John McDouall Stuart (7 September 1815 – 5 June
1866) was the most accomplished and most famous of all Australia's
inland explorers.
Stuart led the second expedition to traverse
the Australian mainland from south to north, and the first to do so
from a starting point in South Australia
, achieving this despite poor backing from the
Government of South
Australia. His experience and the care he showed for his
team ensured he never lost a man, despite the harshness of the
country he encountered.
The explorations of Stuart eventually
resulted in the Adelaide-Darwin telegraph being built and the main
route from Port Augusta
to Darwin
being established, which is now known as the
Stuart Highway in his
honour.
Biography
Early life
Born in
Dysart,
Fife
, Scotland
, Stuart was
the youngest of nine children. His father was a retired army
captain serving as a customs officer. Stuart's parents died when he
was in his early teens and he came under the care of relatives. He
graduated from the Scottish Naval and Military Academy as a
civil engineer before
emigrating to
Australia
in 1838, at the age of 23. Stuart was a slight, delicately built
young man, standing about 5' 6" tall (168 cm) and weighing
less than 9 stone (about 55 kg).
In 1839 he arrived in
the three-year-old frontier province of South Australia
, at that time little more than a single crowded
outpost of tents and dirt floored wooden huts. Stuart soon
found employment as a public surveyor, working in the semi-arid
scrub of the newly settled districts marking out blocks for
settlers and miners. In 1842 the committee he was working for
reduced the number of employees and Stuart lost his job. This
didn't bother Stuart greatly as he became a private surveyor and
kept working in the remote areas he loved. Life in the surveying
camps was harsh but Stuart rapidly earned a reputation for
extraordinary accuracy. He was a
Freemason
[69610].
Charles Sturt's protegé
The South
Australian Surveyor-General, Stuart's superior officer, was the
famous explorer Captain Charles Sturt,
who had already solved the mystery of the inland-flowing rivers of
New South
Wales
, in the process discovering the Darling River
, travelling the full length of the Murrumbidgee
, and tracing the Murray
to the
sea. Stuart remained with the Survey Department until 1842
and then worked in the
Mount Lofty
Ranges as a private surveyor and grazier.
In 1844 Captain Sturt embarked on an expedition into the arid
interior, and engaged Stuart as a draughtsman. Sturt's expedition
penetrated further north than any previous attempt, at the cost of
great hardship.
Instead of the hoped-for inland sea, the
explorers found two of the most fearsome arid areas anywhere in
Australia: Sturt's
Stony Desert
and the Simpson Desert
. After second-in-command James Poole died of
scurvy, Sturt appointed Stuart in his place.
Both men survived to return to Adelaide, but suffered greatly from
scurvy. Sturt never really recovered and would soon return to
England; the younger Stuart was unable to work or travel for a
year.
Stuart
returned to his trade as a private surveyor, spending more and more
time in the remote areas he loved, and moving to Port Lincoln
for several years before moving again to the
northern Flinders
Ranges
where he worked for the wealthy pastoralists
William Finke, James Chambers, and John Chambers, exploring,
prospecting for minerals, and surveying pastoral
leases.
The first expedition
On 14 May 1858, with financial backing from William Finke, Stuart
set off on the first of his six major expeditions. His aim was to
find minerals or new agricultural lands in the north-west of South
Australia. (An area then unexplored, but now known to be so lacking
in water and soil fertility that it remains unsettled to this day.)
Stuart took two companions (another white man named Forster and a
young Aboriginal man), a pocket compass, a watch, half a dozen
horses, and rations for six weeks.
From the Flinders Ranges, Stuart travelled
west, passing to the south of Lake Torrens
, then north along the western edge of Lake
Torrens. He found an isolated chain of semi-permanent
waterholes which he named
Chamber's Creek (now called
Stuart Creek). It would later become crucially important
as a staging post for expeditions to the arid centre of the
continent.

Landscape just north of Coober Pedy,
November 2003.
Continuing
to the north-west, Stuart reached the vicinity of Coober Pedy
(not realising that there was a fantastically rich
opal field underfoot) before shortage of
provisions and lack of feed for the horses forced him to turn
towards the sea 500 kilometres to the south. A difficult journey
along the edge of the Great Victoria Desert
brought Stuart to Miller's Water (near present-day
Ceduna
) and from
there back to civilisation after four months and 2400
kilometres. This expedition made Stuart's reputation and
brought him the award of a gold watch from the Royal
Geographical Society
.
The second expedition
Shortly after returning from his first expedition, Stuart applied
for a pastoral lease at Chambers Creek. As the discoverer he was
already entitled to a lease, but wanted rights to a larger area. As
a bargaining chip in the negotiation process, Stuart offered to do
the surveying himself and in April 1859 he set off with a party of
three men and 14 horses.
The Chambers Creek survey complete, Stuart
explored to the north again, aiming to reach the border between
South Australia and what is now the Northern Territory
(at that time still a part of New South
Wales
). Although still well supplied with rations
and not short of water, the expedition turned back about 100
kilometres short of the border because they had no more horse shoes
(an essential item in that arid, stony region). Importantly,
however, Stuart had found another reliable water supply for future
attempts: a "beautiful spring" fed by the then-unknown
Great Artesian Basin. He wrote:
I
have named this "The Spring of Hope". It is a little
brackish, not from salt, but soda, and runs a good stream of
water. I have lived upon far worse water than this: to me
it is of the utmost importance, and keeps my retreat open.
I can go from here to Adelaide any time of the year and in any
sort of season. He returned in July with reports of "wonderful
country"; an extraordinary description of territory that is now
barely able to support a few cattle.
(The history of Australia generally and of South Australia in
particular has many similar examples of initial optimism that
proved unjustified. Explorers and early settlers often chanced to
see an area during a rare good season and consequently assumed that
it could be used for sheep, cattle, or even wheat. The inevitable
return to normal weather patterns resulted in heartbreak and
bankruptcy for the farmer, and destruction of the thin and fragile
topsoil layer. Farmers who advanced into the Flinders Ranges in the
good seasons of the 1870s were forced to abandon their new lands
en masse during the drought of the early 1880s.)
The third expedition
At around this time in Australia, exploration fever was reaching a
peak. Several factors contributed. At "home" (as Australians still
called Britain), public attention was focussed on the search for
the source of the
Nile, with the competing
expeditions of
Speke,
Burton and
Baker all contending for the honour of
discovery. Like the interior of Africa, inland Australia remained
an embarrassing blank area on the map and although the long-held
dreams of a fertile inland sea had faded, there was an intense
desire to see the continent crossed. This was the apex of the age
of heroic exploration.
Additionally, there was the factor of the
telegraph. Invented only a few decades earlier,
the technology had matured rapidly and a global network of undersea
and overland cables was taking shape.
The line from England
had already reached India
and plans
were being made to extend it to the major population centres of
Australia in Victoria
and New South Wales. Several of the mainland
colonies were competing to host the Australian terminus of the
telegraph: Western Australia and New South Wales proposed long
undersea cables; South Australia proposed employing the shortest
possible undersea cable and bringing the telegraph ashore in
Australia's
Top End. From there it would run
overland for 3000 kilometres south to Adelaide. The difficulty was
obvious: the proposed route was not only remote and (so far as
European settlers were concerned) uninhabited, it was simply a vast
blank space on the map.
At much the same time, the wealthy rival colony Victoria was
preparing the biggest and most lavishly equipped expedition in
Australia's history. The South Australian government offered a
reward of £2,000 to any person able to cross the continent and
discover a suitable route for the telegraph from Adelaide to the
north coast. Stuart's friends and sponsors, James & John
Chambers and Finke, asked the government to put up £1,000 to equip
an expedition to be led by Stuart. The South Australian government,
however, ignored Stuart and instead sponsored an expedition led by
Alexander Tolmer, which failed
miserably, failing to travel beyond the settled districts.
Meanwhile, Stuart was entangled with other problems. Some of the
land he had claimed and surveyed in the Chambers Creek district on
his second trip had in fact already been explored and claimed by
people attracted to the area by reports of Stuart's first trip.
Stuart needed to return to Chambers Creek to re-survey his claims.
He left Adelaide with a small party in August 1859. Having surveyed
his own claim and several new claims on behalf of his sponsors,
Stuart spent the spring and summer exploring the area west of Lake
Eyre, finding several more artesian springs. Working through the
severe heat of summer, Stuart experienced trouble with his eyes
because of the glare, and after some time enduring half rations,
all but one of his men refused to leave camp. Contemptuously,
Stuart sent them home.
William Kekwick, his remaining companion, was reputed for his
steadfastness and would stay with Stuart for the remainder of his
career, usually organising the supply bases while Stuart scouted
ahead. Kekwick went south for provisions and more men, returning
with 13 horses, rations for three months, however only a single
man; Benjamin Head.
The fourth expedition
In March 1860 the three men left Chambers Creek, aiming to find the
centre of Australia. As always, Stuart travelled light, taking only
as much as could be carried on a few pack horses. The secret to
successful exploration, in Stuart's view, was to travel fast and
avoid the delays and complications that always attend a large
supply train.
By the
time they reached Neale's Creek (near present-day Oodnadatta
) unexpected rain had ruined most of their stores
and they continued on half-rations — something that Head, who had
started the trip as a big man and weighed twice as much as Stuart,
found difficult to adjust to. Water became more and more
difficult to find and
scurvy began to set in.
Stuart's right eye was failing. Nevertheless, they found a major
watercourse in early April which Stuart named the
Finke River, and followed it north-west over the
South Australian border to the
MacDonnell Ranges, which he named after
Sir
Richard Graves
MacDonnell, Governor of South Australia, on 12 April
1860.
On 22 April 1860, according to Stuart's calculations, the party
reached the centre of the continent. Stuart wrote:
There is a
high mount about two miles to the NNE which I hoped would be in the
centre but on it tomorrow I will raise a cone of stones and plant
the Flag there and will name it Mount Sturt after my excellent and
esteemed commander of the expedition in 1844 and 45, Captain Sturt,
as a mark of gratitude for the great kindness I received from him
during that journey. (In fact the mountain became known as
Central
Mount Stuart
after Stuart himself, not his mentor Sturt, and
geographers no longer regard it as the true centre of
Australia. Nevertheless, it retains its symbolic
value.)
The explorers were unable to progress much further north. Lack of
water forced them back again and again. Stuart's scurvy was growing
worse, Head was now half his original weight, and only Kekwick
remained capable of heavy work. Then, on 22 May, it rained.
With
water now available nearly every day, they made good mileage and by
mid June were able to reach a riverbed which Stuart named Tennant's
Creek (now the site of the township Tennant
Creek
). The worst of the country was now behind
them and they were only about 800 km from the coast.
From here, however, progress seemed impossible. A four day
excursion to the north-west found no water at all and they had to
retreat. After giving the horses a week to recover, they tried
heading due north. They found another creek (later named Attack
Creek) but were blocked by heavy scrub. Unlike those further south,
the Warramunga Aboriginal people were hostile. On 26 June they
raided the explorers' camp. One stole the shoeing rasp (which
Stuart was able to recover); others threw boomerangs at the horses
and set fire to the grass around the camp. Like Sturt (and unlike
some of the other Australian explorers) Stuart generally got on
well with the Aboriginal people he encountered but he was unable to
negotiate with this group and considered it unsafe to continue.
That night, with even the indefatigable Kekwick complaining of
weakness, the explorers abandoned their attempt to reach the north
coast and reluctantly turned south.
It was 2400 kilometres to Adelaide, all three men had scurvy,
supplies were very short, the horses were in poor condition, and
the country was drying out. Nevertheless, the party pressed on at
Stuart's customary rapid pace. They reached the safety of Chambers
Creek in August.
A few days earlier, on 20 August 1860, the
larger Burke and Wills expedition
had finally left Melbourne
.
Stuart reached Adelaide in October 1860. Although he had narrowly
failed to cross the continent, his achievement in crossing the
centre was immense, ranked with Speke's discovery of the source of
the Nile. He was awarded the Royal Geographical Society's Patron's
Medal — only the second person (after
Dr Livingstone) to be given double honours
by that august body. Belatedly, even the South Australian
government started to recognise Stuart's abilities.
The fifth expedition
James Chambers put forward a plan for Stuart and Kekwick to return
north with a government-provided armed guard to see them past the
difficulties at Attack Creek. The government prevaricated and
quibbled about cost, personnel, and ultimate control of the
expedition, but eventually agreed to contribute ten armed men and
£2500; and put Stuart in operational command. (In contrast, the
Victorian government had provided
Burke
and Wills with the massive sum of £12,000.
That expedition had
already reached the Darling
River
in northern New South Wales.)
Stuart left Chambers Creek with a dozen men, 49 horses and rations
for 30 weeks on 1 January 1861. It was high summer in South
Australia and the worst possible time for travelling. Stuart was
soon forced to send two men and the five weakest horses back. The
heat was extreme and the party often delayed while Stuart searched
for fodder and water.
They were still in northern South Australia
on 11 February, the day that Burke and Wills reached the Gulf of
Carpentaria
. With difficulty, Stuart's party had reached
the MacDonnell Ranges when heavy rains came, allowing them to press
on northwards at a much better pace. They reached Attack Creek on
24 April 1861, this time finding no sign of the hostile tribesmen
that had blocked the last attempt. At about the same time — and
unknown to Stuart's party, of course — Burke, Wills and King
reached their base camp at
Cooper's
Creek only to find it deserted. The fourth member of their
party, Charles Gray, was already dead; Wills and then Burke would
perish within a few more days, leaving only King to be sustained by
the kindness of the local Aborigines.
Stuart
still planned to march north-west towards the known region
ofVictoria River
, which had been mapped by A.C. Gregory in
1845. Leaving the main expedition to rest, he led a series of small
parties in that direction, but was blocked by thick scrub and a
complete lack of water. After a great deal of effort, the scouting
parties managed to find another watering point 80 kilometres
further north and Stuart moved the main body up. Over the next two
weeks Stuart made three more attempts to find a practicable route
over the plains to the north-west, but without success. Finally, he
decided to try heading due north. He was rewarded with the
discovery of "a splendid sheet of water" 150 metres wide and 7
kilometres long which he named Glandfield Lagoon.
(It was later renamed
Newcastle Waters
after a scandal involving the then Mayor of
Adelaide, Edward Glandfield.)
For five more weeks the party camped at Newcastle Waters while
Stuart tried to find a north-westward route to take them to
Victoria River and thus the sea. The local Aboriginal people were
unfriendly, lighting fires around the camp and spooking the horses,
and Kekwick had to mount an armed sentry with instructions to fire
warning shots whenever they came near. Provisions were running
short and both men and horses were in poor condition. Finally, on 1
July 1861, exactly six months after they had left Chambers Creek,
Stuart ordered a return. In the relative cool of the southern
winter, they travelled fast, reaching the settled regions of South
Australia in September.
When Stuart learned that Burke and Wills were missing he
immediately offered to join the search for them. The first rescue
teams had left some time earlier, however, and soon returned with
the news that no less than 7 members of the largest and
best-equipped expedition in Australia's history had died.
Public exploration mania had cooled considerably. Although Stuart
had now led five expeditions into the arid centre of Australia and
crossed all but the last few hundred miles of the continent without
losing a man, the South Australian government was initially
reluctant to back a sixth effort. However, the prospect of
establishing a route for an overland telegraph line, became a
significant factor. The government finally provided £2000 at the
last minute on condition that Stuart took a scientist with him.
James & John Chambers along with William Finke remained the
principal private backers.
The sixth expedition
The main body of Stuart's sixth expedition left Adelaide in late
October 1861, leaving Stuart behind for a time to recover from an
accidental injury to his hand. However they did not leave Chambers
Creek until 8 January 1862, numbering 10 men and 71 horses.
Benjamin Head, veteran of the fourth and fifth expeditions was
still too ill to accompany them. The party made good time to
Newcastle Waters, reaching that point on 5 April, and experiencing
conflict with the local Aborigines once again. Here they rested for
a week before Stuart led a scouting party north, finding good water
for the main body to move up to. The next stage, however, proved
more difficult. Five times Stuart and his scouts tried to find a
route towards Victoria River without success. Finally he headed
north rather than north-west and was rewarded with a series of
small waterholes leading to
Daly Waters,
about 150 kilometres north of Newcastle Waters.
Stuart made one last attempt to reach Victoria River before
continuing north into the
Top End. On 9 June
he reached territory that had already been mapped and 1 July the
Mary River.
Finally,
on 24 July 1862 Stuart reached the beach at Chambers Bay (east of
present day Darwin
).
Places named after John McDouall Stuart
Places
named after John McDouall Stuart include Stuart Street, an arterial
road in the Canberra
suburb of Griffith
[69611], the Stuart
Highway, Stuart Park
, an inner Darwin
suburb, Central Mount Stuart
, the Electoral division of Stuart in
the Northern Territory, an electoral division in South
Australia
, and the
town of Stuart
, which was
changed to Alice
Springs
in 1933.A statue honouring Stuart can be found in
Victoria Square, Adelaide,
while in Darwin
, a both a statue and a monument celebrate his
achievements.
References
- Explorations in Australia edited by William Hardman. Hesperian
Press.
- John McDouall Stuart by Mona Stuart Webster. Melbourne
University Press.
- John McDouall Stuart Society Inc.
External links