Henry Hellyer
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Henry Hellyer (1790 – September 1832) was an English surveyor and architect who was one of the first
explorer Exploration refers to the historical practice of discovering remote lands. It is studied by geographers and historians. Two major eras of exploration occurred in human history: one of convergence, and one of divergence. The first, covering most ...
s to visit the rugged interior of the north west of
Tasmania ) , nickname = , image_map = Tasmania in Australia.svg , map_caption = Location of Tasmania in AustraliaCoordinates: , subdivision_type = Country , subdi ...
, Australia and made the most comprehensive maps of the area up to that time.


Life

Henry Hellyer was descended from Hellyers living in the area. Nothing is known about his early life or where he was trained as an architect and surveyor, but it seems that the family were able to afford to educate their children well. His older brother William Varlo Hellyer was a lawyer in London and Secretary of the
Royal Institution The Royal Institution of Great Britain (often the Royal Institution, Ri or RI) is an organisation for scientific education and research, based in the City of Westminster. It was founded in 1799 by the leading British scientists of the age, inc ...
in 1841. A copy of a letter written by Henry in 1830 to William Varlo's Hellyer's wife, Mary Vuliamy was deposited by a Canadian descendant of William and Mary in the Hellyer Regional Library in
Burnie, Tasmania Burnie is a port city on the north-west coast of Tasmania, Australia. When founded in 1827, it was named Emu Bay, being renamed after William Burnie, a director of the Van Diemen's Land Company, in the early 1840s. , Burnie had an urban popu ...
. Henry himself had no direct descendants. When the
Van Diemen's Land Company The Van Diemen's Land Company (also known as Van Dieman Land Company) is a farming corporation in the Australian state of Tasmania. It was founded in 1825 and received a royal charter the same year, and was granted 250,000 acres (1,000 km2) ...
was formed in 1825 he was one of the first officers to sign on, as a surveyor (later Chief Surveyor) and Chief Architect. His achievements in Tasmania are well documented, and the Court of Directors of the VDL Co in London noted his resignation (March 1832) as follows: "Mr Hellyer, whose valuable services have been so great and whose name is so well known both to the Colonial Government and at home, by his unwearied exertions for the company, by his personal privation and risk in exploring the country, and by the admirable maps and plans which have been exhibited, has been recently appointed to an important situation under the Surveyor-General of the Colony".quoted in Winter, W. "What lay behind the heroic image of Henry Hellyer." ''The Advocate''. Burnie Sesquicentenary Edition, 14 September 1977 There are no portraits of Henry Hellyer. However, for the sesquicentenary of the town of Burnie in 1977, a portrait was created by local artist Casey McGrath from descriptions, and used as the basis for 200 silver medallions and 4,000 anodised aluminium ones that were given to school children in the area. A special issue of the local newspaper provided a detailed account of his life.


Work in Tasmania

Henry Hellyer explored most of North Western Tasmania for his employer, the
Van Diemen's Land Company The Van Diemen's Land Company (also known as Van Dieman Land Company) is a farming corporation in the Australian state of Tasmania. It was founded in 1825 and received a royal charter the same year, and was granted 250,000 acres (1,000 km2) ...
(VDL Co), and wrote extensive journals and reports which are held in various archives. His best known journey was with
Richard Frederick Richard Frederick (born 6 August, 1965) is a Saint Lucian lawyer and politician, and he is the Minister in the Office of the Prime Minister with Responsibility for Housing and Local Government. Fredrick made his debut in the 2021 Saint Lucian ...
Isaac Cutts, from
Circular Head Circular Head Council is a Local government in Australia, local government body in Tasmania covering the far north-west mainland. It is classified as a rural local government area with a population of 8,066, and its major towns and localities ...
to St Valentines Peak and back, in February 1827. Overall, it seems clear that Henry Hellyer accepted the VDL Co view that their
royal charter A royal charter is a formal grant issued by a monarch under royal prerogative as letters patent. Historically, they have been used to promulgate public laws, the most famous example being the English Magna Carta (great charter) of 1215, bu ...
from
King George IV George IV (George Augustus Frederick; 12 August 1762 – 26 June 1830) was King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and King of Hanover from the death of his father, King George III, on 29 January 1820, until his own death ten y ...
made the Aboriginal people of North West Tasmania trespassers on company land. In August 1830, while building a footbridge over the River Wey, his camp at Weybridge was visited by
George Augustus Robinson George Augustus Robinson (22 March 1791 – 18 October 1866) was a British-born colonial official and self-trained preacher in colonial Australia. In 1824, Robinson travelled to Hobart, Van Diemen’s Land, where he attempted to negotiate ...
and the "friendly mission" whose intent was to investigate claims of killings, including the Cape Grim massacre by VDL Co employees, and to remove all Aboriginal people from their land and relocate them to an offshore island. The party that visited Hellyer's camp included
Truganini Truganini (also known as Lallah Rookh; c. 1812 – 8 May 1876) was an Aboriginal Tasmanian woman. She was one of the last native speakers of the Tasmanian languages and one of the last individuals solely of Aboriginal Tasmanian descent. Trug ...
and her husband Woorady. Hellyer told Robinson of a stock-keeper who claimed to have killed 19 Aboriginal people with a swivel-gun and later wrote to his sister-in-law about Robinson's visit, saying, "I hope he will do some good, for at present a man's life is not safe if he stirs out without arms, but I have hitherto been lucky enough to escape." This probably refers to an incident on 25 January 1829 which he described in a report as "...a narrow escape, the natives having set fire to a thicket which we were struggling to get through. We rushed through the flames... We saw the natives with fire and tried to shoot them, but although not ten yards off they all escaped..." In 1831 he became the first European to reach the summit of
Cradle Mountain Cradle Mountain is a locality and mountain in the Central Highlands region of the Australian state of Tasmania. The mountain is situated in the Cradle Mountain-Lake St Clair National Park. At above sea level, it is the sixth-highest mount ...
. In the same year, he began the design of the residence, Highfield House, for the Chief Agent of the VDL Co, but he did not live to see it built. He committed suicide on the night of 1/2 September 1832, leaving a note which is held in the Tasmanian Archives. Hellyer travelled extensively along the north of the island. Parts of his journey have been recorded by Brian J Rollins, who followed precisely parts of this journey. His article, "Henry Hellyer, esquire, 1790/1832: Van Diemen's Land Company surveyor: in his footsteps." was published in 1988 by ''Australian Surveyor.''


Suicide

Hellyer suicided on 9 September 1832, his incoherent suicide note ending with the following line: ''Alas my mother, in agony I fly to my saviour.'' His suicide was the inspiration for a 1998 play. Most theories about the suicide are speculation, except for a thorough investigation involving the well-validated technique of LIWC (Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count). An analysis of his diaries from the day he left England, suggests he was suffering from ever-increasing depression. An alternative view has been advanced that he may have suffered from
bipolar disorder Bipolar disorder, previously known as manic depression, is a mental disorder characterized by periods of depression and periods of abnormally elevated mood that last from days to weeks each. If the elevated mood is severe or associated with ...
. Baddeley, Daniel and Pennebaker's analysis suggests that his final extreme distress could have been occasioned by gossip circulated about illegal sexual relationships with convict associates. There was no concrete evidence available at the time for this. It is more likely that this gossip was malicious and intended to blacken his name. There could well have been some envy at Stanley (the base for the Van Diemen's Land Company) that Hellyer could look forward to a government appointment. As a devout Christian, he would have been devastated by this. A further suggestion is that he may have suffered from
gelotophobia Gelotophobia is a fear of being laughed at, a type of social phobia. While most people do not like being laughed at, in his clinical observations, German psychotherapist and psychoanalyst Michael Titze (1996) discovered that some of his patients s ...
, an inability to deal with what he perceived as bullying, even if this was in fact merely thoughtless teasing. A further LIWC analysis of the internal inquiry conducted into his suicide, on behalf of the Van Diemen's Land Company, suggests there was a whitewash by those who might have been seen as involved in negative behaviour towards Hellyer. Gwyneth Daniel's detailed exposition of these and other points can be seen in ''Utmost Extrication. Why Henry Hellyer Shot Himself''. Despite the evidence concerning depression, in a letter to his sister-in-law in 1830 he wrote that he had been in excellent health ever since arriving in the Colony, "...except for two or three short attacks occasioned by over-exertion and fatigue after some of my long excursions in the bush". There is no hint of what these "attacks" may have been, but there is no doubt that his explorations were marked by extraordinary energy and copious note-taking on everything that took his interest, from cicadas, through "young centipedes white as snow" to land-crab chimneys. He is often described as a visionary. The Chief agent of the VDL Co wrote of him, "He is exceedingly chimerical in all his ideas... He would have mansions where I would have cottages", and elsewhere, "...he may he said to look upon everything with a painter's eye and upon his own discoveries in particular with an affection which is blind to all faults". If Henry Hellyer was prone to "attacks" of depression after periods of over-exertion and fatigue, the winter of 1832 provided an occasion. He wrote: "...The snow is so deep that we are completely hemmed in by it. It forms such hard lumps on my overalls... that I was completely fettered by it and in the greatest pain imaginable. One hour of this weather would kill any man if he were stuck fast and remained inactive. The poor dogs were literally plated with coats of mail formed by the ice on their hair, but they traveled better than we could, as the crust would support them...".Report quoted in McFarlane Ian. ''Aboriginal Society in North West Tasmania: Dispossession and Genocide''. PhD, University of Tasmania, 2002


Legacy

Although Henry Hellyer had no descendants, his younger brother Thomas Hellyer (1801–41) migrated to New Zealand with his son
William William is a male given name of Germanic origin.Hanks, Hardcastle and Hodges, ''Oxford Dictionary of First Names'', Oxford University Press, 2nd edition, , p. 276. It became very popular in the English language after the Norman conquest of Engl ...
(1821–1885) by way of Hobart Town, Tasmania, where Thomas married his second wife on 11 June 1832. Henry Hellyer had by then advised the Court of Directors of the VDL Co that he would be leaving their service at the end of his contract, to accept an appointment with the Surveyor-General in Hobart Town, a highly coveted position that might have generated some envy among his colleagues. It is not known if the brothers had plans to work together, if they met, or if Henry Hellyer attended the wedding. He could have done so, since the VDL Co operated a cutter that made the trip regularly for mail and supplies, but his name is not listed amongst the witnesses. Henry's nephew William Hellyer migrated from New Zealand to
New South Wales ) , nickname = , image_map = New South Wales in Australia.svg , map_caption = Location of New South Wales in AustraliaCoordinates: , subdivision_type = Country , subdivision_name = Australia , established_title = Before federation , es ...
about 1838, and became a solicitor and was a member of the NSW Parliament for one day in 1861. Many Australian Hellyers are descended from William, whose son
Thomas Henry Hellyer Thomas Henry Hellyer (18405 April 1889) was an Australian politician and solicitor. He was born at Bathurst to solicitor William Hellyer, and Margaret Gray. On 25 April 1862 he married Rose Anne Parfitt, with whom he had twelve children. A ...
(1840–1889) was a member of the NSW Parliament from 1883 to 84.


Places named by or after Henry Hellyer

* Arthur River: Aboriginal name ''Tunganrick'', renamed by Hellyer 1827, but it was already recorded as the Arthur River in 1824J. Moore-Robinson J. ''Tasmanian Nomenclature with dates and origins.'' Hobart: The Mercury Printing Office, 1911

/ref> * Dipwood Marsh and Dipwood Range: 1827 * Emu River: 13 February 1827 * Hampshire Hills * Hellyer River and
Hellyer Gorge The Hellyer Gorge is a gorge in Tasmania, through which flows the Hellyer River, named after Henry Hellyer. It is the subject of the Hellyer Gorge State Reserve. The Murchison Highway passes through the area with many sharp and steep bends, whic ...
: Aboriginal name ''Kar.ne.ket.tel.lay''; renamed as "Don" by Hellyer, 16 February 1827; later renamed after him * Saint Valentine's Peak: Aboriginal name ''Natone'', renamed by Hellyer 14/15 February 1827 * Surrey Hills: February 1827


Other

* Fossil trilobite (''Nepea hellyeri'') * Centipe (''Lamcytes hellyeri'') * Minerals:
Hellyerite {{infobox mineral , name = Hellyerite , image = Hellyerite-Heazlewoodite-Zaratite-255032.jpg , imagesize = 260px , alt = , caption = Zaratite (emerald-green coating), hellyerite (powder-blue) and heazlewoodite (light b ...
, the Hellyer Deposit and the Hellyer Mine *
Hellyer College Hellyer College (often stylised as hellyer college) is a government comprehensive senior secondary school located in in north-western Tasmania, Australia. Established in 1976, the college caters for approximately 800 students in Years 11 and ...
and the Hellyer Regional Library in
Burnie, Tasmania Burnie is a port city on the north-west coast of Tasmania, Australia. When founded in 1827, it was named Emu Bay, being renamed after William Burnie, a director of the Van Diemen's Land Company, in the early 1840s. , Burnie had an urban popu ...
*
Hellyers Road Distillery Hellyers Road is a whisky distillery in Burnie, Tasmania. Founded in 1997 by a group of dairy farmers, it takes its name from a road surveyed in 1827 by explorer Henry Hellyer. In 2010, Hellyers Road was recognised by the Malt Whisky Associatio ...


References


External links


Entry in University of Tasmania Companion to Tasmanian HistoryImage of gravestone and plaque in old Stanley cemetery, at Hellyer's Road Distillery websiteImage of gravestone and plaque on genealogy websiteNewspaper clipping of Hellyer gravestone restoration from genealogy website
Henry Hellyer's surveys and maps
Henry Hellyer's 1827 panoramic sketch from the summit of St Valentine's Peak at the National Library of AustraliaHenry Hellyer's 1828 map of the interior of North Western Tasmania at the National library of AustraliaHenry Hellyer's 1828 map of the interior of North Western Tasmania with route of survey party at the National Library of AustraliaHenry Hellyer's 1828 map of North West Tasmania at the National Library of AustraliaHenry Hellyer's 1830 map of the Hellyer River at the National Library of AustraliaHenry Hellyer's 1831 map of the Surrey Hills area at the National Library of Australia
Henry Hellyer's architecture
Two of Henry Hellyer's 1831–32 drawings for Highfield House in a guide to the Highfield site by Parks and Wildlife service, Tasmania1835 painting by W Purser of Highfield House at the National Library of Australia1835 painting by unknown of Highfield House at the National Library of AustraliaImages of Highfield House at the State Library of TasmaniaHighfield House – architect Henry Heller – website of restored house at Stanley, Tasmania, Parks and Wildlife Service, Tasmania
{{DEFAULTSORT:Hellyer, Henry 1790 births 1832 deaths Australian explorers People from Tasmania English emigrants to colonial Australia Suicides in Tasmania 1830s suicides