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Climbing and Naming of Mount BarkerPrint Page
The plaque was erected along the Mount Barker Heritage Trail as a bicentenary project to commemorate the climbing and naming of Mount Barker by the 1829 Overland expedition led by Dr. Thomas Braidwood Wilson.
Mount Barker was first explored in late 1829, nearly four years after the establishment of the penal colony at Albany which lies only 50 kilometres to the south. The penal colony`s surgeon Dr Thomas Braidwood Wilson with a small party consisting of two convicts, an Aboriginal guide named Mokare, a soldier and Mr. John Kent, Albany`s commissariat officer, set off from Albany on 2 December 1829 to explore the hinterland.
They reached Mount Barker (which was named after Captain Collet Barker, the settlement`s commandant) in late 1829 and then turned west and south reaching the coast near the present day site of Denmark.
The Mount Barker Heritage Trail is part of the Heritage Trails Network, a project for community participation originally devissed by the Western Australian Heritage Committee (now known as the Heritage Council of Western Australia), in commemoration of the 1988 Bicentenary.
Location
Address: | Tower Road, Summit, Mount Barker, 6324 |
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State: | WA |
Area: | AUS |
GPS Coordinates: | Lat: -34.655833 Long: 117.645833 Note: GPS Coordinates are approximate. |
Details
Monument Type: | Plaque |
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Monument Theme: | Landscape |
Sub-Theme: | Exploration |
Approx. Event Start Date: | 1829 |
Approx. Event End Date: | 1829 |
Dedication
Approx. Monument Dedication Date: | 1988 |
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Australia
1788-1988
Mount Barker Heritage Trail
Mount Barker
The mount was climbed by Dr Thomas Braidwood
Wilson and party in 1829, during an expedition from
Albany into the previously unexplored Mount Barker,
Denmark and Torbay areas.
Named by Wilson after Captain Collett (sic) Barker, the
Commandant of the King George III Sound Settlement
(Albany), Mount Barker is 404 metres above sea level.
An Australian Bicentenary project with financial
assistance from the State and Commonwealth governments