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A cliff of Silurian limestone
on the walk to the entrance at the Abercrombie Caves
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Abercrombie
Caves (including Tuena and Grove Creek Falls)
Accessible and interesting group of limestone
caves south of Bathurst.
Located 289 km west of Sydney and 72 km south of
Bathurst, Abercrombie Caves are the most accessible cave system in New
South Wales. The road to the cave is sealed and, unlike the Jenolan
Caves which are nearby, most of the access road travels over flat,
undulating land. Only the last few kilometres wind down into a valley
where there is a pleasant picnic and parking area.
This particularly attractive collection of limestone caves
offer the usual array of stalagmites and stalactites. There is a river
with a couple of particularly beautiful pools and the caves themselves
have an array of columns and shawls with names like 'Hall of
Terpischore', 'Angel's Harp', 'Plum Pudding' and 'Diamond Cascade'.
The caves, which are run by the NSW State government's Caves
Reserve Trust, offer a number of attractive walks in the area, a series
of guided caves inspections, and, for those not wanting to join an
organised cave inspection, there is the Arch Cave, a self-conducted
walk over a small hill and beside Grove Creek.
The local Aborigines, the Burra Burra group who were
part of the larger Wiradjuri tribe, knew of the caves although,
interestingly, there have been no artifacts found in the Arch Cave. In
1977 a research team found stone tools and animal bones (some from
extinct animals) in a shelter north of the Great Arch.
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The Archway entrance
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There is some
doubt as to who was the first European to see the Arch Cave. As early
as 1821 the Sydney Gazette reported that 'a cave of considerable
dimensions has been recently discovered in the neighbourhood of
Bathurst' although, at the time, there was no confirmation that this
report referred to Abercrombie Caves.
By the early 1830s some bushrangers known as 'The Ribbon
Gang' were using the Arch (which the locals referred to as 'The
Bridge') as a hideout. This little-known gang was led by a disgruntled
convict, Ralph Entwistle. They terrorised the local area from September
to October 1830 until they were captured. Although it is interesting to
note that, after a particularly bloody battle, the gang retreated to
Abercrombie Caves, were followed and cornered, but escaped through an
'exit hole'. They were caught the next day. Two members of the gang
died from wounds. The remaining ten were hanged at Bathurst Prison on 2
November 1830.
Throughout the 1830s people from the surrounding
properties would visit the main cave and by the 1840s it was a popular
visiting place. A survey was carried out in 1842. The Sydney Morning
Herald reported on a visit to the caves in 1843 and the immensely
gifted artist, Conrad Martens, arrived and made a number of sketches in
May, 1843.
The discovery of gold in the area in the 1850s (Tuena -
1851, Mount Grey - 1854) resulted in a huge increase in visitors to the
caves. In 1860 the miners at Mount Grey built the first stage in the
Arch Cave. It was replaced in 1880 and is still used occasionally today.
The discovery of gold also meant a dramatic increase in
bushranging in the district and, once again, the caves became a popular
retreat when bushrangers were being chased. In his book 'The
Abercrombie Caves', author Geoff Bates claims 'It is believed that Ben
Hall and his gang (including Frank Gardiner and John O'Meally) spent
considerable time at the caves in the years 1863 to 1865.'
By 1870 the caves were popular with visitors from
Sydney and by 1888 a temporary keeper was employed to look after the
caves which were suffering from graffiti and vandals. By 1895 more than
1000 people a year were visiting the caves.
They are truly the most accessible caves in New South Wales.
Things to see:
Information Centre
The obvious and necessary starting point is the
Information Centre which sells tickets to the various cave walks. It
also has a number of books and brochures as well as 'memorabilia'
including tea towels, mugs, postcards etc.
The Caves
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Looking out the entrance of
The Archway from inside the cave
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1. Archway Cave
A pleasant self-guided walk along Grove Creek will bring
the visitor to the southern end of the Archway. At this point the path
turns right, rises up over the hill, and then descends into the Grove
Creek valley (there are good views of the cave's mouth) and enters the
Archway from the northern end. The cave is 221 metres long, 60 metres
wide at both ends and 30 metres high in the middle. It is reputedly the
largest cave of its type south of the Equator.
At the southern end of the cave is the Gold digger's
Stage - a large platform built by miners which was historically used
for dances and concert performances which, presumably, were greatly
enhanced by the cave's acoustics.
In The Abercrombie Caves, Geoff Bates provides a
brief history of the Gold digger's Stage which 'was built by the
goldminers living in the area about the year 1854.
'For relaxation, miners from the goldfields at Tuena,
The Junction and Trunkey Creek would come to the caves on a Saturday
evening, together with their loved ones, be it a wife or a girlfriend
to drink and dance the night away. The cave would ring with the sound
of popular bush music, played on their instruments, which included
concertinas, flutes, harmonicas and fiddles.
'A drop of good ale always went down well at these
functions and many an old bottle has been dug up from around the dance floor.
Bates goes on to explain that the platform was built of
Baltic pine and was probably a packing case for mining equipment or
ship's ballast. The ironbark beams came from around Hill End and were
brought to the caves by bullock team.
The best way to ensure that you fully appreciate the
cave is to obtain the Archway Cave: Self Guided Tour brochure which
describes, in great detail, the 1.4 km round trip and draws the
walker's attention to all the main points of interest. It also includes
an easy to follow map.
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Grove Creek which flows
through The Archway
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2.
King Solomon's Temple
This cave, part of the Archway, is a popular one hour
guided tour which passes through three major chambers. The first
recorded tour occurred in 1834 and there is no record of whether the
first visitors started naming the various formations. Today visitors,
after passing through the Archway, see such features as the Angel's
Harp, the Dress Circle and the Temple Windows.
3. Bushrangers Cave
Not surprisingly this cave was named because it was the
place where the Ribbon Gang hid before they were captured. The
conducted tour of the cave takes around one hour, covers a distance of
approximately 450 metres, and passes through a number of caverns (there
are 8 in the complex) which are variously named the Butcher's shop, the
Spare Bedroom, the Pulpit and the Hill Cave.
4. Grove Cave
A small cave (the conducted tour only travels about 70
metres into the cave) which has been open for a little over a decade.
It is located at the southern end of the Grand Arch and is noted for
its exceptionally beautiful shawl formations with one chamber being
named the Red Shawl Chamber. There is also the Pineapple chamber and
the Final chamber.
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Grove Creek Falls near
Abercrombie Caves
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Grove
Creek Falls
A few kilometres south (and on the eastern side of the
road) is a dirt road which leads to Grove Creek Falls. Grove Creek
actually runs through the heart of Abercrombie Caves and here, only a
few kilometres downstream, it tumbles over a sheer cliff and falls some
70 metres to the rocks below. There is a good, safe viewing area. The
rainbow trout in the creek are popular with anglers, in the
trout-fishing season.
Tuena
Located 17 km (mostly on
unsealed road) south of Abercrombie Caves, Tuena (the name is said to
derive from a local Aboriginal word translated as 'string of
waterholes') is one of those old gold mining towns which experienced
very rapid growth and equally rapid decline. Gold was discovered at
Tuena in 1851. It is claimed that a certain Reverend Douglas, who was
travelling to Tuena for a christening, stopped to boil his billy at
Limestone Creek, turned over a stone and found a nugget of gold. Miners
poured into the area. At its peak Tuena had a population of more than
10 000 but by 1869 the gold was gone and the population had dropped to
less than 100.
Another party to cash in on the area's pickings was that of
bushranger Ben Hall. His gang were active in the area and bailed up an
inn near Tuena in 1865.
Today the town is no more than a few historic buildings
on the less than perfect dirt road about halfway between Bathurst and Goulburn.
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St Margarets Presbyterian
Church (1888), Tuena
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A walking tour of the
town's historic buildings is available from Parsons General Store
(1860) which features old cedar counters and a museum display (it is
closed on Sundays, except in school holidays). It takes in the
Bookkeeper's Cottage (1861), a wattle-and-daub building which was used
for tallying gold, The Goldfields Inn (1866) which is the oldest
licensed wattle-and-daub hotel in the country, St Marks Anglican Church
(1886), the Tuena Public School (1889), St Margaret's Presbyterian
Church (1890), built of local stone, a suspension footbridge, police
station (1900) and a number of other, less important, buildings.
Each Easter the village holds a Goldrush Festival which
attracts more than 2 000 people to the town on Easter Saturday.
Fossicking is still popular in the area with panning equipment
available from the general store. The surrounding rivers and waterholes
are popular spots for fishing, swimming, canoeing and fishing. Local
arts and crafts are available in the Tuena Hall on weekends. Green's
Bluff, adjacent the recreation ground, is a good swimming spot and free
camping is available at Tuena Reserve. For further information about
Tuena contact the general store in Bathurst St, tel: (02) 4834 5235.
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Hotels
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Abercrombie Hotel
Bathurst Rd
Tuena
Abercrombie Caves
NSW
2795
Telephone: (02) 4834 5214
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Abercrombie Hotel
Bathurst Rd
Tuena
Abercrombie Caves
NSW
2795
Telephone: (02) 4834 5214
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Cottages & Cabins
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Abercrombie Caves Camp & Cabin Area
Abercrombie Caves
NSW
2795
Telephone: (02) 6368 8603
Facsimile: (02) 6368 8634
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Restaurants
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The Goldfields Inn Dining Room
Bathurst Rd
Tuena
Abercrombie Caves
NSW
2795
Telephone: (02) 4834 5214
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Cafés
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Abercrombie Caves Camp Area (Kiosk)
Abercrombie Caves
NSW
2795
Telephone: (02) 6368 8603
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