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Commercial Banking Company of
Sydney Building in the main street
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Cessnock
(including Bellbird, Nulkaba, Ellalong, Paxton and Millfield)
Mining town in the Hunter Valley
151 km north of Sydney via the freeway Cessnock,
together with Bellbird, has a population of 17 914 and is situated 107
metres above sea-level. Although originally a service centre to
travellers and the surrounding farms its real development as a town
occurred when the area became a major mining centre at the turn of the
century. Consequently there is little in the way of heritage buildings
and today Cessnock is essentially a rather unattractive and
uninteresting residential, commercial and government centre, although
it is situated adjacent one of the state's most important wine-growing
centres (see entry on Pokolbin).
Depending on which source is consulted it is variously
believed that the original inhabitants of the area were the Darkinjang,
Awabakal or Wanaruah peoples.
Many early landholders in the Hunter Valley were of
Scottish descent. Some were the younger sons of noble families who had
come to take advantage of generous grants when the family estate was
bestowed upon the eldest son. One such case was that of John Campbell
who was granted 1560 acres in 1826 along Black Creek where the town is
now situated. He named the property after Cessnock castle in Ayrshire,
Scotland, which belonged to his baronial grandfather. Unfortunately
John died in 1828 at the age of 24 and his younger brother David
returned to Scotland when the grant was transferred to elder brother
George, still resident in his native land. George waived his rights in
1832 and David finally managed to secure a deed in 1834. However, by
that time, he too had decided to remain in Scotland and he became an
absentee landlord. Much of the property was sold in an 1853 enabling
the emergence of a private village.
The locality was situated at an intersection on the
Great North Road. The first road to join Sydney with the Hunter Valley
it was built by 3000 convicts between 1826 and 1834. The junction
became a camping place for teamsters. The Cessnock Inn was established
here in 1856 for those travelling between Wollombi and Maitland. By
1858 there were still no more than eleven adults.
After the Robertson Land Act of 1861 the way was
opened for small landholders and people began to settle on small farms
along Black Creek and Anvil Creek in the area to the north and
north-west of Cessnock. They were mostly wheat-growers but a German
winemaker named Bouffier established a vineyard at Cessnock around
1866. The township developed as a service centre to local farmers and
travellers. Wheat-growing declined after rust destroyed the crop in 1870.
With a view to establishing a village in the area, land
had been reserved for a church and school north of present-day Cessnock
as early as 1829. St Luke's Anglican Church was finally built there in
1867, the original slab-construction St Patrick's Catholic Church in
1872 and a school in 1877. A village was laid out there in 1884-85.
Officially described as 'The Village of Pokolbin' it became known as
Cessnock later in the decade. That name was transferred south to the
town now called Cessnock in 1908 and the northern village became known
by its local name, Nulkaba, which was officially adopted in 1927. By
that time the farmland to the west had become known as Pokolbin.
Coal was discovered by William Keene in 1856 but the full
potential of the Greta coal seam was not recognised until 1886 when
T.W. Edgeworth David did some exploratory work. The first colliery
(Richmond Vale) was opened in 1891 and was linked by rail with
Maitland. Closed in 1967 it is now a mining museum. The East Greta,
Stanford Merthyr, Pelaw Main, Abermain, Aberdare and Hebburn collieries
were all in operation by 1906 (the names recalling the mining areas of
Wales and Northern England). Aberdare (opened in 1905) was the first
mine at what is now known as Cessnock.
The local mining operations were very large, even by
world standards. 17 collieries existed on the South Maitland Coal
Field, employing nearly 10 000 men and boys and thus supporting a
population of 43 000 in the district.
As a result of the collieries a land boom occurred
between the turn of the century and the early 1920s. Subsequently the
population, which had increased from 62 in 1871 to 165 in 1901, was 12
000 by 1926 when Cessnock became a municipality. Coalmining was
supplemented by wine-making, timber, pottery, dairying and cattle.
Conditions at the mines were poor. The unionised
workforce pressed for central rescue stations in the mines but their
pleas were ignored. Some did not even have safety lamps. Then, on
September 1, 1923, 20 men and their horses were killed in an
underground explosion and fire at Bellbird Colliery. One of the
rescuers, John Brown, the manager at Aberdare, also died.
Unrest continued throughout the 1920s. In 1929 Norman Brown
was shot and killed at Rothbury when police fired their pistols to warn
off thousands of miners protesting against scab labour during a
lock-out. A monument to what has become known as the Rothbury Riots is
located at North Rothbury.
Many mines closed during the Great Depression of the
1930s. They reopened during World War II which were profitable years
for the mine-owners although unrest continued over pay and conditions.
Striking employees were visited by novelist Katherine Susannah Prichard
in 1944. The methods employed by the owners to accelerate extraction
rendered vast amounts of coal inaccessible. The pits began to close
from the late 1950s and wine slowly supplanted coal as the centrepiece
of the local economy.
The City of Cessnock was declared in 1957 and the
Greater City of Cessnock in 1984. The latter incorporates 25 formerly
separate towns and mining villages which mostly developed around a
particular colliery.
The Budburst Festival is held in September with a
parade, markets, events and the Miss Cessnock quest.
Things to see:
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Flywheel from Aberdare
Colliery near Tourist Information Office
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Tourist Information
The Hunter Valley Wine Country Visitors' Centre
is located at Turner Park on Aberdare St, about 1 km east of the
intersection with Vincent St, Cessnock's main shopping strip. Vincent
St was originally known as Mt Vincent Rd as it continued on to Ellalong
and Mt Vincent. The information centre has plenty of information on the
area's wineries, accommodation, restaurants and events.
Nulkaba
At the town's centre
Maitland Rd, Wollombi Rd, Allandale Rd and Vincent St all meet at what
is left of Black Creek (now cemented in and changed beyond
recognition), along which the Campbells received the first land grant
in the area.
Head north along Allandale Rd which originally lead through
the farms which bordered Black Creek and Anvil Creek. 1 km brings you
to Nulkaba. With a view to the future development of a village, land
was reserved here for a church and school during the first surveys of
the area in 1829. St Luke's Anglican Church was built in 1867, the
original slab-construction St Patrick's Catholic Church in 1872 and a
school in 1877. Intended as an administrative centre for the district a
village was laid out in 1884-85 as 'The Village of Pokolbin' but became
known as Cessnock later in the decade. That name was transferred to the
town now known as Cessnock in 1908 and the local name, Nulkaba, was
officially adopted in 1927.
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Pottery kilns at Nulkaba
north of Cessnock
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As you drive north
you can see, to the left, just past the cemetery, St Patrick's Catholic
Church (1892) then, to the right, the interesting sight of some large
and unusual-looking pottery kilns (c. 1880). They are located in the
grounds of Potters Tavern.
Simply D'Vine Gallery and Gift Shop is situated at
49-53 Orient St, Nulkaba, tel: (02) 4990 4291.
Rusa Park Zoo
1.5 km north of the kilns is the turnoff into Lomas Lane,
to the right, which takes you a further kilometre to Rusa Park Zoo,
tel: (02) 4990 7714 or (02) 4990 1217. 1.4 km further north along
Branxton Rd is Tandem Skydiving, located at Cessnock Airfield, tel:
(02) 4990 1000.
St John's and Marthaville
Head south-west from Cessnock's main intersection
along Wollombi Rd. The Wollombi-Maitland Rd was originally part of the
Great North Rd, built by 3000 convicts between 1826 and 1834. The first
right is Westmacott St where you will find St John's Anglican Church
(1909) designed by Cyril Blacket. Return to Wollombi Rd and continue
south. Just past the first roundabout, to the right, is a signpost
indicating 'Historic Marthaville' (1889), now an arts and cultural
centre, open Friday to Sunday.
Bellbird
Continue south-west along
Wollombi Rd for 4 km to Bellbird where two collieries once operated. At
the corner of Wollombi Rd and Kendall St is the Bellbird Mining
Disaster Memorial in a small and unremarkable park to the right.
This simple monument stands opposite the site of Bellbird
Colliery where, on Saturday, September the 1st, 1923, explosions and
fires underground killed 20 men and their horses. Another man, John
Brown, the manager at Aberdare, died in the rescue attempt. Working
conditions at the time were very poor. The unionised workforce had
pressed for central rescue stations in the mines but their pleas were
ignored. Some did not even have safety lamps.
25 000 people attended the ensuing mass funeral. Subsequently
the Central Mines Rescue Station was formed.
Unrest continued throughout the 1920s. In 1929 Norman Brown
was shot and killed at Rothbury when police fired their pistols to warn
off thousands of miners protesting against scab labour during a
lock-out. A monument to what has become known as the Rothbury Riots is
located at North Rothbury on the western side of Branxton Rd.
Lookouts
A signpost at the corner
of Kendall St and Wollombi Rd indicates that it is the route to
Bimbadeen scenic lookout. Follow this road, with the mountains dead
ahead, for 4 km. It is then necessary to take a very sharp left turn.
After about another 600 m turn left again through a little gateway with
'Bimbadeen' overhead.
Here you can join the Great North Walk. Sydney Cove is a mere
190 km distant, Newcastle 92 km, the Paxton Hotel 8 km and Pokolbin
Rest Area 9 km. The views are excellent. To the east are a series of
mountains. The tallest, capped by two large television transmitters, is
Mt Sugarloaf where there is another outstanding lookout (see entry on
Newcastle). In between is a very flat
valley with occasional pockets of human habitation. Cessnock is in the
near distance with Kurri Kurri further east and Maitland just
discernible. The Watagan Mountains are to the right (south).
If you do not take the side road to Bimbadeen but
continue along the main road, which becomes gravel after a short
distance, you soon come to a fork. The right path leads up to Mount
Bright Lookout. There is little to indicate its existence. You simply
park your car on the side of the road and walk a short distance to a
good vantage point although these can be hard to locate amidst the
dense tree growth.
Millfield
Return to Wollombi Rd. 7 km
south of Kendall St you will come to the pleasant and peaceful locality
of Millfield. The land here was taken up by ex-convicts Patrick and
Eupheme Dowlan in 1828. When the Great North Road went through the
following year they set up an inn adjacent the thoroughfare. A village
subsequently developed serving farmers and travellers.
Note the road on the left which leads through Paxton to
Ellalong. 700 m beyond this turnoff you will come to the crest of a
small hill where there are two buildings of interest.
The old slab hut to the left was licensed in 1838 as The
Rising Sun Inn. The licensee was Thomas Pendergast. In 1840 it was held
up by bushranger Edward Davis and his gang while Pendergast was being
visited by John McDougall of Wollombi. After being robbed McDougall
received a dozen lashes because of his reputation for being 'over fond
of flogging whilst overseer of an iron gang' during the construction of
the Great North Road. When McDougall's inn at Wollombi closed in 1845
he purchased the Rising Sun which is now a craft gallery and museum of sorts.
St Luke's opposite has an old bell from one of the
oldest and largest properties in the district, Brown Muir. The owners,
Robert (former chief clerk to the Colonial Secretary) and Thomas
Crawford, were amongst the largest landholders in the area (8000
acres).
Further south is the beautiful old village of Wollombi.
Ellalong
and Paxton
Return to Cessnock through Paxton, which grew around
Stanford Main No. 2 Colliery, and Ellalong. After 9 km you will pass
the Paxton Hotel and come to the crest of a small hill where there is
an intersection. A right will take you south into the Congewai Valley,
all of which was once owned by Thomas Crawford. A left turn leads,
after 4 km, back to the Wollombi Rd just south of Bellbird.
This intersection is a good spot to view the rather
attractive Ellalong Swamp. Never known to have run dry these wetlands
are part of Quarrybylong Creek which flows into Congewai Creek. The
mountains in the distance are the Watagans.
If you proceed straight ahead then, after 2 km,
there is another turnoff on the left which also leads back to the
Wollombi Rd, this time through the old mining village of Ellalong,
originally a grant made out to Robert Crawford.
If you do not take this left the road continues on to Heaton
Lookout which is 24 km distant (see entry on Cooranbong).
Tours
Pokolbin
Estate Wine Tour and Adventure Booking Centre offer free information on
the tours available in the area, tel: (02) 4998 7304.
Jump Up Creek Vineyard Tours in Belford provide daily
mini coach tours of the Lower Hunter vineyards. They will pick you up
and return you to your accommodation in Singleton, Maitland, Morpeth,
Cessnock, Pokolbin and Wollombi, tel: (02) 6574 7252 or 019 453 674.
Hunter Vineyard Tours (tel: 02 4991 1659 or
tours@huntervineyardtours.com.au), Wine Country Tours (tel: 02 9484
0477) and Grape Expectations (tel: 015 892 855) offer a similar
service. The first organises transport to and from Newcastle, Maitland
and Cessnock while the latter two organise free Sydney hotel pick-ups.
Hunter Valley Day Tours offer a combined winery and rainforest tour or
a wine and cheese tasting tour with free hotel pick-up (tel: 02 4938 5031).
Hot-air ballooning is provided by Balloon Aloft (tel:
1800 028 568) and Hunter Valley Hot-Air Ballooning (tel: 1800 818 191).
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Tourist Information
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Cessnock City Tourist Board
Aberdare Rd
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4990 4477
Facsimile: (02) 4991 4518
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Motels
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Cessnock Motel
13 Allandale Rd
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4990 2699
Facsimile: (02) 4990 5834
Rating: ***1/2
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Cessnock Vintage Motor Inn
300 Maitland Rd
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4990 4333
Facsimile: (02) 4991 1240
Rating: ***1/2
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Chardonnay-Sky Motel
Lot 210 Allandale Rd
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4991 4812
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Cumberland Motor Inn
57 Cumberland St
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4990 6633
Facsimile: (02) 4991 1619
Rating: ***1/2
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Hunter Valley Motel
30 Allandale Rd
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4990 1722
Facsimile: (02) 4990 3025
Rating: ***
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Hunter Valley Travellers Rest Motel
35 Colliery St
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4991 2355
Facsimile: (02) 4991 2619
Rating: ***
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Hotels
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Aberdare Tavern
198 Vincent St
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4990 1014
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Australia Hotel
136 Wollombi Rd
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4990 1256
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Bellbird Hotel
388 Wollombi Rd
Bellbird
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4990 1094
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Black Opal Hotel
216 Vincent St
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4990 1070
Rating: *
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Caledonia Hotel
110 Aberdaire Rd
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4990 1212
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Cessnock Hotel
234 Wollombi Rd
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4990 1002
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Neath Hotel, (National Trust)
Cessnock Rd
Neath
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4930 4270
Rating: *
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Royal Oak Hotel
201 Vincent St
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4990 2366
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Wentworth Hotel
36 Vincent St
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4990 1364
Rating: **
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Bed & Breakfast/Guesthouses
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Cessnock Heritage Inn Bed & Breakfast
167 Vincent St
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4991 2744
Facsimile: (02) 4991 2720
Rating: ****
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Colliery House Bed & Breakfast
Lot 393 Colliery St
Neath
Cessnock
NSW
2326
Telephone: (02) 4930 8286
Facsimile: (02) 4930 8286
Rating: ****
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Danica House Bed & Breakfast
27 Orient St
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4991 4893
Rating: ****
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Greta Main Payoffice Guesthouse
Lot 12 Wollombi Rd
Greta Main
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4998 1703
Facsimile: (02) 4998 1715
Rating: ****
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Splinters Guesthouse
617 Hermitage Rd
Pokolbin
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 6574 7118
Facsimile: (02) 6574 7280
Rating: ****1/2
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Cottages & Cabins
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Splinters Guesthouse
617 Hermitage Rd
Pokolbin
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 6574 7118
Facsimile: (02) 6574 7280
Rating: ****1/2
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Caravan Parks
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Cessnock Wine Country Caravan Park
Allandale-Branxton & Pokolbin Rds
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4990 5819
Facsimile: (02) 4991 2944
Rating: **1/2
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Valley View Cessnock Carapark
Mt View Rd
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4990 2573
Facsimile: (02) 4990 2573
Rating: ****
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Southwood Park Caravillageš
Carrs Rd
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4930 4565
Rating: ***1/2
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Restaurants
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Amicos Restaurants
138 Wollombi Rd
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4991 1995
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Black Opal Hotel
216 Vincent St
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4990 1070
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Caledonia Hotel
110 Aberdaire Rd
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4990 1212
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Cessnock Ex-Services Club
201 Vincent St
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4991 1884
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Cessnock Hotel
234 Wollombi St
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4990 1002
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Corky's Restaurant
4 Wollombi Rd
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4991 6088
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Cumberland Motor Inn Restaurant
57 Cumberland St
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4990 6633
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Edward's Take-away
Cessnock Plaza
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4990 6483
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Kurrajong Restaurant
234 Wollombi Rd
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4991 4414
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La Cucina regionale d'Italia
Lovedale Rd
Lovedale
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4930 7153
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Lee Ho Restaurant
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4991 2288
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Mojo's on Wilderness
Lot 82, Wilderness Rd
Lovedale
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4930 7244
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Neath Hotel, (National Trust)
Cessnock Rd
Neath
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4930 4270
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Old Wine Bar Brasserie
4 Wollombi Rd
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4991 6088
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Poppethead Restaurant
19 Cessnock Rd
Kitchener
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4990 1560
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Potters Brewery
Allandale Rd
Nulkaba
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4991 7922;
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Reggio's Restaurant
57 Cumberland St
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4990 6633
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Royal Oak Hotel
201 Vincent St
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4990 2366
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Stetsons Steakhouse & Saloon BBQ
4 Wollombi Rd
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4991 4700
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The Courtyard Restaurant
35 Colliery Rd
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4991 2355
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Wentworth Hotel
36 Vincent St
Cessnock
NSW
2325
Telephone: (02) 4990 1364
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