Everything about Cooktown totally explained
Cooktown (
Guugu Yimithirr:
Gan.gaarr [ganˈgaːr]) is the northernmost town on the east coast of
Australia, located at the mouth of the
Endeavour River, on
Cape York Peninsula in
Far North Queensland.
The
Guugu Yimithirr name for the region,
Gan.gaarr, means "(place of the) rock crystals," as quartz crystals, which were used in various
Aboriginal ceremonies, are found in the vicinity and used to be traded at least as far south as modern
Mossman, to the north of Cairns.
History
Cook's Arrival
The site of modern Cooktown was the meeting place of two vastly different cultures when, in June
1770, the local Aboriginal
Guugu Yimithirr tribe cautiously watched the crippled
sailing vessel – His Majesty's Bark
Endeavour – limp up the coast of their territory seeking a safe
harbour after sustaining serious damage to its wooden hull from running aground on Endeavour Reef south of Cooktown. The Guugu Yimithirr saw
Endeavour beached in the calm waters near the mouth of their river, which they called "Wahalumbaal".
James Cook wrote: “. . . it was happy for us that a place of refuge was at hand; for we soon found that the ship wouldn't work, and it's remarkable that in the whole course of our voyage we'd seen no place that our present circumstances could have afforded us the same relief".
The English crew spent seven weeks on the site of the present day Cooktown, repairing their ship, replenishing food and water supplies, and caring for their sick. While the wealthy scientist,
Joseph Banks, and Swedish naturalist
Daniel Solander, who accompanied Cook on the expedition, were collecting, preserving and documenting many new species of plants, the young artist
Sydney Parkinson was illustrating them. He was the first English artist to portray Aboriginal people from direct observation.
After some weeks, Banks met and spoke with the local people, recording about 50
Guugu Yimithirr words, including the name of the intriguing animal the natives called
gangurru (which he transcribed as “Kangaru”). The kangaroo was first seen by European settlers on Grassy Hill during this trip.
Cook named the river the “Endeavour”, after his ship, and, as they sailed north, he hoisted the flag known as the 'Queen Anne Jack' and claimed possession of the whole eastern coast of Australia for Britain. He named
Cape York Peninsula after the then
HRH the Duke of York.
King's Expedition
The next recorded expedition to the area was nearly 50 years later, when another botanist,
Allan Cunningham, accompanying Captain
Phillip Parker King, visited the remarkable region in
1819-
20. He also collected numerous botanical specimens for the
British Museum and
Kew Gardens.
Gold Rush
In
1872,
William Hann discovered gold on the
Palmer River, southwest of Cooktown. His findings were reported to
James Venture Mulligan who led an expedition to the Palmer River in
1873. Mulligan's expedition found quantities of alluvial gold and thus began the
gold rush that was to bring prospectors to the Endeavour River from all over the world.
The Queensland government responded quickly to Mulligan's reports, and soon a party was dispatched to advise whether the Endeavour River would be a suitable site for a port. Shortly after, a new township was established at the site of the present town, on the southern bank of the river.
The Palmer goldfields and its centre,
Maytown, were growing quickly. The recorded output of gold from 1873 to 1890 was over half a million ounces (more than 15,500 kg). Cooktown was the port through which this gold was exported and supplies for the goldfields brought in. Word of the gold quickly spread, and Cooktown was soon thriving, as
prospectors arrived from around the world.
Population estimates vary widely, but there were probably around 7,000 people in the area and about 4,000 permanent residents in the town by
1880. At that time, Cooktown boasted a large number of hotels and guest houses. There were 47 licensed pubs within the town boundaries in 1874 although this number had dropped to 27 by the beginning of 1880. There were also a number of illegal
grog shops and several brothels. There were bakeries, a brewery and a soft drinks factory, dressmakers and milliners, a brickworks, a cabinetmaker, and two newspapers.
The Chinese played an important role in the early days of Cooktown. They came originally as prospectors, but many established market gardens, supplying the town and the goldfields with fruit, vegetables and rice, while others opened shops.
However, largely through cultural misunderstandings, conflict broke out between the Aboriginal people and the new settlers, and the diggers.
The Cooktown Herald, 8 December
1875, reported: “The natives wholly ignorant of the terrible firepower of fire-arms, and confiding in their numbers, showed a ferocity and daring wholly unexpected and unsurpassed. Grasping the very muzzles of the rifles they attempted to wrest them from the hands of the whites, standing to be shot down, rather than yield an inch....” It was an unequal struggle. Whole tribes were wiped out as European settlement spread over
Cape York Peninsula.
Transport was an ongoing problem for the new settlers. Getting supplies and people to the goldfields often took three weeks. After every
wet season the tracks and bridges had to be remade. A railway line from Cooktown to
Maytown, was planned, but it took five years to get the 67 miles (108 km) to
Laura – and that's where it stopped. By that time the gold was petering out, so the Queensland Government refused further funding for the venture.
In spite of this, the train proved to be a lifeline for the Peninsula people connecting the hinterland to Cooktown, from where one could catch a boat to
Cairns and other southern ports. The line was closed in 1961 after the Peninsula Development Road was built connecting Cooktown and other Peninsula communities with Cairns and the
Atherton Tableland to the south.
Cooktown's magnificent Botanic Garden of 62 hectares (154 acres) was established near the town in 1878. Much work was done in the early stages – with wells sunk, water reticulated, garden beds enclosed, stone-lined paths, stone-pitched pools and footbridges made, and lawns, trees and shrubs planted.
Although the gardens fell into disrepair, in recent years they've been expanded, and are a favoured destination for botanists and nature lovers. Most of the early stonework has been restored, and beautiful walking tracks lead the visitor through the Botanic Garden to the magnificent beaches at Finch Bay and Cherry Tree Bay.
In
1881, a bridge over the
Endeavour River was completed, which opened up the richer pastoral lands of the Endeavour and McIvor River valleys.
Tin was found in the Annan River area, south of Cooktown, in
1884.
In
1886, Lutheran missionaries came to Cooktown to establish a secure place for the Aboriginal people who were living in abominable conditions on the edge of the town. Missions were established at Elim on the beach (later they moved inland to
Hopevale), and
Wujal Wujal, near the mouth of the Bloomfield River.
With the gold rush over, the number of people living in the area started dwindling. Two major fires struck Cooktown – in
1875 and, again, in
1919 when whole blocks of buildings in the main street were burned to the ground. A major
cyclone in
1907 added to the destruction.
World War II
By
1940, little evidence of Cooktown or Maytown's interesting past remained. During the
Second World War, Cooktown became an important base for the war effort.
Some 20,000 Australian and American troops were stationed in and around the town. The busy airfield played a key role in the crucial
Battle of the Coral Sea when Japanese expansion towards the Australian mainland was finally halted.
Most of the population of
Cape York Peninsula, both Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal, were moved “down south” for the duration of the War. Many Aboriginal people died when moved from their traditional lands, and many Aboriginal and white families never returned from their exile.
Cooktown since World War II
In
1949, another cyclone devastated the town, and Cooktown's population declined further. With the closure of the rail link to
Laura in 1961 and the
Peninsula Development Road opened up to the south, the population declined to just a few hundred people before it gradually began to climb again.
Today, there's a generally harmonious relationship between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal residents in the region. There is an active Aboriginal Community Centre on the main street called Gungarde (from the original
Guugu Yimithirr name for the region).
The "Milbi Wall" (or "Story Wall")
(External Link
) marks the place of the first encounter between the British seafarers and the local Aborigines. The Milbi Wall tells the story of Cooktown and the Endeavour River from the perspective of the Aboriginal people, and is an outstanding monument to reconciliation.
Cooktown has recently grown in importance again and has become a popular tourist destination. The paving of the
Mulligan Highway now provides all-weather access by road for the first time. There are two flights a day connecting Cooktown with Cairns. The town now has good communications, more services, better roads, and offers residents a relaxed and healthy lifestyle.
About 2,000 people live in the town itself while about another 4,000 in the region use it as a service centre. Visitors enjoy the delightful tropical environment, the historical connections, and use it as an access point to the
Great Barrier Reef, the
Lakefield National Park, and for fishing.
Cooktown is of particular interest to botanists since the time of Cook's visit when extensive collections and illustrations were made of local plants. It is situated at the junction of several vegetation zones including tropical rainforest,
sclerophyll forests, sandy dunes and lagoons.
Vera Scarth-Johnson, a local resident, gave a priceless collection of her botanical illustrations to the people of Cooktown, which are now housed in a dedicated gallery at Nature's PowerHouse situated in the Botanic Gardens, and features displays of local flora and fauna.
Cooktown is a service centre for the district including the Aboriginal communities of
Hopevale, 47 km to the northwest, and
Wujal Wujal, 72 km to the south.
Cooktown is the northern terminus of the
Bicentennial Heritage Trail, which, at 5,330 km (3,312 miles), is the longest trail of its type in the world. The southern end of the trail is at
Healesville, Victoria, a beautiful town 52 km north-east of Melbourne.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Cooktown'.
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