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  1. The South Australian Great Northern Exploring Expedition 1861-1862. Stuart’s Track 1861 – 1862. Map by David Kennett. John McDouall Stuart officially set out on the 25th October 1861 from “Montefiore House”, the residence of James and Catherine Chambers in North Adelaide, on his sixth expedition. This was his third, and ultimately ...

  2. John McDouall Stuart made six expeditions from 1858 to 1862, exploring the Australian interior and establishing a route from Adelaide to the north coast. Stuart was the first European to discover the true nature of the centre of the continent.

  3. 30 de ago. de 2004 · The explorations of Mr. John McDouall Stuart may truly be said, without disparaging his brother explorers, to be amongst the most important in the history of Australian discovery. In 1844 he gained his first experiences under the guidance of that distinguished explorer, Captain Sturt, whose expedition he accompanied in the capacity of draughtsman.

  4. 31 de may. de 2017 · John McDouall Stuart was born on 7 September 1815 in Dysart, Fife - just north of the city of Edinburgh, Scotland. He died in London aged 50 years, on 5 June 1866 and was buried at Kensal Green Cemetery. Left Side Inscription. Alice Springs Town Council. This statue was gifted to the Alice Springs Town Council by the McDouall Stuart Freemasons ...

  5. John McDouall Stuart. Born in Scotland in September 1815, John McDouall Stuart arrived in South Australia in January 1839. He worked as a surveyor, particularly in remote areas. After gaining a taste for exploration on Captain Charles Sturt’s expedition to central Australia in 1844-45, he undertook six major inland expeditions of his own.

  6. John McDouall Stuart made six expeditions from 1858 to 1862, exploring the Australian interior and establishing a route from Adelaide to the north coast. Stuart was the first European to discover the true nature of the centre of the continent.

  7. John McDouall Stuart. On 26 th November 1862 ten exhausted, gaunt and ragged men, on their limping, emaciated horses, arrived at a remote stock run near Mount Margaret, in northern South Australia. With them, in a horse-drawn litter, was the skeletal figure of their leader, stretchered for 1,600 miles, nearly blind, with a crippled right hand ...