C1846

South Branch of the Albert River.

Artist:

Graham Gore (? - 1847)

The area was originally named for the Plains of Promise or ‘Province of Albert’ after Prince Albert, the Queen’s Consort in 1841. The town was named in honour of ill-fated explorer Robert O’Hara Burke following the overland expedition in 1861. … Read Full Description

$A 110

In stock

S/N: QC-DIAU-12–195422
(C037)
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Details

Full Title:

South Branch of the Albert River.

Date:

C1846

Artist:

Graham Gore (? - 1847)

Condition:

In good condition.

Technique:

Hand coloured engraving.
AUTHENTICITY
South Branch of the Albert River. - Antique Print from 1846

Genuine antique
dated:

1846

Description:

The area was originally named for the Plains of Promise or ‘Province of Albert’ after Prince Albert, the Queen’s Consort in 1841. The town was named in honour of ill-fated explorer Robert O’Hara Burke following the overland expedition in 1861. From, “Discoveries In Australia With An Account Of The Coasts And Rivers Explored And Surveyed During The Voyage Of H.M.S. Beagle, In The Years 1837-38-39-40-41-42-43.”

Biography:

Graham Gore (?-1847)

Gore was a sketcher and naval officer, from a seafaring family, his grandfather having sailed with Cook and his father with Bligh.

He entered the Royal Navy in 1820 and was first lieutenant aboard HMS Volage at the capture of Aden (1839) and of the Bogue forts and Chusan during the early part of the Chinese War (1840). In 1841 he was ordered to sail from India to Sydney to join HMS Herald, but the vessel he was to board had already departed, so in April Gore joined the Beagle under Stokes’s command. Gore returned to England at the end of the voyage, in 1843. In 1845 he joined HMS Erebus under Sir John Franklin, former Governor of Van Diemen’s Land.

He was promoted commander in 1846 and continued to serve aboard HMS Erebus, dying in the Arctic with the rest of the crew in 1847 on Franklin’s ill-fated expedition in search of the north-west passage.

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