Linden
to Woodford
86km to 90km from Sydney
Close
to and either side of the present highway you will discover
a wealth of colonial pioneer heritage waiting for you in the
bush. On your left (heading east) are the magnificent ruins
of ‘Weemala’, built in 1881 and destroyed in the 1968 bushfires.
The
explorers camped somewhere on the ridge at Linden, with Blaxland
recording the difficulty of the terrain. Cox also recorded
the problems, and explained how he and his convicts built
an 80 ft long x 15 ft wide road over a chasm. Sandstone buttressing
for this road sits beside the G.W.H.
Turn left off the highway at Tollgate Drive and follow the
signs to Glossop Road, Kings Cave and Caley’s Repulse.
Caley’s
Repulse is a pile of stones said to mark the final point of
a failed attempt to cross the Mountains by George Caley.
The
stones are a little obscured in the bush and are close to
wonderfully preserved sections of Cox’s Road, most of it carved
out of sandstone.
Just
off Glossop Road is the headstone of John Donohue, who legend
has it was a constable shot by a bushranger in 1837. The headstone
is at the head of the track leading to Kings Cave, believed
to have been used by the Kings Own Regiment, who guarded the
convict road builders.

Convict
Cell at Bull's Camp