|
Besides coal, vast
cedar forests covered a huge tract up the Hunter, a source of urgently
needed building timber for the infant Sydney colony.
Governor King decided
to establish a small post at the river mouth, however this first
settlement was short lived. It was headed by one Corporal Wixtead,
who was then suddenly replaced by Surgeon Martin Mason. Surgeon
Mason's rule ended in a mutiny, and Governor King closed the settlement
early in 1802.
A settlement was
again attempted in 1804 as a place of secondary punishment for unruly
convicts. The settlement was re-named Newcastle, after England's
famous coal port. The name first appeared by the commission issued
by Governor King on March 15, 1804, to Lieut. Charles Menzies of
the Royal Marines, appointing him superintendent of the new settlement.
The old links with
Newcastle upon Tyne, UK, whence many of the 19th century coal miners
came, is still obvious in some of the place-names - such as Jesmond,
Hexham, Wickham and Wallsend.
Information
obtained from Wikipedia.com
|