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In Tasmania

Page 41

by Nicholas Shakespeare


  Stephen, James

  Stirling community

  Stodart’s Hotel, Hobart

  Stoke Rivers, Devon

  Stoke Rivers, North Motton

  Stokell, Dr George

  Stokes, Lieutenant Pringle

  Strahan

  Styx Forest

  Sullivan, Bruce

  sun fish

  Sunday Companion

  sunstroke

  Surrey Theatre, London

  Swan River

  Swansea

  History Room

  Swansea Hotel

  Swift, Jonathan: Gulliver’s Travels

  Sydney see also Port Jackson

  arrival of Kemp in (1795)

  description of

  Sydney Heads

  Sydney Opera House

  takahe

  Takudo, Admiral Tatsuo

  Tamar (ship)

  Tamar River

  Tangiers

  Tanzania

  Tapte (chief of the lagoon people)

  Taraba, the Nasty One

  Tas (a birder)

  Tasman, Abel Janszoon

  dies in disgrace

  discovery of Tasmania (1642)

  learning sailing

  Tasmanian tiger

  Tasman Peninsula

  Tasman Sea

  Tasmania see also Van Diemen’s Land

  Castra settlement

  European population

  first sighted by a European (1642)

  fugitives in

  health resort

  mainland Australia and

  map

  mineral deposits

  name change (1856)

  oldest human habitation

  remoteness

  self-government

  time

  200th anniversary of settlement

  Tasmania Museum

  ‘Tasmaniacs’

  Tasmanian cave spider

  Tasmanian devil (Sarcophilus harrisii)

  Tasmanian emus

  Tasmanian Government Thylacine Bounty Scheme

  Tasmanian Kennel Club

  Tasmanian Tiger Research Centre

  Tasmanian tiger (Thylacinus cynocephalus)

  Tasmanian Times

  Tasmaniana Library, Hobart

  Tatum, Miss (governess)

  Taylor, Charles

  Taylor, George P.

  Teddington

  Teddy (Ivy’s brother-in-law)

  Telegraph Hotel, St Helen’s

  temperance societies

  Temperata Antipodum Nobis Incognita

  Terra Australis Incognita

  terrorism

  Theatre Royal, Hobart

  Thingvellir, Iceland

  Thomas, Captain Bartholomew

  Thompson, Arthur

  Thompson, Constance

  Thompson, Estelle Merle

  Thompson, John Willis

  thylacine see Tasmanian tiger Tierney, Mike

  Tierra del Fuego

  Tiger Man

  tiger-snakes

  Times, The

  Timler

  Tinderbox, Hobart

  Toarra Marra Monah

  Todd, Ann

  Togari

  Tolstoy, Count Leo

  Tom Thumb (a rowing boat)

  Tomkinson, Sergeant

  Tonbridge School, Kent

  Tongerlongetter

  Black Line and

  burial

  death

  Flinders Island, on

  loss of his forearm

  Robinson and

  Tongs’ butter factory, North Motton

  Tongs, Laurie

  Toorah, SS

  Total Abstinence societies

  Tourism Tasmania

  Tragedy Hill, Campbell Town

  Tramp, Count

  transportation

  Travers, Clara

  Travers, Matthew

  Travers, William

  Trawlulwuy nation

  Trefoil Island

  Triabunna

  trial by jury

  Trollope, Anthony

  Australia and New Zealand

  Trollope, Reverend William

  Trowenna (Aboriginal name for Tasmania)

  True Colonist

  Truganini

  appearance

  death

  Last Tasmanian

  lives with Mrs Dandridge

  shell necklaces

  William Lanne and

  Turner, Liz

  Twain, Mark

  Tyreddeme people

  Ulverstone

  Ulverstone Gentlemen’s Club

  Ulverstone museum

  Union Jack

  United States

  University of Tasmania

  Updike, John

  Vale of Rasselas

  Van Diemen, Anthony

  Van Diemen’s Land see also Tasmania

  alcohol, always linked with

  convicts sent to

  French scientific force mapping

  independence (1825)

  island

  name changed to Tasmania (1856)

  occupied to prevent French occupation

  penal colony

  probation system

  Van Diemen’s Land Company

  Venn, Chrissie

  Venus (a brig)

  Victoria, Australia

  Victoria Cross

  Viney, Margaret

  Wainewright, Thomas

  Wales

  Walker, George Washington

  wallabies

  Wallarrange tribe

  Ward, John

  Ward, Mary Augusta (‘Mrs Humphrey Ward’ née Arnold),

  Helbeck of Bannidale

  Warner Brothers

  Warner, Jack

  Warren, Bev

  Washington, George

  wasp, gall-forming

  Waterloo Hotel, Hobart

  Waterloo Point

  wattle

  black

  silver

  Watts, Jobi

  Waugh, Alec: The Loom of Youth

  Weapons of Mass Destruction

  Webb, Edna

  Webb, Murray

  Wedding Rehearsal (film)

  Weindorfer, Gustav

  Weldborough

  Wellington, Duke of

  Wells, H.G.

  West Devon Agricultural Association

  West, John

  Western Tiers

  Westward Ho!

  whales

  Whiley, Mr and Mrs Horace

  Whitbread, Samuel

  White, Edward

  White, Patrick: A Fringe of Leaves

  Whitemark, Flinders Island

  wilderness

  William Potter & Son

  Williams, Cecil

  Williams, Geoff

  Williams, Patrick

  Williamson, Christine

  Williamson, Henry

  Willis, Fred

  Wilson’s Promontory

  Windeward Bound (a brigantine)

  Windschuttle, Keith

  The Fabrication of Aboriginal History, Volume 1, Van Diemen’s Land 1803-1847

  Wineglass Bay

  Wolders, Robert

  Wombat Glen

  wombats

  Woodman

  Woolnorth, near Cape Grim

  Woretermoeteyenner

  World Heritage Area

  Wrest Point Hotel and Casino, Hobart

  Wright, Peter

  Wybalenna, Flinders Island

  Wynyard

  Yarde, Devon

  York Town

  European settlement

  Young, Amy (née Kemp; Kemp’s daughter)

  Young, Lieutenant Wharton Thomas (Kemp’s son-in-law)

  Ypres

  1 Flinders was also the first to give the name Australia to what had previously been New Holland.

  2 The response of Kemp’s father may have inspired these lines in William Moncrieff’s 1830 play, Van Diemen’s Land: ‘Hence from my doors! I do renounce – di
sclaim you! The husband of a convict shall be no son of mine!’

  3 In an unlikely story passed on by his daughter, Kemp instantly announced to his wife: ‘My dear, the Colonel is sending in his papers and I am buying his commission.’

  ‘Very well, my dear, if you want to be Colonel of the Regiment do so, but you will have to choose between the regiment and me. Much as I love you, I will not face three months more of seasickness on the way home for any man on earth.’

  ‘Very well, dear, then I will give up the regiment.’

  4 In Tasmania, it remains a badge of honour to drink like a fish. Stocky batsman David Boon is still believed to hold the record for consuming 52 cans of beer on a flight to London in 1989.

  5 Among the plumbers and glaziers who worked on the extension at Mount Vernon was possibly James Woodcock Graves, a former composer from Wigton who one evening in 1824 had sat down and written impromptu the first five verses of ‘D’ye ken John Peel’. In 1842, he was detained for apparent insanity at an asylum in New Norfolk.

  6 In the 1420s, Chinese eunuch admirals accurately mapped south-west and north Australia. The first Briton to reach mainland Australia was William Dampier in January 1688, north of Broome.

  7 Meredith’s eldest son, also George, after violently quarrelling with his father, went to live on Kangaroo Island with an Aboriginal girl, Sal. He was killed by a jealous Aborigine.

  8 While they were camped in Elizabeth Street, Kemp’s friend the artist John Glover took some sketches and used them in various paintings.

  9 North Motton’s most famous son is A.W. Knight, an engineer of surpassing ability, who in a paper before his death remarked on the oddity of ‘North Motton’ in the absence of any other ‘Motton’. The name possibly derived from one William Walter Motton who settled thereabouts in 1854.

  10 Part of the reclaimed land on the Hobart wharf is made up of millions of apricot stones from the jam factory.

  11 GBS said of him that Edward was his favourite uncle as he never met him.

 

 

 


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