A lone Jew on a cart at the Port of Karvellah 1860
It's a photo from not long after the changeover to the British Empire at the old Sephardic Jewish Quarter given the new name "The Rocks" by the British.
The "Rocks" was a British naming joke, insinuating that these buildings in the Port never existed. That is because when you look carefully at the Architecture you don't see "British" architecture at all what you see is actually a typical Sephardic Port Town that spoke Ladino and the buildings were a combination of different waves of Diaspora immigration going back over 2,000 years. You can see Portuguese architecture and that from Eastern Europe. While most of the people in the photo shown have no idea why they are there a lone-Jew on a horse-drawn cart on the left knows exactly where he is, and what the History of the Port of Karvellah (the name of 'Sydney' before the British changed the name) was all about. This was a Sephardic Jewish Town connected to a network of other Sephardic Ports that ran from Ostralye (the Sephardic name that the British englified) to connected cities across Asia that the official History books have actively tried to hide.