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Matthew Flinders (16 March, 1774 - 19 July, 1814) was one of the
most accomplished navigators and chartmakers of his age. In a career that spanned just over twenty years, he sailed with Captain Bligh, circumnavigated and named Australia, survived shipwreck and disaster only to be imprisoned as a spy, identified and corrected the effect of
iron ships upon compass readings, and wrote the seminal work on Australian exploration A Voyage To Terra Australis.
Born in Donington, Lincolnshire, England, the young
Matthew Flinders had his hunger for exploration and knowledge whetted by the tale of Robinson Crusoe, and at the age of fifteen he joined the navy. Later, he sailed with Captain Bligh on
The Providence, transporting breadfruit from Tahiti to Jamaica.
Later, Flinders sailed to Australia on The Reliance, establishing himself as a fine navigator and cartographer, and
in 1796 explored the coastline around Sydney in a tiny open boat called Tom Thumb. In
1798 he circumnavigated Van
Diemen's Land (later renamed Tasmania) aboard The Norfolk, therefore
proving it to be an island. The passage between the Australian mainland and Tasmania became known as Bass Strait after the ships' doctor, George Bass, and
a large island was named Flinders Island.
On 17 April 1801 Flinders married Ann
Chappell, but was soon forced to leave his new wife when the British Government sent him back to Australia. He set out that July,
in command of The Investigator, to produce a detailed survey of the coastline of Australia, the southern coast of which
was still unknown.
Between December 1801 and June 1803, Flinders charted the entire coastline of Australia. He sighted Cape Leeuwin on 6 December and worked his way eastwards until he reached Fowlers Bay on the 28 January. From that point on, the coastline was uncharted.
Nicolas Baudin and the Meeting At Encounter Bay
On 8 April, Flinders, while sailing east, met up with the French explorer Nicolas Baudin, who was sailing west aboard Le Géographe. Both men had
been sent by their respective governments on separate expeditions to map the unknown southern coastline of Australia. Both men of
science, Flinders and Baudin met and exchanged details of their discoveries, and sailed together to Sydney to resupply. Flinders
would later name the site of their meeting Encounter Bay.
The meeting at Encounter Bay by the two expeditions marked the point at which the entire coastline of continental Australia
became mapped.
By June 1803, the hull of The Investigator had deteriorated to such a degree that Flinders was forced to abandon his
survey of the northern coastline of Australia. He returned to Sydney by the west coast, thus completing his circumnavigation of Australia.
Flinders set sail for England aboard The Porpoise to secure another vessel from the British Government with which to
complete his survey, but was shipwrecked on the Great Barrier
Reef. Remarkably, Flinders navigated the ship's cutter across open sea back to
Sydney, a distance of some 700 miles, and arranged for the rescue of the marooned crew on Wreck Reef.
Flinders next attempted to return to England aboard The Cumberland, but the poor condition of the schooner forced it to put in at Mauritius
for repairs on 17 December. Unbeknowst to Flinders, England was now at war
with France again, and the French governor, General De Caen, had Flinders detained as a spy. He would be imprisoned on Mauritus
for almost seven years.
Flinders finally returned to England in October 1810, where he immediately began work on preparing A Voyage to Terra
Australia for publication. On 18 July 1814, the book was published. The next
day, Matthew Flinders died, aged only 40.
- See also: List of explorers
Links
[The Matthew Flinders Electronic Archive ]
http://gutenberg.net.au/pages/bass-flinders.html
The noted archaelogist Sir William
Matthew Flinders Petrie was his grandson.
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