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Ulladulla Police Station
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Ulladulla Substantial coastal holiday town
surrounded by beaches and National Parks Ulladulla is located
227 km south of Sydney via the Princes Highway. It is a coastal holiday
resort, retirement centre and fishing port. The local economy is
supplemented with dairying, timber-getting and the production of honey.
There are a number of theories about the origins of 'Ulladulla' as a
place name. The indigenous word is variously given as 'ullada ullada'
and 'Woollahderra' supposedly meaning 'safe harbour'. The apocraphyl
story is that the word 'Ulladulla' is a compromise between the
Aboriginal title and the phrase 'holey dollar' whichr was a form of
currency in NSW from 1814 until about 1824.
For the 20,000 years prior to white settlement the coastal area was
occupied, depending on what source you read, by the Dhurga, Walbanja
and/or Wadandian Aborigines. Middens and caves used for shelter testify
to their occupation of the land. When Captain Cook travelled up the
coastline in 1770 he noted, at Bawley Point, south of Ulladulla, people
on the shore who 'appeared to be of a black or very dark colour'. On
April 21 he sighted Pigeon House Mountain, to the west of the present
town. He described it as 'a remarkable peaked hill, which resembled a
square dove-house, with a dome at the top, and which for that reason I
called the Pigeon House'.
In 1827 Thomas Florance surveyed the coastline from Burrill to
Narrawallee, naming much of what he saw. He anchored his boat, the Wasp
, in what is now called Ulladulla Harbour and hence it became known, for
a time, as Wasp Harbour.
The first land grant in the area was issued in 1827 to Reverend
Thomas Kendall (1778-1832). He settled north of the present township of
Milton, calling his property 'Kendall Dale'. There he ran cattle and
felled timber utilising ticket-of-leave men for labour. Kendall
travelled often from Ulladulla to Sydney but was drowned when his small
boat, the Brisbane, was wrecked off Jervis Bay.
His grandson, Henry Kendall, was born on the estate in 1839. Although
he only lived there for five years the people of Ulladulla helped to
launch his literary career when they instigated, by public subscription,
the publishing of his first book, Poems and Songs , in 1862. He was to
become one of Australia's most distinguished contemporary poets.
An area called 'The Settlement', upon the site of present-day Milton,
was occupied by farmers. Creeks, rivers, gorges, mountains, lakes and
swamps made access by land problematic so the settlers began to use the
harbour, imaginatively known as 'The Boat Harbour', for the shipment of
produce. There were no breakwaters nor any jetty, just a chain by which
ships were secured.
Other grants were issued in the 1830s and the site for a village was
surveyed in 1837. With an abundance of red cedar in the area, much in
demand for the construction of furniture, Ulladulla prospered as a
timber port in the 1840s.
The first houses consisted of a sapling framework with strips of
dried bark for covering. As families developed (until 1850 there was
only one white woman living at Ulladulla Harbour) larger slab houses
were erected.
Shipbuilding was also undertaken from about 1840 by David and James
Warden on the beach inside Ulladulla Harbour. The promontory known as
Warden Head is named in their honour.
Other early industries included dairying, wheat-growing (destroyed
when 'rust' hit the south coast in the 1860s), pig-rearing, honey, maize
and vegetable-cultivation, a tannery works at Millards Creek and the
mining of silica and quartzite which was loaded on a wharf at Bannister
Point and shipped out for usage in the furnaces at Newcastle.
In 1856 the population of Ulladulla was around 300. A road was marked
out in 1858 although it was not suitable for laden wagons. That same
year a wooden jetty was built by private subscription, being replaced by
a government wharf in 1865. The stone steps are all that remain in
Ulladulla Harbour. Markets are held at the wharf on the second Sunday of
each month.
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View across Ulladulla Harbour to the
breakwater |
Today Ulladulla is a peaceful, relaxed seaside resort. The harbour,
with two boat ramps, is nestled between two enclosing headlands. With a
couple of notable beaches, seven lakes nearby and a hinterland of state
forest, mountain ranges and national parkland it is ideal for all
aquatic activities, camping, bushwalks and scenic drives.
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