May 1813.
William Wentworth, William Lawson and Gregory Blaxland were the first Europeans to make a complete journey across the Blue Mountains without being forced to turn back. Previous attempts by other explorers had been made, but they always ended with the exploration parties finding themselves faced with an impossible climb up sheer rock faces, or standing on ridges that ended sharply at cliff edges.
Lawson, Blaxland and Wentworth departed South Creek, Sydney Cove, on 11 May 1813. After some three weeks of exploring through difficult and previously impenetrable terrain, the men reached Mount Blaxland, the end point of their journey, from where they could see the plains to the west, on 31 May 1813.
Numerous explorers were sent to try to cross the Blue Mountains in an attempt to find new land for the growing colony in New South Wales. The first successful explorers were William Charles Wentworth, William Lawson and Gregory Blaxland. Others who attempted the crossing before these three were George Caley, George Bass, Francis Barrallier, William Dawes and Watkin Tench, just to name a few.
William Wentworth did not discover the Blue Mountains. These mountains were known from the time of the first European settlement in Australia, and had prevented Sydney from expanding as a colony, because they could not be crossed.William Wentworth was one of the first men to successfully cross the Blue Mountains. He explored with Gregory Blaxland and William Lawson in May 1813.
Not much information is known about Gregory Blaxland's childhood. Gregory Blaxland is most known for being an explorer who crossed the Blue Mountains in Australia.
shishony
The Oregon Trail crossed the Cascade mountains.
The Blue Mountains of New South Wales were crossed by following the ridge tops, rather than the creeks, gullies or ravines.
To find the green mountains
The First Fleet did not go over the Blue Mountains. It was a fleet of ships, and as such was not an inland exploration party.Lawson, Blaxland and Wentworth were the ones who first crossed the Blue Mountains, twenty five years after the First Fleet.They found their route by following the ridges, not the river valleys as previous explorers had attempted.
Nobody said the Blue Mountains could not be crossed. Every explorer who tried to get through prior to 1813 believed there had to be a route - it is just that it took explorers 25 years to find it.
They weren't sea explorers. Lawson, Blaxland and Wentworth were explorers who crossed the Blue Mountains for the first time.
The Blue Mountains were known from the time of European settlement in 1788. No single person specifically "discovered" them, but they were a hindrance to the development and expansion of Australia's first settlement, Sydney. The Blue Mountains were successfully crossed by explorers Lawson, Blaxland and Wentworth in 1813, some 25 years after the first settlement.
Ural Mountains
William Charles Wentworth did not discover the Blue Mountains whilst on a boat; in fact, he did not discover the Blue Mountains at all. The Blue Mountains held the colonists of the first Australian settlement virtually as prisoners within the sheer rock walls of the mountains from the time it became obvious that more land was needed. All the colonists knew of the mountains, which were quite visible in the distance, with their distinctive blue hue. Wentworth was one of three men who first crossed the Blue Mountains in 1813, sighting good grazing land to the west. No boat was involved, as the expedition had to be carried out entirely on foot and horseback.
The first explorers in Australia to cross the Blue Mountains of New South Wales were Gregory Blaxland, William Lawson and William Wentworth. They achieved this in May 1813, twenty-five years after European settlement in Australia began.
William Wentworth did not discover the Blue Mountains. These mountains were known from the time of the first European settlement in Australia, and had prevented Sydney from expanding as a colony, because they could not be crossed. William Wentworth was one of the first men to successfully cross the Blue Mountains. He explored with Gregory Blaxland and William Lawson in May 1813. The three men and the convicts who assisted them achieved the crossing by following the ridges over the tops of the mountains.
The first to establish the Blue Mountains were Gregory Blaxland, William Charles and Lieutenant!
Lewis and Clark crossed the Rocky Mountains during their expedition in the early 1800s. They also navigated other mountain ranges, such as the Bitterroot and the Blue Mountains, as they journeyed to the Pacific Ocean.