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    Tatura

    , VIC

    Things to see
    Motels
    Hotels
    Caravan Parks
    Restaurants


    Sacred Heart Catholic Church

    Tatura
    Service centre to surrounding irrigation district
    As you drive into Tatura you are very likely to see a Dethridge water-wheel by the roadside, regulating the flow of water along irrigation channels in adjoining fields. It is an apt symbol of the district which has became rich and fertile with the introduction of an extensive irrigation project. The intensive agricultural orientation of the area is also evident in the form of the Institute of Sustainable Irrigated Agriculture which is the state's major centre for research into irrigation management related issues. Tatura is located 167 km north of Melbourne via Murchison. The main local industries are cereal crops, fruit and vegetable cultivation, dairying, fat sheep and cattle. Not surprisingly, the town has a tomato-processing factory, a milk products plant and an abattoir. It is also the seat of Goulburn-Murray Water - the regional water management authority.

    A less predictable element of the surrounding landscape is the German War Cemetery which reflects the fact that, during both World Wars, German prisoners-of-war and internees were imprisoned at camps in the area. Some Italians and Japanese were also held in the Second World War. The German officers were detained at 'Dhurrungile' (1871), one of the largest station homesteads ever built in Australia.

    The Dhurrungile run was established in 1836 and subdivided in 1870 for closer settlement. The village which had developed around the local watering hole, known as the Whim, was proclaimed in 1874. The Tatura Wheat Export Movement was formed in 1906 and a butter factory was built the following year. It also produced electricity for the town from 1911. When dairy farmers from the Gippsland moved into the area after World War I, a larger factory was established. A cannery was built in 1919 but it was moved to Mooroopna in 1922 owing to complaints about the smell.

    Italian settlers moved into the area from the early 1930s and many more after World War II. The irrigation research farm was established in 1937 and a Rosella cannery in 1949. The tomato concentrate plant opened in 1981.

    Prior to European settlement the area is thought to have been inhabited by the Yorta Yorta people and the town's name is thought to be taken from their language. It is said to mean 'small lagoon with rushes'.

    The Tatura Show is held in March and International Dairy Week in January. The Taste of Tatura Food and Wine Festival is held on the first weekend in March.


    Things to see:   [Top of page]

    Dethridge water-wheel

    Tatura Irrigation and Wartime Camps Museum
    The Tatura Irrigation and Wartime Camps Museum, at the corner of Hogan and Ross Sts, has a title which provides a fair indication of the themes which govern its displays. It is situated in the original Rodney Irrigation office, built in 1888 for Walter Scott Murray, the engineer responsible for the first local irrigation trust. The building has a hipped verandah roof dressed with a lovely cast-iron valance. It is open from 1.00 p.m. - 3.00 p.m. every weekday and on weekends and public holidays from 2.00 p.m. to 4.00 p.m. Ring (03) 5824 2111 for details. The email address is info@taturamuseum.org.au.

    Catholic Complex and Other Historic Buildings
    If, from the museum, you turn into Hogan St (the main road through town) then you will see, to your immediate left, the dark red brickwork and cream-coloured mouldings of the Sacred Heart Catholic Church (1912). On one side is the presbytery and on the other is the Sacred Heart School. Over the road are the convent (1940) and, perhaps the finest of all, the school hall, fronted by a large palm tree. The hall is an elegant two-storey red-brick structure built in 1901 as a boarding house for school children. It features some finely detailed cast-iron lacework, and highly ornamental decorative mouldings on the facade.

    Just along from the church, on the same side of the road, are the old mechanics institute (late 19th century) and Victory Hall.

    Dhurringile
    If you start at the Hogan and Ross St intersection and head east along Hogan St for about 1.7 km there is a turnoff on the right into Tatura-Murchison Rd. About 10 km along here, on the roadside, you can see Dhurringile mansion, one of the largest station homesteads ever built in Australia. Consisting of 65 rooms, it was erected in 1871 for James Winter on the Dhurringile station which was established in 1836. Winter never occupied this huge residence. He died in England. In World War II it was used to house German officers who were seen as dangerous and likely to try and escape. After the war the Presbyterian Church used it for young Scottish emigres. It is now a minimum security prison.

    German War Cemetery

    Tatura German War Cemetery
    If you head west from the Hogan-Ross St intersection, towards Rushworth, you will soon come to a signposted turnoff on the right which leads to the Tatura public cemetery, on the right-hand side of the road. Adjacent is the German War Cemetery, fronted by a white pillared entranceway adorned with a large cross.

    Here are the graves of 239 civilian internees - they were of German origin but had not been involved in the war - (marked with a Latin cross) and a number of German POW graves denoted by an iron cross. All died while under detention both locally and at other camps throughout Australia. The remains were exhumed for reinterment at this site in 1958. The cemetery was funded by the Federal Republic of Germany and maintained by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.

    Cussen Park
    If you start at the Hogan and Ross St intersection and head north along Ross St, 1 km will take you past Cussen Park, on the right-hand side of the road. This natural depression forms a lagoon where birdlife is usually profuse. A network of footpaths give access to a series of lagoons where birdhides offer visitors the opportunity to observe the wildlife. The park has wheelchair access and both picnic and toilet facilities are available.


     

    Motels   [Top of page]

     
      Whim Inn Motel
    Hogan St
    Tatura VIC 3616
    Telephone: (03) 5824 1155
     
     

    Hotels   [Top of page]

     
      Commercial Hotel
    Hogan St
    Tatura VIC 3616
    Telephone: (03) 5824 1051
     
     
      Criterion Hotel
    162 Hogan St
    Tatura VIC 3616
    Telephone: (03) 5824 1891
     
     
      Victoria Hotel
    205 Hogan St
    Tatura VIC 3616
    Telephone: (03) 5824 1004
     
     

    Caravan Parks   [Top of page]

     
      Country Gardens Caravan Park
    Cnr Rushworth & Winter Rds
    Tatura VIC 3616
    Telephone: (03) 5824 2652
    Rating: ***
     
     
      Tatura Caravan Park
    Hastie St
    Tatura VIC 3616
    Telephone: (03) 5824 2155
    Rating: *
     
     

    Restaurants   [Top of page]

     
      Annabels Licensed Restaurant
    Cnr Hogan St & Dhurringile Rd
    Tatura VIC 3616
    Telephone: (03) 5824 1155
     
     
      Commercial Hotel
    Hogan St
    Tatura VIC 3616
    Telephone: (03) 5824 1051
     
     
      Criterion Hotel
    162 Hogan St
    Tatura VIC 3616
    Telephone: (03) 5824 1891
     
     
      Hill Top Golf and Country Club
    Gowrie St
    Tatura VIC 3616
    Telephone: (03) 5824 1689
     
     
      Pizza Nostra
    185 Hogan St
    Tatura VIC 3616
    Telephone: (03) 5824 1677
     
     
      Tatura Golden Wheel Chinese Restaurant
    Hogan St
    Tatura VIC 3616
    Telephone: (03) 5824 1086
     
     
      Victoria Hotel
    205 Hogan St
    Tatura VIC 3616
    Telephone: (03) 5824 1004
     




     

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