Newcastle
By David Ellis
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Newcastle |
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Had it not been for one of the more bizarre maritime chases in
Australia’s colonial history, it could have been years before the
now-Hunter Valley’s rich agricultural lands and coal seams were to be
opened up to early settlement – including to go on to become one of
Australia’s premier winemaking regions.
In the early 1790s a
group of convicts stole one of the only two sailing sloops in the-then
fledgling Sydney Town and fled north to what is now known as Port
Stephens. They lived there for several years with the local
aboriginal people, before being found by accident by the sloop HMS
Providence that had been swept north in a fierce storm while on an
exploratory trip out of Sydney.
The four surviving "miserable
and half-starved" convicts happily returned to Sydney Town aboard the
Providence to face the music for their escape. But after just a couple
of years two of them organised another escape... this time taking the
colony’s only other sailing boat, the “Cumberland” and once again
heading north.
Colonial Governor John Hunter ordered a search
for them, and bizarrely Lieutenant John Shortland took off in pursuit
of the sloop in just a row-boat manned by a handful of sailors.
That
was 1797 and he never did find the escapees, but he did come across the
broad entrance to a river that some lost fishermen had earlier dubbed
Coal River after discovering coal along its floodplains.
On his
return, Lieutenant Shortland told Governor Hunter of the rich potential
of the river (which Shortland officially named after the Governor,) and
free settlers and pardoned convicts were encouraged to go forth and
settle there.
They quickly discovered just how rich those lands
were, and soon a port town called Newcastle grew up, supplying the new
settlers with their needs and shipping their produce to Sydney Town,
Hunter Valley coal to India… and by the early 1820s, wine to Sydney
from the first Hunter Valley vineyards.
And while by the
mid-1970s the Hunter Valley’s wine and allied industries were booming
with a new kind of tourism sassiness, industrial Newcastle seemed
trapped in a time warp, its image reflected by stand-up comic Bob
Hudson’s The Newcastle Song reminiscing long and clear on the mating
habits of the night-time occupants of the city’s Hunter Street Mall…
But
today Newcastle has found itself internationally-recognised, listed
this year in the Lonely Planet travel guide as one of the World’s Top
10 Cities to Visit — alongside such legends as New York, Valencia
and Delhi.
So, how did the ugly duckling turn into such a strikingly beautiful swan?
In
reality many facets of that swan have been obvious but unappreciated
since the city’s founding — grand colonial public buildings, imposing
commercial and residential streetscapes, and a magnificent coastline of
stark rocky outcrops contrasted by temptingly sandy beaches...
But
most importantly has been a more-recent appreciation of Newcastle’s
history, together with a seemingly new-found devotion to landscaping,
the arts, tourism and cuisine, and an interesting scheme called
Illumination Newcastle that nightly bathes some of its most historic
buildings under soft floodlights.
The transformation is most
obvious in the city’s eastern end, where the old Royal Newcastle
Hospital site has given way to tourist accommodation, cafés and
apartments, paving the way for a 24-hour life rather than a drab
nine-to-five existence.
Amongst new accommodations is the Sebel
Harbourside, a near-beachside hotel whose 88 guest rooms feature chic,
contemporary furnishings, and all the mod cons of a 4.5-star property.
Many of its rooms also offer spectacular ocean views.
Amongst
historical nearby attractions is Fort Scratchley that formed an
integral link in our defences against potential invasion — real and
imagined — and during World War II, whose canons were Australia’s
only-ever to fire in anger against an invading naval force.
The
Fort’s resurrection allows visitors to spend a couple of hours touring
its tunnels, and to enjoy the most spectacular views of the port and
its most significant landmark, Nobby’s Head.
Nearby, the grand
Customs House attests to Newcastle’s maritime and trading stature, and
if visiting Newcastle don’t miss the East Newcastle Heritage Walk that
embraces eighteen historic sites from the old Customs House, to the
original gaol site, the beach promenade and an historic convict-era
lumber yard.
See www.visitnewcastle.com.au or Freecall 1800 654 558
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