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Up the Gorge
Following a preliminary survey in 1857, a group of Royal
Engineers (army), under Sergeant Quodling, were given
the 6 week assignment of constructing a bridle trail up the Grose River Gorge, from the
Nepean River near Agnes Banks. The gorge was being considered as a possible route for the railway, a tunnel under the Darling Causeway to Hartley Vale
being envisaged. It is interesting to consider how the mountains might have developed had
this route been adopted.
Whilst Martindale probably envisaged little more than
cutting a path through the scrub, the Engineers were out to build a
real, permanent, track. They engaged in excavation, rock quarrying, tree
felling & bridge construction. However, as time went by and pressure
increased for results, the standard of construction declined.
Recon by Edwin Barton3 & Thomas Sherwood: Jan. 1858
Surveying had started by April.
Track construction probably started Nov 9, 1858
Construction from west ordered after Martindale visited the lower
Grose in late January 1859, probably commenced in April.
The tunnel beneath Darling Causeway would have been two miles long, used ten million
bricks, taken two years to build and cost £800,000. The colony did not have enough
bricklayers. Other problems with the route included landslides
& very sharp curves; the route was eventually abandoned in 1860.
The group of Royal Engineers, under the command of Sergeant Quodling,
consisted of 10 surveyors and 49 labourers. Possibly, some of these were convicts.
Bureaucracy being what it is......
They built a very fine track, with extensive
rock works.
After more than 18 months.....
Some time ago a survey of the Grose was appointed .....after an
expenditure of over £20,000 .....reported to be impracticable! Can it
possibly be true? It is true .....that those who ought to be held
responsible to the country in this matter, suffered the survey to
proceed; until the above named sum was expended, without ever once
seeing the line themselves. Surely if either Captain Martindale or Mr
Whitton had made a general inspection of the proposed line of survey,
supposing them to have a knowledge of their preferred business, they
must have known from a comparative glance that it was impracticable.
Letter to a newspaper.
A botanist, Louisa Atkinson, used the track and wrote about it in "Ranges of the
Grose", part of her "A Voice from the Country" series published in the
Sydney Morning Herald in the early 1860's. Her party found many sections already washed
away by flood. Indeed, major flooding occurred within weeks of the
Engineers pulling out, wiping out many road & rail bridges in the
Sydney region.
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The upper Grose River valley, looking east. Photo © David Martin 1997 |
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Use
Scientists, Artists, Prospectors
- Louisa Atkinson, 1861
- Rev. W.B. Clark, geologist, early 1860's
- Du Faur Expedition, 1875
- Mackenzie brothers, oil shale prospectors, 1865-66
- Charlie Diews & companion, 1911
- Ernest Williamson & Martin Zobel, prospectors, 1925
Bushwalkers
- Oscar Reinits, 1900
- Harry Whitehouse, 1916
- Sydney Bushwalking Club, 1936
- Alex Coley, 1957
Search Parties for
- Loften, 1895
- Barton brothers, 1900
- 4 young men, 1936
- And at least 11 other searches between 1936 & 1976
Official
- 'Commission of Enquiry into the Supply of Water to Sydney &
Suburbs', 1868
- Metropolitan Water Sewerage & Drainage Board engineers, 1925
The Track Today
Where the track ran beside the river, it has long since been washed away. But in many
places, it climbed above the flood level. Here, the hand-made stone embankments are still
in place.
A map believed to date from the 1930's (Department of Lands) shows a "trail,
negotiable route or doubtful track" from Yarramundi to Blue Gum Forest.
The latest topographic map shows an "Engineer's Track" descending from the
Darling Causeway into the gorge below, but no further. There is also a track from Victoria
falls to the Blue Gum Forest. The maps in Andy Macqueen's book
(see below) indicate the track & its condition.
Macqueen divides the track condition into 'fair', 'poor' &
'little trace', with the fair & poor sections accounting for 55%
of the 61km.
There is no longer any continuous track up the gorge. Hiking from the Blue
Gum Forest to Yarramundi should only be undertaken by experienced
bushwalkers, with current local knowledge. (It is rumoured that one very experienced person
ran the route in a day!)
Can you help?
We would welcome first-hand information and photos from bushwalkers who have
explored the Engineer's Track. Please E-mail
us.
Restoration? The future...
- 1965: NSW Federation of Bushwalking Clubs lobbied for reopening.
- 1977: Blue Mountains National Park Advisory Committee suggested
the track be listed on the register of the National Estate &
be restored.
- 1985: Listed by NPWS on its Historic Places Register.
- One prominent bushwalker, & former member of the Blue
Mountains National Park Advisory Committee, claims that over 90%
of the Engineers Track is 'obvious' & capable of
restoration.
What will become of the Engineer's Track? The cost of re-building the missing
parts and restoring the rest would be prohibitive; or would it?
There are people who must be given exercises in order to develop or maintain skills.
Army engineers and helicopter crews, for example. How about it, fella's?
Then there's work for the dole, work for the pension, work for
sickness benefit, work for refugee status.....
A bridle track has considerable potential for eco-tourism, with tourists & supplies
travelling on horseback. This could help raise money for upkeep etc. It could also be
negotiated by trail bike; useful for emergencies and upkeep. Food for thought.
Seen our Bushwalking (hiking) Links?
More Info
- Andy Maqueen's excellent history of the Grose Valley, Back
from the Brink. Maqueen's denigration of the Barton
& the Engineers has been criticised by the author of the NPWS
report (below).
- George
Melrose, one of the surveyors.
- National Parks & Wildlife Service, Walking Track Heritage
Study 1998, Item Name: Track - Engineers
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The upper Grose River valley, looking southwest. Photo © David Martin
1997 |
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Back
to Routes index |
Other Workers
Corporals Alfred Francis & Martin Lavelle, Sappers (privates)
John Ashplant, Henry Grierson, Michael Given, Charles Richardson,
Albert Vine, Edwin Fearnside (draughtsman based at Parramatta). |
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