
Gregory Blaxland

Exploration of Blaxland
'Gregory Blaxland' (
17 June 1788 –
31 December 1852) was a pioneer farmer and explorer in
Australia.
Born in Fordwich,
Kent,
England in
1788 (or 1771 according to ''Burkes's Colonial Gentry''), the fourth son of John Blaxland senior who was mayor 1767 to 1774 and whose family owned nearby estates for years.
He arrived in
Sydney, Australia in April 1806, followed by his brother
John Blaxland in 1807 as a free settler. In 1808 was associated with the
Macarthur faction in the deposing of
Governor Bligh. He made his peace with
Governor Macquarie but fell out of favour later on.
In 1813, he led the first known European expedition across the area of the
Great Dividing Range known as the
Blue Mountains, along with
William Lawson and
William Charles Wentworth, on a journey which would open up the inland of the continent. He is also noted as one of the first settlers to plant
grapes for the purpose of making
wine.
He visited England and in February 1823 he published his ''Journal Of A Tour Of Discovery Across The Blue Mountains'':
:"On Tuesday, May 11, 1813, Mr. Gregory Blaxland, Mr. William Wentworth, and Lieutenant Lawson, attended by four servants, with five dogs, and four horses laden with provisions, ammunition, and other necessaries, left Mr. Blaxland's farm at the South Creek, for the purpose of endeavouring to effect a passage over the Blue Mountains ..."
Later the same year he was awarded the silver medal of the
Royal Society of Arts for some wine he had exported to
London, and five years later he received its gold medal. In January 1827 Blaxland was elected by a public meeting with two others to present a petition to
Governor Darling asking that "Trial by jury" and "Taxation by Representation" should be extended to the colony.
Blaxland was engaged during the next few years in wine-making. and other activities, but took no prominent part in the life of the colony. For the last six months of his life he was suffering a great deal with pains in his head which affected his mind, and he died by his own hand on
31 December 1852. In 1798 he had married Eliza, daughter of John Spurden, and was survived by their sons and daughters. He is buried in All Saints Cemetery in
Parramatta. The township of
Blaxland in the
Blue Mountains is named after him, as is the
Australian Electoral Division of Blaxland.
See also
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Ermington, New South Wales
Reference
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External links
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Blaxland, Gregory (1778 - 1853) at Australian Dictionary of Biography
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Online edition of the Journal
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PDF version of the Journal