Clarence, Western Australia

Clarence, also known as Clarence Town and Peel Town, was an early European settlement on the coast of Western Australia . It was planned by Thomas Peel, with help from various other colonial backers. The first ship of settlers landed in December 1829, and the settlement was abandoned by the early 1830s.[1]

No firm evidence exists for its exact location. It was thought to be sited in the vicinity of Woodman Point, though recent archaeological discoveries have also found evidence of settlement further south, near Mount Brown in the Beeliar Regional Park. The name was chosen in honour of the Duke of Clarence, the heir to the throne at the time of naming.

Notes

  1. Items 143-144 of Western Australia. Surveyor General's Office (1981), [Western Australian historical plans], Surveyor General's Office, retrieved 19 February 2019
gollark: It's @everyone, not @everybody.
gollark: Just don't check that and hope nobody just randomly writes @a word#0000.
gollark: <@593113791252660224> Just contact me if you want stuff hosted and I can probably work something out.
gollark: You could use REGULAR EXPRESSIONS™ but that wouldn't allow you to check ping validity.
gollark: Which could be plugged in and linked to the osmarks.tk™cloud.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.