Sturt's
party reaches the junction of the Murray and Murrumbidgee Rivers on their
arduous journey upstream to Sydney.
Captain
Charles Sturt was born in India in 1795. He came to Australia in 1827, and soon
after undertook to solve the mystery of where the inland rivers of New South
Wales flowed. Because they appeared to flow towards the centre of the
continent, the belief was held that they emptied into an inland sea. Sturt
first traced the Macquarie River as far as the Darling, which he named after
Governor Darling. Pleased with Sturt's discoveries, the following year Governor
Darling sent Sturt to trace the course of the Murrumbidgee River, and to see
whether it joined to the Darling. Sturt followed the Murrumbidgee in a
whaleboat and discovered that the Murrumbidgee River flowed into the Murray
(previously named the Hume).
Sturt continued to trace the course of the Murray southwards, arriving at Lake Alexandrina, from which he could see the open sea of the southern coast, in February 1830. However, the expedition then had to face an agonising journey rowing back up the Murray against the current. The men rowed in shifts from dawn until dusk each day, low on rations, through extreme heat, and against the floodwaters heading downstream. On 17 March 1830, they reached the junction of the Murray and Murrumbidgee Rivers. By the time they reached their depot at Maude on the Murrumbidgee, they had rowed and sailed 3,000 km on Australia's inland rivers, with no loss of life.
Sturt continued to trace the course of the Murray southwards, arriving at Lake Alexandrina, from which he could see the open sea of the southern coast, in February 1830. However, the expedition then had to face an agonising journey rowing back up the Murray against the current. The men rowed in shifts from dawn until dusk each day, low on rations, through extreme heat, and against the floodwaters heading downstream. On 17 March 1830, they reached the junction of the Murray and Murrumbidgee Rivers. By the time they reached their depot at Maude on the Murrumbidgee, they had rowed and sailed 3,000 km on Australia's inland rivers, with no loss of life.
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