PART II
Preface
journal of an expedition in
Australia part II.
Appendix part I.
No. I. Instructions for conducting and leading
first expedition.
No. II Report of tour over Blue Mountains in
1815 by the Governor.
No. III Letter from Oxley to Governor advising
of his return from first
expedition.
Appendix part II.
No. IV Diary of Mr. Evans, from 8th to 18th
of July, 1818.
No. V. Governor’s report on the return
of Oxley from the second
expedition,
together with a letter from Oxley on his arrival
at
Port Stephens..
No. VI. Governor’s report on Oxley’s
discovery of Port Stephens together
with
a letter from Oxley to the Governor on this subject.
A brief abstract of the population of N.S.W in 1815,
1816 and 1817.
A statement of land in cultivation, quantities of
stock, etc. from
1813
to 1817 inclusive.
LIST OF PLATES (NOT INCLUDED IN THIS EBOOK).
Field Plains from Mount Aymot.
The Grave of a Native of Australia.
Arbuthnot’s Range, from the West.
Liverpool Plains. West Prospect from View Hill.
Bathurst’s Falls.
A Native Chief of Bathurst.
LIST OF CHARTS (NOT INCLUDED IN THIS EBOOK).
Range of the Thermometer from April 9th to August
30th 1817 by John
Oxley.
A Chart of Part of the Interior of New South Wales,
1817.
First Expedition.
A Chart of Part of the Interior of New South Wales,
1818.
Second Expedition.
Reduced Sketch of the Two Expeditions.
A Plan of Port Macquarie Including a Sketch of Part
of Hastings River,
on the East Coast of
New South Wales.
A General Statement of the Inhabitants of New South
Wales as per General
Muster commencing 28th
September 1818, with an account of same
at Van Diemmens Land.
A General Statement of the Land in Cultivation etc.,
the quantities
of Stock etc.,
as accounted for at the General Muster, with an
account of same at Van
Diemmens Land..
Journal of an expedition in
Australia
Part I.
To his excellency lachlan Macquarie,
Esq.
Major general in the Army,
and Captain general and governor
in chief in and over the
territory
of new south Wales and its
dependencies,
the following journal of an
expedition,
performed under his administration
and direction,
is respectfully inscribed, by
his very obedient humble servant,
John Oxley.