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The entrance to the
Museumof Fire |
Penrith (including Luddenham)
Large and prosperous town/suburb on the edge of the
Cumberland Plain
Penrith is located 53 km from Sydney and 30 metres above sea
level, on the edge of the Blue Mountains. It is famous as
the home of the huge entertainment complex - the Penrith
Panthers - as an idyllic setting beside the Nepean River and
as the home of the Museum of Fire.
It was near modern-day Penrith, in 1819, that Governor
Lachlan Macquarie established a farm and it was the setting
for one of Sydney's most infamous penal stations.
It would seem that the first European to site the modern
location was Watkin Tench, a Marine Captain, who explored
and discovered the Nepean River in June 1789. It was on the
basis of this expedition that convicts were sent to the
area.
This area was the last place on the Sydney basin before
Blaxland, Wentworth and Lawson crossed the Nepean River to
climb and cross the Blue Mountains.
In Blood on the Wattle I described the early attempts to
cross the Blue Mountains in the following terms: 'For a
quarter of a century the whites had been battering their
heads against sheer walls. Everybody in the Sydney colony,
from the lowliest convict who longed to put as much distance
as possible between himself and the overseer's lash to the
quixotic adventurers who had drifted into the tiny outpost
of European civilisation, looked west.
'On a clear winter's day it was easy to see the mountains
touched with that distinctive smoky blue which rises,
shimmering, from the dense monotony of the eucalypts. They
called them the Blue Mountains although they were really a
monocline and a series of box canyons. They thought the old
exploration techniques would work. Follow a river to its
source, climb the valley, cross over the mountains. Each
time they followed a river upstream they came not to an
ever-steepening valley or gorge but to a waterfall which
fell hundreds of metres over a sheer, unclimbable cliff.
They'd clamber up the scree slopes, gaze hopelessly at the
wall above them, and mooch on back to Parramatta and Sydney
Town chastened by the folly of their expedition and cursing
nature's indifference to their ambitions.
'It wasn't until 1813 that Blaxland, Wentworth and
Lawson, with help from the local Aborigines who'd been
wandering backwards and forwards across the mountains for
thousands of years, finally managed to traverse a ridge and
gaze across the rich, undulating slopes which tumbled away
to the west. They liked what they saw - good rivers, rich
soils, quality grazing land.'
On 11 May 1813 Gregory Blaxland recorded that the
expedition trying to cross the Blue Mountains had 'crossed
the Nepean River at the ford on to Emu Island at four
o'clock in the afternoon and proceeded by their calculations
two miles through forest land and good grass'. Over the
years floods have washed away Emu Island although you can
get a fair idea of where the crossing was. It was just to
the the northern side of the bridge across the Nepean.
A few months later, on 17 July 1814 William Cox with a
gang of thirty convicts started to build the road across the
Blue Mountains. The crossing over the river was completed on
25 July. As the road officially started at Emu Plains it is
hardly surprising that a town developed very quickly. It is
sad that the remnants of the old road can now no longer be
seen.
Over the years the main settlement has moved further
upstream along the Nepean which is how modern Penrith came
into existence. The railway was extended to Penrith in 1863.
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Penrith