• About
    • La Perouse Museum and Headland Trust
    • Local Place Names
    • Major Sites
    • Stakeholders
      • Friends of the Laperouse Museum
        • Friends of the Laperouse Museum Executive Committee
        • Membership
        • Merchandise
        • Museum
          • Museum Collection
            • Gallery
          • Museum Establishment
            • Documents
            • Gallery
            • Laperouse Day
          • Museum Floor Plans
        • Newsletters
          • Newsletters 1990-1997
        • Past Presidents & Life Members
        • Patrons
        • Publications
        • Reports
  • Bare Island
    • Bare Island Marine Life
    • Bare Island Open Day
    • Bare Island Veterans
    • Botany Bay Batteries – Cape Banks, Henry Head, Bare Island
    • Shipwrecks of Botany Bay
  • Contact
  • Gallery
  • Laperouse Expedition
    • French First Encounters
      • Christian Services
      • Garden
      • Geological Observations
      • La Perouse Flora – French Connections
        • Banksia ericifolia collected by Lamartinière or Collignon
      • Laperouse Bottle
      • Mail
      • Observatory
    • Laperouse’s last documents
    • Memorials
      • Brest
      • Cape Soya
      • Carmel Mission
      • De Kastri – Siberia
      • Hawaii – La Perouse Bay
      • Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky
      • Red Hill, Canberra
      • Sakhalin
      • Tamentfoust
      • Terney – Siberian Russia
      • Vanikoro
      • Vladivostok
    • References
    • The Disappearance of Laperouse
      • Final fate of the Laperouse Expedition
  • Laperouse Monument
    • Monument Plaques & Visits
      • Capitaine de frégate Jean-René Degans speech October 7, 2013
      • Plaques & Visits 1788-1900
      • Plaques & Visits 1901-1920
      • Plaques & Visits 1921-1940
      • Plaques & Visits 1941-1980
      • Plaques & Visits 1981-2000
      • Plaques & Visits 2001-2020
  • Laperouse Scholars
    • Ed Duyker
    • Ivan Barko
    • John Gascoigne
    • Margaret Sankey
    • Reece Discombe
    • Robert Clancy
    • William Land
  • Macquarie Watchtower
  • Receveur Monument
    • Receveur Tree Stump
  • Snake Shows
  • Sustainability Newsletters
  • Telecommunications
  • Tourism
    • La Perouse Loop
      • Guerrilla Gardeners blitz La Perouse bus shed
    • Sustainable Tourism
    • Timbery Boomerangs
  • Treasures of the Collection
    • Bronze Sculpture of Laperouse by Ante Dabro presented by Gough Whitlam
    • D’Entrecasteaux Mapping the South Pacific
    • Fragment of L’Astrolabe
    • John Winch Tapestry
    • L’Astrolabe Bilge Pumps
    • La Boussole Cannon
    • Laperouse Bottle
    • Lead Ignots
    • Millstone and pulley from L’Astrolabe
    • Robert de Lamanon’s Sword Hilt
    • Wrecks Room Mural

La Perouse Museum & Headland

La Perouse Museum & Headland

Category Archives: History

La Perouse – One Huge History!

22 Monday Aug 2016

Posted by Admin in History

≈ Leave a comment


WatchtowerSUNDAY 11H SEPTEMBER  2016  
10.30 AM– 12.00 Noon

La Perouse has witnessed many events significant in our National History – from Indigenous Australians to the arrival of James Cook, the First Fleet and the Expedition of Laperouse. The Rum Trade flourished with the arrival of the Second Fleet and La Perouse became the first Customs Outpost in Australia.

Later the headland would provide communication between Australia and NZ and later the fear of enemy attack saw the development of defences to protect important local infrastructure. But, there is a lot more!

Join a walk with Committee member Greg Bond to view the landscape and colonial structures that reflect a diverse local history on this 191st Anniversary of the foundation of the Laperouse Monument by the Baron de Bougainville.

This is a free activity sponsored by the Friends of the Lapérouse Museum

Meet: on the verandah, Laperouse Museum at 10.15

Following the walk –tea / coffee, etc. will be provided. Gold Coin donation appreciated.

Activity involves walking around La Perouse Headland on grassed, uneven and paved surfaces. Slip, slop slap.

RSVP / Further information: Greg Bond Ph: 9661 5431 / 0418 628730
greg.bond1@bigpond.com

Advertisement

1787 Massacre at Tutuila

07 Monday Jan 2013

Posted by Admin in History

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Massacre

Monument Massacre Bay

In the wake of the Lapérouse expedition at Tutuila (Samoa) – Bernard Jimenez

(left: Monument to Laperouse expedition members massacred. Link to  lecture on restoration of monument – Johnson & Slavid – “Case study of the restoration of the Monument at Massacre Bay, A’asu, Tutila, American Samoa).

Bernard and Françoise Jimenez have recently set out for Hawai’i and Samoa in the wake of Lapérouse. This first report retraces their discovery of the places where the expedition made landfall on the island of Tutuila (Samoa) and the drama which took place there.

The island of Tutuila, that Lapérouse named Maouna[1], is today part of American Samoa. It is here, in the bays of Fagas and then A’asu, that first contacts ashore took place – at first very friendly then dramatic – between Europeans and inhabitants of the Navigator Islands, discovered by the Dutchman Jacob Roggeveen in 1722 and so named by Louis-Antoine de Bougainville in May 1768.

Fagasa Bay (Anse de l’aiguade)

Although there is a large, well-protected bay to the south side, that of Pago Pago, Lapérouse made landfall on the north side of the island on 9 December 1787, moreover making a scathing attack on Bougainville for the lack of precision of his charts. Lapérouse wrote in his log: “It would have been desirable that these particular maps were drawn up with greater care and on a larger scale”[2]. The two frigates anchored first in sight of Fagasa Bay and many exchanges took place with the islanders: “more than 500 pigs, chickens, pigeons, immense quantities of fruit […] and two dogs which were found to be very good”(2). Then cutters and Continue reading →

Cable Station 1882-1903

26 Wednesday Dec 2012

Posted by Admin in History

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Cable Station

Cable Station

The Laperouse Museum is located in the Southern Wing of the La Perouse Cable Station which was built for telecommunications as well as for accommodation and training of telegraphers.  The Station was completed in 1882 under the direction of the Colonial Architect James Barnet.

The laying of the cable connecting Nelson in New Zealand to Australia was completed six years earlier in 1876  by the Eastern Extension Australasia and China Telegraph Company Ltd.  The photograph  above shows the huts in the Telegraph Officers’ Camp.

etching from town and country journal 1876 laying of telegraph cable at La PerouseThe cable was brought ashore at Frenchmans Beach and telecommunications commenced on 21st February 1876.

One of the marvels of the mid 19th century was the electric telegraph, an invention which dramatically changed the nature of communications through out the world.
‘Gentlemen of the Cable Service: A pictorial history of Australia’s overseas cable telecommunications service, 1870- 1934’. O.T.C. date unknown

By 1903 the telegraph service had been transferred to nearby Yarra Bay House.  In 1917 the company moved the entire cable landing site to Bondi Beach and closed the La Perouse Cable Station.

James_BarnetJames Barnet supervised the construction of hundreds of post and telegraph offices, courthouses, police stations, lock-ups and  lighthouses.  Some of his more notable buildings include the Customs House at Circular Quay,  The GPO in Martin Place, the Australian Museum,the Lands Department Building,the Beehive Casemate and the Sydney International Exhibition Building.   His supervision of Bare Island, south of the Museum, was the subject of Royal Commission which in 1891 led to his resignation.

Sacre bleu! French invasion plan for Sydney

11 Tuesday Dec 2012

Posted by Admin in History, Members

≈ Leave a comment

 

Sacre bleu! French invasion plan for Sydney

 

ABC PM By Rebecca Brice

VIDEO: James Hancock reports on how Sydney Cove could have looked very different (7pm TV News SA)

More has emerged about a little-known French proposal to invade the British colony at Sydney Cove more than two centuries ago.

Historians have often speculated that until Nelson defeated Napoleon’s navy at the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805, France had plans to invade Sydney.

Now researchers from Adelaide University say they have proof.

For the first time they have translated into English a confidential report from one of the explorers on the Nicholas Baudin expedition of the early 1800s.

Francois Peron, the chief zoologist and intellectual leader of the expedition, authored the draft report in 1802, 14 years after Port Jackson was established.

But until now, only sections have been translated into English.

AUDIO: Listen to the story (PM)

Associate Professor John West-Sooby heads the Discipline of French Studies at Adelaide University and went to France to see the document. Continue reading →

Unveiling and blessing of Altar Stone from La Boussole

18 Sunday Nov 2012

Posted by Admin in Events, History

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Boussole, Receveur

A replica of the Altar Stone used to celebrate the first Catholic mass in Australia was unveiled by Randwick City Mayor Councillor Tony Bowen at the Laperouse Museum today. The Altar Stone was blessed by Franciscan Father Paul Ghanem. This was followed by lunch sponsored by Randwick City Council and provided by the Friends of the Laperouse Museum.
The Altar Stone was commissioned by Randwick City Council and will be on permanent loan to the Friends of Laperouse Museum to be exhibited at the Museum. Continue reading →

← Older posts

Bastille Day Celebrations

Bastille DayJuly 14, 2022

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Blogroll

  • Consul-General in Sydney
  • E-Hive Laperouse Museum Calalogue
  • French Australian Chamber of Commerce
  • Friends of the Laperouse Museum
  • L'Association Salomon
  • La Perouse Aboriginal Land Council
  • Laperouse Museum in Albi
  • Laperouse Wiki
  • Lepetitjournal.com
  • National Parks & Wildlife Service
  • NSW State Library
  • Pamela Griffith Artist
  • Randwick & District Historical Society
  • Randwick City Tourism
  • Receveur
  • Silent World Foundation
  • St Andrew Malabar
  • Telstra Museum
  • Voyage Round the World

Contact

La Perouse Museum Anzac Parade
Museum open 10-2 Wed & Fri, 10-4 Sat-Sun
Monuments: access all hours
Telephone: 9093 6190 Email: lpm@randwick.nsw.gov.au for further details

La Perouse Headland

La Perouse Headland

Randwick City Council

Randwick City Council

Randwick City Tourism

Randwick City Tourism

Friends of the Laperouse Museum Inc

Friends of the Laperouse Museum Inc

Lycee Condorcet

Lycee Condorcet

Archives

Meta

  • Register
  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.com

Tags

Albi Amenities Astrolabe Astronomy Banks Bastille Botany Botany Bay Boussole Bumborah Point Cable Station Cann Chinese Collection Treasures Collector Items Cook Developments Eastern Suburbs Banksia Scrub Encounters Enlightenment Events Exhibition Exhibits Expedition Exploration Flora & Fauna French French Navy French School Friends Golf Governance Heritage Jennifer Street Korea Laperouse Legacy Little Bay Local History major developments Massacre members Memorials Merchandise Military Alliance Monument Museum Napoleon National Parks Naval Pacific Paris Patrons Pierre Roussel Planning Plans Prince Henry Publications Randwick City Council Receveur Recreation Reece Discombe Refuge Research Restoration Science & Technology Snake Shows Talks Telecommunications Timbery Tours Vanikoro VISITORS WWI

Blog at WordPress.com.

Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
  • Follow Following
    • La Perouse Museum & Headland
    • Join 107 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • La Perouse Museum & Headland
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...
 

You must be logged in to post a comment.