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Maiden's Hotel where Burke
and Wills stayed
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Menindee
(including Kinchega National Park and Sunset Strip)
Historic town on the edge of the desert
Menindee is located 1106 km north-west of Sydney via
the Great Western, Mitchell and Barrier Highways and 70 m above
sea-level. If you are approaching from Broken Hill it is 111 km
south-east along a sealed road and, if your departure point is
Wilcannia, it is 143 km south-west on a mostly unsealed road.
Menindee is a tiny settlement of 980 people. The countryside
is flat and arid and barely supports grazing, although Menindee itself
is surrounded by citrus orchards and vegetable cultivation. If desert
and fruit-growing sound incompatible, then one has to remember that
Menindee is also surrounded by some 20 lakes fed by the Darling River.
It is a weird experience to drive through land which is so marginal
that you wonder whether it ever rains and to suddenly come across vast
freshwater lakes full of dead trees and surrounded by sand, saltbush
and inhospitable red soils.
The lakes were previously an unreliable source of
water, filling out during flood periods and disappearing when the river
level dropped. As early as 1894 plans were put forward for conservation
of the resource but a water storage scheme was not implemented until
1949 (completed in 1960). The current storage capacity is 1 794 000
megalitres, 3.5 times the volume of Sydney Harbour and covering eight
times its area. Lake Menindee, the largest, is 16 x 14 km in surface
area. The purpose of the scheme is the provision of regulated flows for
water supply and irrigation. A pipeline which runs from Menindee
provides Broken Hill with a regular supply of water.
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Lake Menindee in the Kinchega
National Park
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Historically the
Darling River has been associated with the Barkindji Aboriginal people
who travelled its length from Wilcannia through Menindee and down to
Wentworth. They relied upon the river for water and food, using canoes
and elaborate stone traps for their fishing. The town's name is said to
derive from the Barkindji place name 'Minandichee'.
It is thought by some that the first Europeans in the
immediate vicinity, the 1835 party of Major Thomas Mitchell, laid the
foundations for what turned out to be disastrous relations with the
Aborigines. Mitchell followed the Bogan and Darling rivers down to
Menindee and the surrounding lakes, which he named Laidley's Chain of
Ponds after the deputy commisary-general of NSW (the Barkindji called
them 'Wontanella' meaning 'many waters').
At the lakes Mitchell selected a campsite on top of the
sandhills. According to Mitchell's account trouble broke out when two
of his party took a kettle for fresh water and some Aborigines they
encountered wanted it. A white was clubbed and a black shot. A skirmish
broke out and another black was killed. The Aborigines fled to the
water where a woman with a baby on her back was killed. Mitchell
records that 'a mournful song, strongly expressive of the wailing of
women' was then heard and they hurriedly departed for the north
expecting heavy retaliation.
Charles Sturt travelled up the Darling from the Murray in
1844 during his exploration of the interior. He arrived at the site of
Menindee in 1844 and then headed north-west (see entries on Broken Hill, Milparinka, Tibooburra).
As pastoralists, drovers and shepherds followed in the wake
of the explorers frequent and violent conflict arose with the
Aborigines. The whites encroached upon traditional hunting grounds and
raped the black women. The Aborigines killed and ate white stock,
attacked droving camps and stole station food and stores. The trouble
was serious enough to cause drovers to shun the area and landowners to
abandon their properties, at least until 1853 when police were brought
in to secure the area. Afterwards the tide turned against the Barkindji
who were subsequently decimated by European disease, forcibly driven
from the land and moved to government missions at Menindee, Lake
Cargelligo and Ivanhoe.
While most skirmishes were limited in scope there were two
ill-publicised massacres in the area. Leaseholds along the Darling
stipulated that the property owners had to provide the Aborigines with
provisions and permit the hunting of traditional game. When Avoca
station, to the south, fell upon a period of hardship the bread
provision was garnished with arsenic and the entire tribal group was
found dead the next morning. On the shore of Boolaboolka Lake, to the
east, a group of whites shot a tribe and left the skeletons to bleach
in the sun, suggesting their conviction that they would not be held
answerable.
The first settler in and effective founder of Menindee was
Tom Pain and his family who arrived in 1852, determined to establish a
home and business on the river. He opened the Menindee Hotel the
following year. With numerous additions it is still open and considered
the second-oldest hotel still in continuous operation in NSW. It is now
known as Maiden's Menindee Hotel for the simple reason that it was
owned, from 1896 to 1979, by the Maiden family (see entry on Moama). It burnt down a couple of years ago
and a more modern hotel now replaces the original and historic building.
With the growth of the river trade in the 1850s, the
arrival of a police force and Pain's presence, prospects for the
settlement of the region improved. The runs of the Central Darling were
officially surveyed and opened for tender in 1855. Explorer John
McKinlay took up several of the properties, including 'Menindel', one
of the first small frontage blocks along the Darling. This station
later became Kinchega.
Captain Francis Cadell, who pioneered the operation
of river steamers along the Murray, established a store near the hotel
at Menindee in 1856. It was named Wurtindelly after the Aboriginal word
for the sand ridges on which it was built. These two buildings became
the nucleus around which the town grew. Although not the first to
navigate the Darling, Cadell is the first whose name is recorded. It
was not until early 1859 that he travelled upriver as far as Mt
Murchison station (see entry on Wilcannia) and visiting his Menindee
store on the return journey. Settlers began to pour into the region
with news that the Darling was navigable.
Burke and Wills reached Kinchega station in October 1860 on
their expedition to the Gulf of Carpentaria. They journeyed on to
Menindee by steamer, stayed at the Menindee Hotel then continued north.
Burke split the expedition in two. He headed an advance party
of eight while Wright was left in charge of the main body of the
expedition, which was to bring up the rear. Burke, Wills, Gray and King
set off for the Gulf of Carpentaria leaving Brahe in charge of a
stockade at Cooper Creek. Brahe was to wait for Wright's party but they
never showed up. Four months later Gray was dead and Burke, Wills and
King staggered back to Coopers Creek barely alive, only to find that,
just seven hours prior to their arrival, Brahe's team had left some
provisions and departed.
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The grave of Dost Mahomet
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One of those who
waited at Cooper Creek was Dost Mahomet, one of the party's Afghan
camel drivers. After losing an arm in a camel-related accident Mahomet
settled in Menindee and worked in the bakery of William Ah Chung, who
established one of the first market gardens in town. His grave is
located about 1 km out of town on the road towards Broken Hill. Ah
Chung's bakehouse, built around 1880, is still standing in Menindee St.
It currently houses an art gallery.
A post office opened at the fledgling settlement in
1861 and the site was officially known as 'Perry' but locals protested
and the township was gazetted as Menindie in 1863 (it was respelled
Menindee in 1918). Growth was initially slow but with the help of the
steamers Menindee became an important river port and telegraph station.
The boats were quicker and much cheaper than bullock trains although in
drought periods the water level would sometimes fall so low the
waterways became unnavigable.
The 1860s and 1870s were a period of expansion for the town.
However, when gold and other mineral finds were made to the north in
the late 1870s and 1880s, employees along the Darling chased the new
prospects and Wilcannia displaced Menindee as the main river port and
business centre. Consequently, Menindee slowed down to become a service
and community centre to the surrounding district. As previously
mentioned this role was later supplemented by fruit and vegetable
production when the lakes' irrigation potential was harnessed.
Things to see:
Kinchega National Park
Just one kilometre north of Menindee, on the Broken Hill
Rd, there is a signposted left turn to Kinchega National Park which
extends westwards from the Darling River, encompassing all of Lake
Cawndilla and the southern half of Lake Menindee. The 44 000-ha park
was created in 1967 from land that was previously a part of Kinchega
station. It includes river red gum forests, black soil flood plains
along the Darling River where kangaroos and emu flocks are frequently
seen, the varied and colourful vegetation of the red sandhills and sand
plains, and a series of tall lunettes (crescent-shaped dunes) on the
eastern side of the lakes created by a combination of westerly winds
and waves. These lunettes have proven a treasure trove of information
about past environmental conditions and archaeological material,
including remnants of Aboriginal culture (scarred trees where bark was
stripped for canoes or shelter, middens, hearths, stone implements and
mineralised bones) and extinct animals (giant kangaroos and wombats and
Tasmanian tigers).
The large, saucer-shaped depressions of the overflow lakes
are home to a variety of waterbirds including pelicans, spoonbills,
egrets, cormorants and swans. The best time to see the wildlife is at
dawn or dusk, not only because they venture out at these times but
because the colours of the outback are quite remarkable.
The park contains several remnants from the pastoral days. By
1881, Kinchega covered one million acres and had 143 000 sheep. It was
regularly visited by paddle steamers run by Samuel McCaughey (see entry
on Leeton). Steam engines were being used
to irrigate the paddocks as early as 1875 and the station prospered as
a sheep run shepherded almost entirely by Aborigines. Kinchega was also
one of the first properties to experiment with bores, striking water at
250 feet in 1879.
Kinchega woolshed is still standing. Here, six million
sheep were shorn over the course of a century. At its peak in the 1880s
it had stands for 26 blade shearers. The remains of the homestead and
cemetery are nearby, as well as an old water regulator and trough used
to furnish the homestead with water. The homestead, built of locally
kilned bricks, probably in the 1850s, was used as an overseer's house
and stockmen's quarters from 1872 to the 1940s.
The cemetery may contain the crew of the paddlesteamer
Providence . In 1872 they apparently left Menindee in an intoxicated
state and forgot to refill the boiler which blew up and killed them. It
can still be seen where it was dragged from the water. Other sites of
interest are the Cawndilla Channel and Menindee Lakes Lookout.
The park has 35 camping areas with limited facilities.
Caravans can be accommodated but there are no powered sites. Bookings
can also be made to stay at the old shearer's quarters. Morton Boolka
picnic area is especially good for bird-watching and the woolshed
picnic area has fresh water. There are numerous self-guided walks and,
for a more comprehensive overview, the Lake Drive and the River Drive.
The Homestead Loop is a shorter journey through the park's European
historical remnants. There are guided tours in the school holidays and
the park is ideal for photographers. For enquiries about bookings, fees
and information pamphlets see the park's (or the town's) visitor's
centre, or phone (08) 8088 5933.
Lake Pamamaroo and Main Weir
The lake system has become a tourist attraction and
recreational facility for the people of Broken Hill and Menindee. 8 km
north of Menindee on the Broken Hill Rd there is a signposted right
turn to Lake Pamamaroo and the Main Weir. There are recreational
facilities at both sites. A plaque on a tree, at the weir, indicates
the location of the Burke and Wills campsite.
Copi Hollow
About 13 km north of Menindee on the Broken Hil Rd,
just before you cross the interconnecting channel between Lake Menindee
and Pamamaroo Lake, there is a signposted right turn on an all-weather
road which leads to Copi Hollow: an artificially constructed body of
water developed for speed boats, sailing, swimming and waterskiing. The
inland speed championships are held here each year in mid-May. There is
a well-shaded shoreline park with picnic facilities, amenities block
and a caravan park.
To get there follow the Broken Hill Rd out of Menindee
for 13 km then take the signposted right turn just before you cross the
interconnecting channel between Lakes Menindee and Pamamaroo.
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View from the front lawn of a
holiday house looking out across Lake Menindee from the holiday village
of Sunset Strip
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Sunset Strip
20 km north of Menindee, along the Broken Hill Rd, is a
signposted turnoff, on the left, to Sunset Strip which is situated on
the northern shore of Lake Menindee. Here we find a rather bizarre
manifestation of the Australian quest for a holiday by the sea - a
quest driven by the fact that the vast majority of the country's
population is located along the coastal fringe. That has not stopped
the people of Broken Hill. They gladly drive nearly 100 km to gaze out
upon a muddy lake full of dead trees in a rather odd version of a
waterfront resort. Instead of the overdone and often tasteless 'luxury
villas' of the the coastal resorts there are inexpensive, kit-type
holiday homes where corrugated iron is more common than brick. While
the well-irrigated gardens are attractive, the exteriors of the houses
are awful. If nothing else Sunset Strip certainly affords genuine
insight into the priorities of Australians. Note that the water in
Menindee Lake can get very cold and wind squalls can also produce
dangerous waves.
Fishing in the Lakes
Not surprisingly perhaps Menindee is considered one of
the finest freshwater fishing spots in NSW. Murray cod, golden perch,
silver perch, European carp, crayfish and catfish are in abundant
supply along the Darling and in the lakes.
If you are interested in a fishing or birdwatching trip in
the area, phone Geoff Looney on (02) 8091 4437. A more comprehensive
tour though the town's history, waterways and other natural sights is
on offer from Burke & Wills Hire Boat Expeditions (02) 8091 4383.
History of the Town
Menindee itself has two historic trees - one marked by a
survey team in 1882 and one in Yartla St to mark the height of the 1890
floods. At the Maidens Hotel, also in Yartla St, you used to be able to
see the arrow Burke and Wills carved in the door post indicating the
direction their journey would pursue. For many years the room the two
men stayed in was preserved for visitors.
Also of some historic interest is the fact that John
Cleary of Menindee started the first motorised postal service in NSW in
1910, although the contract stipulated that his lorry be followed by a
coach-and-horses in case it broke down! When this system proved
uneconomical he reverted to the horse-and-coach until allowed to use
the lorry on its own in 1911.
The Heritage Trail
The visitors' centre can furnish you with a pamphlet
which will lead you around the town's heritage trail: 19 sites with
informative signposts that connect physical locations with their
historic significance. A book is also for sale ($8.50) which provides a
more comprehensive account of the sites.
Lastly, remember that many of the local roads are gravel and
can be hazardous or impassable after wet weather. Phone (08) 8091 5155
for an up-to-date report on their condition.
Burke and Wills site at Pamamaroo Creek
Here on the Pamamaroo Creek is the site of the base
camp of the 1860 Burke and Wills expedition. The expedition party
included 15 men, 23 horse, 27 camels and 21 tons of stores. At the time
of Burke's arrival in Menindee it was an outpost with no other
settlements between here and the vast interior. On 19 October the small
party of Burke, Wills, Brahe, King, Gray, McDonagh, Patton and Dost
Mahomet, 15 horses and 16 camels left the Pamamaroo camp and headed
north. The balance of the expedition party stayed for the next year.
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Tourist Information
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Menindee Tourist Information Centre
Yartla St
Menindee
NSW
2879
Telephone: (08) 8091 4274
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Motels
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Burke and Wills Motel
Yartla St
Menindee
NSW
2879
Telephone: (08) 8091 4313
Facsimile: (08) 8091 4406
Rating: **1/2
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Hotels
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Albermarle Hotel
Menindee St
Menindee
NSW
2879
Telephone: (08) 8091 4212
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Maiden's Hotel
Yartla St
Menindee
NSW
2879
Telephone: (08) 8091 4208
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Caravan Parks
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Copi Hollow Caravan Park
Copi Hollow
15 km north of Menindee
Menindee
NSW
2879
Telephone: (08) 8091 4880
Facsimile: (08) 8091 4880
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Menindee Lake Park
Menindee Lakes Shore Rd
Menindee
NSW
2879
Telephone: (08) 8091 4315
Facsimile: (08) 8091 4325
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