The Hon. David Wynford Carnegie (23 March 1871 –
27 November 1900) was an explorer and gold prospector in
Western Australia. In 1896 he led an expedition from
Coolgardie through the Gibson and
Great Sandy Deserts to Halls
Creek, and then back again.
David Carnegie was born in London on 23 March
1871, the youngest child of the ninth Earl of Southesk.
He was educated at Charterhouse in Godalming,
Surrey but dropped out without graduating, and was thereafter educated by a private tutor. He
later entered the Royal Indian Engineering College, but again dropped
out without completing the course. In 1892, he travelled to Ceylon to work on a tea plantation. Finding it boring, he quit after a few weeks,
and set sail for Australia with his friend Lord Percy
Douglas.
On arriving in Albany, Western Australia in September 1892, Carnegie and Douglas learned of Arthur Bayley's discovery of gold at Coolgardie, and immediately decided to leave the
ship and join the gold rush. Together, they prospected around Coolgardie for a number of
months, with little success. Eventually, Douglas left the field to raise finances in order for them to continue prospecting.
Carnegie continued prospecting, joining the rush to Kalgoorlie after
Paddy Hannan's discovery of gold there. He had little success, and by the middle of
1893 he was destitute. Unable to make a living as a prospector, he took a job at the Bayley's
Reward mine in Coolgardie.
Late in 1893, Douglas was appointed a director of a new mining exploration company, thus
securing finances for Carnegie's prospecting. In March 1894, Carnegie commenced his first
prospecting expedition, in the company of a prospector and camel handler named Gus Luck. The pair initially explored the Hampton Plains immediately east of
Kalgoorlie, but finding it extremely dry, they travelled instead to the Queen Victoria Springs, about 250 km (150 miles) east of Kalgoorlie. From there they travelled north through
unknown country to Mount Shenton, about 100 km (60 mi) north east of the present-day town of Laverton. After prospecting around Mount Margaret and Mount Ida, they returned to
Coolgardie, having been away for ninety days and having travelled about 1350 km (850 mi). They had found little evidence of gold,
and nothing worth claiming a lease on.
In November 1893, Carnegie set out on his second prospecting expedition, this time in the
company of two prospectors: an American named Jim Conley and an Irish-Victorian named Paddy Egan. The party initially travelled
north, but hearing rumours of promising country near Lake Roe, they turned to the south east. After meeting no success around
Lake Roe, they returned to the north, again exploring around Mount Margaret and Mount Ida. Early in February, after failing to
locate a pool at Erlistoun, the party sought water in a granite outcrop near Lake Darlot, about 60 km (40 mi) east of the
present-day town of Leinster. There, they had the good fortune to stumble upon the scene of a
rich new find, before news of the find had reached Coolgardie. Having beaten the rush, Carnegie was able to discover and lay
claim to a high quality reef. After working the reef for a period, the company sold the mine, and Carnegie received a substantial
sum.
The Carnegie Exploring Expedition
Carnegie formed a syndicate with some friends, into which he deposited his camels, then returned to England to visit his
family. Finding that his family were disappointed and embarrassed by his lack of an education and career, he returned to
Australia determined
- to prove that I am not the useless devil they have prophesied I would become1.
While he was away, his syndicate had pegged another mine, and shortly after his return it also was sold.
Carnegie invested his profits from the two mines in preparations for his major expedition; he proposed to travel almost 1600
km (1000 miles) from Coolgardie to Halls Creek. Much of the area through
which he intended to travel was unexplored and unmapped, and Carnegie hoped to find good pastoral or gold-bearing land, and to
make a name for himself as an explorer.
Carnegie's party consisted of five men and nine camels. His travelling companions were the prospectors Charles Stansmore and
Godfrey Massie, bushman Joe Breaden, and Breaden's Aboriginal companion Warri.
The party left Coolgardie on 9 July 1896. They travelled north to
Menzies, then north east. On 23 July they
entered largely unexplored country, and were immediately affected by the extreme scarcity of water. By 9 August they were desperately short of water; that day they came upon a native, who they captured and forced
to show where water was located. The supply they were led to was an underground spring in a hidden cave, which Carnegie named
Empress Spring after Queen Victoria. The party realised they could never have found this on their own. This became the pattern
for the remainder of the expedition: whenever short of water, the party tracked down and captured natives, and tried to force
them to lead the expedition to water.
Leaving the spring, the expedition continued north. Throughout August, September and October, the party passed through the
desert country of the Gibson and Great Sandy
Deserts. At first, the terrain was largely flat, and consisted almost entirely of spinifex and
sand (hence the name Spinifex and Sand for Carnegie's published account of the expedition). Later, the flatness of the
land was broken up by regular sandridges, running in an east-west direction. Since the party was travelling in a northerly
direction, they had to cross these sandridges at right angles, and this made travel even more difficult. Carnegie later wrote of
the land
- What heartbreaking country, monotonous, lifeless, without interest, without excitement save when the stern necessity of
finding water forced us to seek out the natives in their primitive camps.2
Carnegie managed to bring the party almost entirely through the desert without loss. However on November 2, with their journey nearing completion, a number of Carnegie's camels ate poisonous plants, and
three died. Four weeks later, with the party only eight miles (13 km) from the Derby–Halls Creek road, Stansmore slipped while crossing a ridge, and dropped his gun. When the
gun hit the ground, the cartridge exploded, and Stansmore was shot through the heart. He died instantly, and was buried nearby by
his companions. The remaining members of the party reached Halls Creek four days later, after a journey of 149 days and 1,413
miles (2,274 km).
On arriving at Halls Creek, the party were informed that two members of the Calvert Exploring
Expedition were missing in the desert. The Calvert expedition had taken a path roughly parallel to the Carnegie
expedition, but about 100 miles (160 km) further west. Carnegie offered to join the search for the missing men, but despite his
familiarity with the search area, he was not sent out immediately, being instead put on standby in Halls Creek. He formulated a
search plan, and purchased three horses in anticipation of joining the search, but to the party's great frustration they remained
on standby for nearly fifteen weeks. Eventually, it became obvious that the missing men must have perished, and Carnegie
retracted his offer of help.
Carnegie's expedition was originally intended to terminate at Halls Creek, but since they had found no gold-bearing or
pastoral land, the party decided to continue exploring, by returning to Coolgardie by a more easterly overland route. The party
left Halls Creek on 22 March 1897, heading east then southeast,
before eventually turning south. At first the going was easier than the trip north: water and game were easily found; the natives
they encountered were friendly; and the camels' loads had been lightened, enabling them to carry a large supply of water. Later,
the party experienced similar hardships to their northerly trip, scarcity of water being the main problem. Although they were
able to carry plenty of water with them, this advantage was largely cancelled out by the presence of horses in the party, horses
needing regular and generous watering. They arrived back in Coolgardie late in August 1897, having
again found no land of interest to prospector or pastoralist.
Shortly after the completion of his expedition, Carnegie sold his assets and sailed for England. In England, he wrote and published a book on his experiences in Western Australia, entitled Spinifex
and Sand. He also gave a brief lecture tour, and was awarded a medal by the Royal Geographic Society. However he was keen to resume exploring, and he expressed interest
in joining an expedition from Cape Town to Cairo before
eventually deciding against it. He also sought funding to lead an expedition to map the country between Lake Rudolf (now
Lake Turkana) in northern Kenya and the Nile, but was unsuccessful.
Eventually Carnegie accepted a position as Assistant Resident of the Middle Niger in the Protectorate of Nigeria. He sailed for Africa in December 1899,
and took up his job in late January 1900. In November 1900, Carnegie was sent to apprehend a fugitive named Gana. While searching
the village of Tawari in the early hours of the morning of 27 November 1900, he was shot in the thigh with a poison arrow. He died fifteen minutes later. He was just 29 years old.
Notes
- from a letter to his sister, quoted in Peasley (1995).
- from Carnegie (1898).
References
- Carnegie, David W. (1898). Spinifex and Sand. London: C. Arthur Pearson. Republished in 1989 by Hesperian Press, Victoria Park, Western
Australia. ISBN 0-85905-139-0.
- Peasley, William J. (1995). In the Hands of Providence: The Desert Journeys
of David Carnegie. Perth, Western Australia: St George Books. ISBN 0-86778-056-8.
External links
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