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The statue of Captain
Thunderbolt
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Uralla
Town
famous for its connection with the legendary bushranger Captain Thunderbolt
Uralla is a typical rural service town of some
2300 persons situated in hilly country 1005 metres above sea-level on
the Northern Tablelands of New England region of New South Wales. It is
502 km north-north-east of Sydney, 488 km south-west of Brisbane and 23
km south-west of Armidale. The district is renowned for superfine wool
and cattle and characterised by extensive protrusions of granite.
Uralla calls itself Thunderbolt Countryš and the town's
chief claims to fame are the grave of notorious bushranger Thunderbolt
(Fred Ward) and Thunderbolt Rock outside the town, a large granite
outcrop which has unfortunately been covered by graffiti in recent times.
The Anaiwan Aborigines occupied the area prior to the
arrival of Europeans and it is from their language that the town's name
derives. It is said to refer to a ceremonial meeting place and lookout,
situated on the top of a hill - possibly a reference to the two hills
at the town's north-western boundary.
The first white settler in the district was Edward Gostwyck
Cory (see Paterson and Wangi Wangi). He sold his property in
1834 to William Dangar who passed it on to his brother Henry who
surveyed much of the Hunter Valley and the Liverpool Plains in the
1820s and 1830s, acquiring vast amounts of land in the process.
In the 1840s a tiny settlement sprang from what began
as a shepherd's out-station on the banks of Rocky Creek, at the
southern boundary of the 'Saumarez' sheep station, established in 1834
by Henry Dumaresq (see entry on Armidale).
A townsite was reserved in 1849 where a branch track departed
from the Great North Road heading north-west along the Bundarra River.
At this intersection Samuel McCrossin established an inn, where the
town's bowling greens are now located.
However, the town really began with the discovery of gold at
Rocky River in 1851. A goldrush began the following year. The village
was gazetted in 1855.
New and more substantial finds at Mt Jones in 1856
caused a renewal of activity which soon made the fields the largest in
northern NSW with some 4000 or 5000 miners on-site. Sluicing operations
began in 1857 and large numbers of Chinese arrived in 1858 to rework
the original alluvial field. Chinese miners soon outnumbered Europeans,
leading to petitions demanding restrictions upon immigration. They
moved on to other fields when the surface gold was depleted in the
1870s. Tunnelling by larger enterprises commenced in the 1860s and
continued until the early twentieth century.
The area also prospered from pastoral and agricultural
pursuits. Wheat was a major focus and McCrossin established a large
mill at Uralla in 1870. Still standing it now houses a museum.
By 1871 the population was 254. Although wheat returns
diminished due to competition from South Australia in the 1870s Uralla
prospered as a service centre to the wealthy farming community. Local
newspaper, the Uralla Times, was established in 1873.
The town was declared a municipality in 1882 when the
railway arrived. The population, increased to 819 by 1891, dropped to
681 by 1901 and jumped up to 1590 in 1911. After the First World War
land was resumed at Kentucky, south of Uralla, for soldier settlement
and orcharding began.
The Uralla Show is held each January. The town markets
occur on the second Sunday of the month from September to May. There is
an 18-hole golf course.
Things to see:
Visitors' Centre and Thunderbolt
Uralla's Visitors' Centre is located at the
corner of Bridge St (the name of the New England Highway as it passes
through town) and Salisbury St. They have pamphlets outlining a
self-guided heritage tour and can answer most questions, tel: (02) 6778 4496.
Uralla is closely associated with the bushranger known
as Thunderbolt (alias Fred Ward) and at this same corner is a lifesize
statue of the outlaw on a horse. Nearby, just along Salisbury St, is a
plaque dedicated to Constable Walker who killed Thunderbolt to the
south of Uralla in 1870. Also at the corner is a stand which plays
pre-recorded messages relating to Thunderbolt's life and death.
Ward was born at Windsor c.1835. He was sent to Cockatoo
Island Gaol in Sydney Harbour for ten years in 1856 for horse theft.
Receiving a ticket-of-leave in 1860 he was soon charged with another
horse theft and sent again to Cockatoo Island to serve out the
remainder of his original sentence with an additional five years. In
September 1863 he escaped with Fred Britten and swam to shore.
For the next six and a-half years he robbed mail coaches, as
well as roadside inns, stores and private homes from Maitland north to
the Queensland border and west to Bourke. At times he worked with a
gang but, while his superior skills as a horseman were probably
responsible for his evading capture for so long, his accomplices were
not so lucky and, consequently, he often worked alone.
In an inequitable society bushrangers were often seen as
romantic Robin Hood figures, particularly by members of the
disadvantaged majority who did not always have much respect for the
system of law and order. Thunderbolt acquired a reputation, both
locally and nationally, as a gentleman. It was said he was always
polite, particularly to women, and he never killed anybody. Others, of
course, considered him a scoundrel.
One apocryphal story asserts that, after bailing up
a group of German musicians who were headed for Queensland and who
pleaded with him not to proceed with the robbery, Thunderbolt promised
that if he had luck at the horse races he would repay them. He induced
a song from them, obtained their Queensland address and duly sent them
their money back, with interest. In another version he never took the
money. In any case the story typifies popular perceptions of his
generous and decent spirit.
On May 25, 1870 Thunderbolt held up a hawker at
Blanch's Inn. The Uralla police were alerted and Senior Constable
Mulhall and Constable Walker investigated. When they arrived Ward was,
by chance, trying out a new horse and hence fled on an inferior and
unfamiliar animal.
Shots were fired on both sides while Walker chased Ward
westwards for about 3 km along a ridge. At Kentucky Creek Ward left his
horse and swam across.
There are different versions of this story. It seems
clear that the constable shot Thunderbolt's horse, thereby ensuring he
didn't return to it at a later stage of the chase. The two then met
upstream. In one version it is said that, after Ward refused to
surrender, they both plunged into the creek and moved towards each
other with revolvers drawn, but Ward was out of ammunition. Thunderbolt
was shot, allegedly with Walker's last bullet. He dropped into the
water, then resurfaced and lunged at Walker who hit him on the head
with the gun butt. When he rose again blood was pouring from his mouth
and he died.
McCrossin's Mill Museum and Thunderbolt Gallery
From the information centre head south-east for one
block to Salisbury and Maitland Sts. Near this intersection is one of
the town's main attractions, McCrossin's Mill Museum, located in a
three-storey flour mill built of brick and granite in 1870 by Samuel
McCrossin who opened the town's first inn around 1850. Adjacent are
some old stables built in the 1860s in association with McCrossin's
Post Office and Store which was located where McRae's Store is now situated.
The museum contains a Thunderbolt exhibition,
including an effigy of his body on the table the corpse was laid out
upon. There is also a series of paintings relating to the bushranger,
an Aboriginal diorama, a Rocky River Goldfields exhibition, including a
recreated Chinese joss house which features the contents of an actual
joss house from the mid-19th century goldfields.
Other displays include an exhibition of cricket bats, the
touching Corporal Cecil Stoker exhibition, relating to a local soldier
whose possessions were found bricked up in a chimney, and a collection
of rustic tools .
The museum is open daily from midday to 5.00 p.m. and from
10.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. in school holidays, tel: (02) 6778 3022.
New England Brass and Iron Lace Foundry
Continue on to the end of Salisbury St. Opposite is
the New England Brass and Iron Lace Foundry which has been operating
since 1872. It is open from 9.00 a.m. to 3.00 p.m. daily. There is a
small admission fee and coach tours are welcomed by appointment, tel:
(02) 6778 5065 or (018) 659 718. Note that East St is discontinuous and
hence the foundry cannot be reached from the western end of the street.
Town Walk
Return to McCrossin's to start the heritage walk.
Opposite the museum, near Maitland St, is the old Literary Institute
(1886). 'Gartshore', at the south-eastern corner of Salisbury St and
Elizabeth Lane, dates from the 1880s, as does the house diagonally opposite.
Return to Maitland St and turn right. In the block
between Salisbury and Hills Sts are some attractive late 19th century
residences, including 'Monleys' (1880s) with ornate cast-iron lacework
and servants' quarters to the rear. On the right-hand side is the
Masonic Hall (1884). At the corner of Hill and Maitlands Sts is the
brick courthouse with its rendered Classical facade and portico
(1883-85). Opposite is the Uniting Church.
Turn right into Hill St. At the T-intersection turn
left into Duke St to the railway station and stationmaster's residence
(1882).
Return along Hill St. Between Maitland St and Bridge St, to
the right, is the post office (1885). Almost opposite is Coopers
Hardware Store, built in 1876 as a skating rink.
Turn right into Bridge St. On the right is an arts and crafts
shop built in the 1870s as Bardsley's Wine Shop. At 34 Bridge St is a
house dating from the 1870s. Over the road is the Coachwood and Cedar
Hotel-Motel built upon the basis of the Great Northern Hotel (1881).
At the corner of Bridge and King Sts is St David's
Presbyterian Church (1904). Opposite is the Rock Hunter's Rendezvous
with a large collection of precious stones and gold relics, housed in
the old Commercial Hotel (1870s). Also on the same corner is the Blue
Trail Garage, originally Kirkwoods Store (1860s).
Turn left into King St. At no. 55 is a brick cottage
dating from 1885, built on the site of Kirkwood's Flour Mill.
Turn left into Queen St and to the immediate right is
Alma Park, situated upon Uralla's first cemetery. A Cobb & Co. changing
station was also on this site.
Turn left into Hill St. To the right, at no. 48, is
'Gunyah' (1905), once the home of the Uralla Times' editor.
At the corner of Hill and Bridge Sts is the National
Australia Bank building, erected in 1892 as the Australian Joint Stock
Bank. The Thunderbolt Inn, over the road, dates from 1909 when it was
erected as the Imperial Hotel.
In Bridge St, between Hill and Salisbury Sts, to the
right, are Reg Stoker's Store (1870) and the Salvation Army Citadel
(1872).
Cross over Salisbury St past the information centre. At 112
Bridge St is the old Court House Hotel (1870). Opposite is the former
Oddfellows Hall (1888). At the corner with Park St is St John's
Anglican Church (1886-88).
Turn right, along Park St. At the corner with Queen St, is
the original Uralla Public School (1871), now the Matrons Hospital.
Continue along Park St, turning left into Uralla St. At the
intersection with John St is the Uralla Cemetery and Thunderbolt's Grave.
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The grave of Fred Ward -
Thunderbolt
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Thunderbolt's Grave
The grave is clearly marked and located on the eastern
side of the cemetery. There is still a body of local opinion that the
grave contains the remains of Thunderbolt's brother-in-law and that
Ward was actually killed in a brawl in the USA years later. However,
the corpse was positively identified by an friend of Ward's at the
post-mortem. It is also widely accepted that the body put on display
for some time prior to burial. A plaque at the cemetery outlines
Thunderbolt's career.
Military Museum
About 500 m south of the visitors' centre along the
highway, just over East St and on the right-hand side, is the Uralla
Military Museum, open seven days a week from 9.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m.,
tel: (02) 6778 4600. It has an interesting collection, including
personal material and items pertaining to national military history.
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Thunderbolt Rock
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Thunderbolt Rock
Thunderbolt's Rock is essentially a large granite
outcrop which has been attacked by graffitists. It is located on the
eastern side of the New England Highway 7.2 km south of Uralla.
Although it is claimed that Thunderbolt used the outcrop as a vantage
point and hide-out it is possible that he had little if any real
connection with the agglomeration, but Blanch's Inn, where the final
ride of Thunderbolt started, was located only about 300 m further south
of the rock, on the opposite side of the road. A few old bricks remain
and a depression in the ground where the cellars were located.
Horseriding
Harlow Park Horse
Riding is located 4 km from Uralla in Gostwyck Rd. They offer rides
varying in length from one hour to pack horse treks of several days
duration. There are also riding camps for children and riding holidays,
tel: (02) 6778 4631.
Wilderness Rides offer guided treks within the New
England Blue Mountain Gorge, 30 km east of Uralla via the Gostwyck Rd,
tel: (02) 6778 4631. Both organisations will arrange transport to their
area if desired.
Gostwyck
Head east out of town
along East St. In about 10 or 11 km, to the left, is Gostwyck Chapel, a
beautiful little building at the end of an avenue of 200 elm trees on
the grassy banks of a willow-bordered stream. Vines cover the chapel in
a blaze of autumnal reds around April. .
The chapel is part of the Gostwyck property, purchased by
Edward Gostwyck Cory in 1832. Cory was an early European landholder in
the Hunter Valley. He sold the property in 1834 to William Dangar who
then passed it on to his brother Henry. Henry became famous as a
pioneering surveyor of the Hunter Valley and Liverpool Plains in the
1820s and 1830s. He also became a wealthy pastoralist with extensive
runs in the Hunter and New England areas. Henry established Gostwyck in
1834. He also designed and built the 'Deeargee (originally 'Gostwyck')
Woolshed' in 1851. To see the woolshed continue on in an easterly
direction for a short distance and turn right into the gravel road.
One of the largest and oldest woolsheds in Australia on one
of New England's oldest stations it is an octagonal building with a
diameter of 15 m. It was used by 24 blade shearers working in a circle
with a 22-m tail through which the sheep passed from their pens to the
shearing floor. It also became one of the first sheds to use a Wolseley
shearing machine (1890). The three-tier roof possesses a clerestory of
glass ventilators allowing shearers to work in a well-lit and
well-ventilated open-plan environment.
The woolroom is a brick building which connects to the shed
on its southern side. Built shortly after the shed
A.A. Dangar acquired the property in the 1860s and planted
the elms between the homestead and chapel. He transferred the property
to his son Clive in 1911. His widow built the chapel after he was
killed in the First World War.
Visitors can visit the site and inspect the externalities
but are not permitted inside the buildings.
Dangars Lagoon
At the intersection of East St and Duke St the road to
Walcha heads south. In about 3 km it passes Dangars Lagoon Nature
Reserve on the left. This is a wetland haven with over 100 bird species
which are listed in a pamphlet available from the Armidale office of
the National Parks and Wildlife Office, tel: (02) 6773 7211. There are
picnic facilities and a viewing hutch approached by a screened walkway.
Salisbury Court
Continue south along the same road. About 10 km from
Uralla it crosses Salisbury Waters, a headwater of the Macleay River
system. Beyond this point, to the right, is Salisbury Court, a
single-storey stone house built by Matthew Henry Marsh (1845-47). It is
open for inspection but only to coach groups, tel: (02) 6778 4496.
Morning teas and lunch are served on the verandah ad there is a guided
tour.
Salisbury Court has a six-panelled front door, French
shuttered windows and a shingled roof, now covered with iron. The
wooden verandah and verandah posts were replaced with stone and a wing
was added at the rear c.1890. The outbuildings include an adobe
structure which was a dairy.
The property was first squatted by Edward Gostwyck Cory and
acquired by Marsh in 1840. He settled there after briefly returning to
England where he married.
Rocky River Goldfields
The old Rocky River Goldfields are about 5 km
north of town along the Bundarra Rd. There isn't a lot to see other
than small holes in the ground, although the site is quite historic.
Gold was found here in 1851 and a goldrush ensued. New and more
substantial finds in 1856 on Mt Jones caused an intensified renewal of
activity which made the fields the largest in northern NSW with some
4000 or 5000 miners on-site. Sluicing operations began in 1857. Large
numbers of Chinese arrived in 1858 to rework the original alluvial
field located at Maitland Point. They moved on to other fields when the
surface gold was depleted in the 1870s. Tunnelling by larger
enterprises commenced in the 1860s and continued until the early
twentieth century.
The area is a little unsafe now owing to subsidence so the
best way to investigate the site is with Uralla Goldfield Tours, tel:
(02) 6772 6828.
There is a picnic area by the river where you are free to frolic.
Fossicking
Fossickers can
investigate the Rocky River area to the west of town. Head south along
the highway a short distance and turn right at the Kingstown turnoff.
There are some well-signposted fossicking areas about 6 km along this
road with toilets, barbecues, picnic areas and fresh water. Equipment
can be obtained from the visitors' centre.
Mt Yarrowyck Aboriginal Cultural Walk
About 23 km north of town along the Bundarra Road you
will see the Armidale turnoff on the right. About another kilometre
past this there is a small signpost directing you to turn right onto
the gravel road which leads to a carpark and picnic area where there
are plaques pointing out the highlights of a 3-km loop walk to an
Aboriginal rock art site in a small shelter on the south-western slopes
of Mt Yarrowyck. On a 2.7-m rock surface are some red ochre paintings,
dominated by bird track motifs. There are also stick figures and other
geometric shapes with the red pigments and technique being considered
characteristic of the New England area. It is not a spectacular
ceremonial site but an information cave that told passers-by what type
of food was available.
Shops
There are several
arts, crafts,.bric-a-brac and antique shops in town. They are Orchard
Studio in Arding Road (tel: 02 6775 3123), the Uralla Wool Room at 38
Bridge St (tel: 02 6778 4226), the Uralla Trading Post at 80 Bridge St
(tel: 02 6778 4344), Gatherum Books at 62 Bridge St (tel: 02 6778
4682), Burnet's Books at 100 Bridge St (tel: 02 6778 4682), the New
Antique and Collectible Shop at 50 Bridge St (tel: 0402 054 149), and
the New England Antique Emporium at 67 Bridge St, tel: (02) 6778 4300.
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Camping & Other
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Rocky River Fossicking Area
Kingstown Road
East Uralla
Uralla
NSW
2358
Rating:
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Cottages & Cabins
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West Kunderang Recreational Retreat
Uralla
NSW
2358
Telephone: (02) 6778 1264
Facsimile: (02) 6778 1264
Rating:
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Tourist Information
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Uralla Tourist Information Centre
Bridge St
Uralla
NSW
2358
Telephone: (02) 6778 4496
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Motels
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Altona Regency Motel
New England Hwy
Uralla
NSW
2358
Telephone: (02) 6778 4007
Rating: ***
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Bushranger Motor Inn
37-41 Bridge St
Uralla
NSW
2358
Telephone: (02) 6778 3777
Rating: ****
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Uralla Motel
New England Hwy
Uralla
NSW
2358
Telephone: (02) 6778 4326
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Hotels
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Coachwood & Cedar Hotel/Motel
Bridge St
Uralla
NSW
2358
Telephone: (02) 6778 4110
Facsimile: (02) 6778 4055
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Thunderbolt Inn Hotel
Bridge St
Uralla
NSW
2358
Telephone: (02) 6778 4048
Facsimile: (02) 6778 3431
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Bed & Breakfast/Guesthouses
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Cruickshank's Farmstay Bed & Breakfast
Tourist Drive 19
Uralla
NSW
2358
Telephone: (02) 6778 2148
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Stony Batter North Gwydir Getaway Bed & Breakfast
Stony Batter North
Uralla
NSW
2358
Telephone: (02) 6723 7234
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Lindon Cottage B & B
Lindon Road
Uralla
NSW
2358
Telephone: (02) 6778 7120
Facsimile: (02) 6778 7153
Rating: ***
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Mihi Creek B & B
Tourist Drive 19
Uralla
NSW
2358
Telephone: (02) 6778 2166
Rating: ****
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Caravan Parks
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Country Road Caravan Park
New England Hwy
Uralla
NSW
2358
Telephone: (02) 6778 4563
Facsimile: (02) 6778 4564
Rating: **
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Uralla Caravan Park
17 Queen St
Uralla
NSW
2358
Telephone: (02) 6778 4763
Facsimile: (02) 6778 4036
Rating: **
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Restaurants
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Bushranger Motor Inn Restaurant
37-41 Bridge St
Uralla
NSW
2358
Telephone: (02) 6778 3777
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Yu Wah Restaurant
49 Bridge St
Uralla
NSW
2358
Telephone: (02) 6778 4151
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