I donno!
Gregory Blaxland explored the Blue Mountains in 1813.
Yes. It was on the expedition of Blaxland, Wentworth and Lawson that Mt Blaxland was discovered and named.
Blaxland is named after Gregory Blaxland, an early Australian explorer and one of the first to cross the Blue Mountains in 1813. The area was originally part of a larger land grant given to him for his contributions to exploration. The name reflects the region's historical significance in the expansion of settlement in New South Wales.
Gregory Blaxland was a grazier who, like many other graziers in the colony of New South Wales, needed more land. The colony was quickly outgrowing the land available, but it was believed that good land lay on the other side of the Blue Mountains. Therefore, Blaxland, along with William Lawson and William Wentworth, sought to find a route across the Blue Mountains, something that had been attempted by many men before, but always unsuccessfully.
John Blaxland died in 1845.
John Blaxland was born in 1769.
Division of Blaxland was created in 1949.
Helen Blaxland was born in 1907.
Helen Blaxland died in 1989.
Explorer Gregory Blaxland was honoured by these places being named after him: * the town of Blaxland in the Blue Mountains * Mount Blaxland and later: * the Australian Electoral Division of Blaxland * Blaxland, a small Queensland railway siding on the Darling Downs, between Oakey and Dalby
The Wentworth Falls and Blaxland areas in the Blue Mountains of New South Wales, Australia, are named after explorers William Wentworth and Gregory Blaxland. They were among the first Europeans to cross the Blue Mountains in 1813, facilitating access to the interior of New South Wales. Their journey was significant in opening up the region for settlement and development.
William Lawson explored the Blue Mountains largely due to the influence of Gregory Blaxland. Blaxland was a wealthy grazier who had come to Australia in 1806. He stood to gain much by finding a route to new grasslands. Blaxland approached Governor Macquarie about funding an expedition to cross the Blue Mountains. Blaxland took along two other men: William Lawson, who was also a landholder, and magistrate with surveying experience; and William Wentworth, the first Australian-born explorer.