Everything about Bennelong Point New South Wales totally explained
Bennelong Point is the location of the
Sydney Opera House in
Sydney,
Australia . It was called
Tubowghule by the local
Indigenous Australians.
The point was originally a small
tidal island,
Bennelong Island, that largely consisted of rocks with a small beach on the western side. The island was located on the tip of the eastern arm of Sydney Cove and was apparently separated from the mainland at high tide. For a brief period in
1788, this relatively isolated protrusion into
Port Jackson (Sydney's natural harbour) was called
Cattle Point as it was used to confine the few cattle and horses that had been brought from
Cape Town by
Governor Phillip with the
First Fleet.
The area at that time was also strewn with discarded oyster shells from thousands of years of gathering by the local aboriginal women. Those shells were regathered by the newly arrived convict women and burnt to make
lime for cement
mortar. The point was called
Limeburners' Point for that reason, though those shells only furnished enough lime to make a single building, the two-storey government house.
In the early
1790s, the Aborigine
Bennelong—kidnapped and employed as a cultural
interlocutor by the British—persuaded
New South Wales Governor
Arthur Phillip to build a brick hut for him on the point, giving it its name.
In December
1798, a half-moon battery was constructed at the extreme northern end of the Point, mounted with guns from
HMS Supply.
In the period from
1818 to
1821, the tidal area between Bennelong Island and the mainland was filled with rocks excavated from the Bennelong Point peninsula. The entire area was leveled to create a low platform and to provide suitable stone for the construction of
Fort Macquarie. While the fort was being built, a large portion of the rocky escarpment at Bennelong Point was also cut away to allow a road to be built around the point from
Sydney Cove to Farm Cove. This was known as Tarpeian Way.
The existence of the original tidal island and its rubble fill were largely forgotten until the late
1950s when both were rediscovered during the excavations related to the construction of the
Sydney Opera House. Prior to the Opera House's construction, Bennelong Point had housed
Fort Macquarie Tram Depot.
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