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Edward John Eyre & WyliePrint Page
The Eyre and Wylie memorial is situated on a high point in the Allambie Park Cemetery and commemorates Edward John Eyre's efforts to traverse Australia from East to West with the help of Aboriginal guide, Wylie.
The situation of the monument is based on the end point of the track that the two overlanders took in 1841 after travelling for six months from the east (from Flowers Bay to Albany).
Edward John Eyre (1815 - 1901), together with his aboriginal friend Wylie, was the first man to cross southern Australia from east to west, travelling across the Nullarbor Plain from Adelaide to Albany.
Location
Address: | Lower King Road & Mercer Road, Allambie Park Cemetery , Walmsley , 6330 |
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State: | WA |
Area: | AUS |
GPS Coordinates: | Lat: -34.982222 Long: 117.921389 Note: GPS Coordinates are approximate. |
Details
Monument Type: | Monument |
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Monument Theme: | People |
Sub-Theme: | Exploration |
Link: | https://www.dplh.wa.gov.au/about-in… |
Dedication
Approx. Monument Dedication Date: | 1965 |
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Erected to the memory of Edward John Eyre
The first white man to cross from east to west.
From this point on July 7th, 1841 two weary men may have been seen threading an uneven way through the scrub thickets of Bayonet Head, Yakamia Swamp, Emu Point and Middleton to the Residency, Albany.
For six months they had endured the torture of searing heat, flies, thirst, hunger and the massacre of Baxter.
These two men were Eyre and Wylie.
Two lovers of history and Albany pay their tribute to these sturdy Australian pioneers.
Plaque :
Also to the memory of "Wylie"
A local Aboriginal
The faithful guide who stayed with his leader through all the trials of the journey.