When was perth found




















A team of officers broke into a Carnarvon property on Tonkin Crescent around 1am where they found Cleo in a locked room. Deputy Police Commissioner Col Blanch confirmed Cleo was reunited with her parents "a short time later". He revealed a year-old Carnarvon man, not believed to be linked to the family, has been arrested and is currently being questioned by detectives.

Western Australia Police confirmed the suspicious car they were searching for in the missing case of four-year-old Cleo Smith led a team of officers to a home where the little girl was found. Police Commissioner Chris Dawson said he could not provide detailed information at this stage but said the vehicle gave them the biggest lead as to where Cleo could have been taken.

The Noongar had contact with various seafaring visitors including the Dutch and the French before the arrival of Captain James Stirling who colonised the region for the British in Relations between the settlers and the Aboriginals were not always harmonious as the latter were dispossessed of their land and subjected to sometimes harsh and unsympathetic colonial rule.

Fast forward to December when the State Government signed a framework agreement with the representative body, the South West Aboriginal and Land and Sea Council , aimed at resolving through negotiation six Noongar Native Title claims over Perth and the south-west of Western Australia. You may also be interested in the 'Karla Yarning: Stories of the home fires' self guided walk maps.

The area is also home to the Aboriginal Noongar people who have lived in the south-west region of Western Australia for more than 35, years. In the city precinct itself, the traditional owners are known as Whadjuk Noongar people. When surveying the area previously, Captain Stirling was said to have been stunned by the beauty of the Swan River and the fertile land around it.

Since water transport was vital to communications in the new colony before roads were built, the meanderings of the Swan River determined the site of the first towns. See all services. Access the live stream. Latest News. View all news. The latest with the Lord Mayor Get the latest updates on news, initiatives, developments, events, activations and much more from City of Perth Lord Mayor, Basil Zempilas.

Find out more. Forbidden Broadway Greatest Hits - Volume 1. City of Perth. Christmas Lights Trail. Christmas Nativity. When Stirling returned to Sydney, he reported his findings to Governor Darling. Stirling, who had briefly returned to Britain and had ambitions to govern the new colony, argued that the financial burden on the government could be limited if Swan River was established as a free settlement funded by private capital.

These reports fuelled interest in the potential colony, especially among Britons eager to start new lives in Australia untainted by the stain of the convict colony of New South Wales. Investors were also attracted to the prospect of new lands. National Library of Australia The government was flooded with letters from would-be emigrants and finally agreed to the establishment of a Swan River Colony on the understanding it would receive minimal public funding, which meant no convicts would be sent to provide labour.

Prospective settlers were cautioned that emigration would be at their own risk and cost, and that they would have to develop the land they were granted in order to obtain title to it. Thomas Peel received a commitment for a grant of , acres if he successfully landed settlers by 1 November In the event, Peel arrived after this date, and with fewer settlers than promised. His private colony was beset with problems and branded a failure in London. Shortly afterwards, the first Swan River settlers arrived on the Parmelia and the Sulphur.

The colonisation of Whadjuk country began with the reading of an official proclamation at Garden Island on 18 June, naming James Stirling as lieutenant governor. He decided to establish two towns in the new settlement: a commercial port at Fremantle and a capital — which he named Perth after the Scottish city — about 19 kilometres up the Swan River. On 12 August a large party travelled through the bush to lay the foundation stone for Perth.

Intense interest in the Swan River Colony in Britain resulted in a rush of people applying to emigrate. Life in the colony in the early s was precarious and Stirling felt some migrants were not prepared for the hardships of pioneer life.



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