Dampier initially stumbled across "New Holland" as part of his journeys as a pirate.
In January 1688, his ship the 'Cygnet' was beached on the northwest coast of Australia, at King Sound near Buccaneer Archipelago on the north-west coast of Australia. While the ship was being repaired Dampier made notes on the fauna and flora he found there. He was unimpressed by the dry, barren landscape, the lack of water and what he described as the "miserablest people in the world" - the native population.
Eleven years later, Dampier was back, after the British Admiralty commissioned him to chart the north-west coast, hoping to find a strategic use for 'New Holland. The expedition set out on 14 January 1699. In July, Dampier reached Dirk Hartog Island near Shark Bay in Western Australia. Searching for water, he followed the coast northwards, reaching the Dampier Archipelago and then Roebuck Bay. After finding no sign of water, he was forced to head north for Timor.
Dampier's negative reports on New Holland delayed British colonisation of the continent for many years, until Cook found the verdant eastern coast.
Willem Janszoon was an employee of the Dutch East India Company. While he was working for them, he was told to sail to New Guinea to find new economic opportunities. When he sailed to what he believed to be an extension of New Guinea in the South, he actually found nowadays' Northern Queensland.
Like several other early Australian explorers, John Oxley explored the rivers of inland NSW to find out why they flowed away from the coast instead of towards the coast. Every other continent had rivers which flowed toward the coast, but Australia was different in that regard.
Forrest explored for two main reasons: to find good pastureland and to find a list explorer.
In 1869, John Forrest led the search for Ludwig Leichhardt's expedition which had gone missing while travelling across Australia from east to west. This search was unsuccessful, but it gave Forrest the chance to do what he wished, which was to explore the uncharted areas of Western Australia. In 1874, both John and his brother Alexander Forrest departed Geraldton and discovered the Weld River and the pastureland land around it.
William Charles Wentworth was a forward-thinking, progressive grazier who could see the need for more land for the growing colony of New South Wales. The colony was very quickly outgrowing the area on the eastern side of the Blue Mountains, and Wentworth evidently had the persistence to continue until he found a way through the maze of stream beds that met sheer rock cliffs, or the ridges that ended in drops of hundreds of feet below.
Captain Arthur Phillip travelled to Australia with the First Fleet to oversee the establishment of the convict colony in New South Wales. He had been appointed Governor of the colony.
Yes and no.
William Wentworth was actually born of an English convict woman, on a convict ship during the voyage of the Second Fleet, in 1790.
John Forrest explored for several reasons. In 1869, Forrest led the search for Ludwig Leichhardt's expedition which had gone missing while travelling across Australia from east to west. This search was unsuccessful, but it gave Forrest the chance to do what he wished, which was to explore the uncharted areas of Western Australia. In 1870, Forrest surveyed the route which Edward Eyre had taken in 1840-41 from Adelaide to Albany, across the Great Australian Bight. As the main route from eastern Australia overland to the west, he realised it needed to be surveyed so a road could be built, and later a railway.
John Forrest spent most of his childhood in Bunbury,Western Australia.
John Forrest was born on 22 August 1847, at Preston Pointnear Bunbury in Western Australia
Yes. John Forrest was an Australian explorer from Western Australia. He also became the first Premier of Western Australia. In 1869, Forrest led the search for Ludwig Leichhardt's expedition which had gone missing while travelling across Australia from east to west. This search was unsuccessful, but it gave Forrest the chance to do what he wished, which was to explore the uncharted areas of Western Australia. In 1870, Forrest surveyed the route which Edward Eyre had taken in 1840-41 from Adelaide to Albany, across the Great Australian Bight. As the main route from eastern Australia overland to the west, he realised it needed to be surveyed so a road could be built, and later a railway.
John Forrest was never a convict. He was born of free settler parents in Western Australia, so he was always free.
John Forrest came to Australia on a day which was ...
John Forrest made two major expeditions. His first was in 1869, when Forrest led the search for Ludwig Leichhardt's expedition which had gone missing while travelling across Australia from east to west. This search was unsuccessful, but it gave Forrest the chance to do what he wished, which was to explore the uncharted areas of Western Australia.
John Forrest explored for several reasons. In 1869, Forrest led the search for Ludwig Leichhardt's expedition which had gone missing while travelling across Australia from east to west. This search was unsuccessful, but it gave Forrest the chance to do what he wished, which was to explore the uncharted areas of Western Australia. In 1870, Forrest surveyed the route which Edward Eyre had taken in 1840-41 from Adelaide to Albany, across the Great Australian Bight. As the main route from eastern Australia overland to the west, he realised it needed to be surveyed so a road could be built, and later a railway.
John Forrest was appointed first Premier of Western Australia on 22 December 1890.
There are several schools named after Sir John Forrest, who was an important Australian explorer and politician. Some of these include Sir John Forrest Secondary College in Perth, Western Australia, Sir John Forrest High School in Morley, Western Australia, and Sir John Forrest Primary School in Baldivis, Western Australia.
John Forrest was an Australian explorer from Western Australia. He also became the first Premier of Western Australia. In 1869, Forrest led the search for Ludwig Leichhardt's expedition which had gone missing while travelling across Australia from east to west. This search was unsuccessful, but it gave Forrest the chance to do what he wished, which was to explore the uncharted areas of Western Australia. In 1870, Forrest surveyed the route which Edward Eyre had taken in 1840-41 from Adelaide to Albany, across the Great Australian Bight. As the main route from eastern Australia overland to the west, he realised it needed to be surveyed so a road could be built, and later a railway.
John Forrest spent most of his childhood in Bunbury,Western Australia.
John Forrest didn't discover Australia. (Nor did Captain Cook, a commonly believed myth.) John Forrest was an Australian explorer from Western Australia. He also became the first Premier of Western Australia. For details on who actually discovered Australia, see the related question.
John Forrest was born on 22 August 1847, at Preston Pointnear Bunbury in Western Australia
John Forrest was an Australian explorer from Western Australia. He also became the first Premier of Western Australia. In 1869, Forrest led the search for Ludwig Leichhardt's expedition which had gone missing while travelling across Australia from east to west. This search was unsuccessful, but it gave Forrest the chance to do what he wished, which was to explore the uncharted areas of Western Australia. In 1870, Forrest surveyed the route which Edward Eyre had taken in 1840-41 from Adelaide to Albany, across the Great Australian Bight. As the main route from eastern Australia overland to the west, he realised it needed to be surveyed so a road could be built, and later a railway.
Yes. John Forrest was an Australian explorer from Western Australia. He also became the first Premier of Western Australia. In 1869, Forrest led the search for Ludwig Leichhardt's expedition which had gone missing while travelling across Australia from east to west. This search was unsuccessful, but it gave Forrest the chance to do what he wished, which was to explore the uncharted areas of Western Australia. In 1870, Forrest surveyed the route which Edward Eyre had taken in 1840-41 from Adelaide to Albany, across the Great Australian Bight. As the main route from eastern Australia overland to the west, he realised it needed to be surveyed so a road could be built, and later a railway.
John Forrest was an Australian explorer from Western Australia. He also became the first Premier of Western Australia. In 1869, Forrest led the search for Ludwig Leichhardt's expedition which had gone missing while travelling across Australia from east to west. This search was unsuccessful, but it gave Forrest the chance to do what he wished, which was to explore the uncharted areas of Western Australia. In 1870, Forrest surveyed the route which Edward Eyre had taken in 1840-41 from Adelaide to Albany, across the Great Australian Bight. As the main route from eastern Australia overland to the west, he realised it needed to be surveyed so a road could be built, and later a railway.