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Post Info TOPIC: August 20 (definitely) - Today in history


Guru

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August 20 (definitely) - Today in history


Gday...

1836  -             Colonel William Light arrives in South Australia to survey a site for the first settlement.

Colonel William Light was born in Malaya in 1786, the son of the founder and Governor of Penang. Educated in England, he joined the British navy at age 14. Following an illustrious naval career, he sold his commission at the age of 35. He travelled Europe and northern Africa, and in Egypt worked with John Hindmarsh, who was appointed first Governor of South Australia in 1835. It was upon Hindmarshs recommendation that Light became the Surveyor General in the new colony.

Travelling on the ship Rapid from London, Colonel Light arrived at Kangaroo Island on 20 August 1836. His task was to survey the area around Nepean Bay in order to establish the first settlement in South Australia. However, the lack of surface water or suitable arable land caused him to seek a better site on the mainland. He surveyed the west coast of the Fleurieu Peninsula, around Rapid Bay, following up on the exploration of Captain Collet Barker, who had already recommended the current site of Adelaide, but who had been speared by Aborigines while exploring around the Murray mouth. Although Lights chosen site for Adelaide clashed with Governor Hindmarshs preference for a more openly coastal site, in the end Lights decision prevailed.

Colonel Light began surveying Adelaide in January 1837, and completed his survey in March 1837. He then commenced the task of naming streets and squares in the new town on 23 May 1837. 

1857  -             121 people die when the ship, the 'Dunbar', runs aground at The Gap, Sydney.

The Dunbar was a first class sailing vessel, and, at 1,320 tonnes, was the largest of the time to be built at Sunderland shipyards in England. The vessel left Plymouth on 31 May 1857, carrying 63 passengers and 59 crew.

On the night of 20 August 1857, the Dunbar approached the heads of Sydney Harbour. It seems that the captain, though experienced in Sydney waters, was disoriented by the driving rain and gale conditions. Possibly he mistook 'The Gap', a spectacular ocean cliff near South Head, for the entrance to Sydney Harbour. The swell pushed the ship into the reef at the foot of South Head and the Dunbar began to break up immediately. Only one person survived: 23 year old Irish seaman James Johnson, who was flung into the cliffs where he managed to gain a foothold, remaining there until he was noticed clinging to a ledge in the morning.

A mass funeral was held on 24 September for those who died in the shipwreck, as many of them were unidentified. A monument to the victims still sits at St Stephen's Cemetery, Camperdown.

1860  -             Australian explorers Burke and Wills commence their expedition to cross the continent from south to north.

Robert O'Hara Burke and William Wills led the expedition that was intended to bring fame and prestige to Victoria: being the first to cross Australia from south to north and back again. They set out on Monday, 20 August 1860, leaving from Royal Park, Melbourne, and farewelled by around 15,000 people. The cost of the expedition was almost 5,000 pounds.

Because of the size of the exploration party, it was split at Menindee so that Burke could push ahead to the Gulf of Carpentaria with a smaller party. The smaller group went on ahead to establish the depot which would serve to offer the necessary provisions for when the men returned from the Gulf. The expedition to the Gulf took longer than Burke anticipated: upon his return to Cooper Creek, he found that the relief party had left just seven hours earlier, less than the amount of time it had taken to bury Gray, who had died on the return journey. Through poor judgement, lack of observation and a series of miscommunications, Burke and Wills never found the supplies left for them by the relief party. They perished on the banks of Cooper Creek. King alone survived to lead the rescue party to the remains of Burke and Wills, and the death of one of the most elaborately planned expeditions in Australia's history.

1908  -             The first successful Australian transcontinental motor car journey is completed.

Australia's love affair with the car as a means of travelling the continent's huge distances began with the first transcontinental motor car trip. Engineer Horace Hooper Murrag Aunger was born on 28 April 1878 at Narridy, near Clare, South Australia. He collaborated with cycle maker Vivian Lewis and Tom O'Grady to build the first petrol-driven motorcar in South Australia. Aunger teamed up with Henry Hampden Dutton to be the first to cross Australia from south to north by motorcar. Their first attempt left Adelaide in Dutton's Talbot car on 25 November 1907, and travelled north through countryside suitable only for a modern 4WD. When the pinion in the Talbot's differential collapsed south of Tennant Creek, the car had to be abandoned as the wet season was approaching. Travelling on horseback, the men met the railhead at Oodnadatta, from where they returned to Adelaide.

Dutton then purchased a larger, more powerful vehicle, again a Talbot. The men made their second attempt to cross the continent from south to north, leaving Adelaide on 30 June 1908. They were joined at Alice Springs by Ern Allchurch. Reaching the abandoned Talbot at Tennant Creek, the car was repaired, and they drove in convoy to Pine Creek, where the original Talbot was freighted by train to Darwin. The men continued in the second Talbot, reaching Darwin on 20 August 1908. The car in which the men completed their journey now sits preserved in the Birdwood museum, South Australia.

1908  -             The 'Great White Fleet' arrives in Sydney, Australia.

The 'Great White Fleet', consisting of 16 new battleships of the Atlantic Fleet, was sent around the world by US President Theodore Roosevelt. Launched on 16 December 1907, it travelled down the eastern coast of America, around the southern cape and back up the western coast, as the Panama Canal had not yet been completed. After this, it continued on to various ports around the world. The fleet reached its final destination on 22 February 1909. The purpose of the fleet seemed to be as a show of American sea power, even though some of the ships were technically obsolete and no longer fit for battle.

The 'Great White Fleet' arrived in Sydney Harbour on 20 August 1908. After remaining there for seven days, it continued on to Melbourne, where it remained again for a week. The fleet then arrived in Albany, Western Australia, on September 11th, remaining for another week before setting sail for Manila. 

1977  -             The Voyager 2 spacecraft is launched, to become the first probe to visit Uranus and Neptune.

The Voyager programme was originally part of NASA's 'Mariner' programme. It involved sending unmanned space probes to Jupiter and Saturn, with Voyager 2 having the capability to continue on to Uranus and Neptune. Voyager 2 was launched on 20 August 1977, from Cape Canaveral, Florida. It carried a 12-inch copper phonograph record containing greetings in dozens of languages, samples of music and sounds of nature.

The mission provided valuable information about the nature of the gas giants. Voyager 2 closely examined the rings of Saturn but a problem with the steerable platform on which its optical instruments were mounted resulted in the loss of some significant high-resolution data. The problem corrected itself by the time the craft reached Uranus over four years later.

By late June 2010 Voyager 2 had completed 12,000 days of continuous operations. As of 1 November 2009, the spacecraft was located at 19.733 hours Right Ascension and -54.59 degrees declination. As observed from earth, it appeared to be in the constellation Telescopium. The spacecraft is expected to continue transmitting into the 2030s.

Cheers - John



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Some people feel the rain - the others just get wet - Bob Dylan



Guru

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Posts: 1779
Date:

thankyou John.

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Dave S

ex Bricklayer 20 years & 33 years Carpet Cleaning

but what do i know, i'm only a old fart.

iv'e lost my glass.



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Definitely a good read, thanks John.

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