1804 in Australia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Flag of Australia.svg
1804
in
Australia

Decades:
  • 1780s
  • 1790s
  • 1800s
  • 1810s
  • 1820s
See also:

The following lists events that happened during 1804 in Australia.

Incumbents[]

  • Monarch - George III

Governors[]

Governors of the Australian colonies:

  • Governor of New South WalesCaptain Philip King
  • Lieutenant-Governor of Southern Van Diemen's LandDavid Collins
  • Lieutenant-Governor of Northern Van Diemen's LandWilliam Paterson

Events[]

  • 4 March – The Castle Hill convict rebellion, also known as the Battle of Vinegar Hill, takes place: 200 convicts, mostly Irish, rebel. Fifty-one convicts are punished, and nine hanged.[1]
  • 3 May – An Aboriginal food hunting party is attacked by settlers and soldiers at Risdon Cove. Eyewitness estimates of the death toll from the massacre vary from three or four to fifty.[2]
  • 16 September – A government-owned brewery is opened at Parramatta as a means of controlling the consumption of spirits.[3]
  • 4 November – In a letter to Sir Joseph Banks, Matthew Flinders recommends that the newly discovered country, New Holland, be renamed "Australia" or "Terra Australis" (from the Latin "australis" meaning "of the south").[4]

Exploration and settlement[]

  • 15 February – Lieutenant-Governor David Collins lands at Risdon Cove in Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania). Unhappy with the area as a site for a settlement, Collins sends his surveyor, George Prideaux Harris, and harbour master William Collins in search of an alternative site. Harris and Collins recommend Sullivan's Cove.[5]
  • 24 March – The settlement at the Hunter River, also known as the Coal River, is officially named Newcastle.[6]
  • 8 May – Lieutenant-Governor Collins establishes the settlement at Sullivan's Cove on the Derwent River.[7]
  • 15 June – The name "Hobart Town", after the Colonial Secretary Lord Hobart, is adopted as the name for the new colony at Sullivan's Cove.[7]
  • 5 November – Lieutenant-Colonel William Paterson arrives at Outer Cove, leading the Buffalo, the Lady Nelson and two schooners, under instructions from London to form a settlement in the north of Van Diemen's Land.[7]

Births[]

Deaths[]

  • 21 March – James Bloodsworth (born 1759), convict and bricklayer
  • 27 December – George Barrington (born 1755), convict and police officer

References[]

  1. ^ Whitaker, Anne-Maree: Castle Hill convict rebellion 1804, Dictionary of Sydney.
  2. ^ Darby, Andrew: Debate exposes 200-year-old massacre, The Age, 4 May 2004.
  3. ^ Late in the eighteenth century, Australian Beers.
  4. ^ Flinders' letter to Sir Joseph Banks 1804, National Library of Australia, 4 November 1804.
  5. ^ Newman, Terry: Bowen Refuses to Bow Out Archived 5 March 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Parliamentary History Project (Parliament of Tasmania), December 2003.
  6. ^ Settlement at Coal Harbour and Hunter’s River to be named Newcastle, Limits of Settlement and Governorship, &c., University of Newcastle, 24 September 1804.
  7. ^ a b c 1803–1850s, British outpost, Tasmanian Year Book 2005, Australian Bureau of Statistics, 21 November 2006.
Retrieved from ""