Crossing History’s Mountains: The Historic Values of the Greater Blue Mountains
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Date
Authors
McGrath, Ann
Journal Title
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Volume Title
Publisher
Greater Blue Mountains World Heritage Area Advisory Committee
Abstract
The Greater Blue Mountains holds a special place in
the making of the Australian nation. It is a location
of demonstrable and outstanding national historical
significance. With its iconic profile and famous heritage, it
has long been recognised as an area that was foundational
to the building of the Australian nation.
The Greater Blue Mountains region is a place of outstanding
Australian national heritage value and a unique repository
that spans early convict and pastoral history, economic and
technological growth, tourism, wilderness and political
movements, science, culture and creativity.
The region has played an outstanding role in the
conceptualization of Australia’s national history and its
national legends. As the location of prime historical events in
Australia’s early European history, it reflects the early convict
settlement and early nationalist sentiments.
Its pivotal economic history is widely acknowledged and of
enduring significance. Australia’s most influential national
historians have identified the European history of the Blue
Mountains as a region where the nation’s key historical
‘turning points’ have taken place.
The Blue Mountains Crossing of 1813 has become a mainstay
of school history textbooks over Australia’s first century
of federated nationhood. Australia’s best-known poets,
novelists, artists and others have popularised its heritage.
Indicating its significance in Australian history, Australia’s
most prominent and highly regarded historians have
detailed its historic significance, including Australia’s premier
Commonwealth historian, W.K. Hancock (1930), followed for
example, by Manning Clark (1993), Russell Ward (1958), John
Hirst (2000), and Martin Thomas (2004).
This paper discusses the historical significance of the Greater
Blue Mountains following a number of historical themes
from 1788, through the colonial and modern periods. The
Greater Blue Mountains meets several, and possibly all, of
the assessment criteria for National Heritage and historical
values, and illustrates their inter-relatedness in drawing a
rich picture of the national story.
Description
Citation
McGrath, A. “Crossing History’s Mountains: The Historic Values of the Greater Blue Mountains”. In Values for a new generation: Greater Blue Mountains World Heritage Area, edited by Greater Blue Mountains World Heritage Area Advisory Committee, 97-136. Sydney: Greater Blue Mountains World Heritage Area Advisory Committee, 2015.
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Book Title
Values for a new generation: Greater Blue Mountains World Heritage Area
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Access Statement
Open Access