Records indicate that Covington landed in Sydney in 1840, and he married Eliza Twyford who lived at
Stroud, a small town in northern
New South Wales. Eliza Twyford was from London, and had traveled to Australia with her family in 1832 on the ship Princess Royal as a free settler. Covington was able to draw on his naval connections to find employment, and by 1843 was working as a clerk at the Sydney coal depot of the
Australian Agricultural Company. Around 1844 the family, with their first two sons, accepted the invitation of Captain Lloyd and moved to the South coast property at
Pambula, which Lloyd had been given in lieu of a pension from the
Royal Navy. His deafness may have been the result of exposure to guns used in collecting specimens. In response to Darwin's request for specimens, Covington and his eldest son collected a large number of
barnacles at nearby
Twofold Bay. Darwin's letter of 23 November 1850 expressed his delight at having just received the box, which included particularly unusual species. This contributed to the extensive studies of barnacles which established Darwin as a biologist. Covington became Postmaster of Pambula in 1854, and managed an inn called the
Forest Oak Inn built on the coast road above the floodplain where the first Pambula township had been repeatedly damaged by floods. By 1848 he and his wife had eight children, six sons and two daughters. In 1861 Covington died of 'paralysis' at only 47 years old. The inn was then run by his widow, and later by her second husband Llewelyn Heaven. The license was taken over by John Behl around 1864, and the building became known as
The Retreat in 1895. It has been used as a
doctor's surgery and more recently as a Thai restaurant, and its red tin roof and double chimneys can still be seen beside a sharp bend of the main Coast Road. ==Legacy==