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Pioneers of Bega DistrictPrint Page
The Caesar was a barque of the Hinrich Wilhelm Kohn Line with a burden of 428 tons. She was built in 1854 in Elsfleth in the Wempe shipyards and commissioned 18 April 1854.
Many migrants departed from Hamburg, Germany to sail to Australia and they were welcomed. German labour was in demand : vine-dressers, shepherds, hutkeepers, farm labourers, domestic servants, mechanics – single or in families. Many were nominated free passengers, which means someone, often a family member, paid their passage to Australia. Agents were sometimes sent to Germany to hire workers for employers.
James Manning, who had been educated in Germany, assumed the position of Manager of Kameruka Estate near Candelo, and it was due to his encouragement that German Settlers were bought to Kameruka to commence cheesemaking under the ‘American System’, as labour was one of the scarest commodities. It is believed that the first German Settlers in the district arrived in Twofold Bay (Eden) in 1855, where they were met by a guide from Kameruka. The group walked the incredible distance from Twofold Bay, along the dirt tracks which wandered through the silent bush, finally coming to rest at their new home, where they feasted upon sheep roasted over an open fire.
Location
Address: | Princes Highway, Bega Cemetery , Bega , 2550 |
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State: | NSW |
Area: | AUS |
GPS Coordinates: | Lat: -36.704474 Long: 149.841701 Note: GPS Coordinates are approximate. |
Details
Monument Type: | Trees |
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Monument Theme: | Landscape |
Sub-Theme: | Settlement |
Dedication
Plaque :
Plantation dedicated to our District pioneers
English, Scottish, Irish & Germans from the Rhineland who arrived at Twofold Bay in March 1855 on the barque "Caesar" from Hamburg
Labor Omnia Vincit