C1821

Vaucluse Bay. Port Jackson. New South Wales.

Rare, early hand coloured c.19th engraved view of Vaucluse which was named by the Irish convict Sir Henry Browne Hayes who had acquired the property in 1803. It later became the residence of William Charles Wentworth in 1821.  Although the … Read Full Description

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S/N: AHAO-NS-011–309173
(C011)
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Details

Full Title:

Vaucluse Bay. Port Jackson. New South Wales.

Date:

C1821

Condition:

In good condition.

Technique:

Hand coloured copper engraving.

Image Size: 

275mm 
x 183mm

Paper Size: 

468mm 
x 335mm
AUTHENTICITY
Vaucluse Bay. Port Jackson. New South Wales. - Antique Print from 1821

Genuine antique
dated:

1821

Description:

Rare, early hand coloured c.19th engraved view of Vaucluse which was named by the Irish convict Sir Henry Browne Hayes who had acquired the property in 1803. It later became the residence of William Charles Wentworth in 1821. 

Although the engraving has the attribution below the image, from an Original Drawing by Capt. Wallis 46th Regt., the engraving is actually based on a watercolour by Joseph Lycett (1777-1828) now in an album of original drawings by both Captain James Wallis and Joseph Lycett, c.1817-1818, in the State Library of New South Wales. The watercolour is item number  [2.] [Vaucluse Bay, Port Jackson, New South Wales, by Joseph Lycett] Watercolour Inscribed lower centre in ink `Drawn by a Convict.’  (SLNSW, Call number SAFE/PXE 1072)

The rocks on the right known as Bottle and Glass Point were destroyed in a naval gunnery exercise. Wallis an amateur artist of considerable ability, was appointed captain on 19 December 1811 and arrived in Sydney with the 46th Regiment to relieve the 73rd, Macquarie’s regiment, in the transport General Hewitt, arriving on February 1814. On 1 June 1816 he was appointed to relieve Lieutenant Thompson as commandant at Newcastle at a salary of £136, and on 8 June embarked in the brig Lady Nelson with a detachment of his regiment. He immediately implemented new regulations and, through stringent discipline, curtailed the prevailing laxity. He also began constructing new public and governmental buildings. When Governor Macquarie visited Newcastle in 1818 he was impressed by Wallis’s building activity. His influence was of profound importance on the developing settlement at Newcastle. In December 1818, Wallis was relieved by Captain James Morisset of the 48th Regiment. He reached Sydney on 9 January 1819 and on 3 March sailed in the transport Tottenham to join his regiment in India. He proceeded to England and in 1820 and supervised the publication of, An Historical Account of The Colony of New South Wales and its Dependent Settlements.

From: Wallis, J. An Historical Account of The Colony of New South Wales and its Dependent Settlements; in Illustration of Twelve Views, Engraved By W. Preston, a Convict, from Drawings Taken on the Spot

References:
Wantrup, J. Australian Rare Books. Sydney, 1987 :: 288.
Ferguson, J. A. Bibliography of Australia Volumes 1-8, Canberra 1976 :: 842.
McCormick, T. First Views of Australia 1788-1825. Sydney 1987 :: 145, 148 - 151, and pp. 309.
Perry, T. & Prescott, D. A guide to maps of Australia in books published 1780-1830. Canberra 1996 :: 1821.05.


Collections:
British Museum London: Registration number 1873,0809.1419-1431
Museums of History NSW / Caroline Simpson: Record number: 54147

James Wallis (1784 - 1825)

Wallis was an engraver, bookseller, printer, stationer and publisher. Wallis was born at Southampton and apprenticed 7 May 1799 to John Roper. Little else is known.

View other items by James Wallis

Walter Preston (1777 - )

Walter Preston (1777-?)  Preston was an engraver sentenced to death for highway robbery and transported to the penal settlement of Newcastle for fourteen years in 1814 under the command of Captain Wallis. He engraved twelve views of NSW for Wallis and when these were subsequently published they were attributed not to Preston but Wallis.

View other items by Walter Preston

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