The Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser, Thu 15 Oct 1829
1935 – The Hornibrook Bridge opens, connecting Brisbane and Redcliffe, the 2.8 km bridge is one of the longest timber and girder bridges in Australia.
The Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser, Thu 15 Oct 1829
1790 Slightly cracked and half past a pool noodle, John Macarthur rocked up in Sydney for the first time.
His wife, Elizabeth, did a lot for the sheep industry with Merinos.
1836 Snow fell in Sydney all over the shop and scared the two-legged wildlife.
1847 The Right Reverend Charles Perry was consecrated as the first Bishop of Melbourne (29 June).
1848 The Right Reverend Charles Perry was installed in the Cathedral Church of St James.
1880 Bushranger Ned Kelly was caught by the police after throwing a tanty that resulted in a number of people being not alive.
1880 Melbourne became the first city to install a commercial telephone when engineering firm Robison Bros hooked up their Melbourne office to their South Melbourne foundry.
Book-ending the bloody mess called The First World War
1914 The assassination of Arch-Duke Ferdinand and his wife, Sophia, kicked off 4 years of mayhem.
1919 Billy Hughes signed the Versailles Treaty on behalf of Australia; the Treaty of Versailles officially brought an end to the war.
Sources - I accidentally closed some of the tabs and I'm getting tired, cranky and snarky, so I'll do it tomorrow.
Or something.
On this merry wee date in history a few things all cricket flavoured happened.
1882 The Australian Cricket Team took on the United South of England at Chichester and made a tidy little score.
Source:
Australia V United South England
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1915 Australian cricketer Victor Trumper was farewelled at the too-young age of 37.
Source:
Victor Trumper
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1938 Australian cricketer Don Bradman scored 102 at Lords.
Source:
Don Bradman
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2006 Keith Miller's Baggy Green cricket cap was auctioned for $35,000 more than 50 years after he wore it.
Source:
Keith Miller
The night of June 24, 1852 saw the river Murrumbidgee swell to breaking its banks, flooding the original township of Gundagai (Gun-da-guy).
European settlers had established buildings on the low lying ground, too close to the river.
Wiradjuri (Wee-rad-jury) men came to the rescue of the Europeans - even though they'd tried to warn them against building the town and buildings where they had - Indigenous people were often the saviours of those who'd dismissed/ignored or treated them badly.
Previous floods had seen Wiradjuri people rescue Europeans in the 1840s.
The Wiradjuri men of whose names we know were Yarri (Coonong Denamundinna) Jacky Jacky, Long Jimmy and Tommy Davis.
They rescued an estimated 69 people in bark canoes over three days and nights.
No one knows the exact number of people who lost their lives as the population was often increased with drovers, but with 250 people living in the town, at least 80 - 100 people died, untold livestock losses and only 3 houses left standing after the flood water receded.
And, of course, no one knows how many Indigenous people died.
Sources:
https://indigenousx.com.au/the-heroes-of-gundagai/
https://www.visitgundagai.com.au/discovergundagai/sculpture-the-great-rescue-of-1852
https://csaa.asn.au/2022/08/08/gundagai-yarri-and-jacky-jacky/
https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/101627922
https://www.visitgundagai.com.au/discovergundagai/oldgundagai
1786 - Barron Field, who claimed to be the first poet of Australia *ahem* and was for a number of years an actual judge in New South Wales...