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The old mining rigs,
Lucknow
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Lucknow
Historic
goldmining village - site of Australia's second gold discovery
Lucknow is a tiny, former goldmining village
located 9 km south-east of Orange on the Mitchell Highway and 250 km
north-west of Sydney.
The first European in the area appears to have been
Lieutenant Percy Simpson who traversed Frederick's Valley en route to
Wellington where he established a convict settlement. In 1824 a
government station cum garrison was established in the valley as a
resting place for those travelling to the new penal settlement.
The Lucknow estate was established in 1838 by William Charles
Wentworth, a member of the first European party to cross the Blue
Mountains. The land was then leased to a Captain Raine.
In May 1851 the estate became the site of the second
gold discovery in Australia, after Ophir.
The usual story is that two tenant farmers found gold on the hill
behind what is now the village. As this was privately-owned land,
Wentworth demanded a monthly fee with royalties from prospectors. This
arrangement only lasted four months as the royalties became too
exorbitant.
In April 1852 the whole estate was sold to the Wentworth Gold
Field Company - the first goldmining company to be formed in Australia.
It went into liquidation in 1860 and the land was opened to the public
on monthly leases in 1862.
The settlement was named 'Lucknow' in 1863. Some say this was
a reference to the good fortune the town proffered (i.e., luck now)
while others claim it was named by the mine bookkeeper after the siege
at Lucknow in India in which he may have been wounded.
Four hotels were in operation by 1866 as well as a public
school, a Catholic church (1864), a police station and lock-up, general
store, butcher's, blacksmith's, bootmaker's and baker's. Church
services were initially held in a bark hut which doubled as a school
until a National School building was erected in 1864. Anglican and
Wesleyan churches were erected in 1873 and 1886 respectively.
After initial hardship caused by drought the
finds came thick and fast and substantial fortunes were made. The Bank
of NSW and Commercial Bank purchased 1962 kg of Lucknow gold from April
1862 to February 1867, though other gold went to private buyers or
direct to Bathurst or Sydney. The largest nugget weighed 76 kg.
By 1872 the easy pickings were gone and an influx of
capital was needed to extend the mining further underground. The Uncle
Tom Company was formed in 1873 but it ran out of capital owing to
mismanagement and closed. It was purchased and reopened in 1878 by
Henry Newman who had made his fortune at Lucknow but lost it
subsequently. The reopened mine proved profitable and other companies
successfully worked the fields until the outset of the 20th century.
Most of the land at Lucknow was privately owned by
large syndicates until subdivision commenced in 1913. In 1929 the
Bismarck Group recommenced mining and struck a new vein. They operated
the field successfully until they ran out of funds in 1937 and there
have been no further such enterprises since that time. It has been
estimated that the fields yielded around 14 000 kg of gold in all.
Things to see:
Tourist Information
Orange Visitors Centre, Civic Square, Byng St,
tel: (02) 6361 5226.
Historic Buildings
The bluestone Anglican church was erected in 1873
to replace a bark hut which doubled as a school and centre for both
Anglican and Wesleyan services from the outset of the town's
establishment. The initial National schoolhouse (1864) blew down and
was replaced with a fine stone building in 1878. New wooden classrooms,
added to the original structure in 1900, became the school when the
stone structure was demolished in 1958. The school ceased operations in
1971 and is now a community hall.
'Mamhead' was built as the residence of local identity
Henry Newman (see introduction) in 1879, at the rear of his store. It
is an unusual mixture of styles, with rendered masonry, hipped and
gambrel roofs, numerous chimneys featuring decorative moulding,
cast-iron verandah columns and timber louvred shutters. It is located
by the corner of the main road and Carroll St.
The school of arts was built in 1887 and served as a
library, dance hall, silent movie theatre and general meeting place. A
function for Governor-General Northcote was held here in 1906 and the
Coo-ee marchers from Gilgandra stopped
here during World War I. It is located on the Mitchell Highway and is
currently a garage.
Shops
Darcy's Old Wares is an
antiques, collectables and bric-a-brac store on the highway which is
open from 10.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. daily.
You can pick your own berries from November to April at
Huntley Berry Farm, tel: (02) 6365 5282.
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Hotels
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Lucknow Goldfields Tavern
Mitchell Hwy
Lucknow
NSW
2800
Telephone: (02) 6365 5303
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Restaurants
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Lucknow Goldfields Tavern
Mitchell Hwy
Lucknow
NSW
2800
Telephone: (02) 6365 5303
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