Hi everyone. I hope you are all doing well. Today for my post, I have travelled to Australia's island state of Tasmania, the worlds 26th largest island, lying 240 kilometres off the south eastern tip of Australia.
At least one-fifth, or 20%, of Tasmania is a World Heritage Area. The area which covers 1.58 million hectares includes national parks, marine, and forests reserves
Here is a map to orientate yourself. The red dot on the map shows the location of Spiky Bridge. I live way on the other side of Australia between Perth and Margaret River.
Just
over seven kilometres south of Swansea on Tasmania’s east coast is Spiky
Bridge, a curious relic of Tasmania’s convict era and one of many convict built
bridges in Tasmania. In fact you will find many buildings, bridges etc built by convicts throughout Tasmania and Australia during the convict period. Between 1788 and 1868 more than 162,000 convicts were transported to Australia.
Listed
on the register of Heritage Places, Spiky Bridge was built by convicts in 1843
along the old convict-built coach road connecting Swansea to Little Swanport
and the east coast road to Hobart. With its location opposite the beaches and seascapes of
Great Oyster Bay, you need to be careful you don’t miss the turnoff while
admiring the ocean views.
The
bridge was built from local field stones without mortar or cement and a small
arch allows water to pass beneath the bridge. The parapet was constructed using
jagged field stones stood vertically on end – hence the name Spiky Bridge.
Looking at a side view of the bridge you
can see a water channel running down the wall from a slot at the base of the roadway
to the arch beneath the bridge, allowing water to drain off the road.
By the 1820s European settlement was pushing
northwards along the east coast from Hobart, drawn to the area by farming and
whaling. Workers were not abundant in the area until the Rocky Hills Probation
Station was constructed in 1841, providing free convict labour to build roads, bridges,
clear land, and construct station buildings including the prison.
The
reason why the bridge was decorated with these upright stones is the subject of
speculation. One theory says it was to stop cattle falling into the gully or to
prevent suicide jumpers. Another suggests that the convicts building the bridge
used it as a form of revenge. It is questionable how they could do this whilst
under supervision. Either way, the Spiky
Bridge is now a curious stopping point for tourists.
Popular history says the bridge was built
after Irishman Edward Shaw of Redbanks gave his friend Major de Gillern,
Superintendent of the Rocky Hills Probation Station, a ride home one night
after a game of piquet (pee-kay). Shaw
had repeatedly requested that improvements be made to the road between Swansea and Little Swanport,
particularly the steep gully south of Swansea. His requests had evidently fallen on deaf ears so
to prove his point Shaw
drove his gig and his passenger, the Major, through the gully at full gallop. It must have been a thoroughly uncomfortable
trip because the
bridge was erected shortly afterwards.
Initially the bridge was called
Lafarelle’s Bridge after surveyor and civil engineer Thomas Lafarelle who was
Assistant Superintendent at Rocky Hills Station between 1843 and 1845 and who probably
supervised the building of the bridge. On the nearby hill overlooking the
bridge are the remains of the Governor’s cottage.
The Rocky Hills Probation Station
only lasted eight years, coming to an end during an economic depression in the
late 1840s. Under the convict probation system during the 1840’s, all convicts
had to serve time in a government work gang. Previously, convicts had been
assigned to work for private settlers when they first arrived in the colony, clearing
land and planting crops.
Swansea is Tasmania’s oldest seaside town.
It was first settled by the Welsh in the
1820s who named it Waterloo Point. It was
renamed Swansea in 1842.
There are many convict built bridges in
Tasmania, which can be explored on Tasmania's Convict Trail.
Below are three of them - Red Bridge at Campbell town which was built on dry land and then had the river diverted under it; Richmond Bridge, 25 kilometres north of Hobart, built in 1825, is Australia’s oldest surviving large stone arch bridge; and Ross Bridge built from sandstone in 1836, according
to a 2006 Engineers Australia report, the only example of a stone
bridge in the World that includes carvings along all of its arches
Where is it?
Turnoff
is on the western side of the Tasman Highway, 7.5km south of Swansea on
Tasmania’s east coast, 127km north of Hobart.
Piquet – (pronounced
pee kay) – is a trick-taking card game for two players, using a 32-card pack
consisting of the seven to the ace only.
More information at:
Discover Tasmania – Tasmania’s Convict Trail
Tasmanian Expeditions- Fascinating Facts About Tasmania
National Museum of Australia-Convicts
Thank you so much for stopping by. I hope you have enjoyed this little visit to Tasmania.
You might also like on my blog:
Searching for Platypus - Great Short Walks in Australia
Wombling with Wombats in Tasmania
I value your comments and look forward to hearing from you. I will try to visit your blogs in return. Have a wonderful week.
I am linking up to the link-ups below. Please click on the links to see fabulous contributions from around the world - virtual touring at its best!
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Until then, enjoy your day... it won't be back.