Circular Quay from Dawes Point Battery, Sydney, NSW, 1873. Photo Credit Beaufoy Merlin


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The Dawes Point Battery is an historical fortification that was located adjacent to the southern pylon of the Sydney Harbour Bridge at Dawes Point, New South Wales, Australia. [1] Contents 1 History 2 Armaments 3 References 4 External links History


Dawes Point battery and reserve c190913 NSCA CRS 51, Demolition books, 19001949 City of Sydney

Cannon Dawes Point Reserve The Rocks, NSW 2000 Loading map. The five 42 Pounder Smooth-bore guns, c1850 cannon from the Dawes Point Battery are positioned in Dawes Point Park. Four of the gun barrels are in gravel plots in the approximate position of the outer ring of guns at the Battery.


Dawes Battery Sydney Harbour Sydney Ure Smith, Aust

The 1995 excavation of Dawes Point Battery, constructed to guard the approach to Sydney in 1791, has evoked a number of questions about the strategic importance of the British settlement of Sydney.


Cannon The Rocks Discovery Museum

In 1791 the Dawes Point Battery was meant to be the first line of defence against an attack by the Spanish Empire, while Fort Macquarie was an upgraded from an early fort built in the same time to a larger one in 1798.


Dawes Point Battery Remains The Rocks Discovery Museum

Dawes Point battery | The Dictionary of Sydney The Dictionary of Sydney Browse Entities Building Dawes Point battery The Dictionary of Sydney was archived in 2021. Dawes Point battery Fortification First permanent fortification in Sydney constructed on the site of Dawes' observatory.


View of Sydney Cove from Dawes Point Battery above Campbells Bond stores, 1870s City of Sydney

The Dawes Point Battery remains is a heritage-listed former artillery fortification and now visitor attraction located adjacent to the southern pylon of the Sydney Harbour Bridge at Hickson Road in inner city Sydney, on the boundary between Dawes Point and The Rocks in the City of Sydney local government area of New South Wales, Australia.


Gun battery underneath Harbour Bridge, Hickson Road Dawes Point, 1989 City of Sydney Archives

View of Dawes Point Battery ca. 1791-1796, clearly showing two buildings at Dawes Point: the 1791 guard- house and another sited where it is believed Dawes's observatory stood in 1788. This view was published in 1803 in An Account of a Voyage to New South Wales, purportedly by the notorious pickpocket George Barrington..


360° view of Dawes Point Battery Park Alamy

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SBML 42 Pounder Dawes Point Battery, Sydney Ebroh Flickr

At Dawes Point, on the hill immediately under the southern pylons of the Harbour Bridge, I noticed an information stand next to the old battery site and erstwhile observatory which makes reference to an 18th century conflict between the empires of Britain and Spain that had an association with that very spot, Dawes Point.. Dawes Point.


Dawes Point Battery. Built in 1789, demolished in 1925 to make way for the Harbour Bridge. One

First permanent fortification in Sydney constructed on the site of Dawes' observatory. The current archaeological site below the southern pylon of the Harbour Bridge reveals a powder magazine, officer quarters, guardhouse and circular battery .


A View of the Cove and Part of Sydney. New South Wales. Taken from Dawes Battery Joseph Lycett

The Dawes Point Battery remains is a heritage-listed former artillery fortification and now visitor attraction located adjacent to the southern pylon of the Sydney Harbour Bridge at Hickson Road in inner city Sydney, on the boundary between Dawes Point and The Rocks in the City of Sydney local government area of New South Wales, Australia.


Glass Negative Dawes Point Battery in Dawes Point, circa 1909 City of Sydney Archives

2008 Known to its Cadigal traditional owners as Ta-Ra, the land that became Dawes Point was Sydney's first observatory and weather station, run by William Dawes. It was fortified to a Greenway design and remained government land. In 1925 part of the fort was demolished for the Sydney Harbour Bridge and most of the land became Dawes Point Park.


Relics of the First Fleet

Dawes Point Park is a heritage listed site which contains archaeological remains and relics, including cannons, a guard house, officer's quarters and underground store rooms at the former Dawes Point Battery. The park offers unparalleled views across Sydney Cove. Application and booking information Wedding & Ceremony Bookings Appropriate use


Dawes Point Battery from above 2002. Builders included Greenway. The post1788 archaeological

Dawes Point Park, known as Tarra by the local Aboriginal people, is recognised as the site of the colony's first attempts at an understanding of this country's original inhabitants.


Circular Quay from Dawes Point Battery, Sydney, NSW, 1873. Photo Credit Beaufoy Merlin

The Dawes Point Battery remains is a heritage-listed former artillery fortification and now visitor attraction located adjacent to the southern pylon of the Sydney Harbour Bridge at Hickson Road in inner city Sydney, on the boundary between Dawes Point and The Rocks in the City of Sydney local government area of New South Wales, Australia. It was built and modified from 1791 to 1925 by.


Dawes Point

This work illustrates the military fortifications from Dawes Point. The area was the site of the first battery and fort, established in 1791. During the 1800s the defence system was transferred to the headlands of Sydney Harbour and in the 1920s most of Dawes Point Battery was demolished to allow for the construction of the Sydney Harbour Bridge.