
This clip uses old paintings and engravings to trace the early history of the Rocks area from its inception.
Summary by Damien Parer
The director’s effective and sometimes quirky choice of artwork, combined with snappy editing and a quiet but evocative music track, makes this an entertaining summary of the establishment of The Rocks and an enticing start to what might otherwise have been a pedestrian promotional film.
This sponsored documentary traces the beginning of The Rocks in Sydney Cove to its present redevelopment as a tourist precinct. A young female tourist appears throughout the film as a linking device.
The short documentary was commissioned by the Sydney Cove Redevelopment Authority to promote tourism and shows their involvement in the redevelopment.
Notes by Damien Parer
This clip shows colour footage of The Rocks, Sydney, followed by a series of black-and-white still drawings, a photograph and paintings from the period that illustrate the early history of the area. A narrator describes the settlement of The Rocks, its colourful early history and its significance as an international port.
Education notes provided by The Learning Federation and Education Services Australia
This clip starts approximately 2 minutes into the documentary.
Titles read, ‘Produced by Terry Ohlsson, Written and Directed by Philip Bond’. We see the buildings and ships at the dock. We then see photographs and illustrations of people going about daily life of the time. Concluding with one of Captain Phillip and a two sailing ships at sea.
Narrator The Rocks, Sydney, Australia. A point of arrival for two centuries of Australian immigrants, and a place where visitors from overseas could expect mixed receptions. From day one, foundation day of European settlement, 26 January 1788, the history of The Rocks has been as colourful as it has been varied. The virgin rocky and tree-covered slopes on the western shores of Sydney Cove soon became a collection of insanitary hovels and taverns for seafarers from all parts of the world. Life was cheap for the early settlers, and entertainment fast and bawdy. When Captain Phillip first sailed his fleet through the heads of what is today Sydney Harbour and anchored in Sydney Cove, he could not have foreseen the nautical traffic that was to follow.
The National Film and Sound Archive of Australia acknowledges Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the Traditional Custodians of the land on which we work and live and gives respect to their Elders both past and present.