Page 13 - 1978 NAB Calendar Early Australian Maritime Life Part Two
P. 13

WATSON’S BAY & NORTH HEAD FROM SOUTH HEAD ROAD.

 MAY   The first land grant at Watson’s Bay was of 20 acres to Edward Laing on

 Watson’s Bay in New South Wales appears to have been named after Robert   May 28, 1793, by Lieut. Governor Grose. It was known as Roddam Farm.
 Watson, a seaman of the ‘Sirius’, who after that ship was lost, became a   An obelisk at Watson’s Bay records the construction of an eight mile road
 signalman and pilot at South Head. Later he was harbourmaster and also first   from Sydney initiated by Governor Macquarie. It was built by subscription

 keeper of the Lighthouse, Macquarie Tower. He died at his residence “The   and was completed in ten weeks from the 25 March 1811 by 21 soldiers of
 Rocks” in November 1819 and was buried in Devonshire Street cemetery.  His Majesty’s 73rd Regiment. Gill was one of the most important artists of

 The view shows North Head and, opposite it, Inner South Head with Hornby   the early period of Australian art. He is said to be the first artist whose work
 Light. This beacon was erected in 1858 after the tragic losses of the ‘Dunbar’   expressed  a  distinctly Australian  attitude  to  life.  In  addition  to  his  fine
 and the ‘Catherine Adamson’ in 1857. Its purpose was to light the southern   artistic qualities, his work was of great documentary value as it records the
 headland of the ocean entrance to the harbour, and to mark the South Reef   life, manners and architecture of the period. According to the Australian
 — a ledge of submerged rocks extending approximately a hundred yards   Encyclopaedia,  he  did  little  work  in  later  years  and  drank  heavily.  He
 from  the  tip  of  Inner  South  Head.  It  was  named  in  honour  of Admiral  Sir   collapsed on the steps of the Elizabeth Street Post Office in Melbourne and
 Phipps  Hornby,  who  in  the  1860’s  was  commander-in-Chief  of  the  British   was buried in a public grave, but in 1913 the Historical Society of Victoria

 Pacific Fleet.  organized a subscription to have the artist’s remains interred privately and
       a tombstone erected.
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