Grogory blaxland william lauson and william wenworth
By electric train.
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.
In november 1813, Gregory Blaxland, William Charles Wentworth and Lieutenant Lawson tryed to cross the Blue mountains because of the amount of farm lands, they needed more farm lands so they set of to try and get over the mountains, it was very difficult to cross the Blue Moutains in those days!
The first European settlers to cross the Blue Mountains of New South Wales were Gregory Blaxland, William Lawson and William Wentworth. Wentworth was the first Australian explorer, having been born on a convict ship on the way over from England.They achieved this in May 1813, twenty-five years after European settlement in Australia began.
The first to establish the Blue Mountains were Gregory Blaxland, William Charles and Lieutenant!
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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.
The first explorers in Australia to cross the Blue Mountains of New South Wales were Gregory Blaxland, William Lawson and William Wentworth. They achieved this in May 1813, twenty-five years after European settlement in Australia began.
The Blue Mountains were known from the time of European settlement in 1788. No single person specifically "discovered" them, but they were a hindrance to the development and expansion of Australia's first settlement, Sydney. The Blue Mountains were successfully crossed by explorers Lawson, Blaxland and Wentworth in 1813, some 25 years after the first settlement.
He was a farmer and then became an explorer when he discovered the route to cross the Blue Mountains.
Numerous explorers were sent to try to cross the Blue Mountains in an attempt to find new land for the growing colony in New South Wales. The first successful explorers were William Charles Wentworth, William Lawson and Gregory Blaxland. Others who attempted the crossing before these three were George Caley, George Bass, Francis Barrallier, William Dawes and Watkin Tench, just to name a few.
Well it is called Blue Mountain because the first person to see it (upclose) he/she found it to be rather blueish therefore they called it Blue Mountain and told friends and they told their friends and so on