Page 19 - 1977 NAB CalendarMaritime Life in early Australia Part One
P. 19

WILLIAM’S TOWN LIGHTHOUSE (VIC.)


 AUGUST
 The area in the foreground of this illustration is
    To the right of the lighthouse is the signal station. One of the first duties of the
 now known as Point Gellibrand. As early as 1835 it had been necessary   signalman  installed  at  Point  Gellibrand  had  been  to  report  on  September  30,
 to erect a navigational aid on this point and from August, 1840, a “plain   1839, the arrival of the ‘Pyramus’, carrying C. J. La Trobe, Superintendent of the
 stationary light" was shown there. The lighthouse was built in 1852, and   Port Phillip District, and later Governor of Victoria.
 would have been the first Melbourne landmark seen by many of the
 migrants coming to Melbourne during the gold rushes of the 1850’s.  The ship in the left foreground is the prison hulk, ‘Success’. In 1852 this ship was
    deserted by its crew who went off to the goldfields, and it was bought by the
 Later it became known as Timeball Tower, because when the electrical   government and used to accommodate prisoners. Some of the prisoners worked
 telegraph between Melbourne and Williamstown came into operation in   on quarrying and preparing the stone used in the lighthouse.
 1854, the time ball that gave the one o’clock time signal each day was
 placed on the lighthouse. Shipping in the bay adjusted chronometers by   Edmund Thomas: see June note.
 this signal. In 1932, radio time signals had made its use redundant.



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