Port Arthur penal colony.
The ruins of the barracks.
The church were they tried to rehabilitate the convicts.
The Tasman National Park coastline.
The Tasman Bridge in Hobart.
Hobart from the summit.
Tuesday,
March 29th.
I
got up and found out they had a buffet continental breakfast so I
indulged before retracing my drive from last night towards Port
Arthur. The drive was pretty and took about an hour and a half to get
there. Port Arthur Historic Site is recognized by the World Heritage
Foundation. It is a penal station that was established in 1830 as a
timber getting camp, using convict labour to produce sawn logs for
government projects. At the time Tasmania was called Van Diemen's
Land. It was used from the 1830's until it closed in 1877. This
colony was for repeated offenders, or escapees from other colonies.
There was a large barracks for men and on an island off shore there
was one for boys as young as nine. This was the beginning of juvenile
reform in Australia.
I
had a 40 minute guided walking tour and a half hour cruise around the
lovely harbour. It was an interesting place with lot of buildings and
ruins to explore, including the barracks, the prison and the large
church, but I couldn't help feeling that it would not have been as
nice when it was operating. Now it is very pretty and clean. I'm sure
it was a horrible place in its day. They tried to rehabilitate the
criminals who were mostly thieves and put them to work. There was a
brick making factory, logging, boat building, farming and other
shops.
After
the cruise I decided to leave and drive back to Hobart. As the
highway came over a hill it gave an incredible view of the Tasman
Bridge. I spent a half hour driving around and trying to find the way
up a pedestrian walkway over the highway from which to take a photo
of it. In the process I found another small summit that gave a good
view of the city. Finally I found the pathway and walked up. It was a
great view. I had hoped to go to the Bruny Islands south of Hobart,
but there was not enough time, so I decided to drive up Mt
Wellington. Apparently Charles Darwin climbed up here well before
there was a road!
What
an incredible road up! This was another Depression era make work
project that used unemployed WWI soldiers to construct a 10
kilometres long road up a very steep mountain. The summit above the
tree line is quite large and flat and offers incredible views of
Hobart and the surroundings. Really spectacular. I wandered around
for a bit and then talked to two Australian men who told me some of
the things I could see including the bridge I had photographed, and
how an ore carrying ship had crashed into it one night in 1973 and
caused part of the span to collapse! Then they had no bridge to
connect the two sides of the city except for one about 20 kms away.
When they rebuilt the bridge they built around the wreckage of the
ship that sank right there with its cargo and the span of the bridge
on top of it. The whole thing is below the water.
Then
I drove back down and began to look for a hotel. I was tired and
determined to find one earlier than the last couple of nights, but
after a short look without luck, I decided to go back to the Travel
Lodge. I knew where it was, that it was good and affordable and had a
breakfast. I got there about seven, and spent the evening typing,
watching the news and reading.
Drove a total of 266 kms today.
Drove a total of 266 kms today.
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