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Late evening near Lake Dumbleyung
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Dumbleyung
(including Lake Dumbleyung)
Small wheatbelt town with famous lake nearby
Dumbleyung is a small wheatbelt town located 275 km
south east of Perth. No one knows exactly how the town got its name but
it is likely that it is a corruption of the local Aboriginal word
'dambeling' which probably meant 'large stretch of water'. An
alternative theory argues that it may well be derived from 'dumbung'
which either meant a native pear tree or an Aboriginal game played with
bent sticks and a hard piece of fruit.
Although in many ways Dumbleyung is a typical wheatbelt
town there is one event in its history which makes it uniquely
important and separates it from the dozens of other towns in the area.
On New Years Eve 1964, after a particularly wet winter
had seen the lake fill to overflowing, Donald Campbell set the world
water speed record when he raced his boat Bluebird across the lake at
the remarkable speed of 444.66 km/h (276.3 mph). This made him the
fastest man both on land and on water. A unique double.
A memorial to Donald Campbell's achievements is
located on Pussy Cat Hill on the lake shoreline. Offering excellent
views over the lake, it is clearly signposted 'Scenic Drive - Lake
Dumbleyung' on the road from Wagin to Dumbleyung.
Lake Dumbleyung, undoubtedly the area's great
attraction, is the largest natural body of inland water in West
Australia. It is approximately 13 km long by 6.5 km wide with a
catchment area which extends approximately 64 km north towards Kulin,
64 km south towards Narrangerup and 55 km east to Tarin Rock.
In the years when it overflows the water takes a course
through the Wagin Lakes into the Beaufort River, thence the Blackwood
and into the sea at Augusta.
The first recorded sighting of the lake was in 1843
when two explorers Henry Landor and Henry Maxwell Lefroy travelled
through the area looking for pastoral lands and a large body of water
which had been mentioned by the local Aborigines.
Landor and Lefroy described Lake Dumbleyung in their journal
entry for 17 January 1843. 'After riding 10 miles, we came in sight of
Dambeling, the largest of the lakes - 13 miles by 7 or 8. It is like
the others, shallow with many low islands in varied and beautiful form.
On the northern and eastern shores, there is a good grazing country
down to the lake, ending in precipitous banks and extending over the
hills 2 or 3 miles distant from the lake. The water is salt and the
shore long, flat and muddy, on which we saw the impressions of two
stray horses and a foal...'
The first grazing leases around Lake Dumbleyung were granted
in 1875 to George Kersley who overlanded sheep from Beverley and took
up a lease of 20 000 acres which included half of the lake. Early
accounts describe the lake as having grass covered banks and the
saltbush provided valuable grazing for Kerseley's stock.
The pastoralists were followed by the sandalwood cutters who
came through the area searching for the aromatic timber. It was also
common for farmers to cut the timber as it was a ready source of income
during hard times or periods of inactivity.
Other early accounts describe a road across the
lake used by Katanning settlers to cart produce to the goldfields in
the 1890s. This was the opportunity for local farmers to make a fortune
as quickly as the miners. They would load their wagons with flour,
sugar, oatmeal, jam and baking flour and when they got to the
goldfields actually auction their produce.
While the lake is used for aquatic recreation today,
in the early 1900s there were race tracks on it and it was used for
picnics. During the 1920s and 1930s, although the lake did not fill to
overflowing, there were years when it had enough water for swimming and
boating. A record wet year in 1946 saw the lake fill completely.
In recent times the lake has suffered greatly from
the salination which has affected the whole of the wheatbelt. It now
has a very distinctive saline smell. The shorelines, which the early
settlers described as being so rich and fertile, are now characterised
by forests of dead trees standing like forlorn skeletons. Most of the
lake is part of a water bird conservation area. In March 1985 a total
of 24 839 birds were counted on the lake.
The town of Dumbleyung seems to run a rather poor second
to the lake but it is not without its charm. It came into existence
just prior to World War I. The township was proclaimed in 1906 and the
railway arrived a year later. From 1907-1912 Dumbleyung was the railway
terminus which meant that it became an important meeting place. The
Dumbleyung Hotel was built in 1913 and by 1915 Dumbleyung was the major
rural service town in the region.
Things to see:
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Lake Dumbleyung in the late
afternoon from the Donald Campbell Memorial
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Lake
Dumbleyung and Donald Campbell memorial
On New Years Eve 1964, after a particularly wet
winter had seen the lake fill to overflowing, Donald Campbell set the
world water speed record when he raced his boat Bluebird across the
lake at the remarkable speed of 444.66 km/h (276.3 mph). This made him
the fastest man both on land and on water. A unique double.
A memorial to Donald Campbell's achievements is
located on Pussy Cat Hill on the lake shoreline. Offering excellent
views over the lake, it is clearly signposted 'Scenic Drive - Lake
Dumbleyung' on the road from Wagin to Dumbleyung.
Lake Dumbleyung, undoubtedly the area's great
attraction, is the largest natural body of inland water in West
Australia. It is approximately 13 km long by 6.5 km wide with a
catchment area which extends approximately 64 km north towards Kulin,
64 km south towards Narrangerup and 55 km east to Tarin Rock.
Heritage Trail and History
An interesting journey through the region can be
taken by following the Dumbleyung Historic Schools Trail Heritage
Brochure. The brochure details four separate drives which include the
sites of 26 schools and cover a total of 374 km
There is an excellent book on the area titled A History of
Dumbleyung written by Terry Klemm. It is available from the Shire of
Dumbleyung office on the corner of Harvey and Dawson Streets.
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Hotels
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Dumbleyung Tavern
Bartram St
Dumbleyung
WA
6350
Telephone: (08) 9863 4028
Rating: *
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Farm & Eco Holidays
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Peppercorn Cottage Farmstay
125 Gate Rd
Dumbleyung
WA
6350
Telephone: (08) 9864 1012
Facsimile: (08) 9864 1012
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Caravan Parks
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Dumbleyung Caravan Park
Harvey St
Dumbleyung
WA
6350
Telephone: (09) 9863 4012
Rating: ***
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