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Phillip Parker King

Thomas Woolner1854

National Portrait Gallery

National Portrait Gallery
Canberra, Australia

RADM Phillip Parker King, RN, Rtd (1791-1856) has been described as the first Australian-born person to succeed in the world outside the colonies. He trained for a naval career in England, and subsequently became skilled in surveying. In 1817 he was appointed to explore the Australian coastline to consolidate the earlier work of Matthew Flinders. Over five years he made four difficult voyages, charting many gulfs, identifying several islands, and providing the first reports of Port Darwin. He was accompanied on the early voyages by Bungaree. In 1826, regarded as one of Britain's leading hydrographers, he sailed in the company of the Beagle to chart Peru, Chile and Patagonia. Charles Darwin later described him as an ideal captain.
Thomas Woolner was a founding member of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, a group of English poets and artists. He came to Australia in 1852 to try his luck on the goldfields, but quickly returned to portraiture. He produced a number of medallions of prominent Melbourne and Sydney citizens before returning to England in 1854.

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National Portrait Gallery

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