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Australian migration history timeline

1770

Cook names the east coast of Australia ‘New South Wales’



Captain James Cook – watercolour
on ivory miniature in gold frame,
DL Pa 24, Mitchell Library, State
Library of New South Wales

In 1768, England sent an expedition to Tahiti to chart the transit of Venus across the sun. James Cook, a brilliant Royal Navy navigator and map maker, was in charge of the expedition on the converted coal carrier HMS Endeavour. After completing the astronomical task of observing the transit of Venus, Cook set out to see if there was a Great South Land – the land that navigators had believed existed for hundreds of years. After circumnavigating New Zealand, Cook’s expedition sailed west for Van Diemens Land (Tasmania) but winds forced the Endeavour north and the expedition came upon the east coast of Australia in April 1770. For the next four months, Cook mapped the east coast from Eden to the Gulf of Carpentaria. At a brief and simple ceremony at Botany Bay, Cook named the entire east coast of Australia New South Wales.



1770 Captain Cook's Sextant

Discover the Sextant used by Captain James Cook on his third Pacific voyage that is from the British National Maritime Museum, London, UK.

1768 Captain Cook's Secret Instructions

Discover the Secret Instructions in a letterbook to Lieutenant James Cook, dated 1768.

1770 HMS Endeavour cannon

Discover the Endeavour cannon, thrown overboard when Cook’s ship struck a coral reef.

View other objects from this era »