Point 2 Point

Bennelong Point

Bennelong Point Visited in on 25 October 2008 Comment View on map -33.85630386827518;151.21534824371338

View from the ferry coming in to Circular Quay.
View from the ferry heading in to Circular Quay.
View from the ferry coming in to Circular Quay.
Looking south to Circular Quay and the Sydney CBD.
Looking north-west across Sydney Cove to Dawes Point and the southern pylon of the Harbour Bridge. The Blues Point peninsula is visible under the Bridge.
Western side of the SOH.
Point.
Plaque from the Institution of Surveyors, commemorating Flinders and this Point.
Eastern side of the SOH looking south to the Man-O-War jetty and the Botanical Gardens.
Looking east across Farm Cove to Mrs Macquaries Point and Garden Island.
Looking south to steps leading to the Tarpeian Way and Botanical Gardens. This was (husband thinks) the bulk of Bennelong Point before the point was flattened and the tidal area between it and Bennelong Island was consolidated into one.
Opera House forecourt steps

Arguably the most famous point in Australia and, architecturally, the world. Sometimes windy, always gorgeous, ladies and gentlemen, Bennelong Point…

Which can also claim to be the centre of Australia. Flinders – who gave Australia its name – “determined the geographical position of this point in 1795 and again in 1802 and used it as the initial point in his surveys of Port Jackson and the coastline of Australia.” That’s from a plaque placed at the northern end of the point by the Institution of Surveyors, Australia, N.S.W Division, in 1974.

Once a small tidal island, Bennelong Point was consolidated and flattened to extend the eastern arm of Sydney Cove in the 1820s. It housed a fort (photo, photo) and then a tram depot. This photo taken from Dawes Point in 1900 shows just how unprepossessing Bennelong Point looked back then.

Known as Cattle Point in the early days of the colony when it was used for the herding of public stock, it became Limeburners’ Point when convict women burnt oyster shells from its middens to make lime for cement mortar.

It was called by the indigenous people Tubowghule.

Its contemporary name honours Bennelong, who had a brick hut built for him there by Governor Arthur Phillip. Must have had a cool view. Still does.

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