Australia

A fair bit of water has gone under Tom Ugly's bridge since those halcyon days, I'm afraid to say.

I recall the smell of which you speak, and the even worse one that came from the mangroves in Quibray Bay when the old tip was there before they built Shark Park (Endeavour Field, I think it was originally, and more recently, Toyota Park). We did most of our fishing in various bits of Port Hacking, usually at either Gymea Bay baths for bream or on the sand flats at Grays Point for Lizards and Winter Whiting.

Great memories.

:)

Endeavour field - brings back memories. I recall around 69' 70' going to see the Endeavour cup played there - The wind was driving sand from the nearby dunes like something out of Lawrence of Arabia.

Tom Uglys - the wooden wharf on the southern side used to be the best flathead spot in all of Sydney. Was very sad when that all went away with the construction of the new bridge
 
TomUglysBridge00.jpg


Tom Ugly's Bridge is one of three major road crossings of the Georges River in southern Sydney, New South Wales. It consists of two separate bridges that carry the Princes Highway, linking the St George area at Blakehurst to the Sutherland Shire at Sylvania.



TomUglysBridge01.jpg

The 1929 Bridge viewed from the boat ramp at Tom Ugly's Point (Sylvania)



About that name . . .

Tom Ugly's Bridge took its name from the geographical feature at the Southern end of the bridge known as Tom Ugly's Point, a name by which it had been known for over 80 years prior to the construction of the bridge.

There are several theories about the origin of the name, the most popular being:


  1. It was named after a local resident Tom Huxley who was, because of their difficulty with pronouncing the letter 'x', referred to by the local aborigines as 'Tom Ugly'. Descendants of Thomas Huxley have asserted that he was indeed a land owner in the area at one time, but there are no official records confirming this.

  2. It's a corrupted pronunciation of the name of a local Aboriginal man, Tow-weiry, who lived in the area and died about 1846.

  3. It derives from the tale of a one-legged man, possibly an army deserter or a boat operator, called either 'Tom Woggleg' or 'Wogul Leg Tom', either because of a mispronunciation of 'wooden leg', or from the local Aboriginal dialect word for 'one'.

  4. It was a mispronounced version of the name of a local fisherman by the name of Tom Illigley.
Pick one or create your own. This is Australia, a land of legends, after all.

:)

Whatever the origin of the name, it was only officially adopted as the name for the bridge in the early 1970s to avoid confusion after the construction of the Captain Cook Bridge (at Taren Point) in 1965 and the Alfords Point Bridge in 1973, although locally it had always been referred to as Tom Ugly's Bridge.



TomUglysBridge02.jpg

The original steam-powered punt approaches the northern (Blakehurst) shore c. 1890
Sorry about the picture size. Things were much smaller in those days.


Tom Ugly's Point Ferry

Tenders were called to construct a punt (Australian for 'vehicular ferry') at Tom Ugly's in 1864. and a hand operated punt service from Tom Ugly's Point (Southern, or Shire side) to Horse Rock Point (Northern, Blakehurst, or 'eeyew, over there' side commenced. Towards the end of the 1870s, however, a couple of factors created one of those 'something must be done' situations. A series of cable breaks (we're talking 'rope' here) almost caused a few disasters, as well as seriously disrupting commerce in the rapidly-growing Shire and the final straw seems to have come when there was something of a revolt caused by the punt's recalcitrant 79-year-old operator who had fallen into the habit of conscripting passengers to help him wind the cables.

In 1882 a steam powered ferry with nice, shiny steel cables was brought into service, reducing the crossing time to less than 10 minutes. The punt was 16 metres (54 feet) long and had a 3.4 m (11 ft) wide roadway and was capable of carrying six horse-drawn vehicles. By 1898 a larger steam-driven ferry began operation, capable of carrying 100 passengers and 15 vehicles. A new punt capable of carrying 28 vehicles and making the crossing in three minutes was installed in 1922.



TomUglysBridge03.jpg

The Sylvania side some time during the 1920s. The smaller picture shows
the original punt landing ramp as it is today (still in use as a boat ramp)

This is pretty much the spot that MG mentioned in Post #2461




TomUglysBridge03a.jpg

A night shot taken in 2010 from the same place as the previous (inset) picture

A lifetime ago my Dad used to take us down here for fish and chips about once a
fortnight and we'd sit and watch the activity on the river while we had our dinner



After WWI, even with two ferries operating, delays of several hours had become the norm and weekends/public holidays were the stuff of nighmares. Once again, Something Had To Be Done and in 1923 meetings between Sutherland Shire Council and the Minister of Public Works produced a commitment to construct a 30-foot carriageway as well as a six-foot pedestrian path. Later that year a bill was introduced into the New South Wales Parliament enabling the construction and the foundation stone for the bridge was laid on 7 June 1924. The bridge construction was funded by Sutherland Shire Council with borrowed money which was to be repaid by a toll on the bridge once it was opened.


The 1929 Bridge

The bridge consists of six steel truss spans forming a total length of 499 m (545 yds). It was designed by Percy Allan, who designed many bridges in New South Wales, including the Pyrmont Bridge at Darling Harbour. When it was opened, it was the longest bridge in Australia.

The crossing was first opened for traffic on 26 April 1929, and officially opened by Sir Dudley de Chair, the Governor of New South Wales, on 11 May 1929. It was then known as the 'George's River Bridge'. The river, incidentally, was itself named for King George V (r. 1910 - 1936).



Tom Ugly's - the wooden wharf on the southern side used to be the best flathead spot in all of Sydney. Was very sad when that all went away with the construction of the new bridge.



TomUglysBridge04.jpg

Not quite the original, but still a good place to catch some lizards
This is the Clare Street jetty, about 500 m upstream from the old one



The toll was collected on the Sylvania (Shire) side of the bridge by toll collectors standing on the road. (tolls were removed in 1952 when the bridge loan was repaid) The road was one lane in each direction in the 1940s and 1950s, and was later converted to become three lanes, with two lanes in the direction of the peak traffic flow until the opening of the second bridge.

Yes, there were some scary moments.



TomUglysBridge07.jpg

Resurfacing the roadway in the 90s



In 2006, the original lead paint was removed by sandblasting. In order to protect the environment and nearby residents they did it one truss at a time by building ginormous box thingies over them with a massive air extraction system. Looked pretty silly, but worked a treat, apparently.


The 1987 Bridge

A second bridge, which opened on 17 October 1987, was built adjacent to the old one to alleviate traffic congestion. It's a plain-looking concrete beam bridge and about as aesthetically pleasing as a train smash. Quite a few people remain pissed off to this very day that they didn't duplicate the look and feel of the old bridge, but I won't name any names just at the moment.



TomUglysBridge06.jpg

The new . . . thing



The new bridge was designed to carry four lanes of traffic. During repair work on the 1929 bridge it has been configured both for one lane northbound and three lanes southbound, as well as two lanes in each direction. The current configuration is for three lanes southbound on the 1987 bridge, and three lanes northbound on the 1929 bridge.

The two bridges aren't quite parallel, being approximately 20 m (65 ft) apart at the northern end and 100 m (325 ft) apart at the southern end.


TomUglysBridge05.jpg

You are about to enter the Shire. Please have your passport ready.





___________
 
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Time for another one of these? Must be.

Got all but cocklebiddy cave and the national museum. In my defence I haven't been back to Oz since before the later was built!

Done the natural bridge jump. Damn cold water I recall.

I probably wouldn't think so anymore, having done ice hole swimming now :)
 
Have any of you guys heard of Geoff Krozier (Crosier)?

"‘Krozier’ was Geoff Crozier, demented psychedelic magician/performance artist from Seymour in Victoria, Australia; ‘the Generator’ refers to his musical accompaniment at this stage in his life, the group Rainbow Generator, who had previously released obscure albums of their own. Crozier was a unique character, part Arthur Brown, part Robert Calvert, part Alice Cooper (though without really singing in a conventional sense, or wearing leather jackets), part shaman, part trickster god and court jester, who appeared both on stage and in rehearsal or recording in face make-up and full outlandish regalia, living his life purely to explore and express, and to blow his own mind as well as the audience’s, and put them back together again to make something new and unexpected. Although not really a singer of much talent, the content of his words - often more recited dramatically or comedically, rather than sung as such - was sometimes puzzling, sometimes enlightening, sometimes funny, and always engaging and strange. He was both a stage magician/illusionist and a ritual magician/shaman, using multi-media performance and improvisation as the method and propulsion for his own anarchic vision of unhinged exploration, with each gig or recording session being a spontaneous ceremonial ritual to see how far out he could take it all and still be there once it was over.
http://www.wendysaddingtonfantribute.com/gpage27.html

I came across him while trying to find Aussie music gems and a track from his first backing group just popped up on my music shuffle. The band's instruction was to free improvise during his act.

I decided to look him up on YouTube and found this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zeqFM9spvMw&

Occupational health and safety might have something to say about his act these days.
 
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Wowsers!

I don't think I've ever heard of him, despite his coming from 20 klicks up the road.

I'm reading up and having a watch - more comments to follow. Thanks for a fascinating link.

:)
 
"Did you know that the Catholic Church has its own insurance agency? And it ain't God."
From Crozier's "Paid Your Money" on the Tranceformer album.
 
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Some news . . .


S&P affirms Australia's AAA rating

Standard & Poor's Ratings Services has affirmed Australia's long-term AAA credit rating due to the country's economic resilience, public policy stability and sound financial sector.

The ratings agency also affirmed the country's short-term A-1+ rating and stable outlook, in a statement.

"The ratings on Australia reflect Standard & Poor's view of the country's ample fiscal and monetary policy flexibility, economic resilience, public policy stability and its sound financial sector," credit analyst Kyran Curry said in the statement.

News.com



Palestinian law schools look to Australia for constitution insight

Palestinian statehood is in the hands of the United Nations but a group of Australian universities is providing the building blocks for a legal framework in a future fledgling nation.

Five deans from Palestinian law schools have been touring law schools at Australian universities this week to gain an insight into the constitutional legal system, which they hope to incorporate in their own teaching

Sydney Morning Herald



Royal Visit

Queen Elizabeth II and her husband Prince Philip are to visit Canberra, Perth, Brisbane and Melbourne during their trip to Australia in October, Buckingham Palace announced Friday.
The royal couple will arrive in the capital Canberra on October 19 and depart Australia on October 29, the palace said.

The itinerary includes a visit to Brisbane on the east coast on October 24 and, on October 26, a trip to the Victorian capital Melbourne before travelling on Perth.

Queen Elizabeth, as head of the Commonwealth, is to attend the Commonwealth heads of government meeting in the west coast city, which runs from October 28 to 30.

The West Australian



There be whales!

The world's biggest newborns are expected to turn the NSW east coast into a whale nursery for the first time in 50 years.

The NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service (NPWS) said a large number of whales with newborn calves in tow were expected to grace the state's shores soon.

The whale baby boom parade is to make its way slowly south along the coast from this month until November.

NPWS marine fauna program co-ordinator Geoff Ross said this many baby whales had not been seen on the east coast since commercial whaling was banned in Australia in the 1960s.

Sydney Morning Herald
 
Thanks be to the Pharaoh.

Yep, Australia is one of the best economies in the world during these troubled financial times.

And that's good news about Pakistan. Nice we can show our fellow Commonwealthians a thing or two when it's sorely needed.
 
Her Maj is coming here? I'll have to see if I can get a photo or two.

Wait, on second thoughts, hell no.



Word is that she's looking forward to trying out the slow-cooked possum ragout at the Lanyon Cafe, but just in case you can't make it up there I'll make sure there are one or two pics posted here.

Honi soit qui mal y pense, as they say.
 

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