A little ray of sunshine from Australia

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Barney
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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by Barney » September 19, 2020, 7:15 am

19th SEPTEMBER 1919 . . .

On this day, 19th September 1919, the Great Ocean Road project in Victoria is officially launched.

The Great Ocean Road is a scenic highway in southern Victoria which begins at Torquay and extends west for 243 km, ending at Allansford, just east of Warrnambool. Hailed as an engineering feat for its time, the road was built by around 3000 returned servicemen, or Diggers, following World War I.

The concept of such a road was first put forward as early as the 1870s. Settlers along the coast could only reach the larger communities inland via rough tracks over the Otway ranges, so calls were made for either a rail or road route connecting these otherwise isolated coastal settlements. Shortly after Geelong businessmen E. H. Lascelles and Walter Howard Smith proposed a road be built between Geelong and Lorne, the Country Roads Board (CRB) was formed in 1912. Following World War I, CRB chairman William Calder suggested that returned Diggers be gainfully employed on various road projects, including a road extending from Barwon Heads to Warrnambool. The plan was soundly approved by Mayor of Geelong, Howard Hitchcock, who saw not only the value in such a road for tourism but also as a permanent memorial to the many thousands of soldiers who lost their lives in the Great War.

The Great Ocean Road Trust was officially formed on 22 March 1918, and surveying began in August of that year. On 19 September 1919, the project to construct the Great Ocean Road was officially launched by the Premier of Victoria, Harry Lawson. Taking 13 years to complete, the road is regarded as a tremendous engineering feat for the 1920s. With the absence of any machinery at the time, it required back-breaking manual labour as the men had only shovels, picks and horse-drawn carts to hew out the rocky cliffside. The first section, extending from Lorne to the Eastern View section of the Great Ocean Road, was officially opened on 18 March 1922. The second official opening occurred on 27 April 1932, and this celebrated the extension of the road to Warrnambool.
Although modernised since its original construction, the Great Ocean Road continues to stand as the world's largest memorial to the soldiers of World War I.

Pictured: Returned soldiers working on the Great Ocean Road
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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by tamada » September 19, 2020, 9:31 am

Qantas flight to nowhere proves popular.

"Flight QF787, due to depart Sydney Domestic Airport on October 10 and return to the Australian metropolis seven hours later, had 134 tickets on sale -- spanning business class, premium economy and economy and costing from AUD$787 to $3,787 (US$566 to $2,734)."

https://www.cnn.com/travel/article/flig ... index.html

Interesting to see if the People's Republic of Queensland will close their air space ahead of this egregious violation of their state quarantine laws.

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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by noosard » September 19, 2020, 10:31 am

The PRQ has removed quarantine conditions from ACT

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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by tamada » September 19, 2020, 1:20 pm

noosard wrote:
September 19, 2020, 10:31 am
The PRQ has removed quarantine conditions from ACT
Woohoo!. And how about the Democratic Republic of Western Australia?

Oh... hold on. There's bugger all to see over on that side of God's country.

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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by jackspratt » September 19, 2020, 1:52 pm

^ That's correct - bugger all new cases; bugger all new deaths; people able to freely travel the length and breadth of the state; and still holding the national economy together.

I bet there are plenty of other places around the globe that wish they had that sort of bugger all. ;)

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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by noosard » September 19, 2020, 1:57 pm

A lovely story out of DR of WA
Hitchhiker breaks the rules sentenced to 6 months in the monkey house
Truck driver due to face the music for smuggling hitchhiker into the DR of Wa and a few other rules on September the 22nd
Hitchhiker did 3 weeks jail time before ruling over turned
Now has to 50 hours community service
This all comes about she got permission to return to the DR of WA from Vic
but didnt want to do the 14 days quarantine

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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by tamada » September 19, 2020, 2:39 pm

Replacing being fined or locked up with community service is a good idea. The person being punished will take away only the positives whereas there are no positives in being hosed or jailed.

Bojo's bungling fustercluck back in the UK goes into lockdown (again), they can adapt the same, less draconian punishments and have their miscreants do their community service at the remarkably unbusy Covid testing stations.

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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by noosard » September 19, 2020, 3:11 pm

I read that in Indonesia you break the coronvirus rules you dig the graves

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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by Barney » September 21, 2020, 8:07 am

21st SEPTEMBER 1817 . . .

On this day, 21st September 1817, in an official dispatch, Governor Lachlan Macquarie advocates the adoption of the name Australia for the continent, as suggested by Matthew Flinders.

Australia was previously named New Holland by the Dutch sea explorers who landed on the western coast in the early 1600s. James Cook claimed the eastern coast of the continent for England in 1770, naming it New South Wales. After the First Fleet arrived in 1788, Captain Arthur Phillip was given orders to extend the claim further west. The western half of the continent continued to be known as New Holland, and the eastern half was New South Wales.
Matthew Flinders became the first explorer to circumnavigate the entire continent, doing so between 1801 and 1803. After being wrongly imprisoned by the French for seven years, accused of being a spy, Flinders returned to England. In 1810 he wrote an account of his expeditions, 'A Voyage to Terra Australis'. It was in this account that Flinders proposed the name 'Terra Australis' or 'Australia' be adopted for the southern continent. There were many supporters of his proposal in England, but wealthy sponsor Sir Joseph Banks did not support his suggestion. Flinders died before the new name of the continent could be decided upon.

It was Governor Lachlan Macquarie who, impressed by Flinders’ arguments, advocated that the name ‘Australia’ be adopted, and began to use this term regularly. In an official dispatch dated 21 September 1817, Macquarie stated:

'I hope [Australia] will be the Name given to this Country in future, instead of the very erroneous and misapplied name hitherto given to it of “New Holland” which properly speaking only applies to a part of this immense Continent.'

Pictured: Lachlan Macquarie. portrait, ca.1805-1824
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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by tamada » September 21, 2020, 10:52 am

Australis is Latin for southern or of the south so it's a nice sounding alternative to tosta caesio or effundensque.

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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by noosard » September 21, 2020, 11:20 am

It was named New Holland then Terra Australis by Matthew Flinders
Shortened to Australia

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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by mickojak » September 21, 2020, 4:01 pm

Barney,
Thanks for being our resident historian.
Keep up the good work.
Mick

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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by jackspratt » September 22, 2020, 7:23 pm

I see that the UK is regressing again, Covid-wise.

Honestly, as the "leader" of one of the world's great civilisations and democracies, the Flaxen Fool would would not get a look in as a state Premier (of whatever political persuasion) in Oz.

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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by tamada » September 22, 2020, 7:45 pm

^ Hey! He hired one of your has-been's so he can't be all that bad, no?

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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by jackspratt » September 22, 2020, 7:58 pm

tamada wrote:
September 22, 2020, 7:45 pm
^ Hey! He hired one of your has-been's so he can't be all that bad, no?
Just further confirmation (as if it was needed). ;)

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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by tamada » September 22, 2020, 8:02 pm

jackspratt wrote:
September 22, 2020, 7:58 pm
tamada wrote:
September 22, 2020, 7:45 pm
^ Hey! He hired one of your has-been's so he can't be all that bad, no?
Just further confirmation (as if it was needed). ;)
Agreed. Confirmation that UK statesmanship is now as dire as Australia's.

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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by jackspratt » September 22, 2020, 8:10 pm

The big difference is that Australia has moved on from Abbott.

Whereas the UK is picking up the Oz cast-off, and will continue to suffer under Johnson for at least the foreseeable future.

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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by pipoz4444 » September 22, 2020, 10:16 pm

The Dark side of Australia and I dare say, in other countries as well

Beware

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vzSXPW4wZB4

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That's one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind.

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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by GT93 » September 23, 2020, 2:49 am

tamada wrote:
September 22, 2020, 8:02 pm
jackspratt wrote:
September 22, 2020, 7:58 pm
tamada wrote:
September 22, 2020, 7:45 pm
^ Hey! He hired one of your has-been's so he can't be all that bad, no?
Just further confirmation (as if it was needed). ;)
Agreed. Confirmation that UK statesmanship is now as dire as Australia's.
:lol:

Nice try. Johnson is first grade dire. Johnson was the PM who was too lazy or thick to attend multiple COBRA meetings as Covid 19 spread. Scotty from Marketing isn't my cup of tea but he isn't anywhere near as dire as Johnson.
Lock 'em up - Eastman, Giuliani, Senator Graham, Meadows and Trump

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Re: A little ray of sunshine from Australia

Post by Barney » September 23, 2020, 12:58 pm

23rd SEPTEMBER 1830 . . .

On this day, 23rd September 1830, the Bathurst Rebellion begins outside Bathurst, New South Wales, following the escape of a group of convicts known as the 'Ribbon Gang' under the leadership of convict-servant Ralph Entwistle. Ten of the rebels are later captured and publicly hung after being tried and found guilty of murder.

Entwistle was a Bolton labourer convicted of stealing clothing and transported to New South Wales in 1827. After arriving in Sydney, he and a few other convicts were assigned to squatter John Lipscombe and sent across the newly traversed Blue Mountains to work on his land, near Bathurst. In November 1829, Entwistle and another assigned servant drove one of their master's bullock drays to Sydney Markets to deliver wool, and on returning to Bathurst, in the heat of the day, stopped for a skinny dip in the Macquarie River. Governor Ralph Darling and his party, then touring Bathurst, happened to pass by the bathing convicts, who were subsequently hauled before the Police Magistrate of Bathurst, Thomas Evernden, and charged with "causing an affront to the Governor", despite Darling not having seen the incident. Entwistle and his companion were each sentenced to a public flogging of 50 lashes. This experience left Entwistle embittered, and within a year, he had taken up bushranging and persuaded other convicts to join him.
In late September 1830, Entwistle and his men began raiding farms, seizing firearms and liberating convicts in the process. The gang had grown to 50 members by the time they arrived at the farm of Thomas Evernden, seeking revenge, but the magistrate was absent. When the farm's overseer, James Greenwood, refused to allow Evernden's convict servants to join the gang, Entwistle and his men threatened to shoot him dead. Greenwood still refused, saying they were "not game enough" to shoot him, at the same time baring his chest. Entwistle and two other bushrangers, Gahan and Kearney, fired immediately, killing Greenwood.

When news of the murder reached Bathurst, the locals met at the courthouse to rally support for the settlement's six troopers. Twelve men volunteered, including pastoralist and politician William Henry Suttor, who was chosen as the volunteers' leader, with his brother Charles second in command. By this stage, the Ribbon Gang had trekked to the Abercrombie River, and at Trunkey Creek, the hard core of the group, led by Entwistle, splintered off and headed for the Abercrombie Caves. Most of the other forcibly recruited convicts returned to their assigned farms. Suttor's volunteers, together with the troopers under the command of Major Donald McPherson, set out for the caves, passing through stations the gang had ransacked, and the next day near sundown, with the assistance of two Aboriginal trackers, found and cornered the gang—now reduced to 20 men. Over 300 shots were fired in the ensuing gunfight, and several men on both sides were wounded, at least two bushrangers mortally. As night fell, the volunteers were forced to retire to Bathurst, allowing time for the Ribbon Gang to move to a more secure location beyond the caves—a bald hill, now known as Bushranger's Hill.

The next battle of the Bathurst Rebellion involved a police party led by Lieutenant James Brown of the 57th Regiment of Foot. The bushrangers claimed a victory, killing two of Brown's constables and five of his horses. As Brown and his men returned to Bathurst, military reinforcements were called for; 130 British Army soldiers from the 39th Regiment of Foot began the march from Sydney whilst members of the New South Wales Mounted Police were dispatched from Goulburn via the convict-built Tuena Road. The Ribbon Gang continued to raid homesteads and attract recruits as they moved through Cowra, and in the vicinity of Galong, near Boorowa, encountered the mounted troopers from Goulburn, commanded by Lieutenant John McAllister. Men from both sides were wounded in the gun battle that followed, including McAllister, who was shot in the thigh. The troopers retreated to their police barracks at Bong Bong, taking three wounded bushrangers prisoners with them. The Ribbon Gang was now exhausted and depleted of men, and once the combined military force from Bathurst and the infantry regiment from Sydney arrived, the remaining bushrangers either dispersed or surrendered.

On 30 October 1830, the bushrangers were put on trial in the Bathurst Court House by the order of Governor Ralph Darling. They were tried by a Special Commission and a jury of military officers, with His Honor the Chief Justice of New South Wales Francis Forbes present. Ralph Entwistle, William Gahan, Michael Kearney, Patrick Gleeson, Thomas Dunn and John Shepherd were convicted of the murder of John Greenwood and hanged. The remaining bushrangers: Robert Webster, James Driver, Dominic Daby and John Kenny were hanged for plundering farmhouses.

The public execution took place on 2 November in Bathurst on the site of what is now known as Ribbon Gang Lane. After being kept on display for a day "as a warning", the bodies were buried in two mass graves, five in each.


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