Station
Similar stations in G 123-16
Surface Settlement (Installation) - -
G 123-16 Crimson Universal ServBeltrami's Progress
Surface Settlement (Installation) - -
G 123-16 Pro-Alliance GroupGrand Spring Harvests
Installation (Agricultural) - -
Hand gang of G 123-16Jones' Folly
Surface Settlement (Installation) - -
Hand gang of G 123-16Lichfield Hold
Installation (Unauthorised) - -
Hand gang of G 123-16Little Stream Stores
Installation (Government) - -
G 123-16 Pro-Alliance GroupRoosevelt Heights
Installation (Tourist) - -
G 123-16 Pro-Alliance GroupSmith Works
Surface Settlement (Installation) - -
Liberals of G 123-16
Galpedia
Hamilton Hume
Hamilton Hume (19 June 1797 – 19 April 1873) was an early explorer of the present-day Australian states of New South Wales and Victoria. Along with Hovell in 1824, Hume was part of an expedition that first took an overland route from Sydney to Port Phillip near the site of present day Melbourne. Along with Sturt in 1828, he was part of an expedition of the first Europeans to discover the Darling River.
On 19 June 1797 Hume was born at Seven Hills (his father's property) near Parramatta, a settlement close to (and now a suburb of) Sydney.
Hume was the eldest son of Andrew Hamilton Hume and his wife Elizabeth, née Kennedy. Andrew Hume got the appointment of Commissary-General for New South Wales, and came out to this colony in 1797. There were few opportunities for education in Australia during the first ten years of the nineteenth century, and Hamilton Hume received most of his education from his mother.
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