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Travel in Australia: The islands of Sydney Harbour

Written By Amazing on Monday, March 16, 2015 | 6:30 AM


Tourists visiting Australia cannot miss the Sydney Harbour with wonderful islands. The islands here bring specific features making travelers curious to explore.

The islands of Sydney Harbour stand like lookouts on one of the world’s most attractive waterways — reshaped by the demands of war. But where there used to be 14 islands dotting the busy harbour, only eight have avoided the growth of Australia’s biggest metropolis.


“Some people may not be aware that some of the coastline’s bulging headlands were originally islands,” explained Ian Hoskins, the official historian at the North Sydney Council and author of the book Sydney Harbour: A History. The best known of Sydney’s vanished islands is Garden Island, which was used as an offshore farm to feed a fledgling penal colony in the late 18th Century and is now one of Australia’s most important navy bases. In 1942, after a military dry dock for naval boat repairs joined the island to Sydney’s southern shoreline, Garden Island witnessed an attack that brought terror to a nation in fear of invasion. A Japanese midget submarine sank the moored accommodation ship Kuttabul, killing 21 Australian and British sailors during WWII. The northern part of this historic treasure is now public parkland, only reachable by ferry and peppered with historic buildings and naval installations. It is a popular picnic spot too. Other islands that lost island status when developers joined their landmass with the mainland include Darling Island, which became part of the mainland in the late 1840s and later became the base of Darling Harbour, a popular restaurant and entertainment hub in the suburb of Pyrmont. Little Bennelong Island, a tiny hummock of land, was appropriated by the mainland in the 1820s and now makes up the tip of Bennelong Point, home to the Sydney Opera House. And Glebe Island, an industrial area in the suburb of Balmain, joined the mainland in the 1860s and now acts as a cargo storage area for freighters. In the case of Glebe Island, developers filled the gap between the island and the mainland with rocks to create a connecting causeway. “My favourite island is, in fact, not an island,” Hoskins said. “[Berry Island] is so easy to get to and is joined [to the mainland]by this isthmus of lawn, but once you’re there, it is this wonderful angophora forest. There are various Aboriginal sites and you can see grooves in the rock where they would have sharpened spears… and you can look out through the Sydney red gum trees and get a sense of the pre-European harbour.” The islands that remain Through the mist on a damp day, a Captain Cook tour boat ferried soggy tourists to Fort Denison, a rocky outcrop of an island that once housed an early convict prison. To boost Sydney’s maritime defences during the early years of colonization, the tiny island was flattened and Australia’s only Martello-style fort was built, similar to those that dotted the coast of Britain in the mid 19th Century, with very thick sandstone walls to absorb cannon fire. The highly recommended Fort Denison Cafe and Restaurantserves Australian cuisine with a Mediterranean twist and for those with very deep pockets, the island affords a front row seat to arguably theworld’s finest New Year’s Eve fireworks display. Only reachable by boat tour, Fort Denison is one of Sydney’s gems, with spectacular views of the opera house and the old coat hanger bridge that spans one of the world’s most photogenic harbours. Even on a damp day, visiting is a treat. “It is quite an iconic image for Sydney Harbour,” explained Bernie Courtenay, the Captain Cook cruise boat skipper. “It was a little island when the First Fleet [of settlers]arrived here [in 1788]. They had no use for it except as a place of isolation for reoffending convicts. During the 1840s, because of fears of invasion by privateers and foreign navies, they decided to fortify the island. You can [still]walk around Fort Denison and quite imagine yourself back in Crimean times.”

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