
Bicentennial Monument at Botany Bay
'Botany Bay' is a
bay in
Sydney,
New South Wales, a few kilometres south of the
Sydney central business district. It was the site of a landing by
James Cook of
HMS ''Endeavour''.
Name and short history
Cook's landing marked the beginning of
Britain's interest in Australia and in the eventual
colonisation of this new ''Southern continent'' (
Captain Cook's map of Botany Bay).
In modern times the Bay is chiefly notable for being the site of
Kingsford Smith International Airport, Australia's largest. The land around the headlands of the bay is protected as
Botany Bay National Park. Also within Botany Bay is
Towra Point Nature Reserve.

Black-eyed Sue and Sweet Poll of Plymouth,England mourning their lovers who are soon to be transported to Botany Bay, 1792
Initially the name 'Stingray Bay' was used by Cook and other journal keepers on his expedition, for the
stingrays they caught. That name was recorded on an Admiralty chart too.
[1] Cook's log for
6 May 1770 records "The great quantity of these sort of fish found in this place occasioned my giving it the name of Stingrays Harbour". However, in his journal (prepared later from his log), he changed to "The great quantity of plants
Mr. Banks and
Dr. Solander found in this place occasioned my giving it the Name of Botany Bay".
[2]
Captain
Arthur Phillip led the
First Fleet into the bay on
18 January 1788 to found a
penal colony there. Finding that the sandy infertile soil of the site in fact rendered it most unsuitable for settlement, Phillip decided instead to move to the excellent natural harbor of
Port Jackson to the north. On
26 January, while still anchored in the bay, the British encountered the
French exploratory expedition of
Jean-François de La Pérouse. Panicked by the thought that the French might beat them to it, the colonists sailed that afternoon to found a settlement at
Sydney Cove.
Despite the move, for many years afterward, the Australian penal colony would be referred to as "Botany Bay" in
England - and in
convict ballads such as
Ireland's "
The Fields of Athenry".
The good supply of
fresh water in the area led to the expansion of its population in the
19th century.
Demographics
According to the most recent census, Botany Bay has a population of 35,897 (17,735 males and 18,162 females).
There were 558 people 1.6% (274 males and 284 females) who identified as being of
Indigenous origin. 22.07% of residents are of Southern European descent (Principally
Italian and
Greek). Eastern/South East
Asian and People from
Indian Subcontinent make 19.24% of the population, followed by
Middle Eastern and
Northern African people at 7.17% and
Pacific Islanders 2.72%.
The three most common languages spoken at home other than English in the 2001 Census were Greek 7.4%,
Chinese languages 5.05% and
Spanish 4.5%.
The median weekly individual income for people aged 15 years and over in the 2001 Census was $300-$399. 49.8% of households have children and 3.5% of the people were in group households.
.jpg)
Aerial photo of Sydney showing Botany Bay in the foreground.
Kingsford Airport and Port Botany
The small Mascot
Aerodrome at Botany was gradually developed and renamed the
Sydney (Kingsford Smith) Airport in 1953.
Port Botany was built in
1930 and is now a
container terminal.
References
1. , editor W. J. L. Wharton's footnote to 6 May 1770.
2. Ray Parkin, ''H. M. Bark Endeavour'', Miegunyah Press, second edition 2003, ISBN 0-522-85093-6, page 203.
Bibliography
''Expédition à Botany Bay, La fondation de l'Australie coloniale'', Watkin Tench, préface d'Isabelle Merle, 2006, Editions Anacharsis
Le texte fondateur de l'Australie, Récit de voyage d'un capitaine de la First Fleet durant l'Expédition à Botany Bay
[1]
See also