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The Dig Tree: A True Story of Bravery, Insanity, and the Race to Discover Australia's Wild Frontier

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About The Dig Tree: A True Story Of

Product description The harrowing true story of the Burke and Willis expedition team who took on the Australian wilds 150 years ago--and lost. They departed Melbourne's Royal Park in the summer of 1860, a misfit party of eighteen amateur explorers cheered on by thousands of well-wishers. Their mission: to chart a course across the vast unmapped interior of Australia, from Melbourne to the northern coast. Months later, only one man returned alive--with tales of heroism, hardships, and lost opportunities that were by turns terrifying and darkly comic. Drawing its title from one of the few remaining traces of the expedition, The Dig Tree combines the danger of Sebastian Junger with the irony of Bill Bryson to relive the tragic journey of these completely initiated adventurers. The cast of characters includes the expeditionleader; a reckless, charming Irish policeman known for getting lost on his way home from the pub; an eccentric nature enthusiast from Germany; an alcoholic camel handler; and a rogue American horse-breaker who is just in it for the money. For nine harrowing months, their quest for glory shifts from idiocy to perseverance and then inexorably toward tragedy. The nightmare culminates in a last haunting message left behind a group of desperate and dying men--the word DIG carved into what is now Australia's most famous tree. The Dig Tree follows this compelling journey through a forgotten corner of history to examine a daring expedition that came unbelievably close to success only to let it slip away. From Publishers Weekly In a thorough but somewhat languid narrative, Murgatroyd chronicles the mid-19th-century trek led by Robert Burke to penetrate Australia's unforgiving interior and chart a course from Melbourne to the northern coast. The book, like the expedition itself, is a little slow to get going and, like the bulk of the territory the motley adventurers encounter, is exceedingly dry. While Murgatroyd does an exhaustive job of charting the group's movements and outlining the political machinations behind their quest, Burke's scant journal gives her little to draw on to make the story truly come alive. His second in command, the scientist William Wills, was more elaborate in his own writings, but decidedly practical. At one point, Murgatroyd despairs: "If only Burke had been a writer. His emotions surged so much nearer the surface than those of his deputy that he might have revealed more than just temperatures and plant names." But the book shows the obvious top-notch research one would expect from a seasoned journalist, and Murgatroyd unearths enough quirky facts to develop her main characters beyond the constrained outlines of a history textbook. She is also unflinching in portraying a campaign that, despite being elaborately equipped, was so shockingly unprepared and misguided that its account borders on black comedy. Burke, a volatile, impetuous leader driven by ego, was selected by a chummy, old-boys' network that cared more about his lineage than his qualifications. His poor decisions and leadership, combined with a considerable amount of bad luck, make for the type of hardship and disaster that will keep readers interested, even if they find themselves thirsting for a story that's a little more satisfying. Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc. From Booklist "The history of Australian exploration is littered with the corpses of men who underestimated the power, the size, and the unpredictability of the outback," Murgatroyd writes. This book is the tale of one such group, the ill-fated Burke and Wills expedition that set out in August 1860. Robert O'Hara Burke was an Irish police officer who not only possessed no exploration experience but also was notorious for getting lost in his own neighborhood. Surveyor William Wills, third in command until Burke fired his deputy, was a copious note-taker and documented the 5,000-mile journey, which commenced in Melbourne and took the men almost up to the Gulf of Carpentaria in the north. Along the way the group splintered into three separate groups, with only Burke and Wills' small group reaching the northernmost point. Along the way, they encountered varied terrains--including grasslands and swamps--and Aboriginal people, many who brought the explorers food. Eventually, many of these explorers succumb to malnutrition and starvation. Both fascinating and tragic, Murgatroyd's book will appeal to those interested in expeditions or Australia's past. Kristine Huntley Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved From the Inside Flap The harrowing true story of the Burke and Willis expedition team who took on the Australian wilds 150 years ago--and lost. They departed Melbourne's Royal Park in the summer of 1860, a misfit party of eighteen amateur explorers cheered on by thousands of well-wishers. Their mission: to chart a course across the vast unmapped interior of Australia, from Melbourne to the northern coast. Months later, only one man returned alive--with tales of heroism, hardships, and lost opportunities that were by turns terrifying and darkly comic. Drawing its title from one of the few remaining traces of the expedition, The Dig Tree combines the danger of Sebastian Junger with the irony of Bill Bryson to relive the tragic journey of these completely initiated adventurers. The cast of characters includes the expeditionleader; a reckless, charming Irish policeman known for getting lost on his way home from the pub; an eccentric nature enthusiast from Germany; an alcoholic camel handler; and a rogue American horse-breaker who is just in it for the money. For nine harrowing months, their quest for glory shifts from idiocy to perseverance and then inexorably toward tragedy. The nightmare culminates in a last haunting message left behind a group of desperate and dying men--the word DIG carved into what is now Australia's most famous tree. The Dig Tree follows this compelling journey through a forgotten corner of history to examine a daring expedition that came unbelievably close to success only to let it slip away. About the Author A journalist and adventure traveler, SARAH MURGATROYD has covered current affairs for the BBC and produced a variety of radio documentaries, including a special series on Aboriginal issues. Her recent travels took her across Australia, where she trekked the route taken by Burke and Wills. A native of England, she now lives in Sydney. This is her first book. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. One Terra Australis Incognita Let any man lay the map of Australia before him, and regard the blank upon its surface, and then let me ask him if it would not be an honourable achievement to be the first to place foot in its centre. --Charles Sturt, 1840 When Captain James Cook stood on the deck of the Endeavour in March 1770 and felt the hot dry winds filling her sails off Australia's southern coast, he declared that the country's interior would be nothing but desert. Nearly a century later, the same sultry breeze blew down from the heart of the continent, removing the morning chill from Melbourne's Royal Park. As the sun rose, a small group of men emerged from the row of new canvas tents pitched under the gum trees. The warm air in their faces reminded them of the task that lay ahead. It was Monday, August 20, 1860--the day that Australia's most elaborate and audacious expedition would set out to solve a geographical mystery that had confounded the European settlers since their arrival in Botany Bay in 1788. The Victorian Exploring Expedition was charged with crossing the driest inhabited continent on earth--an island the size of the United States of America, home to such extraordinary creatures as the kangaroo, the emu, and the duck-billed platypus. What other strange beasts or lost civilizations might lie hidden in a land that had rebuffed European explorers for so long? Despite the early hour, people were already making their way down Melbourne's elegant boulevards, determined to catch a glimpse of the men, whom journalists had already dubbed "pioneers of civilisation and progress, some of who perchance might never return." The crowds bustled toward the park expecting to see a highly organized operation. Instead, they found a scene of "picturesque confusion." Men rushed about, cursing under their breath as they tripped over the twenty tons of equipment that lay scattered on the grass. Artists jostled to find the best view and newspaper journalists elbowed their way through to examine the chaos. The Argus reported: At one part, might be observed a couple of "associates," already dressed in their expeditionary undress uniform (scarlet jumper, flannel trousers, and cabbage-tree hat), busily engaged in packing; at another, a sepoy might be seen occupied in tying together the legs of a sheep. Orders were being rapidly issued and rapidly executed, and there was, indeed, every indication of the approach of a movement of an extraordinary character. Many spectators made straight for the specially constructed stables on one side of the park. They were intrigued by the strange bellowing noises and peculiar odor emanating from the building. Those who managed to thrust their way inside were rewarded with a glimpse of four "Indian" sepoys, attired in white robes and red turbans, trying to calm a small herd of camels. Mochrani, Matvala, Gobin, Golah Singh, Linda, Tschibik, and their companions had been imported to conquer the deserts of central Australia. The animals were the pride of the expedition and enjoyed a level of care normally reserved for visiting English opera singers. In preparation for the journey, they had each been fitted with a waterproof rug, complete with a hole for the hump, along with two sets of camel shoes, "each made of several folds of leather, and shod with iron," designed for traveling over stony ground. Even river crossings had been prepared for. "If it becomes necessary to swim the camels," boasted the Argus, "air bags are to be lashed under their jowls, so as to keep their heads clear when crossing deep streams." People milled about stroking, patting, and getting in the way. Then, as the police tried to evict the inquisitive onlookers, pandemonium erupted outside. A passing horse had smelled the new beasts, and displaying the customary equine revulsion for the camel, it bolted through the crowd, throwing its rider and breaking her leg. Not to be outdone, a camel broke loose and chased a well-known police officer across the park: The gentleman referred to is of large mould, and until we saw his tumbling feat yesterday, we had no idea that he was such a sprightly gymnast. His down-going and uprising were greeted with shouts of laughter, in which he good-naturedly joined. The erring camel went helter-skelter through the crowd, and was not secured until he showed to admiration how speedily can go "the ship of the desert." In the center of the turmoil, standing on top of a wagon, was a tall, flamboyant Irishman, with flashing blue eyes and a magnificent black beard. Shouting orders in a strong Galway accent, he was trying (and failing) to impose order on the mayhem below. Expedition leader Robert O'Hara Burke grew ever more impatient as he tried to squeeze too much equipment onto too few camels, horses, and wagons. The expedition was already running hopelessly behind schedule, but as fast as his men tried to organize the stores, more people descended in a frenzy of curiosity. They inspected the rifles and ammunition, sat down at the cedar-topped dinner tables, and discussed the relative advantages of the bullock cart versus the American wagon. The expedition doctor, Hermann Beckler, recalled later, "no member of the expedition could see another, none could work with another, none could call another--such was the crush among the thousands who thronged to see our departure." The Victorian Exploring Expedition had been organized by a committee of Melbourne's most important men. In July 1851 Victoria had proudly severed its ties with its parent colony of New South Wales and this grand enterprise was designed to show off the achievements of a new and ambitious colony. Every eventuality was prepared for using the latest inventions. One "hospital camel" was fitted with an enclosed stretcher, which would "afford capital accommodation for invalids, should sickness unfortunately visit the party." In order to cope with dry conditions, each man carried a "pocket charcoal filter, by means of which he will be able to obtain drinkable water under the most unfavourable circumstances," and should anyone get lost, the party carried "an abundance of signals, from the rocket and the blue light to the Union Jack and the Chinese gong." As the Age remarked, "Never did an expedition set forth under, on the whole, brighter auspices. Everything that could possibly be furnished, as in any way useful or auxiliary to the expedition, has been given it." The problem was--where to put it all? By lunchtime the crowd had swelled to around 15,000, a good turnout for a city of 120,000. An impromptu band was formed and a carnival atmosphere swept through the park, compounding the general disarray and giving the proceedings "a very gay and animated appearance." Whispers began to circulate that certain "entertainments" could be procured in the bushes around the edge of the park and a "sly grog shop" opened up behind the camel stables. By mid-afternoon an expedition member confirmed one of those rumors by appearing amongst the crowd "a little too hilarious through excess of beer." Burke had already dismissed two of his party for disobedience and he now fired ex-policeman Owen Cowan on the spot. The expedition was three men down--and it had not even finished packing. One man avoided the revelry. Refusing to be interviewed or to have his photograph taken, a neatly dressed young Englishman stayed inside his tent, wrapping his scientific instruments and placing them inside custom-built mahogany boxes. Surveyor, astronomer, meteorologist, and third in command, William John Wills packed his nautical almanacs, sextant, compass, theodolite, chronometer, barometer, thermometer, anemometer, telescope, sketchbooks, notebooks, specimen jars, and bottles of preserving fluid. Wills was a born scientist. It was his mission to discover, record, and explain the world around him, and now at the age of twenty-six he had the opportunity to cross an entire continent, from the Southern Ocean to the Gulf of Carpentaria. Wills had no doubt that scientific observation would soon dispel the mystique of the Australian interior as surely as it would explain away religion and other superstitions. He expected the journey to last more than two years. The expedition had been due to depart at one o'clock in the afternoon but "hour after hour passed in preparation for starting." After lunch the deputy leader, George Landells, who had special responsibility for the camels, delayed proceedings even further by losing his temper when it was suggested his animals should carry an extra 150 kilograms each. Burke was becoming flustered. With the city's dignitaries waiting to offer the official farewell, he was facing the embarrassing prospect of having to leave with only half his party. Impulsively, and with little regard for the cost, he hired two extra American-style wagons and ordered that the rest of the supplies be loaded at once. When the column of camels, horses, and wagons finally assembled shortly before four o'clock, the mood became patriotic. It was as if the city of Melbourne were saluting its troops as they strode off into battle. Burke returned to his tent, changed into his explorer's uniform, and then addressed the crowd. For a man who often had plenty to say, his speech was awkward: On behalf of myself and the Expedition I beg to return you my most sincere thanks. No expedition has ever started under such favourable circumstances as this. The people, the government, the committee--they all have done heartily what they could do. It is now our turn; and we shall never do well till we justify what you have done in showing what we can do! In private Burke was more forthright. "I will cross Australia," he told his friends, "or perish in the attempt." As the band struck up "Cheer, Boys, Cheer," the crowd applauded and the explorers...