Robert O'Hara Burke was born in Galway, Ireland in 1820. He
joined the Irish police force in 1848 and then came to Australia
in 1853. He first went to Tasmania then to the Victorian goldfields
where he became a police inspector at Beechworth.
In 1860 he was chosen to lead an expedition from Melbourne to
the Gulf of Carpentaria. The expedition was funded by extensive
private and public subscriptions and was sponsored by the Royal
Society of Victoria. By November 1860 they had set up base camp
at Cooper's Creek and in December Burke decided to head for the
Gulf, accompanied by Wills, King and Gray.
Burke and Wills did actually reach the coast when on the 11th
of February, 1861, they found mangroves which they took to be
the coast of Carpentaria. On the return journey, Gray died in
the desert. The other 3 reached the base camp at Cooper's Creek
on April 21st, 1861 only to find the waiting main party had left
some 7 hours before, having given up on the foursome for dead.
On the tree where supplies were left there was an inscription
Dig dftw AP 21.
Against Wills' advice, the threesome headed south towards Mount
Hopeless with Burke and Wills both perishing in the desert from
starvation and exhaustion on or around June 30th, 1861. King
survived the ordeal.
Although Wills constantly disagreed with Burke, he stayed loyal
to him throughout, though this was clearly wearing thin as intimated
in letters written by Wills to his father when he knew he was
close to death. It is said that the expedition failed because
of the party's lack of bushmanship and Burke's impatience in
proceeding without carefully planning the course of action.
However, this was the first crossing of the continent of Australia
and the bravery of men like Burke and Wills helped build the
nation we have, going into the new Millenium.
Burke and Wills were given a hero's funeral in Melbourne on
21st January, 1863.