Yes.
Gregory Blaxland and William Lawson were both born and educated in England. Blaxland attended The King's School, Canterbury, while Lawson was known to have been educated in London.
William Wentworth, despite being the son of a convict woman, received a good education, being sent back to England to attend school, firstly in Bletchley, then later the Greenwich school of Dr Alexander Crombie.
* In 1813, Evans followed the route of Blaxland, Lawson and Wentworth who had crossed the Blue Mountains of New South Wales. He left Sydney with five men on 19 November 1813, and soon reached a mountain which he named Mt Blaxland, which was the end-point of Blaxland, Lawson & Wentworth's explorations. He then headed southward into hilly country, and found a waterway which he called the Fish River, being full of fish. Following the Fish River west to its junction with the Campbell River on 6 December 1813, he named the large river formed by the union of the two smaller streams the Macquarie River, after Governor Macquarie. The plains surrounding the river were rich with lush vegetation, indicating fertile soil, and he named them the Macquarie Plains. finding rich farming land in the Hartley Vale region, and later finding the Macquarie River. * In 1817, Oxley and Evans attempted to follow the flooded Lachlan River. * In 1818, Evan was Oxley's second-in-command on the journey to trace the Macquarie. Oxley was slowed by impassable marshes and, while trying to find a way around them, he sent Evans to the north-east. Ten days later, Evans returned to report that on 12 July 1818, he had found another river and better pasture country. Evans named the river the Castlereagh after Lord Castlereagh, Secretary for the Colonies.
he did not go to school.
where did he go to school
Joan of Arc did not go to school because in 15th Century Europe Peasent Women did not go to school.
he did not go to school because he was a slave.
i aint know this
Blaxland approached lawson and wentworth to go on the expedition with him because they were both graziers who needed new land. The purpose of the expedition was to find new land to suit the needs of the growing colony.
They needed to go over the blue mountains
Blaxland High School
Blaxland High School
Blaxland High School
William Wentworth did not discover the Blue Mountains. These mountains were known from the time of the first European settlement in Australia, and had prevented Sydney from expanding as a colony, because they could not be crossed. William Wentworth was one of the first men to successfully cross the Blue Mountains. He explored with Gregory Blaxland and William Lawson in May 1813. The three men and the convicts who assisted them achieved the crossing by following the ridges over the tops of the mountains.
lord lawson
Wentworth Primary School in Dartford, Kent. Source Wikipedia
Craig Wentworth goes by Happy.
Edward Wentworth goes by Eddie.
Donne Lawson goes by Donne Lawson.