Lachlan Vale (NSW)
Farm belonging to
William Broughton.
Launceston (Tasmania)
Launceston was named in
1807 as the main settlement at Port
Dalrymple. The name came into general use from about 1818 and also gradually
became the name for the port instead of Port Dalrymple or the Tamar. Named after
Governor King's birthplace in Cornwall, England. Briefly known as Patersonia.
Lion's Rump, The (South Africa)
Rocky
promontory located at the approach to Table Bay, adjacent to Table Mountain;
nearby was 'Sugar Loaf Hill' or the 'Lion's Head'.
Liphook (or Lipook) (Hampshire, England)
Village located just within the Hampshire boundary from Sussex on the road from
London to Portsmouth [north-east of Petersfield]. A regular coaching stop - the
most famous posting inn in the village was the late-17th-century Royal Anchor
Hotel, patronized by the famous, among them Samuel Pepys, Admiral Nelson (on
his way to Portsmouth and Trafalgar in 1805) General Blucher (on his way to
London after the victory at Waterloo in 1815), and later, Queen Victoria.
Lizard, The (Cornwall, England)
The Lizard Point
is the most southerly tip of England, jutting into the English Channel between
Penzance and Falmouth.
London Docks
Opened at Wapping in 1805.
These were the docks nearest to the City of London, and until 1826, all ships
arriving in London - except those from the East and West Indies - had to unload
at London Docks There were two main docks: the Western Dock (20 acres) with a
lock into a basin and from there into the river on the south; and an Eastern Dock
(7 acres) with a basin and locks into the river on the east. The docks were
linked by a small Tobacco Dock. The docks were surrounded by high walls and
locked at night (as Macquarie discovered) to prevent smuggling and theft.
Macarthur's Farm (NSW)
Camden Park
estate belonging to John Macarthur.
Macquarie Gift (NSW)
Colonel George
Johnston's farm comprised 1,500 acres. It was initially called 'Macquarie Gift',
but was later known as 'Johnston's Meadows'. Colonel Johnston's farm was managed
by a man called Wilson, a pioneer stockman in Illawarra.
Macquarie Pier (Newcastle, NSW)
Named
after Lachlan Macquarie. Construction commenced from the mainland under the
command of Capt. Wallis in 1818 using convict labour. The stone was quarried from
the Fort Scratchley area (then named Signal Hill); work was abandoned 5 years
later when the pier extended halfway to Nobbys island. In 1836 work on the pier
recommenced under the command of Capt. G. Barney and this time Nobbys Island was
quarried for rock. The pier was finally connected and completed in 1846.
Manangle (NSW)
A 2,000 acre farm on the banks
of the Nepean granted to Walter Davidson by Governor
King on 18 December 1805. Originally called 'Belmont' the land had a river
frontage onto the Nepean River and was straddled on either side by two grants to
John Macarthur known as Upper Camden, and Lower Camden (totalling 5000
acres).[Macarthur had been permitted to take his land grant in two parts to
maximise his access to the river]. The combined effect was that the land grants
to Davidson and Macarthur extended along the left bank (western side) of the
Nepean for a distance of more than 8 miles (12 kilometres). When Davidson
returned to England in March 1809, Macarthur had the free use of his friend's
grant.
The Aboriginal name 'Menangle' (or 'Manangle') came from the pond which
stood on Davidson's land. [Similarly 'Carabeely' was the name of the pond on
Macarthur's Upper Camden grant, while 'Belgenny' or 'Belkennie' the pond on the
Lower Camden grant].
Margate (Kent, England)
Sea port at the mouth of
the Thames, on the Isle of Thanet. After extensive storm damage in January 1808,
a new stone pier was built at the entrance to Margate at a cost of £90,000. N. of
Ramsgate.
Meadow Banks (NSW)
Farm on York Plains
which was on a grant of 50 acres given to Joseph Wright on 1 January 1817.
Meredith Island (NSW)
Located inside Port Stephens, midway between present-day Soldiers Point (south) and Fame Point (north).
Now known as Boondaba (or Middle) Island.
[Latitude 32° 41' S, Longitude 152° 04' E.]
Named after Elizabeth Macquarie's close personal friend and school companion, Miss Harriet Meredith (17??-1828).
Their friendship endured until c.1828, when Miss Meredith died, bequeathing to the
widowed Elizabeth Macquarie £2000 and her London home located at 58 Upper Charlotte Street (near Portland Place).
Minto District (NSW)
Macquarie s excursion on 8
November 1810, followed in general the present Liverpool-Campbelltown road
through the district of Minto. He mentions the farms of:
Richard Guise (Casula)
Charles Throsby (Glenfield)
James Meehan
(Macquarie Fields)
William Arden Lewin (Macquarie Fields)
Captain
Richard Brooks (Denham Court).
From 'Denham Court' Macquarie branched south-west to the farms of Dr. Robert
Townson ('Varroville'), and of the recently deceased Andrew Thompson ('St.
Andrews').
Moor Bank (or Moorbank) (NSW)
Shortly before
Macquarie's arrival Thomas Moore (1762-1840) was granted 1,300 acres in
the George's River district by Lt. Governor Paterson. This grant was confirmed by
Macquarie, who appointed him magistrate for the district on 7 May 1810. Moore
also accompanied Macquarie on his tour of the district when the town site of
Liverpool was declared on 15 December 1810. Moore remained at Liverpool until his
death on 24 December l840. His property, 'Moorebank', was bequeathed to the
Church of England, and Moore Theological College was established with the
proceeds.
Mount Brisbane (NSW)
Macquarie gave this name to the
top of the Illawarra Range behind Mount Keira.
Mount Taurus (NSW)
Named because it was
a favourite grazing ground of the wild cattle. It was also known as Spaniard's
Hill.
Mount Throsby (NSW)
The hill named Mount
Throsby by Macquarie is probably Mount Marshall.
Mull, Isle of (Inner Hebrides, Scotland)
Island off
the west coast of Scotland (third largest of the Hebridean Islands). Mountainous,
with a jagged coastline that is broken up by deeply penetrating sea lochs and
inlets. Exposed on its western seaboard to Atlantic gales which bring large
amounts of rain and strong winds, and the narrow glens funnel the wind into the
central areas. Mull is approximately 24 miles (38 km) from north to south, and 26
miles (42 km) from east to west; separated from the Scottish mainland in the NE
by the Sound of Mull, and in the SW by the Firth of Lorne.
Mull and Australia: The Macquarie connection is distinguished, in
particular, by the extremely large number of place names in New South Wales and
Tasmania (Van Diemen's Land) whose origins are derived from locations and
features on the Isle of Mull and its environs. Lachlan Macquarie used his
governorship (1810 -1821) as an opportunity to commemmorate, through nostalgic
place names, the places and personal associations that he had kept with Mull
since his boyhood. He was born on the adjoining island of Ulva on 31
January 1761.
Newcastle (NSW)
Site of the future city of
Newcastle was discovered on 9 September 1797 by Lieut. John Shortland (on board
HMS Reliance). He was seeking escaped convicts from Sydney when he found the
river entrance which he named Hunter's River. He made camp at a site that he
called Freshwater Bay (now Newcastle). On the rough survey map of the harbour
entrance he marked and named the distinctive island at the entrance Hacking's
Point (later changed to Coal Island - and then Nobby's)
Nobby's (NSW)
Name for Coal Island, Newcastle.
The first mention of the name 'Nobby's' is to be found in the Sydney Gazette
on 6 October 1801, reporting the loss of two seamen from the ship
Resource (William Wallis and William Ratkin).
Originally described by Capt. Cook in May 1770 as "a small clump of an island
lying close to shore". The island was originally named Hacking's Island by Lieut.
John Shortland in 1797 and subsequently visited by Lieut. Col. Paterson in 1801
who renamed it Coal Island. Ensign Barrallier was responsible for the survey work
on the island during this expedition and he stated that Nobby's was 302 feet high
- more than twice its current height. The reduction is the result of stone being
quarried for the construction of the breakwater (Macquarie Pier) linking Coal
Island to the mainland at South Head (now Fort Scratchley). This project,
originally initiated by Macquarie in 1818 was finally completed in 1846 . When
connected to the mainland the island became known as Nobby's Head.
In 1855 the summit of Nobby's was further reduced (from 62 metres to its present
height of 28 metres) during the construction of a signal station and dwellings
for lighthouse staff. The lighthouse finally replaced the coal-fired beacon that
had operated from South Head (Signal Hill) since 1804.
Aboriginal name for the island: Whibay-Garba.
Nore, The (Kent, England)
The Nore anchorage was
situated in the River Thames estuary, just off the entrance to the River Medway
(adjacent to the Isle of Sheppey). It was largely protected from easterly winds
by the sandbanks of the estuary. It was the common point of arrival and departure
for vessels proceeding into and out of the Thames. Once they had reached the Nore
anchorage vessels were required to wait until the tide, and force and direction
of the wind, was favourable to proceed further.
Nowenong (NSW)
Now known as Menangle Park (on the
opposite side of the Nepean River to Walter Davidson's 'Manangle').
Parramatta River Farms (NSW)
Among the
first grants on the Parramatta v. were those of Isaac Archer, Royal Marines, 80
acres, January 3rd 1792 Michael Connor, 80 acres at Ryde, April 6th 1798 (portion
21, parish of Hunters Hill), Alexander Macdonald, Corporal, Royal Marines,
January 3rd 1792, and John Ramsay, 50 acres, February 22nd 1792.
Penrith (NSW)
The town of Penrith was built
upon a grant of 1,000 acres on the Nepean to Captain Daniel Woodriff, R.N.
(which he received on 1 February 1804).
Pernambuco (Brazil)
City/state located in
northeast Brazil between the Sao Francisco and Panaiba rivers. It was the largest
Portuguese colony in Brazil in the sixteenth century and by the early seventeenth
century had become its most prosperous - and was the world's leading sugar
region. This prosperity was based upon a plantation society completely dependent
upon the importation of black African slaves. By the late the late eigteenth
century this primacy had been eclipsed by Dutch and English initiatives elsewhere
in South America and the Caribbean. On the coast, the port of Recife
provided anchorages for deepwater vessels and sheltered dock facilities for ships
visiting the city/state of Pernambuco (with slaves or collecting cargoes of
agricultural produce.
The Ponds District (NSW)
Located between North
Parramatta and Ryde.
Port Dalrymple (Tasmania)
The early name
for the port on the Tamar River at Launceston.
Portland Head (NSW)
At the time of
Macquarie's visit in 1810 there were no grants on the Hawkesbury below Sackville
Reach.
Prince Regent's Glen (NSW)
Valleys now
named Jamieson, Megalong and Kanimbla.
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