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Ulva Cottage in Penola built
in the 1850s by Alexander
Cameron
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Penola
Historic
town at the southern end of the rich Coonawarra/Penola wine district
Located 388 km south east of Adelaide, Penola is in
the heart of one of South Australia's most productive wine growing
areas. To the north of the town lies the famous terra rosa soils of the
Coonawarra which have produced excellent red wines for the past
century. The town is also famous as the central location in the life of
Mary McKillop, Australia's first saint.
Along the road from Penola to Coonawarra (a distance of
only 7 km) there are a total of 21 wineries. [The two entries on Coonawarra and Penola are designed so
that if you are heading south from Coonawarra the wineries are in the
order you will experience them and if you are heading north from Penola
they are in correct order]. This is the result of an extraordinary
situation where there are beautiful red soils (terra rossa) stretching
14 km and lying on top of limestone. The town's name, although no one
is exactly sure, seems to derive from an Aboriginal word meaning 'wild
honeysuckle' although other sources insist it was a local Aboriginal
word 'pena oorla' meaning 'wooden house' and referring to the first
pub, the Royal Oak, built in the district.
The local Aborigines were the Bunganditj or Booandik
group who lived on a diet of kangaroo, wallaby, emu, wombat, fish,
roots and seeds. They had lived in the district for tens of thousands
of years but, with the arrival of Europeans, their numbers declined
rapidly. It is said that five Aborigines are buried in the Penola
cemetery but there is no evidence of their graves. The last of the
local Aborigines died in 1902.
The first Europeans into the area were the Austin
brothers who arrived in 1840 and established a run of 109 square miles
based on what is now Yallum Park (see Coonawarra for more details). But the
gold rushes of the 1850s ensured that their dreams were not realised.
The man who was known as the Founder of Penola and
the 'King of Penola' was Alexander Cameron (1810-1881). He arrived in
Sydney in 1839 and that year set out with his uncles and a range of
animals and travelled 1500 km from Sydney to the famed 'Australia
Felix', west of Melbourne. In 1841 Alexander crossed into South
Australia and by 1844 Penola Station had been established. By 1850
Cameron had built a pub, the Royal Oak, to supply liquor to the
increasing number of travellers who were coming through the Penola
area. It was around this time that he gained freehold title to 80 acres
stretching north from the hotel. This was to be the site for the
township of Penola. Christopher Sharam, a bootmaker, built his house on
this land in 1850. He was quickly followed by a Mr Hailes, a
blacksmith. Later that year Cameron added another 80 acres to the
original holding.
The real beginning for the settlement of the area
occurred when John Riddoch purchased Yallum in 1861. Riddoch was one of
those larger-than-life characters who seem to squeeze five lives into a
single lifetime. He grew up in poverty in the highlands of Scotland (a
result of the Highlands clearances) and in 1851 emigrated to try his
luck on the Victorian goldfields. Within a few years he was a
successful shopkeeper and wine merchant on the Geelong goldfields.
He acquired 35,000 acres on which he ran 50,000 head of
sheep. In keeping with his exalted status he lived like a local lord
(as can be seen for the richness of Yarram Park).
By 1863 Penola had acquired an unusual status in South
Australia. It boasted the largest library outside Adelaide. Not
surprisingly, given its literary tradition, the poet Adam Lindsay
Gordon, came to the district and often stayed with John Riddoch. Three
years later (1866) Mary McKillop, Australia's first saint, built the
first of many schools she was to construct in Australia and New
Zealand. This remarkable woman established a concept of egalitarian
education which ensured education for children regardless of their
family's income or their social class. She founded the Sisters of St
Joseph of the Sacred Heart.
Another significant figure around this time was Father
Julian Tenison Woods, a Catholic priest, who in 1866 actively assisted
Mary McKillop to form the Sisters of St Joseph of the Sacred Heart.
Around 1890 John Riddoch formed the Coonawarra Fruit
Colony and 2,000 acres from Yarram Park were subdivided into smaller
holdings of 10-30 acres which were sold, at very reasonable terms, to a
group of farmers with the express idea that they all became vineyards
and orchards. The secret of the district's success was a strange
rectangle, known as the 'Coonawarra cigar', of terra rosa (red soil).
Here, according to grape growers, was perfect soil which would produce
perfect grapes which, if the locals knew what they were doing, would
produce near-perfect wines, particularly red wines.
It was out of this that the Coonawarra vineyards grew. In
fact Riddoch insisted that the 'blockers', the people who purchased the
'blocks' of land, had to plant one-third cabernet sauvignon to
two-thirds shiraz. It is no accident that today eighteen of the
district's twenty one vineyards have, among their crops, healthy
acreages of both cabernet sauvignon and shiraz grapes.
The vineyards were more successful than the wineries
but wine wasn't really part of the Australian diet. It was not until
the 1960s that the exceptional soils of the area, and their ability to
produce superb red wines, was fully realised. It is worth noting that
of the 21 wineries in the Coonawarra-Penola district only one, Wynns
Coonawarra Estate, dates from the nineteenth century (1896). Of the
rest one (Rouge Homme) appeared in 1954, seven came into production in
the 1960s, four in the 1970s, five in the 1980s and three in the 1990s.
It is significant that Penola is associated with two of
Australia's most distinguished poets. John Shaw Neilson was born in the
town in 1872 (his home is now the tastings and cellar door for Hollick
Wines and Adam Lindsay Gordon worked in the area as a mounted policeman
from 1853-54.
Things to see:
AROUND THE TOWN
There is an excellent pamphlet, 'Walk with History at
Penola', which is available free of charge from the Tourist Information
Office. It covers all the major buildings and locations in town (a
total of 33 destinations) and provides interesting information about
the most significant buildings). Some of the buildings mentioned include:
Tourist Information Centre & John Riddock
District Interpretive Centre
Located in Portland Street and housed in the Old
Mechanics Institute (built 1869) The John Riddock District Interpretive
Centre, which traces the history of the area through well-captioned
pictures and illustrations, is an excellent introduction to the history
of Penola. Unfortunately there are some errors particularly in the text
relating to the early Aborigines in the district. The claim that a
number are buried in the town cemetery is simply not true.
Bond Store
Built between the Old Mechanics Institute and Ulva
Cottage, the Bond Store was used to hold liquor and goods in the
pre-Federation days when goods coming across from Victoria attracted
state taxes.
Ulva Cottage
Located on Bowden Street, Ulva Cottage was built in
the 1850s by Alexander Cameron, the founder of Penola. The house was
built for Cameron's daughter, Margaret and her husband, Dr Bayton.
Sadly Margaret died in childbirth in 1863. Does this reflect on her
husband's ability as a doctor?
Church of St Mary the Virgin
Located on the corner of Arthur and Queen Sts (1873)
this church takes third place behind the Catholic and Presbyterian
buildings. Historically the town has strong Presbyterian traditions
(John Riddoch built the town's Presbyterian Church) and Roman Catholic
traditions. This building was completed by Michael Harris and William
Blight. The bell turret and bell were added in 1889. Of particular
interest are the floor made from adzed logs and the memorial window
which was installed in 1886.
Lynn's Market Place
Lynn's Market Place was used in the 1870s by
Christopher Sharam as a bootmaking premises. Later it was used as a
barbershop and billiard room.
Balnaves Store
The Balnaves family have lived in the Penola-Coonawarra
district since the 1890s when they set up a General Store in the main
street. They continued to operate the store until the 1970s. In 1972
Doug Balnaves became manager of Hungerford Hill's vineyard outside
Penola. He was with Hungerford Hill until 1988 when he decided to go
out on his own. He now owns Balnaves of Coonawarra - a producer of fine
local wines.
Royal Oak Hotel
Located in Church Street, the current stone building
was completed in 1873, it replaced an early slab hut hotel (one of the
first buildings in the district) which had operated on the same site
since the 1840s. The building is now part of the town's main streetscape.
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The Cobb & Co Booking Office
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Cobb & Co
Dated 1857 and located in Riddoch Street this small,
unassuming booking office still stands virtually unaltered since it was
used as the town's 'bus stop' for the Cobb & Co. coaches. Today it is a
good quality restaurant which perfectly complements the local wines.
Woods - MacKillop Schoolhouse
Located on the corner of Portland and Petticoat
Lanes, this was the first Josephite School House. It was built in 1867
and is the site of the original Josephite Stables School. Inside there
is a lot of information pertaining to Sister Mary McKillop although
much of this has been moved to the McKillop Centre which is nearby.
Petticoat Lane
This is a remarkable area which is well worth visiting
and exploring. A number of very old single storey cottages have been
maintained. Some are still lived in and others have been purchased by
the National Trust. The masterpiece is Sharam Cottage which dates from
1850 and is the oldest extant cottage in the town. Other cottages of
interest include Gammon Cottage (early 1860s) with its distinctive
detached kitchen and its pressed metal tiles and Wilson Cottage
(1860s).
Sharam Cottage
Reputedly Penola's first house, Sharam Cottage was
built in 1850. It is located, and clearly signposted, in Petticoat
Lane. Sharam's Cottage (built by Christopher and Ellen Sharam in 1850
and now owned by the National Trust) is a reminder of how the whole
Coonawarra wine region started. In 1890 John Riddoch divided the terra
rosa soil area up into smaller blocks of land which he sold to people
known as 'blockers'. There was a covenant on the land that the
'blocker' had to plant one-third cabernet sauvignon to two-thirds
shiraz. One of these blockers was Christopher Sharam and his family
kept producing grapes until they Sharam 'block' was sold to Penfolds in 1957.
Sarah's Cottage
It is possible to book into one of the old cottages.
Sarah's Cottage, which is located at 24 Julian Street West, is a
delightful cottage which dates from the 1870s and which has been
meticulously restored so it has all the mod-cons as well as a superb
Victorian bathroom with spa bath, delightful old style kitchen and open
fire place. Contact (08) 8736 3309 for bookings.
National Trust McAdam Slab Hut
The National Trust McAdam Slab Hut in the school yard,
Penola. It was built in the 1850s by David McAdam. It is signposted off
the main road on the Naracoorte side of town. It is interesting for its
smallness. The concept that you could live in a house which was nothing
more than a single room was an adequate dwelling. It seems so low and
so small by today's standards.
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Yallum Park
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Yallum Park
Owned by Glen and Gay Clifford who have written 'The
Grass is Green - The story of Yallum Park' (a very comprehensive
history of the house) Yallum Park is a glorious old Victorian Classical
Revival sandstone house, with lots of Italian additions, which was
built in 1878-1880 for John Riddoch, eight kilometres out of Penola. It
was from this base that Riddoch established his Coonawarra vineyards
planting some 95,000 vines in 1891.
Riddoch was one of those larger-than-life characters who
seem to squeeze five lives into a single lifetime. He grew up in
poverty in the highlands of Scotland (a result of the Highlands
clearances) and in 1851 emigrated to try his luck on the Victorian
goldfields. Within a few years he was a successful shopkeeper and wine
merchant on the Geelong goldfields. He borrowed £23,000 and paid
£30,000 for Yallum Park where he promptly built his mansion.
Today it is still a wonder to behold with its original
William Morris wallpapers, it's beautiful gardens and arboretum, its
cavernous 15-feet high ceilings, its eleven Italian marble
mantelpieces, its gold leaf cornices and its sense of history. It was
here that the English novelist Anthony Trollope stayed and where a
passing parade of Governors and Princes (including King George V when
he was still the Duke of Cornwall) spent the night. And out the back is
the old Yallum Park house where Adam Lindsay Gordon used to stay when
he visited John Riddoch.
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The dining room at Yallum
Park House
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Behind the main
Yallum House are two smaller residences. One called Gordon House and
the other Austin House. These were the original houses. It was in the
place now known as Gordon House that Adam Lindsay Gordon came to stay.
Yallum Park is now a private home which is open by appointment. Contact
(08) 8737 2435.
A Modern Folly
The idea of people in the 1990s building follies is
rather quaint. They were essentially 19th luxuries full of
pointlessness and grandeur. However in Penola, if you take the Dergholm
Road out of Penola and turn into Shepherd's Lane you will come across
David Abbey's folly which is a combination of mausoleum, church and
brick frippery.
Majella Wines
Located on Lynn Road south of Coonawarra this family
winery was established in 1990 and specialises in red table wines
derived from cabernet sauvignon and shiraz grapes. It is open seven
days for tastings and sales. For more details contact (08) 8736 3055.
Katnook Estate & Riddoch
Located on the Riddoch Highway north of Penola this
large winery was established in 1978 and specialises in red and white
table wines and sparkling wines derived from cabernet sauvignon,
riesling, chardonnaysauvignon blance, merlot, and shiraz grapes. It is
open seven days for tastings and sales. For more details contact (08)
8737 2394.
Highbank Wines
Located on Main Penola/Naracoorte Road north of Penola
this family winery was established in 1986 and specialises in premium
red and white table wines derived from cabernet sauvignon, chardonnay,
Merlot and cabernet franc grapes. It is open during the holiday period,
other times by appointment for tastings and sales. For more details
contact (08) 8736 3311, toll free 1800 653 311.
Leconfield
Located on Main Penola/Naracoorte Road north of Penola this
family winery was established in 1974 and specialises in premium red
and white table wines derived from cabernet sauvignon, riesling,
chardonnay, Merlot, cabernet franc, petit verdot and shiraz grapes. It
is open seven days for tastings and sales. For more details contact
(08) 8737 2326.
Bowen Estate
Located on the Riddoch Highway north of Penola this
family winery was established in 1972 and specialises in premium dry
red and white table wines derived from cabernet sauvignon, chardonnay,
Merlot, cabernet franc, petit verdot and shiraz grapes. It is open
seven days for tastings and sales. For more details contact (08) 8737 2229.
Balnaves of Coonawarra
Located on the Riddoch Highway north of Penola
this family winery was established in 1991 and specialises in premium
red wines derived from cabernet sauvignon, chardonnay, Merlot, cabernet
franc and shiraz grapes. It is open seven days for tastings and sales.
For more details contact (08) 8737 2946.
Haselgrove Wines
Located on the Riddoch Highway north of Penola this
family winery was established in 1966 and specialises in dry and sweet
white wines and dry red wines derived from cabernet sauvignon and
chardonnay grapes. It is open seven days for tastings and sales. For
more details contact (08) 8737 2734.
Hollick Wines
Located on the Riddoch Highway north of Penola this
family winery was established in 1966 and specialises in dryred and
white table wines and sparkling wines derived from cabernet sauvignon,
riesling, chardonnay, Merlot, pinot noir, cabernet franc, sauvignon
blanc, petit verdot and shiraz grapes. It is open seven days for
tastings and sales. For more details contact (08) 8737 2318.
Wetherall Wines
Located on Main Road north of Penola this small family
winery was established in 1966 and specialises in red and white table
wines derived from cabernet sauvignon chardonnay, Merlot and shiraz
grapes. It is open seven days for tastings and sales. For more details
contact (08) 8737 2104.
Parker Coonawarra Estate
Located on the Riddoch Highway just north of Penola
this select winery was established in 1988 and specialises in red table
wine derived from cabernet sauvignon, Merlot and cabernet franc. The
retail outlet and tastings is located at the Bushman's Inn, PenolaI.
For more details contact (08) 8737 2946.
Punters Corner
Located corner of Riddoch Highway & Racecourse Road
just north of Penola this small winery was established in 1994 and
specialises in red and white table wines derived from cabernet,
chardonnay, Merlot and shiraz grapes. It is open seven days for
tastings and sales. For more details contact (08) 8737 2007.
Lindemans Coonawarra Estate
Located on the Riddoch Highway just north of Penola
this famous winery was established in 1965 and specialises in premium
red and white table wines derived from cabernet sauvignon, riesling,
chardonnay, Merlot, Malbec and shiraz grapes. It is open seven days for
tastings and sales. For more details contact (08) 8737 2613.
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Tourist Information
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Penola-Coonawarra Visitors Centre
Arthur St
Penola
SA
5277
Telephone: (08) 8737 2855
Facsimile: (08) 8737 2251
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Motels
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Coonawarra Motor Lodge Motel
114 Church St
P.O. Box 161
Penola
SA
5277
Telephone: (08) 8737 2364, 1800 649 342
Rating: ***
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Hotels
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Heyward's Royal Oak Hotel
31 Church St
Penola
SA
5277
Telephone: (08) 8737 2322
Rating: ***
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Prince of Wales Hotel/Motel
Church St
Penola
SA
5277
Telephone: (08) 8737 2402
Rating: **
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Apartments
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Julian Court Apt
1/13 Julian St
Penola
SA
5277
Telephone: (08) 8762 3038 or 018 838 213
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Cottages & Cabins
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Cobb & Co Cottages
2 Portland St
Penola
SA
5277
Telephone: (08) 8737 2526
Rating: ***
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Jessie's Cottage
Cnr Clark & Scott Sts
Postal: 2 Scott St
Penola
SA
5277
Telephone: (08) 8737 2630
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Maggie's Cottage
33 Riddoch St
Penola
SA
5277
Telephone: (08) 8736 3302 or 8736 3331
Rating: ***
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Naomi's Villa
20 Riddoch St
P.O. Box 4
Penola
SA
5277
Telephone: (08) 8736 3309
Rating: ****
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Sarah's Cottage
24 Julian St West
Penola
SA
5277
Telephone: 0407 719 030
Rating: ***
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Lodges & Chalets
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McKays Trek Inn
38 Riddoch St
Penola
SA
5277
Telephone: (08) 8737 2250 or 1800 626 844
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Restaurants
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Bushmans' Inn Restaurant
Church St
Penola
SA
5277
Telephone: (08) 8737 2364
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Cobb & Co Restaurant
Riddoch St
Penola
SA
5277
Telephone: (08) 8737 2824
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Heyward's Royal Oak Hotel Bed & Breakfast
31 Church St
Penola
SA
5277
Telephone: (08) 8737 2322
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Irises Cafe
Church St
Penola
SA
5277
Telephone: (08) 8737 2967
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Prince of Wales Hotel/Motel
Church St
Penola
SA
5277
Telephone: (08) 8737 2402
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