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Captain Charles Sturt & Central Australian Exploring ExpeditionPrint Page
The cairn commemorates Captain Charles Sturt and the Central Australian Exploring Expedition of 1844 and 1845. The cairn was unveiled in 1944 to mark the centenary of the expedition.
Sturt was driven by a conviction that it was his destiny to discover a great salt water lake, known as 'the inland sea', in the middle of Australia. At very least, he wanted to be the first explorer to plant his foot in 'the centre' of Australia. In August 1844, he set out with a party of 15 men, 200 sheep, six drays and a boat to explore north-western New South Wales and to advance into central Australia. They travelled along the Murray River and Darling River before passing the future site of Broken Hill, but were then stranded for months by the extreme summer conditions near the present site of Milparinka.
When the rains eventually came Sturt moved north and established a depot at Fort Grey in today's Sturt National Park. With a small group of men, including explorer John McDouall Stuart as his draughtsman, Sturt pressed on across Sturt`s Stony Desert and into the Simpson Desert, at which point he was unable to go further and turned back to the depot. Sturt made a second attempt to reach the centre of Australia, but he developed scurvy in the extreme conditions. His health broke down and he was forced to abandon the attempt. John Harris Browne, surgeon on the expedition, assisted Sturt, took over leadership of the party and after travelling 4,800 kilometres brought it back to safety.
Location
Address: | Adelaide Street, ANZAC Park, Birdsville, 4482 |
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State: | QLD |
Area: | AUS |
GPS Coordinates: | Lat: -25.897922 Long: 139.354414 Note: GPS Coordinates are approximate. |
Details
Monument Type: | Monument |
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Monument Theme: | Landscape |
Sub-Theme: | Exploration |
Monument Manufacturer: | Mr R. Gaffney |
Dedication
Actual Monument Dedication Date: | Friday 1st September, 1944 |
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Central Australian Exploring Expedition
Captain Charles Sturt with a few companions twice entered the Birdsville Region in September and October 1845
His discoveries opened the way to the north for later explorers and resulted in the pastoral occupation of Western Queensland
Erected 1944