my feelings. The natives were, as they +generally are, except when food is scarce, or their anger excited, on the +best terms with everybody and everything, and Jemmy Mungaro, so far as +could be judged from his demeanour, might have been the most veracious +guide who ever led a party of white men through difficulties and dangers +on an expedition of discovery. + +Day by day I noted down the incidents of the journey, and that Journal I +now submit to the reader. + +JOURNAL OF PROCEEDINGS OF AN EXPLORING EXPEDITION IN SEARCH OF THE +REMAINS OF THE LATE DR. LEICHARDT AND PARTY, UNDERTAKEN BY ORDER OF THE +GOVERNMENT OF WESTERN AUSTRALIA, BY JOHN FORREST, GOVERNMENT SURVEYOR. + +Sir, + +In pursuance of instructions received from you, the exploring party under +my command consisted of the following persons, namely, Mr. George Monger, +as second in command; Mr. Malcolm Hamersley, as third in command; +probation prisoner, David Morgan, as shoeing smith, and two natives +(Tommy Windich and Jemmy Mungaro). The latter native gave Mr. J.H. Monger +the information respecting the murder of white men in the eastward. +Reached Newcastle on the 17th and left on Monday, 19th, with a +three-horse cart and teamster and thirteen horses, making a total of +sixteen horses. Reached Mombekine, which is about sixteen miles +East-North-East from Newcastle. + +April 20th. +Continued journey to Goomalling, sixteen miles, which we reached at 1 +p.m., and devoted the remainder of the afternoon to weighing and packing +rations, etc., for a final start. + +21st. +Leaving Goomalling at 10.30 a.m., we travelled in a northerly direction +for nine miles, and reached Walyamurra Lake; thence about East-North-East +for seven miles, we encamped at a well on north side of Kombekine Lake. +The water was very bad from opossums being drowned in it, and there was +hardly any feed. + +22nd. +Hearing from a number of natives that there was no water in the direction +we intended steering, namely, to Mount Churchman, we decided on changing +our course and proceed there via Waddowring, in latitude 31 degrees south +and longitude 118 degrees east. Steering about South-South-East for eight +miles, through dense scrubby thickets, which we had great difficulty in +getting the cart through, we struck the road from Goomalling to +Waddowring, which we followed along about east for eight miles, and +camped at a well called Naaning, with hardly any feed. + +23rd. +Mr. George Roe (who had come from Northam to bid us farewell) and my +teamster left us this morning to return to Newcastle. Considerable delay +having occurred in collecting the horses, we did not start till twelve +o'clock, when we steered East-North-East for eight miles over scrubby +sand-plains, and camped at a well called Pingeperring, with very little +feed for our horses. + +24th. +Started at 8.50 a.m. and steered about east for seven miles over scrubby, +undulating sand-plains, thence North 50 degrees East magnetic for two +miles, thence North 160 degrees for one mile, and thence about North 80 +degrees East magnetic for five miles over scrubby sand-plains. We camped +at a spring called Dwartwollaking at 5 p.m. Barometer 29.45; thermometer +71 degrees. + +25th (Sunday). +Did not travel to-day. Took observations for time, and corrected our +watches. Found camp to be in south latitude 31 degrees 10 minutes by +meridian altitude of sun. + +26th. +Travelled in about the direction of North 73 degrees East magnetic for +twenty-eight miles. We reached Yarraging, the farthest station to the +eastward, belonging to Messrs. Ward and Adams, where we bivouacked for +the night. + +27th. +Bought some rations from Ward and Co., making our supply equal to last +three months on the daily allowance of a pound and a half of flour, half +a pound of pork, a quarter of a pound of sugar, and half an ounce of tea +per man. Being unable to take the cart any further, and wishing to have +the team horses with me, I arranged with Ward and Co. to take it to +Newcastle for 2 pounds. Packed up and left Yarraging with ten pack and +six riding horses, and steering North 320 degrees East magnetic for eight +miles we reached Waddowring springs in south latitude 31 degrees and +longitude 118 degrees East. + +28th. +Started this morning with Mr. Monger, Tommy Windich, and Dunbatch (a +native of this locality) in search of water in order to shift the party. +Travelling about north for eleven miles we found a native well, and by +digging it out seven feet we obtained sufficient water for ourselves and +horses. I therefore sent Mr. Monger back with instructions to bring the +party to this spot, called Cartubing. I then proceeded in a northerly +direction, and at two miles passed water in granite rocks at a spot +called Inkanyinning. Shortly afterwards we passed another native well, +called Yammaling, from which we steered towards a spot called +Beebynyinning; but, night setting in, our guide lost his way, and we were +obliged to camp for the night in a thicket without water and very little +feed. + +29th. +This morning Dunbatch brought us to Beebynyinning, where we obtained a +little water by digging. After digging a well we returned to Cartubing, +where we met the party and bivouacked on a patch of green feed. + +30th. +Shifted the party from Cartubing to Beebynyinning, watering our horses on +the way at Inkanyinning and Yammaling, which was fortunate, as there was +very little water at Beebynyinning. + +May 1st. +Steering about North-East for eight miles over grassy country, we reached +and encamped at Danjinning, a small grassy spot, with native well, by +deepening which about ten feet we obtained a plentiful supply of water. +Mr. Austin visited Danjinning in 1854, and we could see the tracks of his +horses distinctly. Barometer 29. Every appearance of rain, which we are +in much want of. + +2nd (Sunday). +Rested at Danjinning, which I found to be in south latitude 30 degrees 34 +minutes by meridian altitude of the sun. Read Divine Service. Jemmy shot +six gnows and a wurrong to-day. + +3rd. +Steering in a northerly direction for sixteen miles, we reached +Yalburnunging, a small grassy spot, with water in a native well, which we +deepened four feet, and procured a plentiful supply. For the first nine +miles our route lay over scrubby sand-plains, after which we came into +dense thickets and stunted gums. + +4th. +Steering towards Mount Churchman, or Geelabbing, for about fifteen miles, +we reached a grassy spot called Billeburring, and found water in a native +well, probably permanent. At eight miles we passed a water-hole in some +granite rocks, called Gnaragnunging. Dense acacia and cypress thickets +most of the way. + +5th. +Steering in a northerly direction for about twelve miles, we reached +Mount Churchman, or Geelabbing, an immense bare granite hill, and camped, +with plenty of feed and water. At five miles passed a spring called +Coolee. Country very dense and scrubby; no feed in any of the thickets. +From the summit of Mount Churchman, Ningham of Mr. Monger, or Mount +Singleton of Mr. A.C. Gregory, bore North 312 degrees 30 minutes East +magnetic. This evening a party of nine natives (friends of our native +Jemmy) joined us, who state that a long time ago a party of white men and +horses died at a place called Bouincabbajibimar, also that a gun and a +number of other articles are there, and volunteer to accompany us to the +spot. + +6th. +Left Mount Churchman in company with the nine natives, and travelled +about North-North-West for ten miles to a small water-hole called +Woodgine, thence in a northerly direction to a branch of Lake Moore, +which we crossed without difficulty, and, following along its north shore +for three miles, we bivouacked at a spring close to the lake called +Cundierring, with splendid feed around the granite rocks. + +7th. +Steering in a northerly direction for eleven miles, through dense +thickets of acacia and cypress, we reached some granite rocks with water +on them, called Curroning, and bivouacked. Have fears that the +information received from the natives relates to nine of Mr. Austin's +horses that died from poison at Poison Rock. They now state they are only +horses' bones, and not men's, as first stated. + +8th. +Travelling in the direction of North 30 degrees East for about ten miles, +we reached some granite rocks, with a water-hole in them, called +Coorbedar. Passed over very rough, low, quartz hills, covered with acacia +thickets, etc. At four miles passed a water-hole called Yeergolling; at +seven miles a small one called Gnurra; and another at eight miles called +Munnarra. + +9th (Sunday). +Rested our horses at Coorbedar. Found camp to be in south latitude 29 +degrees 24 minutes 43 seconds by meridian altitudes of the sun and +Regulus, and in longitude 118 degrees 6 minutes East. From a quartz hill +half a mile South-West from Coorbedar, Mount Singleton bore North 268 +degrees 15 minutes East. The supply of water from the rock having been +used, I went, in company with Mr. Hamersley, to a spot one mile and a +half South-South-West from Coorbedar, called Dowgooroo, where we dug a +well and procured a little water, to which I intend shifting to-morrow, +as I propose staying in this vicinity for two days, so as to give me time +to visit Warne, the large river spoken of by Jemmy. + +10th. +Started this morning in company with Tommy Windich and a native boy (one +of the nine who joined us at Mount Churchman) to examine the locality +called Warne. Steering North 42 degrees East magnetic for about seven +miles, we came to a grassy flat about half a mile wide, with a stream-bed +trending south running through it. The natives state it to be dry in +summer, but at present there is abundance of water, and in wet seasons +the flat must be almost all under water. After following the flat about +seven miles we returned towards camp, about five miles, and bivouacked. + +11th. +Returned this morning to Dowgooroo and found all well. Rain, which we +were much in want of, fell lightly most of the day. Barometer 28.50; +thermometer 61 degrees. + +12th. +Steered this morning about North 38 degrees East magnetic for eight +miles, and camped by a shallow lake of fresh water--the bivouac of the +10th. Here we met a party of twenty-five natives (friends of my native +Jemmy and the nine who joined us at Mount Churchman) who had a grand +corroboree in honour of the expedition. They stated that at +Bouincabbajilimar there were the remains of a number of horses, but no +men's bones or guns, and pointed in the direction of Poison Rock, where +Mr. Austin lost nine horses. Being now satisfied that the natives were +alluding to the remains of Mr. Austin's horses, I resolved to steer to +the eastward, towards a spot called by the native, Jemmy, Noondie, where +he states he heard the remains of white men were. + +13th. +Bidding farewell to all the natives, we steered in a south-easterly +direction for fifteen miles, and camped in a rough hollow called +Durkying; cypress and acacia thickets the whole way. + +14th. +One of our horses having strayed, we did not start till 10.40 a.m., when +we steered in about a South-East direction for eight miles, and camped on +an elevated grassy spot, called Mingan, with water in the granite rocks, +probably permanent. The thickets were a little less dense than usual, but +without any grass, except at the spots mentioned. By meridian altitudes +of Mars and Regulus, we were in south latitude 29 degrees 30 minutes 30 +seconds, and in longitude about 118 degrees 30 minutes east. + +15th. +Steering North-East for four miles, and North-North-East for seven miles, +over sandy soil, with thickets of acacia and cypress, we bivouacked on an +elevated grassy spot, called Earroo, with water in granite rocks. + +16th (Sunday). +Rested at Earroo; horses enjoying good feed. By meridian altitudes of +Regulus and Mars, camp at Earroo was in south latitude 29 degrees 23 +minutes 3 seconds, and in longitude 118 degrees 35 minutes East; weather +very cloudy; barometer 29. + +17th. +Started 7.50 a.m., and steered North 60 degrees East for about five +miles; thence about North 50 degrees East for eight miles; thence North +85 degrees East for five miles, to a small grassy spot called Croobenyer, +with water in granite rocks. Sandy soil, thickets of cypress, acacia, +etc., most of the way. Found camp to be in south latitude 29 degrees 12 +minutes 43 seconds by meridian altitudes of Regulus and Aquilae (Altair); +barometer 28.70. + +18th. +Steering North 70 degrees East for two miles and a half, we saw a low +hill called Yeeramudder, bearing North 62 degrees 30 minutes East +magnetic, distant about seventeen miles, for which we steered, and camped +to the north of it, on a fine patch of grass with a little rain-water on +some granite rocks. At eleven miles crossed a branch of a dry salt lake, +which appears to run far to the eastward. + +19th. +Steering about North 85 degrees East magnetic for fourteen miles, +attempted to cross the lake we had been leaving a little to the +southward, making for a spot supposed by us to be the opposite shore, but +on arriving at which was found to be an island. As we had great +difficulty in reaching it, having to carry all the loads the last 200 +yards, our horses saving themselves with difficulty, and, being late, I +resolved to leave the loads and take the horses to another island, where +there was a little feed, on reaching which we bivouacked without water, +all being very tired. + +20th. +On examining this immense lake I found that it was impossible to get the +horses and loads across it; I was therefore compelled to retrace my steps +to where we first entered it, which the horses did with great difficulty +without their loads. I was very fortunate in finding water and feed about +three miles North-North-West, to which we took the horses and bivouacked, +leaving on the island all the loads, which we shall have to carry at +least half way, three quarters of a mile, the route being too boggy for +the horses. + +HEAVY WORK IN THE BOG. + +21st. +Went over to the lake in company with Messrs. Monger, Hamersley, and +Tommy Windich, with four horses. Succeeded in getting all the loads to +the mainland, carrying them about three quarters of a mile up to our +knees in mud, from which point the lake became a little firmer, and the +horses carried the loads out. I cannot speak too highly of the manner in +which my companions assisted me on this trying occasion. Having been +obliged to work barefooted in the mud, the soles of Mr. Hamersley's feet +were in a very bad state, and he was hardly able to walk for a fortnight. +Seeing a native fire several miles to the southward, I intend sending +Tommy Windich and Jemmy in search of the tribe to-morrow, in order that I +may question them respecting the reported death of white men to the +eastward. + +22nd. +Went over to the lake with all the horses, and brought the loads to the +camp. Started Tommy and Jemmy in search of the natives. After returning +to camp, overhauled all the pack bags, and dried and re-packed them, +ready for a fresh start on Monday morning. Also washed the mud off the +horses, who appear to be doing well, and fast recovering from the effects +of the bogging. Tommy and Jemmy returned this evening, having seen some +natives after dark, but were unable to get near them. + +23rd (Sunday). +Went with Tommy Windich and Jemmy on foot to follow the tracks of the +natives seen yesterday. Seeing no chance of overtaking them, as they +appeared to be making off at a great rate, and were twelve hours in +advance of us, we returned, after following the tracks for five miles +across the lake. The camp was reached at 2 p.m., after we had walked +about fifteen miles. This spot, which I named Retreat Rock, I found to be +in south latitude 29 degrees 3 minutes 51 seconds by meridian altitudes +of Regulus and Mars, and in about longitude 119 degrees 16 minutes east. + +24th. +Some of the horses having strayed, we were not able to start till 10.40 +a.m., when we steered in about East-North-East direction for sixteen +miles, and camped on a piece of rising ground, with very little water. +From this bivouac, a very remarkable peaked hill, called Woolling, which +I named Mount Elain, bore North 162 degrees 15 minutes East magnetic, +distant about twenty miles; and two conspicuous hills, close together, +called Yeadie and Bulgar, bore North 105 degrees East magnetic. Dense +thickets, acacia, cypress, etc., sandy soil with spinifex, most of the +way. + +DISCOVERY OF LAKE BARLEE. + +25th. +Steering for Yeadie and Bulgar for five miles, and came to some granite +rocks with water, where we gave drink to our thirsty horses. Leaving the +party to follow, I went with Jemmy in advance to look for water, which we +found in a rough stream-bed, and brought the party to it. This afternoon +went with Jemmy to the summit of Yeadie, and took a round of angles. The +local attraction was so great on this hill that the prismatic compass was +useless; luckily I had my pocket sextant with me, by which I obtained the +included angles. From the summit of Yeadie the view was very extensive. +The great lake that we had already followed for forty miles ran as far as +the eye could reach to the east and south, studded with numerous islands; +low ranges of hills in every direction. This immense lake I named Lake +Barlee, after the Colonial Secretary of Western Australia. By meridian +altitudes of Mars and Regulus, camp was in south latitude, 28 degrees 58 +minutes 50 seconds, and in longitude about 119 degrees 39 minutes East, +Yeadie bearing North 172 degrees East magnetic, distant about two miles. + +26th. +Moving in about a northerly direction for nine miles, we turned to the +eastward, rounded a branch of Lake Barlee, towards some loose granite +rocks, where we encamped, but could not find water. Sent Jemmy over to +another rock one mile southward, where he found a fine permanent +water-hole, to which we took the horses after dark. Distance travelled +to-day about eighteen miles. Tommy shot a fine emu, which was a great +treat to us all. + +27th. +Shifted the party over to the water found last night, one mile distant, +and camped. Found camp to be in south latitude 28 degrees 53 minutes, and +in longitude about 119 degrees 50 minutes east. Marked a small tree with +the letter F. close to the waterhole. + +28th. +Some of the horses having strayed, we did not start till 9.30 a.m., when +I went in advance of the party, in company with Jemmy, to look for water. +After following Lake Barlee for nine miles, it turned to the southward. +Then scouring the country in every direction for water without success, +we reached the tracks of the party (who had passed on), and, following +them over plains of spinifex and stunted gums, found them encamped with +plenty of water, which they had luckily discovered at sundown. Distance +travelled eighteen miles about true east. By meridian altitude of Bootes +(Arcturus), this bivouac is in south latitude 28 degrees 53 minutes 34 +seconds, and longitude about 120 degrees 9 minutes east. + +DISAPPOINTED EXPEDITIONS. + +29th. +Started in company with Tommy and Jemmy to explore the country eastward, +leaving the party to take off the horses' shoes for their relief. +Travelling in an easterly direction for eight miles over sandy soil and +spinifex, we reached the summit of a high hill, supposed by Jemmy to be +Noondie, which I named Mount Alexander, from which we saw another range +about eleven miles distant, bearing North 82 degrees 15 minutes East +magnetic, to which we proceeded, and found water in some granite rocks. +None of these hills, however, agreed with the description given by Jemmy; +and the expectations were at an end that he would succeed in showing us +the spot where the remains of white men were. Returning to camp, seven +miles, bivouacked on a grassy flat, without water or food. + +30th. (Sunday). +Started at dawn, with the saddles and rugs on our backs, in search of the +horses, and, after travelling a mile and a half on their tracks, found +them at a small water-hole passed by us yesterday. Saddled up and reached +camp at eleven o'clock, and found all well. Yesterday morning the dogs +caught an emu, off which we made a first-rate breakfast, not having had +anything to eat since the previous morning. Barometer 28.44. + +A DIFFICULTY WITH THE NATIVES. + +31st. +Started this morning in company with Mr. Monger and Jemmy in search of +natives, leaving Mr. Hamersley in charge, with instructions to proceed +eastward about twenty-two miles, to where I found water on the 29th. +After starting the party we steered in a South-South-East direction +towards a high range of hills, which I named Mount Bivou, about twelve +miles distant. To the westward of the range we found a fine water-hole in +some granite rocks, where we rested an hour to allow the horses to feed. +Continuing in about the same direction for five miles, we ascended a +rough range to have a view of the country. We descried a large fire to +the westward seven miles, towards which we proceeded, in the hope of +finding natives. When we were within half a mile we could hear hallooing +and shouting; and it was very evident there was a great muster (certainly +not less than 100) of natives, corrobberying, making a dreadful noise, +the dogs joining in chorus. Having stripped Jemmy, I told him to go and +speak to them, which he started to do in very good spirits. He soon +beckoned us to follow, and asked us to keep close behind him, as the +natives were what he called like "sheep flock." He appeared very nervous, +trembling from head to foot. After reassuring him, we tied up our horses, +and advanced through the thicket towards them. When getting in sight of +them, Jemmy commenced cooeying, and was answered by the natives; after +which he advanced and showed himself. As soon as they saw him, the +bloodthirsty villains rushed at him, and threw three dowaks, which he +luckily dodged; when fortunately one of the natives recognized him +(having seen Jemmy at Mount Elain when a little boy), and called to the +others not to harm him. Seeing Jemmy running towards the horses, Mr. +Monger and I thought it was time to retire, as we saw the mistake we had +made in leaving the horses. The thickets being dense, we had difficulty +in finding the horses quickly. On reaching them Mr. Monger found he had +dropped his revolver. Had not Jemmy been recognized, I feel sure we +should have had bloodshed, and might probably have lost our lives. +Mounting the horses, we advanced towards the natives, and had a short +talk with one of them who came to speak to Jemmy. There was a guard of +eight natives, with spears stripped, and dowaks in readiness, should we +prove hostile. Although I assured them we were friends, and asked them to +put down their spears, they took no notice of what was said. One native +told us not to sleep here, but to go away and not return, or the natives +would kill and eat us, after which he turned away as if he did not wish +to have any more words with us. It being now dark, we took his advice, +and retreated towards where we had dinner, five miles off. Camped in a +thicket without water, and tied up our horses, keeping watch all night. + +June 1st. +At daybreak saddled up our tired and hungry horses, and proceeded to +where we had dinner yesterday. After giving our horses two hours' grazing +and having had breakfast, started back towards the natives' camp, as I +wished to question them respecting the reported death of white men in +this neighbourhood. When we approached the natives' bivouac, we saw where +they had been following up our tracks in every direction, and Jemmy found +the place where they had picked up Mr. Monger's revolver. While Jemmy was +away looking for the revolver, Mr. Monger saw two natives following up +our trail, and within fifty yards of us. We both wheeled round and had +our guns in readiness, but soon perceived they were the same as were +friendly last night, and I called Jemmy to speak to them. At my request +they went and brought us Mr. Monger's revolver, which they stated they +had been warming near the fire! Fortunately for them, it did not go off. +On being questioned by Jemmy, they stated that the place Noondie (where +Jemmy stated he heard the remains of the white men were) was two days' +journey North-West from this spot; that there were the remains of horses, +but not of men, and they volunteered to show us the spot. Being now 1 +p.m., and having to meet the party to-night at a place about twenty-three +miles distant, we started at once, leaving the natives, who did not wish +to move to-day, but who apparently sincerely promised to come to our camp +to-morrow. Reached camp at the spot arranged an hour after dark, and +found all well. + +BIVOUACKING. + +2nd. +Rested our horses at the place, which I called the Two-spring Bivouac, +there being two small springs here. Re-stuffed with grass all the +pack-saddles, as some of the horses were getting sore backs. By meridian +altitude of sun found the camp to be in south latitude 28 degrees 51 +minutes 45 seconds, and in longitude about 120 degrees 30 minutes east. I +was very much annoyed at the natives not putting in appearance as +promised. + +3rd. +No sign of the natives this morning. I decided to steer in the direction +pointed out by them, and travelling about North 306 degrees East magnetic +for fifteen miles, we found water in some granite rocks, with very good +feed around, cypress and acacia thickets, light red loamy soil, destitute +of grass. + +4th. +Steering in about West-North-West direction for sixteen miles, the first +six of which were studded with granite rocks, good feed around them, +after which through poor sandy country, covered with spinifex. We +bivouacked in a thicket without water or feed, and tied up our horses. +Saw a natives' fire, but was unable to get near it. Barometer 28.52; +fine. + +5th. +After travelling in a northerly direction for seven miles without finding +water, and without seeing any hill answering the description given by +Jemmy, I struck about east for sixteen miles, and camped at a fine spring +near some granite rocks, with splendid feed around them. This is the first +good spring since leaving the settled districts. At 8 p.m., barometer +28.44; thermometer 72 degrees. + +6th (Sunday). +Rested at camp, which I called Depot Spring, and found to be in south +latitude 28 degrees 36 minutes 34 seconds by meridian altitude of sun. +Barometer at 8 a.m. 28.38; thermometer 57 degrees; at 5 p.m., barometer +28.30; thermometer 77 degrees. + +7th. +Started this morning, in company with Mr. Hamersley and Jemmy, to explore +the country to the northward, where we had seen a peaked hill. Went in +that direction about thirty miles, the first twenty of which were studded +with granite rocks, with fine feed around them. At twenty-seven miles +crossed a salt marsh, about one mile wide, and, continuing three miles +farther, reached the peaked hill, which was composed of granite, capped +with immense blocks, giving it a very remarkable appearance. Bivouacked +on North-West side of hill, at a small water-hole. + +8th. +This morning, after saddling up, we ascended the conical hill (which I +named Mount Holmes) and took a round of angles from it, after which we +struck North 81 degrees East magnetic to a granite range about eight +miles distant, where we found two fine water-holes, and rested an hour. +Thence in about a South-South-East direction for twelve miles, we +bivouacked without water on a small patch of feed. The day was very fine, +and the rainy appearance cleared off, much to our grief. + +9th. +At daybreak, no sound of horses' bells, and anticipating they had made +off in search of water, we put our saddles, guns, and rugs on our backs, +and started on their tracks. After following the tracks for nine miles we +came to a water-hole and had breakfast; afterwards we succeeded in +overtaking the horses in a grassy flat, about thirteen miles +South-South-East from our last night's bivouac. The last few miles our +troublesome load became very awkward and heavy. One of the horses had +broken his hobbles. Continuing in about the same course for six miles, we +struck about West-South-West for ten miles, and reached camp, where we +found all well, at 6 p.m. Barometer 28.64; cloudy. + +AN OLD NATIVE. + +10th. +Started again this morning in company with Mr. Monger and Jemmy, to +explore the country to the eastward, leaving Mr. Hamersley to shift the +party to our bivouac of the 2nd instant, about twenty-four miles +South-East from here. After travelling East-North-East for six miles, we +came upon a very old native at a fire in the thicket. Jemmy could not +understand what he said, but he thought that he meant that there were a +number of armed natives about. He was very frightened, howled the whole +time we stayed, and was apparently in his dotage, hardly able to walk. +Continuing our journey, we camped at a small water-hole in some granite +rocks, with good feed around them, about sixteen miles East-North-East +from Depot Spring. + +11th. +Started at sunrise, and steered about East-North-East over +lightly-grassed country; and on our way came upon a middle-aged native +with two small children. We were within twenty yards of him before he saw +us. He appeared very frightened, and trembled from head to foot. Jemmy +could understand this native a little, and ascertained from him that he +had never seen or heard anything about white men or horses being killed +or having died in this vicinity. Did not know any place named Noondie; +but pointed to water a little way eastward. Jemmy then asked him all +manner of questions, but to no purpose, as he stated he knew nothing +about the business. Jemmy asked him if he had ever heard of any horses +being eaten; he answered No, but that the natives had just eaten his +brother! I have no doubt parents have great difficulty in saving their +children from these inhuman wretches. Then the old man tried to cry, and +ended by saying he had two women at his hut, a little westward. After +travelling ten miles from our last night's bivouac, and not finding +water, we struck North 204 degrees East magnetic for about twenty miles, +through scrubby thickets, without feed, and arrived at the bivouac of the +2nd, where the party will meet us to-morrow. Reached the water at the Two +Springs half an hour after dark. + +12th. +Explored the country around camp in search of a better place for feed, +but could not find water. Mr. Hamersley and party joined us at 4 p.m., +all well. Tommy shot a red kangaroo, which was a great treat, after +living so long on salt pork. Barometer 28.60; fine; cold wind from the +east all day. + +13th (Sunday). +Rested at camp. Intend taking a trip to the southward to-morrow. +Barometer 28.76. + +14th. +Started this morning, in company with Morgan and Jemmy, to examine the +country to the southward. Travelled in a south-westerly direction for +twenty-five miles, and camped at the spot where we had the encounter with +the natives on May 31. We found they had left, and there was no water on +the rocks. Luckily our horses had water six miles back. + +MOUNT IDA. + +15th. +Saddled up at daybreak, and steered about South-East towards a high range +of hills about ten miles distant. I named it Mount Ida, and from the +summit I took a round of angles with my pocket sextant. On all the hills +in this neighbourhood the local attraction is so great that the prismatic +compass is useless. Found a fine spring of water on south side of Mount +Ida, in an almost inaccessible spot. After giving the horses two hours' +rest we continued our journey North 154 degrees East magnetic for eight +miles to a granite range, where, after a diligent search, I found two +water-holes, and bivouacked, with good feed around the rocks. + +16th. +Saddled up at sunrise, and steered to some trap ranges, North 124 degrees +East, about seven miles distant, from which I could see an immense lake +running as far as the eye could reach to the eastward, and westerly and +northerly, most probably joining Lake Barlee. Not being able to proceed +farther southward, on account of the lake, I steered in a northerly +direction for twenty miles, but, discovering neither feed nor water, +bivouacked in a thicket, and tied up our horses. + +17th. +At dawn, found that my horse Sugar, after breaking his bridle, had made +off towards our bivouac of the 15th. Placing my saddle on Jemmy's horse, +we followed on the track for six miles, when we came to a few granite +rocks, with a little water on them, from rain that had fallen during the +night. At this place Morgan was left with the horses and our guns, while +Jemmy and I followed on Sugar's tracks, taking only a revolver with us. +After travelling on the tracks for two miles we overtook him, and with a +little trouble managed to catch him. On reaching the spot where we had +left Morgan, we found him with the three double-barrelled guns on full +cock, together with his revolver, in readiness. On being asked what was +the matter, he stated "Nothing," but he was ready to give the natives +what he called "a warm attachment." After having breakfast we steered +North-North-West for about twenty miles, and reached camp at 5 p.m., and +found all well. Rained a little during the day. + +EXPLORING EASTWARD. + +18th. +Having thus made an exhaustive search in the neighbourhood where Jemmy +expected to find the remains of the white men, by travelling over nearly +the whole of the country between latitude 28 degrees and 29 degrees 30 +minutes south, and longitude 120 and 121 degrees east, I determined to +make the most of the little time at my disposal, and carry out the +instruction that I was to attempt to proceed as far eastward as possible. +Accordingly, after collecting the horses, steered about East-North-East +for nine miles, to a low quartz range, over tolerably grassy country, not +very dense. From this range I saw some bare granite rocks bearing about +North 120 degrees East magnetic. For these we steered, and luckily, after +travelling six miles over a plain, which in severe winters must be nearly +all under water, found a fine pool in a clay-pan, and bivouacked. There +was a little rain during the night. + +19th. +The horses having strayed back on our tracks, we did not start till 12 +o'clock, when the journey was continued towards the granite range seen +yesterday, about ten miles distant. We camped on west side of North, with +plenty of water from the recent rain on the granite rocks, but with very +little feed. At five miles crossed a dry stream-bed, eighteen yards wide, +sandy bottom; thickets most of the way, but not very dense. + +20th (Sunday). +Rested at camp. Jemmy shot four rock kangaroos to-day. Took a round of +angles from a bare granite hill, North 50 degrees East magnetic, about +one mile from camp, which I found to be in south latitude 28 degrees 57 +minutes by meridian altitudes of Bootes (Arcturus) and a Pegasi (Markab); +and in longitude about 120 degrees 55 minutes East. Saw a high hill +bearing North 81 degrees 30 minutes East magnetic, about twenty-five +miles distant, which I named Mount Lenora; and another bearing North 67 +degrees East magnetic, about twenty-five miles distant, which I named +Mount George. Intend proceeding to Mount Lenora to-morrow. Marked a small +tree (ordnance-tree of Mr. Austin) with the letter F at our bivouac. + +21st. +Steering towards Mount Lenora over some tolerably grassy country, we +reached it at sundown, and, not finding any water, camped without it, +with very good feed. In south latitude 28 degrees 53 minutes by meridian +altitudes of Lyrae (Vega) and Aquilae (Altair), and in longitude about +121 degrees 20 minutes East. + +22nd. +After making every search in the vicinity of the bivouac for water, and +the country ahead appearing very unpromising, I decided to return ten +miles on our tracks, where we found a fine pool of water in a brook, and +camped. Tomorrow I intend taking a flying trip in search of water. + +A NATIVE UP A TREE. + +23rd. +Started this morning, in company with Tommy Windich, to explore the +country to the eastward for water, etc. After travelling three miles +towards Mount Lenora, saw a natives' fire bearing North-East about three +miles, to which we proceeded, and surprised a middle-aged native. Upon +seeing us he ran off shouting, and decamped with a number of his +companions, who were at a little distance. The horse I was +riding--Turpin, an old police-horse from Northam--evidently well +understood running down a native, and between us we soon overtook our +black friend and brought him to bay. We could not make him understand +anything we said; but, after looking at us a moment, and seeing no chance +of escape, he dropped his two dowaks and wooden dish, and climbed up a +small tree about twelve feet high. After securing the dowaks, I tried +every means to tempt him to come down; fired my revolver twice, and +showed him the effect it had on the tree. The report had the effect also +of frightening all the natives that were about, who no doubt made off at +a great rate. I began to climb up after him, but he pelted me with +sticks, and was more like a wild beast than a man. After discovering we +did not like to be hit, he became bolder and threw more sticks at us, and +one hitting Tommy, he was nearly shooting him, when I called on him to +desist. I then offered him a piece of damper, showing him it was good by +eating some myself and giving some to Tommy. He would not look at it, and +when I threw it close to him he dashed it away as if it was poison. The +only way of getting him down from the tree was force, and, after +considering a moment, I decided to leave him where he was. We accordingly +laid down his dowaks and dish, and bade him farewell in as kindly a +manner as possible. Continuing our course, passing Mount Lenora, we +steered North 81 degrees 15 minutes East magnetic to a table hill, which +I ascended and took a round of angles. This hill I named Mount Malcolm, +after my friend and companion, Mr. M. Hamersley. Saw a remarkable peak +bearing North 65 degrees East magnetic, distant about twenty miles, +towards which we proceeded, and at six miles came upon a small gully, in +which we found a little water, and bivouacked. + +24th. +Started early this morning, and steered East-North-East for six miles to +some low stony ranges, lightly grassed; thence North 61 degrees 30 +minutes East magnetic to the remarkable peak, which I named Mount Flora, +distant about nine miles from the stony ranges, ascending which, I +obtained a round of bearings and angles. Saw a high range bearing about +North 106 degrees 15 minutes East magnetic, apparently about sixteen +miles distant, towards which we travelled till after dark, searching for +feed and water on our way without success, and there bivouacked and tied +up our horses. + +MOUNT MARGARET. + +25th. +Saddled at dawn, and proceeded to the range, which bore North 93 degrees +30 minutes East magnetic, about five miles distant, on reaching which I +ascended the highest peak, and named it Mount Margaret. Took a round of +angles and bearings. From the summit of Mount Margaret the view was very +extensive. There was a large dry salt lake to the southward, as far as +the eye could reach, while to the east and north-east there were low trap +ranges, lightly grassed. A high table hill bore North 73 degrees East +magnetic. + +Being now about sixty miles from camp, and not having had any water since +yesterday morning, I decided to return. Steering about west for eight +miles, we struck a brook trending south-east, in which we found a small +quantity of water in a clay-pan. After resting an hour, in order to make +a damper and give the horses a little of the feed, which only grew +sparingly on the banks of the brook, we continued our journey towards +camp. Passing Mount Flora, we camped about eight miles farther onwards, +near a small patch of feed, without water, about a mile north of our +outward track. + +26th. +Started at dawn, and reached our bivouac of the 23rd. There obtained just +sufficient water for ourselves and the horses. Continuing, we found a +fine pool of rain-water in a brook a mile and a half west of Mount +Malcolm, and, reaching camp an hour after dark, found all well. On our +way Tommy Windich shot a red kangaroo, which we carried to camp. + +27th (Sunday). +Rested at camp. Found it to be in south latitude 28 degrees 55 minutes by +meridian altitudes of sun, Aquilae (Altair), and Lyra, and in longitude +about 121 degrees 10 minutes East. Although we had great difficulty in +procuring water in our last trip, I was reluctant to return without +making another effort, especially as, from the appearance of the country +east of the farthest point, I had hope of a change, and therefore +concluded to shift the party to the water found yesterday near Mount +Malcolm, and make another attempt to proceed farther east. + +28th. +Steering about North 81 degrees East magnetic, over lightly-grassed +country, thinly wooded for sixteen miles, we camped a mile and a half +west of Mount Malcolm, in south latitude 28 degrees 51 minutes 19 seconds +by meridian altitude of Aquilae (Altair), and in longitude about 121 +degrees 27 minutes East. + +29th. +Started this morning, in company with Tommy Windich, with seven days' +provisions, leaving instructions for Mr. Monger to shift the party back +to our last camp, where the feed was much better, in latitude 28 degrees +55 minutes South, and longitude 121 degrees 10 minutes East. Travelled +about east for thirty miles towards Mount Margaret, our farthest point +last trip. We camped in a thicket, without water, on a small patch of +feed. + +30th. +Saddled up at dawn, and proceeded towards Mount Margaret, obtaining a +little water at the spot where we found water on our former trip. +Continuing, we came to a fine pool of water in a brook, and rested an +hour, Mount Margaret being north-east about two miles and a half. Hardly +any feed near the water. Resuming, we passed Mount Margaret and started +towards the table hill seen previously, bearing North 73 degrees East +magnetic, apparently about eighteen miles distant, over a series of dry +salt marshes, with sandy country and spinifex intervening. After +travelling eight miles, we bivouacked without water on a small patch of +feed. With the pocket sextant I found this spot to be in south latitude +about 28 degrees 50 minutes, and longitude about 122 degrees 11 minutes +East. + +MOUNT WELD. + +July 1st. +After journeying towards the table hill seen yesterday for six miles, +crossed a large brook heading south-west, in which we found a small pool +of rain-water, and rested an hour to breakfast. Resuming for about six +miles, reached the table hill, which I ascended and took a round of +angles. I have since named this hill Mount Weld, being the farthest hill +seen eastward by us. Continuing about North 77 degrees East magnetic for +fifteen miles, through dense thickets--no grass except spinifex--we +bivouacked, without water or feed, and then tied up our horses. I found +this spot to be in south latitude 28 degrees 41 minutes by meridian +altitude of Bootes (Arcturus), and in longitude about 122 degrees 37 +minutes East. + +2nd. +Started at dawn, and steered about east, searching on our way for water, +which our horses and ourselves were beginning to want much. At six miles +we found a small hole in some rocks, apparently empty, but on sounding +with a stick I found it to contain a little water. The mouth of the hole +being too small to admit a pannican, and having used my hat with very +little success, I at last thought of my gum-bucket, with which we +procured about two quarts of something between mud and water, which, +after straining through my pocket-handkerchief, we pronounced first-rate. +Continuing for six miles over clear, open sand-plains, with spinifex and +large white gums--the only large trees and clear country seen since +leaving the settled districts--we climbed up a white gum to have a view +of the country eastward. Some rough sandstone cliffs bore North 127 +degrees East magnetic, about six miles distant. The country eastward was +almost level, with sandstone cliffs here and there, apparently thickly +wooded with white gums, and other trees; spinifex everywhere, but no +prospects of water. More to the north, a narrow line of samphire flats +appeared, with cypress and stunted gums on its edges--all barren and +desolate--so much so, indeed, that for the last twenty-five miles there +has been no grass seen at all save spinifex. After taking a few bearings +from the top of the tree (which I marked with the letter F on the south +side), which is in south latitude about 28 degrees 41 minutes, and +longitude about 122 degrees 50 East, I decided to return to our last +watering place, nearly thirty-one miles distant, as we were now over 100 +miles from camp, and the horses had been without water or feed since +yesterday morning. Therefore, keeping a little to the north of the +outward track, we travelled nearly two hours after dark, and camped +without water or feed, and tied up the horses. + +WINDICH BROOK. + +3rd. +Saddled up early, and steered westerly towards our last watering-place, +about fourteen miles distant; but, after travelling nearly seven miles, +came to a small pool of water (at the head of the brook where we found +water on the 1st), and rested two hours to allow our horses to feed, as +they had neither eaten nor drunk for the last forty-eight hours. Resuming +our journey along the brook (which I named Windich Brook, after my +companion, Tommy Windich) for ten miles, in which we found several pools +of water, but destitute of feed, camped without water about two miles +east of our bivouac of the 30th June. + +4th. +Travelling about West-South-West for twelve miles, we reached the pool of +water found on our outward track on the 30th June, two miles and a half +South-West from Mount Margaret. There we rested an hour. Resuming, we +travelled nearly along our outward track for eighteen miles, and camped +without water on a small patch of feed. Tommy shot two wurrongs to-day. + +5th. +Started at daybreak, and, continuing nearly along our outward track for +twenty-five miles, we reached the water close to Mount Malcolm, where we +left the party, they having shifted, as instructed, seventeen miles +farther back. There we rested an hour; but, having finished our +provisions, we roasted two wurrongs and made a first-rate dinner. Tommy +also shot an emu that came to water, and which we carried to camp. +Reached there at 6 p.m. and found all well, having been absent seven +days, every night being without water, during which time we travelled +over 200 miles. + +6th. +Weighed all the rations, and found we had 283 pounds flour, 31 pounds +bacon, 28 pounds sugar, and 4 pounds tea--equal to thirty-two days' +allowance of flour, ten days' bacon, nineteen days' sugar, and twenty-one +days' tea on a full ration. Thereupon concluded to return to Perth as +quickly as possible, and reduce the allowance of tea and sugar to last +thirty days--bacon to be done without. By that time I hope to reach +Clarke's homestead, Victoria Plains, and intend to return by Mount +Kenneth, Nanjajetty, Ningham, or Mount Singleton, and thence to Damparwar +and Clarke's homestead, thus fixing a few points that will be useful to +the Survey Office. + +THE RETURN JOURNEY. + +7th. +At 6.30 a.m., barometer 28 86, thermometer 34 degrees. Started on the +return, and followed along our outward tracks for sixteen miles. Camped +on east side of granite range, in south latitude 28 degrees 57 minutes, +and east longitude 120 degrees 55 minutes. + +8th. +Travelling nearly along our eastward track, and passing our bivouac of +the 19th June, we reached the Two Springs bivouac. + +9th. +Travelled twenty-two miles, and reached our bivouac of 30th May--129 +degrees 9 minutes East. + +10th. +Reached the bivouac of May 27th. On our way I ascended a very high range, +which I named Mount Alfred, and took a fine round of angles--Mount +Alexander, Mount Bivou, Mount Ida, Mount Elvire, and Yeadie and Bulgar +being visible. + +11th (Sunday). +Plotted up our track. + +12th. +Travelled for twenty-five miles and camped on a splendid patch of feed, +with a little water on some granite rocks about two miles west of our +bivouac of the 24th. This I found to be in south latitude 28 degrees 57 +minutes 48 seconds by meridian altitudes of Bootes (Arcturus) and Pegasi +(Markab), and in longitude about 119 degrees 28 minutes east; Mount +Elvire bearing North 154 degrees East magnetic, distant about twenty-one +miles. + +13th. +Leaving the party in charge of Mr. Monger, with instructions to proceed +to Retreat Rock--our bivouac of May 23rd--I started with Mr. Hamersley +and Jemmy to attempt to cross Lake Barlee, in order to explore the +country on its south side, near Mount Elvire, as well as to try and find +natives, Jemmy being acquainted with these tribes. Steering North 154 +degrees East magnetic for seven miles, we came to the lake, and, entering +it, succeeded in reaching the southern shore after twelve miles of heavy +walking, sinking over our boots every step--the horses having great +difficulty in getting through. When we reached the southern shore, it was +nearly sundown. Determined to push on, and reached the range, where we +bivouacked on a patch of feed and a little water; Mount Elvire bearing +North 87 degrees East magnetic, about one mile distant; and Yeadie and +Bulgar North 8 degrees East magnetic. Rained lightly during the day. +Being wet through from the splashings of the horses while crossing the +lake, and from it raining throughout the night, and not having any +covering, our situation was not the most pleasant. Jemmy informed me +there was a fine permanent spring close to Mount Elvire; but we did not +go to see it. + +14th. +This morning, after ascending a range to have a view of the country, +steered North 288 degrees East magnetic, and then, travelling six miles, +came to a branch of Lake Barlee running far to the southward, which we +attempted to cross; but after travelling a mile and a half, the horses +went down to their girths in the bog, and we had great difficulty in +getting them to return, which, however, we ultimately succeeded in doing, +and made another attempt, at a place where a series of islands appeared, +to cross it, and, passing over without much difficulty, reached the +opposite shore at sundown, where we bivouacked on a splendid grassy ride, +with abundance of water in granite rocks, Mount Elvire bearing North 108 +degrees East magnetic, and Yeadie and Bulgar North 45 degrees East +magnetic. + +15th. +Having finished our rations last night, we started at dawn, and steered +towards Retreat Rock. where we were to meet the party. After travelling +five miles, we came to that part of Lake Barlee which we attempted to +cross, without success, on May 19th (on our outward track); but, leading +our horses, we at last succeeded in crossing, and reached camp, all very +tired, at twelve o'clock, finding all well. The party were encamped one +mile north of our former bivouac, at some granite rocks with two fine +water-holes. + +16th. +Considerable delay having occurred in collecting the horses, we did not +start till ten o'clock, when we travelled nearly along our outward +track--passing Yeeramudder Hill, from the summit of which Mount Elvire +bore North 111 degrees 30 minutes East magnetic about thirty-five miles +distant--for about twenty-one miles, and bivouacked at some granite rocks +with a little feed around them, which I found to be in south latitude 29 +degrees 8 minutes 47 seconds by meridian altitudes of Bootes (Arcturus) +and Pegasi (Markab), and in longitude about 118 degrees 59 minutes East. + +17th. +Started at 8.45 a.m., and, steering about west for twenty-five miles +through dense thickets without feed, we camped without water on a small +miserable patch, in south latitude 29 degrees 7 minutes 13 seconds by +meridian altitude of Bootes (Arcturus). Marked a small tree with F. 1869. +Being now in friendly country, I decided to give up keeping watch, which +had been done regularly for the last two months. + +18th (Sunday). +After starting the party, went, in company with Tommy Windich, to take +bearings from a low hill, bearing North 289 degrees, distant about eight +miles, after which we struck in the direction in which we expected to +find the party; but as, for some reason or other, they had not passed by, +I anticipated they must have met with good feed and water, and camped, it +being Sunday. However this may be, we kept bearing more and more to the +southward, in hope of crossing the track, till after dark, when we +reached the Warne Flats, and bivouacked. Not expecting to be absent more +than a few days, we had neither rations nor rugs. Luckily, Tommy shot a +turkey, which we roasted in the ashes, and made a very good meal. The +night was bitterly cold, and, not having any rug, I slept with a fire on +each side of me, and, considering the circumstances, slept fairly. + +19th. +Made a first-rate breakfast off the remainder of the turkey, and then +started in search of the party, making back towards where we had left +them, keeping well to the southward. After spending nearly the whole of +the day, and knocking up the horses, we found the tracks of the party +nearly where we had left them yesterday morning, and, following along +them for nine miles, found where they had bivouacked last night; and, it +being now two hours after dark, we camped also, having between us for +supper an opossum, which Tommy had luckily caught during the day. The +night was again very cold, and we had hardly anything to eat, which made +matters still worse. + +20th. +Starting on the tracks at daybreak, followed them for about thirteen +miles, and then we found the party encamped on the east side of a large +bare granite rock called Meroin, Mount Kenneth bearing North 24 degrees +East magnetic, about fifteen miles distant. From a cliff, about one mile +west of the camp, took a splendid round of angles, Mount Kenneth, Mount +Singleton, and several other known points being visible. By meridian +altitudes of sun, a Bootes (Arcturus), E Bootes, and a Coronae Borealis, +camp was in south latitude 29 degrees 10 minutes 49 seconds, and +longitude about 118 degrees 14 minutes east. + +21st. +At seven a.m., barometer 29.10; thermometer 35 degrees. Started at 8.15 +a.m. Steered about west for fifteen miles, over country studded here and +there with granite rocks, with good feed around them--in some places rock +poison--and then camped at a spring called Pullagooroo, bearing North 189 +degrees from a bare granite hill, three quarters of a mile distant, from +which hill Mount Singleton bore North 237 degrees East magnetic, by +meridian altitudes of a Bootes (Arcturus) and E Bootes. Pullagooroo is in +south latitude 29 degrees 7 minutes 46 seconds. Finished our bacon this +morning, and for the future will only have damper and tea. + +22nd. +Steering a little to the north of west, through dense thickets without +grass, we bivouacked at a very grassy spot called Bunnaroo, from which +Mount Singleton bore North 205 degrees East magnetic. By meridian +altitudes of a Bootes (Arcturus), E Bootes, and Coronae Borealis, camp is +in south latitude 28 degrees 58 minutes, and in longitude about 117 +degrees 35 minutes east. + +MOUNT SINGLETON. + +23rd. +After starting the party with instructions to proceed straight to Mount +Singleton, distant about thirty-two miles, I went, in company with Jemmy, +to the summit of a high trap range in order to take a round of angles, +and fix Nanjajetty, which was visible. While on our way to join the +party, saw the tracks of two men and two horses, with two natives +walking, and soon after found where they had bivouacked a few days +before. Was much surprised at this discovery: suppose it to be squatters +looking for country. Continuing, we found the tracks of our party, and +overtook them, and encamped at a fine permanent spring--Mount Singleton +bearing North 146 degrees East magnetic about three miles and a half +distant. Reached the party at seven o'clock. There was a partial eclipse +of the moon this evening. + +24th. +There being splendid green feed around Mount Singleton, and as the horses +were tired, I concluded to give them a day's rest. Went, in company with +Mr. Monger and Jemmy, to the summit of Mount Singleton, which took us an +hour to ascend; but, on reaching it, we were well repaid for the trouble +by the very extensive view and the many points to which I could take +bearings. Far as the eye could reach to the East and South-East were +visible Lake Moore, Mount Churchman; to the north, conspicuous high trap +ranges appeared; while to the west, within a radius of six miles, hills +covered with flowers gave the country a pretty appearance. Further to the +west a dry salt lake and a few trap hills appeared. Reached the camp at 2 +p.m. On our way shot three rock kangaroos. + +25th (Sunday). +Rested at camp near Mount Singleton, which I found to be in south +latitude 29 degrees 24 minutes 33 seconds by meridian altitude of sun, +and longitude about 117 degrees 20 minutes east. + +26th. +Some delay having occurred in collecting the horses, did not start till 9 +a.m., when we steered a little to the north of west towards Damparwar. +For the first seven miles over rough trap hills lightly grassed, when we +entered samphire and saltbush flats for four miles. Crossing a large +marsh at a point where it was only 100 yards wide, and continuing through +thickets, we camped at a spot with very little feed and no water, in +south latitude 29 degrees 21 minutes 48 seconds. From this spot Mount +Singleton bore North 113 degrees 20 minutes East magnetic, distant about +twenty miles. Here we met two natives, whom we had seen on our outward +track at the Warne Corroboree. They were of course friendly, and slept at +our camp; they had a great many dulgates and opossums, which they carried +in a net bag, made out of the inner bark of the ordnance-tree, which +makes a splendid strong cord. They informed us that a native had come +from the eastward with intelligence relating to the encounter we had with +the large tribe on May 31, adding that we had all been killed, and that +all the natives in this vicinity had cried very much on hearing the news. +This is another specimen of the narrations of natives, with whom a tale +never loses anything by being carried. + +27th. +Steering a little to the north of west for eighteen miles, we reached +Damparwar Springs, a clear grassy spot of about 300 acres, on west side +of a low granite hill. The spring was dry, but by digging a few feet +obtained abundant supply. From the appearance of the country there has +hardly been any rain in this neighbourhood for many months. Took a round +of angles from a trap hill about two miles distant, Mount Singleton and +many other points being visible. Met a party of friendly natives here. By +meridian altitudes of a Bootes, a Coronae Borealis and a Lyrae (Vega), +Damparwar Spring is in south latitude 29 degrees 16 minutes 32 seconds, +and longitude about 116 degrees 47 minutes East. + +28th. +Steering in a southerly direction, and following along the western margin +of a salt lake--most of the way over samphire flats, with thickets +intervening, denser than usual--we encamped on a small grassy spot, with +plenty of water in granite rocks, called Murrunggnulgo, situated close to +the west side of the lake, which I named Lake Monger. The native Jemmy, +in company with some of his friends, stayed behind to-day in order to +catch opossums, and did not join us this evening. By meridian altitudes +of E Bootes, a Coronae Borealis, a Lyrae (Vega), and Aquilae (Altair), +Murrunggnulgo is in south latitude 29 degrees 37 minutes 20 seconds. +Damparwar bearing about north magnetic. + +29th. +Moving a little to the west of south for twenty miles, through dense +thickets, by far the worst we have ever encountered, and destitute of +feed, we reached Bera Bera, a grassy spot with a dry well, where water +might be procured. Continuing North 238 degrees East for about five +miles, we reached and camped at some granite rocks, with a fine well of +water called Wandanno, which I found to be in south latitude 29 degrees +57 minutes 14 seconds by meridian altitudes of Lyrae (Vega) and Aquilae +(Altair). From Bera Bera, Mount Singleton bore North 50 degrees 30 +minutes East magnetic about fifty miles distant. Jemmy did not put in an +appearance to-day, but sent on a native to say he would join us in a day +or two. + +30th. +Travelling about North 212 degrees East magnetic for fourteen miles, over +samphire flats, with thickets intervening, we reached a fine grassy spot, +with water in granite rocks, called Gnookadunging. Continuing about south +for two and a half miles, passed another small grassy spot called +Ginbinning; thence in about the general direction of North 210 degrees +East magnetic. For about eleven and a half miles, over an immense +sand-plain, running as far as the eye could reach to the North-West and +South-East, we camped in the centre of it at a spring called Manginie, a +sheep station belonging to Mr. James Church. Towards the end of the day +Bailey's horse Tommy fairly gave in, and we had great difficulty in +getting him to camp, which Mr. Hamersley and I did not reach until an +hour after dark. The night was cloudy, and I was unable to get any +observations, but luckily at daybreak obtained meridian altitudes of +Jupiter, which placed Manginie Spring in South latitude 30 degrees 21 +minutes. + +31st. +Steering about South-South-West for thirteen miles, we reached Cooroo +Springs--a fine grassy spot in winter--where we camped, the horses being +very tired. For the first seven miles over scrubby sand-plains; thence to +Cooroo, over grassy country, with spearwood thickets intervening. Tommy +shot a kangaroo this afternoon, which was very acceptable, having had +only damper and tea for several days past. + +August 1st (Sunday). +Rested at Cooroo Springs. All very busy putting our ragged clothes in as +good repair as possible. By meridian altitudes of sun, Lyrae (Vega), 32 +degrees 15 minutes. Read Divine Service. Jemmy has not yet overtaken us, +so I conclude he has changed his mind, and does not intend following us. +We are now about nine miles from Clarke's homestead, which bears about +South-South-East. + +2nd. +Travelling about South-South-East for nine miles over grassy country, +with York gums, etc., we reached the hospitable residence of Mr. Clarke, +where we were very kindly received, and stayed a short time to hear the +news. Resuming for eighteen miles along the road to Newcastle, we passed +Mr. Donald Macpherson's, where I obtained some rations, and pushed on six +miles farther, and bivouacked one mile south of Badgy-Badgy, with very +short feed for our horses. + +3rd. +Travelling along the road towards Newcastle for twenty-six miles, we +camped one mile past Byen, and about sixteen miles from Newcastle. + +4th. +Reached Newcastle at eleven o'clock, and had just time to report the safe +return of the expedition before the mail left. + +5th. +After handing over all the horses provided by the different settlers to +their respective owners, and bidding farewell to Mr. George Monger (who +intends proceeding to York), I left Newcastle in company with Mr. M. +Hamersley and Tommy Windich, leaving Morgan and remainder of equipment to +follow with the cart which had been brought to Newcastle by Ward and C. +Adams. Reached Baylup at 4 p.m. + +6th. +Made an early start; reached Guildford at twelve o'clock, where we rested +an hour. Then resuming, reached Perth at 4 p.m., and reported personally +the results of the expedition, having been absent 113 days, in which time +I travelled by computation over 2000 miles. + +I now beg to make a few remarks with reference to the main object of the +expedition, which was the discovery of the remains of the late Dr. +Leichardt and party. + +THE NATIVES' STORIES. + +In the first place, Mr. Frederick Roe was informed by the native +Weilbarrin, that two white men and their native companions had been +killed by the aborigines, thirteen days' journey to the northward, when +he was at a spot called Koolanobbing, which is in south latitude about 30 +degrees 53 minutes, and longitude about 119 degrees 14 minutes east. Mr. +Austin lost eleven horses at Poison Rock (nine died, and two were left +nearly dead), which is in latitude 28 degrees 43 minutes 23 seconds +south, and longitude about 118 degrees 38 minutes east, or about 130 +miles from Koolanobbing, and in the direction pointed to by the natives. +I therefore imagine it to be very probable that the whole story +originated from the horses lost by Mr. Austin at Poison Rock, as I am +convinced the natives will say anything they imagine will please. Again, +the account given us at Mount Churchman, on May 5th, appeared very +straightforward and truthful. It was very similar to that related to Mr. +Roe; but, on questioning the natives, they at last stated there were +neither men nor guns left, only horses' remains, and pointed towards +Poison Rock. Further, the native who gave all the information to Mr. +Monger was one of our party. His tale, as related by Mr. Monger, also +appeared very straightforward and truthful, that white men had been +killed by the natives twenty years ago; that he had seen the spot, which +was at a spring near a large lake, so large that it looked like the sea +as seen from Rottnest, eleven days' journey from Ningham or Mount +Singleton, in a fine country. The white men were rushed upon while making +a damper, and clubbed and speared. He had often seen an axe which formed +part of the plunder. All this appears feasible and truthful enough in +print; but the question is, Of what value did I find it? Upon telling +Jemmy what Mr. Monger stated he told him, he said he never told him that +he had seen things himself, but that he had heard it from a native who +had seen them, thus contradicting the whole he had formerly stated to Mr. +Monger. Moreover, the fine country he described we never saw, what a +native calls good country being where he can get a drink of water and a +wurrong; and if there is an acre of grassy land they describe it as a +very extensive grassy country! This I have generally found the case. As a +specimen of the untruthfulness of these natives, I may quote that my +native Jemmy, who was a first-rate fellow in every other respect, stated +to Mr. Monger and myself at York, that there was a large river like that +called the Avon at York, to the eastward, knowing at the time he would be +found out to be telling a falsehood. He even told Mr. George Monger, +before leaving Newcastle, to buy hooks, in order to catch the fish that +were in the river, and concluded by stating that we would have great +difficulty in crossing it, as it ran a great distance north and south. +Almost every evening I questioned and cross-questioned him respecting +this river; still he adhered to what he first stated! It may well be +imagined how disappointed we were on reaching the spot to find only a +small brook running into a salt marsh, with water in winter, but dry in +summer. + +With reference to the country travelled over, I am of opinion that it is +worthless as a pastoral or agricultural district; and as to minerals I am +not sufficiently conversant with the science to offer an opinion, except +that I should think it was worth while sending geologists to examine it +thoroughly. + +CONDUCT OF THE PARTY. + +It now becomes my most pleasing duty to record my entire satisfaction +with the manner in which all the members of the expedition exerted +themselves in the performance of their respective duties. To Mr. George +Monger and Mr. Malcolm Hamersley I am indebted for their co-operation and +advice on all occasions. I am also deeply indebted to Mr. Hamersley for +collecting and preserving all the botanical specimens that came within +his reach, as well as the great trouble and care taken with the store +department, placed under his immediate charge. To probation prisoner +David Morgan my best thanks are due as the shoeing smith, as well as +acting cook for the party the whole time. Of Tommy Windich (native) I +cannot speak too highly, being very useful in collecting the horses, as +well as a first-class huntsman, and really invaluable as a water finder. +Accompanying me on many trying occasions, suffering often from want of +water, he showed energy and determination deserving of the highest +praise. Jemmy Mungaro was also a first-class bushman, and invaluable as a +water finder. He was in many ways useful, and very obedient. His great +failing was that he exaggerated--no tale ever losing anything in his +charge. Nevertheless, I have many things to thank him for, and therefore +he deserves praise. + +In conclusion, sir, allow me to thank you for your kindness and advice, +which has greatly supported me in this arduous undertaking. I much regret +that an expedition which was so efficiently equipped, and on which I was +left so free to act, has not resulted in more direct benefit to the +colony, to satisfy many who are not capable of appreciating the +importance of such explorations. + +I have, Sir, etc., + +JOHN FORREST, + +Leader of Expedition. + +The Honourable Captain Roe, R.N., Surveyor-General. + +So far as the mystery on which the fate of Leichardt is involved was +concerned, my expedition was barren of results; but the additional +knowledge gained of the character of the country between the settled +districts of Western Australia and the 123rd meridian of east longitude, +well repaid me, and those of the party, for the exertions we had +undergone. + +REWARDS. + +Shortly after my return I received an official communication from Mr. +Barlee, the Colonial Secretary at Perth, announcing that his Excellency +the Governor, with a view to mark his sense of the value of my services +as leader of the expedition, had sanctioned the payment to me of a +gratuity of 50 pounds. Mr. Monger and Mr. Hamersley each received 25 +pounds; Morgan, the probation prisoner, who had done good service in the +expedition, especially in looking after the horses, was promised a +remission of a portion of his sentence. Tommy Windich and Jemmy Mungaro, +the natives, had each a single-barrel gun, with his name +inscribed--presents which they highly valued. + +So ended the first of my expeditions; and a very short time elapsed +before I was called upon to undertake a longer, more hazardous, and more +important journey. + + +CHAPTER 3. + +SECOND EXPEDITION. FROM PERTH TO ADELAIDE, ROUND THE GREAT BIGHT. + +A new Exploration suggested. +Proposal to reach Adelaide by way of the South Coast. +The experience derived from Eyre's Expedition. +Survey of Port Eucla. +Official Instructions. +The Start. +Dempster's Station near Esperance Bay. +The Schooner at Port Eucla. +Journal of the Expedition. + +Immediately on my return to Perth a new expedition was suggested by Dr. +Von Mueller, whose anxiety for the discovery of Leichardt was rather +increased than abated by the disappointment experienced. He proposed that +I should start from the upper waters of the Murchison River with a light +party and provisions for six months, and endeavour to reach Carpentaria. +He thought, not only would such an expedition almost certainly find some +traces of the lost explorer, but probably would make geographical +discoveries of the highest interest and importance. In a paper in the +Colonial Monthly he argued that: + +"While those who searched after traces of the lost party did not solve +the primary objects of their mission, their labours have not been without +importance to geographical science. The course of one traveller connected +the southern interior of Queensland in a direct route with the vast +pastoral depressions about Lake Torrens; the researches of another +explorer, bent on ascertaining Leichardt's fate, unfolded to us a tract +of table country, now already occupied by herds and flocks, not less in +length than that of Sweden and Italy...We should bear fully in mind how a +line in Leichardt's intended direction would at once enable the squatters +of North-East Australia to drive their surplus of flocks and herds easily +across to the well-watered, hilly and grassy country within close +proximity to the harbour of the north-west coast." + +I should have been well satisfied to undertake an expedition in the +proposed direction, starting from the head of the Murchison, and trying +to connect my route with that of Mr. A. Gregory's down Sturt Creek; but +the difficulty of obtaining funds and lack of support caused the project +to be set aside or at least delayed. Mr. Weld, then Governor of Western +Australia, who always heartily supported explorations, was in favour of +an attempt to reach Adelaide by way of the south coast, and offered me +the command of an expedition in that direction. + +I readily accepted the offer, and at once busied myself with the +necessary preparations, but was far from being insensible to the +difficulties of the undertaking. Of the route nothing was known except +the disastrous experience of Mr. Eyre in 1840 and 1841. His remarkable +narrative--interesting to all concerned in the history of explorations or +in the records of energy, courage, and perseverance under the most +discouraging circumstances--might have acted as a warning to future +explorers against endeavouring to follow in his track. The fearful +privations he endured, his narrow escape from the most terrible of all +forms of death, were certainly not encouraging; but his experience might +often be of service to others, pointing out dangers to be avoided, and +suggesting methods of overcoming difficulties. At any rate, I was not +deterred from the attempt to trace once more the coast of the Great +Bight, and to reach the sister colony by that route. Eyre had not +discovered any rivers, although it was possible that he might have +crossed the sand-bars of rivers in the night. The difficulties he +laboured under in his almost solitary journey, and the sufferings he +endured, might have rendered him unable to make observations and +discoveries more practicable to a better equipped and stronger party, +while the deficiency of water on the route appeared to offer the greatest +impediment. We were not, however, deterred from the attempt, and on the +30th of March, 1870, we started from Perth on a journey which all knew to +be dangerous, but which we were sanguine enough to believe might produce +considerable results. + +That we were not disappointed the result will prove. Indeed, the +difficulties were much fewer than we had been prepared to encounter; and +in five months from the date of departure from Perth we arrived safely at +Adelaide, completing a journey which Mr. Eyre had been more than twelve +months in accomplishing. + +THE EXPLORING PARTY. + +My party was thus composed: I was leader; the second in command was my +brother, Alexander Forrest, a surveyor; H. McLarty, a police constable; +and W. Osborne, a farrier and shoeing smith, these with Tommy Windich, +the native who had served me so faithfully on the previous expedition, +and another native, Billy Noongale, an intelligent young fellow, +accompanied us. + +Before I enter upon the details of my journey it may be useful to state +as briefly as possible the efforts made to obtain a better acquaintance +with the vast territory popularly known as No Man's Land, which had been +traversed by Eyre, and afterwards to summarize the little knowledge which +had been obtained. + +In 1860 Major Warburton--who afterwards, in 1873 and 1874, succeeded in +crossing the northern part of the great inland desert, after enduring +great privations--contrived to reach eighty-five miles beyond the head of +the Bight, and made several journeys from the coast in a north and +north-westerly direction for a distance of about sixty miles. Traces of +Eyre's expedition were then visible. The holes he had dug in search of +water twenty years before were still there, and the records of his +journey were of great value as guiding Warburton's movements. His +experience of the nature of the country amply confirmed that of the +previous explorer. He found the district to the north to be a dreary +waste, destitute of food and water. Rain seldom fell, and, when it did, +was immediately absorbed by the arid soil. Bustards and moles were the +only living creatures. To the north-west there was a little grass, but +the tract showing verdure was very small in extent, and beyond it was +again the scorched, barren, inhospitable desert. + +Two years afterwards other explorations were attempted, and especially +should be noted Captain Delessier's. He was disposed to think more +favourably of the nature of the country. The enterprise of squatters +seeking for "fresh fields and pastures new," to whom square miles +represent less than acres to graziers and sheep farmers in England--is +not easily daunted. They made a few settlements; but the scanty pasturage +and the difficulty of obtaining water, by sinking wells, in some +instances to the depth of over 200 feet, have been great drawbacks. + +DISCOVERY OF PORT EUCLA. + +It might naturally be inquired why no attempts were made to reach the +coast of the Great Bight by sea? Why so much suffering has been endured +when a well-equipped vessel might have landed explorers at various points +and been ready to afford them assistance? In his explorations to the +north of Western Australia, Mr. F. Gregory had a convenient base of +operations in the Dolphin, a barque which remained on the coast. It might +seem that similar aid could have been afforded to Warburton and others +who attempted to trace the south-coast line. But for hundreds of miles +along the shores of the Bight no vessel could reach the shore or lie +safely at anchor. Long ranges of perpendicular cliffs, from 300 to 400 +feet high, presented a barrier effectually forbidding approach by sea. +About 1867, however, an excellent harbour was discovered about 260 miles +to the west of Fowler's Bay. The South Australian Government at once +undertook a survey of this harbour, and Captain Douglas, President of the +Marine Board, the officer entrusted with this duty, reported in the most +favourable terms. The roadstead, named Port Eucla, was found to afford +excellent natural protection for shipping. There was, however, the less +encouraging circumstance that it was situated a few miles to the west of +the boundary of the colony, and consequently Western, and not South, +Australia was entitled to the benefit of the discovery. + +It was evident that Port Eucla, which Captain Douglas carefully surveyed +by taking soundings and observing bearings, was the key to the +exploration of this vast portion of the continent. But, notwithstanding +the propositions made to the Government of Western Australia by the York +Agricultural Society for equipping an exploring party, nothing was done +until the beginning of 1870, when the Governor determined on equipping an +overland party intended to make its way, keeping as far inland as +possible, to Eucla, where assistance and supplies would await them. It +was this expedition which I was selected to command. The following copy +of official instructions will show the object of the exploration and the +preparations made to insure a fair prospect of a successful result:-- + +OFFICIAL INSTRUCTIONS. + +Colonial Secretary's Office, Perth, + +March 29th, 1870. + +SIR, + +His Excellency the Governor, confiding in your experience, ability, and +discretion, has been pleased to entrust to your charge and leadership an +overland expedition, which has been organized for the purpose of +exploring the country between the settled portions of this colony and the +Port of Eucla, situated near its east boundary. + +Your party will consist of the following six persons, well armed, and +provisioned for two months, namely, yourself as leader; Mr. Alexander +Forrest, your brother, as second in command; H. McLarty, a +police-constable, third in command; W.H. Osborne, farrier, etc.; and two +reliable natives, one of whom will be your former well-tried companion, +Windich. An agreement to serve under you on the expedition in the above +capacities will be signed by each European named previous to starting. + +Ample stores and supply of provisions have been prepared for your use, +and a suitable coasting vessel (the schooner Adur) is engaged, under an +experienced commander, to convey them where required, and to be at your +disposal in aiding the operations of the expedition. + +It is desirable the party should start from Perth as soon as all +arrangements have been completed, and take the most convenient route to +Esperance Bay, where men and horses can be recruited, further supplies +from the coaster laid in, and a fresh start made for Eucla so soon as the +first winter rains may lead to a prospect of the country being +sufficiently watered. + +About 120 miles to the eastward of the station of Messrs. Dempster, at +the west end of Esperance Bay, lies Israelite Bay, under some islands, in +front of which there is said to be anchorage. That being the nearest +known anchorage westward of Eucla, it appears to offer a convenient spot +whence fresh supplies might be drawn from your coaster with which to +prosecute the remaining 300 miles; but this arrangement as to an +intermediate place of call will be liable to modification, after +consulting on the spot with the Messrs. Dempster, who are well acquainted +with that part of the coast. + +Between Israelite Bay and Eucla the route should be as far from the coast +as circumstances and the nature of the country will admit. + +At Eucla all the remaining provisions and stores that may be required +should be landed, and the coaster despatched on her return to Fremantle +with a report of your proceedings. + +After recruiting at Eucla, five or six days might be employed with +advantage in exploring the country to the northward, care being taken to +place in security, by burying in casks or otherwise, such provisions, +etc., as might not be necessary for the northern excursion. + +On returning to Eucla from the north, the expedition is to make a final +start overland for Adelaide, by such route as you may deem advisable. The +Surveyor-General is of opinion that via Port Lincoln, and thence to +Adelaide by steamer, would be the preferable route; but of this you will +be the best judge, after receiving information from the various out- +stations you will pass. Before leaving South Australia, you will dispose +of your horses and such remaining stores and provisions as may not be +further required, retaining all instruments and such pack-saddles and +other articles of outfit as you may deem worth preserving for future +service. + +On arriving at Adelaide you will report yourself to his Excellency the +Governor, and avail yourself of the first favourable opportunity of +returning to Perth with your party, and with the remains of your outfit, +either by any vessel about to proceed direct to the Swan, or by the +earliest mail-steamer to King George's Sound. On application to his +Excellency, Sir James Fergusson, you will be furnished with such means as +may be necessary to defray your expenses from South to Western Australia, +as well as during your stay in the former colony. + +I am to impress on you the advisability of endeavouring, by every means +in your power, to cultivate friendly relations with the aboriginal +inhabitants of the country you are about to traverse. + +Such are briefly the general instructions by which it is intended you +should be governed in conducting the expedition entrusted to your care +and guidance; and I may add that the fullest confidence is placed in your +energy, zeal, and discretion, for bringing it to a successful issue. The +main objects of the undertaking are alone referred to; and, although a +mode of accomplishing them is briefly alluded to, it is by no means +intended to fetter your judgment in adopting such measures of minor +details as may appear to you necessary for effectually carrying them out. + +I have the honour to be, Sir, your obedient servant, + +FRED. P. BARLEE. + +DEPARTURE FROM PERTH. + +The Adur, chartered by the Government, was a vessel of thirty tons, owned +by Mr. Gabriel Adams. It gives me much pleasure to express my thanks to +him and to Mr. Waugh, the master, and to the crew of the vessel, for the +important services they performed, and the zeal they exhibited in +rendering me assistance, not only on board the vessel, but also on shore. + +We started from Perth on the afternoon of Wednesday, the 30th of March, +1870. His Excellency the Governor accompanied us for about three miles on +the Albany Road. We had fifteen horses, and provisions sufficient for the +journey to Esperance Bay, a distance of about 450 miles, where, it was +arranged, further supplies would await us. By the 5th of April we had +reached Kojonup, travelling in a north-easterly direction, and then +rested four days, leaving for Jerramungup on the 9th, and reaching it on +the 13th. Our first day's journey brought us to Mr. Graham's homestead, +near which we bivouacked; thence our route lay in an easterly direction, +at first through good grassy country with jam and white gum trees and +shea oaks, by way of Etticup, Martinup (where we bivouacked on the night +of the 10th), and Nigalup, beyond which were scrubby sand-plains +extending southwards towards the Stirling range. On the following night +we camped near some granite rocks. The next day's journey extended to +Koorarkup, where we again rested. Our rate of travel was from twenty to +twenty-five miles a day, and already we began to experience inconvenience +from want of water. A little stream, the Pallinup, was salt, and there +were salt pools on the route between our last camping-place and +Koorarkup, where we were now resting. + +Around Jerramungup was rich grassy country, but beyond it we passed over +scrubby undulating plains for about sixteen miles, camping, on the night +of the 14th, on a small branch of the Fitzgerald River, near some granite +rocks called Dwertup. At this spot there was water, but very little feed +for the horses. My observations showed that we were in latitude 33 +degrees 1 minute 15 seconds south. + +From this point the progress will be best narrated by extracts from my +Diary. A reference to the map will show that as yet we had not reached +the track of Eyre, who had followed the coast to King George's Sound; but +by the 16th of April we had reached his line of route. + +April 15th. +Travelled to the north of east, and at seven miles crossed the main +branch of the Fitzgerald River; granite rocks in bed, and saltwater +pools. After travelling over stony undulating country for twenty-one +miles, camped on a small patch of feed, with water in some granite rocks, +called Coombedup. + +16th. +Continuing easterly over rough stony country, crossing several brooks +with salt pools of water in them, we reached the Phillips River, and, +after a good deal of searching, found some fresh water in a small brook +near the river. The immense pools in the Phillips were as salt as sea +water. Distance travelled about twenty-five miles. + +VIEW OF THE SEA. + +17th (Sunday). +Did not travel. Went this morning, in company with McLarty, to the summit +of a high hill in Eyre's Range, called Annie's Peak, which we reached +after one and a half hour's hard climbing. It is the steepest hill I ever +attempted to ascend. We had a splendid view of the sea--the first since +leaving Perth--and I also obtained a fine round of angles and bearings. +On our return, found Billy had shot five ducks, and Tommy soon returned +with an emu. In the evening it very suddenly came on to thunder and +lighten, and soon rained in torrents, and, as we were rather unprepared, +we did not pass a very pleasant night. + +18th. +Just as we had collected the horses it commenced to rain in torrents; got +under way, however, by 9 o'clock, steering in about an easterly direction +over sandy, scrubby country, and at ten miles crossed a brook with salt +pools in it, and afterwards reached a large river of salt water, which we +followed about two miles, and then camped at a spring called Jerdacuttup. +It rained in torrents the whole day, blowing hard from the southward, so +that all were drenched when we halted. + +19th. +After travelling about twenty-three miles, in an easterly direction, we +reached a salt lake, called Parriup, and camped. Procured water on some +granite rocks near camp. + +20th. +Travelling nine miles, reached Mr. Campbell Taylor's station on the +Oldfield River, and rested for the remainder of the day. + +21st. +After starting the party, with instructions to reach and camp on north +side of Stokes' Inlet, distant about twenty miles, I went with Mr. Taylor +to the mouth of the Oldfield River, in order to take bearings to East +Mount Barren, but was disappointed, the weather being very hazy. +Accompanied by a native of Mr. Taylor's, followed on the tracks, but, +night setting in, we made the best of our way to where I expected to find +the party, but could see nothing of them, and were obliged to camp for +the night without food, and, what was worse, without a fire, having +neither matches nor powder with us. Luckily I had a rug, by which means I +fared much better than my companion, who had only a small kangaroo skin. +As it blew and rained in torrents most of the night, our position can be +better imagined than described. + +22nd. +Early this morning we were looking for the tracks of the party, but +without success; finally we returned eight miles to the Margaret River, +and, after a good deal of searching, found the tracks almost obliterated +by the rain, and followed along them. Upon nearing Stokes' Inlet we met +Tommy Windich looking for us, he having seen the tracks and last night's +bivouac. He informed me that they had camped about four miles westward of +the inlet, and we had therefore passed them in the dark last night. Made +all haste to overtake the party; succeeded in doing so, after a great +deal of trouble, one hour and a half after dark. Encamped on north side +of Barker's Inlet, at a small well of water called Booeynup. We did +justice to the supper, as we had not had anything to eat for thirty-two +hours. + +23rd. +For the first nine miles over scrubby sand-plains, kangaroos very +numerous, when we came into and skirted a chain of salt lakes and +marshes. Continuing over generally low country, well grassed, for five +miles, we reached and camped at the old homestead of the Messrs. +Dempster, called Mainbenup. + +ESPERANCE BAY. + +24th (Sunday). +Left camp in company with Billy Noongale, and proceeded to Esperance Bay, +distant twenty-four miles. On getting in view of the Bay, was much +disappointed to see no schooner lying at anchor, and felt very anxious +for her safety. Was very kindly received by Mrs. Andrew Dempster; the +Messrs. Dempster being away on Mondrain Island. + +25th. +Went several times up on the hill, looking out for the Adur, but was each +time disappointed. On my return in the evening, found the party had +arrived from Mainbenup, and had camped. + +26th. +Rained very heavily all last night. Shifted camp over one mile west of +homestead to a sheltered spot, where there was feed and wood. No signs of +the Adur. + +27th and 28th. +Rested at camp; the weather very stormy. The Messrs. Dempster returned +from Mondrain Island this evening. + +29th. +Shifted camp back to the homestead, and camped in a sheltered nook near +the Head. On ascending the Look-out Hill this evening, was rejoiced to +espy the Adur near Cape Le Grand, making in for the Bay, and at 8 o'clock +went off in Messrs. Dempster's boat, and had the great pleasure of +finding all hands well. They had experienced heavy weather, but +everything was dry and safe. I cannot find words to express the joy and +relief from anxiety this evening; all fears and doubts were at an end, +and I was now in a position to attempt to carry out my instructions. + +The Messrs. Dempster, whose hospitality was so welcome, are good +specimens of the enterprising settlers who are continually advancing the +frontiers of civilization, pushing forward into almost unknown regions, +and establishing homesteads which hereafter may develop into important +towns. In ten days we had journeyed 160 miles, and had enjoyed a +foretaste of the nature of the country through which we should have to +make our way. Four days' rest recruited our energies, and the arrival of +the Adur, with stores, gave all the party excellent spirits. + +The last day of April was occupied with landing the stores required for +immediate use, and the following day, being Sunday, we rested, and, +observing the practice adopted in my previous expeditions, I read Divine +Service to a somewhat larger congregation than I generally had around me. + +The horses had suffered from sore backs, the result of saddles being +stuffed with straw; and on the two following days we were all busy +restuffing them with wool, and I set Osborn, the farrier, to work to +widen and alter the iron-work, so as to make the saddles more comfortable +and easy to the horses. From the 3rd to the 8th of May we remained at Mr. +Dempster's, and I made a survey of his location, a tract of forty acres. +On Saturday, the 7th, Mr. William Dempster left for Perth, and I had the +opportunity of sending a report of our proceedings to that date to the +Colonial Secretary, and also of forwarding private letters. + +LAST DAY IN ESPERANCE BAY. + +Sunday, the 8th, being our last day in Esperance Bay, was passed quietly, +all attending Divine Service at Mr. Dempster's house; and on the +following morning we prepared to start on the second stage of our +journey. The Adur was to meet us again at Israelite Bay, about 120 miles +to the eastward; and here I resume the extracts from my Diary:-- + +May 9th. +After collecting the horses, we saddled up and started en route for +Israelite Bay, where I had instructed the master of the Adur to meet us. +Bidding good-bye to our kind friends at Esperance Bay, travelled along +the north shore for about eleven miles, when we left the coast and +steered towards Mount Merivale, and camped at a spring on South-East +corner of a salt sake, Mount Merivale bearing North 60 degrees East +magnetic; Frenchman's Peak North 150 degrees East magnetic, and +Remarkable Island North 196 degrees East magnetic. The country for the +last few miles is beautifully grassed, with numerous brackish streams +running through. Commenced keeping watch this evening, two hours each, +from 8 p.m. to 6 o'clock a.m. Marked a tree with the letter F. at our +bivouac. + +10th. +Travelled nearly due East for twenty-four miles, through scrubby, sandy +country without timber. Remarkable bare granite hills studded in every +direction. Camped at a spring on South-East side of granite hills, +resembling a saddle. Passed Mount Hawes, leaving it a little to the +north. From hill near camp, Mount Hawes bore North 295 degrees East +magnetic, Mount Merivale North 278 degrees East magnetic, Frenchman's +Peak North 243 degrees 30 minutes East magnetic, and the east side of +Mondrain Island North 207 degrees 30 minutes East magnetic. + +11th. +The horses having strayed back on the tracks last night, we were delayed +till 10 o'clock, when only eight of them were brought in. Sent Tommy in +search of the remainder, and, after waiting until 3 o'clock for his +return, my brother, Osborn, and Billy went with seven horses and loads; +instructed to camp at the first place where there was feed and water, +there being no feed at this camp. McLarty and myself waited until Tommy +returned, which he did at sundown, having had to go back twenty-four +miles to the bivouac of the 9th. There being scarcely any feed here, and +it being too late to follow after the party, we tied up our horses for +the night. Found it rather long hours watching, namely, about four hours +each. By meridian altitude of sun, camp is in latitude 33 degrees 90 +minutes 49 seconds South. + +12th. +Packed up and followed on the tracks of the party, and at ten miles found +them camped on a branch of a creek which runs into Duke of Orleans Bay. +Brackish streams plentiful: scrubby, sandy country. By meridian altitudes +of sun and Arcturus, camp is in South latitude 33 degrees 51 minutes 35 +seconds. + +THE ALEXANDER RIVER. + +13th. +Travelled in an easterly direction towards Cape Arid, passing at five +miles a large creek, and at ten miles camped on a running brackish +stream, which I named the Alexander. Scrubby open country most of the +way. Shot a few ducks from thousands that are in these rivers. + +14th. +Continuing a little to the south of East for ten miles, crossed a large +brook, and at fourteen miles reached another creek. Followed it up a mile +and camped on east side of a large salt lagoon, into which the brook +empties. Splendid green feed around camp, but no water. Went with Billy +to look for some, and, after going a mile and a half East, struck the +Thomas River, where we met two natives, quietly disposed, who showed us +the water, and, after filling our canteens, returned with us to camp. + +15th (Sunday). +Shifted camp over to the Thomas River, one mile and a half, where there +was plenty of water. Rained a little during the day. Grassy piece of +country round camp--the first good feeding land seen since leaving Mount +Merivale. About half a mile west of camp, Mount Ragged bore North 43 +degrees 30 minutes East magnetic, Mount Baring North 53 degrees 15 +minutes East magnetic, and South-West point of Cape Arid North 140 +degrees 30 minutes East. By meridian altitude of sun, camp was in south +latitude 33 degrees 50 minutes 7 seconds, and longitude about 123 degrees +East. Billy shot five ducks this afternoon. + +16th. +Got an early start and steered nearly East, accompanied by the two +natives, over scrubby sand-plains for about twenty-one miles. We camped +near the sea, a few miles to the westward of Cape Pasley. Filled our +canteens about two miles back from where we camped, from which point +Mount Ragged bore North 11 degrees East magnetic, Cape Pasley North 110 +degrees 30 minutes East magnetic, and South-East point of Cape Arid North +214 degrees East magnetic. + +17th. +Steering in an East-North-East direction for about nineteen miles, we +camped near Point Malcolm, Mount Ragged bearing North 327 degrees East +magnetic, and Point Dempster (Israelite Bay) North 35 degrees 15 minutes +East magnetic. Hope to reach Israelite Bay to-morrow, as it is only +sixteen miles distant. There was no water at Point Malcolm, but luckily +we had filled our canteens. The wind was strong from the westward, +accompanied with light showers all day. Tommy shot a kangaroo this +evening, and the two natives who were travelling with us from the Thomas +River did ample justice to the supper, literally eating the whole night. + +ISRAELITE BAY. + +18th. +After starting the party, went in advance with Billy to prepare camp at +Israelite Bay. When we reached it were delighted to find the Adur lying +safely at anchor there; proceeding on board, found all well. Procured +abundance of water by digging one foot deep in the sand-hills, and good +feed a short distance from camp. + +Our friends on the Adur were looking anxiously for us. We were two days +behind the appointed time, and they feared some evil had befallen us, not +taking into consideration the many delays incidental to such a journey +through strange and difficult country as we had made. We had occupied ten +days in reaching Israelite Bay since leaving Mr. Dempster's station, +going an average of about twelve miles a day, which would be a slow rate +of progress in a settled country, but which had sufficiently tried our +horses, they being now in a very reduced condition from scarcity of feed. +I resolved to stay at the camp for eight or ten days to recruit the +horses, as there was good feed in the vicinity; and we re-stuffed and +re-fitted the saddles and had the horses shod. I made a correct chart of +the route from Esperance Bay, and found that the coast-line, as laid down +in the Admiralty charts, was in many places incorrect. + +On the 24th of May we determined to celebrate the Queen's birthday. All +hands from the Adur came ashore, and I drew them up in line under the +Union Jack, which was duly hoisted near the camp. We presented arms; sang +God Save the Queen vigorously, and fired a salute of twenty-one guns, +finishing with three cheers. I venture to record that our vocal efforts +were as sincerely and heartily made in the Australian wilderness as any +which rang that day in any part of her Majesty's wide dominions. We were +all highly delighted--not only feeling that we had done our duty as loyal +subjects, but other celebrations in more civilized places were forcibly +recalled to memory. + +I had fixed the 30th as the time for our fresh start, and we had enough +to do in packing bags, and making general repairs and improvements in our +outfit. Eucla Bay, the only other point at which we should be able to +communicate with the coaster, was 350 miles to the east of Israelite Bay. +The nature of the country was quite unknown, except so far as indicated +by the not very encouraging record of Eyre's journey. We felt that we +should inevitably have to encounter considerable difficulties, and +perhaps even fail to reach Eucla. I deemed it right to give explicit +directions to Mr. Waugh, the master of the schooner, so that, in the +event of not meeting with us at the appointed place, he should have no +difficulty as to the course to pursue, and to that end I gave him in +writing the following instructions:-- + +INSTRUCTIONS FOR THE SCHOONER. + +Israelite Bay, 28th May, 1870. + +SIR, + +It being my intention to start for Eucla on Monday, the 30th instant, I +have the honour to direct you will be good enough to make arrangements +for leaving this place on the 7th of June, wind and weather permitting, +and sail as direct as possible for Port Eucla, situated in south latitude +31 degrees 43 minutes, and east longitude 128 degrees 52 minutes East. + +You will remain at anchor in Port Eucla until the 1st September, long +before which time I hope to reach and meet you there. No signs of myself +or party appearing by that date, you will bury in casks under the Black +Beacon, 400 pounds flour, 200 pounds pork, 100 pounds sugar, 10 pounds +tea, and four bags barley, together with the remainder of our clothing on +board. You will be careful to hide the spot of concealment as much as +possible, or by any other means that may suggest themselves. Also you +will bury a bottle containing report of your proceedings. + +All these matters had better be attended to a day or two before, and on +the 2nd of September you will set sail and return with all despatch to +this place (Israelite Bay), where, if I have been obliged to return, I +will leave buried a bottle at this spot (arranged by us yesterday), which +will contain instructions as to your future proceedings. + +No signs of our return being found here, you will sail for Fremantle, +calling at Esperance Bay on your way. + +On arriving in Fremantle, you will immediately report your return to the +Honourable the Colonial Secretary, and forward him a report of your +proceedings, after which your charter-party will have been completed. + +These arrangements are chiefly respecting your proceedings in the event +of our not reaching Eucla; and I may add that, although I have every hope +of reaching there in safety, still it is impossible to command success in +any enterprise, and I have to impress upon you the necessity of these +instructions being carried out, as nearly as possible, to the very +letter. Wishing yourself and crew a prosperous voyage, and hoping soon to +meet you in Port Eucla, + +I have, etc., + +JOHN FORREST, + +Leader of Expedition. + +Mr. R.B. Waugh, + +Master of Schooner Adur. + +STARTING FOR EUCLA. + +On Sunday, the 29th of May, all hands came ashore to dinner. It was +certainly a festive party under rather extraordinary circumstances, but +it was heartily enjoyed. So far as we were concerned the future was more +than usually uncertain; but there was no feeling of despondency, and we +separated in the evening with mutual good wishes and hopes for the +success of the expedition. I read Divine Service, and, situated as we +were, a small party remote from civilization, I think we all felt more +impressed than under ordinary circumstances would have been the case. We +had rested for eleven days. Good food had restored the condition of the +horses, and we rested in our camp in good spirits, ready for the work we +were to begin on the following morning. My observations showed that we +were in latitude 33 degrees 36 minutes 58 seconds South and longitude +about 123 degrees 48 minutes East, the variation of compass from a number +of azimuths being about 0 degrees 46 minutes westerly. + +The narrative is now continued in extracts from my Diary:-- + +May 30th. +After bidding good-bye to the crew of the Adur, and to the two natives we +have had with us from the Thomas River, who were now at the end of their +country and were afraid to come any further with us, we left Israelite +Bay en route for Eucla, and steered in a northerly direction for about +fifteen miles over salt marshes and clay-pans, with dense thickets +intervening, destitute of grass. I was obliged to make for the coast, +and, following it for about eight miles, we camped close to it, without +water or feed, and tied up our horses in latitude 33 degrees 17 minutes +17 seconds by meridian altitude of Arcturus and a Bootes. + +31st. +Saddled up at dawn and continued along the beach for four miles; came to +a large sand patch, and found abundance of water by digging one foot deep +in the hollows. Camped on east side of the sand-hills, with first-rate +feed for the horses. By meridian altitude of sun, camp is in latitude 33 +degrees 13 minutes 46 seconds South. + +June 1st. +After starting the party, went with Tommy Windich to examine the country +to the North-West, and then, travelling nine miles over salt marshes and +samphire flats, with dense scrub intervening, we reached what is named on +the Admiralty Charts The Front Bank, which, ascending, we found very +steep and rough. At last, gaining the summit, the country receded to the +north, level and thickly wooded, as far as the eye could reach. We +travelled about four miles to the North-West, from where we ascended the +range, and then climbed a tree to have a view of the country, which I +found very level and thickly wooded with mallee. I therefore determined +to turn east, and if possible, reach the party to-night. Accordingly, we +reached the sea, and, following the tracks of the party, came up with +them at about 10 p.m., encamped on North-East side of an immense +sand-patch, about twenty-five miles from our last night's bivouac. There +was abundance of water on the surface in the hollows of the sand-hills. + +2nd. +There being no feed near camp, saddled up and continued towards Point +Culver for four miles and camped, with only some coarse grass growing on +the white sand-hills for our very hungry horses. Found plenty of water by +digging. This is a poor place for the horses: intend making a flying trip +to the North-East to-morrow. By meridian altitude of sun and Arcturus, +camp is in latitude 32 degrees 55 minutes 30 seconds south, and longitude +124 degrees 25 minutes east. + +3rd. +Started with my brother and Billy to examine the country to the +North-East, and travelled in about a North-East direction for twenty-five +miles over very level country, but in many places most beautifully +grassed. We camped on a splendid flat, without water. + +A VIEW OF THE SEA. + +4th. +Started at dawn and travelled in a southerly direction for nine miles, +when we found a rock water-hole containing one gallon, and had breakfast. +Continuing for four miles, we reached the cliffs, which fell +perpendicularly into the sea, and, although grand in the extreme, were +terrible to gaze from. After looking very cautiously over the precipice, +we all ran back quite terror-stricken by the dreadful view. Turning our +course westward along the cliffs, we reached camp at 5 o'clock, and found +all well. We saw several natives' tracks during the day. + +5th (Sunday). +Rested at camp. Read Divine Service. Intend making preparations to-morrow +for starting on Tuesday morning, and attempt to reach the water shown on +Mr. Eyre's track, in longitude 126 degrees 24 minutes East, 150 miles +distant, by carrying thirty gallons of water with us and walking in +turns, so as to have the horses to carry the water. Intend allowing each +man one quart and each horse two quarts per day. Feel very anxious as to +the result, as it will take five or six days; but it is the only resource +left. After explaining my views to my companions, and pointing out the +great probability of our meeting with small rock water-holes, was much +relieved by the sanguine way in which they acquiesced in the plans, and +the apparent confidence they placed in me. + +6th. +Filled the water-cans, and got everything ready for a start to-morrow +morning. + +7th. +Started at 9 a.m., carrying over thirty gallons of water with us. One of +the drums leaked so much that we left it at camp. Travelled along our +outward tracks of the 4th, and camped at our former bivouac, with +splendid feed, but no water for our horses. + +8th. +Started early, and steered about North-East through dense mallee +thickets, destitute of grass or water, for eighteen miles. We came upon a +small patch of open grassy land, and camped without water for our horses. +This is the second night our horses have been without water, but the +grass has been fresh, and they do not yet appear to have suffered much. +Marked a tree at camp, F., 1870. My brother, I am sorry to say, left his +revolver at our last night's bivouac, and did not notice it until this +evening, when it was too far to send back to look for it. By meridian +altitude of Arcturus, camp is in latitude 32 degrees 34 minutes 20 +seconds south, and longitude 124 degrees 59 minutes east. + +SUFFERINGS FROM THIRST. + +9th. +Made an early start, steering North-East, and at one mile found a rock +water-hole containing fifteen gallons, which we gave the tired, thirsty +horses, and, continuing, chiefly through dense mallee thickets, with a +few grassy flats intervening, for twenty-two miles, found another rock +water-hole holding about ten gallons, which we also gave the horses, and, +after travelling one mile from it, camped on a large grassy flat, without +water for the horses. Our horses are still very thirsty, and have yet +seventy miles to go before reaching the water in longitude 126 degrees 24 +minutes East. Am very thankful for finding the little water to-day, for +if we had none, our situation would be somewhat perilous, and some of the +horses would probably show signs of distress to-morrow. Latitude of camp, +32 degrees 20 minutes 35 seconds South by Arcturus, and longitude 125 +degrees 16 minutes East. + +10th. +Steering East-North-East over generally open country, grassy flats, etc., +thinly wooded, for twenty-one miles, found a small rock water-hole +containing three gallons, which we put into our canteens. After +travelling three miles further, camped on the edge of a grassy flat, and +gave our horses half a gallon each from our canteens. Our horses appear +fearfully distressed this evening. For the last ninety-six hours they +have only had two gallons each. Latitude of camp 32 degrees 11 minutes 5 +seconds South, longitude 125 degrees 37 minutes East. + +11th. +Found, on collecting the horses, that four were missing. Those found were +in a sad state for want of water, and there was not a moment to lose. I +therefore at once told Tommy to look for those missing, and, after +saddling up, sent the party on with my brother, with instructions to +steer easterly for nearly fifty miles, when they would reach the water in +longitude 126 degrees 24 minutes East. I remained behind to await Tommy's +return, and, after an hour's awful anxiety, was rejoiced to see him +returning with the ramblers. We lost no time in following after the +party, and at two miles came to a water-hole they had emptied and given +to the horses (fifteen gallons), and at five miles overtook them. After +travelling ten miles, found another water-hole with fifteen gallons, +which we also gave our horses, they being still very thirsty. At fourteen +miles found a water-hole holding three gallons, which we transferred to +our canteens; and at fifteen miles camped on a small but very grassy +flat, close to which we found a water-hole of ten gallons, which I intend +giving the horses to-morrow morning. Although the horses are still very +thirsty, they are much relieved, and are willing to feed. We all felt +tired from long, weary, and continued walking. By meridian altitude of +Arcturus, camp is in latitude 32 degrees 13 minutes South, and longitude +125 degrees 51 minutes East. + +12th (Sunday). +After giving the horses the little water found by Tommy last evening, we +struck a little to the south of east over generally grassy country, +slightly undulating for three miles, when, being in advance, walking, I +found a large water-hole with about 100 gallons of water in it. It being +Sunday, and men and horses very tired, I halted for the day, as there was +most luxuriant feed round camp. Our horses soon finished the water, and +looked much better after it. Although now without water, we are in +comparative safety, as the horses have had nearly sufficient. We are now +only thirty-two miles from the water shown on Mr. Eyre's chart, in +longitude 126 degrees 24 minutes East. Latitude of camp 32 degrees 13 +minutes 35 seconds South, and longitude 125 degrees 54 minutes East. + +MEETING NATIVES. + +13th. +Made an early start, and steering a little to the south of east, keeping +straight for the water in longitude 126 degrees 24 minutes East. At +eighteen miles got a view of the sea, and beheld the sand-hills about +fifteen miles ahead. Here we saw some natives' fires close to us. +Approaching them, we came upon an old woman, and my brother and Tommy +soon brought a man to bay. There were about twenty round us; they +appeared very frightened. After detaining them half an hour, and treating +them as kindly as possible, we bade them farewell and continued our +journey. The natives were entirely naked. After we left the natives, we +came to where the cliffs leave the sea, in longitude 126 degrees 12 +minutes East. From here Point Dover was clearly visible, and I cannot +express my feelings when gazing on the scene. To the westward, those +grand precipitous cliffs, from 200 to 300 feet high, and Point Dover, +near which Mr. Eyre's overseer was murdered, could easily be discerned; +and while thinking over his hardships and miseries, we turned our faces +eastward, and there saw, within a few miles, the water we so much needed. +We then descended the cliffs and reached the sea shore, which we followed +for about twelve miles, reaching the first sand-patch at about 10 o'clock +p.m. There was good feed all around, but we could not, from the darkness, +find any water. Gave our horses all we had with us, about fifteen +gallons. + +A GLIMPSE OF THE ADUR. + +14th. +This morning searched the sand-patches for water, without success; I +therefore packed up and proceeded towards another large patch, four miles +distant, going in advance with Billy. After we left, Tommy found a place +used by the natives, where water could be procured by digging. He, +however, followed after Billy and myself. On reaching the sand-patch we +saw the place where water could be procured by digging; we also found +sufficient to satisfy our horses on some sandstone flats. We were soon +joined by the party, who were overjoyed to be in perfect safety once +more, and we were all thankful to that Providence which had guarded us +over 150 miles without finding permanent water. We soon pitched camp, and +took the horses to the feed, which was excellent. Returning, we were +surprised to see a vessel making in for the land, and soon made her out +to be the Adur. Although the wind was favourable for Eucla, she made in +for the land until within about three miles, when she turned eastward, +and, although we made fires, was soon out of sight. I afterwards +ascertained that they were not sure of their longitude, having no +chronometer on board, and therefore wished to see some landmark. + +15th. +Dug two wells to-day, and found good water at seven feet from the +surface. Lined them with stakes and bushes to keep them from filling in. +In the afternoon we all amused ourselves shooting wattle-birds, and +managed to kill fifteen. + +16th. +Dug another well and bushed it up, the supply from the two dug yesterday +being insufficient, and obtained an ample quantity of splendid fresh +water. By a number of observations, camp is in latitude 32 degrees 14 +minutes 50 seconds South, and longitude 126 degrees 24 minutes East, the +variation of compass being about 1 degree 6 minutes easterly. The horses +are improving very quickly, there being splendid feed round the +sand-patches. + +17th. +Went with Tommy Windich for a walk eastward along the beach, and returned +a little inland. Passed over some patches of beautiful grassed country. +Saw a pine pole standing on one of the hummocks near the beach, probably +erected by Mr. Eyre, as I am not aware of any one else having been here. +We could not find any of his camps, however; doubtless the sand has long +since covered them. + +18th. +Making preparations for a flying trip inland on Monday. + +19th (Sunday). +Read Divine Service. Every appearance of rain. + +20th. +Started this morning, in company with McLarty and Tommy Windich, to +explore the country to the northward. The first twelve miles north was +through very dense thickets and sandy hills, when we reached the cliffs, +which we ascended with difficulty, and steering about North-North-East +for the first three miles, through dense mallee thickets, we emerged into +a generally grassy country, and travelled over beautifully-grassed downs. +We camped at a rock water-hole of fifteen gallons, about twenty-five +miles from main camp. + +21st. +Steering about north for one mile, we found a rock water-hole holding +about thirty gallons; and continuing for thirteen miles over grassy +plains, thinly wooded, the country became very clear and open, and at +twenty-five miles there was nothing but plains, gently undulating, of +grass and salt-bush in view. Far as the eye could reach to the +North-West, North, and North-East, this clear and grassy country +extended; and being now fifty miles from camp, with the prospect of +finding water diminishing as we travelled northward, I determined to +return. Accordingly struck South-West, and after travelling twelve miles +found a small water-hole of three gallons, and camped for the night. Set +watch as follows: myself 7 to 11, McLarty 11 to 3.30 a.m., and Tommy from +3.30 to 6 a.m. We found them rather long hours. + +22nd. +Saddled up at dawn, and steering southerly over clear, open, grassy +plains for twenty-eight miles, we reached the cliffs, and rested an hour; +after which we continued our journey and reached camp a little after +dark, finding all well. + +A RELIC OF EYRE. + +23rd. +Made preparations for a start for Eucla to-morrow, and put everything in +travelling order. During my absence, Osborn had got the horses' feet in +order, and the pack-saddles had been overhauled, and repairs generally +made. In looking round the camp, Tommy Windich found shoulder-blade of a +horse, and two small pieces of leather. They no doubt belonged to Mr. +Eyre's equipment, and, on reference to his journal, I find he was here +obliged to kill a horse for food. In his journal he writes thus: "Early +on the morning of the 16th April, 1841, I sent the overseer to kill the +unfortunate horse, which was still alive but unable to rise from the +ground, having never moved from the place where he had first been found +lying yesterday morning. The miserable animal was in the most wretched +state possible, thin and emaciated by long and continued suffering, and +labouring under some complaint that in a very few hours, at the farthest, +must have terminated its life." I cut off part of the shoulder-blade, and +have since given it, together with the pieces of leather, to his +Excellency Governor Weld. + +A PARTY OF NATIVES. + +24th. +Started at 8.30 a.m. en route for Eucla. Steering in a North-North-East +direction for fifteen miles, reached the cliffs, and after following +along them two miles, found a large rock water-hole, but in an almost +inaccessible spot. While I was examining the cliffs near, to find a place +where we could get the horses up, Tommy heard a cooey, and after +answering it a good many times, we were surprised to see two natives +walking up towards us, unarmed. I approached and met them; they did not +appear at all frightened, and at once began to eat the damper I gave +them. We could not understand anything they said. I beckoned them to come +along with us, which they at once did, and followed so closely after me +as to tramp on my spurs. They pointed to water further ahead. After +walking about a mile, four more natives were seen running after us, who, +on joining, made a great noise, singing, and appearing very pleased. +Shortly afterwards two more followed, making seven in all; all entirely +naked, and every one circumcised. We found the water alluded to on the +top of the cliffs, but, it being too late to get the horses up, we turned +off to the southward half a mile, and camped on a small grassy flat, +without water for the horses. The seven natives slept at our fire. We +gave them as much damper as they could eat. They had not the least +particle of clothing, and made pillows of each other's bodies, and +resembled pigs more than human beings. + +25th. +The horses began to stray towards morning, and at 3 a.m. I roused Billy +and brought them back. After saddling up, went to the cliffs, and with +two hours' hard work in making a path and leading up the horses (two of +which fell backwards), we managed to gain the summit. The seven natives +accompanied us, and giving one of them the bag containing my rug to carry +over to the water, I was surprised to see him trotting off with it. +Calling Tommy, we soon overtook him and made him carry it back to the +party. After giving our horses as much as they required from the fine +water-holes, I motioned five of the natives to leave us and two to +accompany us, which they soon understood, and appeared satisfied. +Travelling in an East-North-East direction for twenty-one miles, over +rich grassy table-land plains, thinly wooded, we camped on a very grassy +spot, without water for our horses. By meridian altitude of Arcturus, +camp is in latitude 31 degrees 52 minutes 30 seconds south, and longitude +126 degrees 53 minutes East. + +26th (Sunday). +Finding the two natives entirely useless, as we could not understand +them, and had to give them part of the little water we carried with us, +motioned them to return, which they appeared very pleased to do. Steering +in an easterly direction for two miles, over downs of most luxuriant +grass, we found a large rock water-hole holding over 100 gallons. It was +Sunday, and all being tired, we camped for the day. In every direction, +open gently undulating country, most beautifully grassed, extended. By +meridian altitude of sun, camp is in latitude 31 degrees 53 minutes +South. Read Divine Service. Tommy and Billy went for a stroll, and +returned bringing with them two small kangaroos, (the first we have shot +since leaving Israelite Bay) which proved a great treat. The natives also +found a fine water-hole about a mile from camp. Gave the horses all the +water at this place. Every appearance of rain. + +27th. +Made rather a late start, owing to some of the horses straying. Steered +in an East-North-East direction, and at ten miles found a small +waterhole, and at twenty-one miles another, both of which we gave our +horses, and at twenty-four miles camped on a grassy spot, without water +for our horses. For the first fifteen miles grassy, gently undulating, +splendid feeding country extended in every direction, after which there +was a slight falling off, scrubby at intervals. By meridian altitude of +Arcturus, camp was in latitude 31 degrees 46 minutes 43 seconds South, +and longitude 127 degrees 17 minutes East. + +28th. +Had some difficulty in collecting the horses, and made a late start, +steering in about an East-North-East direction for the first five miles, +over very grassy flats, etc., when it became more dense and scrubby until +twenty miles, after which it improved a little. At twenty-four miles we +camped on a grassy rise, without water, in south latitude 31 degrees 41 +minutes, and longitude 127 degrees 40 minutes East. Our horses appeared +distressed for want of water, the weather being very warm. + +HEAVY MARCHING. + +29th. +Had to go back five miles to get the horses this morning. After saddling +up, travelled in about an easterly direction for twenty-four miles, and +camped on a grassy rise, close to a small rock water-hole. During the +day, found in small rock-holes sufficient to give each horse about three +gallons. The country was generally very grassy, although in some places +rather thickly wooded. McLarty was very foot-sore from heavy and long +walking. By meridian altitude of Arcturus, camp is in latitude 31 degrees +45 minutes South, and longitude 128 degrees 2 minutes East. + +30th. +Hearing the horses make off, I roused Billy and brought them back; they +had gone two miles. Packed up, and steering in an east direction over +generally very grassy country with occasional mallee thickets, for about +twenty-two miles, we came to a splendidly-grassed rise, and found a fine +rock water-hole on it, containing about 100 gallons, which our horses +soon finished being fearfully in want, the day being very warm. We are +now only thirty miles from Eucla. For the last two days McLarty has been +so lame that I have not allowed him to walk--his boots hurting his feet. + +July 1st. +Made an early start, every one being in high spirits, as I told them they +should see the sea and Eucla to-day. Travelling about east over most +beautifully-grassed country, at five miles found a large water-hole, +holding 100 gallons; but our horses, not being thirsty, did not drink +much. This is the first rock water-hole we have passed without finishing +since we left Point Culver. After ten miles reached the cliffs, or +Hampton Range, and had a splendid view of the Roe Plains, Wilson's Bluff +looming in the distance, bearing North 77 degrees 30 minutes East +magnetic. + +Descending the cliffs with difficulty, we followed along the foot of +them, which was beautifully grassed, and, after travelling twelve miles, +beheld the Eucla sand-hills. On my pointing them out, every heart was +full of joy, and, being away some distance, I heard the long and +continued hurrahs from the party! Eucla was all the conversation! I never +before remember witnessing such joy as was evinced on this occasion by +all the party. After travelling five miles further we camped close to the +cliffs, at a small water-hole, Wilson's Bluff bearing North 85 degrees +East magnetic, and the Delissier sand-hills North 90 degrees East +magnetic. We might have reached Eucla this evening, but I preferred doing +so to-morrow, when we could have the day before us to choose camp. We are +now again in safety, Eucla being only seven miles distant, after having +travelled 166 miles without finding permanent water--in fact, over 300 +miles with only one place where we procured permanent water, namely, in +longitude 126 degrees 24 minutes East. I trust we all recognized with +sincerity and thankfulness the guiding and protecting Father who had +brought us through in safety. By observation, the camp was in latitude 31 +degrees 42 minutes South. + +EUCLA REACHED. + +2nd. +Made an early start and steered straight for the anchorage, distant about +five miles, having first ascended the range to have a view of the +country, which was very extensive. Far as the eye could reach to the +westward the Roe Plains and Hampton Range were visible; while to the +eastward lay Wilson's Bluff and the Delissier sand-hills; and three miles +west of them we were delighted to behold the good schooner Adur, riding +safely at anchor in Eucla harbour, which formed by no means the least +pleasing feature of the scene to our little band of weary travellers. +Made at once for the vessel, and, on reaching her, found all well and +glad to see us. She was anchored between the Red and Black Beacons. The +latter had been blown down, but shall be re-erected. There being no water +at the anchorage, moved on to the Delissier sand-hills, where we found +water by digging two and a half feet from the surface. Camped on west +side of the sand-hills. Landed barley, etc., from the boat. There was +good feed for the horses under the Hampton Range, about a mile and a half +distant. + +The next day was Sunday. The crew of the Adur came ashore and dined with +us, and, as usual, I read Divine Service. On the following morning I went +aboard the schooner and examined the log-book and charts. We painted the +Red and Black Beacons, and Mr. Adams having trimmed up a spar, we erected +a flagstaff thirty-four feet high. I occupied myself the next day with +preparing a report to be sent to the Colonial Secretary. My brother went +off to the boat and brought ashore the things we required. We were busy +on the following days packing up and shipping things not required for the +trip to Adelaide, and I gave the master of the Adur instructions to sail +with all despatch for Fremantle. + +The following report, which I sent back by the Adur, describes the +progress then made with somewhat more detail than in my Journal:-- + +Port Eucla, 7th July, 1870. + +SIR, + +It is with much pleasure I have the honour to report, for the information +of his Excellency the Governor, the safe arrival here of the expedition +entrusted to my guidance, as also the meeting of the schooner Adur. + +Leaving Esperance Bay on the 9th of May, we travelled in an easterly +direction, over plains generally poorly grassed, to Israelite Bay +(situated in latitude 33 degrees 36 minutes 51 seconds South, and +longitude 123 degrees 48 minutes East), which we reached on the 18th May, +and met the Adur, according to instructions issued to the master. Here we +recruited our horses and had them re-shod, put the pack-saddles in good +order, packed provisions, etc., and gave the master of the Adur very +strict and detailed instructions to proceed to Eucla Harbour, and await +my arrival until the 2nd of September, when, if I did not reach there, he +was to bury provisions under the Black Beacon and sail for Fremantle, via +Israelite and Esperance Bays. Everything being in readiness, on the 30th +of May we left Israelite Bay en route for Eucla, carrying with us three +months' provisions. Keeping near the coast for sixty miles, having taken +a flying trip inland on my way, we reached the sand-patches a little to +the west of Point Culver, in latitude 32 degrees 55 minutes 34 seconds +South, and longitude 124 degrees 25 minutes East, on the 2nd of June. + +On the 3rd went on a flying trip to the North-East, returning on the 4th +along the cliffs and Point Culver. I found the country entirely destitute +of permanent water, but, after leaving the coast a few miles, to be, in +places, beautifully grassed. On the coast near the cliffs it was very +rocky, and there was neither feed nor water. Finding there was no chance +of permanent water being found, that the only water in the country was in +small rocky holes--and those very scarce indeed--and the feed being very +bad at Point Culver, I determined, after very mature consideration, to +attempt at all hazards to reach the water shown on Mr. Eyre's track in +longitude 126 degrees 24 minutes East, or 140 miles distant. + +In accordance with these arrangements, on the 7th day of June started on +our journey, carrying over thirty gallons of water on three of our riding +horses, and taking it in turns walking. Travelled about North-East for +four days, which brought us to latitude 32 degrees 11 minutes South, and +longitude 125 degrees 37 minutes East, finding, during that time, in +rocky holes, sufficient water to give each horse two gallons. On the +fifth day we were more fortunate, and were able to give them each two +gallons more, and on the sixth day (the 12th June, Sunday) found a large +rock hole containing sufficient to give them five gallons each, which +placed us in safety, as the water in longitude 126 degrees 24 minutes +East was only thirty-two miles distant. Continuing, we reached the water +on Tuesday, June 14th, and by observation found it to be in latitude 32 +degrees 14 minutes 50 seconds South, and longitude 126 degrees 24 minutes +East, the variation of the compass being about 1 degree 6 minutes +easterly. + +The country passed over between Point Culver and longitude 126 degrees 24 +minutes East, was in many places beautifully grassed, level, without the +slightest undulation, about 300 feet above the sea, and not very thickly +wood. It improves to the northward, being clearer and more grassy, and +the horizon to the north, in every place where I could get an extensive +view, was as uniform and well-defined as that of the sea. On the route +from Point Culver to longitude 126 degrees 24 minutes East, we were from +twenty to twenty-five miles from the sea. + +Recruiting ourselves and horses till the 30th, I took a flying trip to +the northward. For the first twelve miles from the sea was through a +dense and almost impenetrable scrub, when we reached the cliffs, and +after ascending them we came into the same description of level country +that we travelled over from Point Culver, save that this was more open +and grassy, and became still clearer as we proceeded north, until, at our +farthest point north, in latitude 31 degrees 33 minutes South, and +longitude 126 degrees 33 minutes East, scarcely a tree was visible, and +vast plains of grass and saltbush extended as far as the eye could reach +in every direction. We found a little water for our horses in rock holes. +Returning, we reached camp on June 22nd. On the 23rd we were engaged +making preparations for a start for Eucla. In looking round camp, Tommy +Windich found the shoulder-blade of a horse and two small pieces of +leather belonging to a packsaddle. The shoulder-blade is no doubt the +remains of the horse Mr. Eyre was obliged to kill for food at this spot. + +On June 24th started for Eucla, carrying, as before, over thirty gallons +of water, and walking in turns. On the 25th found on the top of the +cliffs a large rock hole, containing sufficient water to give the horses +as much as they required, and on the 26th were equally fortunate. From +the 26th to the 30th we met with scarcely any water, and our horses +appeared very distressed, more so as the weather was very warm. On the +evening of the 30th, however, we were again fortunate enough to find a +water-hole containing sufficient to give them six gallons each, and were +again in safety, Eucla water being only thirty miles distant. On the +morning of the 1st day of July we reached the cliffs, or Hampton Range +(these cliffs recede from the sea in longitude 126 degrees 12 minutes +East, and run along at the average distance of twelve or fifteen miles +from the sea until they join it again at Wilson's Bluff, in longitude 129 +degrees East. They are very steep and rough, and water may generally be +found in rock holes in the gorges. I, however, wished to keep further +inland, and therefore did not follow them), and shortly afterwards we +beheld the Wilson's Bluff and the Eucla sand-hills. Camped for the night +near the Hampton Range, about five miles from Eucla Harbour, and on the +2nd July, on nearing the anchorage, discovered the schooner Adur lying +safely at anchor, which proved by no means the least pleasing feature to +our little band of weary travellers. Camped on west side of Delissier +sand-hills, and found water by digging. + +The country passed over between longitude 126 degrees 24 minutes East, as +a grazing country, far surpasses anything I have ever seen. There is +nothing in the settled portions of Western Australia equal to it, either +in extent or quality; but the absence of permanent water is the great +drawback, and I do not think water would be procured by sinking, except +at great depths, as the country is at least three hundred feet above the +sea, and there is nothing to indicate water being within an easy depth +from the surface. The country is very level, with scarcely any +undulation, and becomes clearer as you proceed northward. + +Since leaving Cape Arid I have not seen a gully or watercourse of any +description--a distance of 400 miles. + +The route from longitude 126 degrees 24 minutes East to Eucla was +generally about thirty miles from the sea. + +The natives met with appeared friendly and harmless; they are entirely +destitute of clothing, and I think not very numerous. + +Very little game exists along the route; a few kangaroos were seen, but +no emus--an almost certain sign, I believe, of the scarcity of water. + +The health of the party has been excellent; and I cannot speak too highly +of the manner in which each member of the expedition has conducted +himself, under circumstances often of privation and difficulty. + +All our horses are also in splendid condition; and when I reflect how +great were the sufferings of the only other Europeans who traversed this +route, I cannot but thank Almighty God who has guarded and guided us in +safety through such a waterless region, without the loss of even a single +horse. + +I am afraid I shall not be able to get far inland northward, unless we +are favoured with rain. We have not had any rain since the end of April, +and on that account our difficulties have been far greater than if it had +been an ordinary wet season. + +I intend despatching the Adur for Fremantle to-morrow. The charter-party +has been carried out entirely to my satisfaction. With the assistance of +the crew of the Adur I have repainted the Red and Black Beacons. The +latter had been blown down; we, however, re-erected it firmly again. I +have also erected a flagstaff, thirty feet high, near camp on west side +of Delissier sand-hills, with a copper-plate nailed on it, with its +position, my name, and that of the colony engraved on it. + +We are now within 140 miles from the nearest Adelaide station. I will +write to you as soon as I reach there. It will probably be a month from +this date. + +Trusting that the foregoing brief account of my proceedings, as leader of +the expedition entrusted to my guidance, may meet with the approval of +his Excellency the Governor, + +I have, etc., + +JOHN FORREST, + +Leader of Expedition to Eucla and Adelaide. + +The Honourable the Colonial Secretary, + +Perth, W.A. + +We had now accomplished rather more than half the distance between Perth +and Adelaide, but there was still a gap of 140 miles to be bridged over. +We bade good-bye to our friends on board the Adur, and were now thrown +entirely on our own resources. I resume the extracts from my Journal:-- + +LOOKING FOR WATER. + +July 8th. +Started in company with my brother and Billy, having three riding horses +and a pack horse, to penetrate the country to the northward. Travelled in +a northerly direction for about twenty-seven miles, over plains generally +well grassed, and then bivouacked. From the camp only plains were in +sight, not a tree visible. Did not meet with a drop of water on our way, +and, having brought none, we had to do without it. This season is too dry +to attempt to cross these vast grassy plains, and I shall return to camp +to-morrow--the attempt to get inland without rain only exhausting +ourselves and horses to no purpose. + +9th. +After collecting the horses, which had strayed back on the tracks, we +steered in a South-South-West direction, and reached camp a little after +sundown. Did not find any water, except about half a gallon, during the +two days, and, the weather being warm, the horses were in a very +exhausted state when they reached camp. Found the Adur had left yesterday +afternoon. + +10th (Sunday). +Rested at Eucla. Read Divine Service. + +11th. +Osborn busy with the shoeing. Went with Billy to Wilson's Bluff, and saw +the boundary-post between South and Western Australia, placed by +Lieutenant Douglas. Returned at sundown. + +12th. +Erected the flagstaff with the Union Jack flying, and nailed a copper +plate to the staff, with the following engraved on it:-- + +WESTERN AUSTRALIA. ERECTED BY +J. FORREST, JULY 12TH, 1870. + +From the flagstaff, Wilson's Bluff bore North 70 degrees 15 minutes East +magnetic, and the Black Beacon North 246 degrees 20 minutes East +magnetic, and it is situated in latitude 31 degrees 41 minutes 50 seconds +South. + +13th. +There was a total eclipse of the moon in the morning. All busy preparing +for a start for the Head of the Bight to-morrow. Buried a cask eight feet +west of flagstaff, containing 100 pounds flour, 130 pounds barley, 16 new +sets of horse-shoes, shoeing nails, etc. Nailed a plate on flagstaff, +with DIG 8 FEET WEST on it. Took a ride to the Black and Red Beacons, to +examine country round Eucla. + +14th. +Bidding farewell to Eucla and the Union Jack, which we left on the +flagstaff, we started for the Head of the Bight, carrying over thirty +gallons of water with us, and walking in turns. Ascended the cliffs +without difficulty, and passed the boundary of the two colonies; then +left the sea, and, steering in an East-North-East and North-East +direction until a little after dark, camped on a grassy piece of country, +without water for our horses. Distance travelled about twenty-six miles. +By observation camp is in latitude 31 degrees 30 minutes 42 seconds +South, and longitude 129 degrees 20 minutes East. + +SUFFERING FROM THIRST. + +15th. +Started at daylight, and travelled East-North-East for seven miles, when +we bore East over generally level country, well grassed, but entirely +destitute of water. We camped at sundown on a grassy rise, without water +for our horses. Distance travelled, thirty-four miles. The horses have +not had any water for two days, and show signs of distress. Intend +starting before daylight, as there is a good moon. + +16th. +At 1 a.m. went with Billy to bring back the horses, which had again made +off. After returning, saddled up, and at 4.50 a.m. got under way, +steering a little to the south of east in order to make the cliffs, as +there might be water in rock holes near them. At eighteen miles came to +the sea, but could find no water. At thirty miles saw a pile of stones, +and at thirty-three miles saw a staked survey line. Camped on a grassy +piece of country, two miles from the sea. This is the third day without a +drop of water for the horses, which are in a frightful state. Gave them +each four quarts from our water-drums, and I hope, by leaving a little +after midnight, to reach the Head of the Bight to-morrow evening, as it +is now only forty miles distant. By observation, camp is in latitude 31 +degrees 32 minutes 27 seconds South, and longitude 130 degrees 30 minutes +East. + +17th. +Was obliged to get up twice to bring back the horses, and at four o'clock +made a start. The horses were in a very exhausted state; some having +difficulty to keep up. About noon I could descry the land turning to the +southward, and saw, with great pleasure, we were fast approaching the +Head of the Great Australian Bight. Reached the sand-patches at the +extreme Head of the Bight just as the sun was setting, and found +abundance of water by digging two feet deep in the sand. Gave the horses +as much as I considered it safe for them to have at one time. I have +never seen horses in such a state before, and hope never to do so again. +The horses, which four days ago were strong and in good condition, now +appeared only skeletons, eyes sunk, nostrils dilated, and thoroughly +exhausted. Since leaving Eucla to getting water at this spot, a period of +nearly ninety hours, they had only been allowed one gallon of water each, +which was given them from our water-drums. It is wonderful how well they +performed this journey; had they not started in good condition, they +never could have done it. We all felt very tired. During the last sixty +hours I have only had about five hours' sleep, and have been continually +in a great state of anxiety--besides which, all have had to walk a great +deal. + +SIGNS OF CIVILIZATION. + +18th. +This is a great day in my journal and journey. After collecting the +horses we followed along the beach half a mile, when I struck North for +Peelunabie well, and at half a mile struck a cart track from Fowler's Bay +to Peelunabie. After following it one mile and a quarter, came to the +well and old sheep-yards, and camped. Found better water in the +sand-hills than in the well. There is a board nailed on a pole directing +to the best water, with the following engraved on it: + +G. Mackie, April 5th, 1865, Water [finger pointing right] 120 yards. + +Upon sighting the road this morning, which I had told them we should do, +a loud and continued hurrahing came from all the party, who were +overjoyed to behold signs of civilization again; while Billy, who was in +advance with me, and whom I had told to look out, as he would see a road +directly, which he immediately did, began giving me great praise for +bringing them safely through such a long journey. I certainly felt very +pleased and relieved from anxiety, and, on reviewing the long line of +march we had performed through an uncivilized country, was very sensible +of that protecting Providence which had guided us safely through the +undertaking. + +19th. +Steered in an easterly direction along an old track towards Wearing's +well, as I intend going inland, instead of along the coast to Fowler's +Bay. Travelled for sixteen miles through a barren and thickly-wooded +country, sand-hills, etc. We camped on a small grassy flat, without +water. Being now in the settled districts I gave over keeping watch, +which we had regularly done since the 9th of May. + +20th. +Continuing for fifteen miles, we reached a deserted well called +Wearing's; it was about 200 feet deep, and after joining all the +tether-ropes, girths, bridle reins, halters, etc., we managed to get up a +bucket full, but after all our trouble it was quite salt. We therefore +continued our journey South-East for Fowler's Bay, and at four miles saw +some fresh sheep tracks, and shortly afterwards saw the shepherd, named +Jack, who was very talkative. He told us he had been to Swan River, and +thought it was quite as good as this place. He also said there was a well +of good water about eight miles further on. This was a pleasant surprise, +the nearest well on my chart being sixteen miles distant: this was a new +well sunk since the survey. We therefore pushed on, although our horses +were very tired, and reached the well, where there was a substantial +stone hut; met the shepherd, whose name was Robinson. He said he knew who +we were, having heard about three months ago that we might be expected +this way. He was as kind and obliging as it was possible to be in his +circumstances. Had a difficulty in drawing water for the horses, the well +being nearly 200 feet deep, and there was not a bite for the poor +creatures to eat, except a few miles off. As it was now an hour after +dark, I turned them out, and left them to do the best they could. The old +shepherd kept talking most of the night, and said we looked more like +people just come from Fowler's Bay than having come overland from Western +Australia. + +21st. +The horses strayed off in many directions during the night, and they were +not all collected till after noon, when we continued our journey for four +miles, and finding a small piece of feed, we camped without water for the +horses. Many of the horses were in a very critical state, and one was +completely knocked up. + +22nd. +Again were delayed by the rambling of the horses until nearly noon, when +we travelled along the road towards Fowler's Bay. After ten miles, +watered the horses at a well called Waltabby, and two miles further on +camped, with scarcely any feed for the horses. One of the horses +completely gave in to-day, and we had great difficulty in getting him to +camp. By meridian altitude of Arcturus, camp is in latitude 31 degrees 34 +minutes 28 seconds South. + +REACHING A STATION. + +23rd. +Although the feed was short, our horses did not stray, and after saddling +up we continued along road for two and a half miles, and reached Colona, +the head station of Degraves and Co., of Victoria, where we were most +hospitably received by Mr. Maiden, the manager. At his desire camped, and +turned out the horses on a piece of feed kept for his horses, and intend +remaining over Sunday. We accepted his kind invitation to make ourselves +his guests while we remained. He informed me that the South Australian +Government had instructed the mounted trooper at Fowler's Bay to proceed +to the Head of the Bight and give us every information and assistance in +his power. I am glad we have saved him the journey. + +24th. +Rested at Colona. In the afternoon was rather surprised at the arrival of +Police-trooper Richards and party, who were on their way to try and find +out our whereabouts. He handed me a circular for perusal, stating that +anything I required would be paid for by the South Australian Government. + +25th. +Left Colona, accompanied by Police-trooper Richards and party. Mr. Maiden +also accompanied us a few miles, when he returned, bearing with him my +sincere thanks for his kindness to myself and party. After travelling +eleven miles, we reached the hospitable residence of Messrs. Heathcote +and Mathers, where we stayed to dinner, and, although pressed to stay, +pushed on seven miles, and camped at a well called Pintumbra. + +26th. +Rested at Pintumbra, as there was good feed for our tired and hungry +horses. Police-trooper Richards and party also remained with us. + +AT FOWLERS BAY. + +27th. +Travelled towards Fowler's Bay, and at ten miles reached Yallata, the +residence of Mr. Armstrong, where we had dinner, and afterwards reached +Fowler's Bay and put up at the Police-station. + +28th to 31st. +Remained at Fowler's Bay, recruiting ourselves and horses, and wrote the +following letters to the Honourable the Colonial Secretary, Western +Australia, and to his Excellency Sir James Fergusson, Governor of South +Australia:-- + +Fowler's Bay, 29th July, 1870. + +SIR, + +I have the honour to report, for the information of his Excellency the +Governor, the safe arrival here of the exploring expedition under my +command, and beg to give you a brief outline of our proceedings since the +departure of the schooner Adur from Port Eucla. + +On the 8th of July, started on a flying trip north from Eucla, with +fourteen days' provisions, but was unable to penetrate more than thirty +miles (which was over clear open plains of grass, etc., scarcely a tree +visible), on account of the scarcity of water, not meeting with a drop of +water on the whole journey. Returned to Eucla on the 9th, and, as summer +had apparently set in, and there appeared no likelihood of rain, I +decided to at once start for Fowler's Bay and Adelaide. + +On the 14th, therefore, we started, carrying with us about thirty gallons +of water. After great privation to our horses, and not meeting with a +drop of water for 135 miles, by travelling day and night we reached the +Head of the Bight on the evening of the 17th July, and found abundance of +water by digging in the sand-hills. + +Our horses had been ninety hours without a drop of water, and many of us +were very weary from long marching without sleep. Many of the horses +could scarcely walk, and a few were delirious; they, however, all managed +to carry their loads. They have not, however, yet recovered, but with a +few days' rest I hope to see them well again. There being very little +feed at the Head of the Bight we continued our journey, and on the 23rd +July reached Colona (head station of Degraves and Co.), where we met +Police-trooper Richards, who was on his way to the Head of the Bight to +meet us, in accordance with instructions from his Excellency Sir James +Fergusson. + +Leaving Colona on the 25th, we reached Fowler's Bay on the 27th July, all +well. + +We are now about 600 miles from Adelaide. Our route will be through the +Gawler Ranges, skirting the south end of Lake Gairdner, and thence to +Port Augusta and Adelaide, which we shall probably reach in five or six +weeks from date. + +By this mail I have written to his Excellency Sir James Fergusson, +apprising him of our safe arrival, as well as giving him a brief account +of our journey. According to present arrangements we shall, at latest, be +in Perth by the October mail. + +Trusting that these proceedings may meet with the approval of his +Excellency the Governor, I have, etc., + +JOHN FORREST, + +Leader of Expedition to Eucla and Adelaide. + +The Honourable the Colonial Secretary, Perth, Western Australia. + +Fowler's Bay, 29th July, 1870. + +SIR, + +In accordance with my instructions from the Government of Western +Australia, I have the honour to report, for the information of his +Excellency Sir James Fergusson, that the exploring expedition organized +by that Government and placed under my command, has reached this place in +safety. + +With his Excellency's permission, I will give a brief account of our +journey since leaving Perth. + +OFFICIAL REPORT. + +Leaving Perth on the 30th March, we reached Esperance Bay, the station of +the Messrs. Dempster, on the 25th April, and remained to recruit our +horses until the 9th May, when we continued in an easterly direction for +about 130 miles, and reached Israelite Bay, in latitude 33 degrees 37 +minutes South and longitude 123 degrees 48 minutes East, where we met a +coasting vessel with our supplies, etc. + +Left Israelite Bay on May 30th, and reached the water shown on Mr. Eyre's +track in longitude 126 degrees 24 minutes East on the 14th June, +depending wholly on rock water-holes during the journey. Here we +recruited and made a trip inland for fifty miles, finding the country to +be very clear and well grassed, but entirely destitute of permanent +water. + +Leaving longitude 126 degrees 24 minutes East on 24th June, we reached +Eucla on the 2nd July, depending again solely on rock water-holes, our +horses often being in great want of water. At Eucla we again met the +coaster with supplies, etc. + +After despatching the coaster on her return to Swan River, attempted to +get inland north of Eucla; but, owing to the scarcity of water and the +dryness of the season, was unable to get more than thirty miles inland. I +therefore concluded to continue the journey towards Adelaide, and +accordingly left Eucla on July 14th, reaching the Head of the Great +Australian Bight on the evening of the 17th, after a very hard and +fatiguing journey, without a drop of water for our horses for ninety +hours, in which time we travelled 138 miles. + +Men and horses were in a very weary state when we reached the water, +which we found by digging in the sand-hills at the extreme Head of the +Bight. Continuing, we reached Fowler's Bay on the 27th July. + +From longitude 124 degrees 25 minutes East to Port Eucla, in longitude +128 degrees 53 minutes East, our route was from twenty to thirty miles +from the sea, and in the whole of that distance we only procured +permanent water in one spot, namely that shown on Mr. Eyre's track in +longitude 126 degrees 24 minutes East. + +On our route we passed over many millions of acres of grassy country, but +I am sorry to say I believe entirely destitute of permanent water. The +natives met with were friendly, but to us altogether unintelligible. The +health of my party has been excellent, and we have reached this place +without losing a single horse. + +Before reaching Fowler's Bay, we were met by Police-trooper Richards, who +was on his way to meet us, in accordance with instructions from his +Excellency. I am truly thankful for this, as he has been of great service +to us, and has been very attentive to our requirements. I hope to reach +Adelaide in five weeks from date. My route will be through the Gawler +Ranges to Port Augusta, and thence to Adelaide. + +Trusting that this short account of our journey may not be wholly +uninteresting to his Excellency, I have, etc., + +JOHN FORREST, + +Leader of Expedition from Western Australia. + +The Private Secretary, Government House, Adelaide, South Australia. + +August 1st. +Left Fowler's Bay, accompanied by Police-trooper Richards, en route for +Port Augusta. Travelled fourteen miles in about an East-North-East +direction and camped. Rained lightly this evening. + +2nd. +Reached Pinong station. Distance travelled, thirty miles. Passed several +huts and wells. The whole journey was over most beautifully-grassed +country. + +3rd. +Left Pinong, and, after travelling thirty miles, reached a spot called +Athena; then camped, leaving Charra station about seven miles to the +southward. Passed a few huts and wells during the day. + +4th. +At seventeen miles reached Denial Bay, when we turned off towards Hosken +and Broadbent's stations, and at thirteen miles further camped on a very +grassy rise, with two small rock water-holes, called Merking. By meridian +altitude of a Lyrae (Vega), found it to be in latitude 32 degrees 12 +minutes 36 seconds South. + +PANEY STATION. + +5th. +After travelling eight miles, came to a deserted station of Hosken and +Broadbent's, and found abundance of water in a rock water-hole called +Chillandee. As the horses were very tired, and there was splendid feed +for them, we camped here for the remainder of the day. + +6th. +Left Chillandee, and after travelling twenty-six miles, passed +Madebuckela, the homestead of Mr. Hosken, where we camped at a deserted +hut, with splendid feed and water for the horses. + +7th. +Travelled towards Gawler Ranges for thirteen miles, and camped at a spot +called Conkabeena, from which the ranges were clearly visible. + +8th. +Continuing in an easterly direction for twelve miles, we reached +Wollular, a granite hill with plenty of water on the rocks; after which +proceeded due east for twelve miles, through dense thickets and sandy +hills, when we came on a small patch of grassy land and camped, Mount +Centre bearing North 95 degrees East magnetic. + +9th. +Continuing towards Mount Centre for eighteen miles, over a succession of +salt lakes and very sandy hills and scrub, we reached a road making a +little farther north, which was followed, and after travelling five miles +came to Narlibby, and camped on most beautiful feed. + +10th. +After taking wrong roads and going a good deal out of our way, we reached +Paney station and camped at the police-station. + +11th and 12th. +Rested at Paney, as the horses were very tired, and there was splendid +feed for them. Police-trooper Richards intends returning to-morrow to +Fowler's Bay. He has given us every assistance in his power, and deserves +our very sincere thanks for his kindness and attention. + +13th to 17th. +Travelling towards Port Augusta, accompanied for half the distance by +Police trooper O'Shanahan, from Paney station. + +18th. +Reached Port Augusta. Telegraphed to his Excellency Sir James Fergusson, +informing him of our arrival. Camped five miles from Port Augusta, at a +small township named Stirling. + +19th. +Received telegram from his Excellency Sir James Fergusson, congratulating +us on our success. Camped a few miles from Mount Remarkable. + +20th. +Passed through Melrose, and on the 23rd reached Clare, where I had the +pleasure of meeting Mr. John Roe, son of the Honourable Captain Roe, our +respected Surveyor-General. + +On August 24th reached Riverton, and on the 25th Gawler. On the 26th we +arrived at Salisbury, twelve miles from Adelaide. Through all these towns +we have been most cordially received, and I shall never forget the +attention and kindly welcome received on the journey through South +Australia. + +RECEPTION AT ADELAIDE. + +On the 27th August we left Salisbury, and for an account of our journey +from there to Adelaide I cannot do better than insert an extract from the +South Australian Register of August 27th, 1870:-- + +"On Saturday morning the band of explorers from Western Australia, under +the leadership of Mr. Forrest, made their entrance into Adelaide. They +left Salisbury at half-past nine o'clock, and when within a few miles of +the city were met by Inspector Searcy and one or two other members of the +police force. Later on the route they were met by an escort of horsemen, +who had gone out to act as a volunteer escort. At Government House Gate a +crowd of persons assembled, who gave them a hearty cheer as they rode up. +The whole party at once rode up to Government House, where they were +received by his Excellency, who was introduced to all the members of the +expedition, and spent a quarter of an hour in conversation with Mr. +Forrest, and in examining with interest the horses and equipments, which +all showed signs of the long and severe journey performed. Wine having +been handed round, the party withdrew, and were again greeted at +Government Gate by hearty cheers from the crowd, which now numbered +several hundreds. They then proceeded by way of Rundle Street to the +quarters assigned them at the police barracks. The men are to remain at +the barracks, and the officers are to be entertained at the City of +Adelaide Club." + +From August 28th to September 12th we remained in Adelaide, having been +most kindly received by all with whom we came in contact. We saw as much +of the country as possible. I disposed of my horses and equipment by +public auction; then left in the steamer Alexandra with the whole of my +party on the 12th, reaching King George's Sound on the 17th at 1 a.m. +Left King George's Sound on the 19th, and arrived in Perth on the 27th, +where we were most cordially welcomed by his Excellency the Governor and +the citizens of Perth, having been absent 182 days. + +In the foregoing I have attempted to give a faithful and correct account +of our proceedings, and, in conclusion, beg to make a few remarks +respecting the character and the capabilities of the country travelled +over. + +In about longitude 124 degrees East the granite formation ends, at least +on and near the coast; but from longitude 124 degrees to the Head of the +Bight, a distance of over 400 miles, there is no change in the formation, +being limestone and high table land the whole distance. + +The portion most suited for settlement is, I believe, between longitude +126 degrees 12 minutes East and longitude 129 degrees East, near Eucla +harbour, or, in other words, the country to the north of the Hampton +Range--the country north of the range being most beautifully grassed, and +I believe abundance of water could be procured anywhere under the range +by sinking twenty or thirty feet. There is also under the same range a +narrow strip of fine grassy country for the whole length of the range, +namely about 160 miles. I have every confidence that, should the country +be settled, it would prove a remunerative speculation, and, if water can +be procured on the table land, would be the finest pastoral district of +Western Australia. + +CONCLUSION. + +Before I conclude, I have the pleasing duty to record my entire +appreciation of every member of the party. I need not particularize, as +one and all had the interest and welfare of the expedition at heart, and +on no occasion uttered a single murmur. + +Finally, sir, my best and most sincere thanks are due to his Excellency +Governor Weld for the very efficient manner in which the expedition was +equipped. It is chiefly owing to the great zeal and desire of his +Excellency that I should have everything necessary that the success of +the enterprise is attributable. + +I have, etc., + +JOHN FORREST, + +Leader of Expedition. + +The Honourable F.P. Barlee, Esquire, + +Colonial Secretary, Western Australia. + + +CHAPTER 4. + +RECEPTION AT ADELAIDE AND RETURN TO PERTH. + +Departure from Gawler and Arrival at Adelaide. +Appearance of the Party. +Public Entrance. +Complimentary Banquet. +Grant by the Government of Western Australia. + +ARRIVAL AT ADELAIDE. + +On Saturday, the 27th of August, we reached Adelaide. On the previous day +we had left Gawler for Salisbury, where we rested until the following +morning, when we started at half-past nine o'clock for Adelaide. A few +miles from there we were met by the chief inspector of police and some +troopers sent to escort us, and soon afterwards a volunteer escort of +horsemen gave us a friendly welcome. We were heartily cheered as we +entered the town and then rode to Government House, where we were +received in the most cordial manner by the Governor, Sir James Fergusson. +After a brief time spent in examining the horses (which were all the +worse for the long and arduous journey) also the equipments, and in +partaking of refreshments, we left the Government House, the people +cheering lustily, and passed through King William and Rundle Streets on +the way to the City of Adelaide Club. My brother and self stayed there +while in town, and the others at the police barracks, where man and horse +enjoyed the much-needed rest and refreshment. + +It may interest the reader to quote from the South Australian Advertiser +the description of our appearance when we first entered Adelaide: "It was +a genuine Australian bush turnout, the trappings, water-drums, and other +necessaries being admirably adapted for the purpose. The horses looked +somewhat the worse for wear; but, considering the immense distance that +they have travelled, their condition was not to be complained of, and a +few weeks in the Government paddocks will put them in capital condition. +The officers and men, both white and black, look the picture of health, +and their satisfaction at having completed their long and arduous task is +beaming from their countenances." + +Whatever our countenances may have expressed, I know we felt an intense +satisfaction at having been enabled to discharge the duty we had +undertaken. + +On the evening of the 3rd of September Sir James Fergusson entertained us +at dinner, and many old colonists who, in their time, had been engaged in +exploring expeditions, were among the guests. Mr. Barlee, the Colonial +Secretary of Western Australia, who arrived in Adelaide a day or two +after we had reached it, was present with me at the luncheon on the +occasion of the inauguration of the Northern Railway Extension at +Kooringa. In replying to the toast of The Visitors, he took the +opportunity of thanking the South Australian people and the Government +for the courtesy and kindness extended to me and the members of my party, +who, he said, had carried out the instructions so successfully and in a +manner which made him proud of the colony to which he belonged. He hoped +that the line of communication that had been opened might soon lead to +much better and closer intercommunication between the colonies. + +With characteristic consideration and kindness Governor Weld, immediately +on receiving my report from Eucla, addressed a private letter to my +father, congratulating him on my success. + +RECEPTION AT PERTH. + +Anxious to lose no time in reporting myself to my Government, I only +remained in South Australia about a fortnight, and then left for Perth in +the Branch mail steamer, and arrived there on Tuesday, the 27th of +September. The City Council determined to give us a public reception and +present an address. A four-in-hand drag was despatched to bring us into +the city, and a procession, consisting of several private carriages, a +number of the citizens on horseback, and the volunteer band, escorted us. +The city flag was flying at the Town Hall, and there was a liberal +display of similar tokens from private dwellings. The Governor and his +aide-de-camp came out five miles to meet us, and accompanied us to the +beginning of the city, where he handed us over to the Council, meeting us +again at the Government offices. A crowd had collected in front of the +Government offices, where we were to alight, and amid cheering and +general hand-shaking we entered the enclosure. + +Here his Excellency the Governor received us with warm congratulations, +and the City Council presented the address, which was read by the +chairman, Mr. Glyde. He said:-- + +"Mr. Forrest, + +In the name of the citizens I have the very great pleasure to bid you a +cordial welcome on your safe return to Perth. We sincerely congratulate +yourself and party on the success which has attended your adventurous +expedition overland to Adelaide. It must have been gratifying to you to +have been selected to lead this expedition, and to follow such explorers +as Captain Roe, Gregory, Austin, and others, of whom West Australia may +well be proud. Your expedition, however, has an additional interest from +the fact that its leader and members were born in the colony. I trust, +sir, that at no distant date you may have the satisfaction to see the +advantages realized which the route opened by your expedition is +calculated to effect." + +I had had no reason to expect such a marked official reception, and could +only express the pleasure I experienced in knowing that the colonists so +fully appreciated my efforts to carry out successfully the task confided +to me. + +The Governor also offered his congratulations, and three cheers having +been given the party, and three more for the Governor, we left for our +quarters highly gratified with the reception. His Excellency gave a large +dinner-party to celebrate our return, and on Monday, the 24th of October, +a public demonstration of welcome was afforded by a banquet to which we +were invited by the citizens. The following is a report from the Perth +journal:-- + +COMPLIMENTARY BANQUET TO MR. JOHN FORREST. + +On Monday evening last a Complimentary Banquet was given to Mr. Forrest, +the explorer, at the Horse and Groom tavern. About seventy sat down to +dinner, among whom were his Excellency the Governor, the Private +Secretary, the Colonial Secretary, the Surveyor-General, Captain Roe, and +many of the leading inhabitants of Perth and Fremantle. The chair was +taken by Captain Roe. On his right was his Excellency the Governor, and +on his left the guest of the evening--Mr. Forrest. The vice-chair was +filled by Mr. Landor. After the cloth had been removed, the chairman, +Captain Roe, rose and proposed the Queen, a lady whom the people could +not consider without being proud of the sovereign by whom they were +governed. + +The Chairman said he rose to propose another toast, which, he trusted, +was not always given as a matter of course, but with heartfelt +satisfaction. It was the health of the Heir Apparent to the Throne. +(Cheers). The Prince of Wales will, it is hoped, one day fill the throne +of his illustrious mother--may that day be far distant!--but, when that +day does arrive, may he display the exemplary virtues of his illustrious +mother and the sterling qualities that distinguished his great father! + +The Chairman, in proposing the next toast, His Excellency the Governor, +said he had some difficulty in doing so, particularly as the subject of +it was on his right hand that evening; yet he considered the gratitude of +the colonists was due to her Majesty's Government for selecting a +gentleman who was so well qualified to benefit the colony. He believed +his Excellency was the man to drag the colony out of the hole (cheers); +and he believed his Excellency was the man to attain for us that +prosperity we so much desired (hear, hear); but we must do our utmost to +support him in the effort to secure it. It was impossible for any man to +perform one hundredth part of what was wanted of him; yet he believed his +Excellency would do all in his power to benefit the colony in every way. +Let every one give his Excellency that strenuous support necessary to +attain prosperity, and we would attain success. He trusted that when the +term of his Excellency's sojourn amongst us had arrived, he would +remember with pleasure the days he had spent in Western Australia. The +toast was drunk with cheers and enthusiasm. + +His Excellency the Governor, who was received most cordially, rose to +thank them for the very kind manner in which they had received the toast +which had been proposed by the worthy chairman. The chairman was right in +saying that they might rely upon his doing his best for the benefit of +the country, but they must not be disappointed; he could not do +everything, but they might depend upon it he would do what he considered +right for the people and the colony, without the fear or favour of any. +But "many men of many minds," as the old school copy says. People thought +widely different, but he would do his best for the welfare of the colony. +(Cheers). He did not, however, rise to speak of himself; the toast that +evening was in honour of Mr. Forrest, and at the present moment, viewing +the state of Europe, looking at the fact that at this very time two of +the largest nations in the world are carrying on a deadly strife; that on +either side deeds of daring have been done, which we all admire, and by +which we are all fascinated--and why? Because the human mind admired +daring and enterprise. But war devastated the world--war meant misery, +destitution, widows, orphans, and destruction, yet we behold all these +with a species of fascination. But not only in time of war, but at a +period of peace, are the highest feelings of human nature and the noblest +instincts of mankind brought out. It was in a spirit of daring, of +self-sacrifice, of love of fame and science, that induced the gentleman, +whose health will be duly proposed to you this evening, to undertake the +task he has so successfully completed. The same motives, no doubt, led +the warrior into the battle-field, as the explorer into a new and unknown +country. He, like the warrior, combated dangers regardless to self. +Peace, then, has triumphs as well as war. Mr. Forrest and his party well +deserve the triumphs they have secured in their successful journey from +this colony to Adelaide. The benefits conferred on the colony can best be +appreciated by those who have the greatest capacity of looking into +futurity, and as long as Australia has a history, the names of Mr. +Forrest and his companions will be borne down with honour. To himself it +will be a source of pleasure to know that the first year of his +administration will be rendered memorable by the exertion, zeal, and +enterprise of Mr. Forrest. His Excellency resumed his seat amidst loud +and continued applause. + +Captain Roe said a very pleasing duty now devolved upon him; it was to +recognize services well done and faithfully performed. It was always +satisfactory to have our services recognized, and the leader of the +expedition over a distance of more than 2000 miles, from Perth to +Adelaide, so successfully, was deserving of esteem. That expedition had +brought the colony into note, and the good results from it would soon be +apparent. He personally felt more than he could say on the subject. He +felt more in his heart than he could express in words. He trusted that +the success of Forrest and his party would be a solace to him in his +latest day, and that in their latter days they would look back with pride +to the energy and pluck they displayed in their younger. He called upon +them to drink The health and success of Mr. Forrest and his companions +during life. (Loud and continued cheering.) + +Mr. Barlee: One more cheer for the absentees--Mr. Forrest's companions. +(Immense cheering.) + +A Voice: One cheer more for the black fellows. (Applause.) + +Mr. Forrest, who was received with enthusiasm, said he felt quite unequal +to the task of responding to the toast which had been so ably and +feelingly proposed by Captain Roe, and so kindly received by his +fellow-colonists. He was extremely gratified to find that his services +had been so highly appreciated, and were so pleasing to his friends and +fellow-colonists. He was much flattered at the kind way in which himself +and his party had been received by his Excellency Governor Fergusson and +the people of South Australia; but he must say he was much better pleased +at the reception he received from his Excellency Governor Weld and the +citizens of Perth on his return. He was sorry he did not see round the +table his companions of the expedition--some had gone out of town--but he +must say that during the whole of their long and severe march, oftentimes +without water, not one refused to do his duty or flinched in the least +for a single moment. On the part of himself and his companions, he +sincerely thanked them for the very kind manner in which they had drunk +their health. (Great applause.) + +Mr. Landor rose and said he had a toast to propose--it was the Members of +the Legislative Council--and in doing so he would like to make a few +observations upon the old. That evening they had had the pleasure of +hearing one of the oldest of the Council, one who had seen more trial and +suffering than any other, and to whom the grateful task fell that evening +of introducing to you one who was new in travel; and, while admiring that +act, he could not but call to mind the hardships that that gentleman had +endured in former days. In times gone by parties were not so well +provisioned as they were now, and he remembered the time when Captain +Roe, short of provisions, discovered a nest of turkey's eggs, and, to his +consternation, on placing them in the pan found chickens therein. But +things have altered. Captain Roe belonged to an old Council, and it is of +the new he proposed speaking. From the new Council great things are +expected, and of the men who have been selected a good deal might be +hoped. We all wanted progress. We talked of progress; but progress, like +the philosopher's stone, could not be easily attained. He hoped and +believed the gentlemen who had been elected would do their best to try to +push the colony along. He trusted the gentlemen going into Council would +not, like the French, get the colony into a hole; but, if they did, he +trusted they would do their best to get it out of the hole. What the +colony looked for was, that every man who went into the Council would do +his duty. He had much pleasure in proposing the new members of Council +with three times three. + +Mr. Carr begged to express his thanks for the very flattering manner in +which the toast of the new Council had been proposed and seconded. As a +proof of the confidence reposed in them by their constituents, he could +assure them that they would faithfully discharge their duties to them in +Parliament, and work for the good of the colony generally. (Cheers.) +Again thanking them for the honour done the members of the new Council, +Mr. Carr resumed his seat amidst great applause. + +Mr. Leake (who, on rising, was supposed to follow Mr. Carr) said his +rising was not important. As the next toast fell to his lot, he would ask +them to charge their glasses. The toast that was placed in his hands was +to propose the health of his friend, Mr. Barlee, the Colonial Secretary. +He trusted they would join him in giving Mr. Barlee a hearty welcome +after his travels in foreign parts. Mr. Barlee started on his journey +with the approval of the entire colony, and that the acts of the +Government had always the approval of the colonists was more than could +be said at all times. (Laughter.) Mr. Barlee's visit to the other +colonies must have been beneficial, and he trusted Mr. Barlee would that +evening give them his experience of the other colonies. We have not had +an opportunity of hearing of Mr. Barlee, or what he has done since he was +in Adelaide. In Adelaide Sir J. Morphett, the Speaker of the House of +Assembly, had said that Mr. Barlee was a hard-working man, and that was a +good deal to say for a man in this part of the world. (Loud laughter.) +Mr. Barlee, no doubt, would that evening give them a history of his +travels, and tell them what he had done in Adelaide, Melbourne, and +Sydney. Mr. Barlee was a proven friend of the colonists and of West +Australia. He would ask them to join him in drinking the health of Mr. +Barlee with three hearty cheers. (Drunk with enthusiasm.) + +Mr. Barlee, who on rising was received with unbounded applause, said it +would be impossible for him to conceal the fact that he was much pleased +at the hearty manner in which his health had been proposed and received +that evening. He did not require to leave the colony to know the good +feeling of his fellow-colonists for him, nor to acquire testimony as to +his quality as a public officer. There was one matter, however, he very +much regretted, and that was that he was not present at the ovation given +by the people of South Australia to Mr. Forrest and his party. Mr. +Forrest had passed through Adelaide one day before his arrival. Mr. +Forrest and his party had attracted attention not only in South +Australia, but also, as he found, in all the other Australian colonies. +Having done so much, we were expected to do more in the way of opening up +the large tract of country that had been discovered. It was our duty to +assure the other colonies that the country would carry stock, and stock +would be forthcoming. If Mr. Forrest in former days established his fame +as an explorer, his late expedition only proves that he must commence de +novo. Of the modesty and bearing of Mr. Forrest and his party in South +Australia he could not speak too highly. There was, however, one +exception, and that was his friend Windich (native). He was the man who +had done everything; he was the man who had brought Mr. Forrest to +Adelaide, and not Mr. Forrest him. He (Mr. Barlee) was in his estimation +below par to come by a steamer, and he walked across (laughter); and it +was an act of condescension that Windich even looked upon him. (Great +laughter.) He was quite aware Mr. Leake, in asking him to give an account +of his travels in foreign parts, never seriously intended it. If he did, +he would only keep them until to-morrow morning. He would say that his +was a trip of business, and not pleasure, and hard work he had. Morning +and night was he at work, and he trusted he would be spared to see the +results of some of his efforts to benefit West Australia. (Loud cheers.) +He considered, what with our lead and copper-mines, our Jarrah +coal-mines, and the prospect of an auriferous country being found, a new +era was dawning on the colony. (Cheers.) For the first time in the last +sixteen years he had the pleasure of drinking that evening the health of +the members of the Legislative Assembly. He was not yet a member of that +Council, but it was probable he would be a member, and have important +duties to discharge therein. He was proud to learn the quiet and orderly +manner in which the elections had been conducted, and the good feeling +and harmony that existed on all sides, and to learn that the defeated +candidates were the first to congratulate the successful ones on their +nomination. He sincerely trusted that the same quiet good feeling and +harmony would remain and guide the Council in their deliberations +hereafter. + +Other complimentary toasts having been duly honoured, the company broke +up. + + +While the citizens of Perth were thus exhibiting encouraging approval of +our exertions, official recognition, in a practical form, was not +wanting. On the 6th of October, Captain Roe forwarded to me the following +communication:-- + +Surveyor-General's Office, Perth, + +6th October, 1870. + +Sir, + +Having submitted to the Governor your report of the safe return to +head-quarters of the overland expedition to Eucla and Adelaide, entrusted +to your leadership, I have much pleasure in forwarding to you a copy of a +minute in which his Excellency has been pleased to convey his full +appreciation of your proceedings, and of the judgment and perseverance +displayed in your successful conduct of the enterprise. + +In these sentiments I cordially participate, and, in accordance with the +wish expressed in the minute, I beg you will convey to the other members +of the expedition the thanks of his Excellency for their co-operation and +general conduct. + +OFFICIAL REWARDS. + +As a further recognition of the services of the party, his Excellency has +been pleased to direct that the sum of Two Hundred Pounds be distributed +amongst them, in the following proportions, payable at the Treasury, +namely:-- + +To the Leader of the expedition...75 pounds. + +To the Second in command...50 pounds. + +To H. McLarty and R. Osborne, 25 pounds each...50 pounds. + +To the Aborigines, Windich and Billy, 12 pounds 10 shillings....25 +pounds. + +Total 200 pounds. + +I am, Sir, your obedient servant, + +J.S. ROE, Surveyor-General. + +John Forrest, Esquire, + +Leader of Expedition, etc., etc. + +The following is the minute referred to in the above:-- + +HONOURABLE SURVEYOR-GENERAL, + +I beg that you will convey to Mr. John Forrest, leader of the Eucla +expedition, the expression of my appreciation of the zeal, judgment, and +perseverance which he has displayed in the successful conduct of the +enterprise committed to his charge. Great credit is also due to the +second in command, and to every member of the party. All have done their +duty well, and to them also I desire to render my thanks. + +It is with much pleasure that, with the advice of my Executive Council, I +authorize a gratuity of 200 pounds, to be divided in the proportions you +have submitted to me. + +(Signed) FRED. A. WELD. + +1st October, 1870. + +It will be remembered that the York Agricultural Society had previously +proposed an overland expedition, but had not succeeded in obtaining +official sanction, it being then believed that Eucla could be best +approached from the sea. After my return the Society held a meeting, at +which his Excellency the Governor was present, when my report of the +expedition was received with every mark of approval of my labours. + + +CHAPTER 5. + +THIRD EXPEDITION. FROM THE WEST COAST TO THE TELEGRAPH LINE. + +Proposal to undertake a New Expedition. +Endeavour to explore the Watershed of the Murchison. +Expeditions by South Australian Explorers. +My Journal. +Fight with the Natives. +Finding traces of Mr. Gosse's Party. +The Telegraph Line reached. +Arrival at Perth Station. + +The success which had attended my previous expeditions, and the great +encouragement received from the Government and public of each colony, +made me wish to undertake another journey for the purpose of ascertaining +whether a route from Western Australia to the advanced settlements of the +Southern colony was practicable. I also hoped to contribute, if possible, +towards the solution of the problem, What is the nature of the interior? +My first journey, when I succeeded in penetrating for about 600 miles +into the unknown desert of Central Australia, had convinced me that, +although there might, and doubtless would, be considerable difficulties +to be encountered, there were no insuperable obstacles except a probable +failure in the supply of water. That certainly was the most formidable of +all the difficulties that would no doubt have to be encountered; but on +the previous journey the scarcity of water had been endured, not without +privation and suffering, but without any very serious result. At any +rate, the expedition I desired to undertake appeared to be of an +extremely interesting character. It might contribute to the knowledge of +an immense tract of country of which hardly anything was known; it might +also be the means of opening up new districts, and attaining results of +immense importance to the colonies. Perhaps, too, I was animated by a +spirit of adventure--not altogether inexcusable--and, having been +successful in my previous journeys, was not unnaturally desirous of +carrying on the work of exploration. + +A NEW EXPEDITION PROPOSED. + +In 1871 an expedition went out to the eastward of Perth under command of +my brother, Mr. A. Forrest, in search of fresh pastoral country. It was a +very good season, but the expedition was too late in starting. It +succeeded in reaching latitude 31 degrees South, longitude 123 degrees 37 +minutes East, and afterwards struck South-South-East towards the coast; +then, with considerable difficulty, it reached Mount Ragged and the +Thomas River, and, continuing westerly, got as far as Esperance Bay, the +homestead of the Messrs. Dempster. This expedition discovered a +considerable tract of good country, some of which has been taken up and +stocked. It was equipped on very economical principles, and did not cost +more than 300 pounds. + +The leader had been previously with me as second in command on the +journey to Adelaide in 1870, and afterwards accompanied me in 1874 from +the west coast through the centre of the western part of Australia to the +telegraph line between Adelaide and Port Darwin. + +He received great credit from the Government for the energy and +perseverance displayed on this expedition--a character borne out by +future services as second in command with me. + +In July, 1872, I addressed the following letter to the Honourable Malcolm +Fraser, the Surveyor-General:-- + +Western Australia, Perth, + +July 12th, 1872. + +SIR, + +I have the honour to lay before you, for the consideration of his +Excellency the Governor, a project I have in view for the further +exploration of Western Australia. + +My wish is to undertake an expedition, to start early next year from +Champion Bay, follow the Murchison to its source, and then continue in an +east and north-east direction to the telegraph line now nearly completed +between Adelaide and Port Darwin; after this we would either proceed +north to Port Darwin or south to Adelaide. + +The party would consist of four white and two black men, with twenty +horses, well armed and provisioned for at least six months. + +The total cost of the expedition would be about 600 pounds, of which sum +I hope to be able to raise, by subscriptions, about 200 pounds. + +The horses will be furnished by the settlers, many having already been +promised me. + +The geographical results of such an expedition would necessarily be very +great; it would be the finishing stroke of Australian discovery; would be +sure to open new pastoral country; and, if we are to place any weight in +the opinions of geographers (among whom I may mention the Reverend +Tenison Woods), the existence of a large river running inland from the +watershed of the Murchison is nearly certain. + +Referring to the map of Australia you will observe that the proposed +route is a very gigantic, hazardous, and long one; but, after careful +consideration, I have every confidence that, should I be allowed to +undertake it, there are reasonable hopes of my being able to succeed. + +Minor details are purposely omitted; but, should his Excellency +favourably entertain this proposition, I will be too glad, as far as I am +able, to give further information on the subject. + +Trusting you will be able to concur in the foregoing suggestions. + +I have, etc., + +JOHN FORREST. + +To this letter the Governor appended the following memorandum:-- + +Mr. J. Forrest, in a most public spirited manner, proposes to embark in +an undertaking, the dangers of which, though not by any means +inconsiderable, would be outweighed by the advantages which might accrue +to this colony, and which would certainly result in a great extension of +our geographical knowledge. Should he succeed in this journey, his name +will fitly go down to posterity as that of the man who solved the last +remaining problem in the Australian continent; and, whatever may come +after him, he will have been the last (and certainly, when the means at +his disposal and the difficulties of the undertaking are considered, by +no means the least) of the great Australian explorers. + +The honour to be gained by him, and most of the advantages, will +ultimately fall to this colony, which is his birth-place; and for my own +part I shall be very proud that such a design should be carried out +during my term of office. I wish that the means of the colony were +sufficient to warrant the Government in proposing to defray the entire +cost of the expedition, and I think it would be a disgrace to the colony +if it did not at least afford some aid from public funds. + +These papers will be laid before the Legislature, and the Government will +support a vote in aid, should the Legislature concur. + +FRED. A. WELD. + +July 20th, 1872. + +This memorandum showed that his Excellency thoroughly sympathized with my +reason for desiring to undertake the expedition. The proposition, +supported by official approval, was acceded to by the Legislative +Council, which voted the 400 pounds stated to be required in addition to +the 200 pounds which I hoped to be able to raise by subscription. + +Just at this time, however, South Australia was making great efforts to +solve the problem I had undertaken to attempt, preparations being made +for the departure of three expeditions. Stuart's great feat of crossing +the continent from south to north had been followed by other successful +efforts in the same direction. Another result was the establishing a line +of telegraph from Adelaide to Port Darwin. This might therefore be +considered the eastern boundary of the unknown districts, and moreover +was the point of departure for the South Australian expeditions in a +westerly direction. It was also the limit I desired to reach, and, +reaching it, I should achieve the object I had so much at heart. Of the +South Australian expeditions, only one was successful in getting to the +western colony, and that one, led by Colonel Warburton, involved much +suffering and was comparatively barren of practical results. Besides, as +we afterwards knew, the route selected by him was so far to the north as +not to interfere with my project. + +The following letter to me expresses the official estimate of the result +of Colonel Warburton's expedition:-- + +Surveyor-General's Office, Perth, + +March 27th, 1874. + +The gist of the information I have from Colonel Warburton may be summed +up in a few words. From the MacDermot Ranges in South Australia to the +head of the Oakoon River (about 150 miles from the coast), keeping +between the parallels of 20 and 22 degrees south latitude, he traversed a +sterile country, in which he states horses could not possibly exist--they +would starve, as they could not live on the stunted scrub and herbage +which the camels managed to keep alive on. + +The general character of the country seen was that of a high, waterless, +slightly undulating, sandy table-land, with in some parts sand deserts in +ridges most harassing to traverse. There was nothing visible in the way +of water courses in which water could be retained; but they were +successful in finding, at long distances, sufficient to maintain +themselves and their camels as they fled, as it were for their lives, +westward over the Sahara, which appears to be in a great part a desolate +wilderness, devoid of life, or of anything life sustaining. Though this +is a grim picture put before you, yet I would not have you daunted. Your +task is a different one, and one which all the colony is looking forward +to see successfully completed by you. + +I have, etc., + +(Signed) MALCOLM FRASER, Surveyor-General. + +Governor Weld, however, decided that it might be better to postpone my +expedition, as it would not be advisable to appear to enter into +competition with the other colony; besides which it might be of +considerable advantage to wait and avail ourselves of the results of any +discoveries that might be made by the South Australian explorers. Another +reason for delay was that I was required to conduct a survey of +considerable importance, which it was desirable should be completed +before undertaking the new expedition. + +It may assist my readers to understand the references in the latter part +of my Journal if I state that in April, 1873, Mr. Gosse, one of the South +Australian explorers, quitted the telegraph line about forty miles south +of Mount Stuart; that the farthest point in a westerly direction reached +by him was in longitude 126 degrees 59 minutes East; and that Mr. Giles, +a Victorian explorer, had reached longitude 125 degrees, but had been +unable to penetrate farther. + +Some records of these expeditions, and a copy of the chart made by Mr. +Gosse, were in my possession, when at length, in March, 1874, I set to +work on the preliminary arrangements for the expedition. Before leaving +Perth I received from the Surveyor-General the following outline of +instructions for my general guidance:-- + +OFFICIAL INSTRUCTIONS. + +Western Australia, Surveyor-General's Office, + +Perth, 17th March, 1874. + +SIR, + +The arrangements connected with the party organized for the purpose of +proceeding on an exploratory expedition to the north-eastern division of +this territory having now been completed, I am directed to instruct and +advise you generally in the objects and the intention of the Government +in regard to it. + +The chief object of the expedition is to obtain information concerning +the immense tract of country from which flow the Murchison, Gascoigne, +Ashburton, DeGrey, Fitzroy, and other rivers falling into the sea on the +western and northern shores of this territory, as there are many good and +reasonable grounds for a belief that those rivers outflow from districts +neither barren nor badly watered. + +Mr. A.C. Gregory, coming from the northwards by Sturt's Creek, discovered +the Denison Plains, and it may be that from the head of the Murchison +River going northwards there are to be found, near the heads of the +rivers above alluded to, many such grassy oases; and, looking at the +success which has already attended the stocking of the country to the +eastward of Champion Bay, and between the heads of the Greenough River +and Murchison, it will be most fortunate for our sheep farmers if you +discover any considerable addition to the present known pasture grounds +of the colony; and by this means no doubt the mineral resources of the +interior will be brought eventually to light. Every opinion of value that +has been given on the subject tells one that the head of the Murchison +lies in a district which may prove another land of Ophir. + +In tracing up this river from Mount Gould to its source, and in tracing +other rivers to and from their head waters, detours must be made, but +generally your course will be north-east until you are within the +tropics; it will then be discretionary with you to decide on your route, +of which there is certainly a choice of three, besides the retracing of +your steps for the purpose, perhaps, of making a further inspection of +the good country you may have found. + +Firstly, There is to choose whether you will go westward, and fall back +on the settlements at Nicol Bay or the De Grey River, on the north-west +coast. + +Secondly, To consider whether you might advantageously push up Sturt's +Creek, keeping to the westward of Gregory's track. + +Thirdly, To decide whether or not you will go eastward to the South +Australian telegraph line. + +Possibly this latter course may be the most desirable and most feasible +to accomplish, as the telegraph stations, taking either Watson's Creek or +Daly Waters, are not more than 300 miles from the known water supply on +Sturt's Creek, and, supposing you do this successfully, the remaining +distance down the telegraph line to Port Darwin is a mere bagatelle, +provided an arrangement can be made with the South Australian Government +to have a supply of provisions at Daly Waters. + +In the event of your going to Port Darwin, the plan probably will be to +sell your equipment and horses, returning with your party by sea, but in +this and in other matters of detail there is no desire to fetter you, or +to prevent the proper use of your judgment, as I am fully aware that your +sole object is in common with that of the Government--the carrying to a +satisfactory result the work to be done. + +I hope that before you individually leave we shall have the pleasure of +welcoming Colonel Warburton, and I have no doubt will be able to obtain +some valuable information from him. + +Having now dwelt generally on the objects of the expedition, I will go +more into details. + +Your party will consist of yourself as leader, Mr. Alexander Forrest as +surveyor and second in command, James Sweeney (farrier), police-constable +James Kennedy, and two natives, Tommy Windich and Tommy Pierre, making +six in number and twenty horses. The party will be well armed; but by +every means in your power you will endeavour to cultivate and keep on +friendly relations with all the aborigines you may fall in with, and +avoid, if possible, any collision with them. + +The provisions and other supplies already arranged for are calculated to +serve the party for eight months. The expedition will start from Champion +Bay, to which you will at once despatch by sea the stores to be obtained +here; and the men and horses should proceed overland without delay. You +will be probably able to charter carts or drays to take most of your +impedimenta from Geraldton to Mr. Burges's farthest out-station on the +Murchison; this will save you 200 miles of packing, and husband the +strength of your horses for that distance. + +Having the assistance of Mr. Alexander Forrest as surveyor to the party, +you will do as much reconnaissance work in connexion with the colonial +survey as it may be possible; and also, by taking celestial observations +at all convenient times, and by sketching the natural features of the +country you pass over, add much to our geographical knowledge. All +geological and natural history specimens you can collect and preserve +will be most valuable in perfecting information concerning the physical +formation of the interior. + +You will be good enough to get the agreement, forwarded with this, signed +by the whole of the party. + +I am, etc., + +MALCOLM FRASER, + +Surveyor-General. + +DEPARTURE OF THE EXPEDITION. + +On the 18th of March, 1874, the expedition quitted Perth. Colonel +Harvest, the Acting-Governor, wished us a hearty God-speed, which was +warmly echoed by our friends and the public generally. The +Surveyor-General and a party accompanied us for some distance along the +road. Ten days afterwards we reached Champion Bay, where we intended to +remain for three days, having settled to commence our journey on the 1st +of April. We had enough to do in preparing stores, shoeing horses, and +starting a team with our heaviest baggage to a spot about fifty miles +inland. On the 31st March we were entertained at dinner by Mr. Crowther +(Member of the Legislative Council for the district) at the Geraldton +Hotel. It was from that point we considered the expedition really +commenced, and my Journal will show that we numbered our camps from that +place. Our final start was not effected without some trouble. The horses, +happily ignorant of the troubles which awaited them, were fresh and +lively, kicking, plunging, and running away, so that it was noon before +we were fairly on the move. Our first day's journey brought us to a place +named Knockbrack, the hospitable residence of Mr. Thomas Burges, where we +remained two days, the 3rd being Good Friday. On the 4th we were again on +our way--a party of friends, Messrs. E. and F. Wittenoom, Mr. Lacy, and +others, accompanying us as far as Allen Nolba. We camped that night at a +well known as Wandanoe, where, however, there was scarcely any feed for +the horses, who appeared very dissatisfied with their entertainment, for +they wandered away, and several hours were spent on the following morning +in getting them together. + +Our route lay by way of Kolonaday, North Spring, Tinderlong, and Bilyera +to Yuin, Mr. Burges's principal station, which we reached on the 9th, and +remained until Monday the 13th. Then we started on a route +east-north-east, and camped that night at a rock water-hole called +Beetinggnow, where we found good feed and water. My brother and Kennedy +went on in advance to Poondarrie, to dig water-holes, and we rejoined +them there on the 14th. This place is situated in latitude 27 degrees 48 +minutes 39 seconds South, and longitude 116 degrees 16 minutes 11 seconds +East. + +On the following day we were very busy packing up the rations, for I had +arranged to send back the cart, gone on in advance. We had eight months' +provisions, besides general baggage, and I certainly experienced some +difficulty in arranging how to carry such a tremendously heavy load, even +with the aid of eighteen pack-horses, and a dozen natives who accompanied +us. I intended to start on the 16th, but one of the horses was missing, +and, although Pierre and I tracked him for five miles, we were compelled +to give up the search for that night, as darkness came on, and return to +camp. On the following day, however, we followed up the tracks, and +caught the horse after a chase of twenty miles. He had started on the +return journey, and was only a mile from Yuin when we overtook him. + +CAMELS AND HORSES IN THE DESERT. + +By half-past nine on the morning of the 18th we had made a fair start. +The day was intensely hot, and as we had only three riding-horses, half +of the party were compelled to walk. We travelled in a north-easterly +direction for eleven miles, and reached a spring called Wallala, which we +dug out, and so obtained sufficient water for our horses. I may mention +here that Colonel Warburton and other explorers who endeavoured to cross +the great inland desert from the east had the advantage of being provided +with camels--a very great advantage indeed in a country where the water +supply is so scanty and uncertain as in Central Australia. As we +ascertained by painful experience, a horse requires water at least once +in twelve hours, and suffers greatly if that period of abstinence is +exceeded. A camel, however, will go for ten or twelve days without drink, +without being much distressed. This fact should be remembered, because +the necessity of obtaining water for the horses entailed upon us many +wearying deviations from the main route and frequent disappointments, +besides great privation and inconvenience to man and beast. + +The 19th was Sunday, and, according to practice, we rested. Every Sunday +throughout the journey I read Divine Service, and, except making the +daily observations, only work absolutely necessary was done. Whenever +possible, we rested on Sunday, taking, if we could, a pigeon, a parrot, +or such other game as might come in our way as special fare. Sunday's +dinner was an institution for which, even in those inhospitable wilds, we +had a great respect. This day, the 19th, ascertained, by meridian +altitude of the sun, that we were in latitude 27 degrees 40 minutes 6 +seconds South. We had several pigeons and parrots, which, unfortunately +for them, but most fortunately for us, had come within range of our guns. +While thus resting, Police constable Haydon arrived from Champion Bay, +bringing letters and a thermometer (broken on the journey), also a +barometer. When he left we bade good-bye to the last white man we were +destined to see for nearly six months. + +After the usual difficulty with the horses, which had again wandered, we +started on Monday, the 20th, at half-past ten, and steering about 30 +degrees East of north for seven miles, came to a spring called Bullardo, +and seven miles farther we camped at Warrorang, where there was scarcely +any water or feed. We were now in latitude 27 degrees 33 minutes 21 +seconds South, Cheangwa Hill being North 340 degrees East magnetic. + +I now take up the narrative in the words of my Journal, which will show +the reason for ultimately adopting the third of the routes which the +letter of instructions left to my discretion. + +April 21st. +Continued on North 340 degrees East to Cheangwa Hill four miles; thence +northerly, passing Koonbun, and on to a place called Pingie, on the +Sandford River. From camp to Pingie, Barloweery Peaks bore North 322 +degrees East magnetic, Cheangwa Hill North 207 degrees East, latitude 27 +degrees 19 minutes 33 seconds. Found water by digging. Rather warm; +barometer rising. Clear flats along water-courses; otherwise dense +thickets. + +THE MURCHISON RIVER. + +22nd. +Continued northerly; at twelve miles crossed the dividing range between +the Sandford and other creeks flowing into the Murchison. Camped at a +granite hill called Bia, with a fine spring on its north side. Got a view +of Mount Murchison, which bore North 7 degrees East magnetic from camp. +Fine grassy granite country for the first eight miles to-day. Splendid +feed at this camp. Travelled about fifteen miles. Latitude by meridian +altitude of Regulus 27 degrees 7 minutes South. Walking in turns every +day. + +23rd. +Steering a little west of north over level country for six miles, with a +few water-courses with white gums in them, we came into granite country +with bare hills in every direction. Kept on till we came to a brook with +pools of fresh water, where we camped about one mile from the Murchison +River. Latitude 26 degrees 52 minutes 38 seconds, Mount Murchison bearing +North 50 degrees East. Went with Pierre to a peak of granite North 50 +degrees East, about one mile and a half from camp, from which I took a +round of angles and bearings. Travelled about eighteen miles to-day. + +24th. +At one mile reached the Murchison River, and followed along up it. Fine +grassy flats, good loamy soil, with white gums in bed and on flats. +Travelled about fourteen miles, and camped. Rather brackish water in the +pools. Latitude of camp 26 degrees 42 minutes 43 seconds by Regulus. Shot +seven ducks and eight cockatoos. Saw several kangaroos and emus. Rain +much required. Mount Murchison bears from camp North 122 degrees East, +and Mount Narryer North 14 degrees East magnetic. + +25th. +Continued up river for about nine miles, and camped at a fine spring in +the bed of river, of fresh water, which I named Elizabeth Spring; it is +surrounded by salt water, and is quite fresh. Mount Narryer bore from +camp North 4 degrees East magnetic, and Mount Murchison North 168 degrees +30 minutes East magnetic. Windich shot an emu, and some ducks were also +shot. Fine grassy country along river; white gums in flats; large salt +pools. Very hot weather; thermometer 90 degrees in pack-saddle. + +26th (Sunday). +Did not travel to-day. Plotted up track and took observations for time +and longitude. Barometer 29.18; thermometer 83 degrees at 6 p.m. Latitude +of camp 26 degrees 35 minutes 8 seconds South by Regulus. + +27th. +Travelled up river for about sixteen miles; camped at a fine fresh pool +in latitude 26 degrees 24 minutes 52 seconds South, Mount Narryer bearing +North 238 degrees East, and Mount Dugel North 334 degrees East magnetic. +Fine grassy country along river. Shot six ducks; great numbers were in +the river, also white cockatoos. Very warm mid-day; cloudy in evening. +Marked a tree F on the right bank of river. + +A SOLITARY CAMP OUT. + +28th. +Followed up the river. Fine pools for the first six miles, with numbers +of ducks in them. After travelling about twenty miles we lost the river +from keeping too far to the east, and following branches instead of the +main branch--in fact, the river spreads out over beautifully-grassed +plains for many miles. Fearing we should be without water, I pushed +ahead, and after following a flat for about six miles, got to the main +river, where there were large pools of brackish water. As it was getting +late, returned in all haste, but could not find the party, they having +struck westward. I got on the tracks after dark, and, after following +them two miles, had to give it up and camp for the night, tying up my +horse alongside. Neither food nor water, and no rug. + +29th. +I anxiously awaited daylight, and then followed on the tracks and +overtook the party, encamped on the main branch of the river, with +abundance of brackish water in the pools. Shot several cockatoos. From +camp Mount Narryer bore North 211 degrees 30 minutes East magnetic, and +Mount Dugel 225 degrees 15 minutes East magnetic. Camp is in latitude 26 +degrees 6 minutes 12 seconds. Marked a tree with the letter F on right +bank of river. + +30th. +Two of the horses could not be found till half-past twelve. After this we +continued up the river over well-grassed country for about ten miles. +Camped at a small pool of fresh water, in latitude 26 degrees 2 minutes +52 seconds, which we luckily found by tracking up natives. Large pools of +salt water in river. Three walking and three riding every day. Set watch +to-night, two hours each. + +May 1st. +Followed up river, keeping a little to the south of it for about fifteen +miles. We camped on a splendid grassy flat, with a fine large pool of +fresh water in it. Shot several ducks. This is the best camp we have +had---plenty of grass and water--and I was very rejoiced to find the +month commence so auspiciously. Barometer 29.10; thermometer 78 degrees +at 5.30 p.m.; latitude 26 degrees 0 minutes 52 seconds South. Sighted +Mount Gould, which bore North 58 degrees East magnetic. Marked a white +gum-tree F 20, being 20th camp from Geraldton. + +MEETING NATIVES. + +2nd. +Steered straight for Mount Gould, North 58 degrees East, for sixteen +miles, when I found I had made an error, and that we had unknowingly +crossed the river this morning. After examining the chart, I steered +South-East towards Mount Hale and, striking the river, we followed along +it a short distance and camped at some brackish water, Mount Hale bearing +North 178 degrees East, and Mount Gould North 28 degrees East. Barometer +28.96; thermometer 77 degrees at 5.30 p.m. As Pierre was walking along, +he suddenly turned round and saw four or five natives following. Being +rather surprised, he frightened them by roughly saying, "What the devil +you want here?" when they quickly made off. Windich and I then tried to +speak to them, but could not find them. Latitude 25 degrees 57 minutes 32 +seconds South; longitude about 117 degrees 20 minutes East. + +3rd (Sunday). +Went to summit of Mount Hale in company with Pierre, and after an hour's +hard work reached it. It was very rough and difficult to ascend. The +rocks were very magnetic; the view was extensive; indeed, the whole +country was an extended plain. To the east, plains for at least thirty +miles, when broken ranges were visible. Mount Gould to the +North-North-East showed very remarkably. Mount Narryer range was visible. +To the south, only one hill or range could be seen, while to the +South-East broken ranges of granite were seen about thirty miles distant. +Mount Hale is very lofty and rugged, and is composed of micaceous iron +ore, with brown hematite; being magnetic, the compass was rendered +useless. Returned about one o'clock. Windich and the others had been out +searching for fresh water, and the former had seen three natives and had +a talk with them. They did not appear frightened, but he could not make +anything out of them. They found some good water. Barometer, at 6.30 +p.m., 28.88; thermometer 76 degrees. Took observations for time and +longitude. We are much in want of rain, and thought we should have had +some, but the barometer is rising this evening. To-morrow we enter on +country entirely unknown. + +4th. +Started at nine o'clock, and, travelling North-East for three miles, came +to junction of river from Mount Gould, when we got some fresh water, also +met two natives who were friendly, and they accompanied us. We took the +south or main branch of river, and, steering a little south of east for +about nine miles, over splendidly-grassed country, we camped on a small +pool of fresh water on one of the courses of the river, Mount Gould +bearing North 334 degrees 30 minutes East magnetic, and Mount Hale North +228 degrees 30 minutes East magnetic. Barometer 28.90; thermometer 76 +degrees at 6 p.m.; latitude 25 degrees 54 minutes 37 seconds by Regulus. +Marked a tree F 22, being 22nd camp from Geraldton. + +LOFTY RANGES. + +5th. +We travelled up easterly along the river, which spreads out and has +several channels, sometimes running for miles separately, then joining +again. There were many fine fresh pools for the first four miles, after +which they were all salt, and the river divided into so many channels +that it was difficult to know the main river. After travelling about +sixteen miles over fine grassy plains and flats, we were joined by seven +natives, who had returned with the two who had left us this morning. They +told us that there was no fresh water on the branch we were following, +and we therefore followed them North 30 degrees East for seven miles +(leaving the river to the southward), when they brought us to a small +pool in a brook, where we camped, Mount Gould bearing North 285 degrees +30 minutes East magnetic, Mount Hale North 250 degrees East magnetic. +Latitude 25 degrees 52 minutes from mean of two observations. Barometer +28.78; thermometer 77 degrees at 6 P.M. + +6th. +Three of the natives accompanied us to-day. We travelled east for six +miles, when I ascended a rise and could see a river to the north and +south; the one to the north the natives say has fresh water. As the +natives say there is plenty of water ahead, North 70 degrees East, we +continued onwards to a hill, which I named Mount Maitland. After about +twenty miles we reached it, but found the spring to be bad, and after +digging no water came. For our relief I tied up the horses for some time +before letting them go. Ascending the hill close to the camp, I saw a +very extensive range, and took a fine round of angles. The compass is +useless on these hills, as they are composed of micaceous iron ore, with +brown hematite, which is very magnetic. To the east a line of high, +remarkable ranges extend, running eastwards, which I have named the +Robinson Range, after his Excellency Governor Robinson. One of the +highest points I named Mount Fraser, after the Honourable Commissioner of +Crown Lands, from whom I received much assistance and consideration, and +who has aided the expedition in every possible way; the other highest +point, Mount Padbury, after Mr. W. Padbury, a contributor to the +Expedition Fund. The river could be traced for thirty miles by the line +of white gums, while to the south long lines of white gums could also be +seen. I am not sure which is the main branch, but I intend following the +one to the north, as it looks the largest and the natives say it has +fresh water. Barometer 28.45; thermometer 69 degrees at 6 p.m.; latitude +25 degrees 46 minutes South. The last thirty-five miles over fine grassy +plains, well adapted for sheep-runs; and water could, I think, be easily +procured by digging, as well as from the river. + +7th. +The three natives ran away this morning, or at least left us without +asking leave. We had to keep watch all last night over the horses to keep +them from rambling. Got an early start, and steering North 70 degrees +East for about twelve miles, we reached the river, and camped at a fresh +pool of splendid water. This is a fine large branch; it is fresh, and I +believe, if not the main, is one of the largest branches. The country is +now more undulating and splendidly grassed, and would carry sheep well. +The whole bed of the river, or valley, is admirably adapted for pastoral +purposes, and will no doubt ere long be stocked. Latitude 25 degrees 42 +minutes 12 seconds South, and longitude about 118 degrees 9 minutes East. +Barometer 28.57; thermometer 75 degrees at 5.30 p.m. Marked a white gum +on right bank of river F 25, being the 25th camp from Champion Bay. + +8th. +Continued up the river for about fifteen miles, the stream gradually +getting smaller, many small creeks coming into it; wide bed and flat. +Fine grassy country on each side, and some permanent pools in river. +Camped at a small pool of fresh water, and rode up to a low ridge to the +North-East, from which I got a fine view to the eastward. I do not think +the river we are following goes much farther; low ranges and a few hills +alone visible. Barometer 28.48; thermometer 70 degrees at 6 o'clock p.m.; +latitude 25 degrees 47 minutes 53 seconds by meridian altitude of +Jupiter. + +9th. +Continued along river, which is gradually getting smaller, for about +thirteen miles over most beautiful grassy country, the best we have seen. +White gums along bed. I believe the river does not go more than twenty +miles from here, it being now very small. Found a nice pool of water and +camped. Barometer 28.48; thermometer 68 degrees at half-past five +o'clock. + +THE DRY SEASON. + +10th (Sunday). +Went with Windich south about eight miles to a low range, which I rightly +anticipated would be a watershed. Could see a long line of white gums; +believe there may be a river to the south, or it may be the salt branch +of the Murchison. Returned to camp at two o'clock; plotted up track. +Barometer 28.52; thermometer 69 degrees at 6 p.m. Mount Fraser bears +North 328 degrees East magnetic from camp, which is in latitude 25 +degrees 51 minutes 46 seconds, longitude about 118 degrees 30 minutes +East. The country is very dry indeed; in fact, we could not be more +unfortunate in the season thus far. I only trust we may be blessed with +abundance of rain shortly, otherwise we shall not be able to move +onwards. + +11th. +Continued up river, which is getting very small, over beautifully-grassed +country, and at seven miles came to a fine flat and splendid pool of +permanent water. Although a delightful spot, I did not halt, as we had +come such a short distance. Here we met six native women, who were very +frightened at first, but soon found sufficient confidence to talk and to +tell us there was plenty of water ahead. As they always say this, I do +not put any faith in it. We continued on about east for eight miles to a +high flat-topped hill, when we got a view of the country ahead and turned +about North-East towards some flats, and at about eight miles camped on a +grassy plain, with some small clay-pans of water. Splendid feeding +country all along this valley--I may say for the last 100 miles. Heard a +number of natives cooeying above our camp, but did not see them. +Barometer 28.37; thermometer 68 degrees at six o'clock p.m.; latitude 25 +degrees 51 minutes South by meridian altitude of Jupiter. + +12th. +Started East-North-East for four miles, then north three miles to the +range, where we searched over an hour for water without success. We then +travelled South-East for five miles and south one mile and a half to a +water-hole in a brook, by digging out which we got abundance of water. +About a quarter of a mile farther down the brook found a large pool of +water and shot six ducks. As soon as we unloaded, it commenced to rain, +and kept on steadily till midnight. I am indeed pleased to get this rain +at last, as the country is very dry. Splendid open feeding country all +to-day, and the camp is a beautifully-grassed spot. Marked a white +gum-tree F 29, close to the pool or spring on the right bank of this +brook. + +GLENGARRY RANGE. + +13th. +Continued on, steering about south-east, as the flat we have been +following the last week is now nearly at an end. Afterwards determined to +bear southward, in order to see where the south branch of the river goes +to. For the first six miles over most magnificent grassed country. +Ascended a low range to get a view of the country. The prospect ahead, +however, not cheering. Took round of bearings. A very conspicuous range +bore about south, which I named Glengarry Range, in honour of Mr. +Maitland Brown, a great supporter of the expedition; while to the +south-east only one solitary hill could be seen, distant about twenty +miles. We, however, continued for about ten miles over most miserable +country, thickets and spinifex, when we reached some granitic rocks and a +low rise of granite, on which we found sufficient water to camp. +Barometer 28.12; thermometer 60 degrees at 5.30 p.m.; latitude 25 degrees +57 minutes 11 seconds South by Regulus. + +14th. +Steered South-East for about fourteen miles to a stony low range, thence +East-North-East and east and south for six miles, turning and twisting, +looking for water. Windich found some in a gully and we camped. Spinifex +for the first fourteen miles, and miserable country. The prospect ahead +not very promising. Barometer 28.06; thermometer 83 degrees at 5 p.m. +Every appearance of rain. Latitude 26 degrees 8 minutes 31 seconds South, +longitude about 119 degrees 18 minutes East. + +15th. +Raining lightly this morning. I did not proceed, but gave the horses +rest. + +16th. +Continued east for five miles, when we found three of the horses were +missing; returned with Windich, and found them near camp, having never +started at all. Seeing white gums to the south-east, we followed for five +miles down a fine brook (which I named Negri Creek, after Commander +Negri, founder of the Geographical Society of Italy), with fine grassy +country on each side. Afterwards it joined another brook, and went +south-east for about three miles, where it lost itself in open flats. +Struck south for two miles to some large white gums, but found no water. +After long looking about I found water in a gully and camped. Distance +travelled about twenty miles. Spinifex and grassy openings the first five +miles to-day. Barometer 28.20; thermometer 67 degrees at 6 o'clock p.m.; +latitude 26 degrees 16 minutes 8 seconds by Jupiter. Windich shot a +turkey. + +MOUNTS BARTLE AND RUSSELL. + +17th (Sunday). +The horses rambled far away, and it was noon before they were all +collected. Shifted three and a half miles north, where there was better +feed and water. Went on to a low hill on the north of our last night's +camp, and got a fine view of the country to the south and south-east. Two +remarkable flat-topped hills bore South-East, which I named Mount Bartle +and Mount Russell, after the distinguished President and Foreign +Secretary of the Royal Geographical Society. Saw a long line of white +gums (colalyas) running East and West about ten miles distant, looking +very much like a river. To the east and north the view was intercepted by +long stony rises, apparently covered with spinifex. Large white gum +clumps studded the plains in every direction. Evidences of heavy rainfall +at certain times to be seen everywhere. Barometer 28.28; thermometer 72 +degrees at 5 p.m.; latitude 26 degrees 13 minutes 4 seconds South. + +18th. +Steered South-South-East for four miles, then South-East generally, +towards the flat-topped hills seen yesterday, and which bore 144 degrees +East magnetic from Spinifex Hill. At six miles crossed a low range +covered with spinifex, after which we passed over country generally well +grassed, some of it most beautifully, and white gums very large in clumps +were studded all over the plains. At about twenty-two miles reached the +flat-topped hills, and camped, finding some water in a clay-pan. The line +of white gums I find are only large clumps studded over extensive plains +of splendidly-grassed country. No large water-course was crossed, but +several small creeks form here and there, and afterwards run out into the +plains, finally finding their way into the Murchison. It was sundown when +we camped. Walked over twenty miles myself to-day. Barometer 28.38; +thermometer 60 degrees at six o'clock; latitude 26 degrees 27 minutes 38 +seconds South, longitude about 119 degrees 42 minutes East. + +19th. +Continued in a north-easterly direction for about eight miles over fine +grassy plains, and camped at some water in a small gully with fine feed. +I camped early in order to give the backs of the horses a good washing, +and to refit some of the pack-saddles. Passed several clay-pans with +water. We have not seen any permanent water for the last eighty miles. I +much wish to find some, as it is very risky going on without the means of +falling back. The country seems very deficient of permanent water, +although I believe plenty could be procured by sinking. Barometer 28.46; +thermometer 63 degrees at 5 p.m.; latitude 26 degrees 23 minutes 39 +seconds South. Left a pack-saddle frame and two pack-bags hanging on a +tree. + +KIMBERLEY RANGE. + +20th. +Steering North-East for five miles over fine grassy plains, came to a low +stony range, ascending which we saw, a little to the south, a line of +(colalya) white gums, to which we proceeded. Then following up a large +brook for about five miles North-East, we camped at a small water-hole in +the brook. In the afternoon I went with Pierre about one mile North-East +of camp to the summit of a rough range and watershed, which I believe is +the easterly watershed of the Murchison River. All the creeks to the west +of this range (which I named Kimberley Range, after the Right Honourable +Lord Kimberley, the Secretary of State for the Colonies) trend towards +the Murchison, and finally empty into the main river. From this range we +could see a long way to the eastward. The country is very level, with low +ranges, but no conspicuous hills. Not a promising country for water, but +still looks good feeding country. This range is composed of brown +hematite, decomposing to yellow (tertiary), and is very magnetic, the +compass being useless. Bituminous pitch found oozing out of the +rocks--probably the result of the decomposition of the excrement of bats. +It contains fragments of the wing cases of insects, and gives reactions +similar to the bituminous mineral or substance found in Victoria. +Barometer 28.285; thermometer 63 degrees at 5 p.m. On summit of +watershed, barometer 28.15; thermometer 69 degrees; latitude 26 degrees +17 minutes 12 seconds, longitude about 119 degrees 54 minutes East. + +21st. +Continued on North-East, and, travelling over the watershed of the +Murchison, we followed along a gully running North-East; then, passing +some water-holes, travelled on and ascended a small range, from which we +beheld a very extensive clear plain just before us. Thinking it was a +fine grassy plain we quickly descended, when, to our disgust, we found it +was spinifex that had been burnt. We continued till three o'clock, with +nothing but spinifex plains in sight. I despatched Windich towards a +range in the distance, and followed after as quickly as possible. When we +reached the range we heard the welcoming gunshot, and, continuing on, we +met Tommy, who had found abundance of water and feed on some granite +rocks. We soon unloaded, and were all rejoiced to be in safety, the +prospect this afternoon having been anything but cheering. Distance +travelled about thirty miles. Barometer 28.22; thermometer 56 degrees at +6 p.m. Cold easterly wind all day. About eighteen miles of spinifex +plains. Latitude 26 degrees 0 minutes 53 seconds by Arcturus and e +Bootes. + +22nd. +Did not travel to-day, the horses being tired, and the country ahead did +not seem very inviting. Windich found a native spring about a mile to the +North-East. This is a very nice spot, surrounded as it is by spinifex. +Variation 2 degrees 40 minutes West by observation. + +23rd. +Continued on North-East for about twelve miles over spinifex plains and +sandy ridges. Went on ahead with Windich, and came to a gorge and some +granite rocks with abundance of water, and were soon joined by the party. +Barometer 28.30; thermometer 60 degrees at 6 p.m.; latitude 25 degrees 53 +minutes 52 seconds by Altair. + +24th (Sunday). +We rested at camp. I was all day calculating lunar observations. +Barometer 28.22; thermometer 64 degrees at 5.30 p.m. + +FRERE RANGES. + +25th. +Travelled onwards about North 40 degrees East for eight miles, passing a +low granite range at six miles. Came to a fine brook trending a little +south of east, which we followed downwards seven miles, running nearly +east. This brook was full of water, some of the pools being eight or ten +feet deep, ten yards wide, and sixty yards long. It flowed out into a +large flat, and finally runs into a salt lake. I named this brook Sweeney +Creek, after my companion and farrier, James Sweeney. Leaving the flat, +we struck North-North-East for four miles, and came to a salt marsh about +half a mile wide, which we crossed. Following along, came into some high +ranges, which I named the Frere Ranges, after Sir Bartle Frere, the +distinguished President of the Royal Geographical Society. Found a small +rock water-hole in a gully and camped. Water appears exceedingly scarce +in these ranges. It is very remarkable that there should have been such +heavy rain twelve miles back, and none at all here. Rough feed for +horses. Distance travelled about twenty-seven miles. These ranges run +east and west, and are the highest we have seen. The marsh appears to +follow along the south side of the range. Barometer 28.38; thermometer 70 +degrees at 5.30 p.m.; latitude 25 degrees 43 minutes 44 seconds by +Arcturus. + +26th. +Ascended the Frere Ranges and got a fine view to the north and east. Fine +high hills and ranges to the north; a salt marsh and low ranges to the +east and South-East. Continued on North-East for four miles, then +North-North-West for three miles, passing plenty of water in clay-holes +and clay-pans in bed of marsh, we camped at a fine pool in a large brook +that runs into the marsh, which I called Kennedy Creek, after my +companion James Kennedy. The prospect ahead is very cheering, and I hope +to find plenty of water and feed for the next 100 miles. Latitude 25 +degrees 38 minutes 44 seconds South; barometer 28.42; thermometer 41 +degrees at 10 p.m. Marked a white gumtree F 40 close to camp in bed of +river. The banks of the brook at this spot are composed of purple-brown +slate (Silurian). + +27th. +Followed up the Kennedy Creek, bearing North-North-East and North for +about seven miles, passing a number of shallow pools, when we came to +some splendid springs, which I named the Windich Springs, after my old +and well-tried companion Tommy Windich, who has now been on three +exploring expeditions with me. They are the best springs I have ever +seen--flags in the bed of the river, and pools twelve feet deep and +twenty chains long--a splendid place for water. We therefore camped, and +found another spot equally good a quarter of a mile west of camp in +another branch. There is a most magnificent supply of water and +feed--almost unlimited and permanent. A fine range of hills bore +north-west from the springs, which I named Carnarvon Range, after the +Right Honourable the present Secretary of State for the Colonies. The +hills looked very remarkable, being covered with spinifex almost to their +very summit. We shot five ducks and got three opossums this afternoon, +besides doing some shoeing. There is an immense clump of white gums at +head of spring. Barometer 28.34; thermometer 46 degrees at 11 p.m. Marked +a large white gum-tree F 41 on west side close to right bank of river, +being our 41st camp from Geraldton. Latitude 25 degrees 22 minutes 26 +seconds South, longitude about 120 degrees 42 minutes East. + +MOUNT SALVADO. + +28th. +Steering North 30 degrees East for eleven miles, we came to a rough hill, +which I ascended, camped on north side of it, and found water in a gully. +The view was very extensive but not promising--spinifex being in every +direction. A bold hill bore North 31 degrees East magnetic, about seven +miles distant to the North-North-West, which I named Mount Salvado, after +Bishop Salvado, of Victoria Plains, a contributor to the Expedition Fund. +The Carnarvon Ranges looked very remarkable. To the East and North-East +spinifex and low ranges for fifteen miles, when the view was intercepted +by spinifex rises--altogether very unpromising. Barometer 28.26; +thermometer 70 degrees at 5 p.m.; latitude 25 degrees 24 minutes 11 +seconds South. + +29th. +Steered East-North-East for seven miles, when we came to some fine water +in a gully, which we did not camp at, owing to my being ahead with +Windich, and my brother not seeing a note I left telling him to remain +there while I went on to get a view ahead. Passing this at ten miles, we +reached a low spinifex hill capped with rock, from which a remarkable +hill was visible, which I named Mount Davis, after my friend Mr. J.S. +Davis, who was a contributor to the Expedition Fund. Mount Salvado was +also visible. Spinifex in every direction, and the country very miserable +and unpromising. I went ahead with Windich. Steering about North 15 +degrees East for about eight miles over spinifex sand-hills, we found a +spring in a small flat, which I named Pierre Spring, after my companion +Tommy Pierre. It was surrounded by the most miserable spinifex country, +and is quite a diamond in the desert. We cleared it out and got +sufficient water for our horses. To the North, South, and East nothing +but spinifex sand-hills in sight. Barometer 28.44; thermometer 70 degrees +at 5 p.m.; latitude 25 degrees 14 minutes 34 seconds South by Altair. + +SEARCHING FOR WATER. + +30th. +Steering East-North-East over spinifex red sand-hills for nine miles, we +came to a valley and followed down a gully running North-North-East for +two miles, when it lost itself on the flat, which was wooded and grassy. +About a mile farther on we found a clay-pan with water, and camped, with +excellent feed. The country is very dry, and I should think there has not +been any rain for several months. The appearance of the country ahead is +better than it looked yesterday. I went onwards with Windich to-day, and +found the water. Barometer 28.46; thermometer 66 degrees at 5.30 p.m.; +latitude 25 degrees 10 minutes 32 seconds. + +31st. (Sunday). +Rested at camp. Took observations for time. Left two pack-saddle bags +hanging on a tree. + +June 1st. +Barometer 28.38; thermometer 45 degrees at 8 a.m. In collecting the +horses we came on an old native camp, and found the skull of a native, +much charred, evidently the remains of one who had been eaten. Continued +on about North-East along a grassy flat, and at five miles passed some +clay-pans of water, after which we encountered spinifex, which continued +for fifteen miles, when we got to a rocky range, covered with more +spinifex. Myself and Windich were in advance, and after reaching the +range we followed down a flat about North for six miles, when it joined +another large water-course, both trending North-North-West and +North-West. We followed down this river for about seven miles, in hopes +of finding water, without success. Night was fast approaching, and I +struck north for four miles to a range, on reaching which the prospect +was very poor; it proved to be a succession of spinifex sand-hills, and +no better country was in view to the North-East and East. It was just +sundown when we reached the range; we then turned east for two miles, and +south, following along all the gullies we came across, but could find no +water. It was full moon, so that we could see clearly. We turned more to +the westward and struck our outward tracks, and, following back along +them, we met the party encamped at the junction of the two branches +mentioned before. We kept watch over the horses to keep them from +straying. Mine and Windich's horses were nearly knocked up, and Windich +himself was very ill all night. Latitude 24 degrees 55 minutes 19 seconds +South. + +AT WELD SPRINGS. + +2nd. +Early this morning went with Pierre to look for water, while my brother +and Windich went on the same errand. We followed up the brook about south +for seven miles, when we left it and followed another branch about +South-South-East, ascending which, Pierre drew my attention to swarms of +birds, parroquets, etc., about half a mile ahead. We hastened on, and to +our delight found one of the best springs in the colony. It ran down the +gully for twenty chains, and is as clear and fresh as possible, while the +supply is unlimited. Overjoyed at our good fortune, we hastened back, +and, finding that my brother and Windich had not returned, packed up and +shifted over to the springs, leaving a note telling them the good news. +After reaching the springs we were soon joined by them. They had only +found sufficient water to give their own horses a drink; they also +rejoiced to find so fine a spot. Named the springs the Weld Springs, +after his Excellency Governor Weld, who has always taken such great +interest in exploration, and without whose influence and assistance this +expedition would not have been organized. There is splendid feed all +around. I intend giving the horses a week's rest here, as they are much +in want of it, and are getting very poor and tired. Barometer 28.24; +thermometer 71 degrees at 5 p.m. Shot a kangaroo. + +3rd. +Rested at Weld Springs. Light rain this morning. The horses doing well, +and will improve very fast. Towards evening the weather cleared, which I +was sorry for, as good rains are what we are much in need of. Did some +shoeing. Barometer 28.13; thermometer 61 degrees at 5 p.m. + +4th. +Barometer 28.16; thermometer 53 degrees at 8 a.m. Rested at Weld Springs. +Shod some of the horses. Repairing saddles. Rating chronometer. Windich +shot an emu. Horses doing first-rate, and fast improving. + +5th. +Barometer 28.28; thermometer 53 degrees at 6 p.m. Rested at Weld Springs. +Shoeing and saddle-stuffing. Ten emus came to water; shot twice with +rifle at them, but missed. Rated chronometer. + +6th. +Rested at Weld Springs. Took three sets of lunars. Pierre shot a +kangaroo. Marked a tree F 46 on the east side of the spring at our +bivouac, which is in latitude 25 degrees 0 minutes 46 seconds South, +longitude about 121 degrees 21 minutes East. Mended saddles. Horses much +improved, and some of them getting very fresh. + +7th (Sunday). +Pierre shot an emu, and the others shot several pigeons. This is a +splendid spot; emus and kangaroos numerous, pigeons and birds +innumerable, literally covering the entire surface all round the place in +the evenings. We have been living on game ever since we have been here. +Intend taking a flying trip to-morrow; party to follow on our tracks on +Tuesday. Read Divine Service. Barometer 28.38; thermometer 55 degrees at +7 p.m. + +8th. +Started with Tommy Pierre to explore the country East-North-East for +water, leaving instructions for my brother to follow after us to-morrow +with the party. We travelled generally East-North-East for twenty miles +over spinifex and undulating sand-hills, without seeing any water. We +turned east for ten miles to a range, which we found to be covered with +spinifex. Everywhere nothing else was to be seen; no feed, destitute of +water; while a few small gullies ran out of the low range, but all were +dry. Another range about twenty-four miles distant was the extent of our +view, to which we bore. At twenty miles, over red sandy hills covered +with spinifex and of the most miserable nature, we came to a narrow +samphire flat, following which south for two miles, we camped without +water and scarcely any feed. Our horses were knocked up, having come over +heavy ground more than fifty miles. The whole of the country passed over +to-day is covered with spinifex, and is a barren worthless desert. + +BACK TO THE SPRINGS. + +9th. +At daybreak continued east about four miles to the range seen yesterday, +which we found to be a low stony rise, covered with spinifex. The view +was extensive and very gloomy. Far to the north and east, spinifex +country, level, and no appearance of hills or water-courses. To the south +were seen a few low ranges, covered also with spinifex; in fact, nothing +but spinifex in sight, and no chance of water. Therefore I was obliged to +turn back, as our horses were done up. Travelling south for five miles, +we then turned West-North-West until we caught our outward tracks, and, +following them, we met the party at 3 o'clock, coming on, about twenty +miles from the Weld Springs. Our horses were completely done up. We had +not had water for thirty-one hours. We all turned back, retreating +towards the springs, and continued on till 10 o'clock, when we camped in +the spinifex and tied up the horses. + +10th. +We travelled on to the springs, which were only about three miles from +where we slept last night, and camped. I intend staying here for some +time, until I find water ahead or we get some rain. We are very fortunate +in having such a good depot, as the feed is very good. We found that +about a dozen natives had been to the springs while we were away. They +had collected some of the emu feathers, which were lying all about. +Natives appear to be very numerous, and I have no doubt that there are +springs in the spinifex or valleys close to it. Barometer 28.08; +thermometer 62 degrees at 5.30 p.m. + +11th. +Rested at the Weld Springs. Shot an emu; about a dozen came to water. My +brother and Windich intend going a flying trip East-South-East in search +of water to-morrow. Barometer 28.15; thermometer 60 degrees at 5 p.m. + +12th. +My brother and Windich started in search of water; myself and Pierre +accompanied them about twelve miles with water to give their horses a +drink. About ten o'clock we left them and returned to camp. + +FIGHT WITH THE NATIVES. + +13th. +About one o'clock Pierre saw a flock of emus coming to water, and went +off to get a shot. Kennedy followed with the rifle. I climbed up on a +small tree to watch them. I was surprised to hear natives' voices, and, +looking towards the hill, I saw from forty to sixty natives running +towards the camp, all plumed up and armed with spears and shields. I was +cool, and told Sweeney to bring out the revolvers; descended from the +tree and got my gun and cooeyed to Pierre and Kennedy, who came running. +By this time they were within sixty yards, and halted. One advanced to +meet me and stood twenty yards off; I made friendly signs; he did not +appear very hostile. All at once one from behind (probably a chief) came +rushing forward, and made many feints to throw spears. He went through +many manoeuvres, and gave a signal, when the whole number made a rush +towards us, yelling and shouting, with their spears shipped. When within +thirty yards I gave the word to fire: we all fired as one man, only one +report being heard. I think the natives got a few shots, but they all ran +up the hill and there stood, talking and haranguing and appearing very +angry. We re-loaded our guns, and got everything ready for a second +attack, which I was sure they would make. We were not long left in +suspense. They all descended from the hill and came on slowly towards us. +When they were about 150 yards off I fired my rifle, and we saw one of +them fall, but he got up again and was assisted away. On examining the +spot we found the ball had cut in two the two spears he was carrying; he +also dropped his wommera, which was covered with blood. We could follow +the blood-drops for a long way over the stones. I am afraid he got a +severe wound. My brother and Windich being away we were short-handed. The +natives seem determined to take our lives, and therefore I shall not +hesitate to fire on them should they attack us again. I thus decide and +write in all humility, considering it a necessity, as the only way of +saving our lives. I write this at 4 p.m., just after the occurrence, so +that, should anything happen to us, my brother will know how and when it +occurred. + +5 p.m. The natives appear to have made off. We intend sleeping in the +thicket close to camp, and keeping a strict watch, so as to be ready for +them should they return to the attack this evening. At 7.30 my brother +and Windich returned, and were surprised to hear of our adventure. They +had been over fifty miles from camp East-South-East, and had passed over +some good feeding country, but had not found a drop of water. They and +their horses had been over thirty hours without water. + +14th (Sunday). +The natives did not return to the attack last night. In looking round +camp we found the traces of blood, where one of the natives had been +lying down. This must have been the foremost man, who was in the act of +throwing his spear, and who urged the others on. Two therefore, at least, +are wounded, and will have cause to remember the time they made their +murderous attack upon us. We worked all day putting up a stone hut, ten +by nine feet, and seven feet high, thatched with boughs. We finished it; +it will make us safe at night. Being a very fair hut, it will be a great +source of defence. Barometer 28.09; thermometer 68 degrees at 5 p.m. Hope +to have rain, as without it we cannot proceed. + +15th. +Finished the hut, pugging it at the ends, and making the roof better. Now +it is in good order, and we are quite safe from attack at night, should +they attempt it again, which I think is doubtful, as they got too warm a +reception last time. I intend going with Windich to-morrow easterly in +search of water. Barometer 29.09 at 5 p.m.; thermometer 62 degrees. + +16th. +Left the Weld Springs with Windich and a pack-horse carrying fourteen +gallons of water. Steered South-East for twelve miles over spinifex, +after which we got into a grassy ravine, which we followed along three +miles, passing some fine clay-holes which would hold plenty of water if +it rained. We then turned East-North-East for twelve miles over spinifex, +miserable country, when we struck the tracks of my brother and Windich on +their return, June 13th. We followed along them South-East for four +miles, and then South-East to a bluff range about eighteen miles, which +we reached at sundown. Spinifex generally, a few grassy patches +intervening, on which were numbers of kangaroos. We camped close to the +bluff, and gave the horses one gallon of water each out of the cans. Just +when the pannicans were boiled, heard noises which we thought were +natives shouting. We instantly put out the fire and had our supper in the +dark, keeping a sharp look-out for two hours, when we were convinced it +must have been a native dog, as there were hundreds all round us, barking +and howling. The weather is heavy and cloudy, and I hope to get some rain +shortly. We slept without any fire, but it was not very cold. + +17th. +As the horses did not ramble far, we got off early and followed along and +through the ranges East-South-East about, the distance being eighteen +miles. Passed some splendid clay-pans quite dry. The flats around the +ranges are very grassy, and look promising eastwards, but we cannot find +any water. Kangaroos and birds are numerous. Being about seventy miles +from camp, we cannot go any farther, or our horses will not carry us +back. We therefore turned, keeping to the south of our outward track, and +at about eleven miles found some water in some clay-holes, and camped at +about 3 o'clock in the afternoon. There is sufficient water to last the +party about a week, but not more. The weather is dark and threatening, +and I believe there will be rain to-night, which will be a great boon, +and will enable us to travel along easily. It is in circumstances such as +I am at present placed that we are sure to implore help and assistance +from the hand of the Creator; but when we have received all we desire, +how often we forget to give Him praise! + +18th. +Rained lightly last night, and we had a nice shower this morning. Yet did +not get very wet, as we had our waterproofs. Fearing that the rain would +obliterate the tracks and the party be unable to follow them, I decided +to return towards Weld Springs. Therefore followed along our outward +track, but found, to our sorrow, that there had been no rain west of our +last night's camp. We pushed along and got within eighteen miles of Weld +Springs and camped without water, having left the cans behind, thinking +we should find plenty of rain-water. + +19th. +We had to go about two miles for our horses this morning; after which, we +made all haste towards Weld Springs, as I knew the party would be coming +on along our tracks to-day. When we were within six miles of the spring +we met the party, but, being obliged to take our horses to water, I +decided that all should return and make a fresh start to-morrow. The +natives had not returned to the attack during our absence, so I conclude +they do not intend to interfere with us further. On our way to-day we +passed some fine rock holes, but all were quite dry. Rain is very much +required in this country. + +20th. +Started at 9.30 a.m., and steering South-East towards the water found on +the 17th for twenty-four miles; thence East-South-East for eight miles, +and camped without water on a small patch of feed. The last ten miles was +over clear spinifex country of the most wretched description. The country +all the way, in fact, is most miserable and intolerable. Barometer 28.50; +thermometer 56 degrees at 8 p.m.; latitude 25 degrees 13 minutes 36 +seconds South by meridian altitude of Arcturus. Left the rum-keg and a +pair of farrier's pincers in the stone hut at Weld Springs. + +21st (Sunday). +Got an early start, and continued on East-South-East. At about three +miles reached a spring on a small patch of feed in the spinifex and +camped, but found, after digging it out, that scarcely any water came in. +I have no doubt that it will fill up a good deal in the night; but, our +horses being thirsty, I re-saddled and pushed on to the water about +sixteen miles ahead, which we reached at 4 p.m. There is not more than a +week's supply here, therefore I intend going ahead with Pierre to-morrow +in search of more. The country ahead seems promising, but there is a +great deal of spinifex almost everywhere. From Weld Spring to our present +camp is all spinifex, with the exception of a few flats along short +gullies. Latitude 25 degrees 22 minutes 50 seconds South, longitude about +121 degrees 57 minutes East. Barometer 28.50; thermometer 62 degrees at 5 +p.m. + +22nd. +Left camp in company with Tommy Pierre, with a pack-horse carrying +fifteen gallons of water. Steered South-East for four miles, then east +for about eight miles over fine grassy country, then South-East towards a +high range about twenty-five miles distant. After going about three +miles, struck a flat trending South-South-East, which we followed down +about four miles, passing two small clay-holes with water in them; then +we struck South-East for four miles, and came to a large brook trending +South-East, which we followed along until it lost itself on the plain +about six miles. Fine grassy country all the way, and game abundant. +There were a few gallons of water here and there in the brook, but none +large enough to camp at. I then turned east, and at about seven miles +reached the hill seen this morning, which I named Mount Moore, after Mr. +W.D. Moore, of Fremantle, a subscriber to the Expedition Fund. Ascending +the hill we had an extensive view to the South-West, South, and +South-East. Fine grassy country all round and very little spinifex. To +the south about nine miles we saw a lake, and farther off a remarkable +red-faced range, which I named Timperley Range, after my friend Mr. W.H. +Timperley, Inspector of Police, from whom I received a great deal of +assistance before leaving Champion Bay. A remarkable peak, with a reddish +top, bore South-South-East, which I named Mount Hosken, after Mr. M. +Hosken, of Geraldton, a contributor to the expedition. I made south +towards the lake, and at one mile and a half came on to a gully in the +grassy plain, in which we found abundance of water, sufficient to last +for months. We therefore camped for the night, with beautiful feed for +the horses. I was very thankful to find so much water and such fine +grassy country, for, if we had not found any this trip, we should have +been obliged to retreat towards Weld Springs, the water where I left the +party being only sufficient to last a few days. The country passed over +to-day was very grassy, with only a little spinifex, and it looks +promising ahead. Distance from camp about thirty-five miles. + +LAKE AUGUSTA. + +23rd. +Steering south for about eight miles, we reached the lake, which I named +Lake Augusta. The water is salt, and about five miles in circumference. +Grassy country in the flat; red sand-hills along the shore. It appeared +deep, and swarmed with ducks and swans. Pierre shot two ducks, after +which we pushed on North-East for about twelve miles to a low rocky +bluff, which we ascended and got a view of the country ahead--rough +broken ranges to the east and south. We continued on east for six miles, +when, on approaching a rocky face of a range, we saw some natives on top +of it, watching us. Approaching nearer, we heard them haranguing and +shouting, and soon afterward came within thirty yards of one who was +stooping down, looking intently and amazedly at us. I made friendly +signs, but he ran off shouting, and apparently much afraid. He and +several others ran up and joined the natives on the cliff summit, and +then all made off. We turned, and steering East-North-East for six miles, +and then east for about fourteen miles, the last few miles being +miserable spinifex country, we camped, with poor feed, amongst some +spinifex ranges. A good deal of grassy country the first part of the day. +Kangaroos very numerous, and emus also. Evidences of the natives being in +great numbers. + +24th. +Ascended a red-topped peak close to our bivouac and got a view ahead. A +salt lake was visible a few miles to the east, towards which we +proceeded. Passing along samphire flats and over red sand-hills, we got +within a mile of the lake. The country close to it not looking promising, +I determined to turn our faces westward towards the party. Steering a +little south of west for three miles, we struck a large brook trending +North-East into the lake, and, following it up a mile, found a fine pool +of fresh water, with splendid feed. This is very fortunate, as it is a +good place to bring the party to. Elated with our success, we continued +on westerly, passing some fine rock water-holes, half full of water, and +at twenty miles from the pool we found a springy hole, with plenty of +water in it, within a few hundred yards of our outward track. We had +missed it going out; it is in the centre of a very fine grassy plain. +Kangaroos and emus numerous, also natives. Giving the horses water, we +pushed on for twelve miles and camped on some fine grassy flats. Every +appearance of rain. + +ANOTHER NATIVE. + +25th. +Having finished all our rations last night, I shot two kangaroos while out +for the horses, and brought the hind quarters with us. Continuing westerly +for about ten miles, we reached the water, our bivouac on the 22nd. I +awaited the arrival of the party, which should reach here this morning. At +two o'clock heard gunshots, and saw my brother and Windich walking towards +us. Found that they had missed our tracks and were camped about a mile +higher up the gully, at some small clay-holes. We got our horses and +accompanied them back. Rained this evening more than we have had before. +Very cloudy. Barometer 28.18, but inclined to rise. Everything had gone on +well during my absence. + +26th. +Did not travel to-day, as there was good feed and water at this camp. My +brother, Windich, and Pierre rode over to Lake Augusta to get some +shooting, and returned in the afternoon with a swan and two ducks. On +their way out they saw a native and gave him chase. He climbed up a small +tree, and, although Windich expended all his knowledge of the languages +of Australia to get him to talk, he would not open his lips, but remained +silent; they therefore left him to get down from the tree at his leisure. +Re-stuffed some of the pack-saddles. Marked a tree F 50, being our 50th +camp from Geraldton. Barometer 28.40; thermometer 50 degrees at 6 p.m.; +weather cleared off and fine night. Latitude 25 degrees 37 minutes 38 +seconds South; longitude about 122 degrees 22 minutes East. + +27th. +Erected a cairn of stones on South-East point of Mount Moore, after which +continued on and reached the spring found by me on the 24th; distance +fifteen miles. The last six miles poor spinifex country. Fine and grassy +round spring. Barometer 28.54; thermometer 56 degrees at 7 p.m.; latitude +25 degrees 37 minutes 53 seconds by Arcturus. Marked a tree F 51, being +the 51st camp from Geraldton. + +28th (Sunday). +Rested at spring. Found the variations to be 1 degree 52 minutes West by +azimuths. + +29th. +Reached the pool found by me on the 24th; distance seventeen miles. +Latitude 25 degrees 41 minutes 22 seconds South; longitude about 122 +degrees 53 minutes East. Splendid feed round camp. Marked a tree F 52, +being the 52nd from Geraldton. About two miles west of camp I ascended a +remarkable hill and took a round of bearings, naming it Mount Bates, +after the Secretary of the Royal Geographical Society. + +FARING SUMPTUOUSLY. + +30th. +Left camp F 52 in company with Tommy Windich, taking one pack-horse, to +find water ahead eastward. Steered East-North-East over salt marshes and +spinifex sand-hills, and at about eleven miles found water in some +clay-pans, and left a note telling my brother to camp here to-morrow +night. Continued on and found several more fine water-pans and fine +grassy patches. Ascended a range to get a view ahead. In every direction +spinifex, more especially to the north; to the east some low ranges were +visible, about twenty miles distant, towards which we proceeded. On our +way we surprised an emu on its nest and found several eggs; we buried +four with a note stuck over them, for the party to get when they came +along, and took three with us. Soon after this the horse Windich was +riding (Mission) gave in, and we had great difficulty in getting him +along. I was much surprised at this, for I considered him the best horse +we had. We reached the range and found water in some of the gorges, but +no feed; spinifex everywhere. We continued on till dark, passing some +natives' fire, which we did not approach, then camped with scarcely any +feed. I hope to have better luck to-morrow. We have found plenty of +water, but no feed; this is better than having no water and plenty of +feed. We had one wurrung, four chockalotts, and three emu eggs, besides +bread and bacon, for tea to-night, so we fared sumptuously. + +July 1st. +Got off early and continued easterly to a low stony range three miles +off, over spinifex sandy country. Found a rock water-hole and gave our +horses a drink. Continuing about east to other ranges, which we followed +along and through, and from range to range, spinifex intervening +everywhere, and no feed, a few little drops of water in the gullies, but +not sufficient for the party to camp at. When we had travelled about +fifteen miles, we turned north for three miles, and again east, through +and over some ranges. No feed and scarcely any water. Saw a range about +twenty-five miles farther east--spinifex all the way to it. Mission being +again knocked up, although carrying only a few pounds, we camped about +three o'clock at a small hole of water in a gully--only large enough to +serve the party one night--the first to-day that would even do that. The +last forty miles was over the most wretched country I have ever seen; not +a bit of grass, and no water, except after rain; spinifex everywhere. We +are very fortunate to have a little rain-water, or we could not get +ahead. + +2nd. +Steered towards the range seen yesterday a little south of east, and, +after going twelve miles, my horse completely gave in, Mission doing the +same also. I had hard work to get them along, and at last they would not +walk. I gave them a rest and then drove them before me, following Windich +till we reached the range. Found a little water in a gully, but no feed. +Spinifex all the way to-day; most wretched country. We ascended the +range, and the country ahead looks first-rate; high ranges to the +North-East, and apparently not so much spinifex. We continued North-East, +and after going four miles camped on a patch of feed, the first seen for +the last sixty miles. I was very tired, having walked nearly twenty +miles, and having to drive two knocked-up horses. I have good hopes of +getting both feed and water to-morrow, for, if we do not, we shall be in +a very awkward position. + +3rd. +Soon after starting, found a little water in a gully and gave our horses +a drink. Ascended a spur of the range and had a good view ahead, and was +very pleased with the prospect. Steering North-East towards a large range +about fifteen miles off, we found a great deal of spinifex, although the +country generally was thickly wooded. I rode Mission, who went along +pretty well for about twelve miles, when Williams gave in again, and +Mission soon did the same. For the next six miles to the range we had +awful work, but managed, with leading and driving, to reach the range; +spinifex all the way, and also on the top of it. I was very nearly +knocked up myself, but ascended the range and had a very extensive view. +Far to the north and east the horizon was as level and uniform as that of +the sea; apparently spinifex everywhere; no hills or ranges could be seen +for a distance of quite thirty miles. The prospect was very cheerless and +disheartening. Windich went on the only horse not knocked up, in order to +find water for the horses. I followed after his tracks, leading the two +poor done-up horses. With difficulty I could get them to walk. Over and +through the rough range I managed to pull them along, and found +sufficient water to give them a good drink, and camped on a small patch +of rough grass in one of the gorges. Spinifex everywhere; it is a most +fearful country. We cannot proceed farther in this direction, and must +return and meet the party, which I hope to do to-morrow night. We can +only crawl along, having to walk and lead the horses, or at least drag +them. The party have been following us, only getting a little water from +gullies, and there is very little to fall back on for over fifty miles. I +will leave what I intend doing until I meet them. I am nearly knocked up +again to-night; my boots have hurt my feet, but I am not yet +disheartened. + +4th. +We travelled back towards the party, keeping a little to the west of our +outward track; and after going five miles found some water in clay-holes, +sufficient to last the party about one night. Two of our horses being +knocked up, I made up my mind to let the party meet us here, although I +scarcely know what to do when they do arrive. To go forward looks very +unpromising, and to retreat we have quite seventy miles with scarcely any +water and no feed at all. The prospect is very cheerless, and what I +shall do depends on the state of the horses, when they reach here. It is +very discouraging to have to retreat, as Mr. Gosse's farthest point west +is only 200 miles from us. We finished all our rations this morning, and +we have been hunting for game ever since twelve o'clock, and managed to +get a wurrung and an opossum, the only living creatures seen, and which +Windich was fortunate to capture. + +LOSS OF HORSES. + +5th (Sunday). +Early this morning Windich and I went in search of more water. Having +nothing to eat, it did not take us long to have a little drink of water +for our breakfast. Went a few miles to the North-West and looked all +round, but only found a small rock water-hole. Windich got an opossum out +of a tree. We returned about twelve o'clock and then ate the opossum. At +about one o'clock we saddled up and made back towards the party, which I +thought should have arrived by this time. When about two miles we met +them coming on; they had been obliged to leave two horses on the way, +knocked up, one named Fame, about twenty-four miles away, and Little +Padbury about eight miles back; all the others were in pretty good trim, +although very hungry and tired. We returned to the little water, which +they soon finished. I was glad to meet the party again, although we were +in a bad position. Intend returning to-morrow to the range left by the +party this morning, where there is enough water for half a day, and +search that range more thoroughly. The horses will have a good night's +feed and I have every confidence that, if the worst comes, we shall be +able to retreat to a place of safety. Found my brother in good spirits. +We soon felt quite happy and viewed the future hopefully. I was sorry to +lose the horses, but we cannot expect to get on through such a country +without some giving in. The country is so dry; the season altogether dry, +otherwise we could go ahead easily. A good shower of rain is what is +required. It has been very warm the last three days, and I hope much for +a change. Read Divine Service. Latitude 25 degrees 31 minutes 45 seconds +South, longitude about 124 degrees 17 minutes East. Barometer 28.62 at 4 +p.m. + +6th. +Retreated back to the water left by the party in the range fourteen miles +South-West. At one mile we gave the horses as much water as they required +from some rock holes. After reaching the water and having dinner, Pierre +and myself, and my brother and Windich, started off on foot to examine +the range for water, but could find only a few gallons. I think there +will be sufficient water to last us here to-morrow, and we will give the +country a good searching. If we fail, there must be a retreat westwards +at least seventy miles. Barometer 28.53; thermometer 64 degrees at 5 p.m. + +WATER FOUND. + +7th. +Early this morning Pierre and I and my brother and Windich started off in +search of water, as there was scarcely any left at camp. Unless we are +fortunate enough to find some, retreat is inevitable. Pierre and myself +searched the range we were camped in, while Windich and my brother went +further south towards another range. We searched all round and over the +rough ranges without success, and reached camp at one o'clock. To our +relief and joy learnt that my brother and Windich had found water about +five miles South-South-East, sufficient to last two or three weeks. This +was good news; so after dinner we packed up and went over to the water. +The feed was not very good, but I am truly thankful to have found it, as +a retreat of seventy miles over most wretched country was anything but +cheering. Barometer 28.52; thermometer 70 degrees at 5 p.m.; latitude 25 +degrees 43 minutes 8 seconds by Arcturus. + +8th. +Rested at camp. Devoted the day to taking sets of lunar observations. +There is very little feed about this water, and to-morrow my brother and +Pierre go on a flying trip ahead. It is very warm to-day, and has been +for the last week. Barometer 28.59; thermometer 79 degrees at 5 p.m. + +9th. +Very cloudy this morning, although the barometer is rising. My brother and +Pierre started on the flying trip; intend following on their tracks on +Saturday. Could not take another set of lunars on account of the cloudy +weather. Was very busy all day repairing pack-saddles and putting +everything in good order. Did away with one pack-saddle, and repaired the +others with the wool. Shall leave here with twelve pack-horses, and three +running loose and two riding, besides the two that are on flying trip. +Barometer 28.59 thermometer 69 degrees at 5 p.m. + +10th. +Finished repairs and got everything ready for a good start to-morrow +morning, when we will follow my brother's and Pierre's tracks. Cloudy +day, but barometer does not fall. Marked a tree F 59, being our 59th +bivouac from Geraldton. Hung up on the same tree four pack-bags and one +pack-saddle frame. Barometer 28.56; thermometer 74 degrees at 5 p.m. +Tommy Windich shot a red kangaroo this afternoon, and also found a fine +rock water-hole about one mile North-East of camp. + +11th. +Followed on the tracks of my brother and Pierre, south seven miles to a +rough broken range--spinifex and rough grass all the way. Thence we +turned South-East for three miles; then North-East and East over most +wretched spinifex plains for nine miles, when we got on to a narrow +grassy flat, and, following it along about four miles, came to some water +in a clay-pan, sufficient for the night, and camped. With the exception +of this narrow flat the country passed over to-day is most miserable and +worthless, and very dusty. Another hot day. Barometer 28.70; thermometer +67 degrees at 5 p.m.; latitude 25 degrees 52 minutes 30 seconds South. + +12th (Sunday.). +Our horses finished all the water. We got off early, and, steering east, +followed my brother's and Pierre's tracks for eight miles, when we +reached a low rise, and a fine rock water-hole holding over a hundred +gallons of water. While we were watering our horses we heard gunshots, +and soon beheld my brother and Pierre returning. They had good news for +us, having found some springs about twenty-five miles to the eastward. +They had seen many natives; but for an account of their proceedings I +insert a copy of his journal. Barometer 28.60; thermometer 60 degrees. We +camped for the day. Latitude 25 degrees 53 minutes 23 seconds South. Read +Divine Service. + +A. FORREST'S JOURNAL. + +July 10th. +Steered east from the rock hole for the first fifteen miles, over clear +open sand-plains and red sand-hills covered with spinifex; then +South-South-East for ten miles over similar country to a rough range; +after going nearly all round it only found about one gallon of water. As +my horse was very tired, I almost gave up all hopes of finding any, as it +would take us all our time to get back; however, I went South-East for +seven miles further, and found about fifty gallons in a rock hole, but +not a blade of grass near it. As it was nearly dark, and no feed near, I +bore south for a low range about five miles distant, and found a little +feed but no water, and camped. My horse completely gave in; I had great +difficulty in getting him to the range. + +11th. +Again bore west on our return to meet the party. After going seven miles +we saw a beautiful piece of feeding country--the first we had seen for +the last 130 miles--and after looking for water, and our fondest hopes +beginning to fail, we at last followed what seemed to be the largest +gully to its head, when we were gratified in beholding abundance of +water, with several springs, and good feed in the flats below. My horse +was completely knocked up, and I was glad to be able to give him a rest. +After being an hour here, Pierre, who is always on the look-out, saw two +natives, fully armed and in war costume, making for us. I was soon on my +legs and made towards them, but as soon as they saw us they began to move +off, and were soon out of sight in the thicket. At two o'clock continued +on West-North-West for twelve miles, camped in a thicket, and, after +taking off our saddles and making a fire, were very much surprised to +find a party of eight or nine natives going to camp close to us, and a +number more coming down the hill. As it was just dark we thought it best +to move on a few miles, which we did after dark. I believe, myself, they +intend attacking us after dark. + +A. FORREST. + +13th. +Steering straight for the water found by my brother, about +East-South-East for twenty-five miles, over most miserable spinifex +country, without a break. Just before we got to the water Windich shot an +emu. We saw two natives, who made off. Many fires in every direction. +Latitude 26 degrees 5 minutes 10 seconds South, longitude about 124 +degrees 46 minutes East. Fine water at this place. I have no doubt water +is always here. I named it the Alexander Spring, after my brother, who +discovered it. Abundance of water also in rock holes. + +14th. +Rested at Alexander Spring. Eating emu was our chief occupation to-day, I +think. Weather cloudy. Barometer 28.75; thermometer 60 degrees at 5 p.m. + +NATIVES' GRAVES. + +15th. +Rested at Alexander Spring. Went for a walk to a flat-topped hill about +South-South-East 50 chains from camp, which I have since named Mount +Allott, and placed a cairn on it; another hill close by I named Mount +Worsnop, after respectively the Mayor and Town Clerk of Adelaide. Found +two natives' graves close to camp; they were apparently about two feet +deep, and covered with boughs and wood; they are the first I have ever +seen in all my travels to the eastward in Australia, and Windich says he +has never come across one before either. We also found about a dozen +pieces of wood, some six feet long and three to seven inches wide, and +carved and trimmed up. All around were stones put up in the forked trees. +I believe it is the place where the rite of circumcision is performed. +Barometer 28.84; thermometer 60 degrees at 5 p.m. + +16th. +Left Alexander Spring, in company with Windich, to look for water ahead. +Steered east for twelve miles, over spinifex sand-hills with some +salt-marsh flats intervening. We then turned South-East for seven miles +to some cliffs, and followed them along east about one mile and a half, +when we saw a clear patch a little to the North-East, on reaching which +we found a fine rock water-hole holding over 100 gallons of water. We had +a pannican of tea, and gave our horses an hour and a half's rest. Left a +note for my brother, advising him to camp here the first night. We +continued on a little to the south of east for about fifteen miles over +spinifex plains, when we camped on a small patch of feed. Saw a fire +about three quarters of a mile south of our camp, and supposed that +natives were camped there. + +17th. +Early this morning we proceeded to where we saw the fire last night, but +could not find any natives: it must have been some spinifex burning. We +continued about east for two miles; found a rock water-hole holding about +fifty gallons, and had breakfast. After this, continued on a little south +of east for twelve miles, when we turned more to the north, searching +every spinifex rise that had a rocky face, first North and then +North-West and West, all over the country, but not over any great extent, +as my horse (Brick) was knocked up. About one o'clock we found enough to +give the horses a drink, and to make some tea for ourselves. We saw some +low cliffs to the north, and proceeding towards them we saw ahead about +North-North-East a remarkable high cliff. I therefore decided to make for +it. I had to walk and drive my horse before me, and before we reached the +cliff we had hard work to get him to move. When we got close we were +rejoiced to see cliffs and gorges without end, and descending the first +hollow found a fine rock hole containing at least 250 gallons. We +therefore camped, as it was just sundown. I am very sanguine of finding +more water to-morrow, as our horses will soon finish this hole. There was +very little feed about the water. + +SEARCHING FOR WATER. + +18th. +This morning we began searching the ranges for water. First tried +westerly, and searched some fine gullies and gorges, but without success. +My horse soon gave in again, and I left him on a patch of feed and +continued the search on foot. I had not walked a quarter of a mile before +I found about 200 gallons in a gully, and, following down the gully, we +found a fine pool in a sandy bed, enough to last a month. We were +rejoiced at our good fortune, and, returning to where we left the horse, +camped for the remainder of the day. There is not much feed anywhere +about these cliffs and gullies, but as long as there is plenty of water +the horses will do very well. To-morrow I intend going back to meet the +party, as the way we came was very crooked, and I hope to save them many +miles. It is certainly a wretched country we have been travelling through +for the last two months, and, what makes it worse, the season is an +exceptionally dry one; it is quite summer weather. However, we are now +within 100 miles of Mr. Gosse's farthest west, and I hope soon to see a +change for the better. We have been most fortunate in finding water, and +I am indeed very thankful for it. + +19th (Sunday). +Started back to meet the party, leaving old Brick hobbled, and my saddle, +rug, etc., hidden in a tree. After travelling about twenty miles, met the +party coming all right. Everything had gone on well during my absence. +They had slept last night at the rock hole, where we stayed on the 16th, +and found sufficient water for the horses in it. The note I left had been +taken away by the natives, who were very numerous about there. Many +tracks were seen, following mine and Windich's for several miles. The +party had not, however, seen any of them. They were rejoiced to hear of +the water ahead, and we steered for it, keeping to the west of our return +route to search some cliffs on the way for water. After travelling nine +miles we camped without water, on a grassy flat close to some cliffs; +most miserable spinifex country all day; this is the first grass seen. +Walked over twenty miles to-day myself. + +20th. +Steered North-East straight for the water found on the 18th for fourteen +miles; reached it and camped. Found the horse Brick I left behind, and +saddle, rug, etc., as we left them. Horses were very thirsty, but there +is plenty of water for them. Feed is rather scarce. I named this creek +and pool after the Honourable Arthur Blyth, Chief Secretary of South +Australia. + +21st. +Rested at camp. I took observations for time, intending to take several +sets of lunars, but the day was cloudy, and I only managed to get one. +Intend going ahead to-morrow in search of water. + +22nd. +Started in company with Pierre to look for water ahead, steered a little +north of east for about twelve miles to the points of the cliffs, and +ascended a peak to get a view ahead. The line of cliff country ran +North-East, and to the east, spinifex undulating country; nevertheless, +as I wished to get a view of some of the hills shown on Mr. Gosse's map, +I bore East and East-South-East for over thirty miles, but could not find +a drop of water all day, and we had come nearly fifty miles. Camped on a +small patch of feed. Very undulating spinifex country, and no place that +would hold water, even after rain, for more than a day or two. + +23rd. +Decided not to go any further, although I much wished to get a view +further to the east, but our horses would have enough to do to carry us +back. Steered north for a few miles, and then North-West for twenty +miles, thence West-South-West to camp, which we reached after dark, not +having had any water for ourselves or horses since we left it yesterday +morning. The weather was very warm, and our horses were done up when they +reached camp. On our return we got a fine view to the North-East, which +looks more promising. My brother and Windich intend going to-morrow in +that direction in search of water. + +24th. +My brother and Windich started in search of water. We rested at camp. +Took lunar observations, but did not get results which I care much to +rely on, owing to the distances being too great. + +25th. +Rested at camp. My brother and Windich did not return, so I have good +hopes that they have found water ahead. Took several sets of lunars this +evening. Barometer 28.80 at 5 p.m.; warm weather. + +26th (Sunday). +Rested at camp. My brother and Windich returned late this evening, having +been over sixty miles to the East-North-East, and having found only one +small rock water-hole with water in it. Many rock holes had been seen, +but all dry. They had met several natives. One woman and child they had +caught and talked to. She did not seem frightened, and ate readily the +damper and sugar given her. The country appears more parched than it has +been, which I had thought scarcely possible. A range and flat-topped hill +were seen about fifteen miles to the east of their farthest point, but +they were unable to reach it. Barometer 28.70; fine. + +27th. +Rested at Blyth Pool. Intend going a flying trip to-morrow. Worked out +several lunar observations, and the position of Blyth Pool is in latitude +26 degrees 1 minute, 50 seconds South, longitude 125 degrees 27 minutes +East. Barometer 28.72; thermometer 67 degrees at 5 p.m. + +28th. +Left camp in company with Windich to look for water ahead, taking a +pack-horse and ten gallons of water, besides two small tins for our own +use. Steered North-East nearly along my brother's tracks for twenty +miles, and reached the water in the rock hole seen by him, and had +dinner. In the afternoon continued on a little south of east for about +seven miles. Camped without water for the horses on a small patch of old +feed. The weather is dark and cloudy, and there is much thunder about. I +expect rain this evening; if it comes it will be a great boon, and will +enable us to travel on easily. + +TODD RANGE. + +29th. +Rained lightly during the night; my rug got wet. Thinking we could get +plenty of water ahead, I left the drums and water, as the horses would +not drink. We steered about east over miserable spinifex country, and cut +my brother's return tracks. Passed a rock hole seen by him, and found +only a few pints of water in it, proving to us that very little rain had +fallen. We sighted the range and hill seen by my brother, and reached it +at sundown. I have named it the Todd Range, and the highest hill, which +is table-topped, I have named Mount Charles, after Mr. C. Todd, C.M.G., +Postmaster-General of South Australia. No sign of water, and apparently +very little rain has fallen here last night. Found an old natives' +encampment, and two splendid rock holes quite dry; if full they would +hold 700 or 800 gallons. Was very disappointed at this, and it being now +after dark we camped without water for the horses, having travelled over +forty miles. Before we reached the range we had most miserable spinifex +sand-hills. Scarcely any feed in the range, and spinifex everywhere. What +grass there is must be over two years old. + +30th. +Very thick fog this morning. We bore north for four or five miles, and +then South-East for about five miles, when we got a fine view to the +east, and could see some hills, which are no doubt near Mr. Gosse's +farthest west. They bore South-East about eighteen miles distant. I could +not go on to them, as I was afraid the party would be following us, on +the strength of the little rain we had the night before last. +Reluctantly, therefore, we turned westward, and soon after came to an old +native encampment with a rock hole quite dry, which would hold 1000 +gallons if full. It must be a long while since there has been rain, or it +would not have been dry. We continued on, searching up and down and +through the Todd Ranges, finding enough for our horses from the rain. +Late in the afternoon we found another camping-place with four rock holes +quite empty, which, if full, would hold 3000 or 4000 gallons at least. +This was very disheartening, and we felt it very much. It appeared to us +that there was no water in this country at this season, and we felt it +was useless looking for it. We now decided to make back towards the +party; but being uncertain that my brother would not follow, on the +strength of the rain, determined to bear South-West until we struck our +outward tracks. After going six miles, camped without water, and nothing +but some old coarse scrub for the horses. One good shower of rain would +enable us to get over this country easily; but in this season, without +rain, it is quite impossible to move a number of horses. + +A NATIVE HUSBAND. + +31st. +Steering about South-East towards our outward tracks, came across a +native with his wife and two children, the youngest about two years old. +As soon as they saw us, the man, who had a handful of spears, began +talking at us and then ran off (the eldest child following him), leaving +his wife and the youngest child to take care of themselves. The child was +carried on its mother's back, and hung on without any assistance. Thus +encumbered, the woman could not get away. She evidently preferred facing +any danger to parting with her child. Windich spoke to her, and she +talked away quietly, and did not seem much afraid. We could not +understand anything she said, so allowed her to follow her husband, who +certainly did not come up to our standard of gallantry. We continued on +until we reached our outward tracks, and I was much relieved to find that +the party had not gone on. We found a little water in a small rock hole, +and rested two hours, as our pack-horse (Little Brown) was knocked up. We +continued on about five miles, and camped on a patch of feed in a range, +without water. Little Brown was so knocked up that we had great +difficulty in getting him to walk. + +August 1st. +Steering westerly for about eight miles, reached our bivouac of the 28th, +and gave our horses the water from the drums. Continued on, making +straight for camp; stayed two hours to give the horses a rest, and when +within fifteen miles of camp found a rock hole with about 100 gallons of +water in it. Little Brown completely gave in, and we were obliged to +leave him. Pushed on and reached the party a little after dark, and found +all well, having been absent five days, in which time we had travelled +about 200 miles. + +2nd (Sunday). +My brother and Pierre went on a flying trip to the South-East in search +of water. Kennedy and myself went and brought Little Brown and +pack-saddle, etc., to camp. Windich shot an emu; saw about twenty. +Thermometer 95 degrees in sun during the day; barometer 28.62 at 5 p.m. + +PREPARING FOR A STRUGGLE. + +I now began to be much troubled about our position, although I did not +communicate my fears to any but my brother. We felt confident we could +return if the worst came, although we were over 1000 miles from the +settled districts of Western Australia. The water at our camp was fast +drying up, and would not last more than a fortnight. The next water was +sixty miles back, and there seemed no probability of getting eastward. I +knew we were now in the very country that had driven Mr. Gosse back. I +have since found it did the same for Mr. Giles. No time was to be lost. I +was determined to make the best use of it if only the water would last, +and to keep on searching. (Even now, months after the time, sitting down +writing this journal, I cannot but recall my feelings of anxiety at this +camp.) Just when the goal of my ambition and my hopes for years past was +almost within reach, it appeared that I might not even now be able to +grasp it. The thought of having to return, however, brought every feeling +of energy and determination to my rescue, and I felt that, with God's +help, I would even now succeed. I gave instructions to allowance the +party, so that the stores should last at least four months, and made +every preparation for a last desperate struggle. + +3rd. +Rested at camp. My brother and Pierre did not return this evening, so I +concluded they must have found some water for their horses. Barometer +falling slowly; getting cloudy towards evening. + +4th. +A light shower of rain this morning. Rested at camp. My brother and +Pierre returned this evening, having found a few small rock water-holes, +but not sufficient to shift on. They had been about fifty miles +East-South-East, and had passed over most miserable spinifex country the +whole way. They had not had any rain, not even the light shower we had +this morning. They had seen four natives, but did not get near enough to +talk to them. I intend going with Windich ahead to-morrow, in the hope +that rain may have fallen last night to the East-North-East. The weather, +which had looked threatening all day, cleared off this evening. Barometer +28.56. + +THE BAKER RANGE. + +5th. +Thinking that rain might have fallen to the North-East, I left camp with +Windich to ascertain, instructing my brother to follow on the 7th; before +leaving to bury some flour and everything that could be dispensed with, +and to carry all the drums full of water. He has since informed me that +he buried on left bank of brook, seven yards north of a small tree with a +tin plate nailed on it, on which is written, DIG 7 yds. N., two +pack-bags, containing 135 pounds flour, six leather water-bottles, two +tomahawks, one pick, one water canteen, one broken telescope, three emu +eggs, some girths and straps, one shoeing hammer, one pound of candles, +and left a lantern hanging on a tree. A bottle was also buried, with a +letter in it, giving the latitude and longitude of the camp, and a brief +outline of our former and future intended movements. We reached the rock +holes about North-East twenty miles, and were delighted to see them full, +besides plenty on the rocks. This was very encouraging, and after resting +two hours we pushed on East-North-East, to a range visited by my brother +on his last flying trip, and which I named the Baker Range, and the +highest point Mount Samuel, after Sir Samuel Baker, the great African +Explorer, and could see that lately rain had fallen, although much more +in some places than in others. Travelled till after dark through and over +spinifex plains, wooded with acacia and mulga scrub, and camped without +water and only a little scrub for the horses, having travelled nearly +forty miles. + +6th. +Our horses strayed during the night. After we had found them we proceeded +to the Baker Range and found water in a gully on some rocks, and the rock +holes seen by my brother and Windich on their former trip had also a good +deal in them. I was greatly delighted at this; there must have been a +good shower or two here. Before reaching water Windich shot a turkey, +which we roasted and ate for breakfast, not having had any tea last +night. We rested here about two hours. Continuing on East-North-East for +about sixteen miles, came to the four large rock holes seen by Windich +and myself on our former trip. They were quite dry, but, as we suspected, +there was a good deal of water in a rocky gully close by. About two miles +before we reached here we passed a rock hole full of water, about sixty +gallons. I left a note telling my brother to camp here on Sunday night, +and to follow on our tracks on Monday. We continued on about five miles, +and camped not far from Mount Charles, without water for the horses; but +they were not thirsty. So far we have been most fortunate, although there +is very little to fall back on should we be unable to proceed; in fact, +as soon as the surface water dries up it will be impossible. We are, +however, three days in advance of the party, and if we can get enough for +our two riding-horses we shall be able to stop them before there is any +great danger, although we may lose some of the horses. + +7th. +Steered South-South-East for about four miles to two large rock holes +seen by Windich and myself on our former trip, but found them quite dry, +as before. Continued on South-East towards the hills seen by us formerly, +and, after travelling about ten miles, got a fine view of the country, +which looked splendid. High hills and ranges as far as could be seen to +the south and east, and we thought all our troubles were over. We pushed +on about East-South-East to a high hill about ten miles off, over red +sand-hills covered with spinifex. Country of the most miserable +description. We reached the hill, which I named Mount Harvest, after +Colonel Harvest, the Acting-Governor of Western Australia at the time of +our departure, and who took a great interest in the expedition. We +ascended the hill; more ranges and hills were seen--in fact, the whole +country was one mass of hills and ranges to the south, South-East, and +east. We followed down gullies and over hills, passing two rock holes +dry, until after dark, but could not find any water. The country is most +beautifully grassed, and is a great relief after travelling over so many +hundreds of miles of spinifex; but the season is very dry, and all the +gullies are dry. We camped for the night without water for ourselves or +horses. I have since learnt that these ranges were seen by Mr. Giles, and +were named the Warburton Ranges. + +SIGNS OF WHITE MEN. + +8th. +Early this morning Windich and I went on foot to search the hills and +gullies close around, as our horses were knocked up for want of water. We +returned unsuccessful about 8 o'clock. Close to where we found our horses +we found a tree with the bark cut off one side of it with an AXE which +was sharp. We were sure it was done by a white man, as the axe, even if +possessed by a native (which is very improbable), would be blunt. We are +now in the country traversed by Mr. Gosse, although I am unable to +distinguish any of the features of the country, not having a map with me, +and not knowing the latitude. Should we find water, and the party reach +here, there will no doubt be little difficulty in distinguishing the +hills. The country certainly does not answer the description given of his +farther westward. However, I will leave our position geographically for +the present, and treat of what is of much more importance to us, namely, +the finding of water. We saddled our horses and continued our search +about South-East, over hills and along valleys--the distance or direction +I am unable to give--our horses scarcely moving, and ourselves parched +with thirst. The sun was very hot. At about noon we found some water in a +gully by scratching a hole, but it was quite salt. As our horses would +not drink it, it can be imagined how salt it was. We drank about a pint +of it, and Windich said it was the first time he ever had to drink salt +water. I washed myself in it, which refreshed me a little. Our horses +could not go much further without water, but we crawled along about +north, and shortly afterwards found a small rock hole in the side of a +large rough granite hill, with about five gallons of good water in it. We +had a good drink ourselves, put half a gallon into a canteen, and gave +the rest to the horses. From here our usual good fortune returned. We had +not gone far when Windich called me back and said he had found horses' +tracks, and sure enough there were the tracks of horses coming from the +westward. Windich took some of the old dung with him to convince our +companions that we had seen them. We followed westward along the tracks +for half a mile, when we found two or three small rock holes with water +in them, which our horses drank. Still bearing to the north we kept +finding little drops in the granite rocks--our old friend the granite +rock has returned to us again, after having been absent for several +hundred miles. We satisfied our horses, and rested a short time to have +something to eat, not having had anything for forty-eight hours. We bore +North-West, and soon afterwards found a fine rock hole of water in +granite rocks, sufficient to last the party a day. Plenty of water on +rocks, also, from recent rain here. We were rejoiced, as we now had a +place to bring the party to. But our good fortune did not end here: +continuing on westerly or a little north of it, we came on a summer +encampment of the natives, and found a native well or spring, which I +believe would give water if dug out. This may make a good depot if we +require to stay long in this neighbourhood. We were overjoyed; and I need +not add I was very thankful for this good fortune. When everything looked +at its worst, then all seemed to change for our benefit. We camped two +miles from the water. + +9th (Sunday). +Took the horses back to the water, and on our way there found a clay-pan +with a few hundred gallons of water in it. Started back to meet the +party, intending to await their arrival at the first range we came to on +our outward track. Steering a little north of west for fourteen miles, we +camped on west side of Mount Harvest, not having seen a drop of water on +our way. Luckily we brought nearly half a gallon with us, so shall be +able to manage until the party overtake us to-morrow. Our horses will be +very thirsty, but I will give them five gallons each out of the drums. +Shot a wurrung on our way, which we had for dinner. Found two fine rock +holes quite empty. There appears to have been no rain here, although +fifteen miles east there has been a good deal. I hope the change of moon +on the 11th will bring us some rain, as we shall then be able to travel +along easily. My personal appearance contrasts most strikingly with town +life--very dirty, and I may say ragged. I scarcely think my friends would +know me. Washing, or brushing one's hair is out of the question, unless +when resting at camp. + +10th. +We stayed at our last night's bivouac until 12 o'clock, when we saddled +up and followed back along our outward tracks to meet the party, which we +expected to find this afternoon. About 3 o'clock met them coming on, all +well. They were all rejoiced to hear of the water ahead. We gave the +horses water out of the drums, and turned eastward with them. We reached +Mount Harvest by sundown, the party having travelled thirty miles, and +camped on grassy flat without water for the horses. Latitude 25 degrees +55 minutes 43 seconds South by Altair, longitude 126 degrees 32 minutes +East. Everything had gone on first-rate with the party. They had nearly +finished all the water at Mount Samuel, and in the Todd Range, so that we +cannot now turn back, even if we wished, unless with the risk of having +to go ninety or a hundred miles without water. + +FINDING TRACKS. + +11th. +Continued on to the water found ahead, and on our way saw some clay-holes +with water and satisfied the horses. When near the spring, saw natives' +tracks, and shortly afterwards a fire with a whole kangaroo roasting in +it. The natives had made off when they saw us, leaving their game +cooking. Continuing on, and passing the native well, we reached the +granite rocks, two miles from the spring, and camped. While having dinner +we saw two natives about a quarter of a mile from us, watching us; we +beckoned to them, and Windich and I approached them. As we neared them +they began talking and moving off slowly; we could not get close to them, +although they did not appear to be afraid of us. Some fine ranges are +visible from here South-East. Latitude of camp 25 degrees 54 minutes 53 +seconds South, by meridian altitude of Altair. Marked a tree F 70, being +the 70th camp from Geraldton. Barometer 28.26 at 5 p.m. We are not in the +latitude of Mr. Gosse's track by fifteen miles, yet there are tracks only +about two miles south of us! I cannot account for this. The tracks may be +Mr. Giles's, as I cannot think Mr. Gosse could be out in his latitude. + +12th. +Left camp with Tommy Windich to find water ahead, instructing my brother +to follow on to-morrow. We bore East-South-East for a few miles over +grassy flats towards some high hills, but, seeing what we supposed a good +spot for water, we turned east towards it, over miserable spinifex +sand-hills, and found some splendid granite rocks and holes, but not much +water--enough, however, to give the horses a drink. If there was rain, +there would be enough water here for a month or more. Near these rocks +found a tree resembling the figtree (Ficus Platypoda), with ripe fruit +about the size of a bullet, which tasted very much like a fig. I ate some +of the fruit, which was very good. Fine hills and ranges to the eastward, +and country very promising, and in many places beautifully grassed. After +resting two hours we pushed on about east, and, after going five miles +over spinifex sand-hills, came to a granite range and found two fine rock +holes, sufficient to satisfy the horses. Continuing on, we camped close +to a peaked granite hill, which I named Mount Elvire. No water for the +horses. Found the old horse-tracks, just before we camped, coming from +eastward. I cannot make them out to be Mr. Gosse's; they must be Mr. +Giles's. There appears to be a great number of horses', but am uncertain +if there are any camel-tracks. + +IN SAFETY. + +13th. +Found a rock hole with about forty gallons of water in it close to camp. +After watering our horses we followed along the old tracks, going nearly +North-East, and passed a gnow's nest, where they had apparently got out +eggs. Shortly afterwards found where the party had camped without water, +and continued on to some high hills and ranges; then we left them to +follow some emu tracks, which, after following up a gully and over a +hill, brought us to a fine spring of good water in a gully. We camped +here, and intend waiting for our party, which will reach here to-morrow. +We watched at the water for emus, and after waiting about four hours saw +two coming, one of which Windich shot. Fine grass, although old and dry, +down this gully. Ranges in every direction. The country contrasts +strikingly with what we have been travelling through for the last three +months. The party whose tracks we followed this morning have not been to +this spring, so they must have missed it. All my troubles were now over, +inasmuch as I felt sure we would accomplish our journey and reach the +settled districts of South Australia; although, as it afterwards proved, +we had many days of hard work and some privation yet to endure. Still the +country was much improved, and not altogether unknown. I then gave out +publicly to the party that we were now in safety, and in all human +probability in five or six weeks would reach the telegraph line. I need +not add how pleased all were at having at last bridged over that awful, +desolate spinifex desert. + +14th. +Went to a hill close to camp, the highest in this neighbourhood, and +erected a pile of stones. About 1 o'clock the party arrived all safe. +They reported having seen three natives the day we left, and had induced +them to come to camp, and had given them damper and sugar and a red +handkerchief each; they did not remain long. Each had two spears, very +long and thick, and made out of three pieces spliced together, with large +barbs on them. The party had finished all the water on their way, the +horses yesterday having drank over ten gallons each. This afternoon I +took a round of angles and bearings from a pile of stones on the hill. +Marked a tree F 72, near spring, which I named Barlee Spring, after the +Honourable F.P. Barlee, Colonial Secretary of Western Australia, from +whom I have ever received much kindness and assistance, and who took a +great interest in this expedition. A remarkable hill bore +South-South-West from spring, which I named Mount Palgrave. Barlee Spring +is in longitude about 127 degrees 22 minutes East. Unable to get +latitude: too cloudy. + +15th. +Left camp with Windich to look for water ahead, instructing my brother to +follow to-morrow. Steered East along the South side of a rocky range for +ten miles, when we ascended a hill to get a view ahead. About thirty +miles to east fine bold ranges are visible, also broken ranges from +North-East and round to South-East; they are no doubt the Cavanagh Ranges +of Mr. Gosse. About five miles ahead we saw some granite rocks, to which +we proceeded, and found a tremendous rock hole full of water; it was in +between two large rocks and completely shaded from the sun. As the +country east to the ranges appears to be all spinifex and red sand-hills, +I decided to remain here to-night and continue on in the morning. Left a +note telling my brother to camp here on Sunday night. In the afternoon +got a fine round of angles from granite rocks. The country passed over +to-day was along and through ranges which are no doubt the Barrow Ranges +of Mr. Gosse. The flats are very grassy, but the hills are covered with +spinifex. My brother marked a tree at this camp F 73, and observed the +latitude to be about 26 degrees 4 minutes, but was unable to get very +good observation on account of clouds. The Ficus Platypoda was also found +here, loaded with ripe fruit. + +GILES'S CAMP. + +16th (Sunday). +Steering about East-North-East towards the ranges, we passed over very +miserable spinifex plains and red sand-hills the whole way, about thirty +miles. After reaching the ranges we followed up a fine grassy wide flat, +splendidly grassed, although old; and on the flat were innumerable +horse-tracks--unmistakable evidence of horses being camped for months in +this neighbourhood. Kept on up the gully and flat for about a mile and a +half, when Windich found a gum-tree marked E. GILES OCT. 7, 73. My former +suspicions that Mr. Giles must have been in this neighbourhood were now +confirmed. Soon after we came on a cart-track, which rather astonished +us, and soon found that it must have belonged to Mr. Gosse, who also +camped close here. A deep, well-beaten track went along up the gully, +which we followed, knowing it was the daily track of the horses to the +water, and soon after found their old camp at a beautiful spring running +down the gully a quarter of a mile. A stock-yard had been built, and +gardens made, besides a large bush hut to shelter the party from the sun +as well as rain. Trenches were dug round the hut and tent, so that they +must have had rain. I should say Mr. Giles must have been camped here for +two or three months at least. We camped half a mile down the gully from +the spring. Mr. Gosse and Mr. Giles were within a few miles of each other +at the same time, and did not meet. + +17th. +Went for a walk to examine the cart-tracks; found two tracks going east +and west. This convinced me that the cart belonged to Mr. Gosse, who I +knew had returned. Went to the top of a high hill to take angles, while +Windich tried to shoot a kangaroo. After a hard climb I reached the +summit, and had just commenced taking angles when I heard three shots, +and shortly after Windich cooeying. Looking round, I saw a native running +along about 300 yards from me. He disappeared in a hollow. Fearing that +Windich had been attacked by the natives I descended towards him as +quickly as possible, but could not see him. I looked about, keeping a +sharp look-out, expecting to be attacked, but could not find Windich. Sat +down a short time and finally made my way back to the horses, and, after +finding them, saddled one and started back to look for Windich. Found him +coming along with a kangaroo on his back, having shot three, but had not +seen any natives; he had been waiting for me a good while. After dinner I +went back to get my coat and a compass left at the foot of the hill, and +then again ascended the hill and got a fine round of angles. The rock is +very magnetic, and the compass is quite useless. Could see the dust from +the party coming across the spinifex sand-hills, and, descending, met +them just before sundown. + +ANOTHER ENCOUNTER WITH NATIVES. + +They reported having had an encounter with the natives on the 16th, and +having been followed by a number of armed natives for a long way. Finally +they had been compelled to fire on them, but had not killed any. They +were glad to hear of the spring found, and, continuing on, reached it +about half-past 6 o'clock. The spring is Fort Mueller of Mr. Giles, where +he was camped for a long while, and his most westerly permanent water. By +observation Fort Mueller is in latitude 26 degrees 11 minutes 30 seconds +South, and longitude by lunar observation 128 degrees East, the variation +being about 1 degree 25 minutes East by azimuths. + +18th. +Rested at spring. Marked a tree sixty yards south of camp F 74, being +74th camp from Geraldton. Also erected a pile of stones on peak, thirty +chains West-South-West of camp, with a pole in centre, on which is +marked: + +J. FORREST, AUGUST 17, '74. + +Took four sets of lunars, which place spring in longitude 128 degrees +East of Greenwich. + +19th. +Steering East-South-East along Mr. Gosse's track for about thirty-five +miles, over most miserable sandy hills and plains of spinifex, with the +exception of a few miles at first, along a grassy flat. Two rock holes +passed were quite dry. Camped without water on a grassy flat not far from +the ranges; hope to find water early to-morrow, as our horses are too +poor to go long without it. Was obliged to abandon police-horse Brick +to-day, as he was completely done up. Nothing but downright poverty is +the cause of his giving in; and the same in the case of Fame and Little +Padbury, which we abandoned over a month ago. They were poor when they +left, and have only had very dry grass ever since. It is a wonder to me +they all do not give in, as many are mere skeletons. Poor old Brick held +up as long as he could, but was forced to give in, and we had to leave +him to his solitary fate; he will probably go back to the spring (Fort +Mueller). Barometer 28.30; latitude 26 degrees 22 minutes 30 seconds +South. + +20th. +Got a very early start, and continued on. At one mile found a sandy soak +in a gully, and by digging it out got sufficient water for all our +horses. Still proceeding onwards, following a gully for two miles, came +to Mr. Gosse's depot Number 13, at Skirmish Hill. A bullock had been +killed here, and the flesh jerked. Found a large white gum-tree marked +GOS. 13 at camp. All the water was gone. I, however, camped, and took our +horses to a place a mile west, where, by digging in the sand, we got +enough for them. Went with Pierre to the summit of Skirmish Hill, and +took angles. To the south, nothing but sand-hills and spinifex; to the +North-East the Tomkinson Ranges showed up and looked very remarkable and +promising. Marked a tree F 76, being 76th camp from Geraldton. Camp is in +latitude 26 degrees 23 minutes 28 seconds, longitude about 128 degrees 32 +minutes East. + +TOMKINSON RANGES. + +21st. +Left camp at Skirmish Hill in company with Windich, instructing my +brother to follow to-morrow. Found a fine rock hole two miles from camp, +and followed along Mr. Gosse's track for twenty miles to the Tomkinson +Ranges, over most miserable sandy ridges, covered with spinifex. Fine +grassy flats along and through the ranges. We left the track to examine a +gully to the north, but could not find any water. Got on the track just +before dark and followed it along a few miles. Camped without water for +our horses on a fine flat of very old grass. Windich's horse completely +knocked up, and we had to walk and drive him before us this afternoon. +The day was excessively hot, and the horses are very thirsty. We have +only about a quart ourselves. + +ELDER SPRINGS. + +22nd. +Early this morning we continued on, Windich's horse scarcely able to +walk. After about ten miles, found a rock hole with three gallons of +water in it, which we gave to our horses. Followed Mr. Gosse's track to +see if there was any water about his depot Number 12, but we either +missed it or had not reached it. About noon Windich's horse could go no +farther, and mine was not much better. What was to be done? We nearly +finished what water we had with us. The party were coming on to-day, and +were depending on us to find water. I determined not to follow the track +any farther, but to search for water ourselves. The horses were unable to +move; we therefore decided to leave them and go for a search on foot. +Windich said he had seen emu tracks, and he thought they were making +south. We therefore started on foot. The sun's heat was excessive. About +3 o'clock returned unsuccessful, and finished what water we had with us. +What next to do was the question; no time was to be lost. Mr. Gosse's map +showed some gullies ahead, but whether there was any water in them was +questionable; he states, "Nearly all the waters discovered in the Mann +and Tomkinson Ranges were running when left, and from a considerable +height." It must have been a good season, and not like this. We decided +to go on foot to a gully about two miles north, which had white gums in +it. We started off and saw more emu tracks going and coming, also +natives' tracks. Windich shot a wurrung, which he said had lately drunk +water. When we reached the gully, many tracks were seen ascending it, and +we felt sure we should find water, and surely enough we soon reached a +most splendid spring, running down the gully half a mile. We were elated +and very thankful. Windich got a shot at an emu, but missed it. After +having a good drink we went back and got our horses, reaching the spring +with them after dark. They were very thirsty and completely done up. Mr. +Gosse missed this spring; probably there was water on the flats when he +was here, and he did not look much. Although his track is easily +followed, we had nearly got into serious difficulty by following it. Had +we not found this spring our position would be very critical, not having +any water for ourselves or horses, and the party in the same predicament. +I will be careful not to follow the track too far in future, but to trust +to our own resources and look for ourselves. We feel sure we passed water +this morning, as in one place we saw emu tracks and pigeons. The party +will reach here to-morrow, and I feel very thankful and relieved to have +such a fine spring to bring them to. The feed is good a mile down from +the spring, although it is very old and dry. There has not been any rain +to speak of since Mr. Gosse was here, nearly twelve months ago, as can be +seen by the cart-tracks crossing the gullies. I named this spring the +Elder Springs, after my friend the Honourable Thomas Elder, who has been +such a great supporter of exploration, and from whom I received a great +deal of kindness and attention. + +23rd (Sunday). +Awaited the arrival of the party. Shot an emu; and, while skinning it, +heard a gun-shot, and soon after saw Kennedy coming on, walking. Found +that the party were only half a mile off. They had been very distressed +for water, and had left 120 pounds of flour and a pack-saddle five miles +back, Taylor's mare about three miles back, and Burges and his saddle two +miles back. When they saw my note, directing them to the water, they had +gone back and got Burges, and with great difficulty got him close to +camp, when he lay down and they left him. Windich and I started back on +foot at once with two buckets of water, and met Burges within a quarter +of a mile of camp, crawling along; we gave him the water and he then went +on to the spring. We went back and found Taylor's mare, and brought her +slowly to camp. We are now safe again, and I must give the horses a few +days' rest. The weather has been hot, and if we had not found this +spring, not more than five horses would have lasted out the day. I will +send back and get the flour, as it is only five miles off. The party were +all very glad to see such a fine spring, as their position was very +dangerous, having only three gallons of water with them altogether. + +24th. +Rested at Elder Spring. Found the barometer had got broken, which I was +very sorry for. Worked out several lunars taken on the 11th at Giles's +camp. + +25th. +Worked out the remainder of the lunars. Marked a large white gum-tree +close to camp, on left bank of Elder Springs, F 78, being the 78th camp +from Geraldton. Found camp to be in south latitude 26 degrees 15 minutes +10 seconds and longitude about 129 degrees 9 minutes East. My brother and +Pierre went back and brought up the flour left five miles back on the +23rd. + +MOUNT JANE. + +26th. +Went with Pierre to a high peak, which I named Mount Jane, about four +miles South-South-East from camp, and got a round of angles, and a fine +view of the country. To the east high ranges and grassy flats, but to the +south, and from South-East to west, nothing but level country with a few +low rises here and there, apparently sand-hills covered with +spinifex--most miserable country. + +27th. +Left camp with Tommy Windich to look for water ahead, instructing my +brother to follow to-morrow. Steered east for four miles, when we struck +Mr. Gosse's cart-track. Followed along it a few miles, when we bore more +to the north; then in the direction of emu tracks, and passed along a +fine grassy flat with hundreds of kangaroos in every direction; also many +emu tracks. We were sure we were getting close to water. A little farther +on saw about twenty-five emus, and soon reached a spring in the brook, +and camped for dinner. Concluded to remain here the remainder of the day. +Went for a walk higher up the brook and found another spring, about one +mile from the first. Returned and took our horses up to it, as there was +better feed there. Left a note, telling the party to camp there also. In +a good season these flats must look magnificent; at this time they are +very dry, but there is a good deal of old grass on them. My brother +marked a tree at spring F 79, which he found to be in latitude 26 degrees +13 minutes. I named this spring Wilkie Spring, after the Honourable Dr. +Wilkie, the honorary treasurer of the Burke and Wills Exploration Fund, +who took such a lively interest in Australian Exploration. + +28th. +Continued on eastward and soon struck Mr. Gosse's cart-track. Followed it +along about seven miles, passing Mount Davies, when we bore more to the +south. Following the direction of some natives' tracks, and after going +about two miles, found a native well in a gully, where water could be +procured by digging. Left a note telling my brother to dig it out and see +if he could get enough for the horses. We continued on about +East-North-East, and soon after shot a kangaroo and rested an hour for +dinner, after which we bore about North-East towards a gully and white +gums, and found it to be Nilens Gully of Mr. Gosse. Found his camp and a +white gum marked with a broad arrow, but no water. We followed along and +through the ranges, twisting and turning about, and at last found a +number of natives' tracks, making towards a gap, and, following along +them, found they led to a gorge and white gum gully, ascending which we +found water in some little springs. After watering our horses we returned +towards the party three miles and camped, intending to bring the party to +the spring to-morrow. + +FRIENDLY NATIVES. + +29th. +Returned about five miles and met the party coming on all right. They +reported having met about twenty natives yesterday, who were friendly, +and who came to them, first of all laying down their spears. They had +given them damper and a handkerchief. Pierre gave them two kylies. They +had three kangaroos roasting in their fire. When we were passing Nilens +gully I saw a native running, and, calling Windich, we went over and saw +five natives sitting on some rocks watching us. I went towards them; at +first they appeared hostile, but after talking at them and making signs +they began to be friendly and came down close to us. They were all armed +with spears. One of them gave me his spear, which was very blunt, and I +sharpened it for him. He made signs for me to give him the knife, but I +could not, as we were very short of knives. They were afraid at first +when I showed them how a horse could gallop, but soon were very pleased +and laughed heartily. Windich shot a chockalott and gave it to them. They +were amazed at seeing the bird drop, and were very pleased when it was +given to them, as they much prize the feathers of these birds. After this +we left them and continued on to the spring found yesterday, and camped. +Got plenty of water by digging a few holes in the springy places. Marked +a tree F 80 in gorge close to spring. Found spring to be in latitude 26 +degrees 7 minutes 28 seconds South, longitude about 129 degrees 39 +minutes east. + +THE MANN RANGES. + +30th (Sunday). +Rested at spring. Took bearings from hill close to spring, Mount Hardy +bearing north 117 degrees east magnetic, and Mount Davies north 253 +degrees east magnetic. The Mann Ranges were also clearly visible about +ten miles off. In the afternoon Windich found a fine spring in a gully +about half a mile north of camp, at which he shot an emu. I named these +springs the Crowther Springs, after my friend Mr. Charles Crowther, of +Geraldton. Emus and kangaroos very numerous in these ranges. + +31st. +Got an early start and took the horses to the water found by Windich +yesterday, where they could help themselves. Steered East-North-East +about, over level country; spinifex generally, studded with desert oaks, +with limestone and snail-shells on surface for about twenty miles. +Reached the Mann Ranges. Before we reached the ranges we struck Mr. +Gosse's track, and followed it along, and shortly came to a very large +and recent encampment of the natives. There must have been a hundred +camped here about a week ago. Found two small springs not far off, but +not strong enough to water all our horses; but we soon found some fine +springy pools in a gully about half a mile further on, where Mr. Gosse +also had been camped, and marked a tree with a broad arrow. I marked on +the same tree F 81, being our 81st camp from Geraldton. Mr. Gosse's +return track leaves his outward track at this spot. I intend following +his return track and make in to the telegraph line, down the Alberga, and +on to the Peake. There is abundance of water at this place, which I have +no doubt is permanent, as there are four springs within half a mile of +one another, but three are very small. Took bearings from a very high +range close by; Mount Davies, Mount Edwin, and Mount Hardy being visible. +The Mann Ranges are very high and rough, and are composed of reddish +granite. They are the highest ranges met with since leaving Mount Hale +and Mount Gould, on the Murchison. Found camp F 81 to be in latitude 26 +degrees 3 minutes 20 seconds South by meridian altitude of Altair and +Vega, and longitude about 129 degrees 53 minutes East. + +September 1st. +Continuing about east along the foot of the Mann Ranges for about fifteen +miles, came to Mr. Gosse's bivouac of October 11th, but could find no +water; a well that had been dug in the sand was dry. Followed up the +gully about a mile, and came to a small spring, and camped. After +draining it out, found there was no supply, but were fortunate enough to +find some large rock holes with water--no doubt soakages from the +rocks--but they were in an almost inaccessible spot, and it was with +great difficulty we managed to water the horses. One horse fell and +nearly lost his life. Country passed over to-day was poorly grassed, and +spinifex patches here and there. Large and recent native encampments seen +in two places to-day. Latitude 26 degrees 4 minutes 45 seconds South. +Marked a tree F 82, close to our bivouac in bed of gully. + +2nd. +Followed along south side of Mann Ranges over country pretty well grassed +for about sixteen miles, and reached Mr. Gosse's bivouac of October 12th. +Found a little water in a sandy hole, and a small spring about half a +mile higher up the gully. We had to carry the water from the spring in +drums, which was slow and hard work. When we had watered half of the +horses, Windich came, having found great pools of water in a large rocky +gully about a mile west; we therefore packed up again and went over to +the water. It was a very rough and rocky gully, and the horses had hard +work in getting up to it, but there was abundance when they reached it. +Pools of water, rock bottom; in fact, rock reservoirs, and fed by +springs. It was nearly night when we had finished watering. Windich shot +four ducks. Found camp to be in latitude 28 degrees 8 minutes South. +Marked a tree F 83, being 83rd camp from Geraldton. + +ANOTHER ENCOUNTER WITH NATIVES. + +3rd. +Got a late start, owing to the horses rambling. We continued on easterly +and reached Day's Gully, Mr. Gosse's Number 15 depot. The water was all +gone, and we had to proceed. Followed his track along two miles, when +Windich and I went in search of water, the party waiting our return. +After searching a gully to the west without success, we went east to a +bare granite hill and, passing through a gorge, emerged into a small +flat, and saw about 100 natives, all sitting down eating kangaroos. As +soon as they saw us they all rose and shouted, and many ran towards us +with their spears. One spear came close to me, and stuck fast in the +ground. Windich and I fired our revolvers at them several times, and +chased them up the hill. After this they appeared more friendly, and some +came towards us and followed us back towards the party, keeping about 200 +yards behind. We reached them and went back to the natives; they were +perched all over the hills, more than twenty on one rock. They were +friendly now, and about thirty came to us who talked away and seemed very +pleased. They were much afraid of the horses, and would not come near +them. We made the natives understand we wanted water, and about forty +conducted us to a rock hole with nearly fifty gallons in it, which we +gave the horses. The natives laughed heartily when they saw us watering +the horses, but much more when we hit them to drive them away. They were +also delighted that Windich and Pierre were black, and marked about the +body, and also at Pierre having his nose bored. They would not come with +us further, and pointed towards water westward. We did not follow their +direction, and continuing on easterly, camped without water, and only +very old dried grass for our horses. We were obliged to abandon the mare +supplied by Mr. John Taylor to-day, together with about 150 pounds of +flour, also the pack-saddle. She is very near foaling, and is very weak; +she has carried only the empty bags for some time, and has been gradually +failing. She is a fine mare, and I am sorry to lose her, but we cannot +help it. We have more flour than we require, so I decided to leave 150 +pounds, as our horses are not able to carry it easily. We have over 3 +hundredweight still, which will be quite sufficient. Tomorrow I intend +pushing on to try and reach the spring in the Musgrave Range shown on Mr. +Gosse's chart. It is about forty miles from here, and I have no doubt the +horses will go there, although they are very weak. The natives met to-day +were all circumcised; they had long hair and beards, which were all +clotted and in strands. The strands were covered with filth and dirt for +six inches from the end, and looked like greased rope; it was as hard as +rope, and dangled about their necks, looking most disgustingly filthy. +The men were generally fine-looking fellows. The natives are very +numerous in this country, as fires and camps are seen in many places, +besides well-beaten tracks. Pierre dropped his powder-flask, and one of +them picked it up and gave it to him. They were very friendly and +pleased, and I think, after the first surprise was over, only a few were +hostile. They were much amused at my watch ticking, and all wanted to put +their ears to hear it. + +SUFFERINGS OF THE HORSES. + +4th. +The horses would not feed last night, and had to be watched. At 4 o'clock +we got up and collected them, and got under way by half-past 5 o'clock, +following on towards the Musgrave Ranges. The morning was cool, and the +horses went along very well. After travelling about twenty miles Padbury +and Butcher began to show signs of giving in. We still pushed on, in hope +of finding water in Lungley's Gully; the sun shone out very hot in the +afternoon. Passed a remarkable high peak, which I named Mount Mary. My +brother, Sweeney, and Pierre were behind with the knocked-up horses, +trying to get them along. Windich went on Hosken, the only horse that was +strong enough, to the north to scour some valleys. Kennedy and I pushed +along slowly with the main lot of horses. If we halted a minute, many of +the horses lay down, and we had great difficulty in getting them up +again. After travelling about thirty-one miles we reached a gully which I +supposed was Lungley's, and I left Kennedy with the horses while I +ascended it on foot. I soon saw many emu tracks, and therefore was +positive water was a little higher up. Found Windich was about 100 yards +in advance of me, having crossed over into the same gully. I soon heard +him shout that there was abundance of water, and fired the welcome +gun-shots to acquaint the party. Returned, and after lifting up some of +the horses that had lain down, and met my brother with the knocked-up +ones, we all proceeded up to the water, which we found to be a beautiful +spring running down the gully about thirty chains. We were all rejoiced +at this good fortune, as we never before wanted water more than at the +present time. Mr. Gosse had camped here, his depot Number 16, and I +wonder he does not show such a fine spring on his map. We are now in +perfect safety, and I will give the horses two days' rest. + +5th. +Rested at spring. Windich and Pierre shot three emus; a great many came +to water. Being nearly out of meat, we are glad to get them. + +6th (Sunday). +Took bearings from a hill about a mile east of camp, from which there was +a very extensive view. Far as the eye could reach to south, level plains +extended, with low hills rising abruptly out of them here and there; to +the west the Deering Hills and Mann Ranges; while to the east the high +Musgrave Ranges soon stopped the view. The whole country is level, the +ranges rising abruptly out of the plains, and is not like the hilly +country in the settled districts of Western Australia. Marked a tree +close to the camp F 85, being 85th camp from Geraldton. Found camp to be +in latitude 26 degrees 13 minutes 25 seconds by meridian altitude of +Altair, and longitude about 131 degrees 3 minutes east. + +GOSSE'S SPRING. + +7th. +Left spring, and steering about east for seven miles along foot of +Musgrave Ranges, when we turned North-North-East for four miles, and east +one mile to Mr. Gosse's depot Number 17, found spring in a brook, large +white gums in gully; a very fine spring, but not running; any quantity of +water. First-rate feed in gully and on flat. Weather cloudy. Intend +resting here to-morrow, as one of our horses is very lame, and there is +everything we want. + +8th. +Rested at camp. Rained lightly last night, and very stormy. Blew a +hurricane towards morning. Rained lightly until noon; more rain than we +have had on the whole trip. We have not had a drop of rain since the +light shower on the 4th August. Marked a tree F 86, being the 86th camp +from Geraldton. Shod two horses. Finished all our meat. We have now only +flour enough for the remainder of our journey. As my friend Mr. Gosse did +not name this splendid place, I take the liberty of naming it Gosse's +Spring, as that is the name we always gave it in referring to it. + +9th. +The horses rambled away last night, and were not collected till late. It +was nearly eleven o'clock when we started. We travelled about fourteen +miles over fine grassy country, and camped on a fine flat with a little +water in a gully which appears springy; good feed, although chiefly old, +all round camp. One of our horses is very lame, and we have a little +trouble in getting him along. It rained again last night. Latitude 26 +degrees 15 minutes 23 seconds south. + +10th. +Steered North-North-East for five miles, and then North-East and east to +Beare's Creek, Mr. Gosse's depot Number 18, where we found a most +beautiful spring running strong down the gully for half a mile. I wonder +he did not mark it permanent water on his map, as it is one of the best +springs I have ever seen. Poor place for feed. The horses inclined to +ramble. Shot two ducks which were in one of the pools, and two wurrungs, +which were very acceptable, being now altogether without meat. Latitude +26 degrees 9 minutes 50 seconds. Grassy gorge on our route to-day. + +11th. +We got up long before daylight, intending to get an early start, and +reach Whittell's Creek, but two of the horses were missing, and it was +after eight o'clock when Windich returned with them. We, however, +started, and steering easterly through dense acacia thickets without +grass for about thirty miles, we reached the creek, and found plenty of +water by digging in the sand. Rough low granite hills all along our +route, but very little feed. Passed many clay-pans with water in them. +The country was sandy and stony, and is thickly wooded. Mount Woodroffe +bears north 208 degrees east magnetic from our camp, and a remarkable +granite hill bore north, which I named Mount Elizabeth. Latitude 26 +degrees 13 minutes south. Marked a tree F 89, being 89th camp from +Geraldton. + +FIG-TREE GULLY. + +12th. +Continued onwards about North-East for ten miles, over saltbush flats +with water in clay-pans in places, to the north part of a range, from +which I got a view of Mount Connor, which rose abruptly out of the ocean +of scrub. Rounding the mount, bore South-East towards Harry's Reservoir, +reaching which we camped. It is at the head of a rocky gully; it is very +rough to reach, and no feed within a mile and a half of it. There was +plenty of water in the hole, which is about six feet deep. A white +gum-tree close to the pool is marked GOS, 19, and I marked under it, on +same tree, F 90, being 90th camp from Geraldton. This being such a rough +place, and no feed near, I will move on to-morrow towards or to Figtree +Gully. Weather dark and cloudy. + +13th (Sunday). +Continued on towards Figtree Gully, having to go a long way north in +order to get round and through the ranges. Most beautifully-grassed +country all the way; by far the best-grassed country we have seen for +months. After travelling about nineteen miles we found water on some +granite rocks, and camped on a very fine grassy flat. Windich shot a +large kangaroo, which was very acceptable. + +14th. +About 2 o'clock this afternoon we collected the horses, and travelled on +to Figtree Gully about four miles, our horses first finishing all the +water on the granite rocks. We got enough at Figtree Gully to satisfy +them, although there is not a great supply. There is a small soakage from +the rocks; we filled the drums to-night, so as to have sufficient for +them in the morning, as the water does not come in quickly. The view to +the east is not very interesting. A few low hills, and generally level +country--apparently thickly wooded with mulga and acacia. + +THE MARRYATT RIVER. + +15th. +Got an early start, and steering about east for six miles, crossed the +Gum Creek, and followed it along about a mile and a half, when we steered +more to the east, until we struck the head of the Marryatt, which we +followed down North-East and east, until we reached the salt native well +marked on Mr. Gosse's map. We camped here, and dug out the well, which +was very brackish; yet the horses drank it. There was a very poor supply +of water, and we kept bailing it out into the drums all night, and +managed to get out about sixty gallons. We travelled about thirty miles +to-day; our horses were very thirsty, the weather oppressive. I found a +small water-hole, with about twenty gallons in it, about one mile north, +to which we will take the horses to-morrow morning. + +16th. +Went over to the rock hole and gave our horses the water--about one +bucket apiece, after which we struck South-East to the river, and found +two rock holes with sufficient water in them to satisfy all the horses. +Continued on and reached Mr. Gosse's camp, where he marks on his map +"Water-hole dug." Found it quite dry; but after going a few hundred yards +we found a nice clay-pan with water in it, and camped. There has been a +little rain here a few weeks ago, and it has not all dried up yet. If it +was not for the rain-water we should have much difficulty in getting down +this river, as all the old native wells dug in the sand are dry. + +17th. +Followed down the Marryatt, and at six miles passed a native well, which +was quite dry. We continued on, and at about eight miles found a number +of rock water-holes, all nearly full of water, about a quarter of a mile +south of the river, and camped. Shod some of the horses. Took a set of +lunar observations. + +18th. +Two of the horses rambled away during the night, and delayed our start. +At eight o'clock we got under way, and followed along the river. The day +was excessively hot, and we had to walk in turns. At two o'clock crossed +the gum creek shown on Mr. Gosse's map, and searched for the large +clay-pan shown a short distance beyond it; hundreds of natives' tracks +seen all along. Towards evening we found a rock water-hole with about two +gallons in it, which refreshed us, as we were all very thirsty. Here we +were obliged to abandon police-horse Champion, he being completely +knocked up; he has had a very bad back for a long time, and has been +running loose without any load. We pushed on, and I sent Windich to look +for water. We travelled until eight o'clock, when we camped for the night +without water. Shortly after we had camped, Windich overtook us, and +reported having found some clay-pans about six miles back. After having +something to eat I decided to return to the clay-pans, and therefore +packed up three of the horses, and let the others go loose, leaving the +packs until our return. Reached the water by midnight, and the horses +finished it all, and were not half satisfied. I thought there was more, +or would not have come back for it. We hobbled them out, and had a few +hours' rest. + +A PAINFUL MARCH. + +19th. +Early this morning we searched the flat for water, and found a rock +water-hole with about fifty gallons in it, but could not find any more +clay-pans. We therefore gave the horses the fifty gallons, and pushed on +towards "Water near Table-Land" shown on Mr. Gosse's map, about +twenty-one miles distant. The day was excessively hot again, and walking +was most fatiguing. Men and horses moved along very slowly, but did not +give in. Towards noon a hot wind began to blow. Onwards still we pressed, +and crossed the large creek coming into the Alberga about two miles from +the water. I told the party we were now close, and showed them the low +table-land just ahead. Before we reached it we found a clay-hole with +water, and gave the horses a good drink, after which we moved on a mile +and camped at Mr. Gosse's depot Number 20, where we got plenty of water +by digging in the sandy bed of the river. I was very glad to reach here, +for the horses were getting very weary, and Sweeney was also done up, and +looked very ill and swollen up about the head. The walking was most +harassing, for, besides the ground being soft, the sun was overpowering, +and most excessively hot. We are now in safety again, and to-morrow being +Sunday we will rest. + +20th (Sunday). +Rested to-day. Windich shot an emu. Worked out lunar observations. Marked +a tree F 97, being 97th camp from Geraldton. Latitude 26 degrees 44 +minutes 19 seconds, longitude about 133 degrees 47 minutes East. + +21st. +Continued down the Alberga about South-East for about twenty miles, over +sandy country thickly wooded with mulga and acacia, to Mr. Gosse's +bivouac of December 1st, but there was scarcely any water by digging. We +therefore pushed on and found a native well, from which, by digging out +about five feet, we procured abundance of water. Sweeney still very +unwell, unable to walk; others walking in turns. Distance twenty-five +miles. + +22nd. +The horses rambled back on the tracks about three miles, and it was eight +o'clock before we got started. We followed down the Alberga over stony +plains, poorly grassed and thickly wooded, for about eighteen miles. +Found sufficient water by digging in the sand; there was only a very poor +supply, and it took us a good while to water all the horses. The river +bed is more than a quarter of a mile wide and very shallow, and spreads +out over the plains for many miles in heavy winters. + +23rd. +Watering the horses delayed us a little this morning, as there was a very +poor supply coming into the well. We followed down the river, and after +travelling about nine miles heard a native shouting, and soon saw him +running after us. He was quite friendly, but could not speak any English; +he came along with us, and shortly afterwards we found a native well with +sufficient water by digging, then camped, as our horses were very weak, +and required a rest. We finished all our tea and sugar to-day, and have +now only flour left; we will therefore have bread and water for the next +week, until we reach the Peake. The native ate heartily of damper given +to him, and remained all day, and slept at our camp. Distance ten miles. + +NEAR THE END OF THE JOURNEY. + +24th. +Travelled down river, the native still accompanying us, and at about six +miles met a very old native, and a woman and a little girl. They were +quite friendly, and showed us water; and the woman and girl came with us +to Appatinna, Mr. Gosse's depot 21, where we camped at a fine pool of +water under right bank of river. Windich shot three emus that were coming +to the water, and we all had plenty of them to eat. The natives were very +pleased, and went back and brought up the old man and another woman and +child. There were now six with us. They have seen the telegraph line, as +can be seen by signs they make, but they cannot speak English. + +25th. +The horses rambled off miles, and it was nearly ten o'clock before we got +under way. There was no feed at all for them. We followed down the +Alberga for about fifteen miles, about east generally, and camped, with +very little old dried-up grass for our horses. About half an hour after +we left Appatinna this morning we had a very heavy shower of rain, and, +although it only lasted about a quarter of an hour, it literally flooded +the whole country, making it boggy. It was the heaviest thunderstorm I +have ever seen. We shall have no difficulty in procuring water now all +the way to the telegraph line, which is not more than forty miles from +here. The natives stayed at Appatinna, as they had too much emu to leave. +We did not want them, and were just as well pleased they did not come on. +Mr. Gosse's track went North-North-East to the Hamilton River from +Appatinna. + +26th. +Got off early and followed the river about two miles, when it took a bend +to the north, and as it was rather boggy near it we left it, and steered +about east and East-North-East for twenty miles over most miserable +country without any grass. We camped on a small gully with a little water +in it, and some old dry grass in a flat. The horses were very tired, not +having had anything to eat for the last two or three days, and some +showed signs of giving in; in fact, all weak and knocked-up, and we have +to handle them very carefully. For the first thirteen miles we passed +many clay-pans full of water--water nearly everywhere--after which there +was very little; and the rain does not appear to have been heavy to the +east. The river is about a mile and a half north of us, and we have not +seen it for some miles. Latitude 27 degrees 9 minutes south. Hope to +reach the telegraph line to-morrow. + +27th (Sunday). +Continuing East-North-East for two miles, came to the Alberga, and +following along its right bank over many clay-pans with water, about east +for twelve miles, and then East-North-East for three miles, and reached +the telegraph line between Adelaide and Port Darwin, and camped. Long and +continued cheers came from our little band as they beheld at last the +goal to which we have been travelling for so long. I felt rejoiced and +relieved from anxiety; and on reflecting on the long line of travel we +had performed through an unknown country, almost a wilderness, felt very +thankful to that good Providence that had guarded and guided us so safely +through it. + +The telegraph line is most substantially put up, and well wired, and is +very creditable at this spot; large poles of bush timber, often rather +crooked, and iron ones here and there. I now gave up keeping watch, +having kept it regularly for the last six months. Marked a tree F 104, +being 104th camp from Geraldton. We had not much to refresh the inner man +with, only damper and water, but we have been used to it now more than a +month, and do not much feel it. The horses are all very tired, and many +of them have sore backs. I hope to reach the Peake on Wednesday night, +where we shall be able to get something to eat. We find making the damper +with boiling water makes it much lighter and softer, and is a great +improvement. Latitude 27 degrees 7 minutes 50 seconds south. + +28th. +We travelled down the telegraph line for about twenty-one miles, and +camped on a branch of the Neales River, with a little grass. Level plains +and small rocky rises all the way; very stony country; many clay-pans +with water. A well-beaten road goes along near the telegraph line. We did +not get on it till we had travelled along the line about fifteen miles. +It crosses the Alberga east of the line. + +29th. +When we were nearly ready to start, police-horse Butcher lay down and +died in a few seconds; he appeared all right when we brought him in, and +was saddled as usual. Old age, very severe hard work, and continual +travelling, is no doubt the cause of death: we took off his shoes, and +left him where he died. I was sorry for the poor old horse; he had been +rather weak for a good while, but had borne up well to the very last. We +only had four horses to ride to-day, and Sweeney being still lame really +made but three horses between five of us. We travelled down the road for +about thirty-three miles over stony plains; many clay-pans with water, +but no feed. Camped on a gully with some old feed in the flat, in +latitude 27 degrees 49 minutes. Miserable country for grass all day, but +plenty of water from recent rains everywhere. Hope to reach the Peake by +mid-day to-morrow. Damper and water as usual. + +30th. +Got off early as usual, all in high glee at the prospect of meeting +civilized habitations again. Travelled along the road and saw cattle, and +shortly afterwards reached the Peake, and rather surprised the people. +Mr. Bagot, the owner of the cattle station, was the first I met; and +after telling him who we were, he said he had surmised it was so. He soon +told us that Mr. Giles had returned, and also Mr. Ross, who had been +despatched by the Honourable Thomas Elder with camels and a good +equipment to find an overland route to Perth, but was unable to get over +to Western Australia. We were soon introduced to Mr. Blood, the officer +in charge of the telegraph station, and, after unloading, were soon +engaged at dinner, the roast beef and plum pudding being a striking +contrast to our fare lately! Both Mr. and Mrs. Blood, as well as Mr. +Bagot, did all they could to make us comfortable during our four days' +rest. + +CONGRATULATORY TELEGRAMS. + +Immediately on reaching Peake, I despatched a telegram to his Excellency +Mr. Musgrave, Governor of South Australia, at Adelaide, informing him of +the safe arrival of the party, and received the following reply from the +private secretary:-- + +His Excellency has received your message with great satisfaction, and +congratulates you heartily on your safe arrival. + +This telegram was accompanied by another from the Honourable Arthur +Blyth, the Chief Secretary of the Colony: + +Is there anything you want? Mail leaves on October 10th. Shall be happy +to facilitate any despatch you may wish forwarded to your Government. +Superintendent of Telegraphs has given instructions for every assistance +to be rendered you at the various telegraph stations on your road down. + +The instructions sent by Mr. Todd, the Superintendent of Telegraphs, to +Mr. Blood, the officer in charge at Peake station, were to the following +effect:-- + +Please give my hearty congratulations to Mr. Forrest on the successful +completion of his great feat, which I have communicated to the Government +and press; also Baron Von Mueller, who sends his congratulations. I shall +be glad to have a few particulars as to route followed, if convenient to +Mr. Forrest to supply them. Render his party every attention. + +Mr. Ernest Giles, the explorer, also telegraphed, and I also received +messages from the editors of the Register and Advertiser, Adelaide +newspapers, congratulating me, and asking for a few particulars for +publication in their papers. I complied with the request immediately, +forwarding a brief narrative of the more remarkable incidents of our +journey. On the 15th of October, the day after our arrival at Peake, I +wrote, for the information of Governor Musgrave, a short account of the +journey, and this, accompanied by a more detailed narrative, addressed to +the Honourable Malcolm Fraser, Commissioner of Crown Lands at Perth, was, +together with several private telegrams, forwarded free of charge by the +South Australian Government, which also provided us with fresh horses and +everything we required for our journey to Adelaide. + +We left the Peake on the 4th of October, greatly refreshed by the rest +and the kind treatment we had received from Mr. and Mrs. Blood, and Mr. +Bagot, the owner of the cattle station. + +Before I record the details of our journey and the receptions given us at +every place on the route, I will quote the concluding remarks of my +journal relative to the expedition:-- + +THE COUNTRY TRAVERSED. + +I now beg to make a few remarks with reference to the character and +capability of the country traversed; and through the kindness and +courtesy of Baron Von Mueller, C.M.G., etc., Government Botanist of +Victoria, and of Mr. R. Brough Smyth, Secretary for Mines of Victoria, I +am enabled to annex reports upon the botanical and geological specimens +collected on our journey. + +The whole of the country, from the settled districts near Champion Bay to +the head of the Murchison, is admirably suited for pastoral settlement, +and in a very short time will be taken up and stocked; indeed, some +already has been occupied. + +From the head of the Murchison to the 129th meridian, the boundary of our +colony, I do not think will ever be settled. Of course there are many +grassy patches, such as at Windich Springs, the Weld Springs, all round +Mount Moore, and other places; but they are so isolated, and of such +extent, that it would never pay to stock them. The general character of +this immense tract is a gently undulating spinifex desert--Festuca +(Triodia) irritans, the spinifex of the desert explorers, but not the +spinifex of science. It is lightly wooded with acacia and other small +trees, and, except in a few creeks, there is a great absence of any large +timber. + +The prevailing rock, which crops out on the rises and often forms low +cliffs, in which are receptacles for holding water, is LIGHT RED +SANDSTONE (desert sandstone, tertiary). The only game found in the +spinifex is a kangaroo rat, commonly called the wirrup; but in the grassy +openings there are many kangaroos, and often emus, also a rat known as +the wurrung. These animals are very good eating, and formed a valuable +addition to our store department. At the permanent waters there were +always myriads of bronze-winged pigeons, and also the white cockatoo with +scarlet crest, called the chockalott; also the beaccoo, or slate-coloured +parrot. Generally, however, with the exception of the crow and hawk, +birds were not very numerous except round water. Whenever a sheet of +water was found we found ducks, and in Lake Augusta swans and ducks were +innumerable. + +In bringing this report to a close it is not necessary to refer much to +the reasons that induced me to keep more to the south than I originally +intended. It will readily be seen, after perusing this journal, that it +was a necessity, and that we could not get further north. It is a marvel +to me that we got through at all; the season was an exceptionally dry +one--in fact, a drought--our horses were of a very ordinary kind, and the +country most wretched. + +When it is remembered that a horse in poor condition and in warm weather +cannot go much over a day without water, and when the sterility of the +country is considered, it will be readily seen what a disadvantage one +labours under without camels, which can go ten days without water. Well +can I sympathize with Mr. Giles when he states in his journal: "All I +coveted from my brother explorers was their camels, for what is a horse +in such a region as this? He is not physically capable of enduring the +terrors of this country." And so it is; horses are the noblest and most +useful animals in the world, but they must have food and water regularly. +The camel, on the other hand, is physically formed to travel over these +desolate regions, and in Australia has been known to go twelve and +fourteen days without water, carrying 300 pounds, and sometimes 400 +pounds weight. + +From these few remarks it will be seen what a great disadvantage Mr. +Giles and myself laboured under compared with Major Warburton and Mr. +Gosse; and what in similar circumstances might have been easily performed +by them was quite impossible in our circumstances. + +In reading this journal, it may be wondered why we followed so much along +Mr. Gosse's track, when a new route for ourselves might have been chosen +more to the south. The reason is, I had intended, as soon as I reached the +129th meridian (the boundary of our colony), to make a long trip to the +south, near to Eucla, and thus map that important locality; but on +reaching there I was prevented by the following causes: The weather was +excessively warm; the country to the south seemed most uninviting--sand- +hills as far as could be seen, covered with spinifex; our horses were very +poor; our rations were running short, the meat and tea and sugar being +nearly gone; water was very scarce, and I could clearly see that, although +Mr. Gosse had travelled the route last year, it did not follow that we +should be able to do it easily this, as all the water thus far where he +had camped was gone. I felt we were altogether on our own resources for +water, and I concluded to push on towards the telegraph line as quickly as +possible. It turned out, although we had considerable difficulty, that we +reached the line sooner than I could have anticipated. + +ACKNOWLEDGMENTS. + +I have the very pleasant duty to record my thorough appreciation of the +services of my companions. To my brother, Mr. Alexander Forrest, I am +especially indebted for his assistance and advice on many occasions, also +for his indomitable energy and perseverance. Every service entrusted to +him was admirably carried out. He never disappointed me. When absent for +a week, I knew to a few minutes when we should meet again. Whether horses +or loads had to be abandoned, it mattered not to him, he always carried +out the service; and I attribute much of the success to being supported +by such an able and hopeful second in command. In addition to this, he +bestowed great care on the stores of the expedition; collected all the +botanical specimens, besides taking observations for laying down our +route on many occasions during my absence. + +To Tommy Windich (native) I am much indebted for his services as a +bushman, and his experience generally. Accompanying me on many occasions, +often in circumstances of difficulty and privation, I ever found him a +good, honest companion. + +To James Kennedy, James Sweeney, and Tommy Pierre I am thankful for the +ready obedience and entire confidence they placed in me. They ever +conducted themselves in a proper manner, and on no occasion uttered a +single murmur. + +I take this opportunity of thanking all those gentlemen who so kindly +subscribed to the Expedition Fund. + +In conclusion, sir, I beg you will convey to his Excellency Governor Weld +my sincere thanks for the kindness and support he has given me in this +arduous enterprise. I can truthfully state, if it had not been for his +zeal and assistance, I should not have been able to undertake and +accomplish this exploration. + +I have also to thank the Honourable F.P. Barlee, Colonial Secretary, and +yourself, for your kind attention and consideration, and your desire that +I should have everything that was necessary to bring the expedition to a +successful termination. + + +CHAPTER 6. + +PUBLIC RECEPTIONS AT ADELAIDE AND PERTH. + +Procession and Banquet at Adelaide. +Arrival in Western Australia. +Banquet and Ball at Perth. +Results of Exploration. + +We reached Beltana on the 18th, where we were joined by Mr. Henry Gosse, +brother and companion of the explorer, and arrived at Jamestown on the +28th of October. This was the first township on the route, and the +inhabitants, although somewhat taken by surprise by our appearance, would +not let the opportunity pass for giving us a warm welcome. On the +following morning there was a good muster of the principal residents at +Jureit's Hotel, and an address was presented to me. Our healths were then +drunk and duly responded to, and we had every reason to be highly +gratified with our first formal reception. + +BURRA BURRA AND GAWLER. + +The next day we reached Kooringa, on the Burra, and there too our arrival +excited considerable enthusiasm, and we were invited to a complimentary +dinner at the Burra Hotel Assembly Rooms, Mr. Philip Lane, the Chairman +of the District Council, presiding. An address was presented, and, my +health having been proposed by Mr. W.H. Rosoman, Manager of the National +Bank, in replying, I took the opportunity of expressing my thanks to my +associates in the expedition for their unfailing co-operation under +occasionally great difficulties and privations. + +On Saturday, the 31st, having witnessed a cricket-match at Farrell's +Flat, we visited the Burra Burra Mines, and there we received an address +from the manager, accountant, captain, chief engineer, and storekeeper. +We remained at Burra the next day (Sunday), and on Monday morning started +by train for Salisbury with our fifteen horses in horse-boxes. Eleven of +these were the survivors of the expedition, and we were desirous that our +faithful and hard-worked four-footed companions should have their share +of the attention of our South Australian friends. At Gawler we were +received by a crowd of people, and flags were flying to do us honour. The +Town Clerk and a considerable number of the principal residents were +waiting for us in an open space near the railway station, and presented +an address on behalf of the municipality. We were then invited to a +luncheon at the Criterion Hotel, the chair being filled, in the absence +of the Mayor, who was unwell, by Mr. James Morton. Here again I was +called on to respond for my health being proposed; but I need not weary +the reader by endeavouring to repeat all I said upon that and other +similar occasions. I acknowledged and deeply felt the personal kindness +of the receptions my party had experienced; and I fully shared with those +who signed the addresses I received, or proposed my health at dinners, +the hearty desire that the successful issue of my expedition might be the +means of uniting still more closely the two colonies in bonds of mutual +good-feeling and sympathy. I had been similarly welcomed at Gawler and +other places in South Australia on the occasion of my previous visit, and +I was, I trust, not unjustifiably proud and pleased that my old friends +had recognized my recent services. + +RECEPTION AT SALISBURY. + +At Salisbury, which we reached on the 2nd of November, a very hearty +reception awaited us, and we were entertained at a dinner given at the +Salisbury Hotel under the presidency of the Reverend J.R. Ferguson. After +dinner the chairman read a brief address, signed by the Chairman of the +District Council; and as the speeches referred not only to my own +expedition, but were interesting in relation to other explorations and +the method of conducting them, I may be pardoned for quoting a portion of +the report of the proceedings which appeared in the local newspapers:-- + +The Chairman then said he wished to express the great pleasure it was to +him to meet Mr. Forrest, his brother, and party, after their triumphant +accomplishment of the daring and arduous undertaking of crossing from the +Australian shores of the Indian Ocean to the very interior of South +Australia. We at all times felt constrained to value and honour men who +in any way contributed to the progress and welfare of mankind. We +esteemed those men whose lives were devoted to the explorations of +science, and whose discoveries were rendered serviceable to the comfort +and advancement of the race; and what were the achievements of travellers +but contributions to the advancement and welfare of the +race--contributions in which were involved the most magnificent heroism +in penetrating the regions which had hitherto been untrodden by the foot +of the white man? They obtained their contributions to the advancement +and welfare of men by the manifestation of high moral endurance, which +enabled them to submit to privations and discomforts of the most trying +character; while withal they showed dauntless courage in going forward +and meeting dangers of every possible kind, even to the loss of life +itself. He was disposed to rank the achievements of their guests with +those of the foremost of travellers of whom we read. He had sat enchanted +with the perusal of the travels of John Franklin in the Arctic Regions; +and, by the way, John Franklin accompanied Captain Flinders in his +expedition in the year 1800, which was sent out for the purpose of +surveying the south coast of Australia. He had perused with intense +interest the travels of Samuel Baker in the interior of Africa along the +source of that wondrous Nile, as also those of Speke, Grant, Stanley, and +that prince of men, the late Dr. Livingstone; and the name of their guest +was entitled to rank along with such. (Cheers.) Let now our stockholders +and men of capital take advantage of Mr. Forrest's explorations--let his +well-earned honours be bestowed upon him--and let all representatives of +intelligence and enterprise hail him. We who were here as Australians +were proud of him and rejoiced over him, and would seek to send him back +to his own home with our loud plaudits and our heartiest gratitude. + +The Vice-Chairman, in proposing The Health of Mr. John Forrest, the +Leader of the Expedition, said he was sure they were all extremely glad +to see Mr. Forrest and his party in their midst. When Mr. Forrest was +amongst them before they all thought he was a fine, jolly young fellow, +and thought none the less of him on that occasion. (Applause.) At any +rate, he was stouter than when he appeared on his first visit. He thought +the country would feel grateful to Mr. Forrest and his companions for the +benefits which would result from their achievement. (Applause.) + +Mr. John Forrest, who was received with loud cheers, said he thanked them +very heartily for the enthusiastic way in which they had drunk his +health, and for the very handsome address they had presented to him. He +felt altogether unable to respond in the way he could wish to the many +remarks that had been made by their worthy chairman. If he could only +make himself believe that he was worthy of being placed in the rank of +the men whom he had mentioned, he certainly would feel very proud indeed. +It had always given him the greatest pleasure to read the accounts of the +travels of these great men. He remembered being closely connected with +Captain Flinders's researches upon the south coast of Australia, and, +after his journey from Perth to Eucla, Mr. Eyre, the late Governor of +Jamaica, wrote to him that he risked his life upon the accuracy of +Captain Flinders's observations, and in no case had he the least cause to +regret it. Exploration in other parts of the world, as in Africa, was +carried on in a very different style to the exploration in Australia. +Even in the early times, exploration here was carried on in a very +different way to what it was at the present time. Large equipages, many +waggons, and that sort of thing were used in the time of Captain Sturt +and other early explorers, until Mr. Eyre took a light equipment, with +very few horses and very few men. Since then the work had had to be done +with very light turn-outs. In Western Australia a good deal of +exploration was done before his time, and expeditions had been very +common. They generally cost very little indeed. The horses were generally +given by the settlers, the Government contributed a few hundred pounds, +and young settlers volunteered for the service. The cost was sometimes +400 or 500 pounds; and upon his expedition, up to the time they left the +settled districts of Western Australia, they had only spent about 330 +pounds. He did not know that he could say anything more. He had spoken +several times on his journey down, and it seemed to him that he had said +the same thing over and over again. His forte was not in public speaking, +but he hoped they would take the will for the deed. They never could +forget the very kind and hearty reception they had received in every +place they had visited in South Australia. (Cheers.) + +The Reverend J.G. Wright proposed The health of Mr. Alexander Forrest and +the remainder of the Party. He remarked that they had heard a great deal +about Mr. Forrest, the leader of the party, and whilst he had manifested +a great deal of courage and perseverance, and they all felt indebted to +him as the leader of the party, yet there was much praise due to his +brother and the rest of his companions. He was gratified at having the +opportunity of meeting them before they went down to the metropolis, and +he was sure it was no small matter to Salisbury to have such a band +remaining with them for a short time. It would be a source of pleasure to +colonists generally to see them, and he trusted that the work which had +been so nobly performed, and what had followed after it, would tend to +link the colonies more closely together. He was glad to see that original +holders of the land in their western colony--the natives--had been +employed in the work of exploration and opening up the country. (Hear, +hear.) They were expected to do honour to generals and warriors who had +distinguished themselves and placed their names high on the roll of fame, +but he thought that such could not claim greater honours than the +explorer. His work was not one of bloodshed, but one which was undertaken +in the interests and for the benefit of humanity. Civilization, +agriculture, art, and science followed the explorations of those noble +men who had taken their lives in their hands and faced difficulties and +dangers for the advancement of their fellow-men. He proposed with the +heartiest feelings the toast of Mr. Alexander Forrest and his companions. + +The toast was very cordially drunk. + +Mr. Alex. Forrest, on rising to respond, was greeted with hearty and +continued cheering. He said he thanked the company most heartily for the +manner in which they had drunk his health and that of his companions. He +could assure them they felt highly flattered at the reception which had +been accorded them. It was more than they expected. When here four years +ago, it was on a small trip compared with what they had accomplished this +time. It would not be necessary for him to go over the same ground that +his brother had remarked upon--in fact, his brother had quite taken the +wind out of his sails; and public speaking certainly not being his forte, +although he was quite at home round the camp-fire, he must ask them to +excuse him making a lengthy speech. He could assure them they all thanked +them very sincerely for their kindness, and deeply appreciated the honour +which had been done them. (Cheers.) + +Tommy Pierre, one of the aboriginals attached to the expedition, being +called upon to respond, after some hesitation, said, "Well, gentlemen, I +am not in good humour to-night. (Laughter.) I am very glad I got through. +We got a capital gaffer that leaded us through; but it wasn't him that +got us through, it isn't ourselves, but God who brought us through the +place, and we ought to be very thankful to God for getting us through. +(Laughter and cheers.) I am not in good humour to-night to speak +(laughter), but I will speak when I get in Adelaide." (Prolonged +cheering.) + +Tommy Windich, the other aboriginal attached to the expedition, was also +asked to respond, but he could not muster courage enough to do so. + + + +WELCOME AT ADELAIDE. + +The preparations for our reception at Adelaide were most elaborate. It +seems to have been resolved that the capital of South Australia should +appear as the representative of the satisfaction felt throughout the +colony at the successful completion of an adventure, the result of which +was so deeply interesting, and which had been several times attempted by +explorers, not less ardent and determined, but less fortunate than +ourselves. At an early hour on the morning of the 3rd of November, on +which day it was known our party would arrive, the streets through which +we were to pass were thronged with thousands eager to bid us welcome. Not +only the city itself, but the suburban districts contributed to swell the +crowd. Balconies and housetops were thronged, and all along the line of +route were flags and decorations of flowers and evergreens, streamers +with inscriptions of welcome, and arches adorned with large pictures +representing incidents of bush life. The bells, too, rang out merry +peals, and the day was observed as a general holiday at Adelaide. + +We left Salisbury at twelve o'clock, escorted by a considerable number of +the inhabitants. Before reaching Adelaide we were met by carriages +containing the Mayors of Adelaide, Port Adelaide, Kensington, and +Norwood, the town clerks, and members of the different corporations. A +very interesting and characteristic compliment was paid to us by the +presence of members of various exploring expeditions, who, from their own +experience, could best estimate the value of the results we had achieved, +and the difficulties we had encountered. Following the official +personages, on horseback, was Mr. John Chambers, who, with his brother, +the late Mr. James Chambers, and the late Mr. Finke, sent out in 1860 the +parties under the leadership of the intrepid Mr. John McDouall Stuart, to +explore the interior lying between South Australia and the northern +shores of the continent. Three members of this party--Messrs. A.J. +Lawrence, D. Thompson, and John Wall--followed on horseback, carrying +standards marked with the dates January, 1862, and July 25, 1862, when +Stuart departed from Adelaide, and when he planted his flag on the +northern shores. Then came representatives of the various exploring +parties--Messrs. F.G. Waterhouse, F. Thring, W.P. Auld, S. King, J.W. +Billiatt, and H. Nash, of Stuart's party; Mr. R.E. Warburton, Mr. Dennis +White, and Charley, the native boy, of Colonel Warburton's expedition; +Mr. William Gosse (leader), and Mr. Harry Gosse, of the Gosse expedition; +and Mr. Ernest Giles, leader of the Giles expedition. + +The reception committee and representatives of the Oddfellows, Foresters, +Druids, Rechabites, Good Templars, German, and other friendly societies, +followed, after which came our party. We wore the rough, weather-beaten, +and, it may be added, shockingly dilapidated garments in which we had +been clothed during our expedition, and were mounted on the horses which +had served us so well. It was wished that we should represent to the +Adelaide public, as realistically as we could, the actual appearance of +our party while engaged on the long journey, so we slung our rifles at +our sides, and each of us led a pack-horse carrying the kegs we had used +for the conveyance of water. In one respect, no doubt, we failed to +realize adequately the appearance of our party when struggling through +the spinifex desert, or anxiously searching for rock holes and springs. +The month of great hospitality we had experienced since reaching Peake +station had considerably improved our own personal appearance, and the +horses were very unlike the wretched, half-dying animals we had such +difficulty to keep alive and moving. After us came, in long procession, +bands of music, and the members of the various orders, the German Club, +the Bushmen's Club, and a goodly number of horsemen and carriages. The +bands played inspiring strains, the crowd shouted and cheered, and my +brother and I were perpetually bowing acknowledgments. As for the two +natives, Tommy Windich and Tommy Pierre, they appeared to be perfectly +amazed by the novelty of the spectacle, and the enthusiasm of the vast +throng which lined the streets. + +On our arrival at the town hall we were received by the Ministry, the +Honourable W. Milne (President of the Legislative Council), Sir G.S. +Kingston (the Speaker), several members of both Houses of Parliament, and +other gentlemen. Having alighted, we were conducted to a platform, and +addresses were presented to us by the Mayor, on behalf of the citizens of +Adelaide; from the Odd Fellows, the Foresters, the Rechabites, the Good +Templars, and four German societies. In replying to these I did my best, +but very inadequately, to express my feelings of gratitude for the +reception we had met with, and of thanks for the generous manner in which +our endeavours to successfully perform an arduous task had been +recognized. The Mayors of Kensington, Norwood, and Port Adelaide, also +offered a few words of congratulation to our party. + +By particular request, we showed ourselves on the balcony, and bowed our +acknowledgments for the very hearty welcome we received. Then we +remounted our horses, and took them to the police paddocks, after which +my brother and I were introduced to the Adelaide Club. + +I have mentioned that several distinguished Australian explorers took +part in the reception, and I may add that among them were the whole of +Stuart's last party, except the gallant leader and Mr. Kekwick, who were +dead, Mr. Few, who was in a distant part of the colony, and the farrier, +who had gone no one knew whither. It was also appropriate to the occasion +that two horses, who were memorably connected with explorations, should +be associated with the animals who had served one so well. The horse +which had carried poor Burke on his ill-fated expedition from Melbourne +was ridden by Mr. F.G. Waterhouse, and Mr. F. Thring was mounted on a +horse which had crossed the continent with Stuart. + +BANQUET AT THE TOWN HALL. + +In the evening we were entertained at a banquet in the town hall, the +chair being occupied by the Honourable Arthur Blyth, the Premier of the +colony. The proceedings were fully reported in the newspapers on the +following day; and as so many explorers were present, and addressed the +company, I may be permitted, apart from personal considerations, to quote +the principal speeches delivered on the occasion. + +The chairman rose to propose the toast of the evening, and was received +with cheers. He said, "I think, for the last two or three days, that +there has been a general feeling that South Australians were not very +good at receptions and getting up processions; but at all events to-day +we have showed that we can manage such things as well as people of more +importance probably than ourselves--at all events quite as well as +countries much more thickly populated than our own. (Cheers.) We have all +of us read something about the old Roman triumphs--how the conquerors, +when they went forth and were successful, were granted a triumph, and in +this triumph were accompanied by the most beautiful of their captives, +and the most wonderful and singular of the animals they had taken, and +passed through the cities of which they were citizens, and received the +plaudits of their inhabitants. To-day we have granted a triumph, not to a +warrior who has killed thousands of his fellows, or added much to the +landed property of the country, but to one who has been a warrior +nevertheless, fighting many difficulties that many warriors had not to +contend with, and carrying his life in his hands, as warriors have done +of old, in leading those who are associated with him in the triumph here +to-day. (Cheers.) There was no beautiful captive in his train, and no +curious animals, as in the old Roman triumphs. All that we saw were some +dusty pack-horses, and some well-worn packsaddles; yet with these the +explorer has to proceed on his journey, and conquer the difficulties of +the desert, knowing that with such slender things to rely upon he must +hope to overcome the dangers, and endure to the end. (Cheers.) Gentlemen, +in the page of Australian Exploration, which is the sentiment attached to +my toast--in its pages there are to be read too many tragic stories. We +cannot think of the history of exploration without thinking with regret +of some of the names connected with it. What an extraordinary page is +that of Leichardt, of whom it has been said no man + +'--knows his place of rest +Far in the cedar shade.' + +"And yet so great is the interest which is taken in his fate that the +wildest stories of a convict in the gaols of a neighbouring colony have +been of interest to us, and have caused some of our fellow Australians to +send out a party to see if something could not still be heard of that +explorer. Then think of Burke and Wills, and what a tragic tale was +theirs--so nearly saved, so closely arrived to a place of safety, and yet +to miss it after all! I daresay there are hundreds here who, like myself, +saw their remains taken through our streets in the gloomy hearse on the +road to that colony which they had served so well; and we know that now +the country where they laid down their lives is brought under the hand of +pastoral settlement. They were the heroes of other lands; but have we not +heroes also of our own? (Loud cheering.) Have we not here the likeness of +a man who knew not what fear was, because he never saw fear who carried +out the thorough principle of the Briton in that he always persevered to +the end? And then, coming nearer to our own time, speaking by weeks and +months, had we not our opportunity of entertaining in the city the leader +of an expedition that successfully passed its way through the desert to +the shores of Western Australia? I refer to Colonel Warburton. When +speaking, upon that occasion, of the noble way in which the people of +Western Australia had received our explorer, I ventured to hope that +before many months we should have an opportunity of welcoming some +explorer from that colony. Gentlemen, the hour has come, and the man. +(Loud cheering.) For West Australia, though the least of the colonies in +population, has its exploring heroes too. (Cheers.) I have no doubt you +have read, within the last few days, all about the battle that Mr. +Forrest has had to fight with the spinifex desert, with unknown regions, +and hostile natives. While giving all praise to those Australian +explorers connected with this Australian Empire that is to be, I ask you +to join with me in drinking the health of the last and not the least, and +I now give you the toast of Australian Exploration, coupled with the name +of Mr. John Forrest." (Cheers.) + +The toast was enthusiastically received, and three hearty cheers given. + +Band: The Song of Australia. + +Mr. John Forrest, who was received with loud cheers, said, "Mr. Chairman +and Gentlemen, I feel very proud that my name should be coupled with the +toast of Australian Exploration. I assure you I feel altogether unequal +to the toast so aptly proposed by our worthy chairman, my forte not being +public speaking; still, I will try to do as well as I can. (Cheers.) +Since I arrived at years of discretion, I have always taken a very deep +interest in exploration, and for the last five years I have been what is +generally termed in Western Australia The Young Explorer, as I have +conducted all the explorations that have been undertaken by our +Government. In the year 1869 I was instructed to accompany an expedition +as navigator, which was intended to be commanded by Dr. Mueller, of +Melbourne, to search for the remains of the late Dr. Leichardt, who +started from near Moreton Bay in 1848, I think. Dr. Mueller not having +arrived to take command as was anticipated, and the expedition having +been got ready, I was deputed to the command, and we went out about 500 +miles to the eastward of the settled districts of our colony, in order to +find out whether the statements of the natives relative to the existence +of white men or their remains in the locality were correct or not. We +were out about five months. Although we did not suffer very much, as we +had sufficient water and sufficient provisions, still it was a very dry +season. We came back and settled that there were no remains--that, in +fact, the reports of the natives were unfounded, and that they referred +to the remains of horses lost by an explorer of our colony, Mr. Austin, +not many miles to the eastward. This was the first attempt at exploration +I had made, and, although I had been brought up to bush life, I knew very +little about exploration, as I found when I went out. I was made aware of +many things that I did not know about before, and I must say that I was a +much better second than a commander. After this I undertook to conduct an +exploration north-east from our colony to Sturt's Creek, where Mr. A. +Gregory came down about 1855, and down the Victoria River. This fell to +the ground; but our present Governor, Mr. Weld, had a great idea that we +should organize an expedition to come to this colony overland along the +coast--along the course which was previously taken by Mr. Eyre, I think +in 1841--and he requested me to take command. Of course I readily +acquiesced in his suggestion, and in 1870 we started on our journey; and +although we did not experience the difficulties Mr. Eyre experienced, +still we had some little difficulty, and we would have had a great deal +more, I have no doubt, if we had not had Mr. Eyre's experience to guide +us. Many people--in our colony, I mean--thought it was a very little +thing indeed we had done, as we had only travelled along another man's +tracks, although they gave us a very hearty and enthusiastic reception. +We reported that there was good country along the coast, and I am glad to +say that in the course of a year a telegraph line will be run across the +route we travelled. (Cheers.) I hope it will tend to unite more closely +than they are at present united the whole of the Australian colonies, and +especially this colony with our own. (Cheers.) There is a very great deal +of good country inland from the south coast; and if only water can be +procured, I am quite certain it will be the finest pastoral district of +West Australia. (Hear, hear.) I have no doubt the establishment of +telegraphic communication will tend to the settlement of that part of the +country, and I am very glad indeed that the Government of South Australia +have acted so liberally as to join with our Government in erecting the +line. (Cheers.) After this my exploration experience still increased, and +I tried very hard to get up another expedition; but, not being a wealthy +man, I had to depend upon others. I often represented that I would like +to go, and people talked about the matter, and then I thought I would +make an offer to the Government, which they might accept or not as they +liked. We have the good fortune to have in our colony a Governor--who, I +am sorry to say, is leaving shortly--who takes a great interest in +exploration. He had been an explorer himself, having, as he has often +told me, travelled across New Zealand with his swag on his back. +(Cheers.) He has always been a great supporter of mine, and done all he +could to forward exploration; and about two years ago I laid before him, +through the Commissioner of Crown Lands, a project which I was willing to +accomplish if he would recommend the granting of the necessary funds. In +a very complimentary reply he quite acquiesced with what I suggested, and +promised to lay it before the Legislative Council with the support of the +Government; and in 1873 the matter was brought before the Council. All I +asked was that the Government of West Australia would grant me some 400 +pounds, and I would from my own private purse, and those of others who +had agreed to assist me, stand the remainder of the cost. (Cheers.) If +they granted me that sum, I was willing to undertake an exploration from +Champion Bay up to the Murchison, the head of which we did not know, and +strike the telegraph line for Port Darwin, it being left to my discretion +which course should be pursued. Four hundred pounds seems a paltry sum, +but there was some bitter opposition to its being granted, although by +the aid of the Government and other members it was voted. Last year was +the year when I should have undertaken the exploration, and I was, of +course, quite prepared to do so; but in the meantime a whole host of +expeditions from South Australia had come into the field. Mr. Giles, I +saw, had started from some part of the telegraph line westward, and I +heard afterwards that he had through some misunderstanding--I do not know +what it was; I only know by what I read in the papers--returned to +Adelaide. Then we heard that the South Australian Government had +despatched Mr. Gosse, and that the Honourable Thomas Elder--whom I have +the pleasure of meeting to-day--had despatched Colonel Warburton +(cheers)--to explore towards the same direction--as we judged from the +despatches and newspapers--that I intended to start from. I belong to the +Survey Department of West Australia, and was requested by the +Commissioner of Crown Lands and Surveyor-General, the Honourable Malcolm +Fraser, to superintend some surveys he specially wished undertaken that +season. I had an interview with the Governor, and he said very wisely he +did not wish to order me in any way; that it was no use running a race +with South Australia, and that as they were first in the field, although +we were the first to suggest the exploration, we should wait till the +next year, when, if the South Australian explorers were fortunate enough +to reach this colony, we should have no necessity to send an expedition, +and that if they did not, we should certainly profit by their experience. +I, being engaged in another service in which I took great interest, was +willing to wait for another year; and if, as Mr. Weld said, the South +Australians did not succeed, I would undertake it the next year, and +benefit by their experience. As it turned out, the expedition undertaken +by the Government, commanded by Mr. Gosse, did not succeed in reaching +the colony of Western Australia, and the expedition undertaken by Colonel +Warburton, under the auspices of my recent friend, the Honourable Thomas +Elder, reached our colony, but so far north that it did not add to the +knowledge of the route we had laid out for ourselves. He came out between +the 20th and 22nd degrees of latitude, whereas we started from the 26th, +and did not intend to go more north than that. After we heard--his +Excellency the Governor was away on a visit to New Zealand at the +time--that Mr. Gosse had turned back, although he had succeeded in +reaching a very great distance from the telegraph line, I had +instructions from the Colonial Secretary to equip an expedition at once. +If Mr. Gosse had succeeded, I am sure I would not have been here to-day; +but, as he did not succeed, I had orders to equip an expedition, and as I +was starting news arrived from the north-west coast by a coaster that +Colonel Warburton and his party had arrived. (Cheers.) This, of course, +gave us very great pleasure, and steps were at once taken to give him a +reception in Perth. (Cheers.) As soon as we heard that he had arrived, +our whole colony rose up to give him a welcome; and although what we did +did not come up with what you have given to us to-day--for our colony is +only a small one, with little over 30,000 inhabitants--still I am sure +that Colonel Warburton told you it was a kind reception. (Cheers.) I am +sorry to say that I was not able to be present when he was received, +though I waited some time in order to have that opportunity. The +opportunities for transport from our north-west settlements to the +capital are very few at a certain time of the year, and that was the time +when Colonel Warburton arrived in our settlements; so that in a matter of +700 or 800 miles, from Nicol Bay to Perth, he delayed unfortunately three +or four months. It was a very great pity that he should have been delayed +so long. After receiving addresses at Roeburne and Fremantle, the colonel +arrived just in time to be forwarded 250 miles to catch the mail, and +therefore he had not time, I know, to receive the reception that would +have been given him by the people of West Australia had he remained in +our colony a little longer. (Cheers.) All I can say is, that though what +has been done for Colonel Warburton cannot compare with what has been +done for us to-day, it was done in the same spirit, and we did our best. +(Cheers.) I am sure that I would have been very much pleased to have met +Colonel Warburton here this evening; but I understand that he is gone +upon a tour to his native land, and so I am deprived of the opportunity. +I have, however, had the pleasure of meeting other explorers, and I must +congratulate South Australia upon possessing so many explorers. I had no +idea that she could assemble so many, and that so young a man as myself +should be able to meet so many, all young men. I have read a great deal +of early explorations, and could tell you a good deal about them; but I +have no doubt you are just as well acquainted with their histories as I +am. I have only gleaned their history from books written by able men on +exploration; and I therefore need say little upon that subject, and will +content myself with a short reference to explorations of recent date. I +have already referred to Colonel Warburton. Mr. Gosse's is of more recent +date. I have never been able to read his journal to this day; but I hope +to be able to do so now. Through the kindness of Mr. Phillipson, of +Beltana, I was able to see his map of the country he passed over, with +which I am very well pleased; and, in spite of what some people have +said, I think that Mr. Gosse's exploration will be found of considerable +benefit to the colony, and that his action was one for which he deserved +very much credit. He travelled for some time in bad country, but, going +on, he got into good country; and that which he has described as the +Musgrave and Mann and Tomkinson Ranges I hope to see next year stocked +with South Australian sheep and cattle. (Cheers.) The country which Mr. +Gosse found is country abounding with any quantity of grass, with many +springs; and there are, perhaps, many more than I saw, for I kept along +Mr. Gosse's track; but I will say that I always found water where he said +that it would be found. (Cheers.) There is but one fault that I have to +find with him, and that is, that he did not say that water would be found +where I sometimes found it; but doubtless this arose from a very laudable +caution in an explorer, for had he stated that water would be found where +it failed it might have cost men their lives. One place he marked +springs, and if he had been mistaken there, we would have lost our lives; +but I am glad to say that we found there a very good spring indeed, +(cheers) enough to last all the sheep of South Australia, or at any rate +a good spring; and I am glad on this occasion to be able to thank him for +being so careful to mark permanent water where permanent water really +existed. Mr. Giles's exploration would have been as useful to me as Mr. +Gosse's, but unfortunately he did not return before I left the settled +districts of West Australia, and therefore I did not benefit by his work. +I am sure that my companions and myself feel very much the hearty +reception you have given us on this occasion. I cannot find words to +express my feelings on that point at all. I feel very deeply thankful, +and that is about all that I can say. (Loud cheers.) Six weary +travellers, travelling through the spinifex desert with about fifteen or +sixteen nearly knocked-up horses, not knowing whether they should find +water, or whether their lives were safe or not, I am sure that we could +not imagine that, after all our travels were over, we should receive such +a reception as we have received to-day. (Cheers.) I am sure that if any +stimulus is required to induce persons to become explorers, those who +witness our reception to-day ought to feel content. I am very proud of +the hearty and enthusiastic reception my companions and myself have met +with. I hope you will take the will for the deed, and in the absence of +better speaking on my part, consider that we are deeply thankful." (Loud +cheers.) + +Sir H. Ayers, K.C.M.G., had much pleasure in proposing a toast that had +been allotted to him, and made no doubt that the company would have equal +pleasure in responding to it. The toast was Early Explorers, and he had +been requested to associate with it the name of Mr. John Chambers. +(Cheers.) It seemed to be the lot of poor human nature that whenever we +met for rejoicing there was always sure to be some little mournful +circumstance attending it, and we could scarcely think of the early +explorers without remembering with regret the noble leaders and brave +members of former expeditions who have now passed to their eternal rest. +There was the name of Sturt that came first in the list of our old +explorers. There was the name and the likeness of a man far more familiar +to many of them. There was Kekwick, and more recently poor McKinlay--all +gone to their last account. But still he was proud to see, and he was +sure it formed a source of gratification to that company, and especially +so to our guest, so many brave men at the table who had been companions +of those leaders and others in the early expeditions of this country. +(Cheers.) He said it with pride, that in no other Australian colony could +be seen such a group as sat at that table who had gone through the +hardships and dangers of exploration; for with one or two exceptions all +of them in the row were explorers. It was hardly possible for us to +estimate how much we had benefited by those who had opened up the country +for us. We were few in numbers and could not appreciate the work of the +explorer; but generations yet unborn would bless the names of those men +who had carried it out. (Cheers). He thought that it was doing only a +just tribute to associate the name of Mr. John Chambers with this toast, +because it might not be known to all present that Mr. Chambers, with his +late brother James and Mr. W. Finke, enabled Mr. Stuart to accomplish the +journeys that he made throughout the continent. (Cheers.) It was their +capital and his great skill, for in the face of so many explorers he was +not ashamed to say that Mr. McDouall Stuart was the greatest explorer +that ever lived. It was their capital that had enabled him to perform the +work which he had done, and for which his name would remain as a monument +for ever in the memories of South Australians. For not only were we +indebted to Stuart for the most valuable discoveries he had made, but he +thought Mr. Todd would say that his indications had proved the most +accurate. But he had also done a great thing for exploration in changing +the modus operandi. He had been one of Sturt's party that went out with +bullock-drays; but he had had genius, and had changed all that, starting +upon exploring with light parties, and thus being able to accomplish so +much, and he was glad to say that explorers since had followed up the +same plan with great success. (Cheers.) And they were still further +indebted to the Messrs. Chambers. They had not only assisted in +discovering far-off country, but had been the first to invest their +capital in stocking it and making it useful. He was sorry to see that +there were not more Messrs. Chambers to go and do likewise; but he +thought he saw signs of the spread of settlement further, for the toe of +the agriculturist was very near upon the heel of the sheep-farmer, and if +the sheep-farmers did not look out and get fresh fields and pastures new, +they would soon find that the agriculturist was all too near. That was a +question that he enlarged upon, especially in another place; but as +brevity seemed to be the order of the night, he would only ask them to +drink the health of The Early Explorers, coupled with the name of Mr. +John Chambers. + +The toast was received with three cheers. + +Band: Auld lang syne. + +Mr. J. Chambers rose amid cheers, and said that he was proud to say that +he had been connected with the earliest of our explorations, having been +associated with the gallant Captain Sturt in his exploration of the +Murray. After his arrival in the colony he had first travelled with him +and the then Governor, the late Colonel Gawler, in exploring the south. +They had had no difficulties and dangers to encounter then that some of +the explorers of the present had to go through, and, although they +travelled with heavy bullock-drays, managed to have plenty of water and +food. Their principal difficulty lay in getting through the ranges to the +south, and the interminable creeks and gullies which they got into and +had to retrace their steps from. This was a small matter of exploration, +and might at the present day appear absurd; but then there were doubts +where the Angas was, and whether the Onkaparinga in Mount Barker District +was not the Angas, and when beyond the hills they did not know whether +Mount Barker was not Mount Lofty, and whether Mount Lofty was not some +other mount. It was, however, done, and, having settled these matters by +observation, they returned to Adelaide after an exploration of three +weeks. They were on their return made small lions of, although they had +not had to fight the natives, and had had bullock-drays with them, while +their horses were in rather better condition than when they went out. +There was no doubt that the subject of exploration was one of the most +important to be considered by those who in the future would have to do +with the country, as it was always well to have information beforehand; +and, if Governor Gawler and Captain Sturt had known more, there would +have been a different result to their exploration journey up the Murray. +The gallant Captain Sturt had made Cooper's Creek his depot, and that +place twelve months ago had been looked upon as a home by persons in +search of country with a view of stocking it. His youngest son had been +round there for five months, and had penetrated the country far and wide, +and had often to retrace his steps there for water. They had heard from +the young explorer, Mr. Forrest, how it was said when he came here before +that he had only traversed the tracks of Mr. Eyre. So be it, and often +was it said that Mr. Eyre did no good because he kept to the coast; but +they had heard from Mr. Forrest that the tracks and descriptions of Mr. +Eyre were of vast assistance to him. (Cheers.) Therefore no man could +tell what good he might do; the finding of a spring in a desert might +eventually become of great service to the descendants of those who lived +at the time. There were some whom he wished could have been there, but +Providence had ordained the contrary, and therefore he stood before them +to say that it was for no purpose of self-aggrandizement, but for the +purpose of good to the nation, that the early expeditions were promoted +and conducted (cheers) and that the object of James Chambers, Finke, +Stuart, and himself was to span this colony for the purpose of allowing a +telegraph line to be laid. (Cheers.) When we read of the many times that +Stuart was driven back by the force of circumstances, it could easily be +conceived that he possessed a very energetic spirit. It was not once or +twice that Stuart was driven back, but he was determined to penetrate the +continent for the purpose, he was proud to know, of paving the way for +telegraphic communication; and had it not been for his brother, Mr. +Stuart, and himself, he was proud to say, we should not this day have had +the telegraph. It was often said that there never would be a telegraph +line, but their answer was always "yes." (Cheers). He thanked them +heartily for the position in which they had placed him and Mr. Stuart's +companions, and which they all appreciated. (Cheers). + +Mr. J.W. Billiat, who was imperfectly heard, also responded. He said that +when he went out with Mr. Stuart he was only a new chum; but he went out +and came back again, and there he was. He could not say much about Mr. +Stuart's explorations, as all that needed to be said had been so ably put +by Sir Henry Ayers. There was no country in the world that had so tried +the endurance and perseverance of the men on exploring expeditions as +South Australia had done, and explorers should receive all the credit +that could be given. He knew the difficulty of travelling country like +that Mr. Forrest had come across, as several of Mr. Stuart's party had +travelled upon it trying to strike the Victoria River. If Mr. John +Chambers's liberality were known, and the way he had entered into the +question of exploration generally were known, his name would be brought +into more prominence than it had. He had sat in the background, but he +had found both money and energy. + +The Honourable W. Everard (Commissioner of Crown Lands) said the toast he +had to give was The Government and People of Western Australia. Owing to a +variety of circumstances, our relations with Western Australia had not +been so intimate or close as those with the eastern colonies. That would +be readily understood, because Western Australia, being a small colony, +and self-reliant and independent, had troubled us very little-- +occasionally for a few tons of flour or a cargo of notions. Another reason +was that it had not had telegraphic communication with us or the rest of +the world, and it was separated from us by a large extent of country which +till lately was considered little better than a howling wilderness. He was +happy to say that by the enterprise of Western Australia the magic wire +which annihilated time and distance would be laid between the two colonies +before long; and he was happy to say the Legislature here had agreed to +construct the South Australian part of the line, so that Western Australia +would be placed in communication, not only with South Australia, but the +world. (Cheers.) And again, with reference to that large tract of hitherto +supposed desert country which lay between the two colonies, the experience +of the gallant men he saw around him, and not only of the Messrs. Forrest, +but of Warburton, Gosse, and Giles, had shown that it contained grassy +valleys, mountain ranges, and permanent waters, and he believed that +before long it would be occupied by squatters. We must remember that, in +South Australia, close upon the heels of the explorer came the squatter +with his flocks and herds, and he even was not long left in quiet +enjoyment; and if his runs were good they were soon taken from him for +agricultural purposes. Considering the progress that we were making in +agriculture, it was high time we sought to enlarge our borders. Although +it was true that the band of explorers who were now before them had only +made a line through the country, we must remember that it would be a +base-line for future operations. Their work was very different to making +a forced march of two or three days when it was known there was permanent +water ahead. The explorer had carefully and deliberately to feel his way +into unknown country, and if he went a mile or two too far he could not +retrace his steps, and we could not attach too much importance to the +services of those individuals who had risked their lives in that way. It +was said, when Edward John Eyre made that wonderful journey of his along +the coast of Western Australia, that he had done nothing but gone along +the coast; but along that very line there would be a telegraph to connect +this colony with Western Australia. (Cheers.) It was true that Western +Australia was the smallest of the Australian group, and she had not +perhaps been so favoured as South Australia, as her country was not so +good; but he believed, from the enterprise of her Government, and the +courage, perseverance, and endurance shown by some of her sons, that she +would yet take her place among the Australian group, and that at some +future date she would be one of the provinces which would form one united +Australia. (Cheers.) + +The toast was drunk with cheers. + +Mr. Alexander Forrest responded. He said he thanked them most cordially +for having associated his name with that of the Government and people of +Western Australia. He had had the honour for the last four years of being +employed in the service of the Western Australian Government, and he +could assure them that they had a very good Government. They had +representative government, although not responsible government; but since +they had been on their trip they had heard that it was proposed to +establish constitutional government. He did not believe it would make +much difference, but personally he was glad to see it. The people would +have the management of their own money, and that he considered a good +thing, for they were never satisfied till they had the control over it. +When the party left, all the people of Western Australia were longing to +do honour to and entertain Colonel Warburton; and, although they were a +small people, they did their best, and what they did they did heartily. +(Cheers.) If Mr. Gosse had got over they would have given him also a good +reception. He had not expected to see as many people as he had seen that +day. The streets were crowded, and, wherever he looked, some one seemed +to be looking in that direction. (Laughter.) The toast included the +people of Western Australia, and he could assure them that, as he had +travelled through the length and breadth of the land, he knew every man +in it, every squatter, every farmer, every rich man, every poor man, and +every magistrate. This was not the first time that he had been exploring, +as he accompanied his brother to this colony four years ago, and in 1871 +the Government sent him out in command of a party to find new land, when +he went out about 600 miles. He thanked them for the very kind way in +which they had spoken of his companions. Since they came to this colony +they had been fed and clothed, and no one would take any money. (Cheers.) +In the city he expected something great, but in the Burra, Gawler, and +other places where they did not expect it, they had met with a hearty +reception. He saw a great improvement in Adelaide. When he came here four +years ago, the colony was not in such a good state, and a great many men +were out of work; but now everything was in good order, and he believed +South Australia would be one of the first colonies of Australia. +(Cheers). + +Mr. William Gosse rose, and was received with loud cheers. He said he +felt honoured by being invited on the present occasion, and had much +pleasure in taking part in the reception of Mr. John Forrest and party. +He would take that opportunity of making a few remarks. His instructions, +when he was sent out, were to find a route as nearly as possible in a +direct line from his starting-point upon the telegraph line to Perth, +only deviating when obliged to do so for water. He had to feel his way as +he advanced, form depots to secure his retreat if necessary, and +accurately fix all points on his track. The last words the Honourable T. +Reynolds had said to him were, "You fully understand that Perth is your +destination, and not any other point on the western coast," or words to +that effect. They would see by that, that had he been fortunate enough to +discover the country by which Mr. Forrest got across, he should scarcely +have been justified in proceeding. His farthest point west was between +500 and 600 miles from the explored portion of the Murchison, and 360 +miles from the sources of the same. Copies of his diary and map had been +forwarded to Mr. Forrest by Mr. Goyder on the 27th of February, 1874, the +originals of which had been ready for publication on his arrival on the +telegraph line, and had not been compiled after their return to Adelaide, +as some people supposed from the delay in their publication. He made +these statements partly in self-defence, as remarks had been made by +members in the House to the effect that the Government had fitted out an +expedition at an enormous expense which had done comparatively nothing, +though his map showed 50,000 square miles of country. + +Sir John Morphett had been asked to propose the toast of The Australian +Colonies. It was a very large toast indeed at the present time even, and +what it might be in the future it was impossible to say. He hoped that it +would be something wonderful. (Cheers.) At the present time the immense +country was occupied by 2,000,000 people, and we could not with that +number get on. What we wanted was more population. What were the products +which Australia could produce? First of all was wheat--the best in the +world. Then there were wine and wool, and lead, and gold, and copper, +tin, and sugar. These were all products that the world wanted, and all +that we required to make our production of these a success was +federation. We should have greater individual strength and prosperity, +and greater universal strength and prosperity if we were federated, and +we would in time become what we wanted to be--a nation. (Cheers.) Let +them come to West Australia, which was the birth-place of their esteemed +and energetic friend Mr. Forrest. He was glad to see that she had at last +freed herself from the shackles of that curse of convictism, and could +now go hand in hand with the other colonies in the march of progress. He +gave them the toast of the Colonies of Australia, coupling with it the +name of Mr. Ernest Giles. + +The toast having been duly honoured, Mr. Ernest Giles rose to respond, +and was met with cheers. He had been called upon to respond to this +toast, which, as Sir John Morphett had told them, was a very +comprehensive one--so comprehensive that he was sure that he would fail +to do it justice. What he had to say therefore on the subject would not +detain them long. Sir John Morphett had touched upon the progress and +prosperity of the colonies, and there was no doubt that at the present +time the colonies were in a far more prosperous state than they had ever +been in before. With regard to federation, a gentleman high in the +service here, speaking to him, had said that if that was carried out +exploration should not be forgotten, but that fresh lines should be taken +with the co-operation of all the colonies. The splendid success which had +attended Mr. Forrest would, he had no doubt, tend greatly to promote the +ultimate prosperity of the colonies. (Applause.) + +Mr. John Forrest, in a few complimentary words, proposed the health of +the Chairman, which was well received and acknowledged. + +VISIT TO GAWLER AND MELBOURNE. + +A few days afterwards I was honoured by an invitation from Gawler to lay +the first stone of a monument to commemorate the achievements of the late +Mr. John McKinlay, the leader of the Burke Relief Expedition, and the +explorer, under great difficulties, of the northern territory. Mr. +McKinlay died at Gawler in December, 1874, and it was resolved to +perpetuate his memory by the erection of an obelisk in the cemetery. The +14th of November was the day appointed for the ceremony, and after I had +laid the stone with the customary forms, there was a luncheon, presided +over by Mr. W.F. Wincey, the Mayor of Gawler. He delivered a really +eloquent address, describing the character and heroic labours of the +distinguished explorer, whose achievements we were celebrating. My own +health and that of my brother was proposed, and in responding (my brother +not being present) I once more took occasion to express the deep sense, +on the part of all my associates, of the kindness with which we had been +received. + +After this my brother and I paid a flying visit to Melbourne, where we +remained a few days, and received much attention from the Governor, Sir +George Bowen, the Mayor of Melbourne, and others; and then, on the 5th of +December, we bade farewell to our South Australian friends and started on +our homeward voyage. On the 10th we reached King George's Sound, where we +were heartily welcomed and presented with a congratulatory address. At +Banbury and Fremantle we were received with kindness and enthusiastic +demonstrations. At Banbury we met Mr. Weld. He was on his way to King +George's Sound, en route for his new Government in Tasmania. He welcomed +us very heartily, and expressed his regret that he was unable to receive +us at Perth. The popular air, When Johnny comes marching home again, was +selected as extremely appropriate to the occasion, and after a champagne +breakfast at the residence of the Chairman of the Municipal Council, Mr. +Marmion, at Fremantle, we left for Perth in a carriage and six, Tommy +Windich and Tommy Pierre riding on gaily-decked horses immediately behind +us. + +On reaching Perth we were met by the Commandant, Colonel Harvest, the +chairman and members of the Reception Committee, and representatives of +the Friendly Societies. The streets were crowded, and on our way to the +Town Hall we were enthusiastically cheered. Mr. Randell, the Chairman of +the Perth Municipality, read an address of welcome. I need not repeat +what I said in reply; my words were but the expression of what has been +felt ever since our perilous journey was completed--thankfulness that I +had been preserved and strengthened to do my duty, and that I had been so +well supported by brave and faithful companions. But I will quote the +characteristic speech of Tommy Pierre, who returned thanks on behalf of +the party--Windich was called on, but could not summon courage to say a +word. Tommy said, "Well, gentlemen, I am very thankful to come back to +Swan River, and Banbury, Fremantle, and Perth. I thought we was never to +get back. (Laughter.) Many a time I go into camp in the morning, going +through desert place, and swear and curse and say, 'Master, where the +deuce are you going to take us?' I say to him, 'I'll give you a pound to +take us back.' (Cheers and laughter.) Master say, 'Hush! what are you +talking about? I will take you all right through to Adelaide;' and I +always obey him. Gentlemen, I am thankful to you that I am in the Town +Hall. That's all I got to say." (Cheers.) + +No doubt we all shared Tommy's thankfulness, and I am sure his homely +language very fairly expressed the spirit in which all my associates had +shown their confidence in me during our long journey. + +A banquet and ball were given in the Town Hall. Mr. Randell presided at +the former, supported by the Bishop of Perth; Sir Archibald P. Burt, the +Chief Justice; the Honourable the Commandant; Mr. L.S. Leake, Speaker of +the Legislative Council; the Honourable A. O'Grady Lefroy, Colonial +Treasurer, and other gentlemen of high position. The newspapers published +the following report of the principal speeches delivered:-- + +The Chairman gave His Excellency the Governor, whose unavoidable absence +he, in common with every one present, deeply regretted, knowing full well +the deep interest his Excellency had always evinced in connexion with +exploration, and especially in connexion with the expedition so +successfully carried through by their guests that evening. + +The toast was drunk amid loud cheering. + +The Chairman next gave The Army, Navy, and Volunteers, which was duly +honoured. + +The Honourable the Commandant, in responding for the Army and the Navy, +heartily thanked the assembly for the loyal manner in which the toast had +been received. The toast of the British Army and Navy, always appropriate +at a banquet where Britons were assembled, was particularly appropriate +on the present occasion, gathered together as they were to do honour to +valour. (Cheers.) It was needless for him to state that--all knew +it--British soldiers, well equipped, properly provided in every way, and +properly led, would go anywhere, and face any mortal thing; and so, it +appeared, would West Australians, true sons of Great Britain. The other +day, at the presentation of the address given to Mr. Forrest by the +citizens of Perth, he (the Commandant), alluding to the young explorer's +gallant and truly heroic services in the field of exploration, had said +that, were he a soldier, the distinguished feat he had accomplished would +have entitled him to be decorated with the soldier's most honourable mark +of distinction--the Victoria Cross. (Cheers.) Now he had no desire to +accord Mr. Forrest the least particle of credit beyond what he honestly +believed he was entitled to, but he meant to say this--that Mr. Forrest +had displayed all the noblest characteristics of a British soldier under +circumstances by no means as favourable for arousing a spirit of +intrepidity, and for stimulating bravery, as was in operation on a +battle-field, amidst the all-powerful excitement of an engagement with +the enemy, urged on to deeds of valour by the examples of comrades. Who +or what had Mr. Forrest and his little band of followers to cheer them +on; to urge them forward on their perilous and dreary enterprise? What +surrounding circumstances encouraged them to face unknown dangers? He +should think that many a wearisome day and night in crossing the arid, +trackless desert-path he was traversing, he would, on laying down his +head to rest, say, "Would for bedtime in Perth, and all well!" Nothing +daunted, however, by perils, privations, and difficulties, he carried his +enterprise successfully through; and although there were no Victoria +Crosses for distinguished services of that nature, there, nevertheless, +was an order of merit for rewarding exploits such as Mr. Forrest had +performed, and he most heartily and sincerely trusted that the decoration +of honour conferred upon the gallant Warburton would be likewise +conferred on Mr. Forrest. (Applause.) + +Captain Birch briefly responded on behalf of the Volunteers. + +The Chairman then said the pleasing duty devolved upon him to propose the +toast which was in reality the toast of the evening, and to ask them to +drink with him The Health and Prosperity of Mr. John Forrest and his +Party. (Cheers.) Nine months ago, within a day, they had undertaken a +perilous journey across an unknown country, to accomplish what was +believed by many to be an impossible task on account of the terrible +nature of that country. What dangers, what difficulties, what privations +they had suffered in carrying out their daring enterprise, and what the +result of their arduous labours had been, was already known to most if +not all of those now present, a succinct chronicle of their journey +having been published in the South Australian and in the local +newspapers. To-night they were amongst them safe and sound, having been +saved by Almighty Providence from dangers which they could not have +contended with, and surmounted difficulties which but for such Divine +help must have been insuperable. All honour to them; all honour to the +brave men who had assisted to achieve such a victory, of which even Mr. +Forrest and his companions might well be proud, and the advantages of +which he felt that we could not yet fully appreciate. (Cheers.) The +Honourable the Commandant had spoken so ably of their victory that little +remained for him to add. He, however, ventured to differ from the gallant +Commandant on one point, namely, that, when compassed on all sides by +difficulties, far from aid, succour, or assistance of any kind, Mr. +Forrest must have wished himself back in Perth, all well. He (Mr. +Randell) did not believe that such a thought ever entered Mr. Forrest's +head, fully determined as he was to cross the continent, or perish in the +attempt. He was sure that not even the golden reward offered by Tommy +Pierre, for turning back, exerted any influence on his gallant leader's +mind; on the contrary, they found him quietly rebuking Tommy's failing +courage with a "hush" and a promise to take him right through to +Adelaide. Mr. Forrest's courage never failed him on the way, nor had they +any reason to believe that the courage of any member of his party had +really failed in the face of the terrible difficulties they had +encountered, and, by God's help, surmounted. (Applause.) They all had +read of the Olympic games of the ancient Greeks, and the kindred sports +indulged in by the Romans of old. Their athletic contests being conducted +in the presence of immense crowds of spectators naturally stimulated the +athletes to distinguish themselves; the applause of their fellow-citizens +urged them on to strive with might and main to win the crown of laurel or +ivy leaves with which the brow of the victor was decked. He well +remembered an incident recorded in Grecian history, where two brothers +had been engaged in an athletic contest and been victorious. When they +came forth to receive the crown which rewarded their victory, their aged +father--who himself, in his younger days, had been an athlete--was +present, and the sons placed their crown on his venerable head. He was +sorry that the father of the young heroes whom they were then +entertaining was not present to witness the reward freely bestowed upon +his sons by their fellow-countrymen. (Cheers.) Our South Australian +neighbours, in their magnificent reception of Mr. Forrest and his party, +had given us a good example of how to appreciate and reward noble deeds, +and it must be pleasing to every Western Australian to reflect on the +cordiality of that reception. (Applause.) He thought the colony would be +neglecting its duty if it did not, as one man, recognize the extreme +kindness which had been shown our gallant explorers by the people and by +the Government of our sister colony--South Australia. (Cheers.) It was a +pleasing trait in Mr. Forrest's character that he had not been at all +spoilt by the enthusiastic and really splendid ovation he and his party +had received at the hands of our southern neighbours; nothing could be +more admirable than his unaffected modesty and unassuming deportment in +the face of such a reception. The life of a lion did not spoil their +young hero, nor, as the Inquirer had said that morning, did he think it +would suit him long; for however tempting it might be to some people to +live upon laurels well earned, such men as Mr. Forrest had no difficulty +in overcoming the temptation to ease and repose, however deserving and +indisputable his claims thereto. (Cheers.) He believed with the Inquirer +that it was Mr. Forrest's natural instinct to lead a hard life in the +cause of exploration. He belonged--not by birth it was true, but through +his parents--to a country that had produced such men as Mungo Park; +Bruce, who explored the sources of the Nile; and Campbell, who, labouring +in the same cause, traversed the wilds of Africa; and that greatest and +noblest of all explorers, the dead but immortal Livingstone. (Cheers.) +Mr. Forrest's achievements had entitled his name to stand side by side in +the page of history with men of that stamp and others who had placed the +human family under such great obligations by their undaunted and +self-denying efforts in the cause of exploration. (Cheers.) It would not +perhaps be right on his part to refer to the pecuniary reward which the +Legislature had voted as an honorarium to Mr. Forrest and his party, but +he would say this much--and he believed every one in the colony would be +in accord with him--that the public would not have grumbled, on the +contrary, would have been glad if the grant had been 1000 pounds and not +500 pounds. (Hear, hear.) He did not think for a moment that the +Legislative Council thought that 500 pounds was the measure of the value +of Mr. Forrest's services; they were rather influenced by the extent of +the public revenue and the ability of the country to pay a larger amount; +nevertheless, he would have been pleased, and the public would have been +pleased, had the vote been more commensurate with the value of those +services. (Cheers.) In asking the present assembly to join him in +drinking the toast of Mr. Forrest's health and that of his party, he +considered it was as if he moved a vote of thanks on behalf of the colony +for the labours in which they had been associated, for the honour they +had conferred on their country, and he would ask them to join him in +heartily drinking the toast. (Cheers.) + +The toast was received with several rounds of cheering. + +The Commandant rose in explanation, and said he never for a moment meant +to infer that in the midst of his greatest difficulties Mr. Forrest ever +thought of giving up his task. What he said was that he must have often, +in lying down his head after a wearisome day's journey, wished himself at +home in Perth all well, with his enterprise accomplished, but not +otherwise (cheers). He did not believe that Mr. Forrest ever winced at +danger, ever swerved from the path he had laid out for himself to +traverse. + +Mr. John Forrest, on rising, was received with applause, which rose to +ringing cheers. Upon the subsiding of the applause, Mr. Forrest said, +"Mr. Chairman and gentlemen, I feel that I ought to say a great deal on +this occasion, but I really hardly know what to say. I can, of course, +say that I sincerely thank you for your kindness in inviting myself and +companions to this great banquet, and when I say that, I trust you will +give me credit for saying what I feel in my heart of hearts. But I feel I +have much more than this to say this evening, knowing as I do that I +would disappoint you if I did not address you at some length. I will +endeavour to muster the words and the courage to do so; as you know, +public speaking is not my forte, and if I fail in satisfying your +expectations, you must accept the will for the deed (cheers). When I had +the honour of being entertained at a public banquet at Adelaide, I had a +good deal to say there of my career up to the present; but here I need +not say a word about my antecedents, for most of you have known me from +my childhood (cheers). For the last few years you all know I have had +some little to do with exploration, and for me to tell you anything of my +past experience would be simply waste of time and waste of words. You +will, however, expect me to say something of our latest enterprise. I had +been for some time animated by a desire to explore the untrodden interior +of our island continent. I had, as you know, been twice before in the +field; once in an eastward direction, and once along the south sea-board +to Adelaide--the latter, I was told, being considered a very small +undertaking, quite a coasting trip, and one on account of which we could +not lay claim to much credit. I therefore was desirous of penetrating the +mystery that shrouded the interior, and, with that object in view, I used +my utmost endeavours to organize an expedition in that direction. Without +the support and co-operation of one who I am sorry not to see here this +evening, he having quitted the metropolis--his Excellency Governor +Weld--my endeavours, I may safely say, would not have resulted in the +organization of the expedition I had at heart, and I should not have been +here to-night, occupying the proud position which I do. (Cheers.) My +proposition to his Excellency, through the Commissioner of Crown Lands, +was warmly received, and cordially espoused by the Executive. Any one can +see it on application, together with his Excellency's minute, which was +very complimentary to me. The proposition was carried through the +Legislative Council, and a small sum of money was voted for the +expedition, without which it could not probably have been organized and +fitted out. I am happy to say that our trip is not likely to cost much +more than the amount voted (400 pounds). Possibly the expense may reach +600 pounds or so; if it does, I have no doubt the Legislature will +willingly vote the extra amount. (Hear, hear.) If it does not, of course +we keep to the original proposition, and we shall only ask for the 400 +pounds. I am quite prepared to abide by the original arrangement; but I +think that every man in the colony is satisfied that the expedition was +conducted at the least possible expense, and that we all tried to do our +very best. (Cheers.) I scarcely think it is necessary for me to enter +into any details of our journey; I have already given the most salient +points in my published telegraphic despatch to the Government. We +experienced some difficulties, no doubt, and some few privations, but I +can assure you none of us ever thought of turning back. (Cheers.) On one +occasion, I admit, the thought did enter my head that, possibly, we might +have to turn back, but I did not tell any member of the party a word +about it. The thought haunted me at night, and I could not sleep; and had +we to carry it into execution we should have probably found ourselves +coming out somewhere near Victoria Plains, and it struck me that I should +be greeted with such expressions as "Well, old man, I am glad to see you +back, but I am sorry you could not get through." I knew people would be +glad to see us back, but their satisfaction at our safe return would be +alloyed with regret at our failure to get right across; so I said to +myself, "I never can face that; I must try again," and try again we did, +and you know the result. (Cheers.) I candidly tell you that the thought +struck me that if we were baffled in our efforts to penetrate through, it +might be all the better for this colony, inasmuch as there would be a +saving of expense thereby, although the credit due to me would be +considerably diminished. But I did not care so much for that. When, +however, I reached the settled portions of South Australia, I was very +anxious to get right through to the telegraph line, just to show our +neighbours that we could get across. From the date of our arrival at +Peake Station, you know how cordially we were received throughout the +rest of our journey, and with what kindness we were treated. Probably all +of you have read of our enthusiastic reception at Adelaide. I never saw +so many people in my life before, nor such a demonstration. They say +there were 20,000 persons present. I thought there were 100,000 present. +(Laughter.) As for my brother, he seemed enchanted with the sight, and +especially with the ladies. He has said he thought they were all looking +at him. On the contrary, gentlemen, I thought they were all looking at +me. (Laughter.) Every one we came in contact with, both high and low, +treated us most kindly. The same again in Melbourne. (Cheers.) Now, I +must say a word or two about my first impressions on visiting Melbourne. +The first object of interest that caught my attention was the splendid +monument erected to the memory of the gallant explorers, Burke and Wills. +Baron von Mueller kindly met me on the jetty when we landed, and I +accompanied him in a cab to have an interview with the Governor. When we +came in sight of this monument I asked the Baron to stop while I alighted +to inspect it. He courteously did so. Gentlemen, a thrilling feeling came +over me on looking on that memorial of two brave men who sacrificed their +lives in the cause of exploration. The monument represents poor Burke +standing over Wills, who is kneeling down. The first relief represents +the party leaving Melbourne, and the popular demonstration accorded them; +in the next place the return from Carpentaria is depicted, and the +discovery of a depot where some provisions had been deposited. There is +King in the act of holding a candle, Burke reading a letter, and Wills's +head is peering over his shoulder. Further on there is a relief +representing the death of the brave leader with his revolver grasped in +his hand. On the other side there is Howitt and his party finding King, +the sole survivor of Burke's party, among a number of black fellows, with +whom he had been living for several weeks--the black fellows looking +aghast at the relief party. Several times afterwards, during my stay in +Melbourne, I went to look at this monument, and it always sent a thrill +through my very soul. (Cheers.) Gentlemen, in conclusion, I must again +express my gratitude for the kind manner in which you have received me +and the members of my party back amongst you. My only consolation, in the +face of the ovations I have received, is that we all tried to do our very +best. (Cheers.) As to the vote of the Legislature, alluded to by your +chairman, while I thank him heartily for his liberal spirit, I assure you +I am very well satisfied indeed. (Applause.) When I started on the +expedition I never expected one farthing of honorarium from the public +funds; but though I am modest I am not altogether unselfish, and I did +expect what I think every Briton expects from his countrymen when he does +his best--but what he does not always get--the thanks of my +fellow-colonists. (Cheers.) That I HAVE received most abundantly, and I +am quite satisfied with it, and so I think are all the members of my +party. We are also quite content with, and thankful for, the provision +made for us by the Legislative Council. I don't know whether I shall +again appear before you as an explorer, or whether I shall rest on my +laurels, as the Inquirer said to-day. I can only say that if my services +are required I shall be found ready and willing. (Cheers.) In the toast +you have so enthusiastically drank my companions are very properly +associated with myself, for I am much indebted to them for their hearty +co-operation. They always endeavoured to do what I desired, and the most +friendly feelings existed amongst us throughout the journey. (Cheers.) I +never withheld from them any information as to our whereabouts or our +movements; the maps, route, and the observations taken during the +expedition were always open for their inspection, so that they could see +our exact position from day to day. I had no secrets from them (hear, +hear), and this confidence was reciprocated on their part. I never had +occasion to check or to use an angry word to one of my party. They one +and all always showed readiness and willingness to obey my +instructions--in fact, I seldom had any occasion to instruct them; and I +gladly avail myself of this opportunity to thank them publicly for their +exemplary conduct. (Cheers.) On their behalf, as well as on my own +behalf, I once more also thank you most sincerely for the honour you have +done us and the kindness you have shown us. I hope that our future career +will show that we are not altogether unworthy of that kindness." (Loud +cheers.) + +Tommy Pierre, one of the aboriginals attached to the expedition, then +stepped forward, and, addressing the assembly, said: I only black fellow, +you know; nothing at all but just a few words. I ought to give you good +lecture. (Laughter.) Well, gentlemen, I am very thankful that I got into +the city of Perth; that people give me welcome and everything. I am +always thankful to any person that brought me into city of Perth. +(Laughter.) When I speak so of city of Perth I don't speak wrong at all, +what I speak is true and true. Well, gentlemen, I am very thankful to the +people in Perth at the Town Hall; I am very thankful to every one that +welcome me. I am always very glad to see white fellows around me. In +Bunbury, Governor Weld spoke to me and say he left me a present in city +of Perth, and I hope I will get it too. (Cheers and laughter.) Governor +Weld is a splendid fellow; splendid governor. Well, gentlemen, I am all +thankful; my last word is--I am thankful to you all. (Cheers.) + +Mr. Randell: In consequence of the absence of the Surveyor-General--from +what cause I am unable to state--his lordship Bishop Hale has kindly +consented to propose the next toast. (Cheers.) + +His Lordship, on rising, was received most cordially. He said that the +toast which had just been entrusted to him was one that would have been +better proposed by the Surveyor-General. The sentiment was Australian +Exploration. It so happened that ever since he had arrived in Australia +he had been very much interested in exploration, and much mixed up with +persons engaged in that work. He had known the veteran explorer Sturt, +the discoverer of South Australia; and he had also been acquainted with +his brave companion, John McDouall Stuart, who had marked out the route +subsequently followed by the trans-continental telegraph line from +Adelaide to Port Darwin, for, wonderful to say, no better route could +afterwards be discovered; the map of Stuart's journey and the map of the +telegraph line were almost identical. With regard to Mr. Forrest's +exploratory labours, referred to with unaffected and characteristic +modesty by the young explorer himself, his lordship believed that great +and practical results would follow, and that, even as Stuart's track from +south to north of the continent had become the line of communication +between those two extreme points, so would the path traversed by Mr. +Forrest become, some day or other, the line of communication through the +central portion of the continent from West to South Australia. (Cheers.) +With respect to the necessity for exploration, no doubt it was a very +essential work to be carried out. Whenever he had gone to distant and +sequestered parts of the colony in the exercise of his ecclesiastical +functions, and was called upon to console people so situated as to be cut +off from the blessings of regular ministration, he was in the habit of +saying to them, "Although you are at present cut off, yet you may believe +that God in His providence has designed that His world shall be +inhabited, and ordained that pioneers shall go forth into desert places +in order to accomplish that end." Explorers, therefore, like Mr. Forrest, +might well feel that in devoting themselves to the work of exploration +they were doing their duty to God and to their country in seeking to +discover new fields, likely to be of practical use as new settlements for +the ever-increasing human family. Their efforts in that direction, often +purchased with much suffering and privation, entitled explorers to be +classed in the front rank of benefactors to mankind. (Applause.) The +population of the world was continuously increasing, and new settlements +became a necessity. In London alone it was said there was a birth every +five minutes. What, then, must be the population of the British empire if +the increase in one city was at that rate? It was but due to Mr. Forrest +and to all such explorers that they should receive the thanks of their +fellow-men for devoting their lives to so desirable a work as the +discovery of new country, fitted for the habitation of civilized men. +(Applause.) He would not trespass any further on the patience of the +assembly: he was present in order to join in that general feeling of +admiration which Mr. Forrest's exploit had evoked. Cooler courage and +greater heroism could not be displayed under any circumstances than were +displayed by his young friend on his right, circumstanced as he had been +on divers occasions during his journey, with his life and the lives of +his brave companions frequently in imminent peril. (Cheers.) Mr. Forrest +had just told them that he did not think it necessary to enter into the +details of that journey, inasmuch as the most important particulars +connected therewith had already appeared in his telegraphic despatch to +the Government, published in the local newspapers. That telegram was +certainly one of the most explicit and distinct records of the kind that +his lordship had ever perused. He had paid but a moderate degree of +attention to it, but had experienced no difficulty whatever in pricking +out Mr. Forrest's track on a map, and in forming a distinct conception of +his journey. (Cheers.) It only remained for his lordship to ask them to +join him in drinking the sentiment of Australian Exploration, and at the +same time to drink the health of Mr. Alexander Forrest, whose name was +coupled with it. (Cheers.) + +The toast was enthusiastically honoured, the band playing The Song of +Australia. + +Mr. A. Forrest, on rising, was received with applause. He was +indistinctly heard at the reporter's table, owing to the distance which +separated him from it, and the constant hum of conversation, which by +this time was becoming general. He was understood to express the proud +satisfaction he felt at being present that evening, and more especially +as his name had been associated with the toast of Australian Exploration. +The sentiment was a wide one, and they need not suppose that he was going +to enter into the history of all Australian explorations that had taken +place. He was sure that time would not admit of his making even cursory +remarks upon these events. Mr. Forrest then alluded to the exploratory +labours of Stuart--perhaps the greatest of Australian explorers--of +McKinlay, of Burke and Wills, of Captain Roe, and the Gregorys, and of +the veteran Warburton. The hospitality shown by this colony to the +last-named gallant explorer had produced a lasting feeling of gratitude +throughout South Australia. The manner in which our southern neighbours +spoke of the kind treatment extended by the inhabitants of this colony to +that aged explorer, from the day he reached our north-west settlements to +the hour he embarked on board steamer for Adelaide, reflected honourably +upon the hospitable nature of West Australian people. Mr. Elder, one of +the enterprising gentlemen at whose expense the expedition was organized +and equipped, had told him (Mr. Forrest) that he never heard of such +kindness. The South Australians, however, were not long before an +opportunity was afforded them of returning that hospitality, and they +certainly had not neglected the opportunity. Than the treatment which the +party to which he had the honour of belonging had received at the hands +of the people of South Australia nothing could be kinder--nothing could +possibly be more hospitable. Every house was thrown open to them; their +horses were fed free of charge; it did not cost them a single penny in +travelling; everywhere they were met with the most cordial reception. +Their triumphal entry into Adelaide was a demonstration worthy of a +prince. (Cheers.) Having thanked his fellow-colonists for the very hearty +reception accorded them on their return, Mr. Forrest spoke in very +complimentary terms of the other members of the expedition. The two +natives were first-rate fellows, and, as for Sweeney and Kennedy, he +would never wish to have better companions in the bush. They were always +for going ahead; no thought of turning back ever entered their heads; in +their greatest privations not a murmur escaped their lips. (Loud cheers.) + +Mr. L.S. Leake said: "The toast I have to propose is South Australia and +the Sister Colonies--a sentiment which I think might most appropriately +have immediately followed on the speech of my noble friend, Mr. John +Forrest, who by his remarks paved the way to the few words I have to say. +Why South Australia should be placed before the other colonies on this +occasion it is not difficult to conjecture. She has, above all others, +gained our affection by her kind and hospitable treatment of our +fellow-colonists, our respected guests this evening who were received in +Adelaide with even greater honour than the son of our beloved Queen. +(Cheers.) With reference to Mr. Forrest himself, Western Australia should +be proud of having produced such a man; and I only wish I had arrived in +the colony four years and a half earlier, so that I might lay claim to +having been born here. Many of those around me are natives of Western +Australia; and although I am proud of Old England, my native country, I +should have been glad to boast of having been born in the same colony as +John Forrest. All of his fellow-colonists should be proud that Mr. +Forrest has accomplished a feat which the whole civilized world must +admire. (Cheers.) I did think that the Surveyor-General would have +considered it worthy of his coming here to-night to join us in doing +honour to Mr. Forrest, and that he would have introduced you to a +gentleman connected with the Government of Victoria, now in this +colony--Mr. Wardell, the Inspector-General of Public Works, for whose +services we are under deep obligation. I believe him to be an excellent +engineer, and in examining our harbour at Fremantle he will be the right +man in the right place. Had he, however, been in his right place +to-night, he would have been here amongst us, introduced by the +Surveyor-General, and we should thus have an opportunity of publicly +thanking the Victorian Government for granting us the benefit of his +services. (Hear, hear.) But, though Victoria is not represented at this +festive gathering, South Australia is, and that by a gentleman whose name +it affords me great pleasure to connect with the toast which has been +entrusted to me. This colony was established in the year 1829, and in +1830 there arrived amongst us one of our pioneer settlers, a good, +worthy, honest--I cannot say English, but Scotch--gentleman, Mr. Walter +Boyd Andrews, than whom a more upright man never landed on our shores. He +is represented here to night by his eldest son, with whom I spent the +greater portion of my younger days, and who for the last ten years has +been Registrar-General of the colony of South Australia. I have, +therefore, much pleasure in associating his name with the toast which I +now ask you to join me in drinking, Prosperity to South Australia and the +Sister Colonies." (Cheers.) + +The toast was drunk with loud cheering, the band playing Pull, pull +together. + +Mr. Andrews, in response, said: "Mr. Chairman and gentlemen, I rise at +once to return thanks, because I always fancy that words spoken on the +spur of the moment come from the very heart. I will first of all dispose +of myself, having been taken completely by surprise in finding my name +associated with the sentiment proposed by my old friend, Mr. Leake. I +thank you most heartily for the honour you have done me, and the kind +manner in which you have responded to the toast. As regards South +Australia and the Sister Colonies, you have done South Australia the +proud honour of giving her precedence over her sisters of the group, +thereby showing, as Mr. Leake has said, the warmth of your affection +towards her, which kindly feeling, I sincerely believe, is reciprocated +on her part. The cordial reception accorded to your gallant explorers is +an earnest of that feeling, and I think I may venture to say that the +colony which I have the honour to serve will at all times extend a hearty +welcome to any West Australian colonist. There is, I assure you, a very +affectionate feeling entertained by South Australians towards this +colony--a feeling that has been in existence for a long time, and which +is growing deeper and deeper every day. She is not only willing to extend +the right hand of friendship to you, but, as you know, has expressed her +readiness to meet you half way across the desert that separates you from +each other by means of the telegraph. (Cheers.) She does not feel jealous +that you should receive telegraphic intelligence from the outside world +earlier than she does; on the contrary, she is anxious that you should be +placed in the same advantageous position as regards telegraphic +communication as your other sisters are. (Applause.) Gentlemen, on her +behalf, and on my own behalf, I thank you most heartily for the kind +manner in which this toast has been received." + + + +RESULTS OF THE EXPLORATIONS. + +Since then, in the summer of 1875, I have visited Europe and received +many proofs of the interest felt by Englishmen in Australian exploration. +In the colonies, too, I find that the spirit of adventure which +stimulates settlers to follow eagerly in the steps of the pioneer has +been active. Already stations are being advanced on each side along the +shores of the Great Bight, and a telegraph line is being constructed from +King George's Sound to Adelaide, along my route of 1870, which will +connect Western Australia with the telegraph systems of the world. +Farther north, towards the head waters of the Murchison, advances have +been made, and I and other explorers must feel a gratification, which +gives ample reward for all our toil, in knowing that we have made some +advance at least towards a more complete knowledge of the interior of +vast and wonderful Australia. + + +APPENDIX TO JOURNAL. + +1. + +DESCRIPTION OF THE PLANTS, ETC., COLLECTED ON EXPEDITION; + +SHOWING ALSO THE LOCALITY FROM WHICH THEY WERE TAKEN: + +BY BARON VON MUELLER, C.M.G., ETC. + +CAMP 21. +Latitude 25 degrees 57 minutes 32 seconds South; longitude 117 degrees 20 +minutes East:-- +Cassia desolata. Trichodesma Zeilonicum. Stylobasium spatulatum. Psoralea +Cucantha. Scaevola spiniscens. Sida petrophila. Codonocarpus +cotinifolius. Adriana tomentosa. Salsola Kali. + +CAMP 31. +Latitude 26 degrees 8 minutes 31 seconds South; longitude 119 degrees 18 +minutes East:-- +Acacia aneura. Oeschynomene Indica. Eremophila longifola. Cassia Sturtii. +Plectronia latifolia. + +CAMP 33. +Latitude 26 degrees 13 minutes South; longitude 119 degrees 32 minutes +East:-- +Santalum Preissianum. Plectronia latifolia. + +CAMP 36. +Latitude 26 degrees 17 minutes 12 seconds South; longitude 119 degrees 53 +minutes East:-- +Brachychiton Gregorii. Dodonaea petiolaris. Cassia artemisioides. +Eremophila latifolia. Hakea lorea. Acacia aneura. Eremophila longifolia. + +CAMP 40. +Latitude 25 degrees 38 minutes 44 seconds South; longitude 120 degrees 38 +minutes East:-- +Cassia eremophila. Eremophila longifolia. + +CAMP 46. +Latitude 25 degrees 0 minutes 46 seconds South; longitude 121 degrees 22 +minutes East:-- +Stemodia viscosa. Eremophila longifolia. Sida petrophila. Adriana +tomentosa. Convolvulus erubescens. Cassia Sturtii. Hakea lorea. + +Camp 48. +Latitude 25 degrees 22 minutes 50 seconds South; longitude 121 degrees 57 +minutes East:-- +Acacia aneura. Eremophila longifolia. Cassia eremophila. Cassia desolata. +Eremophila Brownii. Loranthus Exocarpi. + +CAMP 52. +Latitude 25 degrees 41 minutes 23 seconds South; longitude 122 degrees 53 +minutes East:-- +Pappophorum commune. Cassia eremophila. Acacia salicina. Santalum +lanceolatum. Senecio lantus. Eremophila Duttoni. Ptilotus alopecuroides. +Brunonia Australis. Hakea lorea. Cassia eremophila. Eremophila +longifolia. + +CAMP 59. +Latitude 25 degrees 43 minutes 8 seconds South; longitude 124 degrees 10 +minutes East:-- +Cassia notabilis. Cassia artemisioides. + +CAMP 61. +Latitude 25 degrees 53 minutes 23 seconds South; longitude 124 degrees 31 +minutes East:-- +Eremophila Latrobei. Dodonaea petiolaris. + +CAMP 62. +Latitude 26 degrees 5 minutes 10 seconds South; longitude 124 degrees 46 +minutes East:-- +Crotalaria Cunninghami. Indigofera brevidens. Sida petrophila. Acacia +salicina. Dodonaea petriolaris. Condonocarpus cotinifolius. Cassia +Sturtii. Cassia artemisioides. Kochia Brownii. Eremophila longifolia. +Loranthus Exocarpi. + +CAMP 70. +Latitude 25 degrees 54 minutes 53 seconds South; longitude 126 degrees 48 +minutes East:-- +Hakea lorea. Cassia desolata. Eremophila longifolia. Abutilon Fraseri. +Acacia salicina. Cassia platypoda. Ficus platypoda (the native fig). + +CAMP 71. +Latitude 26 degrees 1 minute South; longitude 127 degrees 7 minutes East. +Crotolaria Cunninghami. Indigofera brevidens. Cassia Eremophila. +Trichodesma Zeilanicum. Cassia artemisioides. + +CAMP 72. +Latitude 26 degrees 2 minutes South; longitude 127 degrees 22 minutes +East. +Abutilon Fraseri. Trichodesma Zeilanicum. Acacia salicina. + + +CAMP 78. +Latitude 26 degrees 15 minutes 10 seconds South; longitude 122 degrees 9 +minutes East:-- +Gossypium Sturtii. Hibiscus Farragei. Pterocaulon Sphacelatus. Salsola +Kali. Condonocarpus cotinifolius. Heliotropium undulatum. Scaevola +spiniscens. Stylobasium spatulatum. Adriana tomentosa. Tecoma Australis. +Ficus platypoda. Trichodesma Zeilanicum. Sida virgata. Dodonaea viscosa. +Helichrysum apiculatum. Jasminum lineare. Adriana tomentosa. Indigofera +Australis. Petalostylis labicheoides. Scaevola Aemula. Pterocaulon +Sphacelatus. Santalum Preissianum. Festuca (Triodia) irritans. + +The Santalum Preissianum, the so-called native peach, with edible fruit, +is found generally on the whole route. + +The Spinifex so often mentioned is the Festuca (Triodia) irritans, the +Spinifex of the Desert Explorers, but not of Science. + +Latitude 25 degrees 46 minutes South; longitude 118 degrees East:-- +Marsdenia Leichardti, the climber with edible pods and milky sap, the +seeds with a downy top, called by the natives Carcular. + +Latitude 26 degrees 4 minutes South; longitude 129 degrees 50 minutes +East:-- +The Casuarina Decaisneana, the Shea-oak or Desert Oak peculiar to Central +Australia. + + +APPENDIX 2. + +REPORT FROM R. BROUGH SMYTH, ESQUIRE, + +SECRETARY FOR MINES OF VICTORIA, + +ON THE GEOLOGICAL SPECIMENS COLLECTED ON THE EXPEDITION. + +COLUMN 1: POSITION OF LOCALITY WHERE THE SPECIMEN WAS COLLECTED. +COLUMN 2: REMARKS BY MR. JOHN FORREST ON THE SPECIMENS FORWARDED. +COLUMN 3: MR. R. BROUGH SMYTH'S REPORT ON SPECIMENS. + +Latitude 26 degrees South, Longitude 117 degrees 20 minutes East : Taken +from Mount Hale on the Murchison River. This formation extends to +longitude 120 degrees East, and is very magnetic, also very heavy. There +must be a great deal of iron in it. The hills are very high, and the echo +very remarkable. I have seen the same kinds of hills in latitude 29 +degrees, longitude 120 degrees. Bare granite rocks sometimes in the +vicinity, though not attached. (May 4th.) : Two small specimens of +Micaceous Iron-ore with brown Haematite. Impossible to state the age. +Similar ore occurs in Victoria, in Elvans in Porphyry, but it also occurs +in Tertiary rocks. + +Latitude 26 degrees 17 minutes South, Longitude 119 degrees 54 minutes +East : The water shed of the Murchison, after crossing which we entered +the Triodia desert. Found oozing out of rock in the water-shed of the +Murchison. : Brown Haematite, decomposing to yellow. (Tertiary.) +Bituminous material. Mr. Cosmo Newbery reports that it is probably the +result of the decomposition of the excrement of bats. It contains +fragments of the wing cases of insects, and gives reactions similar to +the bituminous mineral or substance found in Victoria. + +Latitude 25 degrees 14 minutes South, Longitude 121 degrees East : Peaks +rising out of sandy Triodia desert. (May 29th.) : 5, Quartz; 6, +Chalcedony; 7, Quartz; 8, Silky Shale (Silurian); 9, very Micaceous +Schist (Silurian). + +Latitude 25 degrees 40 minutes South, Longitude 120 degrees 35 minutes +East : Found in the Frere Ranges. : 10, Ferruginous rock (Tertiary); 11, +portion of a seam or joint of a rock; 12, very fine soft purple slightly +micaceous rock (Silurian); 13, white micaceous slaty sandstone +(Silurian). + +Latitude 25 degrees 39 minutes South, Longitude 120 degrees 40 minutes +East : This rock was broken off the face of the side of a bank of brook. +It is rather soft, and would split; it is all in layers. I cut my +initials in it with a chisel. : Purple brown slate (Silurian). + +Latitude 25 degrees 40 minutes South, Longitude 122 degrees 20 minutes +East, Mount Moore : Many ranges and some grassy country running from +longitude 122 to longitude 124 degrees, generally composed of this +description of rock. : 15, Rough quartzite (conglomeritic) Tertiary; 16, +rough quartzite with white band, brown and purple (Tertiary). + +Latitude 25 degrees 32 minutes South, Longitude 124 degrees 17 minutes +East : Taken from rough range rising out of gently undulating desert. +(July 5th.) : White flinty rock; consists in the main of Silica, with +Magnesia and Alumina; it also contains water and traces of the Alkalies. +It is probably derived from the decomposition of granite. The "rough +ranges" are perhaps granitic. + +Latitude 26 degrees 6 minutes South, Longitude 124 degrees 46 minutes +East : From a low table hill (Alexander Spring). : Translucent greenish +quartz. Impossible to state the probable age. + +Latitude 26 degrees 2 minutes South, Longitude 125 degrees 27 minutes +East : This sandstone is the usual rock found in all the country from +longitude 122 degrees to 126 degrees 30 minutes. In it are receptacles +for water, and all the rising ground is composed of it. Very often one +side of the rise forms a cliff. Where this is taken from there is a long +line of cliffs with many creeks running from them, and low cliff-hills +all about. : Light red sandstone (desert sandstone, Tertiary). + +Latitude 26 degrees South, Longitude 126 degrees 30 minutes East : From +the farthest ranges westward from telegraph line; good grassy country in +flats. The dark piece from a salt gully. (August 8th.) : 20, Silico +felspathic rock impregnated with Micaceous iron (probably from a dyke); +21, 22, green schist (Silurian). + +Latitude 26 degrees 12 minutes South, Longitude 128 degrees East : In the +Cavanagh Ranges. Many ranges. (August 17th.) : Greenstone (Diabase ?). + +Latitude 26 degrees 18 minutes South, Longitude 129 degrees 9 minutes +East : Tomkinson Ranges. Many ranges running East and West, and grassy +flats between them. (August 26th.) Mount Jane. : Aphanite. + + +NOTE BY THE EDITOR. + +The publication of the preceding Journal affords an appropriate occasion +for inviting attention to the remarkable progress of Western Australia +within the last few years. Mr. John Forrest is proud to acknowledge +himself as belonging to that colony--indeed native-born--and his +fellow-colonists have invariably supported and encouraged his +explorations. Belonging to the public service, he has recognized as his +main object the discovery of new and good country with the view of +extending colonization, while within his ideas of duty there has been a +steadfast regard for those objects which promote the welfare of young +settlements. It has long been observed that Western Australia requires to +be thoroughly understood in its great capacities for carrying a large +population. There are vast resources yet to be developed, and what has +been accomplished in sheep and cattle stations, in copper and lead +mining, in wine-growing, in pearl fisheries, besides other important +operations, prove that the country has scarcely been tapped, and will be +sure to reward those who have the enterprise and industry to become +settlers. It is only necessary to substantiate these statements by +official documents, and, in the hope that this volume will do good +service to Western Australia, the following papers are reprinted. + + +GOVERNOR WELD'S REPORT TO THE EARL OF CARNARVON. + +Government House, Perth, + +September 30, 1874. + +MY LORD, + +It has appeared to me that your lordship may think it desirable that, +before I leave, I should, so far as the limits of a despatch may enable +me to do so, place before you the present state of this colony, review +the progress it has made within the last five years, and indicate its +future prospects. + +2. When I was appointed to the Government of Western Australia I was +aware that from various causes the colony had made but little progress; +and on my arrival in September, 1869, I found chronic despondency and +discontent, heightened by failure of the wheat crop, by the prospect of +the gradual reduction of convict expenditure and labour on which the +settlers had been accustomed to depend, by the refusal of the Home +Government to continue to send out free immigrants, and by that vague +dread of being thrown on their own resources so natural to men who have +been accustomed to take no part in their own affairs, and who have +consequently learned to rely entirely upon the Government, and not at all +upon themselves. One healthy symptom there was, and that was a desire, +not very strong perhaps, or even generally founded upon a just +appreciation of the past, or political foresight of the future; but still +a very wide-spread desire, and to many a reasonable and intelligent +desire, for a form of representative institutions which might give the +colonists some real voice in the management of their own affairs. + +3. At the earliest possible moment I commenced work by travelling over as +much as possible of the settled and partially settled districts of the +colony; an old colonist bushman and explorer myself, travelling on +horseback and camping out were but natural to me, and I wished to judge +for myself of the capabilities of the colony; and before I had been six +months in the country I had ridden considerably over two thousand miles, +some part of the distance unfortunately, owing to an accident, with a +fractured rib and other injuries. I had made acquaintance with settlers +of all classes, and was able to form an opinion so accurate, both of the +people and of the country I have since had to deal with, and of their +capabilities, that I have never altered that opinion, nor have my many +subsequent journeys done more than supplement the knowledge I then +gained. + +4. My first political aim was to promote local self-government in local +affairs by establishing or giving real power to road boards and +municipalities (a policy I afterwards carried into effect with school +boards also); and, so soon as I had obtained the sanction of her +Majesty's Government, I introduced that modified form of representative +institutions provided by 13 and 14 Vic., chap. 59, and then passed the +Municipal Acts I have mentioned above. This policy has fulfilled not only +my expectations but my hopes, and should the Council that is about to +meet wish to take the ultimate step of entering into complete +self-government by adopting the responsible system, the preparation +afforded by the last five years will admittedly be of the greatest value. + +5. It fell to me to carry into effect the ecclesiastical policy indicated +by Lord Granville in a despatch, Number 80, of July 10, 1869, held over +for my arrival, in which his lordship suggested that grants (regard being +had to the number in the community of each denomination) should be equal +in substance and alike in form, and asked if there were any difficulties +in applying to Western Australia "that principle of religious equality +which had long been recognized in the Australian Colonies." Lord +Kimberley, in an enclosure to his despatch, Number 78, of December 19, +1870, expressed similar views. To this on March 1, 1871, in my despatch, +Number 37, I was enabled to reply that I had already carried the policy +recommended into practice, that the grants had been equalized by +"levelling up," that the vote for the Church of England was "now handed +over to the Bishop of Perth, the Government reserving the right to +satisfy itself that it is applied to those purposes of religious +ministration and instruction for which it is voted, and that all vested +interests are maintained intact and claims on the Government respected." +Since then I have supported such measures as were thought desirable to +promote self-organization, and I have moreover made liberal grants of +land for glebes, churches, schools, and institutions to the various +religious bodies in proportion to their numbers. I have reason to know +that on all sides satisfaction is felt at the position in which I shall +leave ecclesiastical affairs so far as the action of Government may +effect them. + +6. The elementary educational question, on my arrival, was a source of +much contention and ill-feeling, which came prominently into play, when +in the second session of 1871 I caused a Bill, drafted by myself, and the +general provisions of which I was subsequently informed were "entirely +approved of" by your lordship's predecessor, to be introduced into the +Legislature, and carried it--not, however, quite in its original form. +Though the alterations are unquestionably defects, and may somewhat mar +its success, it has hitherto worked very well, and has proved itself not +only effective but economical: it has received praise from its former +opponents and from the most opposite quarters, and old bitternesses are +now (I hope for ever) things of the past. + +7. I have not failed to give the utmost support in my power--a support +unfortunately much needed in a colony like this--to the Chief Justice, +and it has been a great gratification to me that, on my recommendation, +the long and valuable services of Sir Archibald Paull Burt have been +recognized by her Majesty, and that he has received the honour of +knighthood--a rank which none of her Majesty's servants will more fitly +adorn. I have suggested to the Legislature that a small increase of +salary should be given to uphold the dignity of the Supreme Court; and +the question, to which I have already drawn the attention of the +Legislature, of the appointment of two Puisne Judges and constitution of +a Court of Appeal ought to be taken into consideration at no distant +period. One new resident magistracy has been established in a district +where it was very much needed, and two Local Courts have been +constituted. There is some difficulty in finding a sufficiency of fit +persons for the commission of the peace who are willing to exert +themselves, and the pay of the resident magistrates is in too many cases +insufficient to enable them properly to support their position as +representatives of the Government in their districts. + +8. In the Military Department I have enabled successive commandments to +make reductions in the enrolled Pensioner Force. By withdrawing the guard +from Rottnest Island, and by concurring in the reductions at +out-stations, a very considerable saving has thus been effected. I have +given all the encouragement in my power to the Volunteer movement, and I +may confidently state that the Volunteer Force was never before in so +good a state, either so far as regards numbers or efficiency. To this +result the efforts of successive commandants and liberality of the +Legislature have mainly contributed. + +9. It has been for me to preside over the latter stages of the existence +of the Imperial convict establishment in Western Australia, as a large +and important department; henceforth it will be confined in narrow +limits, and I may state with confidence that the great reductions and +concentrations that it has been my duty to effect have not been attended +with those disastrous effects to the colony that were so confidently +predicted, and also that although the residue of convicts are, many of +them, men of the doubly reconvicted class and long-sentence men, +discipline is well kept, serious prison offences are rare, the health of +the men is excellent, whilst severe punishments are seldom needful. I +here beg leave to make favourable mention of Mr. W.R. Fauntleroy, Acting +Comptroller-General of Convicts, who has proved himself to be my most +valuable officer. + +10. Much remains to be done in the Survey and Lands Department. When Mr. +Fraser in December, 1870, took charge of the department, the greatest +economy was needed to make the revenue of the colony meet the +expenditure, and consequently it was necessary to reduce and lay upon our +oars; Mr. Fraser reorganized his department, putting it on a new system, +letting out work by contract instead of keeping up a large permanent +staff, and thereby effected a considerable annual saving; at the same +time he has been steadily working, as time and means have permitted, +towards certain definite objects, namely, in the direction of a +trigonometrical survey, by fixing points, by making sketch and +reconnaissance surveys of new and important districts, and by accurately +fixing by survey main lines of road: this will give a connexion to the +records in the Survey Office which has been hitherto wanting, and will +contribute to enable him to construct that great desideratum--a large and +accurate map of Western Australia, so far as it is settled or partially +settled. I concur with Mr. Fraser in thinking that, so soon as means will +admit, a considerably increased annual expenditure should be devoted to +surveys. + +11. The joint survey of the coast will also aid in this work. The +Admiralty, in assenting to my proposal to undertake a joint coast survey, +which has been placed under a highly meritorious officer, Navigating +Lieutenant Archdeacon, R.N., have conferred a great benefit on this +colony, and promoted the interests of British commerce and navigation, +much valuable work having already been done. + +12. In close connexion with the Survey and Lands Department is the topic +of exploration. So soon as possible after my first arrival, I took upon +myself to send Mr. John Forrest overland to Adelaide, along the shores of +the Great Bight, nearly on the line of Mr. Eyre's route in 1841. I did +this before the introduction of representative government, and it is +right to say that I knew that I could not have got a vote for it. I felt +that this was the last act of an expiring autocratic regime, and I +believe it was one of the least popular of my acts; but certainly no +small sum of public money has been expended with greater results--for, as +I hoped, Mr. Forrest's expedition has bridged the gap that separated West +Australia from the other colonies, has led to settlement on the shores of +the Great Bight, and to the connexion of this colony with the rest of the +world by electric telegraph. I never doubted of the future of West +Australia from the day when the news of Mr. Forrest's success reached +Perth. Since then more interest has been taken in exploration. A second +expedition was sent out to the eastward under Mr. Alexander Forrest in +1871, with the support of the Legislature and some of the settlers, and +at present under the same auspices Mr. John Forrest is again exploring to +the northward and eastward. His route will be guided by circumstances, +but it is not improbable that he may aim for the Central Australian +telegraph line, and I am already anxiously expecting tidings of him. + +13. In 1870, with a vote I obtained from the Council, I engaged Mr. Henry +Y. Brown as Government Geologist. His geological sketch map and his +researches, which he pushed in one instance far into the interior, have +been of the greatest value; and it was with much regret that in 1872, +owing to the disinclination evinced in the Legislature in the then +straitened circumstances of the colony to expend money on a scientific +department, that I was obliged to forego my desire of making it a +permanent part of the establishment. + +14. As Colonel Warburton's journey from the Central South Australian +telegraph line to our north-west coast was set on foot and its expenses +defrayed by private colonists of South Australia, I only allude to it to +acknowledge the obligation that this colony lies under to those +public-spirited gentlemen and to the gallant leader and his followers. +Parties headed by Mr. Gosse, by Mr. Giles, and by Mr. Ross have all +within the last two years penetrated from the eastern colonies to within +the boundary of our unexplored territory, but, beyond a certain extension +of geographical knowledge, without effecting any material results. + +15. Under the head of Survey and Lands Department, it will be proper to +glance at the alterations in the Land and Mineral Regulations, which have +offered increased inducements and facilities for cultivation and +occupation, and which have considerably promoted mining enterprise. Gold +Mining Regulations have been also prepared and are ready for issue, +should occasion, as is likely, render them requisite. I willingly +acknowledge the assistance I have received from Mr. M. Fraser, the +Surveyor-General and Commissioner of Crown Lands, who has had much +experience in New Zealand, for the services he has rendered in all these +matters. + +16. The mineral riches of this colony are very great. I have never +doubted but that they would ultimately become a main source of its +advancement. All the different kinds of auriferous quartz known in other +colonies are found abundantly in various parts of this--the question of +payable gold is, as I have long since reported, simply a question of +time. After many efforts, I at last, in 1873, obtained a vote for +prospecting, and the results are most promising, the fact of the +existence of rich auriferous quartz being now established. We shall +immediately be in a position to crush specimen consignments of quartz by +a Government steam-crusher, and I doubt not but that, if followed up, the +results will be most important. But gold is not the only nor perhaps the +most important of the minerals possessed by West Australia. The colony is +extraordinarily rich in lead, silver, copper, iron, plumbago, and many +other minerals are found in various localities, and indications of coal +and petroleum are not wanting--what IS wanting, is energy and enterprise +to develop these riches, and that energy and enterprise is being +attracted chiefly from Victoria, first by means of concessions that I was +enabled to make, and now by the reports of the new comers to their +friends. I made a small concession to a smelting company: and another, +and also an iron mining company, is in the field. + +17. When on my arrival I turned around me to see what was to be looked +for to supply the place of Imperial expenditure, only second to our +minerals, our forests attracted my attention. They could not fail to do +so, because just before I came there was an outcry for the development of +this industry by Government aid. With Lord Granville's assent I made +liberal concessions, and thereby induced a pioneer company, shortly +followed by others from Victoria, to embark capital in the enterprise. +The public ardour here had, however, cooled, and an ignorant cry was +raised against foreigners, and the prospects of the trade were +systematically decried. Several causes besides this militated against it, +but it is surmounting them, and at the present moment not only are the +companies largely employing labour and expending money, but their own +success is becoming an established fact, and the export is enormously +increasing, and with good management must continue to increase +indefinitely. Whilst on this subject I may allude to the question of the +preservation of our forests, but as I am treating it more fully in a +separate despatch I will only say that this and the kindred question of +planting ought, at no distant period, to occupy the attention of our +Legislature. + +18. The pearl shell and pearl fishery may be said to have sprung into +existence within the last few years. It employs a fleet of cutters and +schooners, chiefly of small size, on the north-west coast, Port Cossack +being the head-quarters. At Sharks Bay also there are a number of smaller +boats. A licence fee on boats and a tax on shells has been imposed by the +Legislature; laws for the protection of aboriginal divers and Malays have +been enacted. I shall immediately have a Government cutter on the +north-west coast for police and customs purposes, which will also be +useful in cases of shipwreck amongst the islands and inlets, and in +searching for and reporting the position of reefs, of anchorages, and of +new banks of pearl oysters. It will probably hereafter become advisable +to let areas for pearling under certain regulations as in Ceylon, but +this could not well be done with our present means and knowledge. + +19. To turn now to the more settled industries, first in importance is +that of agriculture. It is chiefly in the hands of men of little capital, +and is carried on in a very slovenly way by the greater part of them. Bad +seasons, an over-great reliance on cereals, which have for several +successive years been seriously affected by the red rust, and a neglect +of other products suitable to the soil and climate, added in too many +cases to careless and intemperate habits, have until lately rendered the +position of many of the small farmers a very precarious one. Last year, +however, was more favourable, and they to a great extent recovered +themselves. The lesson of the past has not been altogether lost; they +have also been much assisted by the new Land Regulations, and a few +prosperous seasons will, I sincerely trust, put this class, which ought +to be a mainstay of the colony, into a really prosperous condition. + +20. The cultivation of the vine is a profitable pursuit, and the quantity +of land fitted for that purpose is very great; both soil and climate are +eminently favourable to the growth of the grape. Recent legislation has +given some encouragement to wine-growers by facilitating the sale of +home-grown pure wine. The quantity of land laid down in vineyards is +slightly increased, but the class of settlers that are most numerous in +Western Australia do not readily take to industries that are new to them, +however profitable they may be, nor can they afford to wait for returns, +nor have many of them the knowledge necessary to make good wine: still +this industry will become one of the most important in the colony. + +21. The pastoral interest is the pioneer interest of a new colony. +Western Australia has been somewhat less favoured than some other parts +of Australia in its pastoral lands, but it has, nevertheless, a good deal +of very good pastoral country, and under the extremely liberal +concessions lately offered to those who will devote capital to the +eradication of poison plants much more may be made available, whilst +fresh country is being largely occupied inland. + +The progress, however, of the pastoral interest, considering the age of +the colony, though latterly great, is not SO great as might have been +expected; the comparatively good prices obtainable and anticipated for +meat have kept down the increase of stock, and consequently the yield of +wool; and as yet very little or nothing has been done to supplement +natural resources by growing artificial grasses and fodder plants. No +country presents greater capabilities for horse breeding, and cattle do +exceeding well and are very profitable. + +22. The sandal-wood trade is in a flourishing condition, and has brought +money into the colony, and enabled many of the poorer classes to obtain a +livelihood by cutting that aromatic wood for export. It is, however, +doubted by some whether the labour employed in this trade does not +withdraw many from more steady and permanently useful labour on their +farms and small holdings. + +23. In the matter of minor industries, sericulture holds a first rank. I +look to it in the future as a source of employment for paupers on the +hands of the Government, and also for women and children. I have taken +much interest in this pursuit, and have caused a mulberry plantation to +be made and plants distributed, and have published much information on +the subject. The Report of the Chamber of Commerce of Como (Italy), +alluded to in my despatch, Number 61, of 20th May, 1873, conclusively +shows that this colony is remarkably well adapted for the cultivation of +silk. The cultivation of the olive and the castor-oil plant are +industries for which this soil and climate are extraordinarily well +adapted. Tobacco, hops, and dried and preserved fruits might largely add +to the riches of the colony. In great part at my own expense, I have +introduced and distributed hop plants and various kinds of fruits of +great utility, and have, in fact, in the absence of any botanic garden +(in which I have vainly endeavoured to get the settlers to take an active +interest), made my own garden a kind of nursery for acclimatization and +distribution of useful and ornamental plants, and I have also given a +small concession for the cultivation of the cocoa-nut on the north-west +coast, where, in the absence of vegetables, it would be invaluable. And, +thanks to the Government of the Mauritius, I have been able to introduce +various kinds of sugar-cane, for which part of this territory is well +adapted. The growth of coffee has been also attempted on a Government +plantation, but without success. Cotton had already been proved to thrive +admirably, and to be excellent in quality, but is not considered likely +to pay without cheap labour. I may here note that, with an eye to the +future, I have made reserves for the purposes of public parks and +recreation grounds in several places. + +Deer, Angora goats, hares, and trout have been also introduced. + +24. I will now proceed to another branch of my subject--public works and +undertakings; and first in the category of public works and undertakings +I put those which relate to communications, and under that subdivision +immeasurably the most important are such means of communication as, by +terminating the isolation which has been the great bar to the advancement +of this colony, may make it a living part of the system of life and +progress which has been growing and prospering around it. + +On this end was my mind set when I was appointed to the Governorship, to +this end have I worked steadily ever since, and this end is partially +accomplished, and its complete fulfilment is not distant. + +The vote for the construction of the telegraph line via Eucla to South +Australia, passed last session, and the proposal of Messrs. Siemens +Brothers regarding a submarine cable to Madras, fitly close an +administration which found Western Australia within twelve miles, and has +already placed her in possession of a complete telegraphic system, +consisting of about nine hundred miles of wire, worked at a remarkably +small cost, in efficient order, already remunerative, and affording the +greatest advantages both to the public service and to private business. +It is noteworthy that four or five years ago there was a strong feeling +that the construction of telegraph lines was a waste of public money, and +only a few months ago a prominent member of the Legislature publicly +objected to the line which is to connect this colony with the rest of the +world, that it would only benefit a few individuals! Such ideas, however, +are rapidly becoming obsolete even in Western Australia. + +I will here note that, under a power given me by law to fix and alter +rates, I, in January, 1873, reduced the charges to a uniform rate of one +shilling per ten words, and one penny for each additional word (press +messages at quarter price), and was the first to do so in the Australian +colonies. + +25. After much and persistent opposition, the Legislature was at length +induced to vote a subsidy for steam on the coast, connecting our western +ports and all this part of the colony with Albany, King George's Sound, +the port of call of the Royal mail steamers from Europe and the eastern +colonies. This has done much to throw open this colony, rendering access +to it no longer difficult and uncertain, and greatly facilitating +intercommunication. A very Chinese objection to steam communication has +been publicly made by the same gentleman to whose opinion on telegraphic +communication I have already alluded; namely, that it enabled people to +LEAVE the colony. I am, on the contrary, of opinion that it is certainly +conducing to progress and the promotion of commerce. + +The steamer we have at present is, however, insufficient, but I doubt not +but that a second and more powerful boat will shortly be procured, as it +is already required: I understand, however, that no West Australian +capital is as yet forthcoming for the purpose, nor for steam +communication with India, than which nothing could be more important, as +it would render available the magnificent geographical position of the +colony, and open a market close at hand for its products. I have long ago +and frequently stated my willingness to give all possible Government +support to such an undertaking. + +26. I am immediately about, by invitation, to proceed to Champion Bay, +and to cut the first sod of the first West Australian railway, on the +Geraldton and Northampton line. I have already fully indicated the +advantage that there is good reason to anticipate will result from the +opening of that line, which will, I do not hesitate to say, be the parent +of future and greater undertakings. + +When the colony arrives at a position safely to borrow a million or a +million and a quarter, a railway from Fremantle and Perth, probably up +the Helena valley, into the York district, and thence down the country +eastward of the present Sound road, to the fine harbour of King George's +Sound, would do more than anything else to give an outlet to the +resources of the country and supply its wants; such a line would +ultimately be extended through the eastern districts and Victoria plains +northward to the Irwin, Greenough, and Geraldton. + +But I will recall myself from these and other speculations of the yet +more distant future, and look back upon the modest past. Two tramways +with locomotives now bring timber to the coast from the Jarrah forests, +and there are also two other tramways for the same purpose, of less +extent, but still of some importance. I have made concessions to the +companies constructing them. + +27. With regard to ordinary roads, I can very confidently say that, +considering the extent of the country and its scattered population, no +colony that I have ever seen is in a better position regarding roads. +Occasionally, owing to the loss of convict labour, the scarcity of free +labour, the disinclination of the people to tax themselves locally, and +the great extent of the roads themselves, parts of the roads already made +fall out of repair whilst other parts are being formed; but on the whole, +having perhaps traversed more of Western Australia than any one man in +the colony, I very confidently assert that, taking all in all throughout +the country, the roads are in a better condition than they have ever been +before. Large bridges have been constructed over the Upper Swan, Moore +River, Blackwood, Capel, and Preston, besides twelve smaller bridges, and +a large one completed at the Upper Canning. + +28. Bushing the Geraldton sand-hills has been a very useful and +successful work; the experiment was first tried by Lieutenant-Colonel +Bruce. Part of the work has been done by convict labour, and part by +farmers and settlers in payment for a loan advanced to them for +seed-wheat before my arrival. It is not too much to say that this work +has saved the town of Geraldton and its harbour from destruction by sand. + +29. A little has been done in the way of improving the Swan River +navigation by means of a dredge imported by Governor Hampton, and worked +by prison labour and by an appropriation in the Loan Act of 1872. A work +has also been constructed, from funds provided out of the same loan, at +Mandurah, by which the entrance to the Murray River has been improved. + +30. Harbour improvements have occupied much of the attention of +Government. A fine and substantial open-piled jetty at Fremantle, seven +hundred and fifty feet long, has been constructed, and answers all the +purposes for which it was designed; but the larger and extremely +difficult question of the construction of a really safe harbour at or +near Fremantle is yet undecided. Various plans have been proposed, and +great pressure has been put on the Government to commence works hastily +and without engineering advice. At one time one scheme has found favour, +and another at another, and the merits of the rival schemes of our +amateurs have been popularly judged upon the principle of opposing most +strongly anything that was supposed to find favour with the Government. +Last session a strong wish to do SOMETHING caused the Legislature to +advocate a scheme which many persons think would cause the mouth of the +River Swan to silt up, and expose the town of Fremantle to danger, lest +the river in flood should burst out (as no doubt it did formerly) into +the South Bay over the town site. The question, however, is referred to +the Victorian Government engineer, and the Melbourne Government have been +asked to allow him to visit this colony, but I fear that the people will +not accept his decision; and unless the members of the new Legislature +will agree to do so, or, in the event of his not coming, do what I have +long since recommended, namely, ask your Lordship to refer the whole +question to the decision of Sir John Coode, or some other great +authority, and undertake beforehand to abide by it, I see no chance of +anything being carried into effect until the warmth and personal feeling +which, strangely enough, is always evoked by this question, shall be +succeeded by a more reasonable and business-like mood. One of my first +acts on reaching this colony was, in accordance with the previously +expressed wish of the Council and colonists, to send for an engineer of +high repute to report. His report only raised a tempest of objurgations, +and I must frankly confess failure in my efforts to leave Fremantle with +a harbour; and, indeed, I am far from being convinced that anything under +an enormous outlay will avail to give an anchorage and approaches, safe +in all weathers, for large ships, though I, with the Melbourne engineers, +think that the plan of cutting a ship channel into Freshwater Bay, in the +Swan River, advocated by the Reverend Charles Grenfel Nicholay, is worthy +of consideration. Jetties at Albany, King George's Sound, the Vasse, +Bunbury, and Geraldton, have been lengthened, one at Dongarra +constructed, and money has been voted for the construction of one at Port +Cossack. Moorings have been procured from England, and are being laid +down at Fremantle and other ports. + +31. With respect to public buildings, the Perth Town Hall--a very large +and conspicuous building, commenced by Governor Hampton--was completed +not long after my arrival, and handed over by me to the City Council and +Municipality on June 1, 1870; attached to it I caused the Legislative +Chamber to be built, and so arranged that at no great cost this colony +possesses a council-room more convenient and in better taste than many I +have seen of far greater pretensions. It is, however, proposed hereafter +to build legislative chambers in the new block of Government buildings, +of which the Registration Offices now about to be commenced will form a +wing, for which the contract is 2,502 pounds. The public offices at +Albany were finished shortly after my arrival. I may mention, among a +number of less important buildings, the harbour-master's house, Albany; +school-houses there and in various other places; large addition to +Government Boys' School, Fremantle; court-house and police-station, and +post and telegraphic offices at Greenough and at Dongarra; +police-station, Gingin; addition to court-house, York; post and +telegraphic offices at Guildford, York; and Northam Bonded Store, +Government offices, and police-station, Roebourne. Considerable additions +have been made, which add to the convenience and capabilities of the +Fremantle Lunatic Asylum, and alterations and adaptations and additions +have been made to several other buildings; for instance, at Albany a +resident magistrate's house and also a convenient prison have been formed +at no great outlay. At Perth a building has been erected to which I call +attention, the Government printing-house; this new department has been of +immense service during the four years in which it has been in +existence--in fact, it would have been impossible to have gone on without +it; and the Government printing work is most creditably done at a very +reasonable cost. A handsome stone sea-wall has been commenced by convict +labour at the new jetty at Fremantle, which will reclaim much valuable +land, and greatly improve the appearance of the place. Harbour lights +have been erected at several places. A large lighthouse is in the course +of erection at Point Moore, at Geraldton, which will be of much +importance; and it is proposed, with the co-operation of other colonies, +to erect one near Cape Leeuwin, as recommended at an +intercolonial conference on that subject. + +32. Postal facilities have been increased, several new offices opened, +and postages (under powers vested in me by law) considerably reduced, on +both letters to the colonies and newspapers, from the tariff I found in +force. In this a step in advance of some of our neighbours was taken. + +33. I have reduced several police-stations on the recommendation of +Captain Smith, the superintendent, which appeared to be no longer +necessary; but, on the other hand, I have extended police protection into +outlying districts, both for the benefit of European settlers and of the +aboriginal inhabitants. These latter have gained little and lost much by +the occupation of their country by settlement. I have fought their battle +against cruel wrong and oppression, holding, I trust, the hand of justice +with an even balance, and I rejoice to say not without effect and benefit +to both races. Their services as stockmen, shepherds, and pearlers are +invaluable; and when they die out, as shortly no doubt they will, their +disappearance will be universally acknowledged as a great loss to the +colonists. + +34. The Legislature, I am happy to say, have latterly seconded my efforts +by encouraging industrial institutions for their benefit. Similarly they +have in the last session turned their attention to the condition of the +destitute and criminal children of our own race; and, in my own sphere, I +have done what was possible for the encouragement of the (denominational) +orphanages which have been long established and are in full working +order. This colony is, for its size and means, well supplied with +hospitals, asylums, and establishments for paupers, in which I have taken +great personal interest. + +35. In legislation I have endeavoured to avoid over-legislation and +premature legislation. I have considered that free-trade principles are +especially in place in a colony situated as this is. The ad valorem duty, +and that on wines, spirits, and a few other articles, has been raised for +revenue purposes; some others have been put on the free list. I +successfully resisted the imposition of a duty on flour; I should have +simplified the tariff still further than I have done, and admitted free +many more articles--some of food, others used in our industries--had the +Legislature not objected; the tariff as it stands is inconsistent. The +English bankruptcy system has been introduced, and an Act passed +regarding fraudulent debtors; distillation has been permitted under +proper safeguards; Sunday closing of public-houses has been rendered +compulsory with good effect; a Lunacy Bill on the English model has +become law; the Torrens Land Registration system has been adopted, and +will shortly be put into force. Many equally important measures are +alluded to in their places in the pages of this despatch, and I will not +inflict upon your lordship a list of many minor Acts, some not +unimportant, which have proved beneficial in their degree. + +36. Among lesser but not unimportant matters, I may mention that I have +extended the system of taking security from Government officers in +receipt of public moneys. + +The commencement of a law and parliamentary library has been made. + +37. Immigration from England has, on a small scale, been set on foot +lately, and families are now expected from neighbouring colonies, but our +population from obvious causes has increased but slightly during the last +five years; on my arrival it was said to be actually decreasing, and +there were many reasons why such an opinion was not +unreasonable--reduction of the convict establishment threw some out of +employment, expirees also desired to quit a country which to them had +been a land of bondage, and the prospects of the country were gloomy; now +there is a great want of labour, any that comes is at once absorbed, and +every effort should be made to attract a constant stream of immigrants. + +38. It will be observed that when the whole authorized loan is raised, +the colony will be only in debt to the extent of a little over one year's +income, or 5 pounds 16 shillings 5 1/4 pence a head, whilst Victoria is +indebted 15 pounds 14 shillings 10 3/4 pence, New South Wales 19 pounds 7 +shillings, South Australia 10 pounds 19 shillings 5 pence, Queensland 32 +pounds 12 shillings 7 3/4 pence, Tasmania 14 pounds 3 shillings 6 3/4 +pence, New Zealand 40 pounds 5 shillings 11 pence. I beg also to call +your lordship's attention to the fact that Western Australia has only yet +spent the 35,000 pound loan, and has now only begun to spend that of +100,000 pounds. I also would point out that the last annual increase of +revenue has about equalled the whole capital amount which has been +expended out of loans. + +39. I have caused the following statistics to be furnished me from the +Treasury and Customs Departments for six years, ending on the 30th +September of each year. The first year given, that ending on the 30th +September, 1869, is the year immediately preceding my arrival, I having +been sworn in on that very day. + +TREASURY AND CUSTOMS DEPARTMENTS STATISTICS FOR SIX YEARS TO 1874 IN +POUNDS/SHILLINGS/PENCE. + +COLUMN 1: CATEGORY. +COLUMN 2: 1869. +COLUMN 3: 1870. +COLUMN 4: 1871. +COLUMN 5: 1872. +COLUMN 6: 1873. +COLUMN 7: 1874. + +*Imports : 232,830/0/11 : 232,590/18/8 : 201,070/3/4 : 224,396/10/0 : +253,680/16/2 : 367,417/15/0. + +**Exports : 178,860/15/2 : 204,447/2/2 : 194,934/9/3 : 228,807/12/9 : +278,502/16/0 : 398,900/8/6. + +***Customs duties : 48,157/8/9 : 45,270/14/6 : 43,464/2/3 : 53,556/4/5 : +60,022/1/1 : 82,016/12/0. + +****Revenue : 108,600/1/0 : 109,978/6/3 : 102,128/3/4 : 107,828/5/10 : +120,937/14/8 : 161,443/8/10. + +****Expenditure : 107,213/1/10 : 119,478/8/4 : 112,285/10/7 : +103,205/16/0 : 120,259/11/9 : 131,334/18/5. + +OBSERVATIONS. + +*Ships now expected will greatly swell the items of Imports and Customs. + +**This is exclusive of RE-exported articles, and the valuations are very +moderate. In round numbers, the Exports may be said to be over 400,000 +pounds. + +***Part of the increase of Customs duties is owing to increase of duties +on spirits, wines, and some other items; and ad valorem, on the other +hand, credit should be given for some articles which have been admitted +free. Taking the balance as the amount accruing from increase of duties, +it may be put at 12,000 pounds on the last year. + +****It will be observed that for some time, until better seasons returned +and measures bore fruit, I had to a slight extent to rely on the surplus +found in the chest to make Revenue and Expenditure meet. To have starved +the Expenditure at that time would have been to have damaged the future +progress of the colony, and the Legislative Council opposed several +reductions that I thought might have been effected. + +On the 30th September, 1874, there was a sum of 36,616 pounds 3 shillings +5 pence in the chest, and something like this sum will be at the disposal +of the Legislature at their meeting, beyond current revenue. + +40. I need hardly say that the commercial state of the colony is +admittedly sound, and I am informed in a more prosperous condition than +at any previous period of its existence. Landed property, especially +about Perth, has lately risen immensely in value, and the rise is, I +hope, spreading and will reach the outlying districts. Perth has lost its +dilapidated appearance, and neat cottages and houses are springing up in +all directions, and the same progress to some extent is noticeable in +Fremantle and elsewhere. + +41. I will not conclude this Report without recalling the success which +attended the efforts made by the Government, to which my private +secretary Mr. Henry Weld Blundell largely contributed, to represent the +products of Western Australia at the Sydney Exhibition of 1873. Much of +this success was attributable to the exertions of Mr. F.P. Barlee, +Colonial Secretary, then representing at Sydney this colony in the +intercolonial conference. + +In that conference, the first to which a representative of this colony +was admitted, and which therefore marked an epoch in its political +existence, Mr. F.P. Barlee took a prominent part, ably upheld the trust I +placed in him, and received a most marked and cordial reception from our +colonists on his return. + +41. I have further to express my obligations to that officer for the +assistance he has ever given me; were it not for his fearless and loyal +support, for the confidence which is placed in him by the very great +majority of the colonists, and for his fidelity in following my +instructions and carrying out my policy, it would have been impossible +for me, under a form of government most difficult to work, to have +carried to a successful issue the trust that has been imposed upon me, +and to have left this colony prosperous and self-reliant. + +42. Should your lordship, considering the position in which I found +Western Australia--the reduction of imperial expenditure it has been my +duty to effect, the failure of the wheat crop for four successive seasons +and consequent depression, the inexperience of a new Legislature, the +absence of any propositions for the benefit of the colony from the +opposition, the obstacles thrown at first in the way of all measures +which have eventuated in good--should you, considering these things and +the present state of the colony, be of opinion that the administration of +its affairs during the last five years has not been unsatisfactory or +unfruitful, I beg that you will award a due share of credit to the +Colonial Secretary, who, as my mouthpiece in the Legislature, has carried +on single-handed all parliamentary business, and also to those gentlemen +who are now, or have at various times been, members of my executive, and +who have ever united to support me; to the nominated members of the +Legislature who have steadily voted for all the measures which have led +to the present progress of the colony, and whose merits the +constituencies have fully recognized by electing them as representatives +on vacancies in every case where they have stood; to the elected members, +who every session have given me increased support, and who, forming +two-thirds of the Legislature, had it in their power entirely to have +reversed my policy; and lastly, to the people of Western Australia, who +on each election have increased my strength, on whose ultimate good +sense, I--knowing colonists, myself an old colonist--put my reliance, a +reliance which has not been disappointed. + +I have, etc., + +(Signed) FRED. A. WELD, + +Governor. + +The Earl of Carnarvon, + +etc. etc. etc. + +... + + +STATISTICS IN POUNDS/SHILLINGS/PENCE. + +VALUE OF IMPORTS AND EXPORTS FROM 1861 TO 1873. + +1861 : 147,912 : 95,789. +1862 : 172,991 : 119,313. +1863 : 157,136 : 143,105. +1864 : 169,856 : 132,738. +1865 : 168,413 : 178,487. +1866 : 251,907 : 150,066. +1867 : 204,613 : 174,080. +1868 : 225,614 : 192,636. +1869 : 127,977 : 101,359. +1870 : 213,258 : 200,984. +1871 : 198,011 : 199,288. +1872 : 226,656 : 209,107. +1873 : 297,328 : 265,217. + +VALUE OF IMPORTS AND EXPORTS FOR 1874. + +COLUMN 1: COUNTRIES. +COLUMN 2: IMPORTS. +COLUMN 3: EXPORTS. + +United Kingdom : 188,243/10/8 : 268,726/4/0. + +British Colonies: + Victoria : 75,588/7/0 : 8,038/1/0. + South Australia : 44,021/9/2 : 41,004/11/0. + New South Wales : 1,236/4/9. + New Zealand : 2,065/1/6 : 12,768/6/0. + Mauritius : 23,247/7/4 : 3,435/1/0. + Singapore : 11,346/19/2 : 53,648/16/0. + Ceylon : 1,135/2/0 : 437/0/0. + British India : 20/10/0 : 1,345/0/0. + All other British Possessions : 20/10/0 : 130/3/7. + +Foreign Countries + China : 11,461/18/0 : 36,133/17/0. + Java : 5,646/2/6 : 2,934/19/6. + Timor : 246/14/4. + U.S. of America : 3/15/0 : 101/0/0. + Macassar : - : 118/0/0. + Whaling Ground : - : 16/0/0. + +Total : 364,262/15/0 : 428,836/19/1. + +REVENUE AND EXPENDITURE FROM 1861 TO 1873. + +1861 : 67,261 : 81,087. +1862 : 69,406 : 72,267. +1863 : 71,708 : 71,073. +1864 : 71,910 : 70,714. +1865 : 77,942 : 74,985. +1866 : 89,382 : 84,652. +1867 : 90,430 : 89,501. +1868 : 99,496 : 89,726. +1869 : 103,661 : 103,124. +1870 : 98,131 : 113,046. +1871 : 97,606 : 107,146. +1872 : 105,301 : 98,248. +1873 : 134,832 : 114,270. + +REVENUE AND EXPENDITURE FOR 1874. + +REVENUE. +Customs : 82,275/7/3. +Land Sales : 7,679/2/4. +Land Revenue : 19,806/0/5. +Money Orders : 5,888/12/0. +Telegrams : 1,784/17/8. +Fines, Forfeitures, and Fees of Court : 2,022/13/3. +Reimbursements in aid of expenses incurred : 1,482/12/3. +Special Revenue (North District) : 2,133/12/0. +Miscellaneous Revenues : 11,152/18/11. + +Total Revenue : 134,225/16/1. + +EXPENDITURE. +Civil Establishment : 58,745/9/9. +Miscellaneous Disbursements : 53,111/8/6. +Parliamentary Salaries : 3,910/15/8. +Judicial Establishment : 6,098/18/10. +Customs Establishment : 2,045/1/3. +Police Establishment : 12,923/16/2. +Medical Establishment : 2,377/3/4. +Postal and Telegraph Department : 4,053/13/3. + +Total Expenditure : 143,266/6/8. + + +PUBLIC DEBT : 100,000 pounds. + + +POPULATION OF WESTERN AUSTRALIA. + +1850 : 5,886. +1853 : 9,334. +1856 : 13,391. +1859 : 14,837. +1862 : 17,246. +1865 : 20,260. +1868 : 22,733. +1871 : 25,724. +1874 : 26,209. + + +SUCCESSION OF GOVERNORS OF WESTERN AUSTRALIA. + +NAME AND TITLE. APPOINTMENT. RETIREMENT. +Captain James Stirling, Lieutenant-Governor. June, 1829. September 1832. +Captain Irwin, Acting Lieutenant-Governor. September 1832. September +1833. +Captain Daniell, Acting Lieutenant-Governor. September 1833. May 11, +1834. +Captain Beete, Acting Lieutenant-Governor. May 11, 1834. May 24, 1834. +Sir James Stirling (formerly Captain Stirling), Governor. August 1834. +December 1838. +John Hutt, Esquire, Governor. January 1839. December 1845. +Lieutenant-Colonel Clarke, Governor. February 1846. February 1847. +Lieutenant-Colonel Irwin (formerly Captain Irwin), Governor. February +1847. July 1848. +Captain Charles Fitzgerald, Governor. August 1848. June 1855. +A.E. Kennedy, Esquire, Governor. June, 1855. February 1862. +Lieutenant-Colonel John Bruce, Acting Governor. February 17, 1862. +February 27, 1862. +J.S. Hampton, Esquire, Governor. February 27, 1862. November 1868. +Lieutenant-Colonel John Bruce, Acting Governor. November 1868. September +1869. +F.A. Weld, Esquire, Governor. September 1869. September 1874. +W.C.F. Robinson, Esquire, C.M.G. September 1874. + + +GILBERT AND RIVINGTON, PRINTERS, ST. JOHN'S SQUARE, LONDON. + + + +THE END. + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Explorations in Australia, by John Forrest + +*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EXPLORATIONS IN AUSTRALIA *** + +This file should be named exaus10.txt or exaus10.zip +Corrected EDITIONS of our eBooks get a new NUMBER, exaus11.txt +VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, exaus10a.txt + +Produced by Sue Asscher and Col Choat + +Project Gutenberg eBooks are often created from several printed +editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the US +unless a copyright notice is included. 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FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS*Ver.02/11/02*END* + diff --git a/old/exaus10.zip b/old/exaus10.zip Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..30ff23a --- /dev/null +++ b/old/exaus10.zip diff --git a/old/exaus10h.htm b/old/exaus10h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..a8b55ad --- /dev/null +++ b/old/exaus10h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,9939 @@ +<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"> +<html> +<head> +<title>Explorations in Australia</title> +<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"> +<style type="text/css"> +<!-- +body {background:lightyellow; margin:10%; text-align:justify} +h2,h3,h4,h5,h6 {color:green; text-align:center} +blockquote {font:smaller} +p.poem {text-align:center} +p.external {font:bold} +--> +</style> +</head> +<body> + + +<pre> + +The Project Gutenberg EBook of Explorations in Australia, by John Forrest + +Copyright laws are changing all over the world. 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You can also find out about how to make a +donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved. + + +**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts** + +**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971** + +*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!***** + + +Title: Explorations in Australia + +Author: John Forrest + +Release Date: February, 2006 [EBook #9958] +[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule] +[This file was first posted on November 4, 2003] + +Edition: 10 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EXPLORATIONS IN AUSTRALIA *** + + + + +Produced by Sue Asscher and Col Choat + + + + + +</pre> + + + + +<h3>EXPLORATIONS IN AUSTRALIA:</h3> + +<h4>1. EXPLORATIONS IN SEARCH OF DR. LEICHARDT AND PARTY.</h4> + +<h4>2. FROM PERTH TO ADELAIDE, AROUND THE GREAT AUSTRALIAN BIGHT.</h4> + +<h4>3. FROM CHAMPION BAY, ACROSS THE DESERT TO THE TELEGRAPH AND TO ADELAIDE.</h4> + +<h4>WITH AN APPENDIX ON THE CONDITION OF WESTERN AUSTRALIA.</h4> + +<h3>BY JOHN FORREST, F.R.G.S.</h3> + +<h4>ILLUSTRATIONS BY G.F. ANGAS.</h4> + +<center> +<p><a name="forrest1"></a><img alt="" src="forrest1.jpg"></p> +</center> + +<h5>London:<br> +SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON, LOW, & SEARLE,<br> +CROWN BUILDINGS, 188, FLEET STREET.<br> +1875.</h5> + +<h5>LONDON:<br> +GILBERT AND RIVINGTON, PRINTERS,<br> +ST JOHN'S SQUARE.</h5> + +<p> </p> + +<blockquote>TO HIS EXCELLENCY<br> +FREDERICK ALOYSIUS WELD, ESQ., C.M.G.,<br> +GOVERNOR OF TASMANIA,<br> +LATE GOVERNOR AND COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF of WESTERN AUSTRALIA.<br> + +<p>MY DEAR GOVERNOR WELD,<br> + +<p>It was during your administration of the Government of Western Australia, +and chiefly owing to your zeal and support, that most of the work of +exploration described in this volume was undertaken and carried out. Your +encouragement revived the love of exploration which had almost died out +in our colony before you arrived.<br> + +<p>With gratitude and pleasure I ask you to accept the dedication of this +volume as an expression of my appreciation of your kindness and support.<br> + +<p>Yours very faithfully,<br> + +<p>JOHN FORREST.</blockquote> + +<p> </p> + +<h3>CONTENTS.</h3> + +<p> </p> + +<h4>CHAPTER 1.</h4> + +<blockquote><center>Previous Expeditions into the Interior.<br> +Attempts to Discover a Route between South and Western Australia.<br> +Eyre's Disastrous Journey.<br> +Leichardt, the Lost Explorer.<br> +The Latest Explorations.</center></blockquote> + +<h4>CHAPTER 2.</h4> + +<h5>FIRST EXPEDITION IN SEARCH OF LEICHARDT.</h5> + +<blockquote><center>Statements made by the Natives.<br> +An Expedition Prepared.<br> +Leader Appointed.<br> +Official Instructions.<br> +The Journal.</center></blockquote> + +<h4>CHAPTER 3.</h4> + +<h5>SECOND EXPEDITION. FROM PERTH TO ADELAIDE, ROUND THE GREAT BIGHT.</h5> + +<blockquote><center>A New Exploration suggested.<br> +Proposal to reach Adelaide by way of the South Coast.<br> +The experience derived from Eyre's Expedition.<br> +Survey of Port Eucla.<br> +Official Instructions.<br> +The Start.<br> +Dempster's Station near Esperance Bay.<br> +The Schooner at Port Eucla.<br> +Journal of the Expedition.</center></blockquote> + +<h4>CHAPTER 4.</h4> + +<h5>RECEPTION AT ADELAIDE AND RETURN TO PERTH.</h5> + +<blockquote><center>Departure from Gawler and Arrival at Adelaide.<br> +Appearance of the Party.<br> +Public Entrance.<br> +Complimentary Banquet.<br> +Grant by the Government of Western Australia.</center></blockquote> + +<h4>CHAPTER 5.</h4> + +<h5>THIRD EXPEDITION. FROM THE WEST COAST TO THE TELEGRAPH LINE.</h5> + +<blockquote><center>Proposal to undertake a New Expedition.<br> +Endeavour to Explore the Watershed of the Murchison.<br> +Expeditions by South Australian Explorers.<br> +My Journal.<br> +Fight with the Natives.<br> +Finding traces of Mr. Gosse's Party.<br> +The Telegraph Line reached.<br> +Arrival at Perth Station.</center></blockquote> + +<h4>CHAPTER 6.</h4> + +<h5>PUBLIC RECEPTIONS AT ADELAIDE AND PERTH.</h5> + +<blockquote><center>Procession and Banquet at Adelaide.<br> +Arrival in Western Australia.<br> +Banquet and Ball at Perth.<br> +Results of Exploration.</center></blockquote> + +<h4>APPENDIX.</h4> + +<blockquote><center>Description of Plants, etc.<br> +Report on Geological Specimens.<br> +Note by Editor.<br> +Governor Weld's Report (1874) on Western Australia.<br> +Table of Imports and Exports.<br> +Ditto of Revenue and Expenditure.<br> +Public Debt.<br> +Population.<br> +List of Governors.</center></blockquote> + +<h4>MAPS.</h4> + +<h5><a href="#forrest2">1. General Map of Australia, showing the Three Journeys.</a><br> +2. From Perth to Longitude 123 degrees in Search of Leichardt.<br> +3. From Perth to Adelaide, around the Great Australian Bight.<br> +4. From Champion Bay to Adelaide.</h5> + +<h4>ILLUSTRATIONS.</h4> + +<h5><a href="#forrest1">Portrait of John Forrest.</a><br> +<a href="#forrest3">The Horses Bogged at Lake Barlee.</a><br> +<a href="#forrest4">Portrait of Alexander Forrest.</a><br> +<a href="#forrest5">Arrival at the Great Australian Bight. Fresh Water found.</a><br> +<a href="#forrest6">Public Welcome at Adelaide.</a><br> +<a href="#forrest7">Attacked by the Natives at Weld Springs.</a><br> +<a href="#forrest8">On the March. The Spinifex Desert.</a><br> +<a href="#forrest9">Reaching the Overland Telegraph Line.</a></h5> + +<center> +<p><a name="forrest2"></a><img alt="" src="forrest2.jpg"></p> +<p><b>General Map of Australia, showing the Three Journeys.</b><br> +<a href= "forrest2-full.jpg" target="_blank">[Click here for higher resolution image]</a></p> +</center> + +<h3>EXPLORATIONS IN AUSTRALIA.</h3> + +<h4>CHAPTER 1.</h4> + +<blockquote><center>Previous Expeditions into the Interior.<br> +Attempts to discover a Route between South and Western Australia.<br> +Eyre's Disastrous Journey.<br> +Leichardt, the Lost Explorer.<br> +The Latest Explorations.</center></blockquote> + +<p>As the history of the principal expeditions into the interior of +Australia has been narrated by several able writers, I do not propose to +repeat what has already been so well told. But, to make the narrative of +my own journeys more intelligible, and to explain the motives for making +them, it is necessary that I should briefly sketch the expeditions +undertaken for the purpose of ascertaining the nature of the vast regions +intervening between Western and the other Australian colonies, and +determining the possibility of opening up direct overland communication. + +<p>With energetic, if at times uncertain, steps the adventurous colonists +have advanced from the settlements on the eastern and southern coasts of +the vast island into the interior. Expeditions, led by intrepid +explorers, have forced their way against all but insurmountable +difficulties into the hitherto unknown regions which lie to the north and +west of the eastern colonies. Settlements have been established on the +shores of the Gulf of Carpentaria. Burke and a small party crossed +Australia from south to north, enduring innumerable hardships, Burke, +with two of his associates, perishing on the return journey. About the +same time Stuart crossed farther to the west, reaching the very centre of +Australia, and telegraphic wires now almost exactly follow his line of +route, affording communication, by way of Port Darwin, between Adelaide +and the great telegraphic systems of the world. + +<h5>ATTEMPTS TO CROSS THE DESERT.</h5> + +<p>The telegraph line divides Australia into two portions, nearly equal in +dimensions, but very different in character. To the east are the busy and +rapidly advancing settlements, fertile plains, extensive ranges of grassy +downs, broad rivers, abundant vegetation; to the west a great lone land, +a wilderness interspersed with salt marshes and lakes, barren hills, and +spinifex deserts. It is the Sahara of the south, but a Sahara with few +oases of fertility, beyond which is the thin fringe of scattered +settlements of the colony of Western Australia. To cross this desert, to +discover routes connecting the western territory with South Australia and +the line marked by the telegraph, has been the ambition of later +explorers. Mr. Gregory attempted, from the north, to ascend the Victoria +River, but only reached the upper edge of the great desert. Dr. +Leichardt, who had previously travelled from Moreton Bay, on the eastern +coast, to Port Essington on the northern, attempted to cross from the +eastern to the western shores, and has not since been heard of. Mr. Eyre +made a journey, memorable for the misfortunes which attended it, and the +sufferings he endured, from Adelaide round the head of the great bay, or +Bight of Southern Australia, to Perth, the capital of Western Australia; +and much more recently Colonel Egerton Warburton succeeded in crossing +from the telegraphic line to the western coast across the northern part +of the great wilderness, nearly touching the farthest point reached by +Mr. Gregory. + +<h5>EYRE'S JOURNEY.</h5> + +<p>It was in the year 1840, only four years after the foundation of South +Australia, that the first great attempt to discover a route from Adelaide +to the settlements in Western Australia was made. There then resided in +South Australia a man of great energy and restless activity, Edward John +Eyre, whose name was afterwards known throughout the world in connexion +with the Jamaica outbreak of 1865, and the measures which, as Governor, +he adopted for repressing it. It was anticipated that a profitable trade +between the colonies might be carried on if sheep and other live-stock +could be transferred from one to the other in a mode less expensive than +was afforded by the sea route between Adelaide and the Swan River. Eyre +did not believe in the possibility of establishing a practicable route, +but urged, through the press, the desirability of exploring the vast +regions to the north, which he anticipated would afford a good and +profitable field for adventurous enterprise. He offered to lead an +expedition which should explore the country around the great salt lake +lying to the north-west of the settled portion of the colony, and to +which the name of Lake Torrens had been given. Very little was known of +this lake, and absolutely nothing of the country beyond. The general +supposition, in which Eyre shared, was that there existed a large space +of barren land, most probably the bed of a sea which had at one time +divided the continent into several islands; but it was hoped that no +insuperable difficulties in the way of crossing it would present +themselves, and beyond might be a fertile and valuable district, offering +an almost unbounded field for settlement, and with which permanent +communications might without great difficulty be established. Some +geographers were of opinion that an inland sea might be in existence, +and, if so, of course water communication with the northern half of +Australia could be effected. + +<p>Mr. Eyre's proposition found ready acceptance with the colonists, The +Government granted 100 pounds--a small sum indeed--but the colony was +then young, and far from being in flourishing circumstances. Friends lent +their assistance, enthusiasm was aroused, and in little more than three +weeks from the time when Eyre proposed the expedition, he started on his +journey. Five Europeans accompanied him, and two natives, black boys, +were attached to the party, which was provided with thirteen horses, +forty sheep, and provisions for three months. Lake Torrens was reached, +and then the difficulties of the expedition began. Although dignified +with the name of lake, it proved to be an enormous swamp, without surface +water, and the mud coated with a thin layer of salt. The party struggled +to effect a passage, and penetrated into the slime for six miles, until +they were in imminent danger of sinking. The lake, or rather salt swamp, +presented a barrier which Eyre considered it impossible to overcome. The +party turned in a westerly direction, and reached the sea at Port +Lincoln. Here a little open boat was obtained, and Mr. Scott, Eyre's +courageous companion, undertook to attempt to reach Adelaide and obtain +further supplies. This he successfully accomplished, returning in the +Water Witch with stores and provisions, two more men, and some kangaroo +dogs. Thus reinforced, the party reached Fowler's Bay in the great Bight +of South Australia. The map shows that a journey of more than 200 miles +must have been made before the point was reached. Thence they attempted +to make their way round the head of the Bight, but were twice baffled by +want of water. Nothing daunted, Eyre made a third attempt, and succeeded +in penetrating fifty miles beyond the head of the Bight. But the result +was achieved only at a cost which the little party could ill sustain. +Four of the best horses perished, which deprived Eyre of the means of +carrying provisions, and he had to decide between abandoning the +expedition altogether or still further reducing the number of his +companions. Mr. Scott and three men returned to Adelaide, leaving behind +a man named Baxter, who had long been in Eyre's employ as an overseer or +factotum; the two natives who had first started with him, and a boy, +Wylie, who had before been in Eyre's service, and who had been brought +back in the cutter. + +<p>Six months after Eyre had started from Adelaide, he was left with only +four companions to continue the journey. He had acquired considerable +experience of the privations to be encountered, but refused to comply +with the wishes of Colonel Gawler, the Governor, to abandon the +expedition as hopeless, and return to Adelaide. Indeed, with +characteristic inflexibility--almost approaching to obstinacy--he +resolved to attempt the western route along the shore of the Great +Bight--a journey which, only a few months before, he had himself +described as impracticable. + +<p>The cutter which had been stationed at Fowler Bay, to afford assistance +if required, departed on the 31st of January, 1841, and Eyre and his +small party were left to their fate. He had been defeated in the attempt +to push forward in a northward direction, and he resolved not to return +without having accomplished something which would justify the confidence +of the public in his energy and courageous spirit of adventure. If he +could not reach the north, he would attempt the western route, whatever +might be the result of his enterprise. After resting to recruit the +strength of his party, Eyre resolutely set out, on the 25th of February, +on what proved to be a journey attended by almost unexampled demands upon +human endurance. + +<p>Nine horses, one pony, six sheep, and a provision of flour, tea, and +sugar for nine weeks, formed the slender stores of the little party, +which resolutely set forward to track an unknown path to the west. +Accompanied by one of the blacks, Eyre went on in advance to find water. +For five days, during which time he travelled about 140 miles, no water +was obtained, and the distress endured by men and animals was extreme. It +is not necessary to dwell on every incident of this terrible journey. +Eyre's descriptions, animated by remembrances of past sufferings, possess +a graphic vigour which cannot be successfully emulated. Sometimes it was +found necessary to divide the party, so wretched was the country, and so +difficult was it to obtain sufficient water in even the most limited +supply for man and beast. Once Eyre was alone for six days, with only +three quarts of water, some of which evaporated, and more was spilt. But +his indomitable determination to accomplish the journey on which he had +resolved never failed. He knew that at least 600 miles of desert country +lay between him and the nearest settlement of Western Australia; but even +that prospect, the certain privations, the probable miserable death, did +not daunt him in the journey. The horses broke down from thirst and +fatigue; the pony died; the survivors crawled languidly about, "like +dogs, looking to their masters only for aid." After a few days, during +which no water had been obtainable, a dew fell, and Eyre collected a +little moisture with a sponge, the black boys with pieces of rag. To +their inexpressible joy, some sand-hills were reached, and, after +digging, a supply of water was obtained for their refreshment, and for +six days the party rested by the spot to recruit their strength. The +overseer and one of the natives then went back forty-seven miles to +recover the little store of provisions they had been compelled to +abandon. Two out of the three horses he took with him broke down, and +with great difficulty he succeeded in rejoining Eyre. At this time the +party were 650 miles from their destination, with only three weeks' +provisions, estimated on the most reduced scale. Baxter, the overseer, +wished to attempt to return; but, Eyre being resolute, the overseer +loyally determined to stay with him to the last. One horse was killed for +food; dysentery broke out; the natives deserted them, but came back +starving and penitent, and were permitted to remain with the white men. +Then came the tragedy which makes this narrative so conspicuously +terrible, even in the annals of Australian exploration. Two of the black +men shot the overseer, Baxter, as he slept, and then ran away, perishing, +it is supposed, miserably in the desert. Eyre, when some distance from +the place where poor Baxter rested, looking after the horses, heard the +report of the gun and hurried back, arriving just in time to receive the +pathetic look of farewell from the murdered man, who had served him so +long and so faithfully. + +<p>Wylie, the black boy, who had been with Eyre in Adelaide, now alone +remained, and it is scarcely possible to imagine a more appalling +situation than that in which Eyre then found himself. The murderers had +carried away nearly the whole of the scanty stock of provisions, leaving +only forty pounds of flour, a little tea and sugar, and four gallons of +water. They had also taken the two available guns, and nearly all the +ammunition. The body of Baxter was wrapped in a blanket--they could not +even dig a grave in the barren rock. Left with his sole companion, Eyre +sadly resumed the march, their steps tracked by the two blacks, who +probably meditated further murders; but, with only cowardly instincts, +they dared not approach the intrepid man, who at length outstripped them, +and they were never heard of more. Still no water was found for 150 +miles; then a slight supply, and the two men struggled on, daily becoming +weaker, living on horse-flesh, an occasional kangaroo, and the few fish +that were to be caught--for it must be remembered that at no time were +they far from the coast. + +<p>On the 2nd of June, nearly four months after they had bidden good-bye to +the cutter at Fowler's Bay, they stood on the cliffs, looking out over +the ocean, when they saw in the distance two objects which were soon +recognized as boats, and shortly afterwards, to their unbounded joy, they +discerned the masts of a vessel on the farther side of a small rocky +island. Animated by a new life, Eyre pushed on until he reached a point +whence he succeeded in hailing the ship, and a boat was sent off. The +vessel proved to be a French whaler, the Mississippi, commanded by an +Englishman, Captain Rossiter. The worn-out travellers stayed on board for +a fortnight, experiencing the utmost kindness, and with recruited +strength and food and clothing, they bade a grateful farewell to the +captain and crew, and resumed their journey. + +<p>For twenty-three days more Eyre and his attendant Wylie pursued their +way. Rain fell heavily, and the cold was intense; but at length, on the +27th of July, they reached Albany, in Western Australia, and the journey +was accomplished. + +<p>For more than twelve months Eyre had been engaged forcing his way from +Adelaide to the Western colony; and the incidents of the journey have +been dwelt upon because afterwards I passed over the same ground, though +in the opposite direction, and the records of Eyre's expedition were of +the greatest service to me, by at least enabling me to guard against a +repetition of the terrible sufferings he endured. + +<h5>EXPLORATIONS BY LEICHARDT.</h5> + +<p>It is further necessary to refer to another of the journeys of +exploration which preceded my own--that of the unfortunate Leichardt. He +endeavoured to cross the continent from east to west, starting from +Moreton Bay, Queensland, hoping to reach the Western Australian +settlements. In 1844 Leichardt had succeeded in crossing the +north-western portion of the continent from Moreton Bay to Port +Essington, and he conceived the gigantic project of reaching Western +Australia. Towards the end of 1847, accompanied by eight men, with +provisions estimated at two years' supply, he started on his journey. He +took with him an enormous number of animals--180 sheep, 270 goats, 40 +bullocks, 15 horses, and 13 mules. They must have greatly encumbered his +march, and the difficulty of obtaining food necessarily much impeded his +movements. His original intention was first to steer north, following for +some distance his previous track, and then, as opportunity offered, to +strike westward and make clear across the continent. After disastrous +wanderings for seven months, in the course of which they lost the whole +of their cattle and sheep, the party returned. + +<p>Disappointed, but not discouraged, Leichardt resolved on another attempt +to achieve the task he had set himself. With great difficulty he obtained +some funds; organized a small but ill-provided party, and again started +for the interior. The last ever heard of him was a letter, dated the 3rd +of April, 1848. He was then in the Fitzroy Downs; he wrote in good +spirits, hopefully as to his prospects: "Seeing how much I have been +favoured in my present progress, I am full of hopes that our Almighty +Protector will allow me to bring my darling scheme to a successful +termination." + +<h5>THE FATE OF LEICHARDT.</h5> + +<p>From that day the fate of Leichardt and his companions has been involved +in mystery. He was then on the Cogoon River, in Eastern Australia, at +least 1500 miles from the nearest station on the western side of the +continent. His last letter gives no clue to the track he intended to +pursue. If a westerly course had been struck he would have nearly +traversed the route which subsequently Warburton travelled; but no trace +of him has ever been discovered. Several expeditions were undertaken to +ascertain his fate; at various times expectations were aroused by finding +trees marked L; but Leichardt himself, on previous journeys, had met with +trees so marked, by whom is unknown. Natives found in the remote interior +were questioned; they told vague stories of the murder of white men, but +all investigations resulted in the conclusion that the statements were as +untrustworthy as those generally made to explorers who question +uninformed, ignorant natives. The white man's experience is usually that +a native only partially comprehends the question; he does not understand +what is wanted, but is anxious to please, as he expects something to eat, +and he says what he thinks is most likely to be satisfactory. + +<p>Leichardt was certainly ill-provided for an expedition of the magnitude +he contemplated, and it appears to be at the least as probable that he +succumbed to the hardships he encountered, or was swept away by a flood, +as that he was murdered by the blacks. Twenty-seven years have elapsed +since he disappeared in the interior; yet the mystery attending his fate +has not ceased to excite a desire to know the fate of so daring an +explorer, and ascertain something definite respecting his course--a +desire which was one of the principal motives that prompted my first +expedition into the unknown interior dividing the west from the east. + +<p>In 1872, Mr. Giles headed an exploring party from Melbourne, which +succeeded in making known a vast district hitherto unexplored; but his +progress was stopped, when he had reached longitude 129 degrees 40 +minutes, by a large salt lake, the limits of which could not be +ascertained. In the following year Mr. Gosse, at the head of a party +equipped by the South Australian Government, started from nearly the same +point of the telegraph line, and at the same period as the Warburton +expedition, but was compelled to return after eight months' absence, +having reached longitude 126 degrees 59 minutes. Gosse found the country +generally poor and destitute of water. He was perhaps unfortunate in +experiencing an unusually dry season; but his deliberate conclusion was, +"I do not think a practicable route will ever be found between the lower +part of Western Australia and the telegraph line." + +<h5>VARIOUS EXPEDITIONS.</h5> + +<p>At the instance of Baron Von Mueller, and assisted by a small +subscription from the South Australian Government, Mr. Giles made a +second attempt to penetrate westward. He reached the 125th degree of east +longitude, and discovered and traversed four distinct mountain ranges, on +one of which Mr. Gosse shortly afterwards found his tracks. One of his +companions, Mr. Gibson, lost his way and perished in the desert, and +therefore Mr. Giles turned his face eastwards, and, after an absence of +twelve months, reached Adelaide. He encountered many perils, having been +nine times attacked by the natives, probably in the attempt to obtain +water; and on one occasion was severely wounded and nearly captured. + +<p>On the 20th March, 1874, Mr. Ross, with his son and another European, +three Arabs, fourteen horses, and sixteen camels, started from the +telegraph line, near the Peake station in South Australia. He was +compelled to return through want of water, although, soon after starting, +he had greatly reduced the number of his party by sending back three of +his companions, two of the horses, and twelve of the camels. + +<p>Such, in brief, have been the results of the efforts made to cross +Australia between the telegraph line and the west coast, and ascertain +the probability of establishing a practicable route. I have referred to +them to show how persistent has been the desire to achieve the exploit, +and how little daunted by repeated failures have been Australian +explorers. I now propose to relate my own experiences--the results of +three journeys of exploration, conducted by myself. The first was +undertaken in the hope of discovering some traces of Leichardt; the +second nearly retraced the route of Eyre; the third was across the desert +from Western Australia to the telegraph line in South Australia. The +first journey did not result in obtaining the information sought for; the +second and third journeys were successfully accomplished. + +<h4>CHAPTER 2.</h4> + +<h5>FIRST EXPEDITION IN SEARCH OF LEICHARDT.</h5> + +<blockquote><center>Statements made by the Natives.<br> +An Expedition prepared.<br> +Leader appointed.<br> +Official Instructions.<br> +The Journal.</center></blockquote> + +<p>Early in 1869, Dr. Von Mueller, of the Melbourne Botanic Gardens, a +botanist of high attainments, proposed to the Government of Western +Australia that an expedition should be undertaken from the colony for the +purpose of ascertaining, if possible, the fate of the lost explorer, +Leichardt. Reports had reached Perth of natives met with in the eastern +districts, who had stated that, about twenty years before (a date +corresponding with that of the last authentic intelligence received from +Leichardt), a party of white men had been murdered. This tale was +repeated, but perhaps would not have made much impression if a gentleman, +Mr. J.H. Monger, when on a trip eastward in search of sheep-runs, had not +been told by his native guide that he had been to the very spot where the +murder was committed, and had seen the remains of the white men. His +story was very circumstantial; he described the spot, which, he said, was +near a large lake, so large that it looked like the sea, and that the +white men were attacked and killed while making a damper--bread made of +flour mixed with water, and cooked on hot ashes. So certain was he as to +the exact locality, that he offered to conduct a party to the place. + +<p>This appeared like a trustworthy confirmation of the reports which had +reached the colony, and created a great impression, so that the +Government felt it a duty incumbent on them to make an effort to +ascertain the truth of this statement, and Dr. Von Mueller's offer to +lead an expedition was accepted. + +<p>I was then, as now, an officer of the Survey Department, and employed in +a distant part of the colony. I was ordered to repair to headquarters, to +confer with the authorities on the subject, and was offered the +appointment of second in command and navigator. This was a proposition +quite in accordance with my tastes, for I had long felt a deep interest +in the subject of Australian exploration, and ardently desired to take my +share in the work. I at once arranged the equipment of the expedition, +but, while so engaged, the mail from Melbourne brought a letter from Dr. +Von Mueller, to the effect that his other engagements would not permit +him to take the lead as proposed, and I was appointed to take his place +in the expedition. + +<h5>OFFICIAL INSTRUCTIONS.</h5> + +<p>The Honourable Captain Roe, R.N., the Surveyor-General, who had himself +been a great explorer, undertook the preparation of a set of Instructions +for my guidance; and they so accurately describe the objects of the +journey, and the best modes of carrying them out, that I transcribe the +official letter:-- + +<blockquote><p>Survey Office, Perth,<br> +13th April, 1869.</p> + +<p>Sir, + +<p>His Excellency the Governor having been pleased to appoint you to lead an +expedition into the interior of Western Australia for the purpose of +searching for the remains of certain white men reported by the natives to +have been killed by the aborigines some years ago, many miles beyond the +limits of our settled country, and it being deemed probable that the +white men referred to formed part of an exploring party under the command +of Dr. Leichardt, endeavouring to penetrate overland from Victoria to +this colony several years ago, I have been directed to furnish the +following instructions for your guidance on this interesting service, and +for enabling you to carry out the wishes of the Government in connexion +therewith. + +<p>2. Your party will consist of six persons in the whole, well armed, and +made up of Mr. George Monger as second in command, Mr. Malcolm Hamersley +as third in command, a farrier blacksmith to be hired at Newcastle, and +two well-known and reliable natives, Tommy Windich and Jemmy, who have +already acquired considerable experience under former explorers. + +<p>3. An agreement to serve on the expedition in the above capacities has +been prepared, and should be signed by each European member of the party +previous to starting. + +<p>4. A saddle-horse has been provided for each member of the party, +together with ---- pack-horses to transport such portions of the outfit +as cannot be carried by the former. A three-horsed cart will also +accompany the expedition as far as may be found practicable through the +unsettled country, and thereby relieve the pack-horses as much as +possible. + +<p>5. All preparations for the journey being now complete, it is desirable +that you should lose no time in starting, so as to arrive at the +commencement of the unexplored country by the end of the present month, +or beginning of the expected winter rains. It has been, however, already +ascertained from native information that a considerable quantity of rain +has recently fallen over the regions to be explored, and that no +impediment may be anticipated from a scarcity of water there. + +<p>6. The route to be followed might advantageously commence at Newcastle, +where some of your party and several of your horses are to be picked up, +and thence proceed north-easterly to Goomaling, and 100 miles further in +the same general direction, passing eastward to Mounts Chunbaren and +Kenneth of Mr. Austin's, to the eastern farthest of that explorer, in 119 +degrees East and 28 3/4 degrees South. Thence the general north-easterly +route of the expedition must be governed by the information afforded by +your native guides as to the locality in which they have reported the +remains of white men are to be found. + +<p>7. On arriving at that spot, the greatest care is to be taken to bring +away all such remains as may be discovered by a diligent search of the +neighbourhood. By friendly and judicious treatment of the local natives, +it is also probable that several articles of European manufacture which +are said to be still in their possession might be bartered from them, and +serve towards identifying their former owners. The prospect of obtaining +from the natives, at this remote date, anything like a journal, +note-book, or map, would indeed be small; but the greatest interest would +be attached to the smallest scrap of written or printed paper, however +much defaced, if only covered with legible characters. A more promising +mode by which the former presence of European explorers on the spot might +be detected is the marks which are generally made on the trees by +travellers to record the number or reference to a halting-place, or the +initials of some of the party. Thus the letter L has in several instances +been found by searching parties to have been legibly cut on trees in the +interior of the eastern colonies, and in localities supposed to have been +visited by the eminent explorer alluded to. It is needless to point out +that metal articles, such as axes, tomahawks, gun and pistol barrels, +iron-work of pack-saddles, and such like, would be far more likely to +have survived through the lapse of years than articles of a more +perishable nature. + +<p>8. After exhausting all conceivable means of obtaining information on the +spot, and from the nature of surrounding country, an attempt should be +made to follow back on the track of the unfortunate deceased, which is +said to have been from the eastward and towards the settled part of this +colony. Here a close and minute scrutiny of the trees might prove of +great value in clearing up existing doubts, especially at and about any +water-holes and springs near which explorers would be likely to bivouac. + +<p>9. After completing an exhaustive research and inquiry into this +interesting and important part of your duties, the remainder of the time +that may be at your disposal, with reference to your remaining stock of +provisions, should be employed in exploring the surrounding country, in +tracing any considerable or smaller stream it may be your good fortune to +discover, and generally in rendering the service entrusted to your +guidance as extensively useful and valuable to this colony as +circumstances may admit. + +<p>10. Towards effecting this object, your homeward journey should, if +possible, be over country not previously traversed by the outward route, +or by any former explorers, and should be so regulated as to expose your +party to no unnecessary risk on account of the falling short of supplies. + +<p>11. In your intercourse with the aborigines of the interior, many of whom +will have no previous personal knowledge of the white man, I need +scarcely commend to you a policy of kindness and forbearance mixed with +watchfulness and firmness, as their future bearing towards our remote +colonists may be chiefly moulded by early impressions. + +<p>12. To render the expedition as extensively useful as possible, I would +urge you, in the interests of science, to make and preserve such +specimens in natural history as may come within the reach of yourself and +party, especially in the departments of botany, geology, and zoology, +which may be greatly enriched by productions of country not yet +traversed. + +<p>13. Direct reference to minor objects, and to matters of detail, is +purposely omitted, in full reliance on your judgment and discretion, and +on your personal desire to render the expedition as productive as +possible of benefit to the colony and to science in general. + +<p>14. In this spirit I may add that the brief instructions herein given for +your general guidance are by no means intended to fetter your own +judgment in carrying out the main object of the expedition in such other +and different manner as may appear to you likely to lead to beneficial +results. In the belief that such results will be achieved by the energy +and perseverance of yourself and of those who have so nobly volunteered +to join you in the enterprise, and with confident wishes for your +success, in which H.E. largely participates, + +<p>I remain, Sir,<br> +Your obedient Servant,</p> + +<p>J.S. ROE, Surveyor-General. + +<p> </p> +<p>John Forrest, Esquire, Leader of Exploring Expedition to the North-East.</blockquote> + +<p> </p> + +<p>Mr. George Monger (brother of the gentleman who gave the information), +who accompanied me as second in command, had previously been on an +expedition to the eastward, and Jemmy Mungaro was the black who said he +had seen the spot where the remains of the white men were. His +persistence in the statement encouraged me to hope that I might be the +first to announce positively the fate of the lost explorer; but I had +then to learn how little dependence can be placed on the testimony of +Australian aborigines. + +<p>On the 15th of April, 1869, I began the journey. I was well supplied with +instruments for making observations, so as to ascertain our daily +position. A knowledge of at least the leading principles of the art of +navigation is as necessary to the explorer as to the mariner on the +ocean. Our stock of provisions consisted of 800 pounds of flour, 270 +pounds of pork, 135 pounds of sugar, and 17 pounds of tea; and we each +took two suits of clothes. + +<p>The party were all in good spirits. For myself I was hopeful of success, +and my white companions shared my feelings. The natives were, as they +generally are, except when food is scarce, or their anger excited, on the +best terms with everybody and everything, and Jemmy Mungaro, so far as +could be judged from his demeanour, might have been the most veracious +guide who ever led a party of white men through difficulties and dangers +on an expedition of discovery. + +<p>Day by day I noted down the incidents of the journey, and that Journal I +now submit to the reader. + +<h4>JOURNAL OF PROCEEDINGS OF AN EXPLORING EXPEDITION IN SEARCH OF THE +REMAINS OF THE LATE DR. LEICHARDT AND PARTY, UNDERTAKEN BY ORDER OF THE +GOVERNMENT OF WESTERN AUSTRALIA, BY JOHN FORREST, GOVERNMENT SURVEYOR.</h4> + +<p>Sir, + +<p>In pursuance of instructions received from you, the exploring party under +my command consisted of the following persons, namely, Mr. George Monger, +as second in command; Mr. Malcolm Hamersley, as third in command; +probation prisoner, David Morgan, as shoeing smith, and two natives +(Tommy Windich and Jemmy Mungaro). The latter native gave Mr. J.H. Monger +the information respecting the murder of white men in the eastward. +Reached Newcastle on the 17th and left on Monday, 19th, with a +three-horse cart and teamster and thirteen horses, making a total of +sixteen horses. Reached Mombekine, which is about sixteen miles +East-North-East from Newcastle. + +<p>April 20th.<br> +Continued journey to Goomalling, sixteen miles, which we reached at 1 +p.m., and devoted the remainder of the afternoon to weighing and packing +rations, etc., for a final start. + +<p>21st.<br> +Leaving Goomalling at 10.30 a.m., we travelled in a northerly direction +for nine miles, and reached Walyamurra Lake; thence about East-North-East +for seven miles, we encamped at a well on north side of Kombekine Lake. +The water was very bad from opossums being drowned in it, and there was +hardly any feed. + +<p>22nd.<br> +Hearing from a number of natives that there was no water in the direction +we intended steering, namely, to Mount Churchman, we decided on changing +our course and proceed there via Waddowring, in latitude 31 degrees south +and longitude 118 degrees east. Steering about South-South-East for eight +miles, through dense scrubby thickets, which we had great difficulty in +getting the cart through, we struck the road from Goomalling to +Waddowring, which we followed along about east for eight miles, and +camped at a well called Naaning, with hardly any feed. + +<p>23rd.<br> +Mr. George Roe (who had come from Northam to bid us farewell) and my +teamster left us this morning to return to Newcastle. Considerable delay +having occurred in collecting the horses, we did not start till twelve +o'clock, when we steered East-North-East for eight miles over scrubby +sand-plains, and camped at a well called Pingeperring, with very little +feed for our horses. + +<p>24th.<br> +Started at 8.50 a.m. and steered about east for seven miles over scrubby, +undulating sand-plains, thence North 50 degrees East magnetic for two +miles, thence North 160 degrees for one mile, and thence about North 80 +degrees East magnetic for five miles over scrubby sand-plains. We camped +at a spring called Dwartwollaking at 5 p.m. Barometer 29.45; thermometer +71 degrees. + +<p>25th (Sunday).<br> +Did not travel to-day. Took observations for time, and corrected our +watches. Found camp to be in south latitude 31 degrees 10 minutes by +meridian altitude of sun. + +<p>26th.<br> +Travelled in about the direction of North 73 degrees East magnetic for +twenty-eight miles. We reached Yarraging, the farthest station to the +eastward, belonging to Messrs. Ward and Adams, where we bivouacked for +the night. + +<p>27th.<br> +Bought some rations from Ward and Co., making our supply equal to last +three months on the daily allowance of a pound and a half of flour, half +a pound of pork, a quarter of a pound of sugar, and half an ounce of tea +per man. Being unable to take the cart any further, and wishing to have +the team horses with me, I arranged with Ward and Co. to take it to +Newcastle for 2 pounds. Packed up and left Yarraging with ten pack and +six riding horses, and steering North 320 degrees East magnetic for eight +miles we reached Waddowring springs in south latitude 31 degrees and +longitude 118 degrees East. + +<p>28th.<br> +Started this morning with Mr. Monger, Tommy Windich, and Dunbatch (a +native of this locality) in search of water in order to shift the party. +Travelling about north for eleven miles we found a native well, and by +digging it out seven feet we obtained sufficient water for ourselves and +horses. I therefore sent Mr. Monger back with instructions to bring the +party to this spot, called Cartubing. I then proceeded in a northerly +direction, and at two miles passed water in granite rocks at a spot +called Inkanyinning. Shortly afterwards we passed another native well, +called Yammaling, from which we steered towards a spot called +Beebynyinning; but, night setting in, our guide lost his way, and we were +obliged to camp for the night in a thicket without water and very little +feed. + +<p>29th.<br> +This morning Dunbatch brought us to Beebynyinning, where we obtained a +little water by digging. After digging a well we returned to Cartubing, +where we met the party and bivouacked on a patch of green feed. + +<p>30th.<br> +Shifted the party from Cartubing to Beebynyinning, watering our horses on +the way at Inkanyinning and Yammaling, which was fortunate, as there was +very little water at Beebynyinning. + +<p>May 1st.<br> +Steering about North-East for eight miles over grassy country, we reached +and encamped at Danjinning, a small grassy spot, with native well, by +deepening which about ten feet we obtained a plentiful supply of water. +Mr. Austin visited Danjinning in 1854, and we could see the tracks of his +horses distinctly. Barometer 29. Every appearance of rain, which we are +in much want of. + +<p>2nd (Sunday).<br> +Rested at Danjinning, which I found to be in south latitude 30 degrees 34 +minutes by meridian altitude of the sun. Read Divine Service. Jemmy shot +six gnows and a wurrong to-day. + +<p>3rd.<br> +Steering in a northerly direction for sixteen miles, we reached +Yalburnunging, a small grassy spot, with water in a native well, which we +deepened four feet, and procured a plentiful supply. For the first nine +miles our route lay over scrubby sand-plains, after which we came into +dense thickets and stunted gums. + +<p>4th.<br> +Steering towards Mount Churchman, or Geelabbing, for about fifteen miles, +we reached a grassy spot called Billeburring, and found water in a native +well, probably permanent. At eight miles we passed a water-hole in some +granite rocks, called Gnaragnunging. Dense acacia and cypress thickets +most of the way. + +<p>5th.<br> +Steering in a northerly direction for about twelve miles, we reached +Mount Churchman, or Geelabbing, an immense bare granite hill, and camped, +with plenty of feed and water. At five miles passed a spring called +Coolee. Country very dense and scrubby; no feed in any of the thickets. +From the summit of Mount Churchman, Ningham of Mr. Monger, or Mount +Singleton of Mr. A.C. Gregory, bore North 312 degrees 30 minutes East +magnetic. This evening a party of nine natives (friends of our native +Jemmy) joined us, who state that a long time ago a party of white men and +horses died at a place called Bouincabbajibimar, also that a gun and a +number of other articles are there, and volunteer to accompany us to the +spot. + +<p>6th.<br> +Left Mount Churchman in company with the nine natives, and travelled +about North-North-West for ten miles to a small water-hole called +Woodgine, thence in a northerly direction to a branch of Lake Moore, +which we crossed without difficulty, and, following along its north shore +for three miles, we bivouacked at a spring close to the lake called +Cundierring, with splendid feed around the granite rocks. + +<p>7th.<br> +Steering in a northerly direction for eleven miles, through dense +thickets of acacia and cypress, we reached some granite rocks with water +on them, called Curroning, and bivouacked. Have fears that the +information received from the natives relates to nine of Mr. Austin's +horses that died from poison at Poison Rock. They now state they are only +horses' bones, and not men's, as first stated. + +<p>8th.<br> +Travelling in the direction of North 30 degrees East for about ten miles, +we reached some granite rocks, with a water-hole in them, called +Coorbedar. Passed over very rough, low, quartz hills, covered with acacia +thickets, etc. At four miles passed a water-hole called Yeergolling; at +seven miles a small one called Gnurra; and another at eight miles called +Munnarra. + +<p>9th (Sunday).<br> +Rested our horses at Coorbedar. Found camp to be in south latitude 29 +degrees 24 minutes 43 seconds by meridian altitudes of the sun and +Regulus, and in longitude 118 degrees 6 minutes East. From a quartz hill +half a mile South-West from Coorbedar, Mount Singleton bore North 268 +degrees 15 minutes East. The supply of water from the rock having been +used, I went, in company with Mr. Hamersley, to a spot one mile and a +half South-South-West from Coorbedar, called Dowgooroo, where we dug a +well and procured a little water, to which I intend shifting to-morrow, +as I propose staying in this vicinity for two days, so as to give me time +to visit Warne, the large river spoken of by Jemmy. + +<p>10th.<br> +Started this morning in company with Tommy Windich and a native boy (one +of the nine who joined us at Mount Churchman) to examine the locality +called Warne. Steering North 42 degrees East magnetic for about seven +miles, we came to a grassy flat about half a mile wide, with a stream-bed +trending south running through it. The natives state it to be dry in +summer, but at present there is abundance of water, and in wet seasons +the flat must be almost all under water. After following the flat about +seven miles we returned towards camp, about five miles, and bivouacked. + +<p>11th.<br> +Returned this morning to Dowgooroo and found all well. Rain, which we +were much in want of, fell lightly most of the day. Barometer 28.50; +thermometer 61 degrees. + +<p>12th.<br> +Steered this morning about North 38 degrees East magnetic for eight +miles, and camped by a shallow lake of fresh water--the bivouac of the +10th. Here we met a party of twenty-five natives (friends of my native +Jemmy and the nine who joined us at Mount Churchman) who had a grand +corroboree in honour of the expedition. They stated that at +Bouincabbajilimar there were the remains of a number of horses, but no +men's bones or guns, and pointed in the direction of Poison Rock, where +Mr. Austin lost nine horses. Being now satisfied that the natives were +alluding to the remains of Mr. Austin's horses, I resolved to steer to +the eastward, towards a spot called by the native, Jemmy, Noondie, where +he states he heard the remains of white men were. + +<p>13th.<br> +Bidding farewell to all the natives, we steered in a south-easterly +direction for fifteen miles, and camped in a rough hollow called +Durkying; cypress and acacia thickets the whole way. + +<p>14th.<br> +One of our horses having strayed, we did not start till 10.40 a.m., when +we steered in about a South-East direction for eight miles, and camped on +an elevated grassy spot, called Mingan, with water in the granite rocks, +probably permanent. The thickets were a little less dense than usual, but +without any grass, except at the spots mentioned. By meridian altitudes +of Mars and Regulus, we were in south latitude 29 degrees 30 minutes 30 +seconds, and in longitude about 118 degrees 30 minutes east. + +<p>15th.<br> +Steering North-East for four miles, and North-North-East for seven miles, +over sandy soil, with thickets of acacia and cypress, we bivouacked on an +elevated grassy spot, called Earroo, with water in granite rocks. + +<p>16th (Sunday).<br> +Rested at Earroo; horses enjoying good feed. By meridian altitudes of +Regulus and Mars, camp at Earroo was in south latitude 29 degrees 23 +minutes 3 seconds, and in longitude 118 degrees 35 minutes East; weather +very cloudy; barometer 29. + +<p>17th.<br> +Started 7.50 a.m., and steered North 60 degrees East for about five +miles; thence about North 50 degrees East for eight miles; thence North +85 degrees East for five miles, to a small grassy spot called Croobenyer, +with water in granite rocks. Sandy soil, thickets of cypress, acacia, +etc., most of the way. Found camp to be in south latitude 29 degrees 12 +minutes 43 seconds by meridian altitudes of Regulus and Aquilae (Altair); +barometer 28.70. + +<p>18th.<br> +Steering North 70 degrees East for two miles and a half, we saw a low +hill called Yeeramudder, bearing North 62 degrees 30 minutes East +magnetic, distant about seventeen miles, for which we steered, and camped +to the north of it, on a fine patch of grass with a little rain-water on +some granite rocks. At eleven miles crossed a branch of a dry salt lake, +which appears to run far to the eastward. + +<p>19th.<br> +Steering about North 85 degrees East magnetic for fourteen miles, +attempted to cross the lake we had been leaving a little to the +southward, making for a spot supposed by us to be the opposite shore, but +on arriving at which was found to be an island. As we had great +difficulty in reaching it, having to carry all the loads the last 200 +yards, our horses saving themselves with difficulty, and, being late, I +resolved to leave the loads and take the horses to another island, where +there was a little feed, on reaching which we bivouacked without water, +all being very tired. + +<p>20th.<br> +On examining this immense lake I found that it was impossible to get the +horses and loads across it; I was therefore compelled to retrace my steps +to where we first entered it, which the horses did with great difficulty +without their loads. I was very fortunate in finding water and feed about +three miles North-North-West, to which we took the horses and bivouacked, +leaving on the island all the loads, which we shall have to carry at +least half way, three quarters of a mile, the route being too boggy for +the horses. + +<h5>HEAVY WORK IN THE BOG.</h5> + +<p>21st.<br> +Went over to the lake in company with Messrs. Monger, Hamersley, and +Tommy Windich, with four horses. Succeeded in getting all the loads to +the mainland, carrying them about three quarters of a mile up to our +knees in mud, from which point the lake became a little firmer, and the +horses carried the loads out. I cannot speak too highly of the manner in +which my companions assisted me on this trying occasion. Having been +obliged to work barefooted in the mud, the soles of Mr. Hamersley's feet +were in a very bad state, and he was hardly able to walk for a fortnight.<br> +Seeing a native fire several miles to the southward, I intend sending +Tommy Windich and Jemmy in search of the tribe to-morrow, in order that I +may question them respecting the reported death of white men to the +eastward. + +<center> +<p><a name="forrest3"></a><img alt="" src="forrest3.jpg"></p> +<p><b>The Horses Bogged at Lake Barlee.</b></p> +</center> + +<p>22nd.<br> +Went over to the lake with all the horses, and brought the loads to the +camp. Started Tommy and Jemmy in search of the natives. After returning +to camp, overhauled all the pack bags, and dried and re-packed them, +ready for a fresh start on Monday morning. Also washed the mud off the +horses, who appear to be doing well, and fast recovering from the effects +of the bogging. Tommy and Jemmy returned this evening, having seen some +natives after dark, but were unable to get near them. + +<p>23rd (Sunday).<br> +Went with Tommy Windich and Jemmy on foot to follow the tracks of the +natives seen yesterday. Seeing no chance of overtaking them, as they +appeared to be making off at a great rate, and were twelve hours in +advance of us, we returned, after following the tracks for five miles +across the lake. The camp was reached at 2 p.m., after we had walked +about fifteen miles. This spot, which I named Retreat Rock, I found to be +in south latitude 29 degrees 3 minutes 51 seconds by meridian altitudes +of Regulus and Mars, and in about longitude 119 degrees 16 minutes east. + +<p>24th.<br> +Some of the horses having strayed, we were not able to start till 10.40 +a.m., when we steered in about East-North-East direction for sixteen +miles, and camped on a piece of rising ground, with very little water. +From this bivouac, a very remarkable peaked hill, called Woolling, which +I named Mount Elain, bore North 162 degrees 15 minutes East magnetic, +distant about twenty miles; and two conspicuous hills, close together, +called Yeadie and Bulgar, bore North 105 degrees East magnetic. Dense +thickets, acacia, cypress, etc., sandy soil with spinifex, most of the +way. + +<h5>DISCOVERY OF LAKE BARLEE.</h5> + +<p>25th.<br> +Steering for Yeadie and Bulgar for five miles, and came to some granite +rocks with water, where we gave drink to our thirsty horses. Leaving the +party to follow, I went with Jemmy in advance to look for water, which we +found in a rough stream-bed, and brought the party to it. This afternoon +went with Jemmy to the summit of Yeadie, and took a round of angles. The +local attraction was so great on this hill that the prismatic compass was +useless; luckily I had my pocket sextant with me, by which I obtained the +included angles. From the summit of Yeadie the view was very extensive. +The great lake that we had already followed for forty miles ran as far as +the eye could reach to the east and south, studded with numerous islands; +low ranges of hills in every direction. This immense lake I named Lake +Barlee, after the Colonial Secretary of Western Australia. By meridian +altitudes of Mars and Regulus, camp was in south latitude, 28 degrees 58 +minutes 50 seconds, and in longitude about 119 degrees 39 minutes East, +Yeadie bearing North 172 degrees East magnetic, distant about two miles. + +<p>26th.<br> +Moving in about a northerly direction for nine miles, we turned to the +eastward, rounded a branch of Lake Barlee, towards some loose granite +rocks, where we encamped, but could not find water. Sent Jemmy over to +another rock one mile southward, where he found a fine permanent +water-hole, to which we took the horses after dark. Distance travelled +to-day about eighteen miles. Tommy shot a fine emu, which was a great +treat to us all. + +<p>27th.<br> +Shifted the party over to the water found last night, one mile distant, +and camped. Found camp to be in south latitude 28 degrees 53 minutes, and +in longitude about 119 degrees 50 minutes east. Marked a small tree with +the letter F. close to the waterhole. + +<p>28th.<br> +Some of the horses having strayed, we did not start till 9.30 a.m., when +I went in advance of the party, in company with Jemmy, to look for water. +After following Lake Barlee for nine miles, it turned to the southward. +Then scouring the country in every direction for water without success, +we reached the tracks of the party (who had passed on), and, following +them over plains of spinifex and stunted gums, found them encamped with +plenty of water, which they had luckily discovered at sundown. Distance +travelled eighteen miles about true east. By meridian altitude of Bootes +(Arcturus), this bivouac is in south latitude 28 degrees 53 minutes 34 +seconds, and longitude about 120 degrees 9 minutes east. + +<h5>DISAPPOINTED EXPEDITIONS.</h5> + +<p>29th.<br> +Started in company with Tommy and Jemmy to explore the country eastward, +leaving the party to take off the horses' shoes for their relief. +Travelling in an easterly direction for eight miles over sandy soil and +spinifex, we reached the summit of a high hill, supposed by Jemmy to be +Noondie, which I named Mount Alexander, from which we saw another range +about eleven miles distant, bearing North 82 degrees 15 minutes East +magnetic, to which we proceeded, and found water in some granite rocks. +None of these hills, however, agreed with the description given by Jemmy; +and the expectations were at an end that he would succeed in showing us +the spot where the remains of white men were. Returning to camp, seven +miles, bivouacked on a grassy flat, without water or food. + +<p>30th. (Sunday).<br> +Started at dawn, with the saddles and rugs on our backs, in search of the +horses, and, after travelling a mile and a half on their tracks, found +them at a small water-hole passed by us yesterday. Saddled up and reached +camp at eleven o'clock, and found all well. Yesterday morning the dogs +caught an emu, off which we made a first-rate breakfast, not having had +anything to eat since the previous morning. Barometer 28.44. + +<h5>A DIFFICULTY WITH THE NATIVES.</h5> + +<p>31st.<br> +Started this morning in company with Mr. Monger and Jemmy in search of +natives, leaving Mr. Hamersley in charge, with instructions to proceed +eastward about twenty-two miles, to where I found water on the 29th. +After starting the party we steered in a South-South-East direction +towards a high range of hills, which I named Mount Bivou, about twelve +miles distant. To the westward of the range we found a fine water-hole in +some granite rocks, where we rested an hour to allow the horses to feed. +Continuing in about the same direction for five miles, we ascended a +rough range to have a view of the country. We descried a large fire to +the westward seven miles, towards which we proceeded, in the hope of +finding natives. When we were within half a mile we could hear hallooing +and shouting; and it was very evident there was a great muster (certainly +not less than 100) of natives, corrobberying, making a dreadful noise, +the dogs joining in chorus. Having stripped Jemmy, I told him to go and +speak to them, which he started to do in very good spirits. He soon +beckoned us to follow, and asked us to keep close behind him, as the +natives were what he called like "sheep flock." He appeared very nervous, +trembling from head to foot. After reassuring him, we tied up our horses, +and advanced through the thicket towards them. When getting in sight of +them, Jemmy commenced cooeying, and was answered by the natives; after +which he advanced and showed himself. As soon as they saw him, the +bloodthirsty villains rushed at him, and threw three dowaks, which he +luckily dodged; when fortunately one of the natives recognized him +(having seen Jemmy at Mount Elain when a little boy), and called to the +others not to harm him. Seeing Jemmy running towards the horses, Mr. +Monger and I thought it was time to retire, as we saw the mistake we had +made in leaving the horses. The thickets being dense, we had difficulty +in finding the horses quickly. On reaching them Mr. Monger found he had +dropped his revolver. Had not Jemmy been recognized, I feel sure we +should have had bloodshed, and might probably have lost our lives. +Mounting the horses, we advanced towards the natives, and had a short +talk with one of them who came to speak to Jemmy. There was a guard of +eight natives, with spears stripped, and dowaks in readiness, should we +prove hostile. Although I assured them we were friends, and asked them to +put down their spears, they took no notice of what was said. One native +told us not to sleep here, but to go away and not return, or the natives +would kill and eat us, after which he turned away as if he did not wish +to have any more words with us. It being now dark, we took his advice, +and retreated towards where we had dinner, five miles off. Camped in a +thicket without water, and tied up our horses, keeping watch all night. + +<p>June 1st.<br> +At daybreak saddled up our tired and hungry horses, and proceeded to +where we had dinner yesterday. After giving our horses two hours' grazing +and having had breakfast, started back towards the natives' camp, as I +wished to question them respecting the reported death of white men in +this neighbourhood. When we approached the natives' bivouac, we saw where +they had been following up our tracks in every direction, and Jemmy found +the place where they had picked up Mr. Monger's revolver. While Jemmy was +away looking for the revolver, Mr. Monger saw two natives following up +our trail, and within fifty yards of us. We both wheeled round and had +our guns in readiness, but soon perceived they were the same as were +friendly last night, and I called Jemmy to speak to them. At my request +they went and brought us Mr. Monger's revolver, which they stated they +had been warming near the fire! Fortunately for them, it did not go off. +On being questioned by Jemmy, they stated that the place Noondie (where +Jemmy stated he heard the remains of the white men were) was two days' +journey North-West from this spot; that there were the remains of horses, +but not of men, and they volunteered to show us the spot. Being now 1 +p.m., and having to meet the party to-night at a place about twenty-three +miles distant, we started at once, leaving the natives, who did not wish +to move to-day, but who apparently sincerely promised to come to our camp +to-morrow. Reached camp at the spot arranged an hour after dark, and +found all well. + +<h5>BIVOUACKING.</h5> + +<p>2nd.<br> +Rested our horses at the place, which I called the Two-spring Bivouac, +there being two small springs here. Re-stuffed with grass all the +pack-saddles, as some of the horses were getting sore backs. By meridian +altitude of sun found the camp to be in south latitude 28 degrees 51 +minutes 45 seconds, and in longitude about 120 degrees 30 minutes east. I +was very much annoyed at the natives not putting in appearance as +promised. + +<p>3rd.<br> +No sign of the natives this morning. I decided to steer in the direction +pointed out by them, and travelling about North 306 degrees East magnetic +for fifteen miles, we found water in some granite rocks, with very good +feed around, cypress and acacia thickets, light red loamy soil, destitute +of grass. + +<p>4th.<br> +Steering in about West-North-West direction for sixteen miles, the first +six of which were studded with granite rocks, good feed around them, +after which through poor sandy country, covered with spinifex. We +bivouacked in a thicket without water or feed, and tied up our horses. +Saw a natives' fire, but was unable to get near it. Barometer 28.52; +fine. + +<p>5th.<br> +After travelling in a northerly direction for seven miles without finding +water, and without +seeing any hill answering the description given by Jemmy, I struck about +east for sixteen miles, and camped at a fine spring near some granite +rocks, with splendid feed around them. This is the first good spring +since leaving the settled districts. At 8 p.m., barometer 28.44; +thermometer 72 degrees. + +<p>6th (Sunday).<br> +Rested at camp, which I called Depot Spring, and found to be in south +latitude 28 degrees 36 minutes 34 seconds by meridian altitude of sun. +Barometer at 8 a.m. 28.38; thermometer 57 degrees; at 5 p.m., barometer +28.30; thermometer 77 degrees. + +<p>7th.<br> +Started this morning, in company with Mr. Hamersley and Jemmy, to explore +the country to the northward, where we had seen a peaked hill. Went in +that direction about thirty miles, the first twenty of which were studded +with granite rocks, with fine feed around them. At twenty-seven miles +crossed a salt marsh, about one mile wide, and, continuing three miles +farther, reached the peaked hill, which was composed of granite, capped +with immense blocks, giving it a very remarkable appearance. Bivouacked +on North-West side of hill, at a small water-hole. + +<p>8th.<br> +This morning, after saddling up, we ascended the conical hill (which I +named Mount Holmes) and took a round of angles from it, after which we +struck North 81 degrees East magnetic to a granite range about eight +miles distant, where we found two fine water-holes, and rested an hour. +Thence in about a South-South-East direction for twelve miles, we +bivouacked without water on a small patch of feed. The day was very fine, +and the rainy appearance cleared off, much to our grief. + +<p>9th.<br> +At daybreak, no sound of horses' bells, and anticipating they had made +off in search of water, we put our saddles, guns, and rugs on our backs, +and started on their tracks. After following the tracks for nine miles we +came to a water-hole and had breakfast; afterwards we succeeded in +overtaking the horses in a grassy flat, about thirteen miles +South-South-East from our last night's bivouac. The last few miles our +troublesome load became very awkward and heavy. One of the horses had +broken his hobbles. Continuing in about the same course for six miles, we +struck about West-South-West for ten miles, and reached camp, where we +found all well, at 6 p.m. Barometer 28.64; cloudy. + +<h5>AN OLD NATIVE.</h5> + +<p>10th.<br> +Started again this morning in company with Mr. Monger and Jemmy, to +explore the country to the eastward, leaving Mr. Hamersley to shift the +party to our bivouac of the 2nd instant, about twenty-four miles +South-East from here. After travelling East-North-East for six miles, we +came upon a very old native at a fire in the thicket. Jemmy could not +understand what he said, but he thought that he meant that there were a +number of armed natives about. He was very frightened, howled the whole +time we stayed, and was apparently in his dotage, hardly able to walk. +Continuing our journey, we camped at a small water-hole in some granite +rocks, with good feed around them, about sixteen miles East-North-East +from Depot Spring. + +<p>11th.<br> +Started at sunrise, and steered about East-North-East over +lightly-grassed country; and on our way came upon a middle-aged native +with two small children. We were within twenty yards of him before he saw +us. He appeared very frightened, and trembled from head to foot. Jemmy +could understand this native a little, and ascertained from him that he +had never seen or heard anything about white men or horses being killed +or having died in this vicinity. Did not know any place named Noondie; +but pointed to water a little way eastward. Jemmy then asked him all +manner of questions, but to no purpose, as he stated he knew nothing +about the business. Jemmy asked him if he had ever heard of any horses +being eaten; he answered No, but that the natives had just eaten his +brother! I have no doubt parents have great difficulty in saving their +children from these inhuman wretches. Then the old man tried to cry, and +ended by saying he had two women at his hut, a little westward. After +travelling ten miles from our last night's bivouac, and not finding +water, we struck North 204 degrees East magnetic for about twenty miles, +through scrubby thickets, without feed, and arrived at the bivouac of the +2nd, where the party will meet us to-morrow. Reached the water at the Two +Springs half an hour after dark. + +<p>12th.<br> +Explored the country around camp in search of a better place for feed, +but could not find water. Mr. Hamersley and party joined us at 4 p.m., +all well. Tommy shot a red kangaroo, which was a great treat, after +living so long on salt pork. Barometer 28.60; fine; cold wind from the +east all day. + +<p>13th (Sunday).<br> +Rested at camp. Intend taking a trip to the southward to-morrow. +Barometer 28.76. + +<p>14th.<br> +Started this morning, in company with Morgan and Jemmy, to examine the +country to the southward. Travelled in a south-westerly direction for +twenty-five miles, and camped at the spot where we had the encounter with +the natives on May 31. We found they had left, and there was no water on +the rocks. Luckily our horses had water six miles back. + +<h5>MOUNT IDA.</h5> + +<p>15th.<br> +Saddled up at daybreak, and steered about South-East towards a high range +of hills about ten miles distant. I named it Mount Ida, and from the +summit I took a round of angles with my pocket sextant. On all the hills +in this neighbourhood the local attraction is so great that the prismatic +compass is useless. Found a fine spring of water on south side of Mount +Ida, in an almost inaccessible spot. After giving the horses two hours' +rest we continued our journey North 154 degrees East magnetic for eight +miles to a granite range, where, after a diligent search, I found two +water-holes, and bivouacked, with good feed around the rocks. + +<p>16th.<br> +Saddled up at sunrise, and steered to some trap ranges, North 124 degrees +East, about seven miles distant, from which I could see an immense lake +running as far as the eye could reach to the eastward, and westerly and +northerly, most probably joining Lake Barlee. Not being able to proceed +farther southward, on account of the lake, I steered in a northerly +direction for twenty miles, but, discovering neither feed nor water, +bivouacked in a thicket, and tied up our horses. + +<p>17th.<br> +At dawn, found that my horse Sugar, after breaking his bridle, had made +off towards our bivouac of the 15th. Placing my saddle on Jemmy's horse, +we followed on the track for six miles, when we came to a few granite +rocks, with a little water on them, from rain that had fallen during the +night. At this place Morgan was left with the horses and our guns, while +Jemmy and I followed on Sugar's tracks, taking only a revolver with us. +After travelling on the tracks for two miles we overtook him, and with a +little trouble managed to catch him. On reaching the spot where we had +left Morgan, we found him with the three double-barrelled guns on full +cock, together with his revolver, in readiness. On being asked what was +the matter, he stated "Nothing," but he was ready to give the natives +what he called "a warm attachment." After having breakfast we steered +North-North-West for about twenty miles, and reached camp at 5 p.m., and +found all well. Rained a little during the day. + +<h5>EXPLORING EASTWARD.</h5> + +<p>18th.<br> +Having thus made an exhaustive search in the neighbourhood where Jemmy +expected to find the remains of the white men, by travelling over nearly +the whole of the country between latitude 28 degrees and 29 degrees 30 +minutes south, and longitude 120 and 121 degrees east, I determined to +make the most of the little time at my disposal, and carry out the +instruction that I was to attempt to proceed as far eastward as possible. +Accordingly, after collecting the horses, steered about East-North-East +for nine miles, to a low quartz range, over tolerably grassy country, not +very dense. From this range I saw some bare granite rocks bearing about +North 120 degrees East magnetic. For these we steered, and luckily, after +travelling six miles over a plain, which in severe winters must be nearly +all under water, found a fine pool in a clay-pan, and bivouacked. There +was a little rain during the night. + +<p>19th.<br> +The horses having strayed back on our tracks, we did not start till 12 +o'clock, when the journey was continued towards the granite range seen +yesterday, about ten miles distant. We camped on west side of North, with +plenty of water from the recent rain on the granite rocks, but with very +little feed. At five miles crossed a dry stream-bed, eighteen yards wide, +sandy bottom; thickets most of the way, but not very dense. + +<p>20th (Sunday).<br> +Rested at camp. Jemmy shot four rock kangaroos to-day. Took a round of +angles from a bare granite hill, North 50 degrees East magnetic, about +one mile from camp, which I found to be in south latitude 28 degrees 57 +minutes by meridian altitudes of Bootes (Arcturus) and a Pegasi (Markab); +and in longitude about 120 degrees 55 minutes East. Saw a high hill +bearing North 81 degrees 30 minutes East magnetic, about twenty-five +miles distant, which I named Mount Lenora; and another bearing North 67 +degrees East magnetic, about twenty-five miles distant, which I named +Mount George. Intend proceeding to Mount Lenora to-morrow. Marked a small +tree (ordnance-tree of Mr. Austin) with the letter F at our bivouac. + +<p>21st.<br> +Steering towards Mount Lenora over some tolerably grassy country, we +reached it at sundown, and, not finding any water, camped without it, +with very good feed. In south latitude 28 degrees 53 minutes by meridian +altitudes of Lyrae (Vega) and Aquilae (Altair), and in longitude about +121 degrees 20 minutes East. + +<p>22nd.<br> +After making every search in the vicinity of the bivouac for water, and +the country ahead appearing very unpromising, I decided to return ten +miles on our tracks, where we found a fine pool of water in a brook, and +camped. Tomorrow I intend taking a flying trip in search of water. + +<h5>A NATIVE UP A TREE.</h5> + +<p>23rd.<br> +Started this morning, in company with Tommy Windich, to explore the +country to the eastward for water, etc. After travelling three miles +towards Mount Lenora, saw a natives' fire bearing North-East about three +miles, to which we proceeded, and surprised a middle-aged native. Upon +seeing us he ran off shouting, and decamped with a number of his +companions, who were at a little distance. The horse I was +riding--Turpin, an old police-horse from Northam--evidently well +understood running down a native, and between us we soon overtook our +black friend and brought him to bay. We could not make him understand +anything we said; but, after looking at us a moment, and seeing no chance +of escape, he dropped his two dowaks and wooden dish, and climbed up a +small tree about twelve feet high. After securing the dowaks, I tried +every means to tempt him to come down; fired my revolver twice, and +showed him the effect it had on the tree. The report had the effect also +of frightening all the natives that were about, who no doubt made off at +a great rate. I began to climb up after him, but he pelted me with +sticks, and was more like a wild beast than a man. After discovering we +did not like to be hit, he became bolder and threw more sticks at us, and +one hitting Tommy, he was nearly shooting him, when I called on him to +desist. I then offered him a piece of damper, showing him it was good by +eating some myself and giving some to Tommy. He would not look at it, and +when I threw it close to him he dashed it away as if it was poison. The +only way of getting him down from the tree was force, and, after +considering a moment, I decided to leave him where he was. We accordingly +laid down his dowaks and dish, and bade him farewell in as kindly a +manner as possible. Continuing our course, passing Mount Lenora, we +steered North 81 degrees 15 minutes East magnetic to a table hill, which +I ascended and took a round of angles. This hill I named Mount Malcolm, +after my friend and companion, Mr. M. Hamersley. Saw a remarkable peak +bearing North 65 degrees East magnetic, distant about twenty miles, +towards which we proceeded, and at six miles came upon a small gully, in +which we found a little water, and bivouacked. + +<p>24th.<br> +Started early this morning, and steered East-North-East for six miles to +some low stony ranges, lightly grassed; thence North 61 degrees 30 +minutes East magnetic to the remarkable peak, which I named Mount Flora, +distant about nine miles from the stony ranges, ascending which, I +obtained a round of bearings and angles. Saw a high range bearing about +North 106 degrees 15 minutes East magnetic, apparently about sixteen +miles distant, towards which we travelled till after dark, searching for +feed and water on our way without success, and there bivouacked and tied +up our horses. + +<h5>MOUNT MARGARET.</h5> + +<p>25th.<br> +Saddled at dawn, and proceeded to the range, which bore North 93 degrees +30 minutes East magnetic, about five miles distant, on reaching which I +ascended the highest peak, and named it Mount Margaret. Took a round of +angles and bearings. From the summit of Mount Margaret the view was very +extensive. There was a large dry salt lake to the southward, as far as +the eye could reach, while to the east and north-east there were low trap +ranges, lightly grassed. A high table hill bore North 73 degrees East +magnetic. + +<p>Being now about sixty miles from camp, and not having had any water since +yesterday morning, I decided to return. Steering about west for eight +miles, we struck a brook trending south-east, in which we found a small +quantity of water in a clay-pan. After resting an hour, in order to make +a damper and give the horses a little of the feed, which only grew +sparingly on the banks of the brook, we continued our journey towards +camp. Passing Mount Flora, we camped about eight miles farther onwards, +near a small patch of feed, without water, about a mile north of our +outward track. + +<p>26th.<br> +Started at dawn, and reached our bivouac of the 23rd. There obtained just +sufficient water for ourselves and the horses. Continuing, we found a +fine pool of rain-water in a brook a mile and a half west of Mount +Malcolm, and, reaching camp an hour after dark, found all well. On our +way Tommy Windich shot a red kangaroo, which we carried to camp. + +<p>27th (Sunday).<br> +Rested at camp. Found it to be in south latitude 28 degrees 55 minutes by +meridian altitudes of sun, Aquilae (Altair), and Lyra, and in longitude +about 121 degrees 10 minutes East. Although we had great difficulty in +procuring water in our last trip, I was reluctant to return without +making another effort, especially as, from the appearance of the country +east of the farthest point, I had hope of a change, and therefore +concluded to shift the party to the water found yesterday near Mount +Malcolm, and make another attempt to proceed farther east. + +<p>28th.<br> +Steering about North 81 degrees East magnetic, over lightly-grassed +country, thinly wooded for sixteen miles, we camped a mile and a half +west of Mount Malcolm, in south latitude 28 degrees 51 minutes 19 seconds +by meridian altitude of Aquilae (Altair), and in longitude about 121 +degrees 27 minutes East. + +<p>29th.<br> +Started this morning, in company with Tommy Windich, with seven days' +provisions, leaving instructions for Mr. Monger to shift the party back +to our last camp, where the feed was much better, in latitude 28 degrees +55 minutes South, and longitude 121 degrees 10 minutes East. Travelled +about east for thirty miles towards Mount Margaret, our farthest point +last trip. We camped in a thicket, without water, on a small patch of +feed. + +<p>30th.<br> +Saddled up at dawn, and proceeded towards Mount Margaret, obtaining a +little water at the spot where we found water on our former trip. +Continuing, we came to a fine pool of water in a brook, and rested an +hour, Mount Margaret being north-east about two miles and a half. Hardly +any feed near the water. Resuming, we passed Mount Margaret and started +towards the table hill seen previously, bearing North 73 degrees East +magnetic, apparently about eighteen miles distant, over a series of dry +salt marshes, with sandy country and spinifex intervening. After +travelling eight miles, we bivouacked without water on a small patch of +feed. With the pocket sextant I found this spot to be in south latitude +about 28 degrees 50 minutes, and longitude about 122 degrees 11 minutes +East. + +<h5>MOUNT WELD.</h5> + +<p>July 1st.<br> +After journeying towards the table hill seen yesterday for six miles, +crossed a large brook heading south-west, in which we found a small pool +of rain-water, and rested an hour to breakfast. Resuming for about six +miles, reached the table hill, which I ascended and took a round of +angles. I have since named this hill Mount Weld, being the farthest hill +seen eastward by us. Continuing about North 77 degrees East magnetic for +fifteen miles, through dense thickets--no grass except spinifex--we +bivouacked, without water or feed, and then tied up our horses. I found +this spot to be in south latitude 28 degrees 41 minutes by meridian +altitude of Bootes (Arcturus), and in longitude about 122 degrees 37 +minutes East. + +<p>2nd.<br> +Started at dawn, and steered about east, searching on our way for water, +which our horses and ourselves were beginning to want much. At six miles +we found a small hole in some rocks, apparently empty, but on sounding +with a stick I found it to contain a little water. The mouth of the hole +being too small to admit a pannican, and having used my hat with very +little success, I at last thought of my gum-bucket, with which we +procured about two quarts of something between mud and water, which, +after straining through my pocket-handkerchief, we pronounced first-rate. +Continuing for six miles over clear, open sand-plains, with spinifex and +large white gums--the only large trees and clear country seen since +leaving the settled districts--we climbed up a white gum to have a view +of the country eastward. Some rough sandstone cliffs bore North 127 +degrees East magnetic, about six miles distant. The country eastward was +almost level, with sandstone cliffs here and there, apparently thickly +wooded with white gums, and other trees; spinifex everywhere, but no +prospects of water. More to the north, a narrow line of samphire flats +appeared, with cypress and stunted gums on its edges--all barren and +desolate--so much so, indeed, that for the last twenty-five miles there +has been no grass seen at all save spinifex. After taking a few bearings +from the top of the tree (which I marked with the letter F on the south +side), which is in south latitude about 28 degrees 41 minutes, and +longitude about 122 degrees 50 East, I decided to return to our last +watering place, nearly thirty-one miles distant, as we were now over 100 +miles from camp, and the horses had been without water or feed since +yesterday morning. Therefore, keeping a little to the north of the +outward track, we travelled nearly two hours after dark, and camped +without water or feed, and tied up the horses. + +<h5>WINDICH BROOK.</h5> + +<p>3rd.<br> +Saddled up early, and steered westerly towards our last watering-place, +about fourteen miles distant; but, after travelling nearly seven miles, +came to a small pool of water (at the head of the brook where we found +water on the 1st), and rested two hours to allow our horses to feed, as +they had neither eaten nor drunk for the last forty-eight hours. Resuming +our journey along the brook (which I named Windich Brook, after my +companion, Tommy Windich) for ten miles, in which we found several pools +of water, but destitute of feed, camped without water about two miles +east of our bivouac of the 30th June. + +<p>4th.<br> +Travelling about West-South-West for twelve miles, we reached the pool of +water found on our outward track on the 30th June, two miles and a half +South-West from Mount Margaret. There we rested an hour. Resuming, we +travelled nearly along our outward track for eighteen miles, and camped +without water on a small patch of feed. Tommy shot two wurrongs to-day. + +<p>5th.<br> +Started at daybreak, and, continuing nearly along our outward track for +twenty-five miles, we reached the water close to Mount Malcolm, where we +left the party, they having shifted, as instructed, seventeen miles +farther back. There we rested an hour; but, having finished our +provisions, we roasted two wurrongs and made a first-rate dinner. Tommy +also shot an emu that came to water, and which we carried to camp. +Reached there at 6 p.m. and found all well, having been absent seven +days, every night being without water, during which time we travelled +over 200 miles. + +<p>6th.<br> +Weighed all the rations, and found we had 283 pounds flour, 31 pounds +bacon, 28 pounds sugar, and 4 pounds tea--equal to thirty-two days' +allowance of flour, ten days' bacon, nineteen days' sugar, and twenty-one +days' tea on a full ration. Thereupon concluded to return to Perth as +quickly as possible, and reduce the allowance of tea and sugar to last +thirty days--bacon to be done without. By that time I hope to reach +Clarke's homestead, Victoria Plains, and intend to return by Mount +Kenneth, Nanjajetty, Ningham, or Mount Singleton, and thence to Damparwar +and Clarke's homestead, thus fixing a few points that will be useful to +the Survey Office. + +<h5>THE RETURN JOURNEY.</h5> + +<p>7th.<br> +At 6.30 a.m., barometer 28 86, thermometer 34 degrees. Started on the +return, and followed along our outward tracks for sixteen miles. Camped +on east side of granite range, in south latitude 28 degrees 57 minutes, +and east longitude 120 degrees 55 minutes. + +<p>8th.<br> +Travelling nearly along our eastward track, and passing our bivouac of +the 19th June, we reached the Two Springs bivouac. + +<p>9th.<br> +Travelled twenty-two miles, and reached our bivouac of 30th May--129 +degrees 9 minutes East. + +<p>10th.<br> +Reached the bivouac of May 27th. On our way I ascended a very high range, +which I named Mount Alfred, and took a fine round of angles--Mount +Alexander, Mount Bivou, Mount Ida, Mount Elvire, and Yeadie and Bulgar +being visible. + +<p>11th (Sunday).<br> +Plotted up our track. + +<p>12th.<br> +Travelled for twenty-five miles and camped on a splendid patch of feed, +with a little water on some granite rocks about two miles west of our +bivouac of the 24th. This I found to be in south latitude 28 degrees 57 +minutes 48 seconds by meridian altitudes of Bootes (Arcturus) and Pegasi +(Markab), and in longitude about 119 degrees 28 minutes east; Mount +Elvire bearing North 154 degrees East magnetic, distant about twenty-one +miles. + +<p>13th.<br> +Leaving the party in charge of Mr. Monger, with instructions to proceed +to Retreat Rock--our bivouac of May 23rd--I started with Mr. Hamersley +and Jemmy to attempt to cross Lake Barlee, in order to explore the +country on its south side, near Mount Elvire, as well as to try and find +natives, Jemmy being acquainted with these tribes. Steering North 154 +degrees East magnetic for seven miles, we came to the lake, and, entering +it, succeeded in reaching the southern shore after twelve miles of heavy +walking, sinking over our boots every step--the horses having great +difficulty in getting through. When we reached the southern shore, it was +nearly sundown. Determined to push on, and reached the range, where we +bivouacked on a patch of feed and a little water; Mount Elvire bearing +North 87 degrees East magnetic, about one mile distant; and Yeadie and +Bulgar North 8 degrees East magnetic. Rained lightly during the day. +Being wet through from the splashings of the horses while crossing the +lake, and from it raining throughout the night, and not having any +covering, our situation was not the most pleasant. Jemmy informed me +there was a fine permanent spring close to Mount Elvire; but we did not +go to see it. + +<p>14th.<br> +This morning, after ascending a range to have a view of the country, +steered North 288 degrees East magnetic, and then, travelling six miles, +came to a branch of Lake Barlee running far to the southward, which we +attempted to cross; but after travelling a mile and a half, the horses +went down to their girths in the bog, and we had great difficulty in +getting them to return, which, however, we ultimately succeeded in doing, +and made another attempt, at a place where a series of islands appeared, +to cross it, and, passing over without much difficulty, reached the +opposite shore at sundown, where we bivouacked on a splendid grassy ride, +with abundance of water in granite rocks, Mount Elvire bearing North 108 +degrees East magnetic, and Yeadie and Bulgar North 45 degrees East +magnetic. + +<p>15th.<br> +Having finished our rations last night, we started at dawn, and steered +towards Retreat Rock. where we were to meet the party. After travelling +five miles, we came to that part of Lake Barlee which we attempted to +cross, without success, on May 19th (on our outward track); but, leading +our horses, we at last succeeded in crossing, and reached camp, all very +tired, at twelve o'clock, finding all well. The party were encamped one +mile north of our former bivouac, at some granite rocks with two fine +water-holes. + +<p>16th.<br> +Considerable delay having occurred in collecting the horses, we did not +start till ten o'clock, when we travelled nearly along our outward +track--passing Yeeramudder Hill, from the summit of which Mount Elvire +bore North 111 degrees 30 minutes East magnetic about thirty-five miles +distant--for about twenty-one miles, and bivouacked at some granite rocks +with a little feed around them, which I found to be in south latitude 29 +degrees 8 minutes 47 seconds by meridian altitudes of Bootes (Arcturus) +and Pegasi (Markab), and in longitude about 118 degrees 59 minutes East. + +<p>17th.<br> +Started at 8.45 a.m., and, steering about west for twenty-five miles +through dense thickets without feed, we camped without water on a small +miserable patch, in south latitude 29 degrees 7 minutes 13 seconds by +meridian altitude of Bootes (Arcturus). Marked a small tree with F. 1869. +Being now in friendly country, I decided to give up keeping watch, which +had been done regularly for the last two months. + +<p>18th (Sunday).<br> +After starting the party, went, in company with Tommy Windich, to take +bearings from a low hill, bearing North 289 degrees, distant about eight +miles, after which we struck in the direction in which we expected to +find the party; but as, for some reason or other, they had not passed by, +I anticipated they must have met with good feed and water, and camped, it +being Sunday. However this may be, we kept bearing more and more to the +southward, in hope of crossing the track, till after dark, when we +reached the Warne Flats, and bivouacked. Not expecting to be absent more +than a few days, we had neither rations nor rugs. Luckily, Tommy shot a +turkey, which we roasted in the ashes, and made a very good meal. The +night was bitterly cold, and, not having any rug, I slept with a fire on +each side of me, and, considering the circumstances, slept fairly. + +<p>19th.<br> +Made a first-rate breakfast off the remainder of the turkey, and then +started in search of the party, making back towards where we had left +them, keeping well to the southward. After spending nearly the whole of +the day, and knocking up the horses, we found the tracks of the party +nearly where we had left them yesterday morning, and, following along +them for nine miles, found where they had bivouacked last night; and, it +being now two hours after dark, we camped also, having between us for +supper an opossum, which Tommy had luckily caught during the day. The +night was again very cold, and we had hardly anything to eat, which made +matters still worse. + +<p>20th.<br> +Starting on the tracks at daybreak, followed them for about thirteen +miles, and then we found the party encamped on the east side of a large +bare granite rock called Meroin, Mount Kenneth bearing North 24 degrees +East magnetic, about fifteen miles distant. From a cliff, about one mile +west of the camp, took a splendid round of angles, Mount Kenneth, Mount +Singleton, and several other known points being visible. By meridian +altitudes of sun, a Bootes (Arcturus), E Bootes, and a Coronae Borealis, +camp was in south latitude 29 degrees 10 minutes 49 seconds, and +longitude about 118 degrees 14 minutes east. + +<p>21st.<br> +At seven a.m., barometer 29.10; thermometer 35 degrees. Started at 8.15 +a.m. Steered about west for fifteen miles, over country studded here and +there with granite rocks, with good feed around them--in some places rock +poison--and then camped at a spring called Pullagooroo, bearing North 189 +degrees from a bare granite hill, three quarters of a mile distant, from +which hill Mount Singleton bore North 237 degrees East magnetic, by +meridian altitudes of a Bootes (Arcturus) and E Bootes. Pullagooroo is in +south latitude 29 degrees 7 minutes 46 seconds. Finished our bacon this +morning, and for the future will only have damper and tea. + +<p>22nd.<br> +Steering a little to the north of west, through dense thickets without +grass, we bivouacked at a very grassy spot called Bunnaroo, from which +Mount Singleton bore North 205 degrees East magnetic. By meridian +altitudes of a Bootes (Arcturus), E Bootes, and Coronae Borealis, camp is +in south latitude 28 degrees 58 minutes, and in longitude about 117 +degrees 35 minutes east. + +<h5>MOUNT SINGLETON.</h5> + +<p>23rd.<br> +After starting the party with instructions to proceed straight to Mount +Singleton, distant about thirty-two miles, I went, in company with Jemmy, +to the summit of a high trap range in order to take a round of angles, +and fix Nanjajetty, which was visible. While on our way to join the +party, saw the tracks of two men and two horses, with two natives +walking, and soon after found where they had bivouacked a few days +before. Was much surprised at this discovery: suppose it to be squatters +looking for country. Continuing, we found the tracks of our party, and +overtook them, and encamped at a fine permanent spring--Mount Singleton +bearing North 146 degrees East magnetic about three miles and a half +distant. Reached the party at seven o'clock. There was a partial eclipse +of the moon this evening. + +<p>24th.<br> +There being splendid green feed around Mount Singleton, and as the horses +were tired, I concluded to give them a day's rest. Went, in company with +Mr. Monger and Jemmy, to the summit of Mount Singleton, which took us an +hour to ascend; but, on reaching it, we were well repaid for the trouble +by the very extensive view and the many points to which I could take +bearings. Far as the eye could reach to the East and South-East were +visible Lake Moore, Mount Churchman; to the north, conspicuous high trap +ranges appeared; while to the west, within a radius of six miles, hills +covered with flowers gave the country a pretty appearance. Further to the +west a dry salt lake and a few trap hills appeared. Reached the camp at 2 +p.m. On our way shot three rock kangaroos. + +<p>25th (Sunday).<br> +Rested at camp near Mount Singleton, which I found to be in south +latitude 29 degrees 24 minutes 33 seconds by meridian altitude of sun, +and longitude about 117 degrees 20 minutes east. + +<p>26th.<br> +Some delay having occurred in collecting the horses, did not start till 9 +a.m., when we steered a little to the north of west towards Damparwar. +For the first seven miles over rough trap hills lightly grassed, when we +entered samphire and saltbush flats for four miles. Crossing a large +marsh at a point where it was only 100 yards wide, and continuing through +thickets, we camped at a spot with very little feed and no water, in +south latitude 29 degrees 21 minutes 48 seconds. From this spot Mount +Singleton bore North 113 degrees 20 minutes East magnetic, distant about +twenty miles. Here we met two natives, whom we had seen on our outward +track at the Warne Corroboree. They were of course friendly, and slept at +our camp; they had a great many dulgates and opossums, which they carried +in a net bag, made out of the inner bark of the ordnance-tree, which +makes a splendid strong cord. They informed us that a native had come +from the eastward with intelligence relating to the encounter we had with +the large tribe on May 31, adding that we had all been killed, and that +all the natives in this vicinity had cried very much on hearing the news. +This is another specimen of the narrations of natives, with whom a tale +never loses anything by being carried. + +<p>27th.<br> +Steering a little to the north of west for eighteen miles, we reached +Damparwar Springs, a clear grassy spot of about 300 acres, on west side +of a low granite hill. The spring was dry, but by digging a few feet +obtained abundant supply. From the appearance of the country there has +hardly been any rain in this neighbourhood for many months. Took a round +of angles from a trap hill about two miles distant, Mount Singleton and +many other points being visible. Met a party of friendly natives here. By +meridian altitudes of a Bootes, a Coronae Borealis and a Lyrae (Vega), +Damparwar Spring is in south latitude 29 degrees 16 minutes 32 seconds, +and longitude about 116 degrees 47 minutes East. + +<p>28th.<br> +Steering in a southerly direction, and following along the western margin +of a salt lake--most of the way over samphire flats, with thickets +intervening, denser than usual--we encamped on a small grassy spot, with +plenty of water in granite rocks, called Murrunggnulgo, situated close to +the west side of the lake, which I named Lake Monger. The native Jemmy, +in company with some of his friends, stayed behind to-day in order to +catch opossums, and did not join us this evening. By meridian altitudes +of E Bootes, a Coronae Borealis, a Lyrae (Vega), and Aquilae (Altair), +Murrunggnulgo is in south latitude 29 degrees 37 minutes 20 seconds. +Damparwar bearing about north magnetic. + +<p>29th.<br> +Moving a little to the west of south for twenty miles, through dense +thickets, by far the worst we have ever encountered, and destitute of +feed, we reached Bera Bera, a grassy spot with a dry well, where water +might be procured. Continuing North 238 degrees East for about five +miles, we reached and camped at some granite rocks, with a fine well of +water called Wandanno, which I found to be in south latitude 29 degrees +57 minutes 14 seconds by meridian altitudes of Lyrae (Vega) and Aquilae +(Altair). From Bera Bera, Mount Singleton bore North 50 degrees 30 +minutes East magnetic about fifty miles distant. Jemmy did not put in an +appearance to-day, but sent on a native to say he would join us in a day +or two. + +<p>30th.<br> +Travelling about North 212 degrees East magnetic for fourteen miles, over +samphire flats, with thickets intervening, we reached a fine grassy spot, +with water in granite rocks, called Gnookadunging. Continuing about south +for two and a half miles, passed another small grassy spot called +Ginbinning; thence in about the general direction of North 210 degrees +East magnetic. For about eleven and a half miles, over an immense +sand-plain, running as far as the eye could reach to the North-West and +South-East, we camped in the centre of it at a spring called Manginie, a +sheep station belonging to Mr. James Church. Towards the end of the day +Bailey's horse Tommy fairly gave in, and we had great difficulty in +getting him to camp, which Mr. Hamersley and I did not reach until an +hour after dark. The night was cloudy, and I was unable to get any +observations, but luckily at daybreak obtained meridian altitudes of +Jupiter, which placed Manginie Spring in South latitude 30 degrees 21 +minutes. + +<p>31st.<br> +Steering about South-South-West for thirteen miles, we reached Cooroo +Springs--a fine grassy spot in winter--where we camped, the horses being +very tired. For the first seven miles over scrubby sand-plains; thence to +Cooroo, over grassy country, with spearwood thickets intervening. Tommy +shot a kangaroo this afternoon, which was very acceptable, having had +only damper and tea for several days past. + +<p>August 1st (Sunday).<br> +Rested at Cooroo Springs. All very busy putting our ragged clothes in as +good repair as possible. By meridian altitudes of sun, Lyrae (Vega), 32 +degrees 15 minutes. Read Divine Service. Jemmy has not yet overtaken us, +so I conclude he has changed his mind, and does not intend following us. +We are now about nine miles from Clarke's homestead, which bears about +South-South-East. + +<p>2nd.<br> +Travelling about South-South-East for nine miles over grassy country, +with York gums, etc., we reached the hospitable residence of Mr. Clarke, +where we were very kindly received, and stayed a short time to hear the +news. Resuming for eighteen miles along the road to Newcastle, we passed +Mr. Donald Macpherson's, where I obtained some rations, and pushed on six +miles farther, and bivouacked one mile south of Badgy-Badgy, with very +short feed for our horses. + +<p>3rd.<br> +Travelling along the road towards Newcastle for twenty-six miles, we +camped one mile past Byen, and about sixteen miles from Newcastle. + +<p>4th.<br> +Reached Newcastle at eleven o'clock, and had just time to report the safe +return of the expedition before the mail left. + +<p>5th.<br> +After handing over all the horses provided by the different settlers to +their respective owners, and bidding farewell to Mr. George Monger (who +intends proceeding to York), I left Newcastle in company with Mr. M. +Hamersley and Tommy Windich, leaving Morgan and remainder of equipment to +follow with the cart which had been brought to Newcastle by Ward and C. +Adams. Reached Baylup at 4 p.m. + +<p>6th.<br> +Made an early start; reached Guildford at twelve o'clock, where we rested +an hour. Then resuming, reached Perth at 4 p.m., and reported personally +the results of the expedition, having been absent 113 days, in which time +I travelled by computation over 2000 miles. + +<p>I now beg to make a few remarks with reference to the main object of the +expedition, which was the discovery of the remains of the late Dr. +Leichardt and party. + +<h5>THE NATIVES' STORIES.</h5> + +<p>In the first place, Mr. Frederick Roe was informed by the native +Weilbarrin, that two white men and their native companions had been +killed by the aborigines, thirteen days' journey to the northward, when +he was at a spot called Koolanobbing, which is in south latitude about 30 +degrees 53 minutes, and longitude about 119 degrees 14 minutes east. Mr. +Austin lost eleven horses at Poison Rock (nine died, and two were left +nearly dead), which is in latitude 28 degrees 43 minutes 23 seconds +south, and longitude about 118 degrees 38 minutes east, or about 130 +miles from Koolanobbing, and in the direction pointed to by the natives. +I therefore imagine it to be very probable that the whole story +originated from the horses lost by Mr. Austin at Poison Rock, as I am +convinced the natives will say anything they imagine will please. Again, +the account given us at Mount Churchman, on May 5th, appeared very +straightforward and truthful. It was very similar to that related to Mr. +Roe; but, on questioning the natives, they at last stated there were +neither men nor guns left, only horses' remains, and pointed towards +Poison Rock. Further, the native who gave all the information to Mr. +Monger was one of our party. His tale, as related by Mr. Monger, also +appeared very straightforward and truthful, that white men had been +killed by the natives twenty years ago; that he had seen the spot, which +was at a spring near a large lake, so large that it looked like the sea +as seen from Rottnest, eleven days' journey from Ningham or Mount +Singleton, in a fine country. The white men were rushed upon while making +a damper, and clubbed and speared. He had often seen an axe which formed +part of the plunder. All this appears feasible and truthful enough in +print; but the question is, Of what value did I find it? Upon telling +Jemmy what Mr. Monger stated he told him, he said he never told him that +he had seen things himself, but that he had heard it from a native who +had seen them, thus contradicting the whole he had formerly stated to Mr. +Monger. Moreover, the fine country he described we never saw, what a +native calls good country being where he can get a drink of water and a +wurrong; and if there is an acre of grassy land they describe it as a +very extensive grassy country! This I have generally found the case. As a +specimen of the untruthfulness of these natives, I may quote that my +native Jemmy, who was a first-rate fellow in every other respect, stated +to Mr. Monger and myself at York, that there was a large river like that +called the Avon at York, to the eastward, knowing at the time he would be +found out to be telling a falsehood. He even told Mr. George Monger, +before leaving Newcastle, to buy hooks, in order to catch the fish that +were in the river, and concluded by stating that we would have great +difficulty in crossing it, as it ran a great distance north and south. +Almost every evening I questioned and cross-questioned him respecting +this river; still he adhered to what he first stated! It may well be +imagined how disappointed we were on reaching the spot to find only a +small brook running into a salt marsh, with water in winter, but dry in +summer. + +<p>With reference to the country travelled over, I am of opinion that it is +worthless as a pastoral or agricultural district; and as to minerals I am +not sufficiently conversant with the science to offer an opinion, except +that I should think it was worth while sending geologists to examine it +thoroughly. + +<h5>CONDUCT OF THE PARTY.</h5> + +<p>It now becomes my most pleasing duty to record my entire satisfaction +with the manner in which all the members of the expedition exerted +themselves in the performance of their respective duties. To Mr. George +Monger and Mr. Malcolm Hamersley I am indebted for their co-operation and +advice on all occasions. I am also deeply indebted to Mr. Hamersley for +collecting and preserving all the botanical specimens that came within +his reach, as well as the great trouble and care taken with the store +department, placed under his immediate charge. To probation prisoner +David Morgan my best thanks are due as the shoeing smith, as well as +acting cook for the party the whole time. Of Tommy Windich (native) I +cannot speak too highly, being very useful in collecting the horses, as +well as a first-class huntsman, and really invaluable as a water finder. +Accompanying me on many trying occasions, suffering often from want of +water, he showed energy and determination deserving of the highest +praise. Jemmy Mungaro was also a first-class bushman, and invaluable as a +water finder. He was in many ways useful, and very obedient. His great +failing was that he exaggerated--no tale ever losing anything in his +charge. Nevertheless, I have many things to thank him for, and therefore +he deserves praise. + +<p>In conclusion, sir, allow me to thank you for your kindness and advice, +which has greatly supported me in this arduous undertaking. I much regret +that an expedition which was so efficiently equipped, and on which I was +left so free to act, has not resulted in more direct benefit to the +colony, to satisfy many who are not capable of appreciating the +importance of such explorations. + +<p>I have, Sir, etc.,<br> +JOHN FORREST,<br> +<p>Leader of Expedition.</p> + +<p> </p> +<p>The Honourable Captain Roe, R.N., Surveyor-General. + +<p> </p> +<p> </p> + +<p>So far as the mystery on which the fate of Leichardt is involved was +concerned, my expedition was barren of results; but the additional +knowledge gained of the character of the country between the settled +districts of Western Australia and the 123rd meridian of east longitude, +well repaid me, and those of the party, for the exertions we had +undergone. + +<h5>REWARDS.</h5> + +<p>Shortly after my return I received an official communication from Mr. +Barlee, the Colonial Secretary at Perth, announcing that his Excellency +the Governor, with a view to mark his sense of the value of my services +as leader of the expedition, had sanctioned the payment to me of a +gratuity of 50 pounds. Mr. Monger and Mr. Hamersley each received 25 +pounds; Morgan, the probation prisoner, who had done good service in the +expedition, especially in looking after the horses, was promised a +remission of a portion of his sentence. Tommy Windich and Jemmy Mungaro, +the natives, had each a single-barrel gun, with his name +inscribed--presents which they highly valued. + +<p>So ended the first of my expeditions; and a very short time elapsed +before I was called upon to undertake a longer, more hazardous, and more +important journey. + +<h4>CHAPTER 3.</h4> + +<h5>SECOND EXPEDITION. FROM PERTH TO ADELAIDE, ROUND THE GREAT BIGHT.</h5> + +<blockquote><center>A new Exploration suggested.<br> +Proposal to reach Adelaide by way of the South Coast.<br> +The experience derived from Eyre's Expedition.<br> +Survey of Port Eucla.<br> +Official Instructions.<br> +The Start.<br> +Dempster's Station near Esperance Bay.<br> +The Schooner at Port Eucla.<br> +Journal of the Expedition.</center></blockquote> + +<p>Immediately on my return to Perth a new expedition was suggested by Dr. +Von Mueller, whose anxiety for the discovery of Leichardt was rather +increased than abated by the disappointment experienced. He proposed that +I should start from the upper waters of the Murchison River with a light +party and provisions for six months, and endeavour to reach Carpentaria. +He thought, not only would such an expedition almost certainly find some +traces of the lost explorer, but probably would make geographical +discoveries of the highest interest and importance. In a paper in the +Colonial Monthly he argued that: + +<p>"While those who searched after traces of the lost party did not solve +the primary objects of their mission, their labours have not been without +importance to geographical science. The course of one traveller connected +the southern interior of Queensland in a direct route with the vast +pastoral depressions about Lake Torrens; the researches of another +explorer, bent on ascertaining Leichardt's fate, unfolded to us a tract +of table country, now already occupied by herds and flocks, not less in +length than that of Sweden and Italy...We should bear fully in mind how a +line in Leichardt's intended direction would at once enable the squatters +of North-East Australia to drive their surplus of flocks and herds easily +across to the well-watered, hilly and grassy country within close +proximity to the harbour of the north-west coast." + +<p>I should have been well satisfied to undertake an expedition in the +proposed direction, starting from the head of the Murchison, and trying +to connect my route with that of Mr. A. Gregory's down Sturt Creek; but +the difficulty of obtaining funds and lack of support caused the project +to be set aside or at least delayed. Mr. Weld, then Governor of Western +Australia, who always heartily supported explorations, was in favour of +an attempt to reach Adelaide by way of the south coast, and offered me +the command of an expedition in that direction. + +<p>I readily accepted the offer, and at once busied myself with the +necessary preparations, but was far from being insensible to the +difficulties of the undertaking. Of the route nothing was known except +the disastrous experience of Mr. Eyre in 1840 and 1841. His remarkable +narrative--interesting to all concerned in the history of explorations or +in the records of energy, courage, and perseverance under the most +discouraging circumstances--might have acted as a warning to future +explorers against endeavouring to follow in his track. The fearful +privations he endured, his narrow escape from the most terrible of all +forms of death, were certainly not encouraging; but his experience might +often be of service to others, pointing out dangers to be avoided, and +suggesting methods of overcoming difficulties. At any rate, I was not +deterred from the attempt to trace once more the coast of the Great +Bight, and to reach the sister colony by that route. Eyre had not +discovered any rivers, although it was possible that he might have +crossed the sand-bars of rivers in the night. The difficulties he +laboured under in his almost solitary journey, and the sufferings he +endured, might have rendered him unable to make observations and +discoveries more practicable to a better equipped and stronger party, +while the deficiency of water on the route appeared to offer the greatest +impediment. We were not, however, deterred from the attempt, and on the +30th of March, 1870, we started from Perth on a journey which all knew to +be dangerous, but which we were sanguine enough to believe might produce +considerable results. + +<center> +<p><a name="forrest4"></a><img alt="" src="forrest4.jpg"></p> +<p><b>Portrait of Alexander Forrest.</b></p> +</center> + +<p>That we were not disappointed the result will prove. Indeed, the +difficulties were much fewer than we had been prepared to encounter; and +in five months from the date of departure from Perth we arrived safely at +Adelaide, completing a journey which Mr. Eyre had been more than twelve +months in accomplishing. + +<h5>THE EXPLORING PARTY.</h5> + +<p>My party was thus composed: I was leader; the second in command was my +brother, Alexander Forrest, a surveyor; H. McLarty, a police constable; +and W. Osborne, a farrier and shoeing smith, these with Tommy Windich, +the native who had served me so faithfully on the previous expedition, +and another native, Billy Noongale, an intelligent young fellow, +accompanied us. + +<p>Before I enter upon the details of my journey it may be useful to state +as briefly as possible the efforts made to obtain a better acquaintance +with the vast territory popularly known as No Man's Land, which had been +traversed by Eyre, and afterwards to summarize the little knowledge which +had been obtained. + +<p>In 1860 Major Warburton--who afterwards, in 1873 and 1874, succeeded in +crossing the northern part of the great inland desert, after enduring +great privations--contrived to reach eighty-five miles beyond the head of +the Bight, and made several journeys from the coast in a north and +north-westerly direction for a distance of about sixty miles. Traces of +Eyre's expedition were then visible. The holes he had dug in search of +water twenty years before were still there, and the records of his +journey were of great value as guiding Warburton's movements. His +experience of the nature of the country amply confirmed that of the +previous explorer. He found the district to the north to be a dreary +waste, destitute of food and water. Rain seldom fell, and, when it did, +was immediately absorbed by the arid soil. Bustards and moles were the +only living creatures. To the north-west there was a little grass, but +the tract showing verdure was very small in extent, and beyond it was +again the scorched, barren, inhospitable desert. + +<p>Two years afterwards other explorations were attempted, and especially +should be noted Captain Delessier's. He was disposed to think more +favourably of the nature of the country. The enterprise of squatters +seeking for "fresh fields and pastures new," to whom square miles +represent less than acres to graziers and sheep farmers in England--is +not easily daunted. They made a few settlements; but the scanty pasturage +and the difficulty of obtaining water, by sinking wells, in some +instances to the depth of over 200 feet, have been great drawbacks. + +<h5>DISCOVERY OF PORT EUCLA.</h5> + +<p>It might naturally be inquired why no attempts were made to reach the +coast of the Great Bight by sea? Why so much suffering has been endured +when a well-equipped vessel might have landed explorers at various points +and been ready to afford them assistance? In his explorations to the +north of Western Australia, Mr. F. Gregory had a convenient base of +operations in the Dolphin, a barque which remained on the coast. It might +seem that similar aid could have been afforded to Warburton and others +who attempted to trace the south-coast line. But for hundreds of miles +along the shores of the Bight no vessel could reach the shore or lie +safely at anchor. Long ranges of perpendicular cliffs, from 300 to 400 +feet high, presented a barrier effectually forbidding approach by sea. +About 1867, however, an excellent harbour was discovered about 260 miles +to the west of Fowler's Bay. The South Australian Government at once +undertook a survey of this harbour, and Captain Douglas, President of the +Marine Board, the officer entrusted with this duty, reported in the most +favourable terms. The roadstead, named Port Eucla, was found to afford +excellent natural protection for shipping. There was, however, the less +encouraging circumstance that it was situated a few miles to the west of +the boundary of the colony, and consequently Western, and not South, +Australia was entitled to the benefit of the discovery. + +<p>It was evident that Port Eucla, which Captain Douglas carefully surveyed +by taking soundings and observing bearings, was the key to the +exploration of this vast portion of the continent. But, notwithstanding +the propositions made to the Government of Western Australia by the York +Agricultural Society for equipping an exploring party, nothing was done +until the beginning of 1870, when the Governor determined on equipping an +overland party intended to make its way, keeping as far inland as +possible, to Eucla, where assistance and supplies would await them. It +was this expedition which I was selected to command. The following copy +of official instructions will show the object of the exploration and the +preparations made to insure a fair prospect of a successful result:-- + +<h5>OFFICIAL INSTRUCTIONS.</h5> + +<blockquote><p>Colonial Secretary's Office, Perth,<br> +<p>March 29th, 1870. + +<p>SIR, + +<p>His Excellency the Governor, confiding in your experience, ability, and +discretion, has been pleased to entrust to your charge and leadership an +overland expedition, which has been organized for the purpose of +exploring the country between the settled portions of this colony and the +Port of Eucla, situated near its east boundary. + +<p>Your party will consist of the following six persons, well armed, and +provisioned for two months, namely, yourself as leader; Mr. Alexander +Forrest, your brother, as second in command; H. McLarty, a +police-constable, third in command; W.H. Osborne, farrier, etc.; and two +reliable natives, one of whom will be your former well-tried companion, +Windich. An agreement to serve under you on the expedition in the above +capacities will be signed by each European named previous to starting. + +<p>Ample stores and supply of provisions have been prepared for your use, +and a suitable coasting vessel (the schooner Adur) is engaged, under an +experienced commander, to convey them where required, and to be at your +disposal in aiding the operations of the expedition. + +<p>It is desirable the party should start from Perth as soon as all +arrangements have been completed, and take the most convenient route to +Esperance Bay, where men and horses can be recruited, further supplies +from the coaster laid in, and a fresh start made for Eucla so soon as the +first winter rains may lead to a prospect of the country being +sufficiently watered. + +<p>About 120 miles to the eastward of the station of Messrs. Dempster, at +the west end of Esperance Bay, lies Israelite Bay, under some islands, in +front of which there is said to be anchorage. That being the nearest +known anchorage westward of Eucla, it appears to offer a convenient spot +whence fresh supplies might be drawn from your coaster with which to +prosecute the remaining 300 miles; but this arrangement as to an +intermediate place of call will be liable to modification, after +consulting on the spot with the Messrs. Dempster, who are well acquainted +with that part of the coast. + +<p>Between Israelite Bay and Eucla the route should be as far from the coast +as circumstances and the nature of the country will admit. + +<p>At Eucla all the remaining provisions and stores that may be required +should be landed, and the coaster despatched on her return to Fremantle +with a report of your proceedings. + +<p>After recruiting at Eucla, five or six days might be employed with +advantage in exploring the country to the northward, care being taken to +place in security, by burying in casks or otherwise, such provisions, +etc., as might not be necessary for the northern excursion. + +<p>On returning to Eucla from the north, the expedition is to make a final +start overland for Adelaide, by such route as you may deem advisable. The +Surveyor-General is of opinion that +via Port Lincoln, and thence to Adelaide by steamer, would be the +preferable route; but of this you will be the best judge, after receiving +information from the various out-stations you will pass. Before leaving +South Australia, you will dispose of your horses and such remaining +stores and provisions as may not be further required, retaining all +instruments and such pack-saddles and other articles of outfit as you may +deem worth preserving for future service. + +<p>On arriving at Adelaide you will report yourself to his Excellency the +Governor, and avail yourself of the first favourable opportunity of +returning to Perth with your party, and with the remains of your outfit, +either by any vessel about to proceed direct to the Swan, or by the +earliest mail-steamer to King George's Sound. On application to his +Excellency, Sir James Fergusson, you will be furnished with such means as +may be necessary to defray your expenses from South to Western Australia, +as well as during your stay in the former colony. + +<p>I am to impress on you the advisability of endeavouring, by every means +in your power, to cultivate friendly relations with the aboriginal +inhabitants of the country you are about to traverse. + +<p>Such are briefly the general instructions by which it is intended you +should be governed in conducting the expedition entrusted to your care +and guidance; and I may add that the fullest confidence is placed in your +energy, zeal, and discretion, for bringing it to a successful issue. The +main objects of the undertaking are alone referred to; and, although a +mode of accomplishing them is briefly alluded to, it is by no means +intended to fetter your judgment in adopting such measures of minor +details as may appear to you necessary for effectually carrying them out. + +<p>I have the honour to be, Sir, your obedient servant, + +<p>FRED. P. BARLEE.</blockquote> + +<p> </p> + +<h5>DEPARTURE FROM PERTH.</h5> + +<p>The Adur, chartered by the Government, was a vessel of thirty tons, owned +by Mr. Gabriel Adams. It gives me much pleasure to express my thanks to +him and to Mr. Waugh, the master, and to the crew of the vessel, for the +important services they performed, and the zeal they exhibited in +rendering me assistance, not only on board the vessel, but also on shore. + +<p>We started from Perth on the afternoon of Wednesday, the 30th of March, +1870. His Excellency the Governor accompanied us for about three miles on +the Albany Road. We had fifteen horses, and provisions sufficient for the +journey to Esperance Bay, a distance of about 450 miles, where, it was +arranged, further supplies would await us. By the 5th of April we had +reached Kojonup, travelling in a north-easterly direction, and then +rested four days, leaving for Jerramungup on the 9th, and reaching it on +the 13th. Our first day's journey brought us to Mr. Graham's homestead, +near which we bivouacked; thence our route lay in an easterly direction, +at first through good grassy country with jam and white gum trees and +shea oaks, by way of Etticup, Martinup (where we bivouacked on the night +of the 10th), and Nigalup, beyond which were scrubby sand-plains +extending southwards towards the Stirling range. On the following night +we camped near some granite rocks. The next day's journey extended to +Koorarkup, where we again rested. Our rate of travel was from twenty to +twenty-five miles a day, and already we began to experience inconvenience +from want of water. A little stream, the Pallinup, was salt, and there +were salt pools on the route between our last camping-place and +Koorarkup, where we were now resting. + +<p>Around Jerramungup was rich grassy country, but beyond it we passed over +scrubby undulating plains for about sixteen miles, camping, on the night +of the 14th, on a small branch of the Fitzgerald River, near some granite +rocks called Dwertup. At this spot there was water, but very little feed +for the horses. My observations showed that we were in latitude 33 +degrees 1 minute 15 seconds south. + +<p>From this point the progress will be best narrated by extracts from my +Diary. A reference to the map will show that as yet we had not reached +the track of Eyre, who had followed the coast to King George's Sound; but +by the 16th of April we had reached his line of route. + +<p>April 15th.<br> +Travelled to the north of east, and at seven miles crossed the main +branch of the Fitzgerald River; granite rocks in bed, and saltwater +pools. After travelling over stony undulating country for twenty-one +miles, camped on a small patch of feed, with water in some granite rocks, +called Coombedup. + +<p>16th.<br> +Continuing easterly over rough stony country, crossing several brooks +with salt pools of water in them, we reached the Phillips River, and, +after a good deal of searching, found some fresh water in a small brook +near the river. The immense pools in the Phillips were as salt as sea +water. Distance travelled about twenty-five miles. + +<h5>VIEW OF THE SEA.</h5> + +<p>17th (Sunday).<br> +Did not travel. Went this morning, in company with McLarty, to the summit +of a high hill in Eyre's Range, called Annie's Peak, which we reached +after one and a half hour's hard climbing. It is the steepest hill I ever +attempted to ascend. We had a splendid view of the sea--the first since +leaving Perth--and I also obtained a fine round of angles and bearings. +On our return, found Billy had shot five ducks, and Tommy soon returned +with an emu. In the evening it very suddenly came on to thunder and +lighten, and soon rained in torrents, and, as we were rather unprepared, +we did not pass a very pleasant night. + +<p>18th.<br> +Just as we had collected the horses it commenced to rain in torrents; got +under way, however, by 9 o'clock, steering in about an easterly direction +over sandy, scrubby country, and at ten miles crossed a brook with salt +pools in it, and afterwards reached a large river of salt water, which we +followed about two miles, and then camped at a spring called Jerdacuttup. +It rained in torrents the whole day, blowing hard from the southward, so +that all were drenched when we halted. + +<p>19th.<br> +After travelling about twenty-three miles, in an easterly direction, we +reached a salt lake, called Parriup, and camped. Procured water on some +granite rocks near camp. + +<p>20th.<br> +Travelling nine miles, reached Mr. Campbell Taylor's station on the +Oldfield River, and rested for the remainder of the day. + +<p>21st.<br> +After starting the party, with instructions to reach and camp on north +side of Stokes' Inlet, distant about twenty miles, I went with Mr. Taylor +to the mouth of the Oldfield River, in order to take bearings to East +Mount Barren, but was disappointed, the weather being very hazy. +Accompanied by a native of Mr. Taylor's, followed on the tracks, but, +night setting in, we made the best of our way to where I expected to find +the party, but could see nothing of them, and were obliged to camp for +the night without food, and, what was worse, without a fire, having +neither matches nor powder with us. Luckily I had a rug, by which means I +fared much better than my companion, who had only a small kangaroo skin. +As it blew and rained in torrents most of the night, our position can be +better imagined than described. + +<p>22nd.<br> +Early this morning we were looking for the tracks of the party, but +without success; finally we returned eight miles to the Margaret River, +and, after a good deal of searching, found the tracks almost obliterated +by the rain, and followed along them. Upon nearing Stokes' Inlet we met +Tommy Windich looking for us, he having seen the tracks and last night's +bivouac. He informed me that they had camped about four miles westward of +the inlet, and we had therefore passed them in the dark last night. Made +all haste to overtake the party; succeeded in doing so, after a great +deal of trouble, one hour and a half after dark. Encamped on north side +of Barker's Inlet, at a small well of water called Booeynup. We did +justice to the supper, as we had not had anything to eat for thirty-two +hours. + +<p>23rd.<br> +For the first nine miles over scrubby sand-plains, kangaroos very +numerous, when we came into and skirted a chain of salt lakes and +marshes. Continuing over generally low country, well grassed, for five +miles, we reached and camped at the old homestead of the Messrs. +Dempster, called Mainbenup. + +<h5>ESPERANCE BAY.</h5> + +<p>24th (Sunday).<br> +Left camp in company with Billy Noongale, and proceeded to Esperance Bay, +distant twenty-four miles. On getting in view of the Bay, was much +disappointed to see no schooner lying at anchor, and felt very anxious +for her safety. Was very kindly received by Mrs. Andrew Dempster; the +Messrs. Dempster being away on Mondrain Island. + +<p>25th.<br> +Went several times up on the hill, looking out for the Adur, but was each +time disappointed. On my return in the evening, found the party had +arrived from Mainbenup, and had camped. + +<p>26th.<br> +Rained very heavily all last night. Shifted camp over one mile west of +homestead to a sheltered spot, where there was feed and wood. No signs of +the Adur. + +<p>27th and 28th.<br> +Rested at camp; the weather very stormy. The Messrs. Dempster returned +from Mondrain Island this evening. + +<p>29th.<br> +Shifted camp back to the homestead, and camped in a sheltered nook near +the Head. On ascending the Look-out Hill this evening, was rejoiced to +espy the Adur near Cape Le Grand, making in for the Bay, and at 8 o'clock +went off in Messrs. Dempster's boat, and had the great pleasure of +finding all hands well. They had experienced heavy weather, but +everything was dry and safe. I cannot find words to express the joy and +relief from anxiety this evening; all fears and doubts were at an end, +and I was now in a position to attempt to carry out my instructions. + +<p>The Messrs. Dempster, whose hospitality was so welcome, are good +specimens of the enterprising settlers who are continually advancing the +frontiers of civilization, pushing forward into almost unknown regions, +and establishing homesteads which hereafter may develop into important +towns. In ten days we had journeyed 160 miles, and had enjoyed a +foretaste of the nature of the country through which we should have to +make our way. Four days' rest recruited our energies, and the arrival of +the Adur, with stores, gave all the party excellent spirits. + +<p>The last day of April was occupied with landing the stores required for +immediate use, and the following day, being Sunday, we rested, and, +observing the practice adopted in my previous expeditions, I read Divine +Service to a somewhat larger congregation than I generally had around me. + +<p>The horses had suffered from sore backs, the result of saddles being +stuffed with straw; and on the two following days we were all busy +restuffing them with wool, and I set Osborn, the farrier, to work to +widen and alter the iron-work, so as to make the saddles more comfortable +and easy to the horses. From the 3rd to the 8th of May we remained at Mr. +Dempster's, and I made a survey of his location, a tract of forty acres. +On Saturday, the 7th, Mr. William Dempster left for Perth, and I had the +opportunity of sending a report of our proceedings to that date to the +Colonial Secretary, and also of forwarding private letters. + +<h5>LAST DAY IN ESPERANCE BAY.</h5> + +<p>Sunday, the 8th, being our last day in Esperance Bay, was passed quietly, +all attending Divine Service at Mr. Dempster's house; and on the +following morning we prepared to start on the second stage of our +journey. The Adur was to meet us again at Israelite Bay, about 120 miles +to the eastward; and here I resume the extracts from my Diary:-- + +<p>May 9th.<br> +After collecting the horses, we saddled up and started en route for +Israelite Bay, where I had instructed the master of the Adur to meet us. +Bidding good-bye to our kind friends at Esperance Bay, travelled along +the north shore for about eleven miles, when we left the coast and +steered towards Mount Merivale, and camped at a spring on South-East +corner of a salt sake, Mount Merivale bearing North 60 degrees East +magnetic; Frenchman's Peak North 150 degrees East magnetic, and +Remarkable Island North 196 degrees East magnetic. The country for the +last few miles is beautifully grassed, with numerous brackish streams +running through. Commenced keeping watch this evening, two hours each, +from 8 p.m. to 6 o'clock a.m. Marked a tree with the letter F. at our +bivouac. + +<p>10th.<br> +Travelled nearly due East for twenty-four miles, through scrubby, sandy +country without timber. Remarkable bare granite hills studded in every +direction. Camped at a spring on South-East side of granite hills, +resembling a saddle. Passed Mount Hawes, leaving it a little to the +north. From hill near camp, Mount Hawes bore North 295 degrees East +magnetic, Mount Merivale North 278 degrees East magnetic, Frenchman's +Peak North 243 degrees 30 minutes East magnetic, and the east side of +Mondrain Island North 207 degrees 30 minutes East magnetic. + +<p>11th.<br> +The horses having strayed back on the tracks last night, we were delayed +till 10 o'clock, when only eight of them were brought in. Sent Tommy in +search of the remainder, and, after waiting until 3 o'clock for his +return, my brother, Osborn, and Billy went with seven horses and loads; +instructed to camp at the first place where there was feed and water, +there being no feed at this camp. McLarty and myself waited until Tommy +returned, which he did at sundown, having had to go back twenty-four +miles to the bivouac of the 9th. There being scarcely any feed here, and +it being too late to follow after the party, we tied up our horses for +the night. Found it rather long hours watching, namely, about four hours +each. By meridian altitude of sun, camp is in latitude 33 degrees 90 +minutes 49 seconds South. + +<p>12th.<br> +Packed up and followed on the tracks of the party, and at ten miles found +them camped on a branch of a creek which runs into Duke of Orleans Bay. +Brackish streams plentiful: scrubby, sandy country. By meridian altitudes +of sun and Arcturus, camp is in South latitude 33 degrees 51 minutes 35 +seconds. + +<h5>THE ALEXANDER RIVER.</h5> + +<p>13th.<br> +Travelled in an easterly direction towards Cape Arid, passing at five +miles a large creek, and at ten miles camped on a running brackish +stream, which I named the Alexander. Scrubby open country most of the +way. Shot a few ducks from thousands that are in these rivers. + +<p>14th.<br> +Continuing a little to the south of East for ten miles, crossed a large +brook, and at fourteen miles reached another creek. Followed it up a mile +and camped on east side of a large salt lagoon, into which the brook +empties. Splendid green feed around camp, but no water. Went with Billy +to look for some, and, after going a mile and a half East, struck the +Thomas River, where we met two natives, quietly disposed, who showed us +the water, and, after filling our canteens, returned with us to camp. + +<p>15th (Sunday).<br> +Shifted camp over to the Thomas River, one mile and a half, where there +was plenty of water. Rained a little during the day. Grassy piece of +country round camp--the first good feeding land seen since leaving Mount +Merivale. About half a mile west of camp, Mount Ragged bore North 43 +degrees 30 minutes East magnetic, Mount Baring North 53 degrees 15 +minutes East magnetic, and South-West point of Cape Arid North 140 +degrees 30 minutes East. By meridian altitude of sun, camp was in south +latitude 33 degrees 50 minutes 7 seconds, and longitude about 123 degrees +East. Billy shot five ducks this afternoon. + +<p>16th.<br> +Got an early start and steered nearly East, accompanied by the two +natives, over scrubby sand-plains for about twenty-one miles. We camped +near the sea, a few miles to the westward of Cape Pasley. Filled our +canteens about two miles back from where we camped, from which point +Mount Ragged bore North 11 degrees East magnetic, Cape Pasley North 110 +degrees 30 minutes East magnetic, and South-East point of Cape Arid North +214 degrees East magnetic. + +<p>17th.<br> +Steering in an East-North-East direction for about nineteen miles, we +camped near Point Malcolm, Mount Ragged bearing North 327 degrees East +magnetic, and Point Dempster (Israelite Bay) North 35 degrees 15 minutes +East magnetic. Hope to reach Israelite Bay to-morrow, as it is only +sixteen miles distant. There was no water at Point Malcolm, but luckily +we had filled our canteens. The wind was strong from the westward, +accompanied with light showers all day. Tommy shot a kangaroo this +evening, and the two natives who were travelling with us from the Thomas +River did ample justice to the supper, literally eating the whole night. + +<h5>ISRAELITE BAY.</h5> + +<p>18th.<br> +After starting the party, went in advance with Billy to prepare camp at +Israelite Bay. When we reached it were delighted to find the Adur lying +safely at anchor there; proceeding on board, found all well. Procured +abundance of water by digging one foot deep in the sand-hills, and good +feed a short distance from camp. + +<p>Our friends on the Adur were looking anxiously for us. We were two days +behind the appointed time, and they feared some evil had befallen us, not +taking into consideration the many delays incidental to such a journey +through strange and difficult country as we had made. We had occupied ten +days in reaching Israelite Bay since leaving Mr. Dempster's station, +going an average of about twelve miles a day, which would be a slow rate +of progress in a settled country, but which had sufficiently tried our +horses, they being now in a very reduced condition from scarcity of feed. +I resolved to stay at the camp for eight or ten days to recruit the +horses, as there was good feed in the vicinity; and we re-stuffed and +re-fitted the saddles and had the horses shod. I made a correct chart of +the route from Esperance Bay, and found that the coast-line, as laid down +in the Admiralty charts, was in many places incorrect. + +<p>On the 24th of May we determined to celebrate the Queen's birthday. All +hands from the Adur came ashore, and I drew them up in line under the +Union Jack, which was duly hoisted near the camp. We presented arms; sang +God Save the Queen vigorously, and fired a salute of twenty-one guns, +finishing with three cheers. I venture to record that our vocal efforts +were as sincerely and heartily made in the Australian wilderness as any +which rang that day in any part of her Majesty's wide dominions. We were +all highly delighted--not only feeling that we had done our duty as loyal +subjects, but other celebrations in more civilized places were forcibly +recalled to memory. + +<p>I had fixed the 30th as the time for our fresh start, and we had enough +to do in packing bags, and making general repairs and improvements in our +outfit. Eucla Bay, the only other point at which we should be able to +communicate with the coaster, was 350 miles to the east of Israelite Bay. +The nature of the country was quite unknown, except so far as indicated +by the not very encouraging record of Eyre's journey. We felt that we +should inevitably have to encounter considerable difficulties, and +perhaps even fail to reach Eucla. I deemed it right to give explicit +directions to Mr. Waugh, the master of the schooner, so that, in the +event of not meeting with us at the appointed place, he should have no +difficulty as to the course to pursue, and to that end I gave him in +writing the following instructions:-- + +<h5>INSTRUCTIONS FOR THE SCHOONER.</h5> + +<blockquote><p>Israelite Bay, 28th May, 1870. + +<p>SIR, + +<p>It being my intention to start for Eucla on Monday, the 30th instant, I +have the honour to direct you will be good enough to make arrangements +for leaving this place on the 7th of June, wind and weather permitting, +and sail as direct as possible for Port Eucla, situated in south latitude +31 degrees 43 minutes, and east longitude 128 degrees 52 minutes East. + +<p>You will remain at anchor in Port Eucla until the 1st September, long +before which time I hope to reach and meet you there. No signs of myself +or party appearing by that date, you will bury in casks under the Black +Beacon, 400 pounds flour, 200 pounds pork, 100 pounds sugar, 10 pounds +tea, and four bags barley, together with the remainder of our clothing on +board. You will be careful to hide the spot of concealment as much as +possible, or by any other means that may suggest themselves. Also you +will bury a bottle containing report of your proceedings. + +<p>All these matters had better be attended to a day or two before, and on +the 2nd of September you will set sail and return with all despatch to +this place (Israelite Bay), where, if I have been obliged to return, I +will leave buried a bottle at this spot (arranged by us yesterday), which +will contain instructions as to your future proceedings. + +<p>No signs of our return being found here, you will sail for Fremantle, +calling at Esperance Bay on your way. + +<p>On arriving in Fremantle, you will immediately report your return to the +Honourable the Colonial Secretary, and forward him a report of your +proceedings, after which your charter-party will have been completed. + +<p>These arrangements are chiefly respecting your proceedings in the event +of our not reaching Eucla; and I may add that, although I have every hope +of reaching there in safety, still it is impossible to command success in +any enterprise, and I have to impress upon you the necessity of these +instructions being carried out, as nearly as possible, to the very +letter. Wishing yourself and crew a prosperous voyage, and hoping soon to +meet you in Port Eucla, + +<p>I have, etc.,<br> +JOHN FORREST,<br> +Leader of Expedition.</p> + +<p> </p> + +<p>Mr. R.B. Waugh,<br> +<p>Master of Schooner Adur.</p></blockquote> + + +<h5>STARTING FOR EUCLA.</h5> + +<p>On Sunday, the 29th of May, all hands came ashore to dinner. It was +certainly a festive party under rather extraordinary circumstances, but +it was heartily enjoyed. So far as we were concerned the future was more +than usually uncertain; but there was no feeling of despondency, and we +separated in the evening with mutual good wishes and hopes for the +success of the expedition. I read Divine Service, and, situated as we +were, a small party remote from civilization, I think we all felt more +impressed than under ordinary circumstances would have been the case. We +had rested for eleven days. Good food had restored the condition of the +horses, and we rested in our camp in good spirits, ready for the work we +were to begin on the following morning. My observations showed that we +were in latitude 33 degrees 36 minutes 58 seconds South and longitude +about 123 degrees 48 minutes East, the variation of compass from a number +of azimuths being about 0 degrees 46 minutes westerly. + +<p>The narrative is now continued in extracts from my Diary:-- + +<p>May 30th.<br> +After bidding good-bye to the crew of the Adur, and to the two natives we +have had with us from the Thomas River, who were now at the end of their +country and were afraid to come any further with us, we left Israelite +Bay en route for Eucla, and steered in a northerly direction for about +fifteen miles over salt marshes and clay-pans, with dense thickets +intervening, destitute of grass. I was obliged to make for the coast, +and, following it for about eight miles, we camped close to it, without +water or feed, and tied up our horses in latitude 33 degrees 17 minutes +17 seconds by meridian altitude of Arcturus and a Bootes. + +<p>31st.<br> +Saddled up at dawn and continued along the beach for four miles; came to +a large sand patch, and found abundance of water by digging one foot deep +in the hollows. Camped on east side of the sand-hills, with first-rate +feed for the horses. By meridian altitude of sun, camp is in latitude 33 +degrees 13 minutes 46 seconds South. + +<p>June 1st.<br> +After starting the party, went with Tommy Windich to examine the country +to the North-West, and then, travelling nine miles over salt marshes and +samphire flats, with dense scrub intervening, we reached what is named on +the Admiralty Charts The Front Bank, which, ascending, we found very +steep and rough. At last, gaining the summit, the country receded to the +north, level and thickly wooded, as far as the eye could reach. We +travelled about four miles to the North-West, from where we ascended the +range, and then climbed a tree to have a view of the country, which I +found very level and thickly wooded with mallee. I therefore determined +to turn east, and if possible, reach the party to-night. Accordingly, we +reached the sea, and, following the tracks of the party, came up with +them at about 10 p.m., encamped on North-East side of an immense +sand-patch, about twenty-five miles from our last night's bivouac. There +was abundance of water on the surface in the hollows of the sand-hills. + +<p>2nd.<br> +There being no feed near camp, saddled up and continued towards Point +Culver for four miles and camped, with only some coarse grass growing on +the white sand-hills for our very hungry horses. Found plenty of water by +digging. This is a poor place for the horses: intend making a flying trip +to the North-East to-morrow. By meridian altitude of sun and Arcturus, +camp is in latitude 32 degrees 55 minutes 30 seconds south, and longitude +124 degrees 25 minutes east. + +<p>3rd.<br> +Started with my brother and Billy to examine the country to the +North-East, and travelled in about a North-East direction for twenty-five +miles over very level country, but in many places most beautifully +grassed. We camped on a splendid flat, without water. + +<h5>A VIEW OF THE SEA.</h5> + +<p>4th.<br> +Started at dawn and travelled in a southerly direction for nine miles, +when we found a rock water-hole containing one gallon, and had breakfast. +Continuing for four miles, we reached the cliffs, which fell +perpendicularly into the sea, and, although grand in the extreme, were +terrible to gaze from. After looking very cautiously over the precipice, +we all ran back quite terror-stricken by the dreadful view. Turning our +course westward along the cliffs, we reached camp at 5 o'clock, and found +all well. We saw several natives' tracks during the day. + +<p>5th (Sunday).<br> +Rested at camp. Read Divine Service. Intend making preparations to-morrow +for starting on Tuesday morning, and attempt to reach the water shown on +Mr. Eyre's track, in longitude 126 degrees 24 minutes East, 150 miles +distant, by carrying thirty gallons of water with us and walking in +turns, so as to have the horses to carry the water. Intend allowing each +man one quart and each horse two quarts per day. Feel very anxious as to +the result, as it will take five or six days; but it is the only resource +left. After explaining my views to my companions, and pointing out the +great probability of our meeting with small rock water-holes, was much +relieved by the sanguine way in which they acquiesced in the plans, and +the apparent confidence they placed in me. + +<p>6th.<br> +Filled the water-cans, and got everything ready for a start to-morrow +morning. + +<p>7th.<br> +Started at 9 a.m., carrying over thirty gallons of water with us. One of +the drums leaked so much that we left it at camp. Travelled along our +outward tracks of the 4th, and camped at our former bivouac, with +splendid feed, but no water for our horses. + +<p>8th.<br> +Started early, and steered about North-East through dense mallee +thickets, destitute of grass or water, for eighteen miles. We came upon a +small patch of open grassy land, and camped without water for our horses. +This is the second night our horses have been without water, but the +grass has been fresh, and they do not yet appear to have suffered much. +Marked a tree at camp, F., 1870. My brother, I am sorry to say, left his +revolver at our last night's bivouac, and did not notice it until this +evening, when it was too far to send back to look for it. By meridian +altitude of Arcturus, camp is in latitude 32 degrees 34 minutes 20 +seconds south, and longitude 124 degrees 59 minutes east. + +<h5>SUFFERINGS FROM THIRST.</h5> + +<p>9th.<br> +Made an early start, steering North-East, and at one mile found a rock +water-hole containing fifteen gallons, which we gave the tired, thirsty +horses, and, continuing, chiefly through dense mallee thickets, with a +few grassy flats intervening, for twenty-two miles, found another rock +water-hole holding about ten gallons, which we also gave the horses, and, +after travelling one mile from it, camped on a large grassy flat, without +water for the horses. Our horses are still very thirsty, and have yet +seventy miles to go before reaching the water in longitude 126 degrees 24 +minutes East. Am very thankful for finding the little water to-day, for +if we had none, our situation would be somewhat perilous, and some of the +horses would probably show signs of distress to-morrow. Latitude of camp, +32 degrees 20 minutes 35 seconds South by Arcturus, and longitude 125 +degrees 16 minutes East. + +<p>10th.<br> +Steering East-North-East over generally open country, grassy flats, etc., +thinly wooded, for twenty-one miles, found a small rock water-hole +containing three gallons, which we put into our canteens. After +travelling three miles further, camped on the edge of a grassy flat, and +gave our horses half a gallon each from our canteens. Our horses appear +fearfully distressed this evening. For the last ninety-six hours they +have only had two gallons each. Latitude of camp 32 degrees 11 minutes 5 +seconds South, longitude 125 degrees 37 minutes East. + +<p>11th.<br> +Found, on collecting the horses, that four were missing. Those found were +in a sad state for want of water, and there was not a moment to lose. I +therefore at once told Tommy to look for those missing, and, after +saddling up, sent the party on with my brother, with instructions to +steer easterly for nearly fifty miles, when they would reach the water in +longitude 126 degrees 24 minutes East. I remained behind to await Tommy's +return, and, after an hour's awful anxiety, was rejoiced to see him +returning with the ramblers. We lost no time in following after the +party, and at two miles came to a water-hole they had emptied and given +to the horses (fifteen gallons), and at five miles overtook them. After +travelling ten miles, found another water-hole with fifteen gallons, +which we also gave our horses, they being still very thirsty. At fourteen +miles found a water-hole holding three gallons, which we transferred to +our canteens; and at fifteen miles camped on a small but very grassy +flat, close to which we found a water-hole of ten gallons, which I intend +giving the horses to-morrow morning. Although the horses are still very +thirsty, they are much relieved, and are willing to feed. We all felt +tired from long, weary, and continued walking. By meridian altitude of +Arcturus, camp is in latitude 32 degrees 13 minutes South, and longitude +125 degrees 51 minutes East. + +<p>12th (Sunday).<br> +After giving the horses the little water found by Tommy last evening, we +struck a little to the south of east over generally grassy country, +slightly undulating for three miles, when, being in advance, walking, I +found a large water-hole with about 100 gallons of water in it. It being +Sunday, and men and horses very tired, I halted for the day, as there was +most luxuriant feed round camp. Our horses soon finished the water, and +looked much better after it. Although now without water, we are in +comparative safety, as the horses have had nearly sufficient. We are now +only thirty-two miles from the water shown on Mr. Eyre's chart, in +longitude 126 degrees 24 minutes East. Latitude of camp 32 degrees 13 +minutes 35 seconds South, and longitude 125 degrees 54 minutes East. + +<h5>MEETING NATIVES.</h5> + +<p>13th.<br> +Made an early start, and steering a little to the south of east, keeping +straight for the water in longitude 126 degrees 24 minutes East. At +eighteen miles got a view of the sea, and beheld the sand-hills about +fifteen miles ahead. Here we saw some natives' fires close to us. +Approaching them, we came upon an old woman, and my brother and Tommy +soon brought a man to bay. There were about twenty round us; they +appeared very frightened. After detaining them half an hour, and treating +them as kindly as possible, we bade them farewell and continued our +journey. The natives were entirely naked. After we left the natives, we +came to where the cliffs leave the sea, in longitude 126 degrees 12 +minutes East. From here Point Dover was clearly visible, and I cannot +express my feelings when gazing on the scene. To the westward, those +grand precipitous cliffs, from 200 to 300 feet high, and Point Dover, +near which Mr. Eyre's overseer was murdered, could easily be discerned; +and while thinking over his hardships and miseries, we turned our faces +eastward, and there saw, within a few miles, the water we so much needed. +We then descended the cliffs and reached the sea shore, which we followed +for about twelve miles, reaching the first sand-patch at about 10 o'clock +p.m. There was good feed all around, but we could not, from the darkness, +find any water. Gave our horses all we had with us, about fifteen +gallons. + +<h5>A GLIMPSE OF THE ADUR.</h5> + +<p>14th.<br> +This morning searched the sand-patches for water, without success; I +therefore packed up and proceeded towards another large patch, four miles +distant, going in advance with Billy. After we left, Tommy found a place +used by the natives, where water could be procured by digging. He, +however, followed after Billy and myself. On reaching the sand-patch we +saw the place where water could be procured by digging; we also found +sufficient to satisfy our horses on some sandstone flats. We were soon +joined by the party, who were overjoyed to be in perfect safety once +more, and we were all thankful to that Providence which had guarded us +over 150 miles without finding permanent water. We soon pitched camp, and +took the horses to the feed, which was excellent. Returning, we were +surprised to see a vessel making in for the land, and soon made her out +to be the Adur. Although the wind was favourable for Eucla, she made in +for the land until within about three miles, when she turned eastward, +and, although we made fires, was soon out of sight. I afterwards +ascertained that they were not sure of their longitude, having no +chronometer on board, and therefore wished to see some landmark. + +<p>15th.<br> +Dug two wells to-day, and found good water at seven feet from the +surface. Lined them with stakes and bushes to keep them from filling in. +In the afternoon we all amused ourselves shooting wattle-birds, and +managed to kill fifteen. + +<p>16th.<br> +Dug another well and bushed it up, the supply from the two dug yesterday +being insufficient, and obtained an ample quantity of splendid fresh +water. By a number of observations, camp is in latitude 32 degrees 14 +minutes 50 seconds South, and longitude 126 degrees 24 minutes East, the +variation of compass being about 1 degree 6 minutes easterly. The horses +are improving very quickly, there being splendid feed round the +sand-patches. + +<p>17th.<br> +Went with Tommy Windich for a walk eastward along the beach, and returned +a little inland. Passed over some patches of beautiful grassed country. +Saw a pine pole standing on one of the hummocks near the beach, probably +erected by Mr. Eyre, as I am not aware of any one else having been here. +We could not find any of his camps, however; doubtless the sand has long +since covered them. + +<p>18th.<br> +Making preparations for a flying trip inland on Monday. + +<p>19th (Sunday).<br> +Read Divine Service. Every appearance of rain. + +<p>20th.<br> +Started this morning, in company with McLarty and Tommy Windich, to +explore the country to the northward. The first twelve miles north was +through very dense thickets and sandy hills, when we reached the cliffs, +which we ascended with difficulty, and steering about North-North-East +for the first three miles, through dense mallee thickets, we emerged into +a generally grassy country, and travelled over beautifully-grassed downs. +We camped at a rock water-hole of fifteen gallons, about twenty-five +miles from main camp. + +<p>21st.<br> +Steering about north for one mile, we found a rock water-hole holding +about thirty gallons; and continuing for thirteen miles over grassy +plains, thinly wooded, the country became very clear and open, and at +twenty-five miles there was nothing but plains, gently undulating, of +grass and salt-bush in view. Far as the eye could reach to the +North-West, North, and North-East, this clear and grassy country +extended; and being now fifty miles from camp, with the prospect of +finding water diminishing as we travelled northward, I determined to +return. Accordingly struck South-West, and after travelling twelve miles +found a small water-hole of three gallons, and camped for the night. Set +watch as follows: myself 7 to 11, McLarty 11 to 3.30 a.m., and Tommy from +3.30 to 6 a.m. We found them rather long hours. + +<p>22nd.<br> +Saddled up at dawn, and steering southerly over clear, open, grassy +plains for twenty-eight miles, we reached the cliffs, and rested an hour; +after which we continued our journey and reached camp a little after +dark, finding all well. + +<h5>A RELIC OF EYRE.</h5> + +<p>23rd.<br> +Made preparations for a start for Eucla to-morrow, and put everything in +travelling order. During my absence, Osborn had got the horses' feet in +order, and the pack-saddles had been overhauled, and repairs generally +made. In looking round the camp, Tommy Windich found shoulder-blade of a +horse, and two small pieces of leather. They no doubt belonged to Mr. +Eyre's equipment, and, on reference to his journal, I find he was here +obliged to kill a horse for food. In his journal he writes thus: "Early +on the morning of the 16th April, 1841, I sent the overseer to kill the +unfortunate horse, which was still alive but unable to rise from the +ground, having never moved from the place where he had first been found +lying yesterday morning. The miserable animal was in the most wretched +state possible, thin and emaciated by long and continued suffering, and +labouring under some complaint that in a very few hours, at the farthest, +must have terminated its life." I cut off part of the shoulder-blade, and +have since given it, together with the pieces of leather, to his +Excellency Governor Weld. + +<h5>A PARTY OF NATIVES.</h5> + +<p>24th.<br> +Started at 8.30 a.m. en route for Eucla. Steering in a North-North-East +direction for fifteen miles, reached the cliffs, and after following +along them two miles, found a large rock water-hole, but in an almost +inaccessible spot. While I was examining the cliffs near, to find a place +where we could get the horses up, Tommy heard a cooey, and after +answering it a good many times, we were surprised to see two natives +walking up towards us, unarmed. I approached and met them; they did not +appear at all frightened, and at once began to eat the damper I gave +them. We could not understand anything they said. I beckoned them to come +along with us, which they at once did, and followed so closely after me +as to tramp on my spurs. They pointed to water further ahead. After +walking about a mile, four more natives were seen running after us, who, +on joining, made a great noise, singing, and appearing very pleased. +Shortly afterwards two more followed, making seven in all; all entirely +naked, and every one circumcised. We found the water alluded to on the +top of the cliffs, but, it being too late to get the horses up, we turned +off to the southward half a mile, and camped on a small grassy flat, +without water for the horses. The seven natives slept at our fire. We +gave them as much damper as they could eat. They had not the least +particle of clothing, and made pillows of each other's bodies, and +resembled pigs more than human beings. + +<p>25th.<br> +The horses began to stray towards morning, and at 3 a.m. I roused Billy +and brought them back. After saddling up, went to the cliffs, and with +two hours' hard work in making a path and leading up the horses (two of +which fell backwards), we managed to gain the summit. The seven natives +accompanied us, and giving one of them the bag containing my rug to carry +over to the water, I was surprised to see him trotting off with it. +Calling Tommy, we soon overtook him and made him carry it back to the +party. After giving our horses as much as they required from the fine +water-holes, I motioned five of the natives to leave us and two to +accompany us, which they soon understood, and appeared satisfied. +Travelling in an East-North-East direction for twenty-one miles, over +rich grassy table-land plains, thinly wooded, we camped on a very grassy +spot, without water for our horses. By meridian altitude of Arcturus, +camp is in latitude 31 degrees 52 minutes 30 seconds south, and longitude +126 degrees 53 minutes East. + +<p>26th (Sunday).<br> +Finding the two natives entirely useless, as we could not understand +them, and had to give them part of the little water we carried with us, +motioned them to return, which they appeared very pleased to do. Steering +in an easterly direction for two miles, over downs of most luxuriant +grass, we found a large rock water-hole holding over 100 gallons. It was +Sunday, and all being tired, we camped for the day. In every direction, +open gently undulating country, most beautifully grassed, extended. By +meridian altitude of sun, camp is in latitude 31 degrees 53 minutes +South. Read Divine Service. Tommy and Billy went for a stroll, and +returned bringing with them two small kangaroos, (the first we have shot +since leaving Israelite Bay) which proved a great treat. The natives also +found a fine water-hole about a mile from camp. Gave the horses all the +water at this place. Every appearance of rain. + +<p>27th.<br> +Made rather a late start, owing to some of the horses straying. Steered +in an East-North-East direction, and at ten miles found a small +waterhole, and at twenty-one miles another, both of which we gave our +horses, and at twenty-four miles camped on a grassy spot, without water +for our horses. For the first fifteen miles grassy, gently undulating, +splendid feeding country extended in every direction, after which there +was a slight falling off, scrubby at intervals. By meridian altitude of +Arcturus, camp was in latitude 31 degrees 46 minutes 43 seconds South, +and longitude 127 degrees 17 minutes East. + +<p>28th.<br> +Had some difficulty in collecting the horses, and made a late start, +steering in about an East-North-East direction for the first five miles, +over very grassy flats, etc., when it became more dense and scrubby until +twenty miles, after which it improved a little. At twenty-four miles we +camped on a grassy rise, without water, in south latitude 31 degrees 41 +minutes, and longitude 127 degrees 40 minutes East. Our horses appeared +distressed for want of water, the weather being very warm. + +<h5>HEAVY MARCHING.</h5> + +<p>29th.<br> +Had to go back five miles to get the horses this morning. After saddling +up, travelled in about an easterly direction for twenty-four miles, and +camped on a grassy rise, close to a small rock water-hole. During the +day, found in small rock-holes sufficient to give each horse about three +gallons. The country was generally very grassy, although in some places +rather thickly wooded. McLarty was very foot-sore from heavy and long +walking. By meridian altitude of Arcturus, camp is in latitude 31 degrees +45 minutes South, and longitude 128 degrees 2 minutes East. + +<p>30th.<br> +Hearing the horses make off, I roused Billy and brought them back; they +had gone two miles. Packed up, and steering in an east direction over +generally very grassy country with occasional mallee thickets, for about +twenty-two miles, we came to a splendidly-grassed rise, and found a fine +rock water-hole on it, containing about 100 gallons, which our horses +soon finished being fearfully in want, the day being very warm. We are +now only thirty miles from Eucla. For the last two days McLarty has been +so lame that I have not allowed him to walk--his boots hurting his feet. + +<p>July 1st.<br> +Made an early start, every one being in high spirits, as I told them they +should see the sea and Eucla to-day. Travelling about east over most +beautifully-grassed country, at five miles found a large water-hole, +holding 100 gallons; but our horses, not being thirsty, did not drink +much. This is the first rock water-hole we have passed without finishing +since we left Point Culver. After ten miles reached the cliffs, or +Hampton Range, and had a splendid view of the Roe Plains, Wilson's Bluff +looming in the distance, bearing North 77 degrees 30 minutes East +magnetic. + +<p>Descending the cliffs with difficulty, we followed along the foot of +them, which was beautifully grassed, and, after travelling twelve miles, +beheld the Eucla sand-hills. On my pointing them out, every heart was +full of joy, and, being away some distance, I heard the long and +continued hurrahs from the party! Eucla was all the conversation! I never +before remember witnessing such joy as was evinced on this occasion by +all the party. After travelling five miles further we camped close to the +cliffs, at a small water-hole, Wilson's Bluff bearing North 85 degrees +East magnetic, and the Delissier sand-hills North 90 degrees East +magnetic. We might have reached Eucla this evening, but I preferred doing +so to-morrow, when we could have the day before us to choose camp. We are +now again in safety, Eucla being only seven miles distant, after having +travelled 166 miles without finding permanent water--in fact, over 300 +miles with only one place where we procured permanent water, namely, in +longitude 126 degrees 24 minutes East. I trust we all recognized with +sincerity and thankfulness the guiding and protecting Father who had +brought us through in safety. By observation, the camp was in latitude 31 +degrees 42 minutes South. + +<h5>EUCLA REACHED.</h5> + +<p>2nd.<br> +Made an early start and steered straight for the anchorage, distant about +five miles, having first ascended the range to have a view of the +country, which was very extensive. Far as the eye could reach to the +westward the Roe Plains and Hampton Range were visible; while to the +eastward lay Wilson's Bluff and the Delissier sand-hills; and three miles +west of them we were delighted to behold the good schooner Adur, riding +safely at anchor in Eucla harbour, which formed by no means the least +pleasing feature of the scene to our little band of weary travellers. +Made at once for the vessel, and, on reaching her, found all well and +glad to see us. She was anchored between the Red and Black Beacons. The +latter had been blown down, but shall be re-erected. There being no water +at the anchorage, moved on to the Delissier sand-hills, where we found +water by digging two and a half feet from the surface. Camped on west +side of the sand-hills. Landed barley, etc., from the boat. There was +good feed for the horses under the Hampton Range, about a mile and a half +distant. + +<p>The next day was Sunday. The crew of the Adur came ashore and dined with +us, and, as usual, I read Divine Service. On the following morning I went +aboard the schooner and examined the log-book and charts. We painted the +Red and Black Beacons, and Mr. Adams having trimmed up a spar, we erected +a flagstaff thirty-four feet high. I occupied myself the next day with +preparing a report to be sent to the Colonial Secretary. My brother went +off to the boat and brought ashore the things we required. We were busy +on the following days packing up and shipping things not required for the +trip to Adelaide, and I gave the master of the Adur instructions to sail +with all despatch for Fremantle. + +<p>The following report, which I sent back by the Adur, describes the +progress then made with somewhat more detail than in my Journal:-- + +<blockquote><p>Port Eucla, 7th July, 1870. + +<p>SIR, + +<p>It is with much pleasure I have the honour to report, for the information +of his Excellency the Governor, the safe arrival here of the expedition +entrusted to my guidance, as also the meeting of the schooner Adur. + +<p>Leaving Esperance Bay on the 9th of May, we travelled in an easterly +direction, over plains generally poorly grassed, to Israelite Bay +(situated in latitude 33 degrees 36 minutes 51 seconds South, and +longitude 123 degrees 48 minutes East), which we reached on the 18th May, +and met the Adur, according to instructions issued to the master. Here we +recruited our horses and had them re-shod, put the pack-saddles in good +order, packed provisions, etc., and gave the master of the Adur very +strict and detailed instructions to proceed to Eucla Harbour, and await +my arrival until the 2nd of September, when, if I did not reach there, he +was to bury provisions under the Black Beacon and sail for Fremantle, via +Israelite and Esperance Bays. Everything being in readiness, on the 30th +of May we left Israelite Bay en route for Eucla, carrying with us three +months' provisions. Keeping near the coast for sixty miles, having taken +a flying trip inland on my way, we reached the sand-patches a little to +the west of Point Culver, in latitude 32 degrees 55 minutes 34 seconds +South, and longitude 124 degrees 25 minutes East, on the 2nd of June. + +<p>On the 3rd went on a flying trip to the North-East, returning on the 4th +along the cliffs and Point Culver. I found the country entirely destitute +of permanent water, but, after leaving the coast a few miles, to be, in +places, beautifully grassed. On the coast near the cliffs it was very +rocky, and there was neither feed nor water. Finding there was no chance +of permanent water being found, that the only water in the country was in +small rocky holes--and those very scarce indeed--and the feed being very +bad at Point Culver, I determined, after very mature consideration, to +attempt at all hazards to reach the water shown on Mr. Eyre's track in +longitude 126 degrees 24 minutes East, or 140 miles distant. + +<p>In accordance with these arrangements, on the 7th day of June started on +our journey, carrying over thirty gallons of water on three of our riding +horses, and taking it in turns walking. Travelled about North-East for +four days, which brought us to latitude 32 degrees 11 minutes South, and +longitude 125 degrees 37 minutes East, finding, during that time, in +rocky holes, sufficient water to give each horse two gallons. On the +fifth day we were more fortunate, and were able to give them each two +gallons more, and on the sixth day (the 12th June, Sunday) found a large +rock hole containing sufficient to give them five gallons each, which +placed us in safety, as the water in longitude 126 degrees 24 minutes +East was only thirty-two miles distant. Continuing, we reached the water +on Tuesday, June 14th, and by observation found it to be in latitude 32 +degrees 14 minutes 50 seconds South, and longitude 126 degrees 24 minutes +East, the variation of the compass being about 1 degree 6 minutes +easterly. + +<p>The country passed over between Point Culver and longitude 126 degrees 24 +minutes East, was in many places beautifully grassed, level, without the +slightest undulation, about 300 feet above the sea, and not very thickly +wood. It improves to the northward, being clearer and more grassy, and +the horizon to the north, in every place where I could get an extensive +view, was as uniform and well-defined as that of the sea. On the route +from Point Culver to longitude 126 degrees 24 minutes East, we were from +twenty to twenty-five miles from the sea. + +<p>Recruiting ourselves and horses till the 30th, I took a flying trip to +the northward. For the first twelve miles from the sea was through a +dense and almost impenetrable scrub, when we reached the cliffs, and +after ascending them we came into the same description of level country +that we travelled over from Point Culver, save that this was more open +and grassy, and became still clearer as we proceeded north, until, at our +farthest point north, in latitude 31 degrees 33 minutes South, and +longitude 126 degrees 33 minutes East, scarcely a tree was visible, and +vast plains of grass and saltbush extended as far as the eye could reach +in every direction. We found a little water for our horses in rock holes. +Returning, we reached camp on June 22nd. On the 23rd we were engaged +making preparations for a start for Eucla. In looking round camp, Tommy +Windich found the shoulder-blade of a horse and two small pieces of +leather belonging to a packsaddle. The shoulder-blade is no doubt the +remains of the horse Mr. Eyre was obliged to kill for food at this spot. + +<p>On June 24th started for Eucla, carrying, as before, over thirty gallons +of water, and walking in turns. On the 25th found on the top of the +cliffs a large rock hole, containing sufficient water to give the horses +as much as they required, and on the 26th were equally fortunate. From +the 26th to the 30th we met with scarcely any water, and our horses +appeared very distressed, more so as the weather was very warm. On the +evening of the 30th, however, we were again fortunate enough to find a +water-hole containing sufficient to give them six gallons each, and were +again in safety, Eucla water being only thirty miles distant. On the +morning of the 1st day of July we reached the cliffs, or Hampton Range +(these cliffs recede from the sea in longitude 126 degrees 12 minutes +East, and run along at the average distance of twelve or fifteen miles +from the sea until they join it again at Wilson's Bluff, in longitude 129 +degrees East. They are very steep and rough, and water may generally be +found in rock holes in the gorges. I, however, wished to keep further +inland, and therefore did not follow them), and shortly afterwards we +beheld the Wilson's Bluff and the Eucla sand-hills. Camped for the night +near the Hampton Range, about five miles from Eucla Harbour, and on the +2nd July, on nearing the anchorage, discovered the schooner Adur lying +safely at anchor, which proved by no means the least pleasing feature to +our little band of weary travellers. Camped on west side of Delissier +sand-hills, and found water by digging. + +<p>The country passed over between longitude 126 degrees 24 minutes East, as +a grazing country, far surpasses anything I have ever seen. There is +nothing in the settled portions of Western Australia equal to it, either +in extent or quality; but the absence of permanent water is the great +drawback, and I do not think water would be procured by sinking, except +at great depths, as the country is at least three hundred feet above the +sea, and there is nothing to indicate water being within an easy depth +from the surface. The country is very level, with scarcely any +undulation, and becomes clearer as you proceed northward. + +<p>Since leaving Cape Arid I have not seen a gully or watercourse of any +description--a distance of 400 miles. + +<p>The route from longitude 126 degrees 24 minutes East to Eucla was +generally about thirty miles from the sea. + +<p>The natives met with appeared friendly and harmless; they are entirely +destitute of clothing, and I think not very numerous. + +<p>Very little game exists along the route; a few kangaroos were seen, but +no emus--an almost certain sign, I believe, of the scarcity of water. + +<p>The health of the party has been excellent; and I cannot speak too highly +of the manner in which each member of the expedition has conducted +himself, under circumstances often of privation and difficulty. + +<p>All our horses are also in splendid condition; and when I reflect how +great were the sufferings of the only other Europeans who traversed this +route, I cannot but thank Almighty God who has guarded and guided us in +safety through such a waterless region, without the loss of even a single +horse. + +<p>I am afraid I shall not be able to get far inland northward, unless we +are favoured with rain. We have not had any rain since the end of April, +and on that account our difficulties have been far greater than if it had +been an ordinary wet season. + +<p>I intend despatching the Adur for Fremantle to-morrow. The charter-party +has been carried out entirely to my satisfaction. With the assistance of +the crew of the Adur I have repainted the Red and Black Beacons. The +latter had been blown down; we, however, re-erected it firmly again. I +have also erected a flagstaff, thirty feet high, near camp on west side +of Delissier sand-hills, with a copper-plate nailed on it, with its +position, my name, and that of the colony engraved on it. + +<p>We are now within 140 miles from the nearest Adelaide station. I will +write to you as soon as I reach there. It will probably be a month from +this date. + +<p>Trusting that the foregoing brief account of my proceedings, as leader of +the expedition entrusted to my guidance, may meet with the approval of +his Excellency the Governor, + +<p>I have, etc., + +<p>JOHN FORREST, + +<p>Leader of Expedition to Eucla and Adelaide. + +<p>The Honourable the Colonial Secretary, + +<p>Perth, W.A.</p></blockquote> + +<p>We had now accomplished rather more than half the distance between Perth +and Adelaide, but there was still a gap of 140 miles to be bridged over. +We bade good-bye to our friends on board the Adur, and were now thrown +entirely on our own resources. I resume the extracts from my Journal:-- + +<h5>LOOKING FOR WATER.</h5> + +<p>July 8th.<br> +Started in company with my brother and Billy, having three riding horses +and a pack horse, to penetrate the country to the northward. Travelled in +a northerly direction for about twenty-seven miles, over plains generally +well grassed, and then bivouacked. From the camp only plains were in +sight, not a tree visible. Did not meet with a drop of water on our way, +and, having brought none, we had to do without it. This season is too dry +to attempt to cross these vast grassy plains, and I shall return to camp +to-morrow--the attempt to get inland without rain only exhausting +ourselves and horses to no purpose. + +<p>9th.<br> +After collecting the horses, which had strayed back on the tracks, we +steered in a South-South-West direction, and reached camp a little after +sundown. Did not find any water, except about half a gallon, during the +two days, and, the weather being warm, the horses were in a very +exhausted state when they reached camp. Found the Adur had left yesterday +afternoon. + +<p>10th (Sunday).<br> +Rested at Eucla. Read Divine Service. + +<p>11th.<br> +Osborn busy with the shoeing. Went with Billy to Wilson's Bluff, and saw +the boundary-post between South and Western Australia, placed by +Lieutenant Douglas. Returned at sundown. + +<p>12th.<br> +Erected the flagstaff with the Union Jack flying, and nailed a copper +plate to the staff, with the following engraved on it:-- + +<p>WESTERN AUSTRALIA. ERECTED BY J. FORREST, JULY 12TH, 1870. + +<p>From the flagstaff, Wilson's Bluff bore North 70 degrees 15 minutes East +magnetic, and the Black Beacon North 246 degrees 20 minutes East +magnetic, and it is situated in latitude 31 degrees 41 minutes 50 seconds +South. + +<p>13th.<br> +There was a total eclipse of the moon in the morning. All busy preparing +for a start for the Head of the Bight to-morrow. Buried a cask eight feet +west of flagstaff, containing 100 pounds flour, 130 pounds barley, 16 new +sets of horse-shoes, shoeing nails, etc. Nailed a plate on flagstaff, +with DIG 8 FEET WEST on it. Took a ride to the Black and Red Beacons, to +examine country round Eucla. + +<p>14th.<br> +Bidding farewell to Eucla and the Union Jack, which we left on the +flagstaff, we started for the Head of the Bight, carrying over thirty +gallons of water with us, and walking in turns. Ascended the cliffs +without difficulty, and passed the boundary of the two colonies; then +left the sea, and, steering in an East-North-East and North-East +direction until a little after dark, camped on a grassy piece of country, +without water for our horses. Distance travelled about twenty-six miles. +By observation camp is in latitude 31 degrees 30 minutes 42 seconds +South, and longitude 129 degrees 20 minutes East. + +<h5>SUFFERING FROM THIRST.</h5> + +<p>15th.<br> +Started at daylight, and travelled East-North-East for seven miles, when +we bore East over generally level country, well grassed, but entirely +destitute of water. We camped at sundown on a grassy rise, without water +for our horses. Distance travelled, thirty-four miles. The horses have +not had any water for two days, and show signs of distress. Intend +starting before daylight, as there is a good moon. + +<p>16th.<br> +At 1 a.m. went with Billy to bring back the horses, which had again made +off. After returning, saddled up, and at 4.50 a.m. got under way, +steering a little to the south of east in order to make the cliffs, as +there might be water in rock holes near them. At eighteen miles came to +the sea, but could find no water. At thirty miles saw a pile of stones, +and at thirty-three miles saw a staked survey line. Camped on a grassy +piece of country, two miles from the sea. This is the third day without a +drop of water for the horses, which are in a frightful state. Gave them +each four quarts from our water-drums, and I hope, by leaving a little +after midnight, to reach the Head of the Bight to-morrow evening, as it +is now only forty miles distant. By observation, camp is in latitude 31 +degrees 32 minutes 27 seconds South, and longitude 130 degrees 30 minutes +East. + +<p>17th.<br> +Was obliged to get up twice to bring back the horses, and at four o'clock +made a start. The horses were in a very exhausted state; some having +difficulty to keep up. About noon I could descry the land turning to the +southward, and saw, with great pleasure, we were fast approaching the +Head of the Great Australian Bight. Reached the sand-patches at the +extreme Head of the Bight just as the sun was setting, and found +abundance of water by digging two feet deep in the sand. Gave the horses +as much as I considered it safe for them to have at one time. I have +never seen horses in such a state before, and hope never to do so again. +The horses, which four days ago were strong and in good condition, now +appeared only skeletons, eyes sunk, nostrils dilated, and thoroughly +exhausted. Since leaving Eucla to getting water at this spot, a period of +nearly ninety hours, they had only been allowed one gallon of water each, +which was given them from our water-drums. It is wonderful how well they +performed this journey; had they not started in good condition, they +never could have done it. We all felt very tired. During the last sixty +hours I have only had about five hours' sleep, and have been continually +in a great state of anxiety--besides which, all have had to walk a great +deal. + +<h5>SIGNS OF CIVILIZATION.</h5> + +<p>18th.<br> +This is a great day in my journal and journey. After collecting the +horses we followed along the beach half a mile, when I struck North for +Peelunabie well, and at half a mile struck a cart track from Fowler's Bay +to Peelunabie. After following it one mile and a quarter, came to the +well and old sheep-yards, and camped. Found better water in the +sand-hills than in the well. There is a board nailed on a pole directing +to the best water, with the following engraved on it: + +<p>G. Mackie, April 5th, 1865, Water [finger pointing right] 120 yards. + +<p>Upon sighting the road this morning, which I had told them we should do, +a loud and continued hurrahing came from all the party, who were +overjoyed to behold signs of civilization again; while Billy, who was in +advance with me, and whom I had told to look out, as he would see a road +directly, which he immediately did, began giving me great praise for +bringing them safely through such a long journey. I certainly felt very +pleased and relieved from anxiety, and, on reviewing the long line of +march we had performed through an uncivilized country, was very sensible +of that protecting Providence which had guided us safely through the +undertaking. + +<center> +<p><a name="forrest5"></a><img alt="" src="forrest5.jpg"></p> +<p><b>Arrival at the Great Australian Bight. Fresh Water found.</b></p> +</center> + +<p>19th.<br> +Steered in an easterly direction along an old track towards Wearing's +well, as I intend going inland, instead of along the coast to Fowler's +Bay. Travelled for sixteen miles through a barren and thickly-wooded +country, sand-hills, etc. We camped on a small grassy flat, without +water. Being now in the settled districts I gave over keeping watch, +which we had regularly done since the 9th of May. + +<p>20th.<br> +Continuing for fifteen miles, we reached a deserted well called +Wearing's; it was about 200 feet deep, and after joining all the +tether-ropes, girths, bridle reins, halters, etc., we managed to get up a +bucket full, but after all our trouble it was quite salt. We therefore +continued our journey South-East for Fowler's Bay, and at four miles saw +some fresh sheep tracks, and shortly afterwards saw the shepherd, named +Jack, who was very talkative. He told us he had been to Swan River, and +thought it was quite as good as this place. He also said there was a well +of good water about eight miles further on. This was a pleasant surprise, +the nearest well on my chart being sixteen miles distant: this was a new +well sunk since the survey. We therefore pushed on, although our horses +were very tired, and reached the well, where there was a substantial +stone hut; met the shepherd, whose name was Robinson. He said he knew who +we were, having heard about three months ago that we might be expected +this way. He was as kind and obliging as it was possible to be in his +circumstances. Had a difficulty in drawing water for the horses, the well +being nearly 200 feet deep, and there was not a bite for the poor +creatures to eat, except a few miles off. As it was now an hour after +dark, I turned them out, and left them to do the best they could. The old +shepherd kept talking most of the night, and said we looked more like +people just come from Fowler's Bay than having come overland from Western +Australia. + +<p>21st.<br> +The horses strayed off in many directions during the night, and they were +not all collected till after noon, when we continued our journey for four +miles, and finding a small piece of feed, we camped without water for the +horses. Many of the horses were in a very critical state, and one was +completely knocked up. + +<p>22nd.<br> +Again were delayed by the rambling of the horses until nearly noon, when +we travelled along the road towards Fowler's Bay. After ten miles, +watered the horses at a well called Waltabby, and two miles further on +camped, with scarcely any feed for the horses. One of the horses +completely gave in to-day, and we had great difficulty in getting him to +camp. By meridian altitude of Arcturus, camp is in latitude 31 degrees 34 +minutes 28 seconds South. + +<h5>REACHING A STATION.</h5> + +<p>23rd.<br> +Although the feed was short, our horses did not stray, and after saddling +up we continued along road for two and a half miles, and reached Colona, +the head station of Degraves and Co., of Victoria, where we were most +hospitably received by Mr. Maiden, the manager. At his desire camped, and +turned out the horses on a piece of feed kept for his horses, and intend +remaining over Sunday. We accepted his kind invitation to make ourselves +his guests while we remained. He informed me that the South Australian +Government had instructed the mounted trooper at Fowler's Bay to proceed +to the Head of the Bight and give us every information and assistance in +his power. I am glad we have saved him the journey. + +<p>24th.<br> +Rested at Colona. In the afternoon was rather surprised at the arrival of +Police-trooper Richards and party, who were on their way to try and find +out our whereabouts. He handed me a circular for perusal, stating that +anything I required would be paid for by the South Australian Government. + +<p>25th.<br> +Left Colona, accompanied by Police-trooper Richards and party. Mr. Maiden +also accompanied us a few miles, when he returned, bearing with him my +sincere thanks for his kindness to myself and party. After travelling +eleven miles, we reached the hospitable residence of Messrs. Heathcote +and Mathers, where we stayed to dinner, and, although pressed to stay, +pushed on seven miles, and camped at a well called Pintumbra. + +<p>26th.<br> +Rested at Pintumbra, as there was good feed for our tired and hungry +horses. Police-trooper Richards and party also remained with us. + +<h5>AT FOWLERS BAY.</h5> + +<p>27th.<br> +Travelled towards Fowler's Bay, and at ten miles reached Yallata, the +residence of Mr. Armstrong, where we had dinner, and afterwards reached +Fowler's Bay and put up at the Police-station. + +<p>28th to 31st.<br> +Remained at Fowler's Bay, recruiting ourselves and horses, and wrote the +following letters to the Honourable the Colonial Secretary, Western +Australia, and to his Excellency Sir James Fergusson, Governor of South +Australia:-- + +<blockquote><p>Fowler's Bay, 29th July, 1870. + +<p>SIR, + +<p>I have the honour to report, for the information of his Excellency the +Governor, the safe arrival here of the exploring expedition under my +command, and beg to give you a brief outline of our proceedings since the +departure of the schooner Adur from Port Eucla. + +<p>On the 8th of July, started on a flying trip north from Eucla, with +fourteen days' provisions, but was unable to penetrate more than thirty +miles (which was over clear open plains of grass, etc., scarcely a tree +visible), on account of the scarcity of water, not meeting with a drop of +water on the whole journey. Returned to Eucla on the 9th, and, as summer +had apparently set in, and there appeared no likelihood of rain, I +decided to at once start for Fowler's Bay and Adelaide. + +<p>On the 14th, therefore, we started, carrying with us about thirty gallons +of water. After great privation to our horses, and not meeting with a +drop of water for 135 miles, by travelling day and night we reached the +Head of the Bight on the evening of the 17th July, and found abundance of +water by digging in the sand-hills. + +<p>Our horses had been ninety hours without a drop of water, and many of us +were very weary from long marching without sleep. Many of the horses +could scarcely walk, and a few were delirious; they, however, all managed +to carry their loads. They have not, however, yet recovered, but with a +few days' rest I hope to see them well again. There being very little +feed at the Head of the Bight we continued our journey, and on the 23rd +July reached Colona (head station of Degraves and Co.), where we met +Police-trooper Richards, who was on his way to the Head of the Bight to +meet us, in accordance with instructions from his Excellency Sir James +Fergusson. + +<p>Leaving Colona on the 25th, we reached Fowler's Bay on the 27th July, all +well. + +<p>We are now about 600 miles from Adelaide. Our route will be through the +Gawler Ranges, skirting the south end of Lake Gairdner, and thence to +Port Augusta and Adelaide, which we shall probably reach in five or six +weeks from date. + +<p>By this mail I have written to his Excellency Sir James Fergusson, +apprising him of our safe arrival, as well as giving him a brief account +of our journey. According to present arrangements we shall, at latest, be +in Perth by the October mail. + +<p>Trusting that these proceedings may meet with the approval of his +Excellency the Governor, I have, etc., + +<p>JOHN FORREST, + +<p>Leader of Expedition to Eucla and Adelaide. + +<p>The Honourable the Colonial Secretary, Perth, Western Australia.</blockquote> + +<hr align="center" width ="30%"> + +<blockquote><p>Fowler's Bay, 29th July, 1870. + +<p>SIR, + +<p>In accordance with my instructions from the Government of Western +Australia, I have the honour to report, for the information of his +Excellency Sir James Fergusson, that the exploring expedition organized +by that Government and placed under my command, has reached this place in +safety. + +<p>With his Excellency's permission, I will give a brief account of our +journey since leaving Perth. + +<p>OFFICIAL REPORT. + +<p>Leaving Perth on the 30th March, we reached Esperance Bay, the station of +the Messrs. Dempster, on the 25th April, and remained to recruit our +horses until the 9th May, when we continued in an easterly direction for +about 130 miles, and reached Israelite Bay, in latitude 33 degrees 37 +minutes South and longitude 123 degrees 48 minutes East, where we met a +coasting vessel with our supplies, etc. + +<p>Left Israelite Bay on May 30th, and reached the water shown on Mr. Eyre's +track in longitude 126 degrees 24 minutes East on the 14th June, +depending wholly on rock water-holes during the journey. Here we +recruited and made a trip inland for fifty miles, finding the country to +be very clear and well grassed, but entirely destitute of permanent +water. + +<p>Leaving longitude 126 degrees 24 minutes East on 24th June, we reached +Eucla on the 2nd July, depending again solely on rock water-holes, our +horses often being in great want of water. At Eucla we again met the +coaster with supplies, etc. + +<p>After despatching the coaster on her return to Swan River, attempted to +get inland north of Eucla; but, owing to the scarcity of water and the +dryness of the season, was unable to get more than thirty miles inland. I +therefore concluded to continue the journey towards Adelaide, and +accordingly left Eucla on July 14th, reaching the Head of the Great +Australian Bight on the evening of the 17th, after a very hard and +fatiguing journey, without a drop of water for our horses for ninety +hours, in which time we travelled 138 miles. + +<p>Men and horses were in a very weary state when we reached the water, +which we found by digging in the sand-hills at the extreme Head of the +Bight. Continuing, we reached Fowler's Bay on the 27th July. + +<p>From longitude 124 degrees 25 minutes East to Port Eucla, in longitude +128 degrees 53 minutes East, our route was from twenty to thirty miles +from the sea, and in the whole of that distance we only procured +permanent water in one spot, namely that shown on Mr. Eyre's track in +longitude 126 degrees 24 minutes East. + +<p>On our route we passed over many millions of acres of grassy country, but +I am sorry to say I believe entirely destitute of permanent water. The +natives met with were friendly, but to us altogether unintelligible. The +health of my party has been excellent, and we have reached this place +without losing a single horse. + +<p>Before reaching Fowler's Bay, we were met by Police-trooper Richards, who +was on his way to meet us, in accordance with instructions from his +Excellency. I am truly thankful for this, as he has been of great service +to us, and has been very attentive to our requirements. I hope to reach +Adelaide in five weeks from date. My route will be through the Gawler +Ranges to Port Augusta, and thence to Adelaide. + +<p>Trusting that this short account of our journey may not be wholly +uninteresting to his Excellency, I have, etc., + +<p>JOHN FORREST, + +<p>Leader of Expedition from Western Australia. + +<p>The Private Secretary, Government House, Adelaide, South Australia.</blockquote> + +<p>August 1st.<br> +Left Fowler's Bay, accompanied by Police-trooper Richards, en route for +Port Augusta. Travelled fourteen miles in about an East-North-East +direction and camped. Rained lightly this evening. + +<p>2nd.<br> +Reached Pinong station. Distance travelled, thirty miles. Passed several +huts and wells. The whole journey was over most beautifully-grassed +country. + +<p>3rd.<br> +Left Pinong, and, after travelling thirty miles, reached a spot called +Athena; then camped, leaving Charra station about seven miles to the +southward. Passed a few huts and wells during the day. + +<p>4th.<br> +At seventeen miles reached Denial Bay, when we turned off towards Hosken +and Broadbent's stations, and at thirteen miles further camped on a very +grassy rise, with two small rock water-holes, called Merking. By meridian +altitude of a Lyrae (Vega), found it to be in latitude 32 degrees 12 +minutes 36 seconds South. + +<h5>PANEY STATION.</h5> + +<p>5th.<br> +After travelling eight miles, came to a deserted station of Hosken and +Broadbent's, and found abundance of water in a rock water-hole called +Chillandee. As the horses were very tired, and there was splendid feed +for them, we camped here for the remainder of the day. + +<p>6th.<br> +Left Chillandee, and after travelling twenty-six miles, passed +Madebuckela, the homestead of Mr. Hosken, where we camped at a deserted +hut, with splendid feed and water for the horses. + +<p>7th.<br> +Travelled towards Gawler Ranges for thirteen miles, and camped at a spot +called Conkabeena, from which the ranges were clearly visible. + +<p>8th.<br> +Continuing in an easterly direction for twelve miles, we reached +Wollular, a granite hill with plenty of water on the rocks; after which +proceeded due east for twelve miles, through dense thickets and sandy +hills, when we came on a small patch of grassy land and camped, Mount +Centre bearing North 95 degrees East magnetic. + +<p>9th.<br> +Continuing towards Mount Centre for eighteen miles, over a succession of +salt lakes and very sandy hills and scrub, we reached a road making a +little farther north, which was followed, and after travelling five miles +came to Narlibby, and camped on most beautiful feed. + +<p>10th.<br> +After taking wrong roads and going a good deal out of our way, we reached +Paney station and camped at the police-station. + +<p>11th and 12th.<br> +Rested at Paney, as the horses were very tired, and there was splendid +feed for them. Police-trooper Richards intends returning to-morrow to +Fowler's Bay. He has given us every assistance in his power, and deserves +our very sincere thanks for his kindness and attention. + +<p>13th to 17th.<br> +Travelling towards Port Augusta, accompanied for half the distance by +Police trooper O'Shanahan, from Paney station. + +<p>18th.<br> +Reached Port Augusta. Telegraphed to his Excellency Sir James Fergusson, +informing him of our arrival. Camped five miles from Port Augusta, at a +small township named Stirling. + +<p>19th.<br> +Received telegram from his Excellency Sir James Fergusson, congratulating +us on our success. Camped a few miles from Mount Remarkable. + +<p>20th.<br> +Passed through Melrose, and on the 23rd reached Clare, where I had the +pleasure of meeting Mr. John Roe, son of the Honourable Captain Roe, our +respected Surveyor-General. + +<p>On August 24th reached Riverton, and on the 25th Gawler. On the 26th we +arrived at Salisbury, twelve miles from Adelaide. Through all these towns +we have been most cordially received, and I shall never forget the +attention and kindly welcome received on the journey through South +Australia. + +<h5>RECEPTION AT ADELAIDE.</h5> + +<p>On the 27th August we left Salisbury, and for an account of our journey +from there to Adelaide I cannot do better than insert an extract from the +South Australian Register of August 27th, 1870:-- + +<center> +<p><a name="forrest6"></a><img alt="" src="forrest6.jpg"></p> +<p><b>Public Welcome at Adelaide.</b></p> +</center> + +<blockquote><p>"On Saturday morning the band of explorers from Western Australia, under +the leadership of Mr. Forrest, made their entrance into Adelaide. They +left Salisbury at half-past nine o'clock, and when within a few miles of +the city were met by Inspector Searcy and one or two other members of the +police force. Later on the route they were met by an escort of horsemen, +who had gone out to act as a volunteer escort. At Government House Gate a +crowd of persons assembled, who gave them a hearty cheer as they rode up. +The whole party at once rode up to Government House, where they were +received by his Excellency, who was introduced to all the members of the +expedition, and spent a quarter of an hour in conversation with Mr. +Forrest, and in examining with interest the horses and equipments, which +all showed signs of the long and severe journey performed. Wine having +been handed round, the party withdrew, and were again greeted at +Government Gate by hearty cheers from the crowd, which now numbered +several hundreds. They then proceeded by way of Rundle Street to the +quarters assigned them at the police barracks. The men are to remain at +the barracks, and the officers are to be entertained at the City of +Adelaide Club."</blockquote> + +<p>From August 28th to September 12th we remained in Adelaide, having been +most kindly received by all with whom we came in contact. We saw as much +of the country as possible. I disposed of my horses and equipment by +public auction; then left in the steamer Alexandra with the whole of my +party on the 12th, reaching King George's Sound on the 17th at 1 a.m. +Left King George's Sound on the 19th, and arrived in Perth on the 27th, +where we were most cordially welcomed by his Excellency the Governor and +the citizens of Perth, having been absent 182 days. + +<p>In the foregoing I have attempted to give a faithful and correct account +of our proceedings, and, in conclusion, beg to make a few remarks +respecting the character and the capabilities of the country travelled +over. + +<p>In about longitude 124 degrees East the granite formation ends, at least +on and near the coast; but from longitude 124 degrees to the Head of the +Bight, a distance of over 400 miles, there is no change in the formation, +being limestone and high table land the whole distance. + +<p>The portion most suited for settlement is, I believe, between longitude +126 degrees 12 minutes East and longitude 129 degrees East, near Eucla +harbour, or, in other words, the country to the north of the Hampton +Range--the country north of the range being most beautifully grassed, and +I believe abundance of water could be procured anywhere under the range +by sinking twenty or thirty feet. There is also under the same range a +narrow strip of fine grassy country for the whole length of the range, +namely about 160 miles. I have every confidence that, should the country +be settled, it would prove a remunerative speculation, and, if water can +be procured on the table land, would be the finest pastoral district of +Western Australia. + +<h5>CONCLUSION.</h5> + +<p>Before I conclude, I have the pleasing duty to record my entire +appreciation of every member of the party. I need not particularize, as +one and all had the interest and welfare of the expedition at heart, and +on no occasion uttered a single murmur. + +<p>Finally, sir, my best and most sincere thanks are due to his Excellency +Governor Weld for the very efficient manner in which the expedition was +equipped. It is chiefly owing to the great zeal and desire of his +Excellency that I should have everything necessary that the success of +the enterprise is attributable. + +<p>I have, etc., + +<p>JOHN FORREST, + +<p>Leader of Expedition. + +<p>The Honourable F.P. Barlee, Esquire, + +<p>Colonial Secretary, Western Australia. + +<h4>CHAPTER 4.</h4> + +<h5>RECEPTION AT ADELAIDE AND RETURN TO PERTH.</h5> + +<blockquote><center>Departure from Gawler and Arrival at Adelaide.<br> +Appearance of the Party.<br> +Public Entrance.<br> +Complimentary Banquet.<br> +Grant by the Government of Western Australia.</center></blockquote> + +<h5>ARRIVAL AT ADELAIDE.</h5> + +<p>On Saturday, the 27th of August, we reached Adelaide. On the previous day +we had left Gawler for Salisbury, where we rested until the following +morning, when we started at half-past nine o'clock for Adelaide. A few +miles from there we were met by the chief inspector of police and some +troopers sent to escort us, and soon afterwards a volunteer escort of +horsemen gave us a friendly welcome. We were heartily cheered as we +entered the town and then rode to Government House, where we were +received in the most cordial manner by the Governor, Sir James Fergusson. +After a brief time spent in examining the horses (which were all the +worse for the long and arduous journey) also the equipments, and in +partaking of refreshments, we left the Government House, the people +cheering lustily, and passed through King William and Rundle Streets on +the way to the City of Adelaide Club. My brother and self stayed there +while in town, and the others at the police barracks, where man and horse +enjoyed the much-needed rest and refreshment. + +<p>It may interest the reader to quote from the South Australian Advertiser +the description of our appearance when we first entered Adelaide: "It was +a genuine Australian bush turnout, the trappings, water-drums, and other +necessaries being admirably adapted for the purpose. The horses looked +somewhat the worse for wear; but, considering the immense distance that +they have travelled, their condition was not to be complained of, and a +few weeks in the Government paddocks will put them in capital condition. +The officers and men, both white and black, look the picture of health, +and their satisfaction at having completed their long and arduous task is +beaming from their countenances." + +<p>Whatever our countenances may have expressed, I know we felt an intense +satisfaction at having been enabled to discharge the duty we had +undertaken. + +<p>On the evening of the 3rd of September Sir James Fergusson entertained us +at dinner, and many old colonists who, in their time, had been engaged in +exploring expeditions, were among the guests. Mr. Barlee, the Colonial +Secretary of Western Australia, who arrived in Adelaide a day or two +after we had reached it, was present with me at the luncheon on the +occasion of the inauguration of the Northern Railway Extension at +Kooringa. In replying to the toast of The Visitors, he took the +opportunity of thanking the South Australian people and the Government +for the courtesy and kindness extended to me and the members of my party, +who, he said, had carried out the instructions so successfully and in a +manner which made him proud of the colony to which he belonged. He hoped +that the line of communication that had been opened might soon lead to +much better and closer intercommunication between the colonies. + +<p>With characteristic consideration and kindness Governor Weld, immediately +on receiving my report from Eucla, addressed a private letter to my +father, congratulating him on my success. + +<h5>RECEPTION AT PERTH.</h5> + +<p>Anxious to lose no time in reporting myself to my Government, I only +remained in South Australia about a fortnight, and then left for Perth in +the Branch mail steamer, and arrived there on Tuesday, the 27th of +September. The City Council determined to give us a public reception and +present an address. A four-in-hand drag was despatched to bring us into +the city, and a procession, consisting of several private carriages, a +number of the citizens on horseback, and the volunteer band, escorted us. +The city flag was flying at the Town Hall, and there was a liberal +display of similar tokens from private dwellings. The Governor and his +aide-de-camp came out five miles to meet us, and accompanied us to the +beginning of the city, where he handed us over to the Council, meeting us +again at the Government offices. A crowd had collected in front of the +Government offices, where we were to alight, and amid cheering and +general hand-shaking we entered the enclosure. + +<p>Here his Excellency the Governor received us with warm congratulations, +and the City Council presented the address, which was read by the +chairman, Mr. Glyde. He said:-- + +<blockquote><p>"Mr. Forrest, + +<p>"In the name of the citizens I have the very great pleasure to bid you a +cordial welcome on your safe return to Perth. We sincerely congratulate +yourself and party on the success which has attended your adventurous +expedition overland to Adelaide. It must have been gratifying to you to +have been selected to lead this expedition, and to follow such explorers +as Captain Roe, Gregory, Austin, and others, of whom West Australia may +well be proud. Your expedition, however, has an additional interest from +the fact that its leader and members were born in the colony. I trust, +sir, that at no distant date you may have the satisfaction to see the +advantages realized which the route opened by your expedition is +calculated to effect."</blockquote> + +<p>I had had no reason to expect such a marked official reception, and could +only express the pleasure I experienced in knowing that the colonists so +fully appreciated my efforts to carry out successfully the task confided +to me. + +<p>The Governor also offered his congratulations, and three cheers having +been given the party, and three more for the Governor, we left for our +quarters highly gratified with the reception. His Excellency gave a large +dinner-party to celebrate our return, and on Monday, the 24th of October, +a public demonstration of welcome was afforded by a banquet to which we +were invited by the citizens. The following is a report from the Perth +journal:-- + +<h5>COMPLIMENTARY BANQUET TO MR. JOHN FORREST.</h5> + +<blockquote><p>On Monday evening last a Complimentary Banquet was given to Mr. Forrest, +the explorer, at the Horse and Groom tavern. About seventy sat down to +dinner, among whom were his Excellency the Governor, the Private +Secretary, the Colonial Secretary, the Surveyor-General, Captain Roe, and +many of the leading inhabitants of Perth and Fremantle. The chair was +taken by Captain Roe. On his right was his Excellency the Governor, and +on his left the guest of the evening--Mr. Forrest. The vice-chair was +filled by Mr. Landor. After the cloth had been removed, the chairman, +Captain Roe, rose and proposed the Queen, a lady whom the people could +not consider without being proud of the sovereign by whom they were +governed. + +<p>The Chairman said he rose to propose another toast, which, he trusted, +was not always given as a matter of course, but with heartfelt +satisfaction. It was the health of the Heir Apparent to the Throne. +(Cheers). The Prince of Wales will, it is hoped, one day fill the throne +of his illustrious mother--may that day be far distant!--but, when that +day does arrive, may he display the exemplary virtues of his illustrious +mother and the sterling qualities that distinguished his great father! + +<p>The Chairman, in proposing the next toast, His Excellency the Governor, +said he had some difficulty in doing so, particularly as the subject of +it was on his right hand that evening; yet he considered the gratitude of +the colonists was due to her Majesty's Government for selecting a +gentleman who was so well qualified to benefit the colony. He believed +his Excellency was the man to drag the colony out of the hole (cheers); +and he believed his Excellency was the man to attain for us that +prosperity we so much desired (hear, hear); but we must do our utmost to +support him in the effort to secure it. It was impossible for any man to +perform one hundredth part of what was wanted of him; yet he believed his +Excellency would do all in his power to benefit the colony in every way. +Let every one give his Excellency that strenuous support necessary to +attain prosperity, and we would attain success. He trusted that when the +term of his Excellency's sojourn amongst us had arrived, he would +remember with pleasure the days he had spent in Western Australia. The +toast was drunk with cheers and enthusiasm. + +<p>His Excellency the Governor, who was received most cordially, rose to +thank them for the very kind manner in which they had received the toast +which had been proposed by the worthy chairman. The chairman was right in +saying that they might rely upon his doing his best for the benefit of +the country, but they must not be disappointed; he could not do +everything, but they might depend upon it he would do what he considered +right for the people and the colony, without the fear or favour of any. +But "many men of many minds," as the old school copy says. People thought +widely different, but he would do his best for the welfare of the colony. +(Cheers). He did not, however, rise to speak of himself; the toast that +evening was in honour of Mr. Forrest, and at the present moment, viewing +the state of Europe, looking at the fact that at this very time two of +the largest nations in the world are carrying on a deadly strife; that on +either side deeds of daring have been done, which we all admire, and by +which we are all fascinated--and why? Because the human mind admired +daring and enterprise. But war devastated the world--war meant misery, +destitution, widows, orphans, and destruction, yet we behold all these +with a species of fascination. But not only in time of war, but at a +period of peace, are the highest feelings of human nature and the noblest +instincts of mankind brought out. It was in a spirit of daring, of +self-sacrifice, of love of fame and science, that induced the gentleman, +whose health will be duly proposed to you this evening, to undertake the +task he has so successfully completed. The same motives, no doubt, led +the warrior into the battle-field, as the explorer into a new and unknown +country. He, like the warrior, combated dangers regardless to self. +Peace, then, has triumphs as well as war. Mr. Forrest and his party well +deserve the triumphs they have secured in their successful journey from +this colony to Adelaide. The benefits conferred on the colony can best be +appreciated by those who have the greatest capacity of looking into +futurity, and as long as Australia has a history, the names of Mr. +Forrest and his companions will be borne down with honour. To himself it +will be a source of pleasure to know that the first year of his +administration will be rendered memorable by the exertion, zeal, and +enterprise of Mr. Forrest. His Excellency resumed his seat amidst loud +and continued applause. + +<p>Captain Roe said a very pleasing duty now devolved upon him; it was to +recognize services well done and faithfully performed. It was always +satisfactory to have our services recognized, and the leader of the +expedition over a distance of more than 2000 miles, from Perth to +Adelaide, so successfully, was deserving of esteem. That expedition had +brought the colony into note, and the good results from it would soon be +apparent. He personally felt more than he could say on the subject. He +felt more in his heart than he could express in words. He trusted that +the success of Forrest and his party would be a solace to him in his +latest day, and that in their latter days they would look back with pride +to the energy and pluck they displayed in their younger. He called upon +them to drink The health and success of Mr. Forrest and his companions +during life. (Loud and continued cheering.) + +<p>Mr. Barlee: One more cheer for the absentees--Mr. Forrest's companions. +(Immense cheering.) + +<p>A Voice: One cheer more for the black fellows. (Applause.) + +<p>Mr. Forrest, who was received with enthusiasm, said he felt quite unequal +to the task of responding to the toast which had been so ably and +feelingly proposed by Captain Roe, and so kindly received by his +fellow-colonists. He was extremely gratified to find that his services +had been so highly appreciated, and were so pleasing to his friends and +fellow-colonists. He was much flattered at the kind way in which himself +and his party had been received by his Excellency Governor Fergusson and +the people of South Australia; but he must say he was much better pleased +at the reception he received from his Excellency Governor Weld and the +citizens of Perth on his return. He was sorry he did not see round the +table his companions of the expedition--some had gone out of town--but he +must say that during the whole of their long and severe march, oftentimes +without water, not one refused to do his duty or flinched in the least +for a single moment. On the part of himself and his companions, he +sincerely thanked them for the very kind manner in which they had drunk +their health. (Great applause.) + +<p>Mr. Landor rose and said he had a toast to propose--it was the Members of +the Legislative Council--and in doing so he would like to make a few +observations upon the old. That evening they had had the pleasure of +hearing one of the oldest of the Council, one who had seen more trial and +suffering than any other, and to whom the grateful task fell that evening +of introducing to you one who was new in travel; and, while admiring that +act, he could not but call to mind the hardships that that gentleman had +endured in former days. In times gone by parties were not so well +provisioned as they were now, and he remembered the time when Captain +Roe, short of provisions, discovered a nest of turkey's eggs, and, to his +consternation, on placing them in the pan found chickens therein. But +things have altered. Captain Roe belonged to an old Council, and it is of +the new he proposed speaking. From the new Council great things are +expected, and of the men who have been selected a good deal might be +hoped. We all wanted progress. We talked of progress; but progress, like +the philosopher's stone, could not be easily attained. He hoped and +believed the gentlemen who had been elected would do their best to try to +push the colony along. He trusted the gentlemen going into Council would +not, like the French, get the colony into a hole; but, if they did, he +trusted they would do their best to get it out of the hole. What the +colony looked for was, that every man who went into the Council would do +his duty. He had much pleasure in proposing the new members of Council +with three times three. + +<p>Mr. Carr begged to express his thanks for the very flattering manner in +which the toast of the new Council had been proposed and seconded. As a +proof of the confidence reposed in them by their constituents, he could +assure them that they would faithfully discharge their duties to them in +Parliament, and work for the good of the colony generally. (Cheers.) +Again thanking them for the honour done the members of the new Council, +Mr. Carr resumed his seat amidst great applause. + +<p>Mr. Leake (who, on rising, was supposed to follow Mr. Carr) said his +rising was not important. As the next toast fell to his lot, he would ask +them to charge their glasses. The toast that was placed in his hands was +to propose the health of his friend, Mr. Barlee, the Colonial Secretary. +He trusted they would join him in giving Mr. Barlee a hearty welcome +after his travels in foreign parts. Mr. Barlee started on his journey +with the approval of the entire colony, and that the acts of the +Government had always the approval of the colonists was more than could +be said at all times. (Laughter.) Mr. Barlee's visit to the other +colonies must have been beneficial, and he trusted Mr. Barlee would that +evening give them his experience of the other colonies. We have not had +an opportunity of hearing of Mr. Barlee, or what he has done since he was +in Adelaide. In Adelaide Sir J. Morphett, the Speaker of the House of +Assembly, had said that Mr. Barlee was a hard-working man, and that was a +good deal to say for a man in this part of the world. (Loud laughter.) +Mr. Barlee, no doubt, would that evening give them a history of his +travels, and tell them what he had done in Adelaide, Melbourne, and +Sydney. Mr. Barlee was a proven friend of the colonists and of West +Australia. He would ask them to join him in drinking the health of Mr. +Barlee with three hearty cheers. (Drunk with enthusiasm.) + +<p>Mr. Barlee, who on rising was received with unbounded applause, said it +would be impossible for him to conceal the fact that he was much pleased +at the hearty manner in which his health had been proposed and received +that evening. He did not require to leave the colony to know the good +feeling of his fellow-colonists for him, nor to acquire testimony as to +his quality as a public officer. There was one matter, however, he very +much regretted, and that was that he was not present at the ovation given +by the people of South Australia to Mr. Forrest and his party. Mr. +Forrest had passed through Adelaide one day before his arrival. Mr. +Forrest and his party had attracted attention not only in South +Australia, but also, as he found, in all the other Australian colonies. +Having done so much, we were expected to do more in the way of opening up +the large tract of country that had been discovered. It was our duty to +assure the other colonies that the country would carry stock, and stock +would be forthcoming. If Mr. Forrest in former days established his fame +as an explorer, his late expedition only proves that he must commence de +novo. Of the modesty and bearing of Mr. Forrest and his party in South +Australia he could not speak too highly. There was, however, one +exception, and that was his friend Windich (native). He was the man who +had done everything; he was the man who had brought Mr. Forrest to +Adelaide, and not Mr. Forrest him. He (Mr. Barlee) was in his estimation +below par to come by a steamer, and he walked across (laughter); and it +was an act of condescension that Windich even looked upon him. (Great +laughter.) He was quite aware Mr. Leake, in asking him to give an account +of his travels in foreign parts, never seriously intended it. If he did, +he would only keep them until to-morrow morning. He would say that his +was a trip of business, and not pleasure, and hard work he had. Morning +and night was he at work, and he trusted he would be spared to see the +results of some of his efforts to benefit West Australia. (Loud cheers.) +He considered, what with our lead and copper-mines, our Jarrah +coal-mines, and the prospect of an auriferous country being found, a new +era was dawning on the colony. (Cheers.) For the first time in the last +sixteen years he had the pleasure of drinking that evening the health of +the members of the Legislative Assembly. He was not yet a member of that +Council, but it was probable he would be a member, and have important +duties to discharge therein. He was proud to learn the quiet and orderly +manner in which the elections had been conducted, and the good feeling +and harmony that existed on all sides, and to learn that the defeated +candidates were the first to congratulate the successful ones on their +nomination. He sincerely trusted that the same quiet good feeling and +harmony would remain and guide the Council in their deliberations +hereafter. + +<p>Other complimentary toasts having been duly honoured, the company broke +up.</blockquote> + + + +<p>While the citizens of Perth were thus exhibiting encouraging approval of +our exertions, official recognition, in a practical form, was not +wanting. On the 6th of October, Captain Roe forwarded to me the following +communication:-- + +<blockquote><p>Surveyor-General's Office, Perth, + +<p>6th October, 1870. + +<p>Sir, + +<p>Having submitted to the Governor your report of the safe return to +head-quarters of the overland expedition to Eucla and Adelaide, entrusted +to your leadership, I have much pleasure in forwarding to you a copy of a +minute in which his Excellency has been pleased to convey his full +appreciation of your proceedings, and of the judgment and perseverance +displayed in your successful conduct of the enterprise. + +<p>In these sentiments I cordially participate, and, in accordance with the +wish expressed in the minute, I beg you will convey to the other members +of the expedition the thanks of his Excellency for their co-operation and +general conduct. + +<p>OFFICIAL REWARDS. + +<p>As a further recognition of the services of the party, his Excellency has +been pleased to direct that the sum of Two Hundred Pounds be distributed +amongst them, in the following proportions, payable at the Treasury, +namely:-- + +<p>To the Leader of the expedition...75 pounds. + +<p>To the Second in command...50 pounds. + +<p>To H. McLarty and R. Osborne, 25 pounds each...50 pounds. + +<p>To the Aborigines, Windich and Billy, 12 pounds 10 shillings....25 +pounds. + +<p>Total 200 pounds. + +<p>I am, Sir, your obedient servant, + +<p>J.S. ROE, Surveyor-General. + +<p>John Forrest, Esquire, + +<p>Leader of Expedition, etc., etc.</blockquote> + +<p>The following is the minute referred to in the above:-- + +<blockquote><p>HONOURABLE SURVEYOR-GENERAL, + +<p>I beg that you will convey to Mr. John Forrest, leader of the Eucla +expedition, the expression of my appreciation of the zeal, judgment, and +perseverance which he has displayed in the successful conduct of the +enterprise committed to his charge. Great credit is also due to the +second in command, and to every member of the party. All have done their +duty well, and to them also I desire to render my thanks. + +<p>It is with much pleasure that, with the advice of my Executive Council, I +authorize a gratuity of 200 pounds, to be divided in the proportions you +have submitted to me. + +<p>(Signed) FRED. A. WELD. + +<p>1st October, 1870.</blockquote> + +<p>It will be remembered that the York Agricultural Society had previously +proposed an overland expedition, but had not succeeded in obtaining +official sanction, it being then believed that Eucla could be best +approached from the sea. After my return the Society held a meeting, at +which his Excellency the Governor was present, when my report of the +expedition was received with every mark of approval of my labours. + +<h4>CHAPTER 5.</h4> + +<h5>THIRD EXPEDITION. FROM THE WEST COAST TO THE TELEGRAPH LINE.</h5> + +<blockquote><center>Proposal to undertake a New Expedition.<br> +Endeavour to explore the Watershed of the Murchison.<br> +Expeditions by South Australian Explorers.<br> +My Journal.<br> +Fight with the Natives.<br> +Finding traces of Mr. Gosse's Party.<br> +The Telegraph Line reached.<br> +Arrival at Perth Station.</center></blockquote> + +<p>The success which had attended my previous expeditions, and the great +encouragement received from the Government and public of each colony, +made me wish to undertake another journey for the purpose of ascertaining +whether a route from Western Australia to the advanced settlements of the +Southern colony was practicable. I also hoped to contribute, if possible, +towards the solution of the problem, What is the nature of the interior? +My first journey, when I succeeded in penetrating for about 600 miles +into the unknown desert of Central Australia, had convinced me that, +although there might, and doubtless would, be considerable difficulties +to be encountered, there were no insuperable obstacles except a probable +failure in the supply of water. That certainly was the most formidable of +all the difficulties that would no doubt have to be encountered; but on +the previous journey the scarcity of water had been endured, not without +privation and suffering, but without any very serious result. At any +rate, the expedition I desired to undertake appeared to be of an +extremely interesting character. It might contribute to the knowledge of +an immense tract of country of which hardly anything was known; it might +also be the means of opening up new districts, and attaining results of +immense importance to the colonies. Perhaps, too, I was animated by a +spirit of adventure--not altogether inexcusable--and, having been +successful in my previous journeys, was not unnaturally desirous of +carrying on the work of exploration. + +<p>A NEW EXPEDITION PROPOSED. + +<p>In 1871 an expedition went out to the eastward of Perth under command of +my brother, Mr. A. Forrest, in search of fresh pastoral country. It was a +very good season, but the expedition was too late in starting. It +succeeded in reaching latitude 31 degrees South, longitude 123 degrees 37 +minutes East, and afterwards struck South-South-East towards the coast; +then, with considerable difficulty, it reached Mount Ragged and the +Thomas River, and, continuing westerly, got as far as Esperance Bay, the +homestead of the Messrs. Dempster. This expedition discovered a +considerable tract of good country, some of which has been taken up and +stocked. It was equipped on very economical principles, and did not cost +more than 300 pounds. + +<p>The leader had been previously with me as second in command on the +journey to Adelaide in 1870, and afterwards accompanied me in 1874 from +the west coast through the centre of the western part of Australia to the +telegraph line between Adelaide and Port Darwin. + +<p>He received great credit from the Government for the energy and +perseverance displayed on this expedition--a character borne out by +future services as second in command with me. + +<p>In July, 1872, I addressed the following letter to the Honourable Malcolm +Fraser, the Surveyor-General:-- + +<blockquote><p>Western Australia, Perth, + +<p>July 12th, 1872. + +<p>SIR, + +<p>I have the honour to lay before you, for the consideration of his +Excellency the Governor, a project I have in view for the further +exploration of Western Australia. + +<p>My wish is to undertake an expedition, to start early next year from +Champion Bay, follow the Murchison to its source, and then continue in an +east and north-east direction to the telegraph line now nearly completed +between Adelaide and Port Darwin; after this we would either proceed +north to Port Darwin or south to Adelaide. + +<p>The party would consist of four white and two black men, with twenty +horses, well armed and provisioned for at least six months. + +<p>The total cost of the expedition would be about 600 pounds, of which sum +I hope to be able to raise, by subscriptions, about 200 pounds. + +<p>The horses will be furnished by the settlers, many having already been +promised me. + +<p>The geographical results of such an expedition would necessarily be very +great; it would be the finishing stroke of Australian discovery; would be +sure to open new pastoral country; and, if we are to place any weight in +the opinions of geographers (among whom I may mention the Reverend +Tenison Woods), the existence of a large river running inland from the +watershed of the Murchison is nearly certain. + +<p>Referring to the map of Australia you will observe that the proposed +route is a very gigantic, hazardous, and long one; but, after careful +consideration, I have every confidence that, should I be allowed to +undertake it, there are reasonable hopes of my being able to succeed. + +<p>Minor details are purposely omitted; but, should his Excellency +favourably entertain this proposition, I will be too glad, as far as I am +able, to give further information on the subject. + +<p>Trusting you will be able to concur in the foregoing suggestions. + +<p>I have, etc., + +<p>JOHN FORREST.</blockquote> + +<p>To this letter the Governor appended the following memorandum:-- + +<blockquote><p>Mr. J. Forrest, in a most public spirited manner, proposes to embark in +an undertaking, the dangers of which, though not by any means +inconsiderable, would be outweighed by the advantages which might accrue +to this colony, and which would certainly result in a great extension of +our geographical knowledge. Should he succeed in this journey, his name +will fitly go down to posterity as that of the man who solved the last +remaining problem in the Australian continent; and, whatever may come +after him, he will have been the last (and certainly, when the means at +his disposal and the difficulties of the undertaking are considered, by +no means the least) of the great Australian explorers. + +<p>The honour to be gained by him, and most of the advantages, will +ultimately fall to this colony, which is his birth-place; and for my own +part I shall be very proud that such a design should be carried out +during my term of office. I wish that the means of the colony were +sufficient to warrant the Government in proposing to defray the entire +cost of the expedition, and I think it would be a disgrace to the colony +if it did not at least afford some aid from public funds. + +<p>These papers will be laid before the Legislature, and the Government will +support a vote in aid, should the Legislature concur. + +<p>FRED. A. WELD. + +<p>July 20th, 1872.</blockquote> + +<p>This memorandum showed that his Excellency thoroughly sympathized with my +reason for desiring to undertake the expedition. The proposition, +supported by official approval, was acceded to by the Legislative +Council, which voted the 400 pounds stated to be required in addition to +the 200 pounds which I hoped to be able to raise by subscription. + +<p>Just at this time, however, South Australia was making great efforts to +solve the problem I had undertaken to attempt, preparations being made +for the departure of three expeditions. Stuart's great feat of crossing +the continent from south to north had been followed by other successful +efforts in the same direction. Another result was the establishing a line +of telegraph from Adelaide to Port Darwin. This might therefore be +considered the eastern boundary of the unknown districts, and moreover +was the point of departure for the South Australian expeditions in a +westerly direction. It was also the limit I desired to reach, and, +reaching it, I should achieve the object I had so much at heart. Of the +South Australian expeditions, only one was successful in getting to the +western colony, and that one, led by Colonel Warburton, involved much +suffering and was comparatively barren of practical results. Besides, as +we afterwards knew, the route selected by him was so far to the north as +not to interfere with my project. + +<p>The following letter to me expresses the official estimate of the result +of Colonel Warburton's expedition:-- + +<blockquote><p>Surveyor-General's Office, Perth, + +<p>March 27th, 1874. + +<p>The gist of the information I have from Colonel Warburton may be summed +up in a few words. From the MacDermot Ranges in South Australia to the +head of the Oakoon River (about 150 miles from the coast), keeping +between the parallels of 20 and 22 degrees south latitude, he traversed a +sterile country, in which he states horses could not possibly exist--they +would starve, as they could not live on the stunted scrub and herbage +which the camels managed to keep alive on. + +<p>The general character of the country seen was that of a high, waterless, +slightly undulating, sandy table-land, with in some parts sand deserts in +ridges most harassing to traverse. There was nothing visible in the way +of water courses in which water could be retained; but they were +successful in finding, at long distances, sufficient to maintain +themselves and their camels as they fled, as it were for their lives, +westward over the Sahara, which appears to be in a great part a desolate +wilderness, devoid of life, or of anything life sustaining. Though this +is a grim picture put before you, yet I would not have you daunted. Your +task is a different one, and one which all the colony is looking forward +to see successfully completed by you. + +<p>I have, etc., + +<p>(Signed) MALCOLM FRASER, Surveyor-General.</blockquote> + +<p>Governor Weld, however, decided that it might be better to postpone my +expedition, as it would not be advisable to appear to enter into +competition with the other colony; besides which it might be of +considerable advantage to wait and avail ourselves of the results of any +discoveries that might be made by the South Australian explorers. Another +reason for delay was that I was required to conduct a survey of +considerable importance, which it was desirable should be completed +before undertaking the new expedition. + +<p>It may assist my readers to understand the references in the latter part +of my Journal if I state that in April, 1873, Mr. Gosse, one of the South +Australian explorers, quitted the telegraph line about forty miles south +of Mount Stuart; that the farthest point in a westerly direction reached +by him was in longitude 126 degrees 59 minutes East; and that Mr. Giles, +a Victorian explorer, had reached longitude 125 degrees, but had been +unable to penetrate farther. + +<p>Some records of these expeditions, and a copy of the chart made by Mr. +Gosse, were in my possession, when at length, in March, 1874, I set to +work on the preliminary arrangements for the expedition. Before leaving +Perth I received from the Surveyor-General the following outline of +instructions for my general guidance:-- + +<p>OFFICIAL INSTRUCTIONS. + +<blockquote><p>Western Australia, Surveyor-General's Office, + +<p>Perth, 17th March, 1874. + +<p>SIR, + +<p>The arrangements connected with the party organized for the purpose of +proceeding on an exploratory expedition to the north-eastern division of +this territory having now been completed, I am directed to instruct and +advise you generally in the objects and the intention of the Government +in regard to it. + +<p>The chief object of the expedition is to obtain information concerning +the immense tract of country from which flow the Murchison, Gascoigne, +Ashburton, DeGrey, Fitzroy, and other rivers falling into the sea on the +western and northern shores of this territory, as there are many good and +reasonable grounds for a belief that those rivers outflow from districts +neither barren nor badly watered. + +<p>Mr. A.C. Gregory, coming from the northwards by Sturt's Creek, discovered +the Denison Plains, and it may be that from the head of the Murchison +River going northwards there are to be found, near the heads of the +rivers above alluded to, many such grassy oases; and, looking at the +success which has already attended the stocking of the country to the +eastward of Champion Bay, and between the heads of the Greenough River +and Murchison, it will be most fortunate for our sheep farmers if you +discover any considerable addition to the present known pasture grounds +of the colony; and by this means no doubt the mineral resources of the +interior will be brought eventually to light. Every opinion of value that +has been given on the subject tells one that the head of the Murchison +lies in a district which may prove another land of Ophir. + +<p>In tracing up this river from Mount Gould to its source, and in tracing +other rivers to and from their head waters, detours must be made, but +generally your course will be north-east until you are within the +tropics; it will then be discretionary with you to decide on your route, +of which there is certainly a choice of three, besides the retracing of +your steps for the purpose, perhaps, of making a further inspection of +the good country you may have found. + +<p>Firstly, There is to choose whether you will go westward, and fall back +on the settlements at Nicol Bay or the De Grey River, on the north-west +coast. + +<p>Secondly, To consider whether you might advantageously push up Sturt's +Creek, keeping to the westward of Gregory's track. + +<p>Thirdly, To decide whether or not you will go eastward to the South +Australian telegraph line. + +<p>Possibly this latter course may be the most desirable and most feasible +to accomplish, as the telegraph stations, taking either Watson's Creek or +Daly Waters, are not more than 300 miles from the known water supply on +Sturt's Creek, and, supposing you do this successfully, the remaining +distance down the telegraph line to Port Darwin is a mere bagatelle, +provided an arrangement can be made with the South Australian Government +to have a supply of provisions at Daly Waters. + +<p>In the event of your going to Port Darwin, the plan probably will be to +sell your equipment and horses, returning with your party by sea, but in +this and in other matters of detail there is no desire to fetter you, or +to prevent the proper use of your judgment, as I am fully aware that your +sole object is in common with that of the Government--the carrying to a +satisfactory result the work to be done. + +<p>I hope that before you individually leave we shall have the pleasure of +welcoming Colonel Warburton, and I have no doubt will be able to obtain +some valuable information from him. + +<p>Having now dwelt generally on the objects of the expedition, I will go +more into details. + +<p>Your party will consist of yourself as leader, Mr. Alexander Forrest as +surveyor and second in command, James Sweeney (farrier), police-constable +James Kennedy, and two natives, Tommy Windich and Tommy Pierre, making +six in number and twenty horses. The party will be well armed; but by +every means in your power you will endeavour to cultivate and keep on +friendly relations with all the aborigines you may fall in with, and +avoid, if possible, any collision with them. + +<p>The provisions and other supplies already arranged for are calculated to +serve the party for eight months. The expedition will start from Champion +Bay, to which you will at once despatch by sea the stores to be obtained +here; and the men and horses should proceed overland without delay. You +will be probably able to charter carts or drays to take most of your +impedimenta from Geraldton to Mr. Burges's farthest out-station on the +Murchison; this will save you 200 miles of packing, and husband the +strength of your horses for that distance. + +<p>Having the assistance of Mr. Alexander Forrest as surveyor to the party, +you will do as much reconnaissance work in connexion with the colonial +survey as it may be possible; and also, by taking celestial observations +at all convenient times, and by sketching the natural features of the +country you pass over, add much to our geographical knowledge. All +geological and natural history specimens you can collect and preserve +will be most valuable in perfecting information concerning the physical +formation of the interior. + +<p>You will be good enough to get the agreement, forwarded with this, signed +by the whole of the party. + +<p>I am, etc., + +<p>MALCOLM FRASER, + +<p>Surveyor-General.</blockquote> + +<p>DEPARTURE OF THE EXPEDITION. + +<p>On the 18th of March, 1874, the expedition quitted Perth. Colonel +Harvest, the Acting-Governor, wished us a hearty God-speed, which was +warmly echoed by our friends and the public generally. The +Surveyor-General and a party accompanied us for some distance along the +road. Ten days afterwards we reached Champion Bay, where we intended to +remain for three days, having settled to commence our journey on the 1st +of April. We had enough to do in preparing stores, shoeing horses, and +starting a team with our heaviest baggage to a spot about fifty miles +inland. On the 31st March we were entertained at dinner by Mr. Crowther +(Member of the Legislative Council for the district) at the Geraldton +Hotel. It was from that point we considered the expedition really +commenced, and my Journal will show that we numbered our camps from that +place. Our final start was not effected without some trouble. The horses, +happily ignorant of the troubles which awaited them, were fresh and +lively, kicking, plunging, and running away, so that it was noon before +we were fairly on the move. Our first day's journey brought us to a place +named Knockbrack, the hospitable residence of Mr. Thomas Burges, where we +remained two days, the 3rd being Good Friday. On the 4th we were again on +our way--a party of friends, Messrs. E. and F. Wittenoom, Mr. Lacy, and +others, accompanying us as far as Allen Nolba. We camped that night at a +well known as Wandanoe, where, however, there was scarcely any feed for +the horses, who appeared very dissatisfied with their entertainment, for +they wandered away, and several hours were spent on the following morning +in getting them together. + +<p>Our route lay by way of Kolonaday, North Spring, Tinderlong, and Bilyera +to Yuin, Mr. Burges's principal station, which we reached on the 9th, and +remained until Monday the 13th. Then we started on a route +east-north-east, and camped that night at a rock water-hole called +Beetinggnow, where we found good feed and water. My brother and Kennedy +went on in advance to Poondarrie, to dig water-holes, and we rejoined +them there on the 14th. This place is situated in latitude 27 degrees 48 +minutes 39 seconds South, and longitude 116 degrees 16 minutes 11 seconds +East. + +<p>On the following day we were very busy packing up the rations, for I had +arranged to send back the cart, gone on in advance. We had eight months' +provisions, besides general baggage, and I certainly experienced some +difficulty in arranging how to carry such a tremendously heavy load, even +with the aid of eighteen pack-horses, and a dozen natives who accompanied +us. I intended to start on the 16th, but one of the horses was missing, +and, although Pierre and I tracked him for five miles, we were compelled +to give up the search for that night, as darkness came on, and return to +camp. On the following day, however, we followed up the tracks, and +caught the horse after a chase of twenty miles. He had started on the +return journey, and was only a mile from Yuin when we overtook him. + +<p>CAMELS AND HORSES IN THE DESERT. + +<p>By half-past nine on the morning of the 18th we had made a fair start. +The day was intensely hot, and as we had only three riding-horses, half +of the party were compelled to walk. We travelled in a north-easterly +direction for eleven miles, and reached a spring called Wallala, which we +dug out, and so obtained sufficient water for our horses. I may mention +here that Colonel Warburton and other explorers who endeavoured to cross +the great inland desert from the east had the advantage of being provided +with camels--a very great advantage indeed in a country where the water +supply is so scanty and uncertain as in Central Australia. As we +ascertained by painful experience, a horse requires water at least once +in twelve hours, and suffers greatly if that period of abstinence is +exceeded. A camel, however, will go for ten or twelve days without drink, +without being much distressed. This fact should be remembered, because +the necessity of obtaining water for the horses entailed upon us many +wearying deviations from the main route and frequent disappointments, +besides great privation and inconvenience to man and beast. + +<p>The 19th was Sunday, and, according to practice, we rested. Every Sunday +throughout the journey I read Divine Service, and, except making the +daily observations, only work absolutely necessary was done. Whenever +possible, we rested on Sunday, taking, if we could, a pigeon, a parrot, +or such other game as might come in our way as special fare. Sunday's +dinner was an institution for which, even in those inhospitable wilds, we +had a great respect. This day, the 19th, ascertained, by meridian +altitude of the sun, that we were in latitude 27 degrees 40 minutes 6 +seconds South. We had several pigeons and parrots, which, unfortunately +for them, but most fortunately for us, had come within range of our guns. +While thus resting, Police constable Haydon arrived from Champion Bay, +bringing letters and a thermometer (broken on the journey), also a +barometer. When he left we bade good-bye to the last white man we were +destined to see for nearly six months. + +<p>After the usual difficulty with the horses, which had again wandered, we +started on Monday, the 20th, at half-past ten, and steering about 30 +degrees East of north for seven miles, came to a spring called Bullardo, +and seven miles farther we camped at Warrorang, where there was scarcely +any water or feed. We were now in latitude 27 degrees 33 minutes 21 +seconds South, Cheangwa Hill being North 340 degrees East magnetic. + +<p>I now take up the narrative in the words of my Journal, which will show +the reason for ultimately adopting the third of the routes which the +letter of instructions left to my discretion. + +<p>April 21st. +Continued on North 340 degrees East to Cheangwa Hill four miles; thence +northerly, passing Koonbun, and on to a place called Pingie, on the +Sandford River. From camp to Pingie, Barloweery Peaks bore North 322 +degrees East magnetic, Cheangwa Hill North 207 degrees East, latitude 27 +degrees 19 minutes 33 seconds. Found water by digging. Rather warm; +barometer rising. Clear flats along water-courses; otherwise dense +thickets. + +<p>THE MURCHISON RIVER. + +<p>22nd. +Continued northerly; at twelve miles crossed the dividing range between +the Sandford and other creeks flowing into the Murchison. Camped at a +granite hill called Bia, with a fine spring on its north side. Got a view +of Mount Murchison, which bore North 7 degrees East magnetic from camp. +Fine grassy granite country for the first eight miles to-day. Splendid +feed at this camp. Travelled about fifteen miles. Latitude by meridian +altitude of Regulus 27 degrees 7 minutes South. Walking in turns every +day. + +<p>23rd. +Steering a little west of north over level country for six miles, with a +few water-courses with white gums in them, we came into granite country +with bare hills in every direction. Kept on till we came to a brook with +pools of fresh water, where we camped about one mile from the Murchison +River. Latitude 26 degrees 52 minutes 38 seconds, Mount Murchison bearing +North 50 degrees East. Went with Pierre to a peak of granite North 50 +degrees East, about one mile and a half from camp, from which I took a +round of angles and bearings. Travelled about eighteen miles to-day. + +<p>24th. +At one mile reached the Murchison River, and followed along up it. Fine +grassy flats, good loamy soil, with white gums in bed and on flats. +Travelled about fourteen miles, and camped. Rather brackish water in the +pools. Latitude of camp 26 degrees 42 minutes 43 seconds by Regulus. Shot +seven ducks and eight cockatoos. Saw several kangaroos and emus. Rain +much required. Mount Murchison bears from camp North 122 degrees East, +and Mount Narryer North 14 degrees East magnetic. + +<p>25th. +Continued up river for about nine miles, and camped at a fine spring in +the bed of river, of fresh water, which I named Elizabeth Spring; it is +surrounded by salt water, and is quite fresh. Mount Narryer bore from +camp North 4 degrees East magnetic, and Mount Murchison North 168 degrees +30 minutes East magnetic. Windich shot an emu, and some ducks were also +shot. Fine grassy country along river; white gums in flats; large salt +pools. Very hot weather; thermometer 90 degrees in pack-saddle. + +<p>26th (Sunday). +Did not travel to-day. Plotted up track and took observations for time +and longitude. Barometer 29.18; thermometer 83 degrees at 6 p.m. Latitude +of camp 26 degrees 35 minutes 8 seconds South by Regulus. + +<p>27th. +Travelled up river for about sixteen miles; camped at a fine fresh pool +in latitude 26 degrees 24 minutes 52 seconds South, Mount Narryer bearing +North 238 degrees East, and Mount Dugel North 334 degrees East magnetic. +Fine grassy country along river. Shot six ducks; great numbers were in +the river, also white cockatoos. Very warm mid-day; cloudy in evening. +Marked a tree F on the right bank of river. + +<p>A SOLITARY CAMP OUT. + +<p>28th. +Followed up the river. Fine pools for the first six miles, with numbers +of ducks in them. After travelling about twenty miles we lost the river +from keeping too far to the east, and following branches instead of the +main branch--in fact, the river spreads out over beautifully-grassed +plains for many miles. Fearing we should be without water, I pushed +ahead, and after following a flat for about six miles, got to the main +river, where there were large pools of brackish water. As it was getting +late, returned in all haste, but could not find the party, they having +struck westward. I got on the tracks after dark, and, after following +them two miles, had to give it up and camp for the night, tying up my +horse alongside. Neither food nor water, and no rug. + +<p>29th. +I anxiously awaited daylight, and then followed on the tracks and +overtook the party, encamped on the main branch of the river, with +abundance of brackish water in the pools. Shot several cockatoos. From +camp Mount Narryer bore North 211 degrees 30 minutes East magnetic, and +Mount Dugel 225 degrees 15 minutes East magnetic. Camp is in latitude 26 +degrees 6 minutes 12 seconds. Marked a tree with the letter F on right +bank of river. + +<p>30th. +Two of the horses could not be found till half-past twelve. After this we +continued up the river over well-grassed country for about ten miles. +Camped at a small pool of fresh water, in latitude 26 degrees 2 minutes +52 seconds, which we luckily found by tracking up natives. Large pools of +salt water in river. Three walking and three riding every day. Set watch +to-night, two hours each. + +<p>May 1st. +Followed up river, keeping a little to the south of it for about fifteen +miles. We camped on a splendid grassy flat, with a fine large pool of +fresh water in it. Shot several ducks. This is the best camp we have +had---plenty of grass and water--and I was very rejoiced to find the +month commence so auspiciously. Barometer 29.10; thermometer 78 degrees +at 5.30 p.m.; latitude 26 degrees 0 minutes 52 seconds South. Sighted +Mount Gould, which bore North 58 degrees East magnetic. Marked a white +gum-tree F 20, being 20th camp from Geraldton. + +<p>MEETING NATIVES. + +<p>2nd. +Steered straight for Mount Gould, North 58 degrees East, for sixteen +miles, when I found I had made an error, and that we had unknowingly +crossed the river this morning. After examining the chart, I steered +South-East towards Mount Hale and, striking the river, we followed along +it a short distance and camped at some brackish water, Mount Hale bearing +North 178 degrees East, and Mount Gould North 28 degrees East. Barometer +28.96; thermometer 77 degrees at 5.30 p.m. As Pierre was walking along, +he suddenly turned round and saw four or five natives following. Being +rather surprised, he frightened them by roughly saying, "What the devil +you want here?" when they quickly made off. Windich and I then tried to +speak to them, but could not find them. Latitude 25 degrees 57 minutes 32 +seconds South; longitude about 117 degrees 20 minutes East. + +<p>3rd (Sunday). +Went to summit of Mount Hale in company with Pierre, and after an hour's +hard work reached it. It was very rough and difficult to ascend. The +rocks were very magnetic; the view was extensive; indeed, the whole +country was an extended plain. To the east, plains for at least thirty +miles, when broken ranges were visible. Mount Gould to the +North-North-East showed very remarkably. Mount Narryer range was visible. +To the south, only one hill or range could be seen, while to the +South-East broken ranges of granite were seen about thirty miles distant. +Mount Hale is very lofty and rugged, and is composed of micaceous iron +ore, with brown hematite; being magnetic, the compass was rendered +useless. Returned about one o'clock. Windich and the others had been out +searching for fresh water, and the former had seen three natives and had +a talk with them. They did not appear frightened, but he could not make +anything out of them. They found some good water. Barometer, at 6.30 +p.m., 28.88; thermometer 76 degrees. Took observations for time and +longitude. We are much in want of rain, and thought we should have had +some, but the barometer is rising this evening. To-morrow we enter on +country entirely unknown. + +<p>4th. +Started at nine o'clock, and, travelling North-East for three miles, came +to junction of river from Mount Gould, when we got some fresh water, also +met two natives who were friendly, and they accompanied us. We took the +south or main branch of river, and, steering a little south of east for +about nine miles, over splendidly-grassed country, we camped on a small +pool of fresh water on one of the courses of the river, Mount Gould +bearing North 334 degrees 30 minutes East magnetic, and Mount Hale North +228 degrees 30 minutes East magnetic. Barometer 28.90; thermometer 76 +degrees at 6 p.m.; latitude 25 degrees 54 minutes 37 seconds by Regulus. +Marked a tree F 22, being 22nd camp from Geraldton. + +<p>LOFTY RANGES. + +<p>5th. +We travelled up easterly along the river, which spreads out and has +several channels, sometimes running for miles separately, then joining +again. There were many fine fresh pools for the first four miles, after +which they were all salt, and the river divided into so many channels +that it was difficult to know the main river. After travelling about +sixteen miles over fine grassy plains and flats, we were joined by seven +natives, who had returned with the two who had left us this morning. They +told us that there was no fresh water on the branch we were following, +and we therefore followed them North 30 degrees East for seven miles +(leaving the river to the southward), when they brought us to a small +pool in a brook, where we camped, Mount Gould bearing North 285 degrees +30 minutes East magnetic, Mount Hale North 250 degrees East magnetic. +Latitude 25 degrees 52 minutes from mean of two observations. Barometer +28.78; thermometer 77 degrees at 6 P.M. + +<p>6th. +Three of the natives accompanied us to-day. We travelled east for six +miles, when I ascended a rise and could see a river to the north and +south; the one to the north the natives say has fresh water. As the +natives say there is plenty of water ahead, North 70 degrees East, we +continued onwards to a hill, which I named Mount Maitland. After about +twenty miles we reached it, but found the spring to be bad, and after +digging no water came. For our relief I tied up the horses for some time +before letting them go. Ascending the hill close to the camp, I saw a +very extensive range, and took a fine round of angles. The compass is +useless on these hills, as they are composed of micaceous iron ore, with +brown hematite, which is very magnetic. To the east a line of high, +remarkable ranges extend, running eastwards, which I have named the +Robinson Range, after his Excellency Governor Robinson. One of the +highest points I named Mount Fraser, after the Honourable Commissioner of +Crown Lands, from whom I received much assistance and consideration, and +who has aided the expedition in every possible way; the other highest +point, Mount Padbury, after Mr. W. Padbury, a contributor to the +Expedition Fund. The river could be traced for thirty miles by the line +of white gums, while to the south long lines of white gums could also be +seen. I am not sure which is the main branch, but I intend following the +one to the north, as it looks the largest and the natives say it has +fresh water. Barometer 28.45; thermometer 69 degrees at 6 p.m.; latitude +25 degrees 46 minutes South. The last thirty-five miles over fine grassy +plains, well adapted for sheep-runs; and water could, I think, be easily +procured by digging, as well as from the river. + +<p>7th. +The three natives ran away this morning, or at least left us without +asking leave. We had to keep watch all last night over the horses to keep +them from rambling. Got an early start, and steering North 70 degrees +East for about twelve miles, we reached the river, and camped at a fresh +pool of splendid water. This is a fine large branch; it is fresh, and I +believe, if not the main, is one of the largest branches. The country is +now more undulating and splendidly grassed, and would carry sheep well. +The whole bed of the river, or valley, is admirably adapted for pastoral +purposes, and will no doubt ere long be stocked. Latitude 25 degrees 42 +minutes 12 seconds South, and longitude about 118 degrees 9 minutes East. +Barometer 28.57; thermometer 75 degrees at 5.30 p.m. Marked a white gum +on right bank of river F 25, being the 25th camp from Champion Bay. + +<p>8th. +Continued up the river for about fifteen miles, the stream gradually +getting smaller, many small creeks coming into it; wide bed and flat. +Fine grassy country on each side, and some permanent pools in river. +Camped at a small pool of fresh water, and rode up to a low ridge to the +North-East, from which I got a fine view to the eastward. I do not think +the river we are following goes much farther; low ranges and a few hills +alone visible. Barometer 28.48; thermometer 70 degrees at 6 o'clock p.m.; +latitude 25 degrees 47 minutes 53 seconds by meridian altitude of +Jupiter. + +<p>9th. +Continued along river, which is gradually getting smaller, for about +thirteen miles over most beautiful grassy country, the best we have seen. +White gums along bed. I believe the river does not go more than twenty +miles from here, it being now very small. Found a nice pool of water and +camped. Barometer 28.48; thermometer 68 degrees at half-past five +o'clock. + +<p>THE DRY SEASON. + +<p>10th (Sunday). +Went with Windich south about eight miles to a low range, which I rightly +anticipated would be a watershed. Could see a long line of white gums; +believe there may be a river to the south, or it may be the salt branch +of the Murchison. Returned to camp at two o'clock; plotted up track. +Barometer 28.52; thermometer 69 degrees at 6 p.m. Mount Fraser bears +North 328 degrees East magnetic from camp, which is in latitude 25 +degrees 51 minutes 46 seconds, longitude about 118 degrees 30 minutes +East. The country is very dry indeed; in fact, we could not be more +unfortunate in the season thus far. I only trust we may be blessed with +abundance of rain shortly, otherwise we shall not be able to move +onwards. + +<p>11th. +Continued up river, which is getting very small, over beautifully-grassed +country, and at seven miles came to a fine flat and splendid pool of +permanent water. Although a delightful spot, I did not halt, as we had +come such a short distance. Here we met six native women, who were very +frightened at first, but soon found sufficient confidence to talk and to +tell us there was plenty of water ahead. As they always say this, I do +not put any faith in it. We continued on about east for eight miles to a +high flat-topped hill, when we got a view of the country ahead and turned +about North-East towards some flats, and at about eight miles camped on a +grassy plain, with some small clay-pans of water. Splendid feeding +country all along this valley--I may say for the last 100 miles. Heard a +number of natives cooeying above our camp, but did not see them. +Barometer 28.37; thermometer 68 degrees at six o'clock p.m.; latitude 25 +degrees 51 minutes South by meridian altitude of Jupiter. + +<p>12th. +Started East-North-East for four miles, then north three miles to the +range, where we searched over an hour for water without success. We then +travelled South-East for five miles and south one mile and a half to a +water-hole in a brook, by digging out which we got abundance of water. +About a quarter of a mile farther down the brook found a large pool of +water and shot six ducks. As soon as we unloaded, it commenced to rain, +and kept on steadily till midnight. I am indeed pleased to get this rain +at last, as the country is very dry. Splendid open feeding country all +to-day, and the camp is a beautifully-grassed spot. Marked a white +gum-tree F 29, close to the pool or spring on the right bank of this +brook. + +<p>GLENGARRY RANGE. + +<p>13th. +Continued on, steering about south-east, as the flat we have been +following the last week is now nearly at an end. Afterwards determined to +bear southward, in order to see where the south branch of the river goes +to. For the first six miles over most magnificent grassed country. +Ascended a low range to get a view of the country. The prospect ahead, +however, not cheering. Took round of bearings. A very conspicuous range +bore about south, which I named Glengarry Range, in honour of Mr. +Maitland Brown, a great supporter of the expedition; while to the +south-east only one solitary hill could be seen, distant about twenty +miles. We, however, continued for about ten miles over most miserable +country, thickets and spinifex, when we reached some granitic rocks and a +low rise of granite, on which we found sufficient water to camp. +Barometer 28.12; thermometer 60 degrees at 5.30 p.m.; latitude 25 degrees +57 minutes 11 seconds South by Regulus. + +<p>14th. +Steered South-East for about fourteen miles to a stony low range, thence +East-North-East and east and south for six miles, turning and twisting, +looking for water. Windich found some in a gully and we camped. Spinifex +for the first fourteen miles, and miserable country. The prospect ahead +not very promising. Barometer 28.06; thermometer 83 degrees at 5 p.m. +Every appearance of rain. Latitude 26 degrees 8 minutes 31 seconds South, +longitude about 119 degrees 18 minutes East. + +<p>15th. +Raining lightly this morning. I did not proceed, but gave the horses +rest. + +<p>16th. +Continued east for five miles, when we found three of the horses were +missing; returned with Windich, and found them near camp, having never +started at all. Seeing white gums to the south-east, we followed for five +miles down a fine brook (which I named Negri Creek, after Commander +Negri, founder of the Geographical Society of Italy), with fine grassy +country on each side. Afterwards it joined another brook, and went +south-east for about three miles, where it lost itself in open flats. +Struck south for two miles to some large white gums, but found no water. +After long looking about I found water in a gully and camped. Distance +travelled about twenty miles. Spinifex and grassy openings the first five +miles to-day. Barometer 28.20; thermometer 67 degrees at 6 o'clock p.m.; +latitude 26 degrees 16 minutes 8 seconds by Jupiter. Windich shot a +turkey. + +<p>MOUNTS BARTLE AND RUSSELL. + +<p>17th (Sunday). +The horses rambled far away, and it was noon before they were all +collected. Shifted three and a half miles north, where there was better +feed and water. Went on to a low hill on the north of our last night's +camp, and got a fine view of the country to the south and south-east. Two +remarkable flat-topped hills bore South-East, which I named Mount Bartle +and Mount Russell, after the distinguished President and Foreign +Secretary of the Royal Geographical Society. Saw a long line of white +gums (colalyas) running East and West about ten miles distant, looking +very much like a river. To the east and north the view was intercepted by +long stony rises, apparently covered with spinifex. Large white gum +clumps studded the plains in every direction. Evidences of heavy rainfall +at certain times to be seen everywhere. Barometer 28.28; thermometer 72 +degrees at 5 p.m.; latitude 26 degrees 13 minutes 4 seconds South. + +<p>18th. +Steered South-South-East for four miles, then South-East generally, +towards the flat-topped hills seen yesterday, and which bore 144 degrees +East magnetic from Spinifex Hill. At six miles crossed a low range +covered with spinifex, after which we passed over country generally well +grassed, some of it most beautifully, and white gums very large in clumps +were studded all over the plains. At about twenty-two miles reached the +flat-topped hills, and camped, finding some water in a clay-pan. The line +of white gums I find are only large clumps studded over extensive plains +of splendidly-grassed country. No large water-course was crossed, but +several small creeks form here and there, and afterwards run out into the +plains, finally finding their way into the Murchison. It was sundown when +we camped. Walked over twenty miles myself to-day. Barometer 28.38; +thermometer 60 degrees at six o'clock; latitude 26 degrees 27 minutes 38 +seconds South, longitude about 119 degrees 42 minutes East. + +<p>19th. +Continued in a north-easterly direction for about eight miles over fine +grassy plains, and camped at some water in a small gully with fine feed. +I camped early in order to give the backs of the horses a good washing, +and to refit some of the pack-saddles. Passed several clay-pans with +water. We have not seen any permanent water for the last eighty miles. I +much wish to find some, as it is very risky going on without the means of +falling back. The country seems very deficient of permanent water, +although I believe plenty could be procured by sinking. Barometer 28.46; +thermometer 63 degrees at 5 p.m.; latitude 26 degrees 23 minutes 39 +seconds South. Left a pack-saddle frame and two pack-bags hanging on a +tree. + +<p>KIMBERLEY RANGE. + +<p>20th. +Steering North-East for five miles over fine grassy plains, came to a low +stony range, ascending which we saw, a little to the south, a line of +(colalya) white gums, to which we proceeded. Then following up a large +brook for about five miles North-East, we camped at a small water-hole in +the brook. In the afternoon I went with Pierre about one mile North-East +of camp to the summit of a rough range and watershed, which I believe is +the easterly watershed of the Murchison River. All the creeks to the west +of this range (which I named Kimberley Range, after the Right Honourable +Lord Kimberley, the Secretary of State for the Colonies) trend towards +the Murchison, and finally empty into the main river. From this range we +could see a long way to the eastward. The country is very level, with low +ranges, but no conspicuous hills. Not a promising country for water, but +still looks good feeding country. This range is composed of brown +hematite, decomposing to yellow (tertiary), and is very magnetic, the +compass being useless. Bituminous pitch found oozing out of the +rocks--probably the result of the decomposition of the excrement of bats. +It contains fragments of the wing cases of insects, and gives reactions +similar to the bituminous mineral or substance found in Victoria. +Barometer 28.285; thermometer 63 degrees at 5 p.m. On summit of +watershed, barometer 28.15; thermometer 69 degrees; latitude 26 degrees +17 minutes 12 seconds, longitude about 119 degrees 54 minutes East. + +<p>21st. +Continued on North-East, and, travelling over the watershed of the +Murchison, we followed along a gully running North-East; then, passing +some water-holes, travelled on and ascended a small range, from which we +beheld a very extensive clear plain just before us. Thinking it was a +fine grassy plain we quickly descended, when, to our disgust, we found it +was spinifex that had been burnt. We continued till three o'clock, with +nothing but spinifex plains in sight. I despatched Windich towards a +range in the distance, and followed after as quickly as possible. When we +reached the range we heard the welcoming gunshot, and, continuing on, we +met Tommy, who had found abundance of water and feed on some granite +rocks. We soon unloaded, and were all rejoiced to be in safety, the +prospect this afternoon having been anything but cheering. Distance +travelled about thirty miles. Barometer 28.22; thermometer 56 degrees at +6 p.m. Cold easterly wind all day. About eighteen miles of spinifex +plains, latitude 26 degrees 0 minutes 53 seconds by Arcturus and e +Bootes. + +<p>22nd. +Did not travel to-day, the horses being tired, and the country ahead did +not seem very inviting. Windich found a native spring about a mile to the +North-East. This is a very nice spot, surrounded as it is by spinifex. +Variation 2 degrees 40 minutes West by observation. + +<p>23rd. +Continued on North-East for about twelve miles over spinifex plains and +sandy ridges. Went on ahead with Windich, and came to a gorge and some +granite rocks with abundance of water, and were soon joined by the party. +Barometer 28.30; thermometer 60 degrees at 6 p.m.; latitude 25 degrees 53 +minutes 52 seconds by Altair. + +<p>24th (Sunday). +We rested at camp. I was all day calculating lunar observations. +Barometer 28.22; thermometer 64 degrees at 5.30 p.m. + +<p>FRERE RANGES. + +<p>25th. +Travelled onwards about North 40 degrees East for eight miles, passing a +low granite range at six miles. Came to a fine brook trending a little +south of east, which we followed downwards seven miles, running nearly +east. This brook was full of water, some of the pools being eight or ten +feet deep, ten yards wide, and sixty yards long. It flowed out into a +large flat, and finally runs into a salt lake. I named this brook Sweeney +Creek, after my companion and farrier, James Sweeney. Leaving the flat, +we struck North-North-East for four miles, and came to a salt marsh about +half a mile wide, which we crossed. Following along, came into some high +ranges, which I named the Frere Ranges, after Sir Bartle Frere, the +distinguished President of the Royal Geographical Society. Found a small +rock water-hole in a gully and camped. Water appears exceedingly scarce +in these ranges. It is very remarkable that there should have been such +heavy rain twelve miles back, and none at all here. Rough feed for +horses. Distance travelled about twenty-seven miles. These ranges run +east and west, and are the highest we have seen. The marsh appears to +follow along the south side of the range. Barometer 28.38; thermometer 70 +degrees at 5.30 p.m.; latitude 25 degrees 43 minutes 44 seconds by +Arcturus. + +<p>26th. +Ascended the Frere Ranges and got a fine view to the north and east. Fine +high hills and ranges to the north; a salt marsh and low ranges to the +east and South-East. Continued on North-East for four miles, then +North-North-West for three miles, passing plenty of water in clay-holes +and clay-pans in bed of marsh, we camped at a fine pool in a large brook +that runs into the marsh, which I called Kennedy Creek, after my +companion James Kennedy. The prospect ahead is very cheering, and I hope +to find plenty of water and feed for the next 100 miles. Latitude 25 +degrees 38 minutes 44 seconds South; barometer 28.42; thermometer 41 +degrees at 10 p.m. Marked a white gumtree F 40 close to camp in bed of +river. The banks of the brook at this spot are composed of purple-brown +slate (Silurian). + +<p>27th. +Followed up the Kennedy Creek, bearing North-North-East and North for +about seven miles, passing a number of shallow pools, when we came to +some splendid springs, which I named the Windich Springs, after my old +and well-tried companion Tommy Windich, who has now been on three +exploring expeditions with me. They are the best springs I have ever +seen--flags in the bed of the river, and pools twelve feet deep and +twenty chains long--a splendid place for water. We therefore camped, and +found another spot equally good a quarter of a mile west of camp in +another branch. There is a most magnificent supply of water and +feed--almost unlimited and permanent. A fine range of hills bore +north-west from the springs, which I named Carnarvon Range, after the +Right Honourable the present Secretary of State for the Colonies. The +hills looked very remarkable, being covered with spinifex almost to their +very summit. We shot five ducks and got three opossums this afternoon, +besides doing some shoeing. There is an immense clump of white gums at +head of spring. Barometer 28.34; thermometer 46 degrees at 11 p.m. Marked +a large white gum-tree F 41 on west side close to right bank of river, +being our 41st camp from Geraldton. Latitude 25 degrees 22 minutes 26 +seconds South, longitude about 120 degrees 42 minutes East. + +<p>MOUNT SALVADO. + +<p>28th. +Steering North 30 degrees East for eleven miles, we came to a rough hill, +which I ascended, camped on north side of it, and found water in a gully. +The view was very extensive but not promising--spinifex being in every +direction. A bold hill bore North 31 degrees East magnetic, about seven +miles distant to the North-North-West, which I named Mount Salvado, after +Bishop Salvado, of Victoria Plains, a contributor to the Expedition Fund. +The Carnarvon Ranges looked very remarkable. To the East and North-East +spinifex and low ranges for fifteen miles, when the view was intercepted +by spinifex rises--altogether very unpromising. Barometer 28.26; +thermometer 70 degrees at 5 p.m.; latitude 25 degrees 24 minutes 11 +seconds South. + +<p>29th. +Steered East-North-East for seven miles, when we came to some fine water +in a gully, which we did not camp at, owing to my being ahead with +Windich, and my brother not seeing a note I left telling him to remain +there while I went on to get a view ahead. Passing this at ten miles, we +reached a low spinifex hill capped with rock, from which a remarkable +hill was visible, which I named Mount Davis, after my friend Mr. J.S. +Davis, who was a contributor to the Expedition Fund. Mount Salvado was +also visible. Spinifex in every direction, and the country very miserable +and unpromising. I went ahead with Windich. Steering about North 15 +degrees East for about eight miles over spinifex sand-hills, we found a +spring in a small flat, which I named Pierre Spring, after my companion +Tommy Pierre. It was surrounded by the most miserable spinifex country, +and is quite a diamond in the desert. We cleared it out and got +sufficient water for our horses. To the North, South, and East nothing +but spinifex sand-hills in sight. Barometer 28.44; thermometer 70 degrees +at 5 p.m.; latitude 25 degrees 14 minutes 34 seconds South by Altair. + +<p>SEARCHING FOR WATER. + +<p>30th. +Steering East-North-East over spinifex red sand-hills for nine miles, we +came to a valley and followed down a gully running North-North-East for +two miles, when it lost itself on the flat, which was wooded and grassy. +About a mile farther on we found a clay-pan with water, and camped, with +excellent feed. The country is very dry, and I should think there has not +been any rain for several months. The appearance of the country ahead is +better than it looked yesterday. I went onwards with Windich to-day, and +found the water. Barometer 28.46; thermometer 66 degrees at 5.30 p.m.; +latitude 25 degrees 10 minutes 32 seconds. + +<p>31st. (Sunday). +Rested at camp. Took observations for time. Left two pack-saddle bags +hanging on a tree. + +<p>June 1st. +Barometer 28.38; thermometer 45 degrees at 8 a.m. In collecting the +horses we came on an old native camp, and found the skull of a native, +much charred, evidently the remains of one who had been eaten. Continued +on about North-East along a grassy flat, and at five miles passed some +clay-pans of water, after which we encountered spinifex, which continued +for fifteen miles, when we got to a rocky range, covered with more +spinifex. Myself and Windich were in advance, and after reaching the +range we followed down a flat about North for six miles, when it joined +another large water-course, both trending North-North-West and +North-West. We followed down this river for about seven miles, in hopes +of finding water, without success. Night was fast approaching, and I +struck north for four miles to a range, on reaching which the prospect +was very poor; it proved to be a succession of spinifex sand-hills, and +no better country was in view to the North-East and East. It was just +sundown when we reached the range; we then turned east for two miles, and +south, following along all the gullies we came across, but could find no +water. It was full moon, so that we could see clearly. We turned more to +the westward and struck our outward tracks, and, following back along +them, we met the party encamped at the junction of the two branches +mentioned before. We kept watch over the horses to keep them from +straying. Mine and Windich's horses were nearly knocked up, and Windich +himself was very ill all night. Latitude 24 degrees 55 minutes 19 seconds +South. + +<p>AT WELD SPRINGS. + +<p>2nd. +Early this morning went with Pierre to look for water, while my brother +and Windich went on the same errand. We followed up the brook about south +for seven miles, when we left it and followed another branch about +South-South-East, ascending which, Pierre drew my attention to swarms of +birds, parroquets, etc., about half a mile ahead. We hastened on, and to +our delight found one of the best springs in the colony. It ran down the +gully for twenty chains, and is as clear and fresh as possible, while the +supply is unlimited. Overjoyed at our good fortune, we hastened back, +and, finding that my brother and Windich had not returned, packed up and +shifted over to the springs, leaving a note telling them the good news. +After reaching the springs we were soon joined by them. They had only +found sufficient water to give their own horses a drink; they also +rejoiced to find so fine a spot. Named the springs the Weld Springs, +after his Excellency Governor Weld, who has always taken such great +interest in exploration, and without whose influence and assistance this +expedition would not have been organized. There is splendid feed all +around. I intend giving the horses a week's rest here, as they are much +in want of it, and are getting very poor and tired. Barometer 28.24; +thermometer 71 degrees at 5 p.m. Shot a kangaroo. + +<p>3rd. +Rested at Weld Springs. Light rain this morning. The horses doing well, +and will improve very fast. Towards evening the weather cleared, which I +was sorry for, as good rains are what we are much in need of. Did some +shoeing. Barometer 28.13; thermometer 61 degrees at 5 p.m. + +<p>4th. +Barometer 28.16; thermometer 53 degrees at 8 a.m. Rested at Weld Springs. +Shod some of the horses. Repairing saddles. Rating chronometer. Windich +shot an emu. Horses doing first-rate, and fast improving. + +<p>5th. +Barometer 28.28; thermometer 53 degrees at 6 p.m. Rested at Weld Springs. +Shoeing and saddle-stuffing. Ten emus came to water; shot twice with +rifle at them, but missed. Rated chronometer. + +<p>6th. +Rested at Weld Springs. Took three sets of lunars. Pierre shot a +kangaroo. Marked a tree F 46 on the east side of the spring at our +bivouac, which is in latitude 25 degrees 0 minutes 46 seconds South, +longitude about 121 degrees 21 minutes East. Mended saddles. Horses much +improved, and some of them getting very fresh. + +<p>7th (Sunday). +Pierre shot an emu, and the others shot several pigeons. This is a +splendid spot; emus and kangaroos numerous, pigeons and birds +innumerable, literally covering the entire surface all round the place in +the evenings. We have been living on game ever since we have been here. +Intend taking a flying trip to-morrow; party to follow on our tracks on +Tuesday. Read Divine Service. Barometer 28.38; thermometer 55 degrees at +7 p.m. + +<p>8th. +Started with Tommy Pierre to explore the country East-North-East for +water, leaving instructions for my brother to follow after us to-morrow +with the party. We travelled generally East-North-East for twenty miles +over spinifex and undulating sand-hills, without seeing any water. We +turned east for ten miles to a range, which we found to be covered with +spinifex. Everywhere nothing else was to be seen; no feed, destitute of +water; while a few small gullies ran out of the low range, but all were +dry. Another range about twenty-four miles distant was the extent of our +view, to which we bore. At twenty miles, over red sandy hills covered +with spinifex and of the most miserable nature, we came to a narrow +samphire flat, following which south for two miles, we camped without +water and scarcely any feed. Our horses were knocked up, having come over +heavy ground more than fifty miles. The whole of the country passed over +to-day is covered with spinifex, and is a barren worthless desert. + +<p>BACK TO THE SPRINGS. + +<p>9th. +At daybreak continued east about four miles to the range seen yesterday, +which we found to be a low stony rise, covered with spinifex. The view +was extensive and very gloomy. Far to the north and east, spinifex +country, level, and no appearance of hills or water-courses. To the south +were seen a few low ranges, covered also with spinifex; in fact, nothing +but spinifex in sight, and no chance of water. Therefore I was obliged to +turn back, as our horses were done up. Travelling south for five miles, +we then turned West-North-West until we caught our outward tracks, and, +following them, we met the party at 3 o'clock, coming on, about twenty +miles from the Weld Springs. Our horses were completely done up. We had +not had water for thirty-one hours. We all turned back, retreating +towards the springs, and continued on till 10 o'clock, when we camped in +the spinifex and tied up the horses. + +<p>10th. +We travelled on to the springs, which were only about three miles from +where we slept last night, and camped. I intend staying here for some +time, until I find water ahead or we get some rain. We are very fortunate +in having such a good depot, as the feed is very good. We found that +about a dozen natives had been to the springs while we were away. They +had collected some of the emu feathers, which were lying all about. +Natives appear to be very numerous, and I have no doubt that there are +springs in the spinifex or valleys close to it. Barometer 28.08; +thermometer 62 degrees at 5.30 p.m. + +<p>11th. +Rested at the Weld Springs. Shot an emu; about a dozen came to water. My +brother and Windich intend going a flying trip East-South-East in search +of water to-morrow. Barometer 28.15; thermometer 60 degrees at 5 p.m. + +<p>12th. +My brother and Windich started in search of water; myself and Pierre +accompanied them about twelve miles with water to give their horses a +drink. About ten o'clock we left them and returned to camp. + +<p>FIGHT WITH THE NATIVES. + +<p>13th. +About one o'clock Pierre saw a flock of emus coming to water, and went +off to get a shot. Kennedy followed with the rifle. I climbed up on a +small tree to watch them. I was surprised to hear natives' voices, and, +looking towards the hill, I saw from forty to sixty natives running +towards the camp, all plumed up and armed with spears and shields. I was +cool, and told Sweeney to bring out the revolvers; descended from the +tree and got my gun and cooeyed to Pierre and Kennedy, who came running. +By this time they were within sixty yards, and halted. One advanced to +meet me and stood twenty yards off; I made friendly signs; he did not +appear very hostile. All at once one from behind (probably a chief) came +rushing forward, and made many feints to throw spears. He went through +many manoeuvres, and gave a signal, when the whole number made a rush +towards us, yelling and shouting, with their spears shipped. When within +thirty yards I gave the word to fire: we all fired as one man, only one +report being heard. I think the natives got a few shots, but they all ran +up the hill and there stood, talking and haranguing and appearing very +angry. We re-loaded our guns, and got everything ready for a second +attack, which I was sure they would make. We were not long left in +suspense. They all descended from the hill and came on slowly towards us. +When they were about 150 yards off I fired my rifle, and we saw one of +them fall, but he got up again and was assisted away. On examining the +spot we found the ball had cut in two the two spears he was carrying; he +also dropped his wommera, which was covered with blood. We could follow +the blood-drops for a long way over the stones. I am afraid he got a +severe wound. My brother and Windich being away we were short-handed. The +natives seem determined to take our lives, and therefore I shall not +hesitate to fire on them should they attack us again. I thus decide and +write in all humility, considering it a necessity, as the only way of +saving our lives. I write this at 4 p.m., just after the occurrence, so +that, should anything happen to us, my brother will know how and when it +occurred. + +<p>5 p.m. The natives appear to have made off. We intend sleeping in the +thicket close to camp, and keeping a strict watch, so as to be ready for +them should they return to the attack this evening. At 7.30 my brother +and Windich returned, and were surprised to hear of our adventure. They +had been over fifty miles from camp East-South-East, and had passed over +some good feeding country, but had not found a drop of water. They and +their horses had been over thirty hours without water. + +<center> +<p><a name="forrest7"></a><img alt="" src="forrest7.jpg"></p> +<p><b>Attacked by the Natives at Weld Springs.</b></p> +</center> + +<p>14th (Sunday). +The natives did not return to the attack last night. In looking round +camp we found the traces of blood, where one of the natives had been +lying down. This must have been the foremost man, who was in the act of +throwing his spear, and who urged the others on. Two therefore, at least, +are wounded, and will have cause to remember the time they made their +murderous attack upon us. We worked all day putting up a stone hut, ten +by nine feet, and seven feet high, thatched with boughs. We finished it; +it will make us safe at night. Being a very fair hut, it will be a great +source of defence. Barometer 28.09; thermometer 68 degrees at 5 p.m. Hope +to have rain, as without it we cannot proceed. + +<p>15th. +Finished the hut, pugging it at the ends, and making the roof better. Now +it is in good order, and we are quite safe from attack at night, should +they attempt it again, which I think is doubtful, as they got too warm a +reception last time. I intend going with Windich to-morrow easterly in +search of water. Barometer 29.09 at 5 p.m.; thermometer 62 degrees. + +<p>16th. +Left the Weld Springs with Windich and a pack-horse carrying fourteen +gallons of water. Steered South-East for twelve miles over spinifex, +after which we got into a grassy ravine, which we followed along three +miles, passing some fine clay-holes which would hold plenty of water if +it rained. We then turned East-North-East for twelve miles over spinifex, +miserable country, when we struck the tracks of my brother and Windich on +their return, June 13th. We followed along them South-East for four +miles, and then South-East to a bluff range about eighteen miles, which +we reached at sundown. Spinifex generally, a few grassy patches +intervening, on which were numbers of kangaroos. We camped close to the +bluff, and gave the horses one gallon of water each out of the cans. Just +when the pannicans were boiled, heard noises which we thought were +natives shouting. We instantly put out the fire and had our supper in the +dark, keeping a sharp look-out for two hours, when we were convinced it +must have been a native dog, as there were hundreds all round us, barking +and howling. The weather is heavy and cloudy, and I hope to get some rain +shortly. We slept without any fire, but it was not very cold. + +<p>17th. +As the horses did not ramble far, we got off early and followed along and +through the ranges East-South-East about, the distance being eighteen +miles. Passed some splendid clay-pans quite dry. The flats around the +ranges are very grassy, and look promising eastwards, but we cannot find +any water. Kangaroos and birds are numerous. Being about seventy miles +from camp, we cannot go any farther, or our horses will not carry us +back. We therefore turned, keeping to the south of our outward track, and +at about eleven miles found some water in some clay-holes, and camped at +about 3 o'clock in the afternoon. There is sufficient water to last the +party about a week, but not more. The weather is dark and threatening, +and I believe there will be rain to-night, which will be a great boon, +and will enable us to travel along easily. It is in circumstances such as +I am at present placed that we are sure to implore help and assistance +from the hand of the Creator; but when we have received all we desire, +how often we forget to give Him praise! + +<p>18th. +Rained lightly last night, and we had a nice shower this morning. Yet did +not get very wet, as we had our waterproofs. Fearing that the rain would +obliterate the tracks and the party be unable to follow them, I decided +to return towards Weld Springs. Therefore followed along our outward +track, but found, to our sorrow, that there had been no rain west of our +last night's camp. We pushed along and got within eighteen miles of Weld +Springs and camped without water, having left the cans behind, thinking +we should find plenty of rain-water. + +<p>19th. +We had to go about two miles for our horses this morning; after which, we +made all haste towards Weld Springs, as I knew the party would be coming +on along our tracks to-day. When we were within six miles of the spring +we met the party, but, being obliged to take our horses to water, I +decided that all should return and make a fresh start to-morrow. The +natives had not returned to the attack during our absence, so I conclude +they do not intend to interfere with us further. On our way to-day we +passed some fine rock holes, but all were quite dry. Rain is very much +required in this country. + +<p>20th. +Started at 9.30 a.m., and steering South-East towards the water found on +the 17th for twenty-four miles; thence East-South-East for eight miles, +and camped without water on a small patch of feed. The last ten miles was +over clear spinifex country of the most wretched description. The country +all the way, in fact, is most miserable and intolerable. Barometer 28.50; +thermometer 56 degrees at 8 p.m.; latitude 25 degrees 13 minutes 36 +seconds South by meridian altitude of Arcturus. Left the rum-keg and a +pair of farrier's pincers in the stone hut at Weld Springs. + +<p>21st (Sunday). +Got an early start, and continued on East-South-East. At about three +miles reached a spring on a small patch of feed in the spinifex and +camped, but found, after digging it out, that scarcely any water came in. +I have no doubt that it will fill up a good deal in the night; but, our +horses being thirsty, I re-saddled and pushed on to the water about +sixteen miles ahead, which we reached at 4 p.m. There is not more than a +week's supply here, therefore I intend going ahead with Pierre to-morrow +in search of more. The country ahead seems promising, but there is a +great deal of spinifex almost everywhere. From Weld Spring to our present +camp is all spinifex, with the exception of a few flats along short +gullies. Latitude 25 degrees 22 minutes 50 seconds South, longitude about +121 degrees 57 minutes East. Barometer 28.50; thermometer 62 degrees at 5 +p.m. + +<p>22nd. +Left camp in company with Tommy Pierre, with a pack-horse carrying +fifteen gallons of water. Steered South-East for four miles, then east +for about eight miles over fine grassy country, then South-East towards a +high range about twenty-five miles distant. After going about three +miles, struck a flat trending South-South-East, which we followed down +about four miles, passing two small clay-holes with water in them; then +we struck South-East for four miles, and came to a large brook trending +South-East, which we followed along until it lost itself on the plain +about six miles. Fine grassy country all the way, and game abundant. +There were a few gallons of water here and there in the brook, but none +large enough to camp at. I then turned east, and at about seven miles +reached the hill seen this morning, which I named Mount Moore, after Mr. +W.D. Moore, of Fremantle, a subscriber to the Expedition Fund. Ascending +the hill we had an extensive view to the South-West, South, and +South-East. Fine grassy country all round and very little spinifex. To +the south about nine miles we saw a lake, and farther off a remarkable +red-faced range, which I named Timperley Range, after my friend Mr. W.H. +Timperley, Inspector of Police, from whom I received a great deal of +assistance before leaving Champion Bay. A remarkable peak, with a reddish +top, bore South-South-East, which I named Mount Hosken, after Mr. M. +Hosken, of Geraldton, a contributor to the expedition. I made south +towards the lake, and at one mile and a half came on to a gully in the +grassy plain, in which we found abundance of water, sufficient to last +for months. We therefore camped for the night, with beautiful feed for +the horses. I was very thankful to find so much water and such fine +grassy country, for, if we had not found any this trip, we should have +been obliged to retreat towards Weld Springs, the water where I left the +party being only sufficient to last a few days. The country passed over +to-day was very grassy, with only a little spinifex, and it looks +promising ahead. Distance from camp about thirty-five miles. + +<p>LAKE AUGUSTA. + +<p>23rd. +Steering south for about eight miles, we reached the lake, which I named +Lake Augusta. The water is salt, and about five miles in circumference. +Grassy country in the flat; red sand-hills along the shore. It appeared +deep, and swarmed with ducks and swans. Pierre shot two ducks, after +which we pushed on North-East for about twelve miles to a low rocky +bluff, which we ascended and got a view of the country ahead--rough +broken ranges to the east and south. We continued on east for six miles, +when, on approaching a rocky face of a range, we saw some natives on top +of it, watching us. Approaching nearer, we heard them haranguing and +shouting, and soon afterward came within thirty yards of one who was +stooping down, looking intently and amazedly at us. I made friendly +signs, but he ran off shouting, and apparently much afraid. He and +several others ran up and joined the natives on the cliff summit, and +then all made off. We turned, and steering East-North-East for six miles, +and then east for about fourteen miles, the last few miles being +miserable spinifex country, we camped, with poor feed, amongst some +spinifex ranges. A good deal of grassy country the first part of the day. +Kangaroos very numerous, and emus also. Evidences of the natives being in +great numbers. + +<p>24th. +Ascended a red-topped peak close to our bivouac and got a view ahead. A +salt lake was visible a few miles to the east, towards which we +proceeded. Passing along samphire flats and over red sand-hills, we got +within a mile of the lake. The country close to it not looking promising, +I determined to turn our faces westward towards the party. Steering a +little south of west for three miles, we struck a large brook trending +North-East into the lake, and, following it up a mile, found a fine pool +of fresh water, with splendid feed. This is very fortunate, as it is a +good place to bring the party to. Elated with our success, we continued +on westerly, passing some fine rock water-holes, half full of water, and +at twenty miles from the pool we found a springy hole, with plenty of +water in it, within a few hundred yards of our outward track. We had +missed it going out; it is in the centre of a very fine grassy plain. +Kangaroos and emus numerous, also natives. Giving the horses water, we +pushed on for twelve miles and camped on some fine grassy flats. Every +appearance of rain. + +<p>ANOTHER NATIVE. + +<p>25th. +Having finished all our rations last night, I shot two kangaroos while +out for the horses, and brought the hind quarters with us. Continuing +westerly for about ten miles, we reached the water, our bivouac on the +22nd. I awaited the arrival of the party, which should reach here this +morning. At two o'clock heard gunshots, and saw my brother and Windich +walking towards us. Found that they had missed our tracks and were camped +about a mile higher up the gully, at some +small clay-holes. We got our horses and accompanied them back. Rained +this evening more than we have had before. Very cloudy. Barometer 28.18, +but inclined to rise. Everything had +gone on well during my absence. + +<p>26th. +Did not travel to-day, as there was good feed and water at this camp. My +brother, Windich, and Pierre rode over to Lake Augusta to get some +shooting, and returned in the afternoon with a swan and two ducks. On +their way out they saw a native and gave him chase. He climbed up a small +tree, and, although Windich expended all his knowledge of the languages +of Australia to get him to talk, he would not open his lips, but remained +silent; they therefore left him to get down from the tree at his leisure. +Re-stuffed some of the pack-saddles. Marked a tree F 50, being our 50th +camp from Geraldton. Barometer 28.40; thermometer 50 degrees at 6 p.m.; +weather cleared off and fine night. Latitude 25 degrees 37 minutes 38 +seconds South; longitude about 122 degrees 22 minutes East. + +<p>27th. +Erected a cairn of stones on South-East point of Mount Moore, after which +continued on and reached the spring found by me on the 24th; distance +fifteen miles. The last six miles poor spinifex country. Fine and grassy +round spring. Barometer 28.54; thermometer 56 degrees at 7 p.m.; latitude +25 degrees 37 minutes 53 seconds by Arcturus. Marked a tree F 51, being +the 51st camp from Geraldton. + +<p>28th (Sunday). +Rested at spring. Found the variations to be 1 degree 52 minutes West by +azimuths. + +<p>29th. +Reached the pool found by me on the 24th; distance seventeen miles. +Latitude 25 degrees 41 minutes 22 seconds South; longitude about 122 +degrees 53 minutes East. Splendid feed round camp. Marked a tree F 52, +being the 52nd from Geraldton. About two miles west of camp I ascended a +remarkable hill and took a round of bearings, naming it Mount Bates, +after the Secretary of the Royal Geographical Society. + +<p>FARING SUMPTUOUSLY. + +<p>30th. +Left camp F 52 in company with Tommy Windich, taking one pack-horse, to +find water ahead eastward. Steered East-North-East over salt marshes and +spinifex sand-hills, and at about eleven miles found water in some +clay-pans, and left a note telling my brother to camp here to-morrow +night. Continued on and found several more fine water-pans and fine +grassy patches. Ascended a range to get a view ahead. In every direction +spinifex, more especially to the north; to the east some low ranges were +visible, about twenty miles distant, towards which we proceeded. On our +way we surprised an emu on its nest and found several eggs; we buried +four with a note stuck over them, for the party to get when they came +along, and took three with us. Soon after this the horse Windich was +riding (Mission) gave in, and we had great difficulty in getting him +along. I was much surprised at this, for I considered him the best horse +we had. We reached the range and found water in some of the gorges, but +no feed; spinifex everywhere. We continued on till dark, passing some +natives' fire, which we did not approach, then camped with scarcely any +feed. I hope to have better luck to-morrow. We have found plenty of +water, but no feed; this is better than having no water and plenty of +feed. We had one wurrung, four chockalotts, and three emu eggs, besides +bread and bacon, for tea to-night, so we fared sumptuously. + +<p>July 1st. +Got off early and continued easterly to a low stony range three miles +off, over spinifex sandy country. Found a rock water-hole and gave our +horses a drink. Continuing about east to other ranges, which we followed +along and through, and from range to range, spinifex intervening +everywhere, and no feed, a few little drops of water in the gullies, but +not sufficient for the party to camp at. When we had travelled about +fifteen miles, we turned north for three miles, and again east, through +and over some ranges. No feed and scarcely any water. Saw a range about +twenty-five miles farther east--spinifex all the way to it. Mission being +again knocked up, although carrying only a few pounds, we camped about +three o'clock at a small hole of water in a gully--only large enough to +serve the party one night--the first to-day that would even do that. The +last forty miles was over the most wretched country I have ever seen; not +a bit of grass, and no water, except after rain; spinifex everywhere. We +are very fortunate to have a little rain-water, or we could not get +ahead. + +<center> +<p><a name="forrest8"></a><img alt="" src="forrest8.jpg"></p> +<p><b>On the March. The Spinifex Desert.</b></p> +</center> + +<p>2nd. +Steered towards the range seen yesterday a little south of east, and, +after going twelve miles, my horse completely gave in, Mission doing the +same also. I had hard work to get them along, and at last they would not +walk. I gave them a rest and then drove them before me, following Windich +till we reached the range. Found a little water in a gully, but no feed. +Spinifex all the way to-day; most wretched country. We ascended the +range, and the country ahead looks first-rate; high ranges to the +North-East, and apparently not so much spinifex. We continued North-East, +and after going four miles camped on a patch of feed, the first seen for +the last sixty miles. I was very tired, having walked nearly twenty +miles, and having to drive two knocked-up horses. I have good hopes of +getting both feed and water to-morrow, for, if we do not, we shall be in +a very awkward position. + +<p>3rd. +Soon after starting, found a little water in a gully and gave our horses +a drink. Ascended a spur of the range and had a good view ahead, and was +very pleased with the prospect. Steering North-East towards a large range +about fifteen miles off, we found a great deal of spinifex, although the +country generally was thickly wooded. I rode Mission, who went along +pretty well for about twelve miles, when Williams gave in again, and +Mission soon did the same. For the next six miles to the range we had +awful work, but managed, with leading and driving, to reach the range; +spinifex all the way, and also on the top of it. I was very nearly +knocked up myself, but ascended the range and had a very extensive view. +Far to the north and east the horizon was as level and uniform as that of +the sea; apparently spinifex everywhere; no hills or ranges could be seen +for a distance of quite thirty miles. The prospect was very cheerless and +disheartening. Windich went on the only horse not knocked up, in order to +find water for the horses. I followed after his tracks, leading the two +poor done-up horses. With difficulty I could get them to walk. Over and +through the rough range I managed to pull them along, and found +sufficient water to give them a good drink, and camped on a small patch +of rough grass in one of the gorges. Spinifex everywhere; it is a most +fearful country. We cannot proceed farther in this direction, and must +return and meet the party, which I hope to do to-morrow night. We can +only crawl along, having to walk and lead the horses, or at least drag +them. The party have been following us, only getting a little water from +gullies, and there is very little to fall back on for over fifty miles. I +will leave what I intend doing until I meet them. I am nearly knocked up +again to-night; my boots have hurt my feet, but I am not yet +disheartened. + +<p>4th. +We travelled back towards the party, keeping a little to the west of our +outward track; and after going five miles found some water in clay-holes, +sufficient to last the party about one night. Two of our horses being +knocked up, I made up my mind to let the party meet us here, although I +scarcely know what to do when they do arrive. To go forward looks very +unpromising, and to retreat we have quite seventy miles with scarcely any +water and no feed at all. The prospect is very cheerless, and what I +shall do depends on the state of the horses, when they reach here. It is +very discouraging to have to retreat, as Mr. Gosse's farthest point west +is only 200 miles from us. We finished all our rations this morning, and +we have been hunting for game ever since twelve o'clock, and managed to +get a wurrung and an opossum, the only living creatures seen, and which +Windich was fortunate to capture. + +<p>LOSS OF HORSES. + +<p>5th (Sunday). +Early this morning Windich and I went in search of more water. Having +nothing to eat, it did not take us long to have a little drink of water +for our breakfast. Went a few miles to the North-West and looked all +round, but only found a small rock water-hole. Windich got an opossum out +of a tree. We returned about twelve o'clock and then ate the opossum. At +about one o'clock we saddled up and made back towards the party, which I +thought should have arrived by this time. When about two miles we met +them coming on; they had been obliged to leave two horses on the way, +knocked up, one named Fame, about twenty-four miles away, and Little +Padbury about eight miles back; all the others were in pretty good trim, +although very hungry and tired. We returned to the little water, which +they soon finished. I was glad to meet the party again, although we were +in a bad position. Intend returning to-morrow to the range left by the +party this morning, where there is enough water for half a day, and +search that range more thoroughly. The horses will have a good night's +feed and I have every confidence that, if the worst comes, we shall be +able to retreat to a place of safety. Found my brother in good spirits. +We soon felt quite happy and viewed the future hopefully. I was sorry to +lose the horses, but we cannot expect to get on through such a country +without some giving in. The country is so dry; the season altogether dry, +otherwise we could go ahead easily. A good shower of rain is what is +required. It has been very warm the last three days, and I hope much for +a change. Read Divine Service. Latitude 25 degrees 31 minutes 45 seconds +South, longitude about 124 degrees 17 minutes East. Barometer 28.62 at 4 +p.m. + +<p>6th. +Retreated back to the water left by the party in the range fourteen miles +South-West. At one mile we gave the horses as much water as they required +from some rock holes. After reaching the water and having dinner, Pierre +and myself, and my brother and Windich, started off on foot to examine +the range for water, but could find only a few gallons. I think there +will be sufficient water to last us here to-morrow, and we will give the +country a good searching. If we fail, there must be a retreat westwards +at least seventy miles. Barometer 28.53; thermometer 64 degrees at 5 p.m. + +<p>WATER FOUND. + +<p>7th. +Early this morning Pierre and I and my brother and Windich started off in +search of water, as there was scarcely any left at camp. Unless we are +fortunate enough to find some, retreat is inevitable. Pierre and myself +searched the range we were camped in, while Windich and my brother went +further south towards another range. We searched all round and over the +rough ranges without success, and reached camp at one o'clock. To our +relief and joy learnt that my brother and Windich had found water about +five miles South-South-East, sufficient to last two or three weeks. This +was good news; so after dinner we packed up and went over to the water. +The feed was not very good, but I am truly thankful to have found it, as +a retreat of seventy miles over most wretched country was anything but +cheering. Barometer 28.52; thermometer 70 degrees at 5 p.m.; latitude 25 +degrees 43 minutes 8 seconds by Arcturus. + +<p>8th. +Rested at camp. Devoted the day to taking sets of lunar observations. +There is very little feed about this water, and to-morrow my brother and +Pierre go on a flying trip ahead. It is very warm to-day, and has been +for the last week. Barometer 28.59; thermometer 79 degrees at 5 p.m. + +<p>9th. +Very cloudy this morning, although the barometer is rising. My brother +and Pierre +started on the flying trip; intend following on their tracks on Saturday. +Could not take another set of lunars on account of the cloudy weather. +Was very busy all day repairing pack-saddles and putting everything in +good order. Did away with one pack-saddle, and repaired the others with +the wool. Shall leave here with twelve pack-horses, and three running +loose and two riding, besides the two that are on flying trip. Barometer +28.59 thermometer 69 degrees at 5 p.m. + +<p>10th. +Finished repairs and got everything ready for a good start to-morrow +morning, when we will follow my brother's and Pierre's tracks. Cloudy +day, but barometer does not fall. Marked a tree F 59, being our 59th +bivouac from Geraldton. Hung up on the same tree four pack-bags and one +pack-saddle frame. Barometer 28.56; thermometer 74 degrees at 5 p.m. +Tommy Windich shot a red kangaroo this afternoon, and also found a fine +rock water-hole about one mile North-East of camp. + +<p>11th. +Followed on the tracks of my brother and Pierre, south seven miles to a +rough broken range--spinifex and rough grass all the way. Thence we +turned South-East for three miles; then North-East and East over most +wretched spinifex plains for nine miles, when we got on to a narrow +grassy flat, and, following it along about four miles, came to some water +in a clay-pan, sufficient for the night, and camped. With the exception +of this narrow flat the country passed over to-day is most miserable and +worthless, and very dusty. Another hot day. Barometer 28.70; thermometer +67 degrees at 5 p.m.; latitude 25 degrees 52 minutes 30 seconds South. + +<p>12th (Sunday.). +Our horses finished all the water. We got off early, and, steering east, +followed my brother's and Pierre's tracks for eight miles, when we +reached a low rise, and a fine rock water-hole holding over a hundred +gallons of water. While we were watering our horses we heard gunshots, +and soon beheld my brother and Pierre returning. They had good news for +us, having found some springs about twenty-five miles to the eastward. +They had seen many natives; but for an account of their proceedings I +insert a copy of his journal. Barometer 28.60; thermometer 60 degrees. We +camped for the day. Latitude 25 degrees 53 minutes 23 seconds South. Read +Divine Service. + +<p>A. FORREST'S JOURNAL. + +<blockquote><p>July 10th. +Steered east from the rock hole for the first fifteen miles, over clear +open sand-plains and red sand-hills covered with spinifex; then +South-South-East for ten miles over similar country to a rough range; +after going nearly all round it only found about one gallon of water. As +my horse was very tired, I almost gave up all hopes of finding any, as it +would take us all our time to get back; however, I went South-East for +seven miles further, and found about fifty gallons in a rock hole, but +not a blade of grass near it. As it was nearly dark, and no feed near, I +bore south for a low range about five miles distant, and found a little +feed but no water, and camped. My horse completely gave in; I had great +difficulty in getting him to the range. + +<p>11th. +Again bore west on our return to meet the party. After going seven miles +we saw a beautiful piece of feeding country--the first we had seen for +the last 130 miles--and after looking for water, and our fondest hopes +beginning to fail, we at last followed what seemed to be the largest +gully to its head, when we were gratified in beholding abundance of +water, with several springs, and good feed in the flats below. My horse +was completely knocked up, and I was glad to be able to give him a rest. +After being an hour here, Pierre, who is always on the look-out, saw two +natives, fully armed and in war costume, making for us. I was soon on my +legs and made towards them, but as soon as they saw us they began to move +off, and were soon out of sight in the thicket. At two o'clock continued +on West-North-West for twelve miles, camped in a thicket, and, after +taking off our saddles and making a fire, were very much surprised to +find a party of eight or nine natives going to camp close to us, and a +number more coming down the hill. As it was just dark we thought it best +to move on a few miles, which we did after dark. I believe, myself, they +intend attacking us after dark. + +<p>A. FORREST.</blockquote> + +<p>13th. +Steering straight for the water found by my brother, about +East-South-East for twenty-five miles, over most miserable spinifex +country, without a break. Just before we got to the water Windich shot an +emu. We saw two natives, who made off. Many fires in every direction. +Latitude 26 degrees 5 minutes 10 seconds South, longitude about 124 +degrees 46 minutes East. Fine water at this place. I have no doubt water +is always here. I named it the Alexander Spring, after my brother, who +discovered it. Abundance of water also in rock holes. + +<p>14th. +Rested at Alexander Spring. Eating emu was our chief occupation to-day, I +think. Weather cloudy. Barometer 28.75; thermometer 60 degrees at 5 p.m. + +<p>NATIVES' GRAVES. + +<p>15th. +Rested at Alexander Spring. Went for a walk to a flat-topped hill about +South-South-East 50 chains from camp, which I have since named Mount +Allott, and placed a cairn on it; another hill close by I named Mount +Worsnop, after respectively the Mayor and Town Clerk of Adelaide. Found +two natives' graves close to camp; they were apparently about two feet +deep, and covered with boughs and wood; they are the first I have ever +seen in all my travels to the eastward in Australia, and Windich says he +has never come across one before either. We also found about a dozen +pieces of wood, some six feet long and three to seven inches wide, and +carved and trimmed up. All around were stones put up in the forked trees. +I believe it is the place where the rite of circumcision is performed. +Barometer 28.84; thermometer 60 degrees at 5 p.m. + +<p>16th. +Left Alexander Spring, in company with Windich, to look for water ahead. +Steered east for twelve miles, over spinifex sand-hills with some +salt-marsh flats intervening. We then turned South-East for seven miles +to some cliffs, and followed them along east about one mile and a half, +when we saw a clear patch a little to the North-East, on reaching which +we found a fine rock water-hole holding over 100 gallons of water. We had +a pannican of tea, and gave our horses an hour and a half's rest. Left a +note for my brother, advising him to camp here the first night. We +continued on a little to the south of east for about fifteen miles over +spinifex plains, when we camped on a small patch of feed. Saw a fire +about three quarters of a mile south of our camp, and supposed that +natives were camped there. + +<p>17th. +Early this morning we proceeded to where we saw the fire last night, but +could not find any natives: it must have been some spinifex burning. We +continued about east for two miles; found a rock water-hole holding about +fifty gallons, and had breakfast. After this, continued on a little south +of east for twelve miles, when we turned more to the north, searching +every spinifex rise that had a rocky face, first North and then +North-West and West, all over the country, but not over any great extent, +as my horse (Brick) was knocked up. About one o'clock we found enough to +give the horses a drink, and to make some tea for ourselves. We saw some +low cliffs to the north, and proceeding towards them we saw ahead about +North-North-East a remarkable high cliff. I therefore decided to make for +it. I had to walk and drive my horse before me, and before we reached the +cliff we had hard work to get him to move. When we got close we were +rejoiced to see cliffs and gorges without end, and descending the first +hollow found a fine rock hole containing at least 250 gallons. We +therefore camped, as it was just sundown. I am very sanguine of finding +more water to-morrow, as our horses will soon finish this hole. There was +very little feed about the water. + +<p>SEARCHING FOR WATER. + +<p>18th. +This morning we began searching the ranges for water. First tried +westerly, and searched some fine gullies and gorges, but without success. +My horse soon gave in again, and I left him on a patch of feed and +continued the search on foot. I had not walked a quarter of a mile before +I found about 200 gallons in a gully, and, following down the gully, we +found a fine pool in a sandy bed, enough to last a month. We were +rejoiced at our good fortune, and, returning to where we left the horse, +camped for the remainder of the day. There is not much feed anywhere +about these cliffs and gullies, but as long as there is plenty of water +the horses will do very well. To-morrow I intend going back to meet the +party, as the way we came was very crooked, and I hope to save them many +miles. It is certainly a wretched country we have been travelling through +for the last two months, and, what makes it worse, the season is an +exceptionally dry one; it is quite summer weather. However, we are now +within 100 miles of Mr. Gosse's farthest west, and I hope soon to see a +change for the better. We have been most fortunate in finding water, and +I am indeed very thankful for it. + +<p>19th (Sunday). +Started back to meet the party, leaving old Brick hobbled, and my saddle, +rug, etc., hidden in a tree. After travelling about twenty miles, met the +party coming all right. Everything had gone on well during my absence. +They had slept last night at the rock hole, where we stayed on the 16th, +and found sufficient water for the horses in it. The note I left had been +taken away by the natives, who were very numerous about there. Many +tracks were seen, following mine and Windich's for several miles. The +party had not, however, seen any of them. They were rejoiced to hear of +the water ahead, and we steered for it, keeping to the west of our return +route to search some cliffs on the way for water. After travelling nine +miles we camped without water, on a grassy flat close to some cliffs; +most miserable spinifex country all day; this is the first grass seen. +Walked over twenty miles to-day myself. + +<p>20th. +Steered North-East straight for the water found on the 18th for fourteen +miles; reached it and camped. Found the horse Brick I left behind, and +saddle, rug, etc., as we left them. Horses were very thirsty, but there +is plenty of water for them. Feed is rather scarce. I named this creek +and pool after the Honourable Arthur Blyth, Chief Secretary of South +Australia. + +<p>21st. +Rested at camp. I took observations for time, intending to take several +sets of lunars, but the day was cloudy, and I only managed to get one. +Intend going ahead to-morrow in search of water. + +<p>22nd. +Started in company with Pierre to look for water ahead, steered a little +north of east for about twelve miles to the points of the cliffs, and +ascended a peak to get a view ahead. The line of cliff country ran +North-East, and to the east, spinifex undulating country; nevertheless, +as I wished to get a view of some of the hills shown on Mr. Gosse's map, +I bore East and East-South-East for over thirty miles, but could not find +a drop of water all day, and we had come nearly fifty miles. Camped on a +small patch of feed. Very undulating spinifex country, and no place that +would hold water, even after rain, for more than a day or two. + +<p>23rd. +Decided not to go any further, although I much wished to get a view +further to the east, but our horses would have enough to do to carry us +back. Steered north for a few miles, and then North-West for twenty +miles, thence West-South-West to camp, which we reached after dark, not +having had any water for ourselves or horses since we left it yesterday +morning. The weather was very warm, and our horses were done up when they +reached camp. On our return we got a fine view to the North-East, which +looks more promising. My brother and Windich intend going to-morrow in +that direction in search of water. + +<p>24th. +My brother and Windich started in search of water. We rested at camp. +Took lunar observations, but did not get results which I care much to +rely on, owing to the distances being too great. + +<p>25th. +Rested at camp. My brother and Windich did not return, so I have good +hopes that they have found water ahead. Took several sets of lunars this +evening. Barometer 28.80 at 5 p.m.; warm weather. + +<p>26th (Sunday). +Rested at camp. My brother and Windich returned late this evening, having +been over sixty miles to the East-North-East, and having found only one +small rock water-hole with water in it. Many rock holes had been seen, +but all dry. They had met several natives. One woman and child they had +caught and talked to. She did not seem frightened, and ate readily the +damper and sugar given her. The country appears more parched than it has +been, which I had thought scarcely possible. A range and flat-topped hill +were seen about fifteen miles to the east of their farthest point, but +they were unable to reach it. Barometer 28.70; fine. + +<p>27th. +Rested at Blyth Pool. Intend going a flying trip to-morrow. Worked out +several lunar observations, and the position of Blyth Pool is in latitude +26 degrees 1 minute, 50 seconds South, longitude 125 degrees 27 minutes +East. Barometer 28.72; thermometer 67 degrees at 5 p.m. + +<p>28th. +Left camp in company with Windich to look for water ahead, taking a +pack-horse and ten gallons of water, besides two small tins for our own +use. Steered North-East nearly along my brother's tracks for twenty +miles, and reached the water in the rock hole seen by him, and had +dinner. In the afternoon continued on a little south of east for about +seven miles. Camped without water for the horses on a small patch of old +feed. The weather is dark and cloudy, and there is much thunder about. I +expect rain this evening; if it comes it will be a great boon, and will +enable us to travel on easily. + +<p>TODD RANGE. + +<p>29th. +Rained lightly during the night; my rug got wet. Thinking we could get +plenty of water ahead, I left the drums and water, as the horses would +not drink. We steered about east over miserable spinifex country, and cut +my brother's return tracks. Passed a rock hole seen by him, and found +only a few pints of water in it, proving to us that very little rain had +fallen. We sighted the range and hill seen by my brother, and reached it +at sundown. I have named it the Todd Range, and the highest hill, which +is table-topped, I have named Mount Charles, after Mr. C. Todd, C.M.G., +Postmaster-General of South Australia. No sign of water, and apparently +very little rain has fallen here last night. Found an old natives' +encampment, and two splendid rock holes quite dry; if full they would +hold 700 or 800 gallons. Was very disappointed at this, and it being now +after dark we camped without water for the horses, having travelled over +forty miles. Before we reached the range we had most miserable spinifex +sand-hills. Scarcely any feed in the range, and spinifex everywhere. What +grass there is must be over two years old. + +<p>30th. +Very thick fog this morning. We bore north for four or five miles, and +then South-East for about five miles, when we got a fine view to the +east, and could see some hills, which are no doubt near Mr. Gosse's +farthest west. They bore South-East about eighteen miles distant. I could +not go on to them, as I was afraid the party would be following us, on +the strength of the little rain we had the night before last. +Reluctantly, therefore, we turned westward, and soon after came to an old +native encampment with a rock hole quite dry, which would hold 1000 +gallons if full. It must be a long while since there has been rain, or it +would not have been dry. We continued on, searching up and down and +through the Todd Ranges, finding enough for our horses from the rain. +Late in the afternoon we found another camping-place with four rock holes +quite empty, which, if full, would hold 3000 or 4000 gallons at least. +This was very disheartening, and we felt it very much. It appeared to us +that there was no water in this country at this season, and we felt it +was useless looking for it. We now decided to make back towards the +party; but being uncertain that my brother would not follow, on the +strength of the rain, determined to bear South-West until we struck our +outward tracks. After going six miles, camped without water, and nothing +but some old coarse scrub for the horses. One good shower of rain would +enable us to get over this country easily; but in this season, without +rain, it is quite impossible to move a number of horses. + +<p>A NATIVE HUSBAND. + +<p>31st. +Steering about South-East towards our outward tracks, came across a +native with his wife and two children, the youngest about two years old. +As soon as they saw us, the man, who had a handful of spears, began +talking at us and then ran off (the eldest child following him), leaving +his wife and the youngest child to take care of themselves. The child was +carried on its mother's back, and hung on without any assistance. Thus +encumbered, the woman could not get away. She evidently preferred facing +any danger to parting with her child. Windich spoke to her, and she +talked away quietly, and did not seem much afraid. We could not +understand anything she said, so allowed her to follow her husband, who +certainly did not come up to our standard of gallantry. We continued on +until we reached our outward tracks, and I was much relieved to find that +the party had not gone on. We found a little water in a small rock hole, +and rested two hours, as our pack-horse (Little Brown) was knocked up. We +continued on about five miles, and camped on a patch of feed in a range, +without water. Little Brown was so knocked up that we had great +difficulty in getting him to walk. + +<p>August 1st. +Steering westerly for about eight miles, reached our bivouac of the 28th, +and gave our horses the water from the drums. Continued on, making +straight for camp; stayed two hours to give the horses a rest, and when +within fifteen miles of camp found a rock hole with about 100 gallons of +water in it. Little Brown completely gave in, and we were obliged to +leave him. Pushed on and reached the party a little after dark, and found +all well, having been absent five days, in which time we had travelled +about 200 miles. + +<p>2nd (Sunday). +My brother and Pierre went on a flying trip to the South-East in search +of water. Kennedy and myself went and brought Little Brown and +pack-saddle, etc., to camp. Windich shot an emu; saw about twenty. +Thermometer 95 degrees in sun during the day; barometer 28.62 at 5 p.m. + +<p>PREPARING FOR A STRUGGLE. + +<p>I now began to be much troubled about our position, although I did not +communicate my fears to any but my brother. We felt confident we could +return if the worst came, although we were over 1000 miles from the +settled districts of Western Australia. The water at our camp was fast +drying up, and would not last more than a fortnight. The next water was +sixty miles back, and there seemed no probability of getting eastward. I +knew we were now in the very country that had driven Mr. Gosse back. I +have since found it did the same for Mr. Giles. No time was to be lost. I +was determined to make the best use of it if only the water would last, +and to keep on searching. (Even now, months after the time, sitting down +writing this journal, I cannot but recall my feelings of anxiety at this +camp.) Just when the goal of my ambition and my hopes for years past was +almost within reach, it appeared that I might not even now be able to +grasp it. The thought of having to return, however, brought every feeling +of energy and determination to my rescue, and I felt that, with God's +help, I would even now succeed. I gave instructions to allowance the +party, so that the stores should last at least four months, and made +every preparation for a last desperate struggle. + +<p>3rd. +Rested at camp. My brother and Pierre did not return this evening, so I +concluded they must have found some water for their horses. Barometer +falling slowly; getting cloudy towards evening. + +<p>4th. +A light shower of rain this morning. Rested at camp. My brother and +Pierre returned this evening, having found a few small rock water-holes, +but not sufficient to shift on. They had been about fifty miles +East-South-East, and had passed over most miserable spinifex country the +whole way. They had not had any rain, not even the light shower we had +this morning. They had seen four natives, but did not get near enough to +talk to them. I intend going with Windich ahead to-morrow, in the hope +that rain may have fallen last night to the East-North-East. The weather, +which had looked threatening all day, cleared off this evening. Barometer +28.56. + +<p>THE BAKER RANGE. + +<p>5th. +Thinking that rain might have fallen to the North-East, I left camp with +Windich to ascertain, instructing my brother to follow on the 7th; before +leaving to bury some flour and everything that could be dispensed with, +and to carry all the drums full of water. He has since informed me that +he buried on left bank of brook, seven yards north of a small tree with a +tin plate nailed on it, on which is written, DIG 7 yds. N., two +pack-bags, containing 135 pounds flour, six leather water-bottles, two +tomahawks, one pick, one water canteen, one broken telescope, three emu +eggs, some girths and straps, one shoeing hammer, one pound of candles, +and left a lantern hanging on a tree. A bottle was also buried, with a +letter in it, giving the latitude and longitude of the camp, and a brief +outline of our former and future intended movements. We reached the rock +holes about North-East twenty miles, and were delighted to see them full, +besides plenty on the rocks. This was very encouraging, and after resting +two hours we pushed on East-North-East, to a range visited by my brother +on his last flying trip, and which I named the Baker Range, and the +highest point Mount Samuel, after Sir Samuel Baker, the great African +Explorer, and could see that lately rain had fallen, although much more +in some places than in others. Travelled till after dark through and over +spinifex plains, wooded with acacia and mulga scrub, and camped without +water and only a little scrub for the horses, having travelled nearly +forty miles. + +<p>6th. +Our horses strayed during the night. After we had found them we proceeded +to the Baker Range and found water in a gully on some rocks, and the rock +holes seen by my brother and Windich on their former trip had also a good +deal in them. I was greatly delighted at this; there must have been a +good shower or two here. Before reaching water Windich shot a turkey, +which we roasted and ate for breakfast, not having had any tea last +night. We rested here about two hours. Continuing on East-North-East for +about sixteen miles, came to the four large rock holes seen by Windich +and myself on our former trip. They were quite dry, but, as we suspected, +there was a good deal of water in a rocky gully close by. About two miles +before we reached here we passed a rock hole full of water, about sixty +gallons. I left a note telling my brother to camp here on Sunday night, +and to follow on our tracks on Monday. We continued on about five miles, +and camped not far from Mount Charles, without water for the horses; but +they were not thirsty. So far we have been most fortunate, although there +is very little to fall back on should we be unable to proceed; in fact, +as soon as the surface water dries up it will be impossible. We are, +however, three days in advance of the party, and if we can get enough for +our two riding-horses we shall be able to stop them before there is any +great danger, although we may lose some of the horses. + +<p>7th. +Steered South-South-East for about four miles to two large rock holes +seen by Windich and myself on our former trip, but found them quite dry, +as before. Continued on South-East towards the hills seen by us formerly, +and, after travelling about ten miles, got a fine view of the country, +which looked splendid. High hills and ranges as far as could be seen to +the south and east, and we thought all our troubles were over. We pushed +on about East-South-East to a high hill about ten miles off, over red +sand-hills covered with spinifex. Country of the most miserable +description. We reached the hill, which I named Mount Harvest, after +Colonel Harvest, the Acting-Governor of Western Australia at the time of +our departure, and who took a great interest in the expedition. We +ascended the hill; more ranges and hills were seen--in fact, the whole +country was one mass of hills and ranges to the south, South-East, and +east. We followed down gullies and over hills, passing two rock holes +dry, until after dark, but could not find any water. The country is most +beautifully grassed, and is a great relief after travelling over so many +hundreds of miles of spinifex; but the season is very dry, and all the +gullies are dry. We camped for the night without water for ourselves or +horses. I have since learnt that these ranges were seen by Mr. Giles, and +were named the Warburton Ranges. + +<p>SIGNS OF WHITE MEN. + +<p>8th. +Early this morning Windich and I went on foot to search the hills and +gullies close around, as our horses were knocked up for want of water. We +returned unsuccessful about 8 o'clock. Close to where we found our horses +we found a tree with the bark cut off one side of it with an AXE which +was sharp. We were sure it was done by a white man, as the axe, even if +possessed by a native (which is very improbable), would be blunt. We are +now in the country traversed by Mr. Gosse, although I am unable to +distinguish any of the features of the country, not having a map with me, +and not knowing the latitude. Should we find water, and the party reach +here, there will no doubt be little difficulty in distinguishing the +hills. The country certainly does not answer the description given of his +farther westward. However, I will leave our position geographically for +the present, and treat of what is of much more importance to us, namely, +the finding of water. We saddled our horses and continued our search +about South-East, over hills and along valleys--the distance or direction +I am unable to give--our horses scarcely moving, and ourselves parched +with thirst. The sun was very hot. At about noon we found some water in a +gully by scratching a hole, but it was quite salt. As our horses would +not drink it, it can be imagined how salt it was. We drank about a pint +of it, and Windich said it was the first time he ever had to drink salt +water. I washed myself in it, which refreshed me a little. Our horses +could not go much further without water, but we crawled along about +north, and shortly afterwards found a small rock hole in the side of a +large rough granite hill, with about five gallons of good water in it. We +had a good drink ourselves, put half a gallon into a canteen, and gave +the rest to the horses. From here our usual good fortune returned. We had +not gone far when Windich called me back and said he had found horses' +tracks, and sure enough there were the tracks of horses coming from the +westward. Windich took some of the old dung with him to convince our +companions that we had seen them. We followed westward along the tracks +for half a mile, when we found two or three small rock holes with water +in them, which our horses drank. Still bearing to the north we kept +finding little drops in the granite rocks--our old friend the granite +rock has returned to us again, after having been absent for several +hundred miles. We satisfied our horses, and rested a short time to have +something to eat, not having had anything for forty-eight hours. We bore +North-West, and soon afterwards found a fine rock hole of water in +granite rocks, sufficient to last the party a day. Plenty of water on +rocks, also, from recent rain here. We were rejoiced, as we now had a +place to bring the party to. But our good fortune did not end here: +continuing on westerly or a little north of it, we came on a summer +encampment of the natives, and found a native well or spring, which I +believe would give water if dug out. This may make a good depot if we +require to stay long in this neighbourhood. We were overjoyed; and I need +not add I was very thankful for this good fortune. When everything looked +at its worst, then all seemed to change for our benefit. We camped two +miles from the water. + +<p>9th (Sunday). +Took the horses back to the water, and on our way there found a clay-pan +with a few hundred gallons of water in it. Started back to meet the +party, intending to await their arrival at the first range we came to on +our outward track. Steering a little north of west for fourteen miles, we +camped on west side of Mount Harvest, not having seen a drop of water on +our way. Luckily we brought nearly half a gallon with us, so shall be +able to manage until the party overtake us to-morrow. Our horses will be +very thirsty, but I will give them five gallons each out of the drums. +Shot a wurrung on our way, which we had for dinner. Found two fine rock +holes quite empty. There appears to have been no rain here, although +fifteen miles east there has been a good deal. I hope the change of moon +on the 11th will bring us some rain, as we shall then be able to travel +along easily. My personal appearance contrasts most strikingly with town +life--very dirty, and I may say ragged. I scarcely think my friends would +know me. Washing, or brushing one's hair is out of the question, unless +when resting at camp. + +<p>10th. +We stayed at our last night's bivouac until 12 o'clock, when we saddled +up and followed back along our outward tracks to meet the party, which we +expected to find this afternoon. About 3 o'clock met them coming on, all +well. They were all rejoiced to hear of the water ahead. We gave the +horses water out of the drums, and turned eastward with them. We reached +Mount Harvest by sundown, the party having travelled thirty miles, and +camped on grassy flat without water for the horses. Latitude 25 degrees +55 minutes 43 seconds South by Altair, longitude 126 degrees 32 minutes +East. Everything had gone on first-rate with the party. They had nearly +finished all the water at Mount Samuel, and in the Todd Range, so that we +cannot now turn back, even if we wished, unless with the risk of having +to go ninety or a hundred miles without water. + +<p>FINDING TRACKS. + +<p>11th. +Continued on to the water found ahead, and on our way saw some clay-holes +with water and satisfied the horses. When near the spring, saw natives' +tracks, and shortly afterwards a fire with a whole kangaroo roasting in +it. The natives had made off when they saw us, leaving their game +cooking. Continuing on, and passing the native well, we reached the +granite rocks, two miles from the spring, and camped. While having dinner +we saw two natives about a quarter of a mile from us, watching us; we +beckoned to them, and Windich and I approached them. As we neared them +they began talking and moving off slowly; we could not get close to them, +although they did not appear to be afraid of us. Some fine ranges are +visible from here South-East. Latitude of camp 25 degrees 54 minutes 53 +seconds South, by meridian altitude of Altair. Marked a tree F 70, being +the 70th camp from Geraldton. Barometer 28.26 at 5 p.m. We are not in the +latitude of Mr. Gosse's track by fifteen miles, yet there are tracks only +about two miles south of us! I cannot account for this. The tracks may be +Mr. Giles's, as I cannot think Mr. Gosse could be out in his latitude. + +<p>12th. +Left camp with Tommy Windich to find water ahead, instructing my brother +to follow on to-morrow. We bore East-South-East for a few miles over +grassy flats towards some high hills, but, seeing what we supposed a good +spot for water, we turned east towards it, over miserable spinifex +sand-hills, and found some splendid granite rocks and holes, but not much +water--enough, however, to give the horses a drink. If there was rain, +there would be enough water here for a month or more. Near these rocks +found a tree resembling the figtree (Ficus Platypoda), with ripe fruit +about the size of a bullet, which tasted very much like a fig. I ate some +of the fruit, which was very good. Fine hills and ranges to the eastward, +and country very promising, and in many places beautifully grassed. After +resting two hours we pushed on about east, and, after going five miles +over spinifex sand-hills, came to a granite range and found two fine rock +holes, sufficient to satisfy the horses. Continuing on, we camped close +to a peaked granite hill, which I named Mount Elvire. No water for the +horses. Found the old horse-tracks, just before we camped, coming from +eastward. I cannot make them out to be Mr. Gosse's; they must be Mr. +Giles's. There appears to be a great number of horses', but am uncertain +if there are any camel-tracks. + +<p>IN SAFETY. + +<p>13th. +Found a rock hole with about forty gallons of water in it close to camp. +After watering our horses we followed along the old tracks, going nearly +North-East, and passed a gnow's nest, where they had apparently got out +eggs. Shortly afterwards found where the party had camped without water, +and continued on to some high hills and ranges; then we left them to +follow some emu tracks, which, after following up a gully and over a +hill, brought us to a fine spring of good water in a gully. We camped +here, and intend waiting for our party, which will reach here to-morrow. +We watched at the water for emus, and after waiting about four hours saw +two coming, one of which Windich shot. Fine grass, although old and dry, +down this gully. Ranges in every direction. The country contrasts +strikingly with what we have been travelling through for the last three +months. The party whose tracks we followed this morning have not been to +this spring, so they must have missed it. All my troubles were now over, +inasmuch as I felt sure we would accomplish our journey and reach the +settled districts of South Australia; although, as it afterwards proved, +we had many days of hard work and some privation yet to endure. Still the +country was much improved, and not altogether unknown. I then gave out +publicly to the party that we were now in safety, and in all human +probability in five or six weeks would reach the telegraph line. I need +not add how pleased all were at having at last bridged over that awful, +desolate spinifex desert. + +<p>14th. +Went to a hill close to camp, the highest in this neighbourhood, and +erected a pile of stones. About 1 o'clock the party arrived all safe. +They reported having seen three natives the day we left, and had induced +them to come to camp, and had given them damper and sugar and a red +handkerchief each; they did not remain long. Each had two spears, very +long and thick, and made out of three pieces spliced together, with large +barbs on them. The party had finished all the water on their way, the +horses yesterday having drank over ten gallons each. This afternoon I +took a round of angles and bearings from a pile of stones on the hill. +Marked a tree F 72, near spring, which I named Barlee Spring, after the +Honourable F.P. Barlee, Colonial Secretary of Western Australia, from +whom I have ever received much kindness and assistance, and who took a +great interest in this expedition. A remarkable hill bore +South-South-West from spring, which I named Mount Palgrave. Barlee Spring +is in longitude about 127 degrees 22 minutes East. Unable to get +latitude: too cloudy. + +<p>15th. +Left camp with Windich to look for water ahead, instructing my brother to +follow to-morrow. Steered East along the South side of a rocky range for +ten miles, when we ascended a hill to get a view ahead. About thirty +miles to east fine bold ranges are visible, also broken ranges from +North-East and round to South-East; they are no doubt the Cavanagh Ranges +of Mr. Gosse. About five miles ahead we saw some granite rocks, to which +we proceeded, and found a tremendous rock hole full of water; it was in +between two large rocks and completely shaded from the sun. As the +country east to the ranges appears to be all spinifex and red sand-hills, +I decided to remain here to-night and continue on in the morning. Left a +note telling my brother to camp here on Sunday night. In the afternoon +got a fine round of angles from granite rocks. The country passed over +to-day was along and through ranges which are no doubt the Barrow Ranges +of Mr. Gosse. The flats are very grassy, but the hills are covered with +spinifex. My brother marked a tree at this camp F 73, and observed the +latitude to be about 26 degrees 4 minutes, but was unable to get very +good observation on account of clouds. The Ficus Platypoda was also found +here, loaded with ripe fruit. + +<p>GILES'S CAMP. + +<p>16th (Sunday). +Steering about East-North-East towards the ranges, we passed over very +miserable spinifex plains and red sand-hills the whole way, about thirty +miles. After reaching the ranges we followed up a fine grassy wide flat, +splendidly grassed, although old; and on the flat were innumerable +horse-tracks--unmistakable evidence of horses being camped for months in +this neighbourhood. Kept on up the gully and flat for about a mile and a +half, when Windich found a gum-tree marked E. GILES OCT. 7, 73. My former +suspicions that Mr. Giles must have been in this neighbourhood were now +confirmed. Soon after we came on a cart-track, which rather astonished +us, and soon found that it must have belonged to Mr. Gosse, who also +camped close here. A deep, well-beaten track went along up the gully, +which we followed, knowing it was the daily track of the horses to the +water, and soon after found their old camp at a beautiful spring running +down the gully a quarter of a mile. A stock-yard had been built, and +gardens made, besides a large bush hut to shelter the party from the sun +as well as rain. Trenches were dug round the hut and tent, so that they +must have had rain. I should say Mr. Giles must have been camped here for +two or three months at least. We camped half a mile down the gully from +the spring. Mr. Gosse and Mr. Giles were within a few miles of each other +at the same time, and did not meet. + +<p>17th. +Went for a walk to examine the cart-tracks; found two tracks going east +and west. This convinced me that the cart belonged to Mr. Gosse, who I +knew had returned. Went to the top of a high hill to take angles, while +Windich tried to shoot a kangaroo. After a hard climb I reached the +summit, and had just commenced taking angles when I heard three shots, +and shortly after Windich cooeying. Looking round, I saw a native running +along about 300 yards from me. He disappeared in a hollow. Fearing that +Windich had been attacked by the natives I descended towards him as +quickly as possible, but could not see him. I looked about, keeping a +sharp look-out, expecting to be attacked, but could not find Windich. Sat +down a short time and finally made my way back to the horses, and, after +finding them, saddled one and started back to look for Windich. Found him +coming along with a kangaroo on his back, having shot three, but had not +seen any natives; he had been waiting for me a good while. After dinner I +went back to get my coat and a compass left at the foot of the hill, and +then again ascended the hill and got a fine round of angles. The rock is +very magnetic, and the compass is quite useless. Could see the dust from +the party coming across the spinifex sand-hills, and, descending, met +them just before sundown. + +<p>ANOTHER ENCOUNTER WITH NATIVES. + +<p>They reported having had an encounter with the natives on the 16th, and +having been followed by a number of armed natives for a long way. Finally +they had been compelled to fire on them, but had not killed any. They +were glad to hear of the spring found, and, continuing on, reached it +about half-past 6 o'clock. The spring is Fort Mueller of Mr. Giles, where +he was camped for a long while, and his most westerly permanent water. By +observation Fort Mueller is in latitude 26 degrees 11 minutes 30 seconds +South, and longitude by lunar observation 128 degrees East, the variation +being about 1 degree 25 minutes East by azimuths. + +<p>18th. +Rested at spring. Marked a tree sixty yards south of camp F 74, being +74th camp from Geraldton. Also erected a pile of stones on peak, thirty +chains West-South-West of camp, with a pole in centre, on which is +marked: + +<p>J. FORREST, AUGUST 17, '74. + +<p>Took four sets of lunars, which place spring in longitude 128 degrees +East of Greenwich. + +<p>19th. +Steering East-South-East along Mr. Gosse's track for about thirty-five +miles, over most miserable sandy hills and plains of spinifex, with the +exception of a few miles at first, along a grassy flat. Two rock holes +passed were quite dry. Camped without water on a grassy flat not far from +the ranges; hope to find water early to-morrow, as our horses are too +poor to go long without it. Was obliged to abandon police-horse Brick +to-day, as he was completely done up. Nothing but downright poverty is +the cause of his giving in; and the same in the case of Fame and Little +Padbury, which we abandoned over a month ago. They were poor when they +left, and have only had very dry grass ever since. It is a wonder to me +they all do not give in, as many are mere skeletons. Poor old Brick held +up as long as he could, but was forced to give in, and we had to leave +him to his solitary fate; he will probably go back to the spring (Fort +Mueller). Barometer 28.30; latitude 26 degrees 22 minutes 30 seconds +South. + +<p>20th. +Got a very early start, and continued on. At one mile found a sandy soak +in a gully, and by digging it out got sufficient water for all our +horses. Still proceeding onwards, following a gully for two miles, came +to Mr. Gosse's depot Number 13, at Skirmish Hill. A bullock had been +killed here, and the flesh jerked. Found a large white gum-tree marked +GOS. 13 at camp. All the water was gone. I, however, camped, and took our +horses to a place a mile west, where, by digging in the sand, we got +enough for them. Went with Pierre to the summit of Skirmish Hill, and +took angles. To the south, nothing but sand-hills and spinifex; to the +North-East the Tomkinson Ranges showed up and looked very remarkable and +promising. Marked a tree F 76, being 76th camp from Geraldton. Camp is in +latitude 26 degrees 23 minutes 28 seconds, longitude about 128 degrees 32 +minutes East. + +<p>TOMKINSON RANGES. + +<p>21st. +Left camp at Skirmish Hill in company with Windich, instructing my +brother to follow to-morrow. Found a fine rock hole two miles from camp, +and followed along Mr. Gosse's track for twenty miles to the Tomkinson +Ranges, over most miserable sandy ridges, covered with spinifex. Fine +grassy flats along and through the ranges. We left the track to examine a +gully to the north, but could not find any water. Got on the track just +before dark and followed it along a few miles. Camped without water for +our horses on a fine flat of very old grass. Windich's horse completely +knocked up, and we had to walk and drive him before us this afternoon. +The day was excessively hot, and the horses are very thirsty. We have +only about a quart ourselves. + +<p>ELDER SPRINGS. + +<p>22nd. +Early this morning we continued on, Windich's horse scarcely able to +walk. After about ten miles, found a rock hole with three gallons of +water in it, which we gave to our horses. Followed Mr. Gosse's track to +see if there was any water about his depot Number 12, but we either +missed it or had not reached it. About noon Windich's horse could go no +farther, and mine was not much better. What was to be done? We nearly +finished what water we had with us. The party were coming on to-day, and +were depending on us to find water. I determined not to follow the track +any farther, but to search for water ourselves. The horses were unable to +move; we therefore decided to leave them and go for a search on foot. +Windich said he had seen emu tracks, and he thought they were making +south. We therefore started on foot. The sun's heat was excessive. About +3 o'clock returned unsuccessful, and finished what water we had with us. +What next to do was the question; no time was to be lost. Mr. Gosse's map +showed some gullies ahead, but whether there was any water in them was +questionable; he states, "Nearly all the waters discovered in the Mann +and Tomkinson Ranges were running when left, and from a considerable +height." It must have been a good season, and not like this. We decided +to go on foot to a gully about two miles north, which had white gums in +it. We started off and saw more emu tracks going and coming, also +natives' tracks. Windich shot a wurrung, which he said had lately drunk +water. When we reached the gully, many tracks were seen ascending it, and +we felt sure we should find water, and surely enough we soon reached a +most splendid spring, running down the gully half a mile. We were elated +and very thankful. Windich got a shot at an emu, but missed it. After +having a good drink we went back and got our horses, reaching the spring +with them after dark. They were very thirsty and completely done up. Mr. +Gosse missed this spring; probably there was water on the flats when he +was here, and he did not look much. Although his track is easily +followed, we had nearly got into serious difficulty by following it. Had +we not found this spring our position would be very critical, not having +any water for ourselves or horses, and the party in the same predicament. +I will be careful not to follow the track too far in future, but to trust +to our own resources and look for ourselves. We feel sure we passed water +this morning, as in one place we saw emu tracks and pigeons. The party +will reach here to-morrow, and I feel very thankful and relieved to have +such a fine spring to bring them to. The feed is good a mile down from +the spring, although it is very old and dry. There has not been any rain +to speak of since Mr. Gosse was here, nearly twelve months ago, as can be +seen by the cart-tracks crossing the gullies. I named this spring the +Elder Springs, after my friend the Honourable Thomas Elder, who has been +such a great supporter of exploration, and from whom I received a great +deal of kindness and attention. + +<p>23rd (Sunday). +Awaited the arrival of the party. Shot an emu; and, while skinning it, +heard a gun-shot, and soon after saw Kennedy coming on, walking. Found +that the party were only half a mile off. They had been very distressed +for water, and had left 120 pounds of flour and a pack-saddle five miles +back, Taylor's mare about three miles back, and Burges and his saddle two +miles back. When they saw my note, directing them to the water, they had +gone back and got Burges, and with great difficulty got him close to +camp, when he lay down and they left him. Windich and I started back on +foot at once with two buckets of water, and met Burges within a quarter +of a mile of camp, crawling along; we gave him the water and he then went +on to the spring. We went back and found Taylor's mare, and brought her +slowly to camp. We are now safe again, and I must give the horses a few +days' rest. The weather has been hot, and if we had not found this +spring, not more than five horses would have lasted out the day. I will +send back and get the flour, as it is only five miles off. The party were +all very glad to see such a fine spring, as their position was very +dangerous, having only three gallons of water with them altogether. + +<p>24th. +Rested at Elder Spring. Found the barometer had got broken, which I was +very sorry for. Worked out several lunars taken on the 11th at Giles's +camp. + +<p>25th. +Worked out the remainder of the lunars. Marked a large white gum-tree +close to camp, on left bank of Elder Springs, F 78, being the 78th camp +from Geraldton. Found camp to be in south latitude 26 degrees 15 minutes +10 seconds and longitude about 129 degrees 9 minutes East. My brother and +Pierre went back and brought up the flour left five miles back on the +23rd. + +<p>MOUNT JANE. + +<p>26th. +Went with Pierre to a high peak, which I named Mount Jane, about four +miles South-South-East from camp, and got a round of angles, and a fine +view of the country. To the east high ranges and grassy flats, but to the +south, and from South-East to west, nothing but level country with a few +low rises here and there, apparently sand-hills covered with +spinifex--most miserable country. + +<p>27th. +Left camp with Tommy Windich to look for water ahead, instructing my +brother to follow to-morrow. Steered east for four miles, when we struck +Mr. Gosse's cart-track. Followed along it a few miles, when we bore more +to the north; then in the direction of emu tracks, and passed along a +fine grassy flat with hundreds of kangaroos in every direction; also many +emu tracks. We were sure we were getting close to water. A little farther +on saw about twenty-five emus, and soon reached a spring in the brook, +and camped for dinner. Concluded to remain here the remainder of the day. +Went for a walk higher up the brook and found another spring, about one +mile from the first. Returned and took our horses up to it, as there was +better feed there. Left a note, telling the party to camp there also. In +a good season these flats must look magnificent; at this time they are +very dry, but there is a good deal of old grass on them. My brother +marked a tree at spring F 79, which he found to be in latitude 26 degrees +13 minutes. I named this spring Wilkie Spring, after the Honourable Dr. +Wilkie, the honorary treasurer of the Burke and Wills Exploration Fund, +who took such a lively interest in Australian Exploration. + +<p>28th. +Continued on eastward and soon struck Mr. Gosse's cart-track. Followed it +along about seven miles, passing Mount Davies, when we bore more to the +south. Following the direction of some natives' tracks, and after going +about two miles, found a native well in a gully, where water could be +procured by digging. Left a note telling my brother to dig it out and see +if he could get enough for the horses. We continued on about +East-North-East, and soon after shot a kangaroo and rested an hour for +dinner, after which we bore about North-East towards a gully and white +gums, and found it to be Nilens Gully of Mr. Gosse. Found his camp and a +white gum marked with a broad arrow, but no water. We followed along and +through the ranges, twisting and turning about, and at last found a +number of natives' tracks, making towards a gap, and, following along +them, found they led to a gorge and white gum gully, ascending which we +found water in some little springs. After watering our horses we returned +towards the party three miles and camped, intending to bring the party to +the spring to-morrow. + +<p>FRIENDLY NATIVES. + +<p>29th. +Returned about five miles and met the party coming on all right. They +reported having met about twenty natives yesterday, who were friendly, +and who came to them, first of all laying down their spears. They had +given them damper and a handkerchief. Pierre gave them two kylies. They +had three kangaroos roasting in their fire. When we were passing Nilens +gully I saw a native running, and, calling Windich, we went over and saw +five natives sitting on some rocks watching us. I went towards them; at +first they appeared hostile, but after talking at them and making signs +they began to be friendly and came down close to us. They were all armed +with spears. One of them gave me his spear, which was very blunt, and I +sharpened it for him. He made signs for me to give him the knife, but I +could not, as we were very short of knives. They were afraid at first +when I showed them how a horse could gallop, but soon were very pleased +and laughed heartily. Windich shot a chockalott and gave it to them. They +were amazed at seeing the bird drop, and were very pleased when it was +given to them, as they much prize the feathers of these birds. After this +we left them and continued on to the spring found yesterday, and camped. +Got plenty of water by digging a few holes in the springy places. Marked +a tree F 80 in gorge close to spring. Found spring to be in latitude 26 +degrees 7 minutes 28 seconds South, longitude about 129 degrees 39 +minutes east. + +<p>THE MANN RANGES. + +<p>30th (Sunday). +Rested at spring. Took bearings from hill close to spring, Mount Hardy +bearing north 117 degrees east magnetic, and Mount Davies north 253 +degrees east magnetic. The Mann Ranges were also clearly visible about +ten miles off. In the afternoon Windich found a fine spring in a gully +about half a mile north of camp, at which he shot an emu. I named these +springs the Crowther Springs, after my friend Mr. Charles Crowther, of +Geraldton. Emus and kangaroos very numerous in these ranges. + +<p>31st. +Got an early start and took the horses to the water found by Windich +yesterday, where they could help themselves. Steered East-North-East +about, over level country; spinifex generally, studded with desert oaks, +with limestone and snail-shells on surface for about twenty miles. +Reached the Mann Ranges. Before we reached the ranges we struck Mr. +Gosse's track, and followed it along, and shortly came to a very large +and recent encampment of the natives. There must have been a hundred +camped here about a week ago. Found two small springs not far off, but +not strong enough to water all our horses; but we soon found some fine +springy pools in a gully about half a mile further on, where Mr. Gosse +also had been camped, and marked a tree with a broad arrow. I marked on +the same tree F 81, being our 81st camp from Geraldton. Mr. Gosse's +return track leaves his outward track at this spot. I intend following +his return track and make in to the telegraph line, down the Alberga, and +on to the Peake. There is abundance of water at this place, which I have +no doubt is permanent, as there are four springs within half a mile of +one another, but three are very small. Took bearings from a very high +range close by; Mount Davies, Mount Edwin, and Mount Hardy being visible. +The Mann Ranges are very high and rough, and are composed of reddish +granite. They are the highest ranges met with since leaving Mount Hale +and Mount Gould, on the Murchison. Found camp F 81 to be in latitude 26 +degrees 3 minutes 20 seconds South by meridian altitude of Altair and +Vega, and longitude about 129 degrees 53 minutes East. + +<p>September 1st. +Continuing about east along the foot of the Mann Ranges for about fifteen +miles, came to Mr. Gosse's bivouac of October 11th, but could find no +water; a well that had been dug in the sand was dry. Followed up the +gully about a mile, and came to a small spring, and camped. After +draining it out, found there was no supply, but were fortunate enough to +find some large rock holes with water--no doubt soakages from the +rocks--but they were in an almost inaccessible spot, and it was with +great difficulty we managed to water the horses. One horse fell and +nearly lost his life. Country passed over to-day was poorly grassed, and +spinifex patches here and there. Large and recent native encampments seen +in two places to-day. Latitude 26 degrees 4 minutes 45 seconds South. +Marked a tree F 82, close to our bivouac in bed of gully. + +<p>2nd. +Followed along south side of Mann Ranges over country pretty well grassed +for about sixteen miles, and reached Mr. Gosse's bivouac of October 12th. +Found a little water in a sandy hole, and a small spring about half a +mile higher up the gully. We had to carry the water from the spring in +drums, which was slow and hard work. When we had watered half of the +horses, Windich came, having found great pools of water in a large rocky +gully about a mile west; we therefore packed up again and went over to +the water. It was a very rough and rocky gully, and the horses had hard +work in getting up to it, but there was abundance when they reached it. +Pools of water, rock bottom; in fact, rock reservoirs, and fed by +springs. It was nearly night when we had finished watering. Windich shot +four ducks. Found camp to be in latitude 28 degrees 8 minutes South. +Marked a tree F 83, being 83rd camp from Geraldton. + +<p>ANOTHER ENCOUNTER WITH NATIVES. + +<p>3rd. +Got a late start, owing to the horses rambling. We continued on easterly +and reached Day's Gully, Mr. Gosse's Number 15 depot. The water was all +gone, and we had to proceed. Followed his track along two miles, when +Windich and I went in search of water, the party waiting our return. +After searching a gully to the west without success, we went east to a +bare granite hill and, passing through a gorge, emerged into a small +flat, and saw about 100 natives, all sitting down eating kangaroos. As +soon as they saw us they all rose and shouted, and many ran towards us +with their spears. One spear came close to me, and stuck fast in the +ground. Windich and I fired our revolvers at them several times, and +chased them up the hill. After this they appeared more friendly, and some +came towards us and followed us back towards the party, keeping about 200 +yards behind. We reached them and went back to the natives; they were +perched all over the hills, more than twenty on one rock. They were +friendly now, and about thirty came to us who talked away and seemed very +pleased. They were much afraid of the horses, and would not come near +them. We made the natives understand we wanted water, and about forty +conducted us to a rock hole with nearly fifty gallons in it, which we +gave the horses. The natives laughed heartily when they saw us watering +the horses, but much more when we hit them to drive them away. They were +also delighted that Windich and Pierre were black, and marked about the +body, and also at Pierre having his nose bored. They would not come with +us further, and pointed towards water westward. We did not follow their +direction, and continuing on easterly, camped without water, and only +very old dried grass for our horses. We were obliged to abandon the mare +supplied by Mr. John Taylor to-day, together with about 150 pounds of +flour, also the pack-saddle. She is very near foaling, and is very weak; +she has carried only the empty bags for some time, and has been gradually +failing. She is a fine mare, and I am sorry to lose her, but we cannot +help it. We have more flour than we require, so I decided to leave 150 +pounds, as our horses are not able to carry it easily. We have over 3 +hundredweight still, which will be quite sufficient. Tomorrow I intend +pushing on to try and reach the spring in the Musgrave Range shown on Mr. +Gosse's chart. It is about forty miles from here, and I have no doubt the +horses will go there, although they are very weak. The natives met to-day +were all circumcised; they had long hair and beards, which were all +clotted and in strands. The strands were covered with filth and dirt for +six inches from the end, and looked like greased rope; it was as hard as +rope, and dangled about their necks, looking most disgustingly filthy. +The men were generally fine-looking fellows. The natives are very +numerous in this country, as fires and camps are seen in many places, +besides well-beaten tracks. Pierre dropped his powder-flask, and one of +them picked it up and gave it to him. They were very friendly and +pleased, and I think, after the first surprise was over, only a few were +hostile. They were much amused at my watch ticking, and all wanted to put +their ears to hear it. + +<p>SUFFERINGS OF THE HORSES. + +<p>4th. +The horses would not feed last night, and had to be watched. At 4 o'clock +we got up and collected them, and got under way by half-past 5 o'clock, +following on towards the Musgrave Ranges. The morning was cool, and the +horses went along very well. After travelling about twenty miles Padbury +and Butcher began to show signs of giving in. We still pushed on, in hope +of finding water in Lungley's Gully; the sun shone out very hot in the +afternoon. Passed a remarkable high peak, which I named Mount Mary. My +brother, Sweeney, and Pierre were behind with the knocked-up horses, +trying to get them along. Windich went on Hosken, the only horse that was +strong enough, to the north to scour some valleys. Kennedy and I pushed +along slowly with the main lot of horses. If we halted a minute, many of +the horses lay down, and we had great difficulty in getting them up +again. After travelling about thirty-one miles we reached a gully which I +supposed was Lungley's, and I left Kennedy with the horses while I +ascended it on foot. I soon saw many emu tracks, and therefore was +positive water was a little higher up. Found Windich was about 100 yards +in advance of me, having crossed over into the same gully. I soon heard +him shout that there was abundance of water, and fired the welcome +gun-shots to acquaint the party. Returned, and after lifting up some of +the horses that had lain down, and met my brother with the knocked-up +ones, we all proceeded up to the water, which we found to be a beautiful +spring running down the gully about thirty chains. We were all rejoiced +at this good fortune, as we never before wanted water more than at the +present time. Mr. Gosse had camped here, his depot Number 16, and I +wonder he does not show such a fine spring on his map. We are now in +perfect safety, and I will give the horses two days' rest. + +<p>5th. +Rested at spring. Windich and Pierre shot three emus; a great many came +to water. Being nearly out of meat, we are glad to get them. + +<p>6th (Sunday). +Took bearings from a hill about a mile east of camp, from which there was +a very extensive view. Far as the eye could reach to south, level plains +extended, with low hills rising abruptly out of them here and there; to +the west the Deering Hills and Mann Ranges; while to the east the high +Musgrave Ranges soon stopped the view. The whole country is level, the +ranges rising abruptly out of the plains, and is not like the hilly +country in the settled districts of Western Australia. Marked a tree +close to the camp F 85, being 85th camp from Geraldton. Found camp to be +in latitude 26 degrees 13 minutes 25 seconds by meridian altitude of +Altair, and longitude about 131 degrees 3 minutes east. + +<p>GOSSE'S SPRING. + +<p>7th. +Left spring, and steering about east for seven miles along foot of +Musgrave Ranges, when we turned North-North-East for four miles, and east +one mile to Mr. Gosse's depot Number 17, found spring in a brook, large +white gums in gully; a very fine spring, but not running; any quantity of +water. First-rate feed in gully and on flat. Weather cloudy. Intend +resting here to-morrow, as one of our horses is very lame, and there is +everything we want. + +<p>8th. +Rested at camp. Rained lightly last night, and very stormy. Blew a +hurricane towards morning. Rained lightly until noon; more rain than we +have had on the whole trip. We have not had a drop of rain since the +light shower on the 4th August. Marked a tree F 86, being the 86th camp +from Geraldton. Shod two horses. Finished all our meat. We have now only +flour enough for the remainder of our journey. As my friend Mr. Gosse did +not name this splendid place, I take the liberty of naming it Gosse's +Spring, as that is the name we always gave it in referring to it. + +<p>9th. +The horses rambled away last night, and were not collected till late. It +was nearly eleven o'clock when we started. We travelled about fourteen +miles over fine grassy country, and camped on a fine flat with a little +water in a gully which appears springy; good feed, although chiefly old, +all round camp. One of our horses is very lame, and we have a little +trouble in getting him along. It rained again last night. Latitude 26 +degrees 15 minutes 23 seconds south. + +<p>10th. +Steered North-North-East for five miles, and then North-East and east to +Beare's Creek, Mr. Gosse's depot Number 18, where we found a most +beautiful spring running strong down the gully for half a mile. I wonder +he did not mark it permanent water on his map, as it is one of the best +springs I have ever seen. Poor place for feed. The horses inclined to +ramble. Shot two ducks which were in one of the pools, and two wurrungs, +which were very acceptable, being now altogether without meat. Latitude +26 degrees 9 minutes 50 seconds. Grassy gorge on our route to-day. + +<p>11th. +We got up long before daylight, intending to get an early start, and +reach Whittell's Creek, but two of the horses were missing, and it was +after eight o'clock when Windich returned with them. We, however, +started, and steering easterly through dense acacia thickets without +grass for about thirty miles, we reached the creek, and found plenty of +water by digging in the sand. Rough low granite hills all along our +route, but very little feed. Passed many clay-pans with water in them. +The country was sandy and stony, and is thickly wooded. Mount Woodroffe +bears north 208 degrees east magnetic from our camp, and a remarkable +granite hill bore north, which I named Mount Elizabeth. Latitude 26 +degrees 13 minutes south. Marked a tree F 89, being 89th camp from +Geraldton. + +<p>FIG-TREE GULLY. + +<p>12th. +Continued onwards about North-East for ten miles, over saltbush flats +with water in clay-pans in places, to the north part of a range, from +which I got a view of Mount Connor, which rose abruptly out of the ocean +of scrub. Rounding the mount, bore South-East towards Harry's Reservoir, +reaching which we camped. It is at the head of a rocky gully; it is very +rough to reach, and no feed within a mile and a half of it. There was +plenty of water in the hole, which is about six feet deep. A white +gum-tree close to the pool is marked GOS, 19, and I marked under it, on +same tree, F 90, being 90th camp from Geraldton. This being such a rough +place, and no feed near, I will move on to-morrow towards or to Figtree +Gully. Weather dark and cloudy. + +<p>13th (Sunday). +Continued on towards Figtree Gully, having to go a long way north in +order to get round and through the ranges. Most beautifully-grassed +country all the way; by far the best-grassed country we have seen for +months. After travelling about nineteen miles we found water on some +granite rocks, and camped on a very fine grassy flat. Windich shot a +large kangaroo, which was very acceptable. + +<p>14th. +About 2 o'clock this afternoon we collected the horses, and travelled on +to Figtree Gully about four miles, our horses first finishing all the +water on the granite rocks. We got enough at Figtree Gully to satisfy +them, although there is not a great supply. There is a small soakage from +the rocks; we filled the drums to-night, so as to have sufficient for +them in the morning, as the water does not come in quickly. The view to +the east is not very interesting. A few low hills, and generally level +country--apparently thickly wooded with mulga and acacia. + +<p>THE MARRYATT RIVER. + +<p>15th. +Got an early start, and steering about east for six miles, crossed the +Gum Creek, and followed it along about a mile and a half, when we steered +more to the east, until we struck the head of the Marryatt, which we +followed down North-East and east, until we reached the salt native well +marked on Mr. Gosse's map. We camped here, and dug out the well, which +was very brackish; yet the horses drank it. There was a very poor supply +of water, and we kept bailing it out into the drums all night, and +managed to get out about sixty gallons. We travelled about thirty miles +to-day; our horses were very thirsty, the weather oppressive. I found a +small water-hole, with about twenty gallons in it, about one mile north, +to which we will take the horses to-morrow morning. + +<p>16th. +Went over to the rock hole and gave our horses the water--about one +bucket apiece, after which we struck South-East to the river, and found +two rock holes with sufficient water in them to satisfy all the horses. +Continued on and reached Mr. Gosse's camp, where he marks on his map +"Water-hole dug." Found it quite dry; but after going a few hundred yards +we found a nice clay-pan with water in it, and camped. There has been a +little rain here a few weeks ago, and it has not all dried up yet. If it +was not for the rain-water we should have much difficulty in getting down +this river, as all the old native wells dug in the sand are dry. + +<p>17th. +Followed down the Marryatt, and at six miles passed a native well, which +was quite dry. We continued on, and at about eight miles found a number +of rock water-holes, all nearly full of water, about a quarter of a mile +south of the river, and camped. Shod some of the horses. Took a set of +lunar observations. + +<p>18th. +Two of the horses rambled away during the night, and delayed our start. +At eight o'clock we got under way, and followed along the river. The day +was excessively hot, and we had to walk in turns. At two o'clock crossed +the gum creek shown on Mr. Gosse's map, and searched for the large +clay-pan shown a short distance beyond it; hundreds of natives' tracks +seen all along. Towards evening we found a rock water-hole with about two +gallons in it, which refreshed us, as we were all very thirsty. Here we +were obliged to abandon police-horse Champion, he being completely +knocked up; he has had a very bad back for a long time, and has been +running loose without any load. We pushed on, and I sent Windich to look +for water. We travelled until eight o'clock, when we camped for the night +without water. Shortly after we had camped, Windich overtook us, and +reported having found some clay-pans about six miles back. After having +something to eat I decided to return to the clay-pans, and therefore +packed up three of the horses, and let the others go loose, leaving the +packs until our return. Reached the water by midnight, and the horses +finished it all, and were not half satisfied. I thought there was more, +or would not have come back for it. We hobbled them out, and had a few +hours' rest. + +<p>A PAINFUL MARCH. + +<p>19th. +Early this morning we searched the flat for water, and found a rock +water-hole with about fifty gallons in it, but could not find any more +clay-pans. We therefore gave the horses the fifty gallons, and pushed on +towards "Water near Table-Land" shown on Mr. Gosse's map, about +twenty-one miles distant. The day was excessively hot again, and walking +was most fatiguing. Men and horses moved along very slowly, but did not +give in. Towards noon a hot wind began to blow. Onwards still we pressed, +and crossed the large creek coming into the Alberga about two miles from +the water. I told the party we were now close, and showed them the low +table-land just ahead. Before we reached it we found a clay-hole with +water, and gave the horses a good drink, after which we moved on a mile +and camped at Mr. Gosse's depot Number 20, where we got plenty of water +by digging in the sandy bed of the river. I was very glad to reach here, +for the horses were getting very weary, and Sweeney was also done up, and +looked very ill and swollen up about the head. The walking was most +harassing, for, besides the ground being soft, the sun was overpowering, +and most excessively hot. We are now in safety again, and to-morrow being +Sunday we will rest. + +<p>20th (Sunday). +Rested to-day. Windich shot an emu. Worked out lunar observations. Marked +a tree F 97, being 97th camp from Geraldton. Latitude 26 degrees 44 +minutes 19 seconds, longitude about 133 degrees 47 minutes East. + +<p>21st. +Continued down the Alberga about South-East for about twenty miles, over +sandy country thickly wooded with mulga and acacia, to Mr. Gosse's +bivouac of December 1st, but there was scarcely any water by digging. We +therefore pushed on and found a native well, from which, by digging out +about five feet, we procured abundance of water. Sweeney still very +unwell, unable to walk; others walking in turns. Distance twenty-five +miles. + +<p>22nd. +The horses rambled back on the tracks about three miles, and it was eight +o'clock before we got started. We followed down the Alberga over stony +plains, poorly grassed and thickly wooded, for about eighteen miles. +Found sufficient water by digging in the sand; there was only a very poor +supply, and it took us a good while to water all the horses. The river +bed is more than a quarter of a mile wide and very shallow, and spreads +out over the plains for many miles in heavy winters. + +<p>23rd. +Watering the horses delayed us a little this morning, as there was a very +poor supply coming into the well. We followed down the river, and after +travelling about nine miles heard a native shouting, and soon saw him +running after us. He was quite friendly, but could not speak any English; +he came along with us, and shortly afterwards we found a native well with +sufficient water by digging, then camped, as our horses were very weak, +and required a rest. We finished all our tea and sugar to-day, and have +now only flour left; we will therefore have bread and water for the next +week, until we reach the Peake. The native ate heartily of damper given +to him, and remained all day, and slept at our camp. Distance ten miles. + +<p>NEAR THE END OF THE JOURNEY. + +<p>24th. +Travelled down river, the native still accompanying us, and at about six +miles met a very old native, and a woman and a little girl. They were +quite friendly, and showed us water; and the woman and girl came with us +to Appatinna, Mr. Gosse's depot 21, where we camped at a fine pool of +water under right bank of river. Windich shot three emus that were coming +to the water, and we all had plenty of them to eat. The natives were very +pleased, and went back and brought up the old man and another woman and +child. There were now six with us. They have seen the telegraph line, as +can be seen by signs they make, but they cannot speak English. + +<p>25th. +The horses rambled off miles, and it was nearly ten o'clock before we got +under way. There was no feed at all for them. We followed down the +Alberga for about fifteen miles, about east generally, and camped, with +very little old dried-up grass for our horses. About half an hour after +we left Appatinna this morning we had a very heavy shower of rain, and, +although it only lasted about a quarter of an hour, it literally flooded +the whole country, making it boggy. It was the heaviest thunderstorm I +have ever seen. We shall have no difficulty in procuring water now all +the way to the telegraph line, which is not more than forty miles from +here. The natives stayed at Appatinna, as they had too much emu to leave. +We did not want them, and were just as well pleased they did not come on. +Mr. Gosse's track went North-North-East to the Hamilton River from +Appatinna. + +<p>26th. +Got off early and followed the river about two miles, when it took a bend +to the north, and as it was rather boggy near it we left it, and steered +about east and East-North-East for twenty miles over most miserable +country without any grass. We camped on a small gully with a little water +in it, and some old dry grass in a flat. The horses were very tired, not +having had anything to eat for the last two or three days, and some +showed signs of giving in; in fact, all weak and knocked-up, and we have +to handle them very carefully. For the first thirteen miles we passed +many clay-pans full of water--water nearly everywhere--after which there +was very little; and the rain does not appear to have been heavy to the +east. The river is about a mile and a half north of us, and we have not +seen it for some miles. Latitude 27 degrees 9 minutes south. Hope to +reach the telegraph line to-morrow. + +<p>27th (Sunday). +Continuing East-North-East for two miles, came to the Alberga, and +following along its right bank over many clay-pans with water, about east +for twelve miles, and then East-North-East for three miles, and reached +the telegraph line between Adelaide and Port Darwin, and camped. Long and +continued cheers came from our little band as they beheld at last the +goal to which we have been travelling for so long. I felt rejoiced and +relieved from anxiety; and on reflecting on the long line of travel we +had performed through an unknown country, almost a wilderness, felt very +thankful to that good Providence that had guarded and guided us so safely +through it. + +<center> +<p><a name="forrest9"></a><img alt="" src="forrest9.jpg"></p> +<p><b>Reaching the Overland Telegraph Line.</b></p> +</center> + +<p>The telegraph line is most substantially put up, and well wired, and is +very creditable at this spot; large poles of bush timber, often rather +crooked, and iron ones here and there. I now gave up keeping watch, +having kept it regularly for the last six months. Marked a tree F 104, +being 104th camp from Geraldton. We had not much to refresh the inner man +with, only damper and water, but we have been used to it now more than a +month, and do not much feel it. The horses are all very tired, and many +of them have sore backs. I hope to reach the Peake on Wednesday night, +where we shall be able to get something to eat. We find making the damper +with boiling water makes it much lighter and softer, and is a great +improvement. Latitude 27 degrees 7 minutes 50 seconds south. + +<p>28th. +We travelled down the telegraph line for about twenty-one miles, and +camped on a branch of the Neales River, with a little grass. Level plains +and small rocky rises all the way; very stony country; many clay-pans +with water. A well-beaten road goes along near the telegraph line. We did +not get on it till we had travelled along the line about fifteen miles. +It crosses the Alberga east of the line. + +<p>29th. +When we were nearly ready to start, police-horse Butcher lay down and +died in a few seconds; he appeared all right when we brought him in, and +was saddled as usual. Old age, very severe hard work, and continual +travelling, is no doubt the cause of death: we took off his shoes, and +left him where he died. I was sorry for the poor old horse; he had been +rather weak for a good while, but had borne up well to the very last. We +only had four horses to ride to-day, and Sweeney being still lame really +made but three horses between five of us. We travelled down the road for +about thirty-three miles over stony plains; many clay-pans with water, +but no feed. Camped on a gully with some old feed in the flat, in +latitude 27 degrees 49 minutes. Miserable country for grass all day, but +plenty of water from recent rains everywhere. Hope to reach the Peake by +mid-day to-morrow. Damper and water as usual. + +<p>30th. +Got off early as usual, all in high glee at the prospect of meeting +civilized habitations again. Travelled along the road and saw cattle, and +shortly afterwards reached the Peake, and rather surprised the people. +Mr. Bagot, the owner of the cattle station, was the first I met; and +after telling him who we were, he said he had surmised it was so. He soon +told us that Mr. Giles had returned, and also Mr. Ross, who had been +despatched by the Honourable Thomas Elder with camels and a good +equipment to find an overland route to Perth, but was unable to get over +to Western Australia. We were soon introduced to Mr. Blood, the officer +in charge of the telegraph station, and, after unloading, were soon +engaged at dinner, the roast beef and plum pudding being a striking +contrast to our fare lately! Both Mr. and Mrs. Blood, as well as Mr. +Bagot, did all they could to make us comfortable during our four days' +rest. + +<p>CONGRATULATORY TELEGRAMS. + +<p>Immediately on reaching Peake, I despatched a telegram to his Excellency +Mr. Musgrave, Governor of South Australia, at Adelaide, informing him of +the safe arrival of the party, and received the following reply from the +private secretary:-- + +<blockquote><p>His Excellency has received your message with great satisfaction, and +congratulates you heartily on your safe arrival.</blockquote> + +<p>This telegram was accompanied by another from the Honourable Arthur +Blyth, the Chief Secretary of the Colony: + +<blockquote><p>Is there anything you want? Mail leaves on October 10th. Shall be happy +to facilitate any despatch you may wish forwarded to your Government. +Superintendent of Telegraphs has given instructions for every assistance +to be rendered you at the various telegraph stations on your road down.</blockquote> + +<p>The instructions sent by Mr. Todd, the Superintendent of Telegraphs, to +Mr. Blood, the officer in charge at Peake station, were to the following +effect:-- + +<blockquote><p>Please give my hearty congratulations to Mr. Forrest on the successful +completion of his great feat, which I have communicated to the Government +and press; also Baron Von Mueller, who sends his congratulations. I shall +be glad to have a few particulars as to route followed, if convenient to +Mr. Forrest to supply them. Render his party every attention.</blockquote> + +<p>Mr. Ernest Giles, the explorer, also telegraphed, and I also received +messages from the editors of the Register and Advertiser, Adelaide +newspapers, congratulating me, and asking for a few particulars for +publication in their papers. I complied with the request immediately, +forwarding a brief narrative of the more remarkable incidents of our +journey. On the 15th of October, the day after our arrival at Peake, I +wrote, for the information of Governor Musgrave, a short account of the +journey, and this, accompanied by a more detailed narrative, addressed to +the Honourable Malcolm Fraser, Commissioner of Crown Lands at Perth, was, +together with several private telegrams, forwarded free of charge by the +South Australian Government, which also provided us with fresh horses and +everything we required for our journey to Adelaide. + +<p>We left the Peake on the 4th of October, greatly refreshed by the rest +and the kind treatment we had received from Mr. and Mrs. Blood, and Mr. +Bagot, the owner of the cattle station. + +<p>Before I record the details of our journey and the receptions given us at +every place on the route, I will quote the concluding remarks of my +journal relative to the expedition:-- + +<p>THE COUNTRY TRAVERSED. + +<p>I now beg to make a few remarks with reference to the character and +capability of the country traversed; and through the kindness and +courtesy of Baron Von Mueller, C.M.G., etc., Government Botanist of +Victoria, and of Mr. R. Brough Smyth, Secretary for Mines of Victoria, I +am enabled to annex reports upon the botanical and geological specimens +collected on our journey. + +<p>The whole of the country, from the settled districts near Champion Bay to +the head of the Murchison, is admirably suited for pastoral settlement, +and in a very short time will be taken up and stocked; indeed, some +already has been occupied. + +<p>From the head of the Murchison to the 129th meridian, the boundary of our +colony, I do not think will ever be settled. Of course there are many +grassy patches, such as at Windich Springs, the Weld Springs, all round +Mount Moore, and other places; but they are so isolated, and of such +extent, that it would never pay to stock them. The general character of +this immense tract is a gently undulating spinifex desert--Festuca +(Triodia) irritans, the spinifex of the desert explorers, but not the +spinifex of science. It is lightly wooded with acacia and other small +trees, and, except in a few creeks, there is a great absence of any large +timber. + +<p>The prevailing rock, which crops out on the rises and often forms low +cliffs, in which are receptacles for holding water, is LIGHT RED +SANDSTONE (desert sandstone, tertiary). The only game found in the +spinifex is a kangaroo rat, commonly called the wirrup; but in the grassy +openings there are many kangaroos, and often emus, also a rat known as +the wurrung. These animals are very good eating, and formed a valuable +addition to our store department. At the permanent waters there were +always myriads of bronze-winged pigeons, and also the white cockatoo with +scarlet crest, called the chockalott; also the beaccoo, or slate-coloured +parrot. Generally, however, with the exception of the crow and hawk, +birds were not very numerous except round water. Whenever a sheet of +water was found we found ducks, and in Lake Augusta swans and ducks were +innumerable. + +<p>In bringing this report to a close it is not necessary to refer much to +the reasons that induced me to keep more to the south than I originally +intended. It will readily be seen, after perusing this journal, that it +was a necessity, and that we could not get further north. It is a marvel +to me that we got through at all; the season was an exceptionally dry +one--in fact, a drought--our horses were of a very ordinary kind, and the +country most wretched. + +<p>When it is remembered that a horse in poor condition and in warm weather +cannot go much over a day without water, and when the sterility of the +country is considered, it will be readily seen what a disadvantage one +labours under without camels, which can go ten days without water. Well +can I sympathize with Mr. Giles when he states in his journal: "All I +coveted from my brother explorers was their camels, for what is a horse +in such a region as this? He is not physically capable of enduring the +terrors of this country." And so it is; horses are the noblest and most +useful animals in the world, but they must have food and water regularly. +The camel, on the other hand, is physically formed to travel over these +desolate regions, and in Australia has been known to go twelve and +fourteen days without water, carrying 300 pounds, and sometimes 400 +pounds weight. + +<p>From these few remarks it will be seen what a great disadvantage Mr. +Giles and myself laboured under compared with Major Warburton and Mr. +Gosse; and what in similar circumstances might have been easily performed +by them was quite impossible in our circumstances. + +<p>In reading this journal, it may be wondered why we followed so much along +Mr. Gosse's track, when a new route for ourselves might have been chosen +more to the south. The reason is, I had intended, as soon as I reached +the 129th meridian (the boundary of our colony), to make a long trip to +the south, near to Eucla, and thus map that important locality; but on +reaching there I was prevented by the following causes: The weather was +excessively warm; the country to the south seemed most +uninviting--sand-hills as far as could be seen, covered with spinifex; +our horses were very poor; our rations were running short, the meat and +tea and sugar being nearly gone; water was very scarce, and I could +clearly see that, although Mr. Gosse had travelled the route last year, +it did not follow that we should be able to do it easily this, as all the +water thus far where he had camped was gone. I felt we were altogether on +our own resources for water, and I concluded to push on towards the +telegraph line as quickly as possible. It turned out, although we had +considerable difficulty, that we reached the line sooner than I could +have anticipated. + +<p>ACKNOWLEDGMENTS. + +<p>I have the very pleasant duty to record my thorough appreciation of the +services of my companions. To my brother, Mr. Alexander Forrest, I am +especially indebted for his assistance and advice on many occasions, also +for his indomitable energy and perseverance. Every service entrusted to +him was admirably carried out. He never disappointed me. When absent for +a week, I knew to a few minutes when we should meet again. Whether horses +or loads had to be abandoned, it mattered not to him, he always carried +out the service; and I attribute much of the success to being supported +by such an able and hopeful second in command. In addition to this, he +bestowed great care on the stores of the expedition; collected all the +botanical specimens, besides taking observations for laying down our +route on many occasions during my absence. + +<p>To Tommy Windich (native) I am much indebted for his services as a +bushman, and his experience generally. Accompanying me on many occasions, +often in circumstances of difficulty and privation, I ever found him a +good, honest companion. + +<p>To James Kennedy, James Sweeney, and Tommy Pierre I am thankful for the +ready obedience and entire confidence they placed in me. They ever +conducted themselves in a proper manner, and on no occasion uttered a +single murmur. + +<p>I take this opportunity of thanking all those gentlemen who so kindly +subscribed to the Expedition Fund. + +<p>In conclusion, sir, I beg you will convey to his Excellency Governor Weld +my sincere thanks for the kindness and support he has given me in this +arduous enterprise. I can truthfully state, if it had not been for his +zeal and assistance, I should not have been able to undertake and +accomplish this exploration. + +<p>I have also to thank the Honourable F.P. Barlee, Colonial Secretary, and +yourself, for your kind attention and consideration, and your desire that +I should have everything that was necessary to bring the expedition to a +successful termination. + +<h4>CHAPTER 6.</h4> + +<h5>PUBLIC RECEPTIONS AT ADELAIDE AND PERTH.</h5> + +<blockquote><center>Procession and Banquet at Adelaide.<br> +Arrival in Western Australia.<br> +Banquet and Ball at Perth.<br> +Results of Exploration.</center></blockquote> + +<p>We reached Beltana on the 18th, where we were joined by Mr. Henry Gosse, +brother and companion of the explorer, and arrived at Jamestown on the +28th of October. This was the first township on the route, and the +inhabitants, although somewhat taken by surprise by our appearance, would +not let the opportunity pass for giving us a warm welcome. On the +following morning there was a good muster of the principal residents at +Jureit's Hotel, and an address was presented to me. Our healths were then +drunk and duly responded to, and we had every reason to be highly +gratified with our first formal reception. + +<h5>BURRA BURRA AND GAWLER.</h5> + +<p>The next day we reached Kooringa, on the Burra, and there too our arrival +excited considerable enthusiasm, and we were invited to a complimentary +dinner at the Burra Hotel Assembly Rooms, Mr. Philip Lane, the Chairman +of the District Council, presiding. An address was presented, and, my +health having been proposed by Mr. W.H. Rosoman, Manager of the National +Bank, in replying, I took the opportunity of expressing my thanks to my +associates in the expedition for their unfailing co-operation under +occasionally great difficulties and privations. + +<p>On Saturday, the 31st, having witnessed a cricket-match at Farrell's +Flat, we visited the Burra Burra Mines, and there we received an address +from the manager, accountant, captain, chief engineer, and storekeeper. +We remained at Burra the next day (Sunday), and on Monday morning started +by train for Salisbury with our fifteen horses in horse-boxes. Eleven of +these were the survivors of the expedition, and we were desirous that our +faithful and hard-worked four-footed companions should have their share +of the attention of our South Australian friends. At Gawler we were +received by a crowd of people, and flags were flying to do us honour. The +Town Clerk and a considerable number of the principal residents were +waiting for us in an open space near the railway station, and presented +an address on behalf of the municipality. We were then invited to a +luncheon at the Criterion Hotel, the chair being filled, in the absence +of the Mayor, who was unwell, by Mr. James Morton. Here again I was +called on to respond for my health being proposed; but I need not weary +the reader by endeavouring to repeat all I said upon that and other +similar occasions. I acknowledged and deeply felt the personal kindness +of the receptions my party had experienced; and I fully shared with those +who signed the addresses I received, or proposed my health at dinners, +the hearty desire that the successful issue of my expedition might be the +means of uniting still more closely the two colonies in bonds of mutual +good-feeling and sympathy. I had been similarly welcomed at Gawler and +other places in South Australia on the occasion of my previous visit, and +I was, I trust, not unjustifiably proud and pleased that my old friends +had recognized my recent services. + +<h5>RECEPTION AT SALISBURY.</h5> + +<p>At Salisbury, which we reached on the 2nd of November, a very hearty +reception awaited us, and we were entertained at a dinner given at the +Salisbury Hotel under the presidency of the Reverend J.R. Ferguson. After +dinner the chairman read a brief address, signed by the Chairman of the +District Council; and as the speeches referred not only to my own +expedition, but were interesting in relation to other explorations and +the method of conducting them, I may be pardoned for quoting a portion of +the report of the proceedings which appeared in the local newspapers:-- + +<blockquote><p>The Chairman then said he wished to express the great pleasure it was to +him to meet Mr. Forrest, his brother, and party, after their triumphant +accomplishment of the daring and arduous undertaking of crossing from the +Australian shores of the Indian Ocean to the very interior of South +Australia. We at all times felt constrained to value and honour men who +in any way contributed to the progress and welfare of mankind. We +esteemed those men whose lives were devoted to the explorations of +science, and whose discoveries were rendered serviceable to the comfort +and advancement of the race; and what were the achievements of travellers +but contributions to the advancement and welfare of the +race--contributions in which were involved the most magnificent heroism +in penetrating the regions which had hitherto been untrodden by the foot +of the white man? They obtained their contributions to the advancement +and welfare of men by the manifestation of high moral endurance, which +enabled them to submit to privations and discomforts of the most trying +character; while withal they showed dauntless courage in going forward +and meeting dangers of every possible kind, even to the loss of life +itself. He was disposed to rank the achievements of their guests with +those of the foremost of travellers of whom we read. He had sat enchanted +with the perusal of the travels of John Franklin in the Arctic Regions; +and, by the way, John Franklin accompanied Captain Flinders in his +expedition in the year 1800, which was sent out for the purpose of +surveying the south coast of Australia. He had perused with intense +interest the travels of Samuel Baker in the interior of Africa along the +source of that wondrous Nile, as also those of Speke, Grant, Stanley, and +that prince of men, the late Dr. Livingstone; and the name of their guest +was entitled to rank along with such. (Cheers.) Let now our stockholders +and men of capital take advantage of Mr. Forrest's explorations--let his +well-earned honours be bestowed upon him--and let all representatives of +intelligence and enterprise hail him. We who were here as Australians +were proud of him and rejoiced over him, and would seek to send him back +to his own home with our loud plaudits and our heartiest gratitude. + +<p>The Vice-Chairman, in proposing The Health of Mr. John Forrest, the +Leader of the Expedition, said he was sure they were all extremely glad +to see Mr. Forrest and his party in their midst. When Mr. Forrest was +amongst them before they all thought he was a fine, jolly young fellow, +and thought none the less of him on that occasion. (Applause.) At any +rate, he was stouter than when he appeared on his first visit. He thought +the country would feel grateful to Mr. Forrest and his companions for the +benefits which would result from their achievement. (Applause.) + +<p>Mr. John Forrest, who was received with loud cheers, said he thanked them +very heartily for the enthusiastic way in which they had drunk his +health, and for the very handsome address they had presented to him. He +felt altogether unable to respond in the way he could wish to the many +remarks that had been made by their worthy chairman. If he could only +make himself believe that he was worthy of being placed in the rank of +the men whom he had mentioned, he certainly would feel very proud indeed. +It had always given him the greatest pleasure to read the accounts of the +travels of these great men. He remembered being closely connected with +Captain Flinders's researches upon the south coast of Australia, and, +after his journey from Perth to Eucla, Mr. Eyre, the late Governor of +Jamaica, wrote to him that he risked his life upon the accuracy of +Captain Flinders's observations, and in no case had he the least cause to +regret it. Exploration in other parts of the world, as in Africa, was +carried on in a very different style to the exploration in Australia. +Even in the early times, exploration here was carried on in a very +different way to what it was at the present time. Large equipages, many +waggons, and that sort of thing were used in the time of Captain Sturt +and other early explorers, until Mr. Eyre took a light equipment, with +very few horses and very few men. Since then the work had had to be done +with very light turn-outs. In Western Australia a good deal of +exploration was done before his time, and expeditions had been very +common. They generally cost very little indeed. The horses were generally +given by the settlers, the Government contributed a few hundred pounds, +and young settlers volunteered for the service. The cost was sometimes +400 or 500 pounds; and upon his expedition, up to the time they left the +settled districts of Western Australia, they had only spent about 330 +pounds. He did not know that he could say anything more. He had spoken +several times on his journey down, and it seemed to him that he had said +the same thing over and over again. His forte was not in public speaking, +but he hoped they would take the will for the deed. They never could +forget the very kind and hearty reception they had received in every +place they had visited in South Australia. (Cheers.) + +<p>The Reverend J.G. Wright proposed The health of Mr. Alexander Forrest and +the remainder of the Party. He remarked that they had heard a great deal +about Mr. Forrest, the leader of the party, and whilst he had manifested +a great deal of courage and perseverance, and they all felt indebted to +him as the leader of the party, yet there was much praise due to his +brother and the rest of his companions. He was gratified at having the +opportunity of meeting them before they went down to the metropolis, and +he was sure it was no small matter to Salisbury to have such a band +remaining with them for a short time. It would be a source of pleasure to +colonists generally to see them, and he trusted that the work which had +been so nobly performed, and what had followed after it, would tend to +link the colonies more closely together. He was glad to see that original +holders of the land in their western colony--the natives--had been +employed in the work of exploration and opening up the country. (Hear, +hear.) They were expected to do honour to generals and warriors who had +distinguished themselves and placed their names high on the roll of fame, +but he thought that such could not claim greater honours than the +explorer. His work was not one of bloodshed, but one which was undertaken +in the interests and for the benefit of humanity. Civilization, +agriculture, art, and science followed the explorations of those noble +men who had taken their lives in their hands and faced difficulties and +dangers for the advancement of their fellow-men. He proposed with the +heartiest feelings the toast of Mr. Alexander Forrest and his companions. + +<p>The toast was very cordially drunk. + +<p>Mr. Alex. Forrest, on rising to respond, was greeted with hearty and +continued cheering. He said he thanked the company most heartily for the +manner in which they had drunk his health and that of his companions. He +could assure them they felt highly flattered at the reception which had +been accorded them. It was more than they expected. When here four years +ago, it was on a small trip compared with what they had accomplished this +time. It would not be necessary for him to go over the same ground that +his brother had remarked upon--in fact, his brother had quite taken the +wind out of his sails; and public speaking certainly not being his forte, +although he was quite at home round the camp-fire, he must ask them to +excuse him making a lengthy speech. He could assure them they all thanked +them very sincerely for their kindness, and deeply appreciated the honour +which had been done them. (Cheers.) + +<p>Tommy Pierre, one of the aboriginals attached to the expedition, being +called upon to respond, after some hesitation, said, "Well, gentlemen, I +am not in good humour to-night. (Laughter.) I am very glad I got through. +We got a capital gaffer that leaded us through; but it wasn't him that +got us through, it isn't ourselves, but God who brought us through the +place, and we ought to be very thankful to God for getting us through. +(Laughter and cheers.) I am not in good humour to-night to speak +(laughter), but I will speak when I get in Adelaide." (Prolonged +cheering.) + +<p>Tommy Windich, the other aboriginal attached to the expedition, was also +asked to respond, but he could not muster courage enough to do so.</blockquote> + +<h5>WELCOME AT ADELAIDE.</h5> + +<p>The preparations for our reception at Adelaide were most elaborate. It +seems to have been resolved that the capital of South Australia should +appear as the representative of the satisfaction felt throughout the +colony at the successful completion of an adventure, the result of which +was so deeply interesting, and which had been several times attempted by +explorers, not less ardent and determined, but less fortunate than +ourselves. At an early hour on the morning of the 3rd of November, on +which day it was known our party would arrive, the streets through which +we were to pass were thronged with thousands eager to bid us welcome. Not +only the city itself, but the suburban districts contributed to swell the +crowd. Balconies and housetops were thronged, and all along the line of +route were flags and decorations of flowers and evergreens, streamers +with inscriptions of welcome, and arches adorned with large pictures +representing incidents of bush life. The bells, too, rang out merry +peals, and the day was observed as a general holiday at Adelaide. + +<p>We left Salisbury at twelve o'clock, escorted by a considerable number of +the inhabitants. Before reaching Adelaide we were met by carriages +containing the Mayors of Adelaide, Port Adelaide, Kensington, and +Norwood, the town clerks, and members of the different corporations. A +very interesting and characteristic compliment was paid to us by the +presence of members of various exploring expeditions, who, from their own +experience, could best estimate the value of the results we had achieved, +and the difficulties we had encountered. Following the official +personages, on horseback, was Mr. John Chambers, who, with his brother, +the late Mr. James Chambers, and the late Mr. Finke, sent out in 1860 the +parties under the leadership of the intrepid Mr. John McDouall Stuart, to +explore the interior lying between South Australia and the northern +shores of the continent. Three members of this party--Messrs. A.J. +Lawrence, D. Thompson, and John Wall--followed on horseback, carrying +standards marked with the dates January, 1862, and July 25, 1862, when +Stuart departed from Adelaide, and when he planted his flag on the +northern shores. Then came representatives of the various exploring +parties--Messrs. F.G. Waterhouse, F. Thring, W.P. Auld, S. King, J.W. +Billiatt, and H. Nash, of Stuart's party; Mr. R.E. Warburton, Mr. Dennis +White, and Charley, the native boy, of Colonel Warburton's expedition; +Mr. William Gosse (leader), and Mr. Harry Gosse, of the Gosse expedition; +and Mr. Ernest Giles, leader of the Giles expedition. + +<p>The reception committee and representatives of the Oddfellows, Foresters, +Druids, Rechabites, Good Templars, German, and other friendly societies, +followed, after which came our party. We wore the rough, weather-beaten, +and, it may be added, shockingly dilapidated garments in which we had +been clothed during our expedition, and were mounted on the horses which +had served us so well. It was wished that we should represent to the +Adelaide public, as realistically as we could, the actual appearance of +our party while engaged on the long journey, so we slung our rifles at +our sides, and each of us led a pack-horse carrying the kegs we had used +for the conveyance of water. In one respect, no doubt, we failed to +realize adequately the appearance of our party when struggling through +the spinifex desert, or anxiously searching for rock holes and springs. +The month of great hospitality we had experienced since reaching Peake +station had considerably improved our own personal appearance, and the +horses were very unlike the wretched, half-dying animals we had such +difficulty to keep alive and moving. After us came, in long procession, +bands of music, and the members of the various orders, the German Club, +the Bushmen's Club, and a goodly number of horsemen and carriages. The +bands played inspiring strains, the crowd shouted and cheered, and my +brother and I were perpetually bowing acknowledgments. As for the two +natives, Tommy Windich and Tommy Pierre, they appeared to be perfectly +amazed by the novelty of the spectacle, and the enthusiasm of the vast +throng which lined the streets. + +<p>On our arrival at the town hall we were received by the Ministry, the +Honourable W. Milne (President of the Legislative Council), Sir G.S. +Kingston (the Speaker), several members of both Houses of Parliament, and +other gentlemen. Having alighted, we were conducted to a platform, and +addresses were presented to us by the Mayor, on behalf of the citizens of +Adelaide; from the Odd Fellows, the Foresters, the Rechabites, the Good +Templars, and four German societies. In replying to these I did my best, +but very inadequately, to express my feelings of gratitude for the +reception we had met with, and of thanks for the generous manner in which +our endeavours to successfully perform an arduous task had been +recognized. The Mayors of Kensington, Norwood, and Port Adelaide, also +offered a few words of congratulation to our party. + +<p>By particular request, we showed ourselves on the balcony, and bowed our +acknowledgments for the very hearty welcome we received. Then we +remounted our horses, and took them to the police paddocks, after which +my brother and I were introduced to the Adelaide Club. + +<p>I have mentioned that several distinguished Australian explorers took +part in the reception, and I may add that among them were the whole of +Stuart's last party, except the gallant leader and Mr. Kekwick, who were +dead, Mr. Few, who was in a distant part of the colony, and the farrier, +who had gone no one knew whither. It was also appropriate to the occasion +that two horses, who were memorably connected with explorations, should +be associated with the animals who had served one so well. The horse +which had carried poor Burke on his ill-fated expedition from Melbourne +was ridden by Mr. F.G. Waterhouse, and Mr. F. Thring was mounted on a +horse which had crossed the continent with Stuart. + +<h5>BANQUET AT THE TOWN HALL.</h5> + +<p>In the evening we were entertained at a banquet in the town hall, the +chair being occupied by the Honourable Arthur Blyth, the Premier of the +colony. The proceedings were fully reported in the newspapers on the +following day; and as so many explorers were present, and addressed the +company, I may be permitted, apart from personal considerations, to quote +the principal speeches delivered on the occasion. + +<p>The chairman rose to propose the toast of the evening, and was received +with cheers. He said, "I think, for the last two or three days, that +there has been a general feeling that South Australians were not very +good at receptions and getting up processions; but at all events to-day +we have showed that we can manage such things as well as people of more +importance probably than ourselves--at all events quite as well as +countries much more thickly populated than our own. (Cheers.) We have all +of us read something about the old Roman triumphs--how the conquerors, +when they went forth and were successful, were granted a triumph, and in +this triumph were accompanied by the most beautiful of their captives, +and the most wonderful and singular of the animals they had taken, and +passed through the cities of which they were citizens, and received the +plaudits of their inhabitants. To-day we have granted a triumph, not to a +warrior who has killed thousands of his fellows, or added much to the +landed property of the country, but to one who has been a warrior +nevertheless, fighting many difficulties that many warriors had not to +contend with, and carrying his life in his hands, as warriors have done +of old, in leading those who are associated with him in the triumph here +to-day. (Cheers.) There was no beautiful captive in his train, and no +curious animals, as in the old Roman triumphs. All that we saw were some +dusty pack-horses, and some well-worn packsaddles; yet with these the +explorer has to proceed on his journey, and conquer the difficulties of +the desert, knowing that with such slender things to rely upon he must +hope to overcome the dangers, and endure to the end. (Cheers.) Gentlemen, +in the page of Australian Exploration, which is the sentiment attached to +my toast--in its pages there are to be read too many tragic stories. We +cannot think of the history of exploration without thinking with regret +of some of the names connected with it. What an extraordinary page is +that of Leichardt, of whom it has been said no man + +<blockquote>'--knows his place of rest<br> +Far in the cedar shade.'</blockquote> + +<p>"And yet so great is the interest which is taken in his fate that the +wildest stories of a convict in the gaols of a neighbouring colony have +been of interest to us, and have caused some of our fellow Australians to +send out a party to see if something could not still be heard of that +explorer. Then think of Burke and Wills, and what a tragic tale was +theirs--so nearly saved, so closely arrived to a place of safety, and yet +to miss it after all! I daresay there are hundreds here who, like myself, +saw their remains taken through our streets in the gloomy hearse on the +road to that colony which they had served so well; and we know that now +the country where they laid down their lives is brought under the hand of +pastoral settlement. They were the heroes of other lands; but have we not +heroes also of our own? (Loud cheering.) Have we not here the likeness of +a man who knew not what fear was, because he never saw fear who carried +out the thorough principle of the Briton in that he always persevered to +the end? And then, coming nearer to our own time, speaking by weeks and +months, had we not our opportunity of entertaining in the city the leader +of an expedition that successfully passed its way through the desert to +the shores of Western Australia? I refer to Colonel Warburton. When +speaking, upon that occasion, of the noble way in which the people of +Western Australia had received our explorer, I ventured to hope that +before many months we should have an opportunity of welcoming some +explorer from that colony. Gentlemen, the hour has come, and the man. +(Loud cheering.) For West Australia, though the least of the colonies in +population, has its exploring heroes too. (Cheers.) I have no doubt you +have read, within the last few days, all about the battle that Mr. +Forrest has had to fight with the spinifex desert, with unknown regions, +and hostile natives. While giving all praise to those Australian +explorers connected with this Australian Empire that is to be, I ask you +to join with me in drinking the health of the last and not the least, and +I now give you the toast of Australian Exploration, coupled with the name +of Mr. John Forrest." (Cheers.) + +<p>The toast was enthusiastically received, and three hearty cheers given. + +<p>Band: The Song of Australia. + +<p>Mr. John Forrest, who was received with loud cheers, said, "Mr. Chairman +and Gentlemen, I feel very proud that my name should be coupled with the +toast of Australian Exploration. I assure you I feel altogether unequal +to the toast so aptly proposed by our worthy chairman, my forte not being +public speaking; still, I will try to do as well as I can. (Cheers.) +Since I arrived at years of discretion, I have always taken a very deep +interest in exploration, and for the last five years I have been what is +generally termed in Western Australia The Young Explorer, as I have +conducted all the explorations that have been undertaken by our +Government. In the year 1869 I was instructed to accompany an expedition +as navigator, which was intended to be commanded by Dr. Mueller, of +Melbourne, to search for the remains of the late Dr. Leichardt, who +started from near Moreton Bay in 1848, I think. Dr. Mueller not having +arrived to take command as was anticipated, and the expedition having +been got ready, I was deputed to the command, and we went out about 500 +miles to the eastward of the settled districts of our colony, in order to +find out whether the statements of the natives relative to the existence +of white men or their remains in the locality were correct or not. We +were out about five months. Although we did not suffer very much, as we +had sufficient water and sufficient provisions, still it was a very dry +season. We came back and settled that there were no remains--that, in +fact, the reports of the natives were unfounded, and that they referred +to the remains of horses lost by an explorer of our colony, Mr. Austin, +not many miles to the eastward. This was the first attempt at exploration +I had made, and, although I had been brought up to bush life, I knew very +little about exploration, as I found when I went out. I was made aware of +many things that I did not know about before, and I must say that I was a +much better second than a commander. After this I undertook to conduct an +exploration north-east from our colony to Sturt's Creek, where Mr. A. +Gregory came down about 1855, and down the Victoria River. This fell to +the ground; but our present Governor, Mr. Weld, had a great idea that we +should organize an expedition to come to this colony overland along the +coast--along the course which was previously taken by Mr. Eyre, I think +in 1841--and he requested me to take command. Of course I readily +acquiesced in his suggestion, and in 1870 we started on our journey; and +although we did not experience the difficulties Mr. Eyre experienced, +still we had some little difficulty, and we would have had a great deal +more, I have no doubt, if we had not had Mr. Eyre's experience to guide +us. Many people--in our colony, I mean--thought it was a very little +thing indeed we had done, as we had only travelled along another man's +tracks, although they gave us a very hearty and enthusiastic reception. +We reported that there was good country along the coast, and I am glad to +say that in the course of a year a telegraph line will be run across the +route we travelled. (Cheers.) I hope it will tend to unite more closely +than they are at present united the whole of the Australian colonies, and +especially this colony with our own. (Cheers.) There is a very great deal +of good country inland from the south coast; and if only water can be +procured, I am quite certain it will be the finest pastoral district of +West Australia. (Hear, hear.) I have no doubt the establishment of +telegraphic communication will tend to the settlement of that part of the +country, and I am very glad indeed that the Government of South Australia +have acted so liberally as to join with our Government in erecting the +line. (Cheers.) After this my exploration experience still increased, and +I tried very hard to get up another expedition; but, not being a wealthy +man, I had to depend upon others. I often represented that I would like +to go, and people talked about the matter, and then I thought I would +make an offer to the Government, which they might accept or not as they +liked. We have the good fortune to have in our colony a Governor--who, I +am sorry to say, is leaving shortly--who takes a great interest in +exploration. He had been an explorer himself, having, as he has often +told me, travelled across New Zealand with his swag on his back. +(Cheers.) He has always been a great supporter of mine, and done all he +could to forward exploration; and about two years ago I laid before him, +through the Commissioner of Crown Lands, a project which I was willing to +accomplish if he would recommend the granting of the necessary funds. In +a very complimentary reply he quite acquiesced with what I suggested, and +promised to lay it before the Legislative Council with the support of the +Government; and in 1873 the matter was brought before the Council. All I +asked was that the Government of West Australia would grant me some 400 +pounds, and I would from my own private purse, and those of others who +had agreed to assist me, stand the remainder of the cost. (Cheers.) If +they granted me that sum, I was willing to undertake an exploration from +Champion Bay up to the Murchison, the head of which we did not know, and +strike the telegraph line for Port Darwin, it being left to my discretion +which course should be pursued. Four hundred pounds seems a paltry sum, +but there was some bitter opposition to its being granted, although by +the aid of the Government and other members it was voted. Last year was +the year when I should have undertaken the exploration, and I was, of +course, quite prepared to do so; but in the meantime a whole host of +expeditions from South Australia had come into the field. Mr. Giles, I +saw, had started from some part of the telegraph line westward, and I +heard afterwards that he had through some misunderstanding--I do not know +what it was; I only know by what I read in the papers--returned to +Adelaide. Then we heard that the South Australian Government had +despatched Mr. Gosse, and that the Honourable Thomas Elder--whom I have +the pleasure of meeting to-day--had despatched Colonel Warburton +(cheers)--to explore towards the same direction--as we judged from the +despatches and newspapers--that I intended to start from. I belong to the +Survey Department of West Australia, and was requested by the +Commissioner of Crown Lands and Surveyor-General, the Honourable Malcolm +Fraser, to superintend some surveys he specially wished undertaken that +season. I had an interview with the Governor, and he said very wisely he +did not wish to order me in any way; that it was no use running a race +with South Australia, and that as they were first in the field, although +we were the first to suggest the exploration, we should wait till the +next year, when, if the South Australian explorers were fortunate enough +to reach this colony, we should have no necessity to send an expedition, +and that if they did not, we should certainly profit by their experience. +I, being engaged in another service in which I took great interest, was +willing to wait for another year; and if, as Mr. Weld said, the South +Australians did not succeed, I would undertake it the next year, and +benefit by their experience. As it turned out, the expedition undertaken +by the Government, commanded by Mr. Gosse, did not succeed in reaching +the colony of Western Australia, and the expedition undertaken by Colonel +Warburton, under the auspices of my recent friend, the Honourable Thomas +Elder, reached our colony, but so far north that it did not add to the +knowledge of the route we had laid out for ourselves. He came out between +the 20th and 22nd degrees of latitude, whereas we started from the 26th, +and did not intend to go more north than that. After we heard--his +Excellency the Governor was away on a visit to New Zealand at the +time--that Mr. Gosse had turned back, although he had succeeded in +reaching a very great distance from the telegraph line, I had +instructions from the Colonial Secretary to equip an expedition at once. +If Mr. Gosse had succeeded, I am sure I would not have been here to-day; +but, as he did not succeed, I had orders to equip an expedition, and as I +was starting news arrived from the north-west coast by a coaster that +Colonel Warburton and his party had arrived. (Cheers.) This, of course, +gave us very great pleasure, and steps were at once taken to give him a +reception in Perth. (Cheers.) As soon as we heard that he had arrived, +our whole colony rose up to give him a welcome; and although what we did +did not come up with what you have given to us to-day--for our colony is +only a small one, with little over 30,000 inhabitants--still I am sure +that Colonel Warburton told you it was a kind reception. (Cheers.) I am +sorry to say that I was not able to be present when he was received, +though I waited some time in order to have that opportunity. The +opportunities for transport from our north-west settlements to the +capital are very few at a certain time of the year, and that was the time +when Colonel Warburton arrived in our settlements; so that in a matter of +700 or 800 miles, from Nicol Bay to Perth, he delayed unfortunately three +or four months. It was a very great pity that he should have been delayed +so long. After receiving addresses at Roeburne and Fremantle, the colonel +arrived just in time to be forwarded 250 miles to catch the mail, and +therefore he had not time, I know, to receive the reception that would +have been given him by the people of West Australia had he remained in +our colony a little longer. (Cheers.) All I can say is, that though what +has been done for Colonel Warburton cannot compare with what has been +done for us to-day, it was done in the same spirit, and we did our best. +(Cheers.) I am sure that I would have been very much pleased to have met +Colonel Warburton here this evening; but I understand that he is gone +upon a tour to his native land, and so I am deprived of the opportunity. +I have, however, had the pleasure of meeting other explorers, and I must +congratulate South Australia upon possessing so many explorers. I had no +idea that she could assemble so many, and that so young a man as myself +should be able to meet so many, all young men. I have read a great deal +of early explorations, and could tell you a good deal about them; but I +have no doubt you are just as well acquainted with their histories as I +am. I have only gleaned their history from books written by able men on +exploration; and I therefore need say little upon that subject, and will +content myself with a short reference to explorations of recent date. I +have already referred to Colonel Warburton. Mr. Gosse's is of more recent +date. I have never been able to read his journal to this day; but I hope +to be able to do so now. Through the kindness of Mr. Phillipson, of +Beltana, I was able to see his map of the country he passed over, with +which I am very well pleased; and, in spite of what some people have +said, I think that Mr. Gosse's exploration will be found of considerable +benefit to the colony, and that his action was one for which he deserved +very much credit. He travelled for some time in bad country, but, going +on, he got into good country; and that which he has described as the +Musgrave and Mann and Tomkinson Ranges I hope to see next year stocked +with South Australian sheep and cattle. (Cheers.) The country which Mr. +Gosse found is country abounding with any quantity of grass, with many +springs; and there are, perhaps, many more than I saw, for I kept along +Mr. Gosse's track; but I will say that I always found water where he said +that it would be found. (Cheers.) There is but one fault that I have to +find with him, and that is, that he did not say that water would be found +where I sometimes found it; but doubtless this arose from a very laudable +caution in an explorer, for had he stated that water would be found where +it failed it might have cost men their lives. One place he marked +springs, and if he had been mistaken there, we would have lost our lives; +but I am glad to say that we found there a very good spring indeed, +(cheers) enough to last all the sheep of South Australia, or at any rate +a good spring; and I am glad on this occasion to be able to thank him for +being so careful to mark permanent water where permanent water really +existed. Mr. Giles's exploration would have been as useful to me as Mr. +Gosse's, but unfortunately he did not return before I left the settled +districts of West Australia, and therefore I did not benefit by his work. +I am sure that my companions and myself feel very much the hearty +reception you have given us on this occasion. I cannot find words to +express my feelings on that point at all. I feel very deeply thankful, +and that is about all that I can say. (Loud cheers.) Six weary +travellers, travelling through the spinifex desert with about fifteen or +sixteen nearly knocked-up horses, not knowing whether they should find +water, or whether their lives were safe or not, I am sure that we could +not imagine that, after all our travels were over, we should receive such +a reception as we have received to-day. (Cheers.) I am sure that if any +stimulus is required to induce persons to become explorers, those who +witness our reception to-day ought to feel content. I am very proud of +the hearty and enthusiastic reception my companions and myself have met +with. I hope you will take the will for the deed, and in the absence of +better speaking on my part, consider that we are deeply thankful." (Loud +cheers.) + +<p>Sir H. Ayers, K.C.M.G., had much pleasure in proposing a toast that had +been allotted to him, and made no doubt that the company would have equal +pleasure in responding to it. The toast was Early Explorers, and he had +been requested to associate with it the name of Mr. John Chambers. +(Cheers.) It seemed to be the lot of poor human nature that whenever we +met for rejoicing there was always sure to be some little mournful +circumstance attending it, and we could scarcely think of the early +explorers without remembering with regret the noble leaders and brave +members of former expeditions who have now passed to their eternal rest. +There was the name of Sturt that came first in the list of our old +explorers. There was the name and the likeness of a man far more familiar +to many of them. There was Kekwick, and more recently poor McKinlay--all +gone to their last account. But still he was proud to see, and he was +sure it formed a source of gratification to that company, and especially +so to our guest, so many brave men at the table who had been companions +of those leaders and others in the early expeditions of this country. +(Cheers.) He said it with pride, that in no other Australian colony could +be seen such a group as sat at that table who had gone through the +hardships and dangers of exploration; for with one or two exceptions all +of them in the row were explorers. It was hardly possible for us to +estimate how much we had benefited by those who had opened up the country +for us. We were few in numbers and could not appreciate the work of the +explorer; but generations yet unborn would bless the names of those men +who had carried it out. (Cheers). He thought that it was doing only a +just tribute to associate the name of Mr. John Chambers with this toast, +because it might not be known to all present that Mr. Chambers, with his +late brother James and Mr. W. Finke, enabled Mr. Stuart to accomplish the +journeys that he made throughout the continent. (Cheers.) It was their +capital and his great skill, for in the face of so many explorers he was +not ashamed to say that Mr. McDouall Stuart was the greatest explorer +that ever lived. It was their capital that had enabled him to perform the +work which he had done, and for which his name would remain as a monument +for ever in the memories of South Australians. For not only were we +indebted to Stuart for the most valuable discoveries he had made, but he +thought Mr. Todd would say that his indications had proved the most +accurate. But he had also done a great thing for exploration in changing +the modus operandi. He had been one of Sturt's party that went out with +bullock-drays; but he had had genius, and had changed all that, starting +upon exploring with light parties, and thus being able to accomplish so +much, and he was glad to say that explorers since had followed up the +same plan with great success. (Cheers.) And they were still further +indebted to the Messrs. Chambers. They had not only assisted in +discovering far-off country, but had been the first to invest their +capital in stocking it and making it useful. He was sorry to see that +there were not more Messrs. Chambers to go and do likewise; but he +thought he saw signs of the spread of settlement further, for the toe of +the agriculturist was very near upon the heel of the sheep-farmer, and if +the sheep-farmers did not look out and get fresh fields and pastures new, +they would soon find that the agriculturist was all too near. That was a +question that he enlarged upon, especially in another place; but as +brevity seemed to be the order of the night, he would only ask them to +drink the health of The Early Explorers, coupled with the name of Mr. +John Chambers. + +<p>The toast was received with three cheers. + +<p>Band: Auld lang syne. + +<p>Mr. J. Chambers rose amid cheers, and said that he was proud to say that +he had been connected with the earliest of our explorations, having been +associated with the gallant Captain Sturt in his exploration of the +Murray. After his arrival in the colony he had first travelled with him +and the then Governor, the late Colonel Gawler, in exploring the south. +They had had no difficulties and dangers to encounter then that some of +the explorers of the present had to go through, and, although they +travelled with heavy bullock-drays, managed to have plenty of water and +food. Their principal difficulty lay in getting through the ranges to the +south, and the interminable creeks and gullies which they got into and +had to retrace their steps from. This was a small matter of exploration, +and might at the present day appear absurd; but then there were doubts +where the Angas was, and whether the Onkaparinga in Mount Barker District +was not the Angas, and when beyond the hills they did not know whether +Mount Barker was not Mount Lofty, and whether Mount Lofty was not some +other mount. It was, however, done, and, having settled these matters by +observation, they returned to Adelaide after an exploration of three +weeks. They were on their return made small lions of, although they had +not had to fight the natives, and had had bullock-drays with them, while +their horses were in rather better condition than when they went out. +There was no doubt that the subject of exploration was one of the most +important to be considered by those who in the future would have to do +with the country, as it was always well to have information beforehand; +and, if Governor Gawler and Captain Sturt had known more, there would +have been a different result to their exploration journey up the Murray. +The gallant Captain Sturt had made Cooper's Creek his depot, and that +place twelve months ago had been looked upon as a home by persons in +search of country with a view of stocking it. His youngest son had been +round there for five months, and had penetrated the country far and wide, +and had often to retrace his steps there for water. They had heard from +the young explorer, Mr. Forrest, how it was said when he came here before +that he had only traversed the tracks of Mr. Eyre. So be it, and often +was it said that Mr. Eyre did no good because he kept to the coast; but +they had heard from Mr. Forrest that the tracks and descriptions of Mr. +Eyre were of vast assistance to him. (Cheers.) Therefore no man could +tell what good he might do; the finding of a spring in a desert might +eventually become of great service to the descendants of those who lived +at the time. There were some whom he wished could have been there, but +Providence had ordained the contrary, and therefore he stood before them +to say that it was for no purpose of self-aggrandizement, but for the +purpose of good to the nation, that the early expeditions were promoted +and conducted (cheers) and that the object of James Chambers, Finke, +Stuart, and himself was to span this colony for the purpose of allowing a +telegraph line to be laid. (Cheers.) When we read of the many times that +Stuart was driven back by the force of circumstances, it could easily be +conceived that he possessed a very energetic spirit. It was not once or +twice that Stuart was driven back, but he was determined to penetrate the +continent for the purpose, he was proud to know, of paving the way for +telegraphic communication; and had it not been for his brother, Mr. +Stuart, and himself, he was proud to say, we should not this day have had +the telegraph. It was often said that there never would be a telegraph +line, but their answer was always "yes." (Cheers). He thanked them +heartily for the position in which they had placed him and Mr. Stuart's +companions, and which they all appreciated. (Cheers). + +<p>Mr. J.W. Billiat, who was imperfectly heard, also responded. He said that +when he went out with Mr. Stuart he was only a new chum; but he went out +and came back again, and there he was. He could not say much about Mr. +Stuart's explorations, as all that needed to be said had been so ably put +by Sir Henry Ayers. There was no country in the world that had so tried +the endurance and perseverance of the men on exploring expeditions as +South Australia had done, and explorers should receive all the credit +that could be given. He knew the difficulty of travelling country like +that Mr. Forrest had come across, as several of Mr. Stuart's party had +travelled upon it trying to strike the Victoria River. If Mr. John +Chambers's liberality were known, and the way he had entered into the +question of exploration generally were known, his name would be brought +into more prominence than it had. He had sat in the background, but he +had found both money and energy. + +<p>The Honourable W. Everard (Commissioner of Crown Lands) said the toast he +had to give was The Government and People of Western Australia. Owing to +a variety of circumstances, our relations with Western Australia had not +been so intimate or close as those with the eastern colonies. That would +be readily understood, because Western Australia, being a small colony, +and self-reliant and independent, had troubled us very +little--occasionally for a few tons of flour or a cargo of notions. +Another reason was that it had not had telegraphic communication with us +or the rest of the world, and it was separated from us by a large extent +of country which till lately was considered little better than a howling +wilderness. He was happy to say that by the enterprise of Western +Australia the magic wire which annihilated time and distance would be +laid between the two colonies before long; and he was happy to say the +Legislature here had agreed to construct the South Australian part of the +line, so that Western Australia would be placed in communication, not +only with South Australia, but the world. (Cheers.) And again, with +reference to that large tract of hitherto supposed desert country which +lay between the two colonies, the experience of the gallant men he saw +around him, and not only of the Messrs. Forrest, but of Warburton, Gosse, +and Giles, had shown that it contained grassy valleys, mountain ranges, +and permanent waters, and he believed that before long it would be +occupied by squatters. We must remember that, in South Australia, close +upon the heels of the explorer came the squatter with his flocks and +herds, and he even was not long left in quiet enjoyment; and if his runs +were good they were soon taken from him for agricultural purposes. +Considering the progress that we were making in agriculture, it was high +time we sought to enlarge our borders. Although it was true that the band +of explorers who were now before them had only made a line through the +country, we must remember that it would be a base-line for future +operations. Their work was very different to making a forced march of two +or three days when it was known there was permanent water ahead. The +explorer had carefully and deliberately to feel his way into unknown +country, and if he went a mile or two too far he could not retrace his +steps, and we could not attach too much importance to the services of +those individuals who had risked their lives in that way. It was said, +when Edward John Eyre made that wonderful journey of his along the coast +of Western Australia, that he had done nothing but gone along the coast; +but along that very line there would be a telegraph to connect this +colony with Western Australia. (Cheers.) It was true that Western +Australia was the smallest of the Australian group, and she had not +perhaps been so favoured as South Australia, as her country was not so +good; but he believed, from the enterprise of her Government, and the +courage, perseverance, and endurance shown by some of her sons, that she +would yet take her place among the Australian group, and that at some +future date she would be one of the provinces which would form one united +Australia. (Cheers.) + +<p>The toast was drunk with cheers. + +<p>Mr. Alexander Forrest responded. He said he thanked them most cordially +for having associated his name with that of the Government and people of +Western Australia. He had had the honour for the last four years of being +employed in the service of the Western Australian Government, and he +could assure them that they had a very good Government. They had +representative government, although not responsible government; but since +they had been on their trip they had heard that it was proposed to +establish constitutional government. He did not believe it would make +much difference, but personally he was glad to see it. The people would +have the management of their own money, and that he considered a good +thing, for they were never satisfied till they had the control over it. +When the party left, all the people of Western Australia were longing to +do honour to and entertain Colonel Warburton; and, although they were a +small people, they did their best, and what they did they did heartily. +(Cheers.) If Mr. Gosse had got over they would have given him also a good +reception. He had not expected to see as many people as he had seen that +day. The streets were crowded, and, wherever he looked, some one seemed +to be looking in that direction. (Laughter.) The toast included the +people of Western Australia, and he could assure them that, as he had +travelled through the length and breadth of the land, he knew every man +in it, every squatter, every farmer, every rich man, every poor man, and +every magistrate. This was not the first time that he had been exploring, +as he accompanied his brother to this colony four years ago, and in 1871 +the Government sent him out in command of a party to find new land, when +he went out about 600 miles. He thanked them for the very kind way in +which they had spoken of his companions. Since they came to this colony +they had been fed and clothed, and no one would take any money. (Cheers.) +In the city he expected something great, but in the Burra, Gawler, and +other places where they did not expect it, they had met with a hearty +reception. He saw a great improvement in Adelaide. When he came here four +years ago, the colony was not in such a good state, and a great many men +were out of work; but now everything was in good order, and he believed +South Australia would be one of the first colonies of Australia. +(Cheers). + +<p>Mr. William Gosse rose, and was received with loud cheers. He said he +felt honoured by being invited on the present occasion, and had much +pleasure in taking part in the reception of Mr. John Forrest and party. +He would take that opportunity of making a few remarks. His instructions, +when he was sent out, were to find a route as nearly as possible in a +direct line from his starting-point upon the telegraph line to Perth, +only deviating when obliged to do so for water. He had to feel his way as +he advanced, form depots to secure his retreat if necessary, and +accurately fix all points on his track. The last words the Honourable T. +Reynolds had said to him were, "You fully understand that Perth is your +destination, and not any other point on the western coast," or words to +that effect. They would see by that, that had he been fortunate enough to +discover the country by which Mr. Forrest got across, he should scarcely +have been justified in proceeding. His farthest point west was between +500 and 600 miles from the explored portion of the Murchison, and 360 +miles from the sources of the same. Copies of his diary and map had been +forwarded to Mr. Forrest by Mr. Goyder on the 27th of February, 1874, the +originals of which had been ready for publication on his arrival on the +telegraph line, and had not been compiled after their return to Adelaide, +as some people supposed from the delay in their publication. He made +these statements partly in self-defence, as remarks had been made by +members in the House to the effect that the Government had fitted out an +expedition at an enormous expense which had done comparatively nothing, +though his map showed 50,000 square miles of country. + +<p>Sir John Morphett had been asked to propose the toast of The Australian +Colonies. It was a very large toast indeed at the present time even, and +what it might be in the future it was impossible to say. He hoped that it +would be something wonderful. (Cheers.) At the present time the immense +country was occupied by 2,000,000 people, and we could not with that +number get on. What we wanted was more population. What were the products +which Australia could produce? First of all was wheat--the best in the +world. Then there were wine and wool, and lead, and gold, and copper, +tin, and sugar. These were all products that the world wanted, and all +that we required to make our production of these a success was +federation. We should have greater individual strength and prosperity, +and greater universal strength and prosperity if we were federated, and +we would in time become what we wanted to be--a nation. (Cheers.) Let +them come to West Australia, which was the birth-place of their esteemed +and energetic friend Mr. Forrest. He was glad to see that she had at last +freed herself from the shackles of that curse of convictism, and could +now go hand in hand with the other colonies in the march of progress. He +gave them the toast of the Colonies of Australia, coupling with it the +name of Mr. Ernest Giles. + +<p>The toast having been duly honoured, Mr. Ernest Giles rose to respond, +and was met with cheers. He had been called upon to respond to this +toast, which, as Sir John Morphett had told them, was a very +comprehensive one--so comprehensive that he was sure that he would fail +to do it justice. What he had to say therefore on the subject would not +detain them long. Sir John Morphett had touched upon the progress and +prosperity of the colonies, and there was no doubt that at the present +time the colonies were in a far more prosperous state than they had ever +been in before. With regard to federation, a gentleman high in the +service here, speaking to him, had said that if that was carried out +exploration should not be forgotten, but that fresh lines should be taken +with the co-operation of all the colonies. The splendid success which had +attended Mr. Forrest would, he had no doubt, tend greatly to promote the +ultimate prosperity of the colonies. (Applause.) + +<p>Mr. John Forrest, in a few complimentary words, proposed the health of +the Chairman, which was well received and acknowledged. + +<p>VISIT TO GAWLER AND MELBOURNE. + +<p>A few days afterwards I was honoured by an invitation from Gawler to lay +the first stone of a monument to commemorate the achievements of the late +Mr. John McKinlay, the leader of the Burke Relief Expedition, and the +explorer, under great difficulties, of the northern territory. Mr. +McKinlay died at Gawler in December, 1874, and it was resolved to +perpetuate his memory by the erection of an obelisk in the cemetery. The +14th of November was the day appointed for the ceremony, and after I had +laid the stone with the customary forms, there was a luncheon, presided +over by Mr. W.F. Wincey, the Mayor of Gawler. He delivered a really +eloquent address, describing the character and heroic labours of the +distinguished explorer, whose achievements we were celebrating. My own +health and that of my brother was proposed, and in responding (my brother +not being present) I once more took occasion to express the deep sense, +on the part of all my associates, of the kindness with which we had been +received. + +<p>After this my brother and I paid a flying visit to Melbourne, where we +remained a few days, and received much attention from the Governor, Sir +George Bowen, the Mayor of Melbourne, and others; and then, on the 5th of +December, we bade farewell to our South Australian friends and started on +our homeward voyage. On the 10th we reached King George's Sound, where we +were heartily welcomed and presented with a congratulatory address. At +Banbury and Fremantle we were received with kindness and enthusiastic +demonstrations. At Banbury we met Mr. Weld. He was on his way to King +George's Sound, en route for his new Government in Tasmania. He welcomed +us very heartily, and expressed his regret that he was unable to receive +us at Perth. The popular air, When Johnny comes marching home again, was +selected as extremely appropriate to the occasion, and after a champagne +breakfast at the residence of the Chairman of the Municipal Council, Mr. +Marmion, at Fremantle, we left for Perth in a carriage and six, Tommy +Windich and Tommy Pierre riding on gaily-decked horses immediately behind +us. + +<p>On reaching Perth we were met by the Commandant, Colonel Harvest, the +chairman and members of the Reception Committee, and representatives of +the Friendly Societies. The streets were crowded, and on our way to the +Town Hall we were enthusiastically cheered. Mr. Randell, the Chairman of +the Perth Municipality, read an address of welcome. I need not repeat +what I said in reply; my words were but the expression of what has been +felt ever since our perilous journey was completed--thankfulness that I +had been preserved and strengthened to do my duty, and that I had been so +well supported by brave and faithful companions. But I will quote the +characteristic speech of Tommy Pierre, who returned thanks on behalf of +the party--Windich was called on, but could not summon courage to say a +word. Tommy said, "Well, gentlemen, I am very thankful to come back to +Swan River, and Banbury, Fremantle, and Perth. I thought we was never to +get back. (Laughter.) Many a time I go into camp in the morning, going +through desert place, and swear and curse and say, 'Master, where the +deuce are you going to take us?' I say to him, 'I'll give you a pound to +take us back.' (Cheers and laughter.) Master say, 'Hush! what are you +talking about? I will take you all right through to Adelaide;' and I +always obey him. Gentlemen, I am thankful to you that I am in the Town +Hall. That's all I got to say." (Cheers.) + +<p>No doubt we all shared Tommy's thankfulness, and I am sure his homely +language very fairly expressed the spirit in which all my associates had +shown their confidence in me during our long journey. + +<p>A banquet and ball were given in the Town Hall. Mr. Randell presided at +the former, supported by the Bishop of Perth; Sir Archibald P. Burt, the +Chief Justice; the Honourable the Commandant; Mr. L.S. Leake, Speaker of +the Legislative Council; the Honourable A. O'Grady Lefroy, Colonial +Treasurer, and other gentlemen of high position. The newspapers published +the following report of the principal speeches delivered:-- + +<blockquote><p>The Chairman gave "His Excellency the Governor", whose unavoidable absence +he, in common with every one present, deeply regretted, knowing full well +the deep interest his Excellency had always evinced in connexion with +exploration, and especially in connexion with the expedition so +successfully carried through by their guests that evening. + +<p>The toast was drunk amid loud cheering. + +<p>The Chairman next gave The Army, Navy, and Volunteers, which was duly +honoured. + +<p>The Honourable the Commandant, in responding for the Army and the Navy, +heartily thanked the assembly for the loyal manner in which the toast had +been received. The toast of the British Army and Navy, always appropriate +at a banquet where Britons were assembled, was particularly appropriate +on the present occasion, gathered together as they were to do honour to +valour. (Cheers.) It was needless for him to state that--all knew +it--British soldiers, well equipped, properly provided in every way, and +properly led, would go anywhere, and face any mortal thing; and so, it +appeared, would West Australians, true sons of Great Britain. The other +day, at the presentation of the address given to Mr. Forrest by the +citizens of Perth, he (the Commandant), alluding to the young explorer's +gallant and truly heroic services in the field of exploration, had said +that, were he a soldier, the distinguished feat he had accomplished would +have entitled him to be decorated with the soldier's most honourable mark +of distinction--the Victoria Cross. (Cheers.) Now he had no desire to +accord Mr. Forrest the least particle of credit beyond what he honestly +believed he was entitled to, but he meant to say this--that Mr. Forrest +had displayed all the noblest characteristics of a British soldier under +circumstances by no means as favourable for arousing a spirit of +intrepidity, and for stimulating bravery, as was in operation on a +battle-field, amidst the all-powerful excitement of an engagement with +the enemy, urged on to deeds of valour by the examples of comrades. Who +or what had Mr. Forrest and his little band of followers to cheer them +on; to urge them forward on their perilous and dreary enterprise? What +surrounding circumstances encouraged them to face unknown dangers? He +should think that many a wearisome day and night in crossing the arid, +trackless desert-path he was traversing, he would, on laying down his +head to rest, say, "Would for bedtime in Perth, and all well!" Nothing +daunted, however, by perils, privations, and difficulties, he carried his +enterprise successfully through; and although there were no Victoria +Crosses for distinguished services of that nature, there, nevertheless, +was an order of merit for rewarding exploits such as Mr. Forrest had +performed, and he most heartily and sincerely trusted that the decoration +of honour conferred upon the gallant Warburton would be likewise +conferred on Mr. Forrest. (Applause.) + +<p>Captain Birch briefly responded on behalf of the Volunteers. + +<p>The Chairman then said the pleasing duty devolved upon him to propose the +toast which was in reality the toast of the evening, and to ask them to +drink with him The Health and Prosperity of Mr. John Forrest and his +Party. (Cheers.) Nine months ago, within a day, they had undertaken a +perilous journey across an unknown country, to accomplish what was +believed by many to be an impossible task on account of the terrible +nature of that country. What dangers, what difficulties, what privations +they had suffered in carrying out their daring enterprise, and what the +result of their arduous labours had been, was already known to most if +not all of those now present, a succinct chronicle of their journey +having been published in the South Australian and in the local +newspapers. To-night they were amongst them safe and sound, having been +saved by Almighty Providence from dangers which they could not have +contended with, and surmounted difficulties which but for such Divine +help must have been insuperable. All honour to them; all honour to the +brave men who had assisted to achieve such a victory, of which even Mr. +Forrest and his companions might well be proud, and the advantages of +which he felt that we could not yet fully appreciate. (Cheers.) The +Honourable the Commandant had spoken so ably of their victory that little +remained for him to add. He, however, ventured to differ from the gallant +Commandant on one point, namely, that, when compassed on all sides by +difficulties, far from aid, succour, or assistance of any kind, Mr. +Forrest must have wished himself back in Perth, all well. He (Mr. +Randell) did not believe that such a thought ever entered Mr. Forrest's +head, fully determined as he was to cross the continent, or perish in the +attempt. He was sure that not even the golden reward offered by Tommy +Pierre, for turning back, exerted any influence on his gallant leader's +mind; on the contrary, they found him quietly rebuking Tommy's failing +courage with a "hush" and a promise to take him right through to +Adelaide. Mr. Forrest's courage never failed him on the way, nor had they +any reason to believe that the courage of any member of his party had +really failed in the face of the terrible difficulties they had +encountered, and, by God's help, surmounted. (Applause.) They all had +read of the Olympic games of the ancient Greeks, and the kindred sports +indulged in by the Romans of old. Their athletic contests being conducted +in the presence of immense crowds of spectators naturally stimulated the +athletes to distinguish themselves; the applause of their fellow-citizens +urged them on to strive with might and main to win the crown of laurel or +ivy leaves with which the brow of the victor was decked. He well +remembered an incident recorded in Grecian history, where two brothers +had been engaged in an athletic contest and been victorious. When they +came forth to receive the crown which rewarded their victory, their aged +father--who himself, in his younger days, had been an athlete--was +present, and the sons placed their crown on his venerable head. He was +sorry that the father of the young heroes whom they were then +entertaining was not present to witness the reward freely bestowed upon +his sons by their fellow-countrymen. (Cheers.) Our South Australian +neighbours, in their magnificent reception of Mr. Forrest and his party, +had given us a good example of how to appreciate and reward noble deeds, +and it must be pleasing to every Western Australian to reflect on the +cordiality of that reception. (Applause.) He thought the colony would be +neglecting its duty if it did not, as one man, recognize the extreme +kindness which had been shown our gallant explorers by the people and by +the Government of our sister colony--South Australia. (Cheers.) It was a +pleasing trait in Mr. Forrest's character that he had not been at all +spoilt by the enthusiastic and really splendid ovation he and his party +had received at the hands of our southern neighbours; nothing could be +more admirable than his unaffected modesty and unassuming deportment in +the face of such a reception. The life of a lion did not spoil their +young hero, nor, as the Inquirer had said that morning, did he think it +would suit him long; for however tempting it might be to some people to +live upon laurels well earned, such men as Mr. Forrest had no difficulty +in overcoming the temptation to ease and repose, however deserving and +indisputable his claims thereto. (Cheers.) He believed with the Inquirer +that it was Mr. Forrest's natural instinct to lead a hard life in the +cause of exploration. He belonged--not by birth it was true, but through +his parents--to a country that had produced such men as Mungo Park; +Bruce, who explored the sources of the Nile; and Campbell, who, labouring +in the same cause, traversed the wilds of Africa; and that greatest and +noblest of all explorers, the dead but immortal Livingstone. (Cheers.) +Mr. Forrest's achievements had entitled his name to stand side by side in +the page of history with men of that stamp and others who had placed the +human family under such great obligations by their undaunted and +self-denying efforts in the cause of exploration. (Cheers.) It would not +perhaps be right on his part to refer to the pecuniary reward which the +Legislature had voted as an honorarium to Mr. Forrest and his party, but +he would say this much--and he believed every one in the colony would be +in accord with him--that the public would not have grumbled, on the +contrary, would have been glad if the grant had been 1000 pounds and not +500 pounds. (Hear, hear.) He did not think for a moment that the +Legislative Council thought that 500 pounds was the measure of the value +of Mr. Forrest's services; they were rather influenced by the extent of +the public revenue and the ability of the country to pay a larger amount; +nevertheless, he would have been pleased, and the public would have been +pleased, had the vote been more commensurate with the value of those +services. (Cheers.) In asking the present assembly to join him in +drinking the toast of Mr. Forrest's health and that of his party, he +considered it was as if he moved a vote of thanks on behalf of the colony +for the labours in which they had been associated, for the honour they +had conferred on their country, and he would ask them to join him in +heartily drinking the toast. (Cheers.) + +<p>The toast was received with several rounds of cheering. + +<p>The Commandant rose in explanation, and said he never for a moment meant +to infer that in the midst of his greatest difficulties Mr. Forrest ever +thought of giving up his task. What he said was that he must have often, +in lying down his head after a wearisome day's journey, wished himself at +home in Perth all well, with his enterprise accomplished, but not +otherwise (cheers). He did not believe that Mr. Forrest ever winced at +danger, ever swerved from the path he had laid out for himself to +traverse. + +<p>Mr. John Forrest, on rising, was received with applause, which rose to +ringing cheers. Upon the subsiding of the applause, Mr. Forrest said, +"Mr. Chairman and gentlemen, I feel that I ought to say a great deal on +this occasion, but I really hardly know what to say. I can, of course, +say that I sincerely thank you for your kindness in inviting myself and +companions to this great banquet, and when I say that, I trust you will +give me credit for saying what I feel in my heart of hearts. But I feel I +have much more than this to say this evening, knowing as I do that I +would disappoint you if I did not address you at some length. I will +endeavour to muster the words and the courage to do so; as you know, +public speaking is not my forte, and if I fail in satisfying your +expectations, you must accept the will for the deed (cheers). When I had +the honour of being entertained at a public banquet at Adelaide, I had a +good deal to say there of my career up to the present; but here I need +not say a word about my antecedents, for most of you have known me from +my childhood (cheers). For the last few years you all know I have had +some little to do with exploration, and for me to tell you anything of my +past experience would be simply waste of time and waste of words. You +will, however, expect me to say something of our latest enterprise. I had +been for some time animated by a desire to explore the untrodden interior +of our island continent. I had, as you know, been twice before in the +field; once in an eastward direction, and once along the south sea-board +to Adelaide--the latter, I was told, being considered a very small +undertaking, quite a coasting trip, and one on account of which we could +not lay claim to much credit. I therefore was desirous of penetrating the +mystery that shrouded the interior, and, with that object in view, I used +my utmost endeavours to organize an expedition in that direction. Without +the support and co-operation of one who I am sorry not to see here this +evening, he having quitted the metropolis--his Excellency Governor +Weld--my endeavours, I may safely say, would not have resulted in the +organization of the expedition I had at heart, and I should not have been +here to-night, occupying the proud position which I do. (Cheers.) My +proposition to his Excellency, through the Commissioner of Crown Lands, +was warmly received, and cordially espoused by the Executive. Any one can +see it on application, together with his Excellency's minute, which was +very complimentary to me. The proposition was carried through the +Legislative Council, and a small sum of money was voted for the +expedition, without which it could not probably have been organized and +fitted out. I am happy to say that our trip is not likely to cost much +more than the amount voted (400 pounds). Possibly the expense may reach +600 pounds or so; if it does, I have no doubt the Legislature will +willingly vote the extra amount. (Hear, hear.) If it does not, of course +we keep to the original proposition, and we shall only ask for the 400 +pounds. I am quite prepared to abide by the original arrangement; but I +think that every man in the colony is satisfied that the expedition was +conducted at the least possible expense, and that we all tried to do our +very best. (Cheers.) I scarcely think it is necessary for me to enter +into any details of our journey; I have already given the most salient +points in my published telegraphic despatch to the Government. We +experienced some difficulties, no doubt, and some few privations, but I +can assure you none of us ever thought of turning back. (Cheers.) On one +occasion, I admit, the thought did enter my head that, possibly, we might +have to turn back, but I did not tell any member of the party a word +about it. The thought haunted me at night, and I could not sleep; and had +we to carry it into execution we should have probably found ourselves +coming out somewhere near Victoria Plains, and it struck me that I should +be greeted with such expressions as "Well, old man, I am glad to see you +back, but I am sorry you could not get through." I knew people would be +glad to see us back, but their satisfaction at our safe return would be +alloyed with regret at our failure to get right across; so I said to +myself, "I never can face that; I must try again," and try again we did, +and you know the result. (Cheers.) I candidly tell you that the thought +struck me that if we were baffled in our efforts to penetrate through, it +might be all the better for this colony, inasmuch as there would be a +saving of expense thereby, although the credit due to me would be +considerably diminished. But I did not care so much for that. When, +however, I reached the settled portions of South Australia, I was very +anxious to get right through to the telegraph line, just to show our +neighbours that we could get across. From the date of our arrival at +Peake Station, you know how cordially we were received throughout the +rest of our journey, and with what kindness we were treated. Probably all +of you have read of our enthusiastic reception at Adelaide. I never saw +so many people in my life before, nor such a demonstration. They say +there were 20,000 persons present. I thought there were 100,000 present. +(Laughter.) As for my brother, he seemed enchanted with the sight, and +especially with the ladies. He has said he thought they were all looking +at him. On the contrary, gentlemen, I thought they were all looking at +me. (Laughter.) Every one we came in contact with, both high and low, +treated us most kindly. The same again in Melbourne. (Cheers.) Now, I +must say a word or two about my first impressions on visiting Melbourne. +The first object of interest that caught my attention was the splendid +monument erected to the memory of the gallant explorers, Burke and Wills. +Baron von Mueller kindly met me on the jetty when we landed, and I +accompanied him in a cab to have an interview with the Governor. When we +came in sight of this monument I asked the Baron to stop while I alighted +to inspect it. He courteously did so. Gentlemen, a thrilling feeling came +over me on looking on that memorial of two brave men who sacrificed their +lives in the cause of exploration. The monument represents poor Burke +standing over Wills, who is kneeling down. The first relief represents +the party leaving Melbourne, and the popular demonstration accorded them; +in the next place the return from Carpentaria is depicted, and the +discovery of a depot where some provisions had been deposited. There is +King in the act of holding a candle, Burke reading a letter, and Wills's +head is peering over his shoulder. Further on there is a relief +representing the death of the brave leader with his revolver grasped in +his hand. On the other side there is Howitt and his party finding King, +the sole survivor of Burke's party, among a number of black fellows, with +whom he had been living for several weeks--the black fellows looking +aghast at the relief party. Several times afterwards, during my stay in +Melbourne, I went to look at this monument, and it always sent a thrill +through my very soul. (Cheers.) Gentlemen, in conclusion, I must again +express my gratitude for the kind manner in which you have received me +and the members of my party back amongst you. My only consolation, in the +face of the ovations I have received, is that we all tried to do our very +best. (Cheers.) As to the vote of the Legislature, alluded to by your +chairman, while I thank him heartily for his liberal spirit, I assure you +I am very well satisfied indeed. (Applause.) When I started on the +expedition I never expected one farthing of honorarium from the public +funds; but though I am modest I am not altogether unselfish, and I did +expect what I think every Briton expects from his countrymen when he does +his best--but what he does not always get--the thanks of my +fellow-colonists. (Cheers.) That I HAVE received most abundantly, and I +am quite satisfied with it, and so I think are all the members of my +party. We are also quite content with, and thankful for, the provision +made for us by the Legislative Council. I don't know whether I shall +again appear before you as an explorer, or whether I shall rest on my +laurels, as the Inquirer said to-day. I can only say that if my services +are required I shall be found ready and willing. (Cheers.) In the toast +you have so enthusiastically drank my companions are very properly +associated with myself, for I am much indebted to them for their hearty +co-operation. They always endeavoured to do what I desired, and the most +friendly feelings existed amongst us throughout the journey. (Cheers.) I +never withheld from them any information as to our whereabouts or our +movements; the maps, route, and the observations taken during the +expedition were always open for their inspection, so that they could see +our exact position from day to day. I had no secrets from them (hear, +hear), and this confidence was reciprocated on their part. I never had +occasion to check or to use an angry word to one of my party. They one +and all always showed readiness and willingness to obey my +instructions--in fact, I seldom had any occasion to instruct them; and I +gladly avail myself of this opportunity to thank them publicly for their +exemplary conduct. (Cheers.) On their behalf, as well as on my own +behalf, I once more also thank you most sincerely for the honour you have +done us and the kindness you have shown us. I hope that our future career +will show that we are not altogether unworthy of that kindness." (Loud +cheers.) + +<p>Tommy Pierre, one of the aboriginals attached to the expedition, then +stepped forward, and, addressing the assembly, said: "I only black fellow, +you know; nothing at all but just a few words. I ought to give you good +lecture. (Laughter.) Well, gentlemen, I am very thankful that I got into +the city of Perth; that people give me welcome and everything. I am +always thankful to any person that brought me into city of Perth. +(Laughter.) When I speak so of city of Perth I don't speak wrong at all, +what I speak is true and true. Well, gentlemen, I am very thankful to the +people in Perth at the Town Hall; I am very thankful to every one that +welcome me. I am always very glad to see white fellows around me. In +Bunbury, Governor Weld spoke to me and say he left me a present in city +of Perth, and I hope I will get it too. (Cheers and laughter.) Governor +Weld is a splendid fellow; splendid governor. Well, gentlemen, I am all +thankful; my last word is--I am thankful to you all." (Cheers.) + +<p>Mr. Randell: In consequence of the absence of the Surveyor-General--from +what cause I am unable to state--his lordship Bishop Hale has kindly +consented to propose the next toast. (Cheers.) + +<p>His Lordship, on rising, was received most cordially. He said that the +toast which had just been entrusted to him was one that would have been +better proposed by the Surveyor-General. The sentiment was Australian +Exploration. It so happened that ever since he had arrived in Australia +he had been very much interested in exploration, and much mixed up with +persons engaged in that work. He had known the veteran explorer Sturt, +the discoverer of South Australia; and he had also been acquainted with +his brave companion, John McDouall Stuart, who had marked out the route +subsequently followed by the trans-continental telegraph line from +Adelaide to Port Darwin, for, wonderful to say, no better route could +afterwards be discovered; the map of Stuart's journey and the map of the +telegraph line were almost identical. With regard to Mr. Forrest's +exploratory labours, referred to with unaffected and characteristic +modesty by the young explorer himself, his lordship believed that great +and practical results would follow, and that, even as Stuart's track from +south to north of the continent had become the line of communication +between those two extreme points, so would the path traversed by Mr. +Forrest become, some day or other, the line of communication through the +central portion of the continent from West to South Australia. (Cheers.) +With respect to the necessity for exploration, no doubt it was a very +essential work to be carried out. Whenever he had gone to distant and +sequestered parts of the colony in the exercise of his ecclesiastical +functions, and was called upon to console people so situated as to be cut +off from the blessings of regular ministration, he was in the habit of +saying to them, "Although you are at present cut off, yet you may believe +that God in His providence has designed that His world shall be +inhabited, and ordained that pioneers shall go forth into desert places +in order to accomplish that end." Explorers, therefore, like Mr. Forrest, +might well feel that in devoting themselves to the work of exploration +they were doing their duty to God and to their country in seeking to +discover new fields, likely to be of practical use as new settlements for +the ever-increasing human family. Their efforts in that direction, often +purchased with much suffering and privation, entitled explorers to be +classed in the front rank of benefactors to mankind. (Applause.) The +population of the world was continuously increasing, and new settlements +became a necessity. In London alone it was said there was a birth every +five minutes. What, then, must be the population of the British empire if +the increase in one city was at that rate? It was but due to Mr. Forrest +and to all such explorers that they should receive the thanks of their +fellow-men for devoting their lives to so desirable a work as the +discovery of new country, fitted for the habitation of civilized men. +(Applause.) He would not trespass any further on the patience of the +assembly: he was present in order to join in that general feeling of +admiration which Mr. Forrest's exploit had evoked. Cooler courage and +greater heroism could not be displayed under any circumstances than were +displayed by his young friend on his right, circumstanced as he had been +on divers occasions during his journey, with his life and the lives of +his brave companions frequently in imminent peril. (Cheers.) Mr. Forrest +had just told them that he did not think it necessary to enter into the +details of that journey, inasmuch as the most important particulars +connected therewith had already appeared in his telegraphic despatch to +the Government, published in the local newspapers. That telegram was +certainly one of the most explicit and distinct records of the kind that +his lordship had ever perused. He had paid but a moderate degree of +attention to it, but had experienced no difficulty whatever in pricking +out Mr. Forrest's track on a map, and in forming a distinct conception of +his journey. (Cheers.) It only remained for his lordship to ask them to +join him in drinking the sentiment of Australian Exploration, and at the +same time to drink the health of Mr. Alexander Forrest, whose name was +coupled with it. (Cheers.) + +<p>The toast was enthusiastically honoured, the band playing The Song of +Australia. + +<p>Mr. A. Forrest, on rising, was received with applause. He was +indistinctly heard at the reporter's table, owing to the distance which +separated him from it, and the constant hum of conversation, which by +this time was becoming general. He was understood to express the proud +satisfaction he felt at being present that evening, and more especially +as his name had been associated with the toast of Australian Exploration. +The sentiment was a wide one, and they need not suppose that he was going +to enter into the history of all Australian explorations that had taken +place. He was sure that time would not admit of his making even cursory +remarks upon these events. Mr. Forrest then alluded to the exploratory +labours of Stuart--perhaps the greatest of Australian explorers--of +McKinlay, of Burke and Wills, of Captain Roe, and the Gregorys, and of +the veteran Warburton. The hospitality shown by this colony to the +last-named gallant explorer had produced a lasting feeling of gratitude +throughout South Australia. The manner in which our southern neighbours +spoke of the kind treatment extended by the inhabitants of this colony to +that aged explorer, from the day he reached our north-west settlements to +the hour he embarked on board steamer for Adelaide, reflected honourably +upon the hospitable nature of West Australian people. Mr. Elder, one of +the enterprising gentlemen at whose expense the expedition was organized +and equipped, had told him (Mr. Forrest) that he never heard of such +kindness. The South Australians, however, were not long before an +opportunity was afforded them of returning that hospitality, and they +certainly had not neglected the opportunity. Than the treatment which the +party to which he had the honour of belonging had received at the hands +of the people of South Australia nothing could be kinder--nothing could +possibly be more hospitable. Every house was thrown open to them; their +horses were fed free of charge; it did not cost them a single penny in +travelling; everywhere they were met with the most cordial reception. +Their triumphal entry into Adelaide was a demonstration worthy of a +prince. (Cheers.) Having thanked his fellow-colonists for the very hearty +reception accorded them on their return, Mr. Forrest spoke in very +complimentary terms of the other members of the expedition. The two +natives were first-rate fellows, and, as for Sweeney and Kennedy, he +would never wish to have better companions in the bush. They were always +for going ahead; no thought of turning back ever entered their heads; in +their greatest privations not a murmur escaped their lips. (Loud cheers.) + +<p>Mr. L.S. Leake said: "The toast I have to propose is South Australia and +the Sister Colonies--a sentiment which I think might most appropriately +have immediately followed on the speech of my noble friend, Mr. John +Forrest, who by his remarks paved the way to the few words I have to say. +Why South Australia should be placed before the other colonies on this +occasion it is not difficult to conjecture. She has, above all others, +gained our affection by her kind and hospitable treatment of our +fellow-colonists, our respected guests this evening who were received in +Adelaide with even greater honour than the son of our beloved Queen. +(Cheers.) With reference to Mr. Forrest himself, Western Australia should +be proud of having produced such a man; and I only wish I had arrived in +the colony four years and a half earlier, so that I might lay claim to +having been born here. Many of those around me are natives of Western +Australia; and although I am proud of Old England, my native country, I +should have been glad to boast of having been born in the same colony as +John Forrest. All of his fellow-colonists should be proud that Mr. +Forrest has accomplished a feat which the whole civilized world must +admire. (Cheers.) I did think that the Surveyor-General would have +considered it worthy of his coming here to-night to join us in doing +honour to Mr. Forrest, and that he would have introduced you to a +gentleman connected with the Government of Victoria, now in this +colony--Mr. Wardell, the Inspector-General of Public Works, for whose +services we are under deep obligation. I believe him to be an excellent +engineer, and in examining our harbour at Fremantle he will be the right +man in the right place. Had he, however, been in his right place +to-night, he would have been here amongst us, introduced by the +Surveyor-General, and we should thus have an opportunity of publicly +thanking the Victorian Government for granting us the benefit of his +services. (Hear, hear.) But, though Victoria is not represented at this +festive gathering, South Australia is, and that by a gentleman whose name +it affords me great pleasure to connect with the toast which has been +entrusted to me. This colony was established in the year 1829, and in +1830 there arrived amongst us one of our pioneer settlers, a good, +worthy, honest--I cannot say English, but Scotch--gentleman, Mr. Walter +Boyd Andrews, than whom a more upright man never landed on our shores. He +is represented here to night by his eldest son, with whom I spent the +greater portion of my younger days, and who for the last ten years has +been Registrar-General of the colony of South Australia. I have, +therefore, much pleasure in associating his name with the toast which I +now ask you to join me in drinking, Prosperity to South Australia and the +Sister Colonies." (Cheers.) + +<p>The toast was drunk with loud cheering, the band playing Pull, pull +together. + +<p>Mr. Andrews, in response, said: "Mr. Chairman and gentlemen, I rise at +once to return thanks, because I always fancy that words spoken on the +spur of the moment come from the very heart. I will first of all dispose +of myself, having been taken completely by surprise in finding my name +associated with the sentiment proposed by my old friend, Mr. Leake. I +thank you most heartily for the honour you have done me, and the kind +manner in which you have responded to the toast. As regards South +Australia and the Sister Colonies, you have done South Australia the +proud honour of giving her precedence over her sisters of the group, +thereby showing, as Mr. Leake has said, the warmth of your affection +towards her, which kindly feeling, I sincerely believe, is reciprocated +on her part. The cordial reception accorded to your gallant explorers is +an earnest of that feeling, and I think I may venture to say that the +colony which I have the honour to serve will at all times extend a hearty +welcome to any West Australian colonist. There is, I assure you, a very +affectionate feeling entertained by South Australians towards this +colony--a feeling that has been in existence for a long time, and which +is growing deeper and deeper every day. She is not only willing to extend +the right hand of friendship to you, but, as you know, has expressed her +readiness to meet you half way across the desert that separates you from +each other by means of the telegraph. (Cheers.) She does not feel jealous +that you should receive telegraphic intelligence from the outside world +earlier than she does; on the contrary, she is anxious that you should be +placed in the same advantageous position as regards telegraphic +communication as your other sisters are. (Applause.) Gentlemen, on her +behalf, and on my own behalf, I thank you most heartily for the kind +manner in which this toast has been received."</blockquote> + +<h5>RESULTS OF THE EXPLORATIONS.</h5> + +<p>Since then, in the summer of 1875, I have visited Europe and received +many proofs of the interest felt by Englishmen in Australian exploration. +In the colonies, too, I find that the spirit of adventure which +stimulates settlers to follow eagerly in the steps of the pioneer has +been active. Already stations are being advanced on each side along the +shores of the Great Bight, and a telegraph line is being constructed from +King George's Sound to Adelaide, along my route of 1870, which will +connect Western Australia with the telegraph systems of the world. +Farther north, towards the head waters of the Murchison, advances have +been made, and I and other explorers must feel a gratification, which +gives ample reward for all our toil, in knowing that we have made some +advance at least towards a more complete knowledge of the interior of +vast and wonderful Australia. + +<h4>APPENDIX TO JOURNAL.</h4> + +<h5>1. <br> + +DESCRIPTION OF THE PLANTS, ETC., COLLECTED ON EXPEDITION;<br> + +SHOWING ALSO THE LOCALITY FROM WHICH THEY WERE TAKEN:<br> + +BY BARON VON MUELLER, C.M.G., ETC.</h5> + +<p>CAMP 21.<br> +Latitude 25 degrees 57 minutes 32 seconds South; longitude 117 degrees 20 +minutes East:--<br> +Cassia desolata. Trichodesma Zeilonicum. Stylobasium spatulatum. Psoralea +Cucantha. Scaevola spiniscens. Sida petrophila. Codonocarpus +cotinifolius. Adriana tomentosa. Salsola Kali. + +<p>CAMP 31.<br> +Latitude 26 degrees 8 minutes 31 seconds South; longitude 119 degrees 18 +minutes East:--<br> +Acacia aneura. Oeschynomene Indica. Eremophila longifola. Cassia Sturtii. +Plectronia latifolia. + +<p>CAMP 33.<br> +Latitude 26 degrees 13 minutes South; longitude 119 degrees 32 minutes +East:--<br> +Santalum Preissianum. Plectronia latifolia. + +<p>CAMP 36.<br> +Latitude 26 degrees 17 minutes 12 seconds South; longitude 119 degrees 53 +minutes East:--<br> +Brachychiton Gregorii. Dodonaea petiolaris. Cassia artemisioides. +Eremophila latifolia. Hakea lorea. Acacia aneura. Eremophila longifolia. + +<p>CAMP 40.<br> +Latitude 25 degrees 38 minutes 44 seconds South; longitude 120 degrees 38 +minutes East:--<br> +Cassia eremophila. Eremophila longifolia. + +<p>CAMP 46.<br> +Latitude 25 degrees 0 minutes 46 seconds South; longitude 121 degrees 22 +minutes East:--<br> +Stemodia viscosa. Eremophila longifolia. Sida petrophila. Adriana +tomentosa. Convolvulus erubescens. Cassia Sturtii. Hakea lorea. + +<p>Camp 48.<br> +Latitude 25 degrees 22 minutes 50 seconds South; longitude 121 degrees 57 +minutes East:--<br> +Acacia aneura. Eremophila longifolia. Cassia eremophila. Cassia desolata. +Eremophila Brownii. Loranthus Exocarpi. + +<p>CAMP 52.<br> +Latitude 25 degrees 41 minutes 23 seconds South; longitude 122 degrees 53 +minutes East:--<br> +Pappophorum commune. Cassia eremophila. Acacia salicina. Santalum +lanceolatum. Senecio lantus. Eremophila Duttoni. Ptilotus alopecuroides. +Brunonia Australis. Hakea lorea. Cassia eremophila. Eremophila +longifolia. + +<p>CAMP 59.<br> +Latitude 25 degrees 43 minutes 8 seconds South; longitude 124 degrees 10 +minutes East:--<br> +Cassia notabilis. Cassia artemisioides. + +<p>CAMP 61.<br> +Latitude 25 degrees 53 minutes 23 seconds South; longitude 124 degrees 31 +minutes East:--<br> +Eremophila Latrobei. Dodonaea petiolaris. + +<p>CAMP 62.<br> +Latitude 26 degrees 5 minutes 10 seconds South; longitude 124 degrees 46 +minutes East:--<br> +Crotalaria Cunninghami. Indigofera brevidens. Sida petrophila. Acacia +salicina. Dodonaea petriolaris. Condonocarpus cotinifolius. Cassia +Sturtii. Cassia artemisioides. Kochia Brownii. Eremophila longifolia. +Loranthus Exocarpi. + +<p>CAMP 70.<br> +Latitude 25 degrees 54 minutes 53 seconds South; longitude 126 degrees 48 +minutes East:--<br> +Hakea lorea. Cassia desolata. Eremophila longifolia. Abutilon Fraseri. +Acacia salicina. Cassia platypoda. Ficus platypoda (the native fig). + +<p>CAMP 71.<br> +Latitude 26 degrees 1 minute South; longitude 127 degrees 7 minutes East. +Crotolaria Cunninghami. Indigofera brevidens. Cassia Eremophila. +Trichodesma Zeilanicum. Cassia artemisioides. + +<p>CAMP 72.<br> +Latitude 26 degrees 2 minutes South; longitude 127 degrees 22 minutes +East.<br> +Abutilon Fraseri. Trichodesma Zeilanicum. Acacia salicina. + +<p> +CAMP 78.<br> +Latitude 26 degrees 15 minutes 10 seconds South; longitude 122 degrees 9 +minutes East:--<br> +Gossypium Sturtii. Hibiscus Farragei. Pterocaulon Sphacelatus. Salsola +Kali. Condonocarpus cotinifolius. Heliotropium undulatum. Scaevola +spiniscens. Stylobasium spatulatum. Adriana tomentosa. Tecoma Australis. +Ficus platypoda. Trichodesma Zeilanicum. Sida virgata. Dodonaea viscosa. +Helichrysum apiculatum. Jasminum lineare. Adriana tomentosa. Indigofera +Australis. Petalostylis labicheoides. Scaevola Aemula. Pterocaulon +Sphacelatus. Santalum Preissianum. Festuca (Triodia) irritans. + +<p>The Santalum Preissianum, the so-called native peach, with edible fruit, +is found generally on the whole route. + +<p>The Spinifex so often mentioned is the Festuca (Triodia) irritans, the +Spinifex of the Desert Explorers, but not of Science. + +<p>Latitude 25 degrees 46 minutes South; longitude 118 degrees East:-- +Marsdenia Leichardti, the climber with edible pods and milky sap, the +seeds with a downy top, called by the natives Carcular. + +<p>Latitude 26 degrees 4 minutes South; longitude 129 degrees 50 minutes +East:--<br> +The Casuarina Decaisneana, the Shea-oak or Desert Oak peculiar to Central +Australia. + +<hr align="center" width="30%"> + +<h4>APPENDIX 2.</h4> + +<center> +<p><img alt="" src="forrest-table1.jpg"></p> +</center> +<center> +<p><img alt="" src="forrest-table2.jpg"></p> +</center> + +<hr align="center" width="30%"> + +<h5>NOTE BY THE EDITOR.</h5> + +<p>The publication of the preceding Journal affords an appropriate occasion +for inviting attention to the remarkable progress of Western Australia +within the last few years. Mr. John Forrest is proud to acknowledge +himself as belonging to that colony--indeed native-born--and his +fellow-colonists have invariably supported and encouraged his +explorations. Belonging to the public service, he has recognized as his +main object the discovery of new and good country with the view of +extending colonization, while within his ideas of duty there has been a +steadfast regard for those objects which promote the welfare of young +settlements. It has long been observed that Western Australia requires to +be thoroughly understood in its great capacities for carrying a large +population. There are vast resources yet to be developed, and what has +been accomplished in sheep and cattle stations, in copper and lead +mining, in wine-growing, in pearl fisheries, besides other important +operations, prove that the country has scarcely been tapped, and will be +sure to reward those who have the enterprise and industry to become +settlers. It is only necessary to substantiate these statements by +official documents, and, in the hope that this volume will do good +service to Western Australia, the following papers are reprinted. + +<hr align="center" width="30%"> + +<h5>GOVERNOR WELD'S REPORT TO THE EARL OF CARNARVON.</h5> + +<p>Government House, Perth, + +<p>September 30, 1874. + +<p>MY LORD, + +<p>It has appeared to me that your lordship may think it desirable that, +before I leave, I should, so far as the limits of a despatch may enable +me to do so, place before you the present state of this colony, review +the progress it has made within the last five years, and indicate its +future prospects. + +<p>2. When I was appointed to the Government of Western Australia I was +aware that from various causes the colony had made but little progress; +and on my arrival in September, 1869, I found chronic despondency and +discontent, heightened by failure of the wheat crop, by the prospect of +the gradual reduction of convict expenditure and labour on which the +settlers had been accustomed to depend, by the refusal of the Home +Government to continue to send out free immigrants, and by that vague +dread of being thrown on their own resources so natural to men who have +been accustomed to take no part in their own affairs, and who have +consequently learned to rely entirely upon the Government, and not at all +upon themselves. One healthy symptom there was, and that was a desire, +not very strong perhaps, or even generally founded upon a just +appreciation of the past, or political foresight of the future; but still +a very wide-spread desire, and to many a reasonable and intelligent +desire, for a form of representative institutions which might give the +colonists some real voice in the management of their own affairs. + +<p>3. At the earliest possible moment I commenced work by travelling over as +much as possible of the settled and partially settled districts of the +colony; an old colonist bushman and explorer myself, travelling on +horseback and camping out were but natural to me, and I wished to judge +for myself of the capabilities of the colony; and before I had been six +months in the country I had ridden considerably over two thousand miles, +some part of the distance unfortunately, owing to an accident, with a +fractured rib and other injuries. I had made acquaintance with settlers +of all classes, and was able to form an opinion so accurate, both of the +people and of the country I have since had to deal with, and of their +capabilities, that I have never altered that opinion, nor have my many +subsequent journeys done more than supplement the knowledge I then +gained. + +<p>4. My first political aim was to promote local self-government in local +affairs by establishing or giving real power to road boards and +municipalities (a policy I afterwards carried into effect with school +boards also); and, so soon as I had obtained the sanction of her +Majesty's Government, I introduced that modified form of representative +institutions provided by 13 and 14 Vic., chap. 59, and then passed the +Municipal Acts I have mentioned above. This policy has fulfilled not only +my expectations but my hopes, and should the Council that is about to +meet wish to take the ultimate step of entering into complete +self-government by adopting the responsible system, the preparation +afforded by the last five years will admittedly be of the greatest value. + +<p>5. It fell to me to carry into effect the ecclesiastical policy indicated +by Lord Granville in a despatch, Number 80, of July 10, 1869, held over +for my arrival, in which his lordship suggested that grants (regard being +had to the number in the community of each denomination) should be equal +in substance and alike in form, and asked if there were any difficulties +in applying to Western Australia "that principle of religious equality +which had long been recognized in the Australian Colonies." Lord +Kimberley, in an enclosure to his despatch, Number 78, of December 19, +1870, expressed similar views. To this on March 1, 1871, in my despatch, +Number 37, I was enabled to reply that I had already carried the policy +recommended into practice, that the grants had been equalized by +"levelling up," that the vote for the Church of England was "now handed +over to the Bishop of Perth, the Government reserving the right to +satisfy itself that it is applied to those purposes of religious +ministration and instruction for which it is voted, and that all vested +interests are maintained intact and claims on the Government respected." +Since then I have supported such measures as were thought desirable to +promote self-organization, and I have moreover made liberal grants of +land for glebes, churches, schools, and institutions to the various +religious bodies in proportion to their numbers. I have reason to know +that on all sides satisfaction is felt at the position in which I shall +leave ecclesiastical affairs so far as the action of Government may +effect them. + +<p>6. The elementary educational question, on my arrival, was a source of +much contention and ill-feeling, which came prominently into play, when +in the second session of 1871 I caused a Bill, drafted by myself, and the +general provisions of which I was subsequently informed were "entirely +approved of" by your lordship's predecessor, to be introduced into the +Legislature, and carried it--not, however, quite in its original form. +Though the alterations are unquestionably defects, and may somewhat mar +its success, it has hitherto worked very well, and has proved itself not +only effective but economical: it has received praise from its former +opponents and from the most opposite quarters, and old bitternesses are +now (I hope for ever) things of the past. + +<p>7. I have not failed to give the utmost support in my power--a support +unfortunately much needed in a colony like this--to the Chief Justice, +and it has been a great gratification to me that, on my recommendation, +the long and valuable services of Sir Archibald Paull Burt have been +recognized by her Majesty, and that he has received the honour of +knighthood--a rank which none of her Majesty's servants will more fitly +adorn. I have suggested to the Legislature that a small increase of +salary should be given to uphold the dignity of the Supreme Court; and +the question, to which I have already drawn the attention of the +Legislature, of the appointment of two Puisne Judges and constitution of +a Court of Appeal ought to be taken into consideration at no distant +period. One new resident magistracy has been established in a district +where it was very much needed, and two Local Courts have been +constituted. There is some difficulty in finding a sufficiency of fit +persons for the commission of the peace who are willing to exert +themselves, and the pay of the resident magistrates is in too many cases +insufficient to enable them properly to support their position as +representatives of the Government in their districts. + +<p>8. In the Military Department I have enabled successive commandments to +make reductions in the enrolled Pensioner Force. By withdrawing the guard +from Rottnest Island, and by concurring in the reductions at +out-stations, a very considerable saving has thus been effected. I have +given all the encouragement in my power to the Volunteer movement, and I +may confidently state that the Volunteer Force was never before in so +good a state, either so far as regards numbers or efficiency. To this +result the efforts of successive commandants and liberality of the +Legislature have mainly contributed. + +<p>9. It has been for me to preside over the latter stages of the existence +of the Imperial convict establishment in Western Australia, as a large +and important department; henceforth it will be confined in narrow +limits, and I may state with confidence that the great reductions and +concentrations that it has been my duty to effect have not been attended +with those disastrous effects to the colony that were so confidently +predicted, and also that although the residue of convicts are, many of +them, men of the doubly reconvicted class and long-sentence men, +discipline is well kept, serious prison offences are rare, the health of +the men is excellent, whilst severe punishments are seldom needful. I +here beg leave to make favourable mention of Mr. W.R. Fauntleroy, Acting +Comptroller-General of Convicts, who has proved himself to be my most +valuable officer. + +<p>10. Much remains to be done in the Survey and Lands Department. When Mr. +Fraser in December, 1870, took charge of the department, the greatest +economy was needed to make the revenue of the colony meet the +expenditure, and consequently it was necessary to reduce and lay upon our +oars; Mr. Fraser reorganized his department, putting it on a new system, +letting out work by contract instead of keeping up a large permanent +staff, and thereby effected a considerable annual saving; at the same +time he has been steadily working, as time and means have permitted, +towards certain definite objects, namely, in the direction of a +trigonometrical survey, by fixing points, by making sketch and +reconnaissance surveys of new and important districts, and by accurately +fixing by survey main lines of road: this will give a connexion to the +records in the Survey Office which has been hitherto wanting, and will +contribute to enable him to construct that great desideratum--a large and +accurate map of Western Australia, so far as it is settled or partially +settled. I concur with Mr. Fraser in thinking that, so soon as means will +admit, a considerably increased annual expenditure should be devoted to +surveys. + +<p>11. The joint survey of the coast will also aid in this work. The +Admiralty, in assenting to my proposal to undertake a joint coast survey, +which has been placed under a highly meritorious officer, Navigating +Lieutenant Archdeacon, R.N., have conferred a great benefit on this +colony, and promoted the interests of British commerce and navigation, +much valuable work having already been done. + +<p>12. In close connexion with the Survey and Lands Department is the topic +of exploration. So soon as possible after my first arrival, I took upon +myself to send Mr. John Forrest overland to Adelaide, along the shores of +the Great Bight, nearly on the line of Mr. Eyre's route in 1841. I did +this before the introduction of representative government, and it is +right to say that I knew that I could not have got a vote for it. I felt +that this was the last act of an expiring autocratic regime, and I +believe it was one of the least popular of my acts; but certainly no +small sum of public money has been expended with greater results--for, as +I hoped, Mr. Forrest's expedition has bridged the gap that separated West +Australia from the other colonies, has led to settlement on the shores of +the Great Bight, and to the connexion of this colony with the rest of the +world by electric telegraph. I never doubted of the future of West +Australia from the day when the news of Mr. Forrest's success reached +Perth. Since then more interest has been taken in exploration. A second +expedition was sent out to the eastward under Mr. Alexander Forrest in +1871, with the support of the Legislature and some of the settlers, and +at present under the same auspices Mr. John Forrest is again exploring to +the northward and eastward. His route will be guided by circumstances, +but it is not improbable that he may aim for the Central Australian +telegraph line, and I am already anxiously expecting tidings of him. + +<p>13. In 1870, with a vote I obtained from the Council, I engaged Mr. Henry +Y. Brown as Government Geologist. His geological sketch map and his +researches, which he pushed in one instance far into the interior, have +been of the greatest value; and it was with much regret that in 1872, +owing to the disinclination evinced in the Legislature in the then +straitened circumstances of the colony to expend money on a scientific +department, that I was obliged to forego my desire of making it a +permanent part of the establishment. + +<p>14. As Colonel Warburton's journey from the Central South Australian +telegraph line to our north-west coast was set on foot and its expenses +defrayed by private colonists of South Australia, I only allude to it to +acknowledge the obligation that this colony lies under to those +public-spirited gentlemen and to the gallant leader and his followers. +Parties headed by Mr. Gosse, by Mr. Giles, and by Mr. Ross have all +within the last two years penetrated from the eastern colonies to within +the boundary of our unexplored territory, but, beyond a certain extension +of geographical knowledge, without effecting any material results. + +<p>15. Under the head of Survey and Lands Department, it will be proper to +glance at the alterations in the Land and Mineral Regulations, which have +offered increased inducements and facilities for cultivation and +occupation, and which have considerably promoted mining enterprise. Gold +Mining Regulations have been also prepared and are ready for issue, +should occasion, as is likely, render them requisite. I willingly +acknowledge the assistance I have received from Mr. M. Fraser, the +Surveyor-General and Commissioner of Crown Lands, who has had much +experience in New Zealand, for the services he has rendered in all these +matters. + +<p>16. The mineral riches of this colony are very great. I have never +doubted but that they would ultimately become a main source of its +advancement. All the different kinds of auriferous quartz known in other +colonies are found abundantly in various parts of this--the question of +payable gold is, as I have long since reported, simply a question of +time. After many efforts, I at last, in 1873, obtained a vote for +prospecting, and the results are most promising, the fact of the +existence of rich auriferous quartz being now established. We shall +immediately be in a position to crush specimen consignments of quartz by +a Government steam-crusher, and I doubt not but that, if followed up, the +results will be most important. But gold is not the only nor perhaps the +most important of the minerals possessed by West Australia. The colony is +extraordinarily rich in lead, silver, copper, iron, plumbago, and many +other minerals are found in various localities, and indications of coal +and petroleum are not wanting--what IS wanting, is energy and enterprise +to develop these riches, and that energy and enterprise is being +attracted chiefly from Victoria, first by means of concessions that I was +enabled to make, and now by the reports of the new comers to their +friends. I made a small concession to a smelting company: and another, +and also an iron mining company, is in the field. + +<p>17. When on my arrival I turned around me to see what was to be looked +for to supply the place of Imperial expenditure, only second to our +minerals, our forests attracted my attention. They could not fail to do +so, because just before I came there was an outcry for the development of +this industry by Government aid. With Lord Granville's assent I made +liberal concessions, and thereby induced a pioneer company, shortly +followed by others from Victoria, to embark capital in the enterprise. +The public ardour here had, however, cooled, and an ignorant cry was +raised against foreigners, and the prospects of the trade were +systematically decried. Several causes besides this militated against it, +but it is surmounting them, and at the present moment not only are the +companies largely employing labour and expending money, but their own +success is becoming an established fact, and the export is enormously +increasing, and with good management must continue to increase +indefinitely. Whilst on this subject I may allude to the question of the +preservation of our forests, but as I am treating it more fully in a +separate despatch I will only say that this and the kindred question of +planting ought, at no distant period, to occupy the attention of our +Legislature. + +<p>18. The pearl shell and pearl fishery may be said to have sprung into +existence within the last few years. It employs a fleet of cutters and +schooners, chiefly of small size, on the north-west coast, Port Cossack +being the head-quarters. At Sharks Bay also there are a number of smaller +boats. A licence fee on boats and a tax on shells has been imposed by the +Legislature; laws for the protection of aboriginal divers and Malays have +been enacted. I shall immediately have a Government cutter on the +north-west coast for police and customs purposes, which will also be +useful in cases of shipwreck amongst the islands and inlets, and in +searching for and reporting the position of reefs, of anchorages, and of +new banks of pearl oysters. It will probably hereafter become advisable +to let areas for pearling under certain regulations as in Ceylon, but +this could not well be done with our present means and knowledge. + +<p>19. To turn now to the more settled industries, first in importance is +that of agriculture. It is chiefly in the hands of men of little capital, +and is carried on in a very slovenly way by the greater part of them. Bad +seasons, an over-great reliance on cereals, which have for several +successive years been seriously affected by the red rust, and a neglect +of other products suitable to the soil and climate, added in too many +cases to careless and intemperate habits, have until lately rendered the +position of many of the small farmers a very precarious one. Last year, +however, was more favourable, and they to a great extent recovered +themselves. The lesson of the past has not been altogether lost; they +have also been much assisted by the new Land Regulations, and a few +prosperous seasons will, I sincerely trust, put this class, which ought +to be a mainstay of the colony, into a really prosperous condition. + +<p>20. The cultivation of the vine is a profitable pursuit, and the quantity +of land fitted for that purpose is very great; both soil and climate are +eminently favourable to the growth of the grape. Recent legislation has +given some encouragement to wine-growers by facilitating the sale of +home-grown pure wine. The quantity of land laid down in vineyards is +slightly increased, but the class of settlers that are most numerous in +Western Australia do not readily take to industries that are new to them, +however profitable they may be, nor can they afford to wait for returns, +nor have many of them the knowledge necessary to make good wine: still +this industry will become one of the most important in the colony. + +<p>21. The pastoral interest is the pioneer interest of a new colony. +Western Australia has been somewhat less favoured than some other parts +of Australia in its pastoral lands, but it has, nevertheless, a good deal +of very good pastoral country, and under the extremely liberal +concessions lately offered to those who will devote capital to the +eradication of poison plants much more may be made available, whilst +fresh country is being largely occupied inland. + +<p>The progress, however, of the pastoral interest, considering the age of +the colony, though latterly great, is not SO great as might have been +expected; the comparatively good prices obtainable and anticipated for +meat have kept down the increase of stock, and consequently the yield of +wool; and as yet very little or nothing has been done to supplement +natural resources by growing artificial grasses and fodder plants. No +country presents greater capabilities for horse breeding, and cattle do +exceeding well and are very profitable. + +<p>22. The sandal-wood trade is in a flourishing condition, and has brought +money into the colony, and enabled many of the poorer classes to obtain a +livelihood by cutting that aromatic wood for export. It is, however, +doubted by some whether the labour employed in this trade does not +withdraw many from more steady and permanently useful labour on their +farms and small holdings. + +<p>23. In the matter of minor industries, sericulture holds a first rank. I +look to it in the future as a source of employment for paupers on the +hands of the Government, and also for women and children. I have taken +much interest in this pursuit, and have caused a mulberry plantation to +be made and plants distributed, and have published much information on +the subject. The Report of the Chamber of Commerce of Como (Italy), +alluded to in my despatch, Number 61, of 20th May, 1873, conclusively +shows that this colony is remarkably well adapted for the cultivation of +silk. The cultivation of the olive and the castor-oil plant are +industries for which this soil and climate are extraordinarily well +adapted. Tobacco, hops, and dried and preserved fruits might largely add +to the riches of the colony. In great part at my own expense, I have +introduced and distributed hop plants and various kinds of fruits of +great utility, and have, in fact, in the absence of any botanic garden +(in which I have vainly endeavoured to get the settlers to take an active +interest), made my own garden a kind of nursery for acclimatization and +distribution of useful and ornamental plants, and I have also given a +small concession for the cultivation of the cocoa-nut on the north-west +coast, where, in the absence of vegetables, it would be invaluable. And, +thanks to the Government of the Mauritius, I have been able to introduce +various kinds of sugar-cane, for which part of this territory is well +adapted. The growth of coffee has been also attempted on a Government +plantation, but without success. Cotton had already been proved to thrive +admirably, and to be excellent in quality, but is not considered likely +to pay without cheap labour. I may here note that, with an eye to the +future, I have made reserves for the purposes of public parks and +recreation grounds in several places. + +<p>Deer, Angora goats, hares, and trout have been also introduced. + +<p>24. I will now proceed to another branch of my subject--public works and +undertakings; and first in the category of public works and undertakings +I put those which relate to communications, and under that subdivision +immeasurably the most important are such means of communication as, by +terminating the isolation which has been the great bar to the advancement +of this colony, may make it a living part of the system of life and +progress which has been growing and prospering around it. + +<p>On this end was my mind set when I was appointed to the Governorship, to +this end have I worked steadily ever since, and this end is partially +accomplished, and its complete fulfilment is not distant. + +<p>The vote for the construction of the telegraph line via Eucla to South +Australia, passed last session, and the proposal of Messrs. Siemens +Brothers regarding a submarine cable to Madras, fitly close an +administration which found Western Australia within twelve miles, and has +already placed her in possession of a complete telegraphic system, +consisting of about nine hundred miles of wire, worked at a remarkably +small cost, in efficient order, already remunerative, and affording the +greatest advantages both to the public service and to private business. +It is noteworthy that four or five years ago there was a strong feeling +that the construction of telegraph lines was a waste of public money, and +only a few months ago a prominent member of the Legislature publicly +objected to the line which is to connect this colony with the rest of the +world, that it would only benefit a few individuals! Such ideas, however, +are rapidly becoming obsolete even in Western Australia. + +<p>I will here note that, under a power given me by law to fix and alter +rates, I, in January, 1873, reduced the charges to a uniform rate of one +shilling per ten words, and one penny for each additional word (press +messages at quarter price), and was the first to do so in the Australian +colonies. + +<p>25. After much and persistent opposition, the Legislature was at length +induced to vote a subsidy for steam on the coast, connecting our western +ports and all this part of the colony with Albany, King George's Sound, +the port of call of the Royal mail steamers from Europe and the eastern +colonies. This has done much to throw open this colony, rendering access +to it no longer difficult and uncertain, and greatly facilitating +intercommunication. A very Chinese objection to steam communication has +been publicly made by the same gentleman to whose opinion on telegraphic +communication I have already alluded; namely, that it enabled people to +LEAVE the colony. I am, on the contrary, of opinion that it is certainly +conducing to progress and the promotion of commerce. + +<p>The steamer we have at present is, however, insufficient, but I doubt not +but that a second and more powerful boat will shortly be procured, as it +is already required: I understand, however, that no West Australian +capital is as yet forthcoming for the purpose, nor for steam +communication with India, than which nothing could be more important, as +it would render available the magnificent geographical position of the +colony, and open a market close at hand for its products. I have long ago +and frequently stated my willingness to give all possible Government +support to such an undertaking. + +<p>26. I am immediately about, by invitation, to proceed to Champion Bay, +and to cut the first sod of the first West Australian railway, on the +Geraldton and Northampton line. I have already fully indicated the +advantage that there is good reason to anticipate will result from the +opening of that line, which will, I do not hesitate to say, be the parent +of future and greater undertakings. + +<p>When the colony arrives at a position safely to borrow a million or a +million and a quarter, a railway from Fremantle and Perth, probably up +the Helena valley, into the York district, and thence down the country +eastward of the present Sound road, to the fine harbour of King George's +Sound, would do more than anything else to give an outlet to the +resources of the country and supply its wants; such a line would +ultimately be extended through the eastern districts and Victoria plains +northward to the Irwin, Greenough, and Geraldton. + +<p>But I will recall myself from these and other speculations of the yet +more distant future, and look back upon the modest past. Two tramways +with locomotives now bring timber to the coast from the Jarrah forests, +and there are also two other tramways for the same purpose, of less +extent, but still of some importance. I have made concessions to the +companies constructing them. + +<p>27. With regard to ordinary roads, I can very confidently say that, +considering the extent of the country and its scattered population, no +colony that I have ever seen is in a better position regarding roads. +Occasionally, owing to the loss of convict labour, the scarcity of free +labour, the disinclination of the people to tax themselves locally, and +the great extent of the roads themselves, parts of the roads already made +fall out of repair whilst other parts are being formed; but on the whole, +having perhaps traversed more of Western Australia than any one man in +the colony, I very confidently assert that, taking all in all throughout +the country, the roads are in a better condition than they have ever been +before. Large bridges have been constructed over the Upper Swan, Moore +River, Blackwood, Capel, and Preston, besides twelve smaller bridges, and +a large one completed at the Upper Canning. + +<p>28. Bushing the Geraldton sand-hills has been a very useful and +successful work; the experiment was first tried by Lieutenant-Colonel +Bruce. Part of the work has been done by convict labour, and part by +farmers and settlers in payment for a loan advanced to them for +seed-wheat before my arrival. It is not too much to say that this work +has saved the town of Geraldton and its harbour from destruction by sand. + +<p>29. A little has been done in the way of improving the Swan River +navigation by means of a dredge imported by Governor Hampton, and worked +by prison labour and by an appropriation in the Loan Act of 1872. A work +has also been constructed, from funds provided out of the same loan, at +Mandurah, by which the entrance to the Murray River has been improved. + +<p>30. Harbour improvements have occupied much of the attention of +Government. A fine and substantial open-piled jetty at Fremantle, seven +hundred and fifty feet long, has been constructed, and answers all the +purposes for which it was designed; but the larger and extremely +difficult question of the construction of a really safe harbour at or +near Fremantle is yet undecided. Various plans have been proposed, and +great pressure has been put on the Government to commence works hastily +and without engineering advice. At one time one scheme has found favour, +and another at another, and the merits of the rival schemes of our +amateurs have been popularly judged upon the principle of opposing most +strongly anything that was supposed to find favour with the Government. +Last session a strong wish to do SOMETHING caused the Legislature to +advocate a scheme which many persons think would cause the mouth of the +River Swan to silt up, and expose the town of Fremantle to danger, lest +the river in flood should burst out (as no doubt it did formerly) into +the South Bay over the town site. The question, however, is referred to +the Victorian Government engineer, and the Melbourne Government have been +asked to allow him to visit this colony, but I fear that the people will +not accept his decision; and unless the members of the new Legislature +will agree to do so, or, in the event of his not coming, do what I have +long since recommended, namely, ask your Lordship to refer the whole +question to the decision of Sir John Coode, or some other great +authority, and undertake beforehand to abide by it, I see no chance of +anything being carried into effect until the warmth and personal feeling +which, strangely enough, is always evoked by this question, shall be +succeeded by a more reasonable and business-like mood. One of my first +acts on reaching this colony was, in accordance with the previously +expressed wish of the Council and colonists, to send for an engineer of +high repute to report. His report only raised a tempest of objurgations, +and I must frankly confess failure in my efforts to leave Fremantle with +a harbour; and, indeed, I am far from being convinced that anything under +an enormous outlay will avail to give an anchorage and approaches, safe +in all weathers, for large ships, though I, with the Melbourne engineers, +think that the plan of cutting a ship channel into Freshwater Bay, in the +Swan River, advocated by the Reverend Charles Grenfel Nicholay, is worthy +of consideration. Jetties at Albany, King George's Sound, the Vasse, +Bunbury, and Geraldton, have been lengthened, one at Dongarra +constructed, and money has been voted for the construction of one at Port +Cossack. Moorings have been procured from England, and are being laid +down at Fremantle and other ports. + +<p>31. With respect to public buildings, the Perth Town Hall--a very large +and conspicuous building, commenced by Governor Hampton--was completed +not long after my arrival, and handed over by me to the City Council and +Municipality on June 1, 1870; attached to it I caused the Legislative +Chamber to be built, and so arranged that at no great cost this colony +possesses a council-room more convenient and in better taste than many I +have seen of far greater pretensions. It is, however, proposed hereafter +to build legislative chambers in the new block of Government buildings, +of which the Registration Offices now about to be commenced will form a +wing, for which the contract is 2,502 pounds. The public offices at +Albany were finished shortly after my arrival. I may mention, among a +number of less important buildings, the harbour-master's house, Albany; +school-houses there and in various other places; large addition to +Government Boys' School, Fremantle; court-house and police-station, and +post and telegraphic offices at Greenough and at Dongarra; +police-station, Gingin; addition to court-house, York; post and +telegraphic offices at Guildford, York; and Northam Bonded Store, +Government offices, and police-station, Roebourne. Considerable additions +have been made, which add to the convenience and capabilities of the +Fremantle Lunatic Asylum, and alterations and adaptations and additions +have been made to several other buildings; for instance, at Albany a +resident magistrate's house and also a convenient prison have been formed +at no great outlay. At Perth a building has been erected to which I call +attention, the Government printing-house; this new department has been of +immense service during the four years in which it has been in +existence--in fact, it would have been impossible to have gone on without +it; and the Government printing work is most creditably done at a very +reasonable cost. A handsome stone sea-wall has been commenced by convict +labour at the new jetty at Fremantle, which will reclaim much valuable +land, and greatly improve the appearance of the place. Harbour lights +have been erected at several places. A large lighthouse is in the course +of erection at Point Moore, at Geraldton, which will be of much +importance; and it is proposed, with the co-operation of other colonies, +to erect one near Cape Leeuwin, as recommended at an +intercolonial conference on that subject. + +<p>32. Postal facilities have been increased, several new offices opened, +and postages (under powers vested in me by law) considerably reduced, on +both letters to the colonies and newspapers, from the tariff I found in +force. In this a step in advance of some of our neighbours was taken. + +<p>33. I have reduced several police-stations on the recommendation of +Captain Smith, the superintendent, which appeared to be no longer +necessary; but, on the other hand, I have extended police protection into +outlying districts, both for the benefit of European settlers and of the +aboriginal inhabitants. These latter have gained little and lost much by +the occupation of their country by settlement. I have fought their battle +against cruel wrong and oppression, holding, I trust, the hand of justice +with an even balance, and I rejoice to say not without effect and benefit +to both races. Their services as stockmen, shepherds, and pearlers are +invaluable; and when they die out, as shortly no doubt they will, their +disappearance will be universally acknowledged as a great loss to the +colonists. + +<p>34. The Legislature, I am happy to say, have latterly seconded my efforts +by encouraging industrial institutions for their benefit. Similarly they +have in the last session turned their attention to the condition of the +destitute and criminal children of our own race; and, in my own sphere, I +have done what was possible for the encouragement of the (denominational) +orphanages which have been long established and are in full working +order. This colony is, for its size and means, well supplied with +hospitals, asylums, and establishments for paupers, in which I have taken +great personal interest. + +<p>35. In legislation I have endeavoured to avoid over-legislation and +premature legislation. I have considered that free-trade principles are +especially in place in a colony situated as this is. The ad valorem duty, +and that on wines, spirits, and a few other articles, has been raised for +revenue purposes; some others have been put on the free list. I +successfully resisted the imposition of a duty on flour; I should have +simplified the tariff still further than I have done, and admitted free +many more articles--some of food, others used in our industries--had the +Legislature not objected; the tariff as it stands is inconsistent. The +English bankruptcy system has been introduced, and an Act passed +regarding fraudulent debtors; distillation has been permitted under +proper safeguards; Sunday closing of public-houses has been rendered +compulsory with good effect; a Lunacy Bill on the English model has +become law; the Torrens Land Registration system has been adopted, and +will shortly be put into force. Many equally important measures are +alluded to in their places in the pages of this despatch, and I will not +inflict upon your lordship a list of many minor Acts, some not +unimportant, which have proved beneficial in their degree. + +<p>36. Among lesser but not unimportant matters, I may mention that I have +extended the system of taking security from Government officers in +receipt of public moneys. + +<p>The commencement of a law and parliamentary library has been made. + +<p>37. Immigration from England has, on a small scale, been set on foot +lately, and families are now expected from neighbouring colonies, but our +population from obvious causes has increased but slightly during the last +five years; on my arrival it was said to be actually decreasing, and +there were many reasons why such an opinion was not +unreasonable--reduction of the convict establishment threw some out of +employment, expirees also desired to quit a country which to them had +been a land of bondage, and the prospects of the country were gloomy; now +there is a great want of labour, any that comes is at once absorbed, and +every effort should be made to attract a constant stream of immigrants. + +<p>38. It will be observed that when the whole authorized loan is raised, +the colony will be only in debt to the extent of a little over one year's +income, or 5 pounds 16 shillings 5 1/4 pence a head, whilst Victoria is +indebted 15 pounds 14 shillings 10 3/4 pence, New South Wales 19 pounds 7 +shillings, South Australia 10 pounds 19 shillings 5 pence, Queensland 32 +pounds 12 shillings 7 3/4 pence, Tasmania 14 pounds 3 shillings 6 3/4 +pence, New Zealand 40 pounds 5 shillings 11 pence. I beg also to call +your lordship's attention to the fact that Western Australia has only yet +spent the 35,000 pound loan, and has now only begun to spend that of +100,000 pounds. I also would point out that the last annual increase of +revenue has about equalled the whole capital amount which has been +expended out of loans. + +<p>39. I have caused the following statistics to be furnished me from the +Treasury and Customs Departments for six years, ending on the 30th +September of each year. The first year given, that ending on the 30th +September, 1869, is the year immediately preceding my arrival, I having +been sworn in on that very day.</p> + +<h5>TREASURY AND CUSTOMS DEPARTMENTS STATISTICS FOR SIX YEARS TO 1874 IN +POUNDS/SHILLINGS/PENCE.</h5> + +<center> +<p><img alt="" src="forrest-table3.jpg"></p> +</center> + +<p>On the 30th September, 1874, there was a sum of 36,616 pounds 3 shillings +5 pence in the chest, and something like this sum will be at the disposal +of the Legislature at their meeting, beyond current revenue. + +<p>40. I need hardly say that the commercial state of the colony is +admittedly sound, and I am informed in a more prosperous condition than +at any previous period of its existence. Landed property, especially +about Perth, has lately risen immensely in value, and the rise is, I +hope, spreading and will reach the outlying districts. Perth has lost its +dilapidated appearance, and neat cottages and houses are springing up in +all directions, and the same progress to some extent is noticeable in +Fremantle and elsewhere. + +<p>41. I will not conclude this Report without recalling the success which +attended the efforts made by the Government, to which my private +secretary Mr. Henry Weld Blundell largely contributed, to represent the +products of Western Australia at the Sydney Exhibition of 1873. Much of +this success was attributable to the exertions of Mr. F.P. Barlee, +Colonial Secretary, then representing at Sydney this colony in the +intercolonial conference. + +<p>In that conference, the first to which a representative of this colony +was admitted, and which therefore marked an epoch in its political +existence, Mr. F.P. Barlee took a prominent part, ably upheld the trust I +placed in him, and received a most marked and cordial reception from our +colonists on his return. + +<p>41. I have further to express my obligations to that officer for the +assistance he has ever given me; were it not for his fearless and loyal +support, for the confidence which is placed in him by the very great +majority of the colonists, and for his fidelity in following my +instructions and carrying out my policy, it would have been impossible +for me, under a form of government most difficult to work, to have +carried to a successful issue the trust that has been imposed upon me, +and to have left this colony prosperous and self-reliant. + +<p>42. Should your lordship, considering the position in which I found +Western Australia--the reduction of imperial expenditure it has been my +duty to effect, the failure of the wheat crop for four successive seasons +and consequent depression, the inexperience of a new Legislature, the +absence of any propositions for the benefit of the colony from the +opposition, the obstacles thrown at first in the way of all measures +which have eventuated in good--should you, considering these things and +the present state of the colony, be of opinion that the administration of +its affairs during the last five years has not been unsatisfactory or +unfruitful, I beg that you will award a due share of credit to the +Colonial Secretary, who, as my mouthpiece in the Legislature, has carried +on single-handed all parliamentary business, and also to those gentlemen +who are now, or have at various times been, members of my executive, and +who have ever united to support me; to the nominated members of the +Legislature who have steadily voted for all the measures which have led +to the present progress of the colony, and whose merits the +constituencies have fully recognized by electing them as representatives +on vacancies in every case where they have stood; to the elected members, +who every session have given me increased support, and who, forming +two-thirds of the Legislature, had it in their power entirely to have +reversed my policy; and lastly, to the people of Western Australia, who +on each election have increased my strength, on whose ultimate good +sense, I--knowing colonists, myself an old colonist--put my reliance, a +reliance which has not been disappointed. + +<p>I have, etc., + +<p>(Signed) FRED. A. WELD, + +<p>Governor. + +<p>The Earl of Carnarvon, + +<p>etc. etc. etc. + +<hr align="center" width="30%"> + +<h5>STATISTICS IN POUNDS/SHILLINGS/PENCE.</h5> + +<center> +<p><img alt="" src="forrest-table4.jpg"></p> +</center> + +<center> +<p><img alt="" src="forrest-table5.jpg"></p> +</center> + +<center> +<p><img alt="" src="forrest-table6.jpg"></p> +</center> + + +<h4>THE END.</h4> + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Explorations in Australia, by John Forrest + +*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EXPLORATIONS IN AUSTRALIA *** + +This file should be named exaus10h.htm or exaus10h.zip +Corrected EDITIONS of our eBooks get a new NUMBER, exaus11h.htm +VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, exaus10ah.htm + +Produced by Sue Asscher and Col Choat + +Project Gutenberg eBooks are often created from several printed +editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the US +unless a copyright notice is included. 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