Adventure Bay, the large bay on the eastern side of the isthmus that joins North and South Bruny Island, could be called the birth place of Van Diemen's Land -Tasmania. Its list of 17th and 18th century European visitors reads like a who's who of leading Pacific explorers from the golden age of world exploration.
Where Is it?
Adventure Bay is on South Bruny just across Narrow Neck.

Historic Encounters
The bay was first sighted by Abel Tasman in 1642 when exploring for the great south land south of the then known world because of gale force winds, he was unable to make a landing. James Cook, Matthew Flinders, William Bligh and French explorer Nicolas Baudin all made landfalls at Bruny Island's Adventure Bay. The remains from whalers and loggers from 1820-1850 and timber bridges spanning gullies 30 metres deep are also on display and are part of the unique heritage from the pioneer settler period.
British explorer James Cook in HMS Resolution and Captain Tobias
Furneaux in HMS Adventure left England in 1772 to explore the South
Seas. Becoming separated, Furneaux followed Tasman's chart and in 1773
found the bay naming it Adventure Bay - replenished his water and wood
supplies and sailed on to New Zealand. Cook landed at Adventure Bay in
1777 from HMS Resolution with William Bligh as sailing master.
Captain Bligh revisited Adventure Bay in 1788 with botanist Nelson
planted a number of fruit trees on the east side of the bay which he
brought from the Cape of Good Hope. When he returned in 1792 he found
that one apple tree was still growing, the others having been consumed
by fire. It is said this was the Tasmania's first apple tree. Tasmania
was later to become known throughout the world as the Apple Isle of
Australia. The bay became a centre of the whaling industry with whalers
using the Bay as early as 1804. By 1829 the Bay supported some 80 to 90
men, two sloops and up to twenty whale boats.
As well as discovering, in 1798, that Tasmania was an island George
Bass and Matthew Flinders again visited and explored Bruny Island and
the D'Entrecasteaux Channel in December 1798 when they circumnavigated
Tasmania in the sloop Norfolk. They first sailed to Preservation Island
then across to the north west corner of Tasmania and down the west
coast until they reached Fluted Cape on Bruny Island. Norfolk moored in
Storm Bay and was then taken up the Derwent River and into the
D'Entrecasteaux Channel, with Flinders doing his usual meticulous
mapping as they went. Bass and Flinders spent four days in Oyster Cove
sheltering from rough weather before heading back to Sydney in January
1799.
In 1801 an expedition to Bruny Island and the D'Entrecasteaux Channel
was led by the Frenchman Captain Nicholas Baudin. This expedition, with
two well equipped ships and a group of scientists, was the first purely
scientific expedition to Tasmania and it focused primarily on the Bruny
Island and D’Entrecasteaux Channel region. The French met
Tasmania’s Aboriginal peoples and treated them with high respect.

Things To See And Do
Narrow Neck
The narrow isthmus joining North and South Bruny is called The Neck. on the east side is Adventure Bay, on the west side is Simpsons Bay, which is part of the larger isthmus Bay. At the top of the hummock on the sandbar is the Truganini Lookout - reached via a timber stepped boardwalk that affords 360 degree panoramic views of the Bruny Island coastline.
Truganini
The Narrow Neck lookout honours Tuganini, who is probably the best
known Tasmanian Aboriginal women of the colonial era. She was of the
Nuenonne group, born on Bruny Island in about 1812, just nine years
after British settlement was established further north on the mainland,
close to what is now Hobart. By the time she had learned to collect
food and make shell necklaces, the colonial presence became not only
intrusive but dangerous. She had experienced and witnessed violence,
rape and brutalities inflicted on her people.
By the time she was 17 she had lost her mother, sister, uncle and
would-be partner to violent incidents involving sailors, sealers,
soldiers and wood cutters. At this time, in 1829, the Black War was
under way and Truganini was detained at the Missionary Bay station on
Bruny Island. Placed in the custody of Augustus Robinson, a
government-backed conciliator who set out to capture all independently
living Tasmanian Aborigines, she remained for the rest of her life
under the supervision of colonial officers. Except for a short
interlude, accompanying Robinson in his travels to Port Phillip (now
part of Melbourne), she spent 20 years imprisoned, with other
Aboriginal Tasmanians, on Flinders Island, and another 17 years in the
Oyster Cove camp, south of Hobart.
Details of her biography are sketchy, predominantly drawn from the
journals and papers of Robinson, with whom she was associated for ten
turbulent years until her long detention on Flinders Island. She was
bright, intelligent and energetic, known as one of the few Aboriginal
Tasmanians rooted in pre-contact language and culture, who survived
beyond the middle of the 19th century.
When the number of detained Aboriginal Tasmanians fell below 20 in
1854, there was growing appreciation that Tasmanians were a unique
human group, distinctly different from mainland Australian Aborigines.
Soon this interest expanded beyond paintings and photographs.
Scientists and entrepreneurs attempted to obtain human bodies for
research and exhibitions. From the position of her Aboriginal beliefs
and spirituality, Truganini feared that, when she died, her body would
be cut into pieces for scientific or pseudo-scientific purposes as it
had already happened to another Aboriginal Tasmanian William Lenne in
1869.
She also feared that her remains would be displayed in a museum for
public viewing. Truganini pleaded to colonial authorities for a
respectful burial. Despite her pleas, she was buried at the former
Female Factory at Cascades, a suburb of Hobart. Within two years, her
skeleton was exhumed by the Royal Society of Tasmania and later placed
on display. On 30th April 1976, seven days short of the centenary of
her death, Trugernanner's remains were finally cremated and scattered
according to her wishes - in the D'Entrecasteaux Channel, close to her
birthplace and homeland.
In 1997 the Royal Albert Memorial Museum, Exeter, England, returned
Truganini's necklace and bracelet to Tasmania. In 2002, some of her
hair and skin were found in the collection of the Royal College of
Surgeons of England and returned to Tasmania for burial.
Design by W3Layouts | Content © 2013 Phoenix Group Co. | Sales: phone 1300 753 517, email: [email protected]