- Heirisson Island
Heirisson Island is an island in the Swan River in
Western Australia at the eastern end ofPerth Water (coord|31|57|59|S|115|52|57|E|type:isle_region:AU). The city of Perth and the Town of Victoria Park are linked byThe Causeway which is actually two bridges which span the two foreshores and the island. It occupies an area of roughly 285,600 squaremetre s.Prior to development, there were actually two islands, surrounded by mudflats. Over the years, dredging and reclamation has created a single island, which is now a landscaped nature reserve, with a two kilometre walking path. In recent years a colony of
Western Grey Kangaroo s have been introduced onto the island.History
The first European to visit the Heirisson Island area was the Flemish explorer
Willem de Vlamingh in January1697 . He was exploring the Swan River in long-boats but only got as far as the Heirisson Island(s) because the mud flats impeded any further progress.Heirisson Island was named after French midshipman
François-Antoine Boniface Heirisson , who was on the French ship "Le Naturaliste" which was a scientific expedition led byNicolas Baudin between1801 and1804 . The expedition made several journeys up the river from Fremantle in long-boats and made the first maps of the Swan River. The island was named in June1801 .Captain James Stirling also investigated the area in
1827 just prior to settlement of theSwan River Colony in1829 . (Appleyard & Manford, 1979)Yagan's statue
In September
1984 theGovernment of Western Australia erected a statue of aboriginal warriorYagan . In1997 the statue's head was sawn off by vandals apparently in some sort of comment about the then current attempts to return Yagan's head from Britain.External links
* [http://www.nla.gov.au/apps/cdview?pi=nla.pic-an23148148 Vintage aerial photograph] by
Frank Hurley at theNational Library of Australia References
* Appleyard, R. T. and Manford, Toby (1979). "The Beginning: European Discovery and Early Settlement of Swan River Western Australia", University of Western Australia Press. ISBN 0-85564-146-0 (for all historical information)
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