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1788 in Australia

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The following lists events that happened during 1788 in Australia.

Leaders

  • Monarch – George III
  • Governor of New South Wales – Captain Arthur Phillip
  • Lieutenant-Governor of Norfolk Island – Philip Gidley King
  • Commanding officer of the colony's marine presence – Major Robert Ross

Events

  • 18 January – Captain Arthur Phillip arrives in Botany Bay with the lead ship of the First Fleet, .
  • 19 January – Alexander, Friendship and Scarborough, convict transports of First Fleet arrive Botany Bay.
  • 20 January – Final ships of First Fleet, the convict transports Charlotte, Lady Penrhyn and Prince of Wales with the supply transports Borrowdale, and escorted by arrive in Botany Bay.
  • 24 January – The La Perouse expedition in the Astrolabe and Boussole arrive at Botany Bay.
  • 26 January – After Botany Bay was decided unsuitable for settlement, the First Fleet sails to Port Jackson and lands at Sydney Cove to establish a settlement (which becomes Sydney).
  • 6 February – The first female convicts disembark at Port Jackson.
  • 9 February – The Colony of New South Wales is formally proclaimed, with Phillip sworn in as Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief.
  • 14 February – HMS Supply leaves Sydney Cove to establish a settlement on Norfolk Island.
  • 18 February – Lord Howe Island is discovered by Lieutenant Henry Lidgbird Ball on .
  • 27 February – A convict, Thomas Barrett, receives the first death sentence in the colony.
  • 6 March – Lieutenant Philip Gidley King establishes a settlement on Norfolk Island with a party of fifteen convicts and seven men.
  • 10 March – The La Perouse expedition leaves Botany Bay for New Caledonia, disappeared at sea.
  • 15 April – Phillip explores northwards to Manly, and sights the Blue Mountains.
  • 23 April – Governor Phillip explores the area now known as Parramatta, west of Sydney.
  • 5 May – Charlotte, Lady Penrhyn and Scarborough set sail for China.
  • 29 May – Two convicts are killed by Aboriginals at Rushcutters Bay; Phillip leads a punitive attack on the Aborigines on 31 May.
  • 5 June – All the settlement's cattle brought from Cape Town escape; they are not recaptured until November 1795.
  • 14 July – Borrowdale, Alexander, Friendship and Prince of Wales set sail to return to England.
  • 21 July – First sitting of the Court of Civil Jurisdiction.
  • September – Sydney's first road, from the Governor's House to Dawes Point, is completed.
  • 2 October – Captain John Hunter takes to the Cape of Good Hope to pick up supplies.
  • 2 November – A second settlement is established at Rose Hill, which will later become Parramatta.
  • 19 November – Fishburn and Golden Grove set sail for England.

Births

  • 4 January – Johann Menge, South Australian explorer and geologist (d. 1852)
  • 16 January – Hannibal Hawkins Macarthur, New South Wales politician and businessman (d. 1861)
  • 17 April – Charles Hervey Bagot, South Australian pastoralist, mine owner and parliamentarian (d. 1880)
  • 22 May – William Broughton, bishop (d. 1853)
  • 2 August – Charles Hardwicke, Tasmanian explorer (d. 1880)
  • 24 August – Osmond Gilles, South Australian colonial treasurer (d. 1866)
  • 24 October – John Burdett Wittenoom, Swan River Colony clergyman (d. 1855)
  • date unknown
    • Charles Fraser, botanist (d. 1831)
    • Frederick Goulburn, first Colonial Secretary of New South Wales (d. 1837)
    • John Ovens, explorer (d. 1825)
    • Thomas Pamphlett, convict and castaway (d. 1838)
    • Henry Willey Reveley, Swan River Colony civil engineer (d. 1875)
    • Edward Buckley Wynyard, New South Wales politician (d. 1864)

Deaths

  • 17 February – Louis Receveur, astronomer-priest, member of the French La Perouse expedition (b. )
  • 27 February – Thomas Barrett, convict and the first person executed under British law in Australia (b. )
  • 5 June – Ruth Bowyer, convict (b. )

References

References

  1. [http://www.nla.gov.au/exhibitions/upsidedown/timeline/1788.html The World Upside Down – Australia 1788–1930], National Library of Australia.
  2. (2003). "Investigating early settlement on Lord Howe Island". Australian Archaeology.
  3. (1893). "Historical Records of New South Wales". Lansdown Slattery & Company.
  4. John Henniker Heaton. (1879). "Australian Dictionary of Dates and Men of the Time: Containing the History of Australasia from 1542 to May, 1879". G. Robertson.
  5. "Broughton, William Grant (1788–1853)". National Centre of Biography, Australian National University.
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