| The journeys of Friedrich Wilhelm Ludwig Leichhardt have
captured the imagination of many, both in his own time and in the century
and a half since he began his expeditions through Queensland.
Born in Trebatsch, Prussia, in 1813, the enthusiastic young Ludwig was
student at the Universities of Berlin, Göttingen and institutions
in London and Paris from 1832 until he left Europe in a desperate bid to
find a fresh field for his research, put his skills to good use and make
a name for himself.
Initially a linguist, he transferred his studies to the Faculty of Medicine,
not to graduate a medical practitioner, but because the natural sciences,
which had become his consuming passion, were taught only in that faculty.
The dedication and propaganda of John Dunmore Lang about the great potential
of New Holland, led Leichhardt to believe that it could not fail to become
'... a true home of the arts and sciences.'
So the well qualified and ambitious young man departed for Sydney in
October 1841. Disappointed in his various efforts to gain employment in
NSW, he occupied himself with collecting and data gathering journeys.
From Port Stephens, he travelled via the Gwydir to the Darling Downs
and Brisbane, notebooks packed with topographical, geological and botanical
information, notes on fishes, Aboriginal customs, settler's customs, social
attitudes of convicts and emancipists, wage rates, cartage cost, the design
of yards and shearing sheds and the value of different breeds of working
dogs. Everything was grist to collector Leichhardt's mill.
When the NSW Government decided that the establishment of an overland
route between settled parts of NSW and Port Essington would advantage the
colony by opening a direct line of communication with the islands of the
eastern Archipelago, India and other parts of Asia, Leichhardt was anxious
to take part.
The Governor, short of funds, had referred the matter to London as a
stalling tactic and was reluctant to allow the expedition to proceed. But
the public, smarting from recession, was anxious to support any possibility
of relief, however remote. Public pressure and a newspaper campaign, mentioning
Leichhardt by name as the ideal leader, won the day.
Contributions came in both in money and in kind. The Leichhardt Expedition
to Port Essington was launched and Dr Leichhardt was to lead it.
Without Government funding the party was lightly manned, provisioned
and equipped when it left Sydney for Brisbane in August 1844.
Six men, including the leader; a single wheeled vehicle, for use only
to the Condamine; thirteen horses; fifteen hundred pounds of dried provisions;
travelling stock and Leichhardt's experience in living off the land. Four
other members joined the expedition in Brisbane, but two were obliged to
return to Brisbane from the Dawson area.
From the Dawson River, close to where Taroom now stands, Leichhardt
headed north to the Valley of Lagoons on the headwaters of the Burdekin,
then along the Lynd River to the Mitchell.
On June 28, 1845 in a sudden night attack close to the Mitchell River,
which Leichhardt had named for the Surveyor General of NSW, warriors of
the tribe in whose territory they were, killed Gilbert and wounded two
others. Gilbert was a naturalist, who had joined the party in Brisbane.
On July 5, the expedition caught the first sight of the Gulf and from
that point took a month to reach the Albert somewhere about the junction
with Beames Brook.
Of the area which Captain Stokes had called the Plains of Promise, Leichhardt
wrote '...Should a harbour be found at the head of the Gulf of Carpentaria,
which might allow ships to approach and moor in safety, it would not only
open this fine country to colonisation, but would allow the produce of
the high land of the York Peninsula to be brought down to the Gulf of Carpentaria
as well as to the east coast. Cattle and horses could be easily driven
from coast to coast, and they would even fatten, as water and feed are
everywhere abundant .'
They had crossed the Gulf Savannah from east to west and arrived at
Port Essington on December 17,1845, after a marathon journey of 3,000 miles
and with one bullock of their mobile meat supply still walking.
For very sound reasons, Leichhardt chose to distinguish the names of
his supporters and expeditioners by applying them to the noteworthy features
he recorded. He took little heed of the niceties of colonial society in
doing this.
Mr Walter Beames, the well known Sydney grocer who had assisted with
provisioning, is remembered in the Brook; Mr Robey, who provided ironwork,
in the range of that name. The two Aboriginal party members, Sir Thomas
Mitchell, the Archer Bros, Captain Lynd, squatters, a ticket-of-leave man,
emancipists - those who had helped, had their remembrance, and some of
the more important disliked the company of ex-convicts even on a map.
This caused something of a furore at the time, much enjoyed by the newspapers,
for a number of notables who thought places should have been named for
them had their noses out of joint.
Leichhardt certainly made the name he wished for with this tremendous
achievement, but he lost his life while pursuing his next objective, crossing
the continent from Brisbane to Perth. The fate of this expedition remains
a mystery, and is surrounded by rumour and speculation still.
More information on Ludwig Leichardt at leichhardt.sub.uni-goettingen.de,
Goettingen
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