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View across Lake
Macquarie |
Lake Macquarie
Large Central Coast lake surrounded by pleasant holiday
towns
Lake Macquarie is a large and pleasant lake characterised by
a great diversity of towns on its edges. It is located
approximately 110 km from Sydney via Highway 1 and the
freeway conditions beyond Hornsby (at the northern end of
Sydney) ensure that it is easily accessible from the city.
At the northern end there are flotillas of bobbing boats and
white, flapping sails which crowd the lake and fishing and
swimming are also popular. At the southern end small towns
nestle into the wilderness. Most of the destinations are
designed to take full advantage of the views across the
lake.
The lake itself is the largest coastal saltwater lake in
the Southern Hemisphere, covering 109 square kilometres
(four times the size of Sydney Harbour). It is 24 km long,
3.2 km across at its widest point and 9.7 m at its deepest.
There is no appreciable tidal range within the lake although
the tidal race at Swansea Channel can be strong. There are
92 towns and villages, 29 public boat ramps, 28 public
jetties and wharves and 7 marina berth around the lake. The
Swansea channel has six boat ramps and a public wharf by the
southern side of the bridge. Despite being overfished in the
past the lake still has good supplies of whiting, bream and
flathead for the angler.
Lake Macquarie is linked to the ocean by a narrow
channel. It was, at one time, a bay, but it was almost
enclosed by the development of sandbars caused by wind,
waves and tides.
The lake's foreshore consists of 174 km of bays, beaches
and headlands. The eastern side of the lake is
well-developed and tourist oriented. The western side is
quieter and more rural with scrubby woodland fringing the
shores and the Watagan Mountains in the background. The
southern shore is characterised by bushland and wetlands
while the northern shore is part of the Newcastle sprawl,
complete with heavy, industry, including a major sulphide
factory. The area around the lake has old ties with
coalmining which is still the backbone of the local economy.
There are about a dozen mines around the lake, a few dating
back to the start of the century.
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View from Marks Point
across Lake Macquarie |
In 1800 Captain William Reid became the first European to
make his way into the lake. Sent from Sydney to collect coal
from the mouth of the Hunter River he mistook the channel
for the river estuary, ventured inside and encountered some
members of the Awabakal tribe, who then occupied the area
from the bank of the Lower Hunter to the southern and
western shores of Lake Macquarie. After he inquired about
coal the Aborigines directed him to some embedded in the
headland. It was only upon his return to Sydney that he
realised his error. The lake was thus known as Reid's
Mistake until 1826 when it was renamed in honour of Governor
Lachlan Macquarie.
Reid's discovery excited no initial interest as Newcastle
was, at the time, a penal settlement which the government
wished to keep isolated from Sydney. Eventually pressure
from settlers wishing to move into the Hunter Valley caused
the penal settlement to be removed to Port Macquarie.
Lieutenant Percy Simpson was probably the first European
settler in the whole Lake Macquarie area. He received a
2000-acre grant in 1826, was assigned six convicts who
cleared the land, grazed cattle, and built a homestead and
stockyards near a ford over Dora Creek. He left after two
years but one of his convicts, Moses Carroll, stayed on as a
stockman and was made constable of the area in 1834.
Although settlers were thin on the ground, convict escapees,
cattle thieves, timber-getters and the indigenous
inhabitants caused him some difficulties.
By far the most important of the early settlers was a
missionary, the Reverend Lancelot Threlkeld, an ex-actor and
businessman who, in 1826, established a 1000-acre reserve
for an Aboriginal mission which occupied the whole northern
peninsula, from Pelican north-west to Redhead and north-east
to Croudace Bay.
Threlkeld chose the land after noting it was a gathering
point for Aborigines, drawn by the living conditions and
food around the lake. He held his Aboriginal friends in high
regard and learned their language so as to communicate and
to translate scripture (this work being an early landmark in
Aboriginal studies). The mission house, called 'Bahtahbah',
was located on a rise overlooking Belmont Bay. It was
connected to Newcastle by a rough dray track. Threlkeld
started the first coal mine around the lake at Coal Point,
c.1840, and subsequently bought ten acres at Swansea Heads
for coal-loading and storage around 1842.
Thomas Williamson, of the Shetland Isles, bought 100
acres of land around present-day Belmont in 1863. He built
two cottages, established a farm and grew grapes and
bananas. Fellow Shetlander John Anderson bought 40 acres of
adjacent land and began farming and dairying. There was soon
a small contingent of fishermen in the district and a
steam-driven sawmill was built at Cardiff Point, at the
north-western tip of the bay.
Things to see:
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Houses on the shore of
Lake Macquarie |
For More Information
There are a number of towns which edge the shores of Lake
Macquarie. For more detailed information you should check
out
Belmont,
Cooranbong,
Morisset,
Swansea,
Toronto and
Wangi Wangi
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Lake Macquarie