Fitzroy Gardens is Melbourne's most famous garden. The garden was once a quarry when Melbourne was built, and the stone was lit and became a garden. It is a large green area with towering trees beside the tree-lined path. In winter, the leaves of the trees fell almost, and the branches embraced the hands of the sky, accompanied by the roadside and the lawn with golden leaves, in the sun, as beautiful as oil paintings. The garden is rectangular and the roads form a "meter" shape that makes the garden a huge British flag, said to be most eye-catching from the air. The garden's most famous attraction is Captain Cook's Cabin, Australia's oldest white artifact. Captain Cook was the first British to land on the Australian mainland in 1770 and declare it British territory, and was regarded as the founder of Australia. On the centenary of the city's construction in Melbourne in 1934, an industrialist bought Cook's former residence in England, disassembled it and shipped it to Melbourne in 253 boxes, and then restored it to its original state, with Cook's bronze statue on the side of the cabin. If it is in spring, the quaint cabins are under the shade of flowers and trees, and the history and beauty of Australia blend together, and the scenery is more beautiful.