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View down the main street in
Chiltern
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Chiltern
Fascinating
small historic town
Chiltern is a country town of some 1400 people which is
distinguished by its historic streetscape of well-preserved brick
buildings and old-fashioned timber verandahs. This antique appearance
has drawn filmmakers on several occasions - most notably for the
filming of Walt Disney's Ride a Wild Pony in 1974. It is located amidst
an agricultural landscape 500 metres off the Hume Freeway and 270 km
north-east of Melbourne, between Wangaratta and Wodonga.
The first Europeans in
the area were the party of Joseph Hawdon who was engaged in overlanding
cattle to Port Phillip in 1836. He apparently shot a 'black' dingo
hereabouts and Black Dog Creek was named in its honour. Consequently,
this name was also applied to the settlement when it first emerged.
The first squatters took up land here in 1839 and a
bush inn was established in 1844. A few other buildings developed
around the hotel, although it was later transformed into a police
outpost. As such it was apparently frequented by Robert O'Hara Burke,
of the famous Burke and Wills expedition.
A township reserve was declared on the creek in
1851. The site was surveyed in 1853. At around this time the name of
Chiltern, from the Chiltern Hills of England, had come into use. Town
allotments were sold in 1854.
However, this settlement was abandoned when John Conness's
discovery of the Indigo gold lead was announced in 1858. As prospectors
poured into the area, a new Chiltern was established around the miner's
track which ran parallel to the New Ballarat lead (now Conness St) and
along the route from Beechworth to the Indigo lead (now Main St). The
original Star Hotel was built at the intersection of these two routes
in 1859.
In the first bloom of the rush there were allegedly some ten
to twenty thousand living around the town. The local diggings turned up
the largest nugget of the Ovens goldfields. However, the alluvial gold
soon dwindled and attention was turned to deep quartz reef mines which
required the capital of a company. Consequently the population thinned
to a manageable level.
The new townsite was surveyed in 1860 although sales of
allotments were delayed owing to objections from mining companies.
Chiltern was proclaimed a municipality in 1862. Unusually, the first
council consisted entirely of representatives from the miners' group.
By 1865 there were about 2200 residents and 400 domiciles.
Agriculture and vineyards were under way, there were two steam-powered
sawmills and highly profitable quartz-reef mining was ongoing.
Buildings included 12 hotels, a post office, a telegraph station, the
Federal Standard newspaper office, three banks, a court, a court of
mines, five insurance offices, a reading room, a coach office and a newsagency.
By 1888 there were still twelve hotels although
the population had shrunk to 1243 and the number of banks to two. Gold
mining continued to turn a profit until the early 20th century. The
last reef was abandoned in 1911. Mine director Charles Harkin formed
the Chiltern Vineyard Company in 1912 to provide employment for those
made redundant.
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Lakeview, the home of Henry
Handel Richardson
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Noted novelist
Henry Handel Richardson lived at Chiltern from 1876-77. Short-lived
Country Party Prime Minister John McEwen (1967-68) was born here in 1900.
The Chiltern Box Ironbark Festival in October celebrates
the natural environment and the town's history with guided walks and
other outdoor activities, along with general entertainment.
Things to see:
Federal Standard
The town's major attraction is its historic
buildings, particularly the streetscape of Conness St. Guided tours can
be arranged by calling Rex from the Chiltern Athenaeum on (03) 5726
1467.
A good place to start a walk is at the corner of Main St (the
access road into town from the Hume Freeway) and Alliance St. On the
edge of the Tourist Park is the small brick office of the Federal
Standard (1860-61), Chiltern's first newspaper. Inside are an old
printing press and other equipment from the 1870s-1920s. It is open by
appointment, tel: (03) 5726 1317.
Star Hotel
Proceed north along Main St to the intersection with
Conness St. The latter was named after John Conness, the man who first
discovered gold at Chiltern. It began as a miner's track adjacent the
New Ballarat lead. Main St was the route which extended from the Indigo
lead towards Beechworth.
At the north-eastern corner is the former Star Hotel and
Theatre which was rebuilt in 1866 after a fire destroyed the 1859
original. The expansiveness of an adjoining theatre (used for dancing,
plays and public meetings) and a billiards saloon is a tribute to the
prosperity and extensive custom afforded by a prosperous gold town.
In the courtyard is a grapevine which was planted in 1867. In
1936 it yielded a crop of two and half tonnes of grapes. With a trunk
that measures 1.84 metres and a branch which is 12 metres long it is
recorded as the largest in the Southern Hemisphere.
Today the old theatre houses Grapevine Antiques and Museum
where there are antiques and collectables for sale, Friday to Wednesday
from 10.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m., tel: (03) 5726 1395.
Conness St West
On the north-western corner is Gilmour's Corner
Store(1890), now a craft and giftware shop which also dispenses local
tourist information, tel: (03) 5726 1611.
Head west along Conness St. To the right is the former
Council Club Hotel (1870). In 1890 the owner bought the store on the
other side of the lane and made it part of the hotel.
Stephen's Motor Museum
Further along the road is Stephen's Motor Garage and
Museum which contains an international collection of automotive
memorabilia dating back to the outset of the 20th century, tel: (03)
5726 1236. Opposite is the former Bank of Australasia (1877-79), now
The Mulberry Tree Restaurant and Bed-and-Breakfast.
Dow's Pharmacy
Return along Conness St towards Main St. To the
right is Dow's Pharmacy (1868). Now owned by the National Trust, it
retains its original exterior. Inside is an extensive array of original
shop fittings which display original stock and pharmaceutical
equipment. It is open on weekends and school holidays, tel: (03) 5726 1476.
Main St North
Head north along Main St. On the far side of Crawford
St, to the left, is 'Linden', built in 1890 by David McEwen. His son
John, who was born in the house in 1900, became prime minister of
Australia in 1967-68.
On the other side of the road are the post office (built in
1863 it was the town's first government building), the Classical
courthouse building (1865) and the Masonic hall.
Return south along Main St, turning left into Crawford
St. To the left are the police lock-up (1873) and residence (1875).
Chiltern Athenaeum Museum
Return to the intersection of Main and Conness Sts.
Head east along Conness St. To the left is the Chiltern Athenaeum
Museum. As the building was originally a goldfields library, town hall
and council chambers, it has a large collection of 19th-century books
(including a very early edition of the Encyclopaedia Brittanica) and
other material pertaining to local history, including the works of
local painter Alfred Eustace, who executed detailed miniatures on large
gum leaves. His work was reputedly collected by Queen Victoria and the
Czar of Russia. Eustace died in 1907 and is buried in the local
cemetery. There is a good display of local Aboriginal artefacts. It is
open weekends and public holidays from 10.00 a.m. to 4.00 p.m. or by
appointment, tel: (03) 5726 1467.
Kilgour's Residence, Shop and Factory
At Conness and Kilgour is 'Bellfield' (1870s), the
residence of Andrew Kilgour who owned the blacksmith shop and
mining-equipment factory (1865) on the other side of Conness St. The
latter premises were later used for curing tobacco.
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Lake Anderson in front of Lakeview
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Lake Anderson
and Parkland
Head south along Kilgour St, cross over Alliance St
and walk past Lake Anderson and through the adjacent parkland. This was
the site of the Alliance Gold Mine. The lake bed was created by
subsidence as a result of their operations. An old mullock heap can
still be seen. Today this area is ideal for picnics and there is a
wildlife and bird refuge.
Lakeview
On the southern side of the
lake, at the end of Victoria St, is a typical Victorian, single-storey
country-town villa known as 'Lakeview' (c.1870). It is clearly
signposted off Main Street on the eastern side of town. The Richardson
family moved into this brick bungalow when they arrived at Chiltern in
1876. Ethel Richardson, then six, would later become a distinguished
novelist, working under the pseudonym Henry Handel Richardson. The
family moved on when her father's medical practice failed in 1877. She
later utilised her memories of the house and area in her depiction of
'Barambogie' in the novel Ultima Thule (1929). She also recounts her
time at Chiltern in her autobiography Myself When Young (1948). It was
restored between 1967 and 1967.
The house is adorned with period furnishings and
Richardson memorabilia and is open for inspection on weekends, public
holidays and school holidays from 10.00 a.m. to 4.00 p.m., tel: (03)
5726 1317.
Railway Station
A little further south is the railway station (1875).
Note the polychrome brickwork and cast-iron drinking fountains on the
verandah posts.
Churches
An avenue of trees lead
to St Paul's Church of England (1870-5) in Albert Rd. It is a Gothic
design constructed of local orange bricks and cream-brick quoins. The
octagonal tower is a focal point.
St Andrew's Presbyterian Church (1871-5) is in High St. In a
probable case of cheating during exams, it is, like St Paul's, a Gothic
structure built of the same bricks with a similar avenue of trees and
an octagonal bellcote.
Forest View Emu Farm
Guided tours of Forest View Emu Farm and its fine garden
can be arranged in advance by ringing the owners on (03) 5726 1337. It
is located 2 or 3 km from town, towards Beechworth, in Lancashire Gap
Road. It also has a bed-and-breakfast facility.
Chiltern - Mt Pilot National Park
This reserve protects some historic sites and a stand of box
and ironbark that was once common in Victoria. It covers land to the
immediate north and south-east of town and is noted for its profuse
birdlife (including the rare turquoise parrot). Squirrel and Sugar
Gliders, Tuans (Phasocgales) and Yellow-Footed Antechinus are found
throughout the park and there are fine displays of flora can be enjoyed
in the warmer months.
There are excellent drives and walks in the park which is
crisscrossed by good gravel roads. These are traversed by the Chiltern
Historic Drive (25 km). To get started head out of town on the
Rutherglen Rd and turn left into Donchi Hill Rd. The drive takes in
Donchi Hill (a good lookout over the surrounding plains), the original
cemetery of the Indigo goldfields (established in 1858), the Magenta
Mine (it operated from 1860-1910 and produced around 370 kg of gold)
and the State Battery Site. The battery was set up in the Great
Depression by the government to encourage goldmining. New mines could
have the first three tons of ore free of charge. It closed in World War
II. There are picnic areas at Donchi Hill, Magenta Mine and Frogs Hollow.
The White Box Walking Track (8.5 km) is a circular
walk around the Honeyeater Picnic Area in the south-eastern section.
There is an information board at the Picnic Area and a box which
contains park leaflets and White Box Walk brochures. For more
information check out the Friends of Chiltern website http://friendsofchiltern.org.
Yeddonba
Aboriginal Art Site
About 12 km south of Chiltern, along the road to Beechworth, is a turnoff on the left
into Toveys Rd. Follow Toveys Rd when it veers to the right (i.e.,
ignore the turnoff on the left) and you will soon come to a carpark and
picnic area on the right-hand side of the road. This is the start of a
45-minute walk which begins on the left-hand side of the picnic area
(as you face it from the road). A related pamphlet, available from the
Beechworth Visitor's Centre, provides considerable insight into the
culture of the Duduroa people who were the dominant indigenous clan of
the area. It does so by examining the relationship between the Duduroa
and various attractions along the trail- the physical setting, the
flora, some rocky outcrops and a lookout.
However the main attraction along the track is the Yeddonba
Aboriginal Art Site which depicts a Tasmanian tiger, a goanna and a
snake. The depictions are thought to be over 2000 years old. They are
faded but cannot be redone as there are no known descendants of the
Duduroa alive today. Clan elders used this sacred site to pass on the
Dreaming story of the Tasmanian tiger which was their totem spirit. The
orange ochre was probably obtained from clans in South Australia.
Also along the trail is a rock cave which the
Duduroa believed to be the home of the Tasmanian tiger's spirit. It was
used as an initiation site to connect young men and women with the life force.
Mt Pilot Lookout
About 2 km further south along the Beechworth Rd is
another turnoff on the left into Old Coach Rd which leads to the summit
of Mt Pilot (548 m above sea-level). The mountain was important to
local Aboriginal clans as a spiritual and ceremonial site. Springs in
the rocks here were also an essential water source.
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Motels
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Chiltern Colonial Motor Inn
1-7 Main St
Chiltern
VIC
3683
Telephone: (03) 5726 1788
Rating: ***
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Hotels
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Telegraph Hotel
25 Conness St
Chiltern
VIC
3683
Telephone: (03) 5726 1470
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Caravan Parks
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Lake Anderson Caravan Park
Alliance St
Chiltern
VIC
3683
Telephone: (03) 5726 1298
Rating: ***
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Restaurants
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Johnno's Bar & Grill, Colonial Motor Inn
Main St
Chiltern
VIC
3683
Telephone: (03) 5726 1788
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Telegraph Hotel
25 Conness St
Chiltern
VIC
3683
Telephone: (03) 5726 1470
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The Mulberry Tree Restaurant & Tearooms
Conness St
Chiltern
VIC
3683
Telephone: (03) 5726 1277
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