LEURA CASCADES TO TARPEIAN ROCK,
BLUE MOUNTAINS NSW AUSTRALIA
Tarpeian Rock is on the extreme right of the map (not named) |
This short walk follows the Prince Henry Cliff
Walk from the Leura Cascades picnic area to Tarpeian Rock Lookout and return,
with a diversion to Bridal Veil View Lookout.
The area around the present day picnic area is
part of a major development which took place in 1911-13 and included the baths
(now filled in), the Chelmsford Bridge and what is now Cliff Drive. The
Leura Falls Kiosk (now the Solitary Restaurant) also dates from around this
time as no doubt do some of the area’s walking tracks.
See The Blue
Mountain Echo (NSW: 1909 - 1928), Friday 19 May 1911, page 2 for an
entertaining account of the beginnings of the project. (This can be found by
searching the newspaper files at www.trove.nla.gov.au)
.
Lord
Chelmsford (Frederic
John Napier Thesiger, 1st Viscount Chelmsford (12 August 1868 –
1 April 1933) was a British statesman who served as Governor of Queensland
(1905–1909) and Governor of New South Wales from 1909 to 1913 at the time of
the work at Leura Cascades. He officiated at the opening of the new Katoomba
Town Hall in January1912.
Bridal Veil View is a romantic place |
A one-time feature of the walk to Tarpeian Rock
was the flying fox which took
supplies down to the Katoomba-Leura sewage treatment works in the valley below
Leura Falls. This seems to have been removed as part of the cleanup after the
sewage works closed down a few years ago. There is no shortage of cleaning up
to do down in the valley.
I wonder what this sign used to read! |
The diversion to Bridal Veil View Lookout is well worth taking. It’s only a few minute’s
walk to a point directly opposite the Bridal
Veil (upper Leura Falls, reached by going down the Leura Cascades track).
This lookout seems to have a problem with its name, as I have also seen it
called Bridal Veil View Lookout or just Bridal Veil View.
Leura Tarpeian Rock |
Rome Tarpeian Rock |
So far as I know, there have been no criminals
thrown off the Tarpeian Rock at
Leura, unlike the original in Rome which was used for that purpose for hundreds
of years. There is some physical resemblance between the two rocks, I guess.
You decide.
My
own video of the walk may be found here .
Chelmsford Bridge August 2009 https://johnsbluemountainsblog.blogspot.com/2013/12/links-to-all-blog-entries-and-relevant.html All Blue Mountains blogs and videos All New England and other Geology blogs and videos Limestone Caves of NSW Song Studies. Bible studies based on hymns and songs Shoalhaven District Geology. |
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