Page 26 - 1977 NAB CalendarMaritime Life in early Australia Part One
P. 26

THE NEW PORT, ADELAIDE, SOUTH AUSTRALIA

                   DECEMBER

                   The  New  Port, Adelaide,  is  depicted  here  in  its  first  years  of  operation.  It  is                   Company, which undertook the new development. The Company constructed a
                   obvious  from  early  immigrants’  accounts  of  the  old  port,  aptly  named  Port                           road across the swamps to the New Port in 1839, and opened the wharf, named
                   Misery, that these new facilities presented a dramatic improvement on the old.                                 after the Company’s manager, David McLaren, in 1841. The lithograph shows the
                   Ships  were  forced  to  anchor  a  mile  downstream  from  the  old  port,  and                               extent of the port’s development by about 1842. The six-ton crane is operating
                   passengers were “carried on shore on the sailors’ backs, and their baggage                                     on McLaren Wharf, and the South Australian Company’s warehouses dominate
                   thrown  promiscuously  on  the  muddy  beach”.  After  negotiating  mosquito-                                  the area behind it. The beginnings of the settlement of Port Adelaide can be seen
                   infested mangrove swamps at the landing point, the passengers were faced                                       on the right.
                   with a six mile journey to Adelaide.                                                                           These  new  facilities  soon  proved  inadequate  to  handle  South  Australia’s
                   Governor  Gawler  decided  that  a  new  port  should  be  constructed  at  a  point                           expanding trade, and the port was extended several times before the end of the
                   where ships could anchor, and chose a site about a mile downstream from the                                    century.  Today,  No.  2  Wharf,  Inner  Harbour,  occupies  the  area  where  the
                   old  port.  The  site  formed  part  of  a  section  owned  by  the  South Australian                          McLaren  Wharf  stood,  and  the  tiny  settlement  has  become  the  City  of  Port
                                                                                                                                  Adelaide.Little  is  known  about  the  lithographer,  J.  Hitchen,  whose  work  was
                                                                                                                                  published by J. C. Hailes of London
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