William Cox: Blue Mountains Road Builder and Pastoralist
By (Author) Richard Cox
Rosenberg Publishing
Rosenberg Publishing
1st July 2012
Australia
General
Non Fiction
Highway and traffic engineering
625.7092
Paperback
312
William Cox (1764-1837) was a soldier, road builder, and pioneering pastoralist in the colony of New South Wales. He made his name building the road across the Blue Mountains in 1814. In just over six months, his team of 30 convicts hacked out 163 kilometres of road through appalling terrain, without serious accident. As such he is part of early Australian history. But whilst his sympathetic treatment of convicts contributed to this success, as Paymaster of the New South Wales Corps he had earlier used the regimental funds to buy his first farms - resulting in dismissal from the army. As a pastoralist Cox helped carry through the improvements which gave Australia its first significant wool exports. As a liberal thinker he was both a co-founder of the first Agricultural Society and championed emancipists having citizens' rights. In the first book-length biography of William Cox, Richard Cox - a descendant - gives the details of Cox's life, from early scandal through to success in several fields, and redeems the career of one of the pioneers of colonial Australia.
Richard Cox has had a long and distinguished career. He is the author of 12 novels and a number of works of non-fiction. In 2011 he was awarded an MPhil from Kings College London for his thesis on the career of William Cox.