Toponymy Matthew Flinders was the first to chart the island on 15 December 1798 and named it "Smooth Island" on his contemporaneous maps but the island does not appear on his 1814 map. In 1824
Thomas Scott referred to the island as "Garden Island" on his maps. The origins of this are not entirely clear, and other sources are inconclusive about the above assertions. and state that the island was first named on a map by "Cross (1830)" and "Frankland" (1837)", before stating several pages later that the island was first named "Smooth Island". According to a 1911 newspaper article, the island "is not named in the map of
D'Entrecasteaux, even though it was marked". During the early 21st century, Smooth Island was occasionally listed as "Lot 1 Norfolk Bay, Dunalley TAS 7177" on some real-estate classifieds. Much confusion exists about the names of many of the islands in South East Tasmania.
Garden Island has become an alternative name for both
Green Island and Smooth Island. A newspaper article from 1836 refers to a Garden Island in the
Pembroke Land District.
Structures A survey of Smooth Island was completed on 14 July 1863; it reveals the presence of the original jetty, a
spring and a
guano excavation site on the island. A lighthouse (
K 3621.2) was installed on the north peak in 1991. It was relocated by request of the landowners in 2014.
Potential uses Smooth Island's south and west coasts have alkaline soil while the east slope has acidic soil. • Table wine grapes • Sparkling wine grapes •
Industrial hemp •
Pyrethrum • Phosphate mining: on 13 October 1941, the viability of mining phosphate on Smooth Island was assessed but was determined to not be viable. ==Artwork==