We have at all events proved that they [the Mountains] are traversable, and that, too, by cattle, a circumstance which by those who were allowed to possess some local knowledge of the country has been hitherto deemed impossible.
W. C. Wentworth (1790–1872) was twenty-three when he went on this expedition. He had already been granted 1750 acres by Governor Macquarie on the Nepean and was spurred on by youthful adventure as well as the desire to discover new pastures.
The illegitimate son of a convict, Catherine Crowley, and D’Arcy Wentworth, who
had been charged with, but not convicted of, highway robbery, William Charles
rose to be one of the commanding figures of New South Wales politics.
Display item Across the Blue Mountains
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