Page 8 - 1978 NAB Calendar Early Australian Maritime Life Part Two
P. 8

ADMIRALTY HOUSE FROM CIRCULAR QUAY

                                                                                                                         Blackburn, later Town Surveyor of Melbourne, designed the church beside it, which dates
                                                                                                   MARCH
      This view shows in the distance Admiralty House on Kirribilli Point, New South Wales.                              from 1836. The spire seen here fell off in 1875, but much of the original stonework has been
      Bennelong Point and part of the towers of Fort Macquarie are in the foreground.                                    restored.
                                                                                                                         The long building to the right of the centre of the work is the penitentiary. This four storey
      Admiralty House’ has a very interesting history. The site was bought in 1806 by Robert
                                                                                                                         building housing 657 men was completed in 1848. It was constructed on a grand scale and
      Campbell,  Sydney’s  first  merchant.  In  1842  Campbell  leased  the  land  to  Lieutenant-
                                                                                                                         elegantly  furnished;  indeed  it  was  said  to  be  “more  like  a  mansion  than  a  house  of
      Colonel J. G. N. Gibbes, the Collector of Customs, for 21 years at a rental of £30. Gibbes
                                                                                                                         correction”. Today it is one of the settlement’s most impressive ruins.
      erected what was described as a “very superior building’’ on the site and was ble to re-
      cover the cost from Campbell. In 1849, three years after Campbell’s death, the property                            On the hill to the left stands the sandstone powder magazine, which served as a look-out
      was sold to Gibbes for £760.                                                                                       post and guard centre. It was flanked by twin store watch towers. Between the magazine and
                                                                                                                         the penitentiary are army barracks, officers’quarters, the court, library and the hospital.
      When Thomas Cadell bought the premises by auction for £5.050 in 1874. Wotonaa. as it
      was  then  called.  completed  by  convict  labour  between  1833  and  1844. Although  the                        This engraving is after an original drawing by the English painter John Skinner Prout, who
      settlement  closed  in  1877,  its  construction  was  so  solid  that  much  of  the  stonework                   was born in 1806 and died in 1876. Prout lectured and painted in Sydney after his arrival
      remains. Port Arthur is now one of Tasmania’s major tourist attractions.On the extreme                             there in 1840, then went to Hobart in 1844. While there, he organized Australia’s first art
      right  of  the  engraving  stands  Government  Cottage,  where  the  Governor  and  his                            exhibition. He travelled and worked in Victoria before his return to England in 1849. The
      entourage  came  for  relaxation.  It  was  noted  for  its  fine  English  gardens.  James                        original drawing was probably completed during Prout’s period in Tasmania, although the
                                                                                                                                                                              Page 9ustralia illustrated (1874-76)’.
    Click on link to return to contents page                                                                             engraving was published much later in Booth’s ‘A
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