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The countryside around Moss Vale
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Moss Vale
Major centre in the Southern Highlands
Moss Vale is located 124 km south-west of Sydney
via the F5 Freeway and 672 m above sea-level. It is a quiet country
town of 5690 people (1991 figures) which functions as a service and
administrative centre of Wingecarribee Shire. Like many Southern
Highlands towns the climate and the planting of European trees combine
to create an English village feel.
The area was once occupied by the Dharawal Aborigines,
though they had, in effect, been driven off or killed off by the 1870s.
The first European party to investigate the district was that of
ex-convict John Wilson in 1798. They had been sent by Governor Hunter
with the object of accumulating factual data about the southlands to
discourage convicts who were escaping and heading south in the belief
that China was but 150 miles away. Wilson had been living with the
Aborigines for some years and had almost certainly been in the area
prior to the expedition. His party were the first Europeans to sight
the koala and lyrebird (at present-day Bargo).
Over the next decade there were minor forays into the
district by the likes of John Warby and a botanical collector for
Joseph Banks named George Caley. The Hume brothers, probably in the
company of their uncle John Kennedy, investigated the area in 1814.
With pasturage around Sydney becoming scarce John Oxley and his
stockmen drove some cattle into the area the following year.
In 1817 Charles Throsby, Hamilton Hume, Joseph Wild and
others explored the country west of Sutton Forest. They returned in
1818 with surveyor-general James Meehan en route to Jervis Bay passing
through the eastern portion of what is now Moss Vale. The following
year Throsby and Wild were back again en route to Bathurst. Governor
Macquarie awarded Throsby 1000 acres for his efforts and made him
superintendent over the construction of a road from Picton to the
Goulburn Plains. Macquarie visited the construction site and Throsby's
land grant at Bong Bong, just north of present-day Moss Vale, in 1820.
It was the governor who suggested the name 'Throsby Park'.
A site for the establishment of a village to be called Bong
Bong was surveyed in 1821. It became the first European settlement on
the Southern Highlands but was never proclaimed, perhaps because the
flow of the Wingecarribee was uncertain at the townsite and building
material was scarce. Throsby's servant Joseph Wild, who also
contributed greatly to the exploration of the area, received 100 acres
adjacent Throsby's. His hut was located adjacent the Wingecarribee
River near where the Bong Bong Bridge now stands. A police building and
huts for the accommodation of a military detachment were also amongst
the first buildings, though the most popular was the Argyle Inn.
However, Bong Bong was short-lived. It was surveyed in 1821
but the road to Bong Bong was unpopular as it entailed crossing the
Mittagong Range and travellers preferred the route via Berrima to the
west. Hence the village did not prosper. In 1837, as a sign of its
demise, the post office was moved to Berrima. All that remains today is
Christ Church, consecrated in 1845 after the village had ceased to
exist.
A visitor to the future site of Moss Vale in 1853 observed
that there were five slab and bark structures and wheat being grown.
The subdivision of land around the position of the prospective railway
station began in 1864. At the time the only inhabitant in the immediate
vicinity was Jeremy ('Jemmy') Moss, who was one of Charles Throsby's
herdsmen. It was from him that the town's name derives.
In anticipation of the railway line the Moss Vale Hotel was
erected in 1864 or 1865. Instead of following the route of the main
road to Berrima the line terminated where Moss Vale now stands. When
the station was built it was called Sutton Forest while the post
office, also established in 1867, was called Moss Vale. The nascent
township's first store also opened that year, the first school in 1869,
the first bank branch and newspaper in 1874 and a police station in
1877.
The population increased from 134 to 570 between 1871 and
1881. The village prospered in the late 1870s and 1880s for a number of
reasons: it lay on the road to Robertson, it grew as the main service
centre for the dairying, market gardening, and sheep and cattle raising
district, a railway line to Port Kembla was laid for the transportation
of the area's stores of limestone, and, like other Southern Highlands
town, it became a popular holiday resort when the trains enabled
wealthy Sydneysiders to discover the beautiful scenery and healthy
climate. This trend was encouraged when Mrs Throsby removed to the
original cottage of Throsby Park and leased the main homestead to the
Governor of NSW, the Earl of Belmore, thus advertising the desirability
of the location for tourists.
The years from 1880 to 1888 saw churches built by the main
denominations - Presbyterian (1880), Anglican (1881), Methodist and
Catholic (both 1888) - while the present post office building was
erected 1890-91. Moss Vale was declared a municipality in 1888.
Things to see:
Moss Vale Visitors Centre and Historic Walk
The visitors' centre has leaflets outlining an historic
walk.
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Leighton Gardens in the
centre of Moss Vale
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A Walk around
Moss Vale
Leighton Gardens in Argyle St (the main thoroughfare) is
a pleasant spot for a picnic. There is a band rotunda. In spring and
autumn the trees in the park are spectacular.
Further up Argyle St, on the western side of the road, is the
old Dominican convent - an impressive building with a row of elm trees
leading to the front portal which looks like it has been lifted out of
rural France and placed in the middle of Moss Vale. It is now Aurora
College. In recent years the convent has changed function a number of times.
Just past the convent turn right into Waite St (Berrima
Rd) and on the first corner (Browley St) is the Anglican Church, built
in the 1880s but much altered. Turn left into Browley St and the
Presbyterian Church is to the right (1879). Also in Browley St is
'Kalourgan', thought to have been the residence of Mother Mary McKillop
(Australia's first official saint) for a short time. The Catholic
Church is in Garrett St (head north off the main street into Lackey Rd
and take the first left).
The Southern Highlands Regional Gallery can be found in
Railway House, Argyle St. It is open from Fridays to Sundays from 10-4.
There are two antique shops on Argyle St - Clock Tower Antiques at 249
Argyle St in the old post office building - and the Argyle Street
Galleries at 582 Argyle St. The antiquarian bookshop, The Book Gallery,
is at 551 Argyle St.
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Throsby Park
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Throsby Park
The most impressive residence from this time is Throsby
Park, now administered by the New South Wales National Parks and
Wildlife Service. It is an impressive colonial Georgian residence set
on land granted to Dr Charles Throsby in 1819 in recognition of his
pioneering work exploring and opening up the South Coast and Southern
Highlands.
Throsby built a cottage on the land in 1823 for his nephew as
he preferred to remain at his home in Glenfield and had no children of
his own. The nephew, another Charles, and his wife Elizabeth built
Throsby Park in 1834. Elizabeth was one of only four people not killed
during a Maori attack on a cargo vessel in New Zealand in 1809 when she
was two. The survivors were rescued by Alexander Berry, a friend of her
father. She was only 16 when she married Charles. She bore him 17
children and lived to be 83. Her great-great granddaughter still lives
in the rear section of the residence and runs Throsby Park Riding
School, which operates from the stables (c.1836), contact (02) 4868 1017.
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The main lounge room at
Throsby Park
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Throsby Park is
largely unchanged and retains much of the original furniture, cedar
joinery and fittings. It is a huge, one-storey, 27-room house built of
locally-quarried stone. Wings extend from the main block to form a
courtyard enclosed by a separate kitchen. There are cellars, servants'
attics, six-panelled cedar doors, marble and stone fireplaces as well
as a grand drawing room and dining room. The 1823 cottage is also still
standing and there are farm buildings, including the sandstock-brick
barn (c.1828), which was formerly used as a shearing shed and is now a
private residence. Guided tours for groups can be organised by ringing
(02) 4887 7270 or (02) 4868 2721. The general public's only chance to
see the homestead and grounds is during open days in Tulip Time
(September-October). Ring (1800) 656 176 for more exact details.
To get there head east of Argyle St along the
Illawarra Highway for 1.5 km and turn left into Throsby Park Rd.
Tudor House Preparatory School
Further down the Illawarra Highway, to the left, is
the famous Tudor House preparatory school, the primary school for boys
who usually continue their studies at The Kings School at Parramatta.
Among the school¹s most famous old boys was the novelist, and Nobel
Prize winner, Patrick White, who wrote of the school in his
autobiography, Flaws in the Glass: 'The school to which they sent me
was far enough from Sydney to foment terror in the heart of a timid,
introspective child, anyway in the beginning. It was patronised by the
grazier class and Sydney families with social pretensions. The climate
was bracing. The boys, like those of any school, were said to love
everything about it. The building was a mansion in the Thames Valley
Tudor style favoured by the Australian rich in the early part of the century.'
Other Attractions in the Area
Moss Vale Golf Club is in Arthur St, contact (02) 4869
2091. They also have a lovely guest house for holidaymakers known as
The Dormie House, contact (02) 4868 1014.
Just north of Moss Vale is the site of the first
European settlement in the Southern Highlands, Bong Bong. To the right,
before Bong Bong Bridge is Christ Church, consecrated in 1845 after the
village had ceased to exist. It survived because it was supported by
people in the district and is still used today. The cemetery is
historic and contains descendants of Throsby's nephew, as well as the
tomb of Joseph Wild.
Cross the Bong Bong Bridge over the Wingecarribee River.
On the right, behind a white gate in the pine trees, is a cairn which
marks the site where the first settlement on the Southern Highlands
stood.
Just past the cairn is a branch road to the right which leads
to Cecil Hoskins Nature Reserve on the banks of Bong Bong Reservoir.
This wetlands site has several walking tracks, as well as picnic and
toilet facilities. There are plenty of waterfowl, as well as water rats
and the occasional platypus. Kangaroos and wallabies can be seen on the
eastern side of the reserve which was named after a prominent scion of
the Hoskins family, principal figures in the foundation of Australia's
iron-and-steel industry. Cecil Hoskins, one-time chairman and joint
managing director of AIS, formerly lived at Moss Vale. There are
leaflets concerning the animal life in the area available from the
Fitzroy Falls Visitors' Centre, contact (02) 4887 7270.
Further north on Moss Vale Rd, to the left, just north
of the Bowral Flight Centre, is historic Briars Inn, originally the
Royal Oak Hotel, built c.1845. This two-storey brick building was owned
by the Throsby family until 1943 and was then renovated. One of Charles
Throsby's children lived there until 1891.
A short distance south of Moss Vale, Oldbury Rd heads
north off the Illawarra Highway. Therein lies Oldbury homestead, a
two-storey stone Georgian house built in 1828 by James Atkinson on land
he was granted in 1818. It has a timber Doric portico and cantilevered
timber stairway with a separate kitchen and cellar.
Another way to see the surrounding countryside is to
take a ride on The Cockatoo Run, a leisurely train trip on olden-style
carriages (pulled by steam train except in exceptional circumstances)
to Robertson or down to the lllawarra. It operates from Saturday to
Tuesdays and on public holidays, contact (1800) 64 3801.
The Wangaruka Berry Farm, on Nowra Rd, has fresh
berries, jams, pies and home-made ice-cream in season (December to
April), contact (02) 4887 7278.
The Moss Vale Agricultural Show is held in March. The
largest markets of the Southern Highlands are held on the fourth Sunday
of each month at the Moss Vale showgrounds on the Illawarra Highway.
Highlands Trips and Treks, P.O. Box 298, Bundanoon
NSW 2578. Phone/Fax 02 4883 6523 or Mobile 015 244 714 and email
httreks@acenet.com.au offer 4WD tours and bushwalks in the Southern
Highlands and will pick you up from your accommodation, be it in Sydney
or the highlands.
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Tourist Information
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Tourism Southern Highlands
62-70 Main St
Mittagong
Moss Vale
NSW
2577
Telephone: (02) 4871 2888, 1300 657 559
Facsimile: (02) 4871 3515
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Motels
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Bong Bong Motel
238 Argyle St
Moss Vale
NSW
2577
Telephone: (02) 4868 1033
Facsimile: (02) 4869 2393
Rating: ***
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Golf Ball Motel
Cnr Arthur & Spring Sts
Moss Vale
NSW
2577
Telephone: (02) 4868 1511
Facsimile: (02) 4868 1215
Rating: **
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Hotels
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Central Hotel
Argyle St
Moss Vale
NSW
2577
Telephone: (02) 4868 1921
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Jemmy Moss Inn
Argyle St
Moss Vale
NSW
2577
Telephone: (02) 4868 1721
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Moss Vale Hotel
Argyle St
Moss Vale
NSW
2577
Telephone: (02) 4868 1007
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Bed & Breakfast/Guesthouses
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Heronswood House
165 Argyle St
Moss Vale
NSW
2577
Telephone: (02) 4869 1477
Facsimile: (02) 4869 4079
Rating: ****
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The Dormie House Guesthouse
Arthur St
Moss Vale
NSW
2577
Telephone: (02) 4868 1800
Facsimile: (02) 4868 1258
Rating: ***1/2
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Caravan Parks
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Moss Vale Village Park
Willow Dve
Moss Vale
NSW
2577
Telephone: (02) 4868 1099
Facsimile: (02) 4868 1099
Rating: ***
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Restaurants
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Golden Dragon Chinese Restaurant
Argyle St
Moss Vale
NSW
2577
Telephone: (02) 4868 1333
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Golf Ball Motel
Cnr Arthur & Spring Sts
Moss Vale
NSW
2577
Telephone: (02) 4868 1511
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Hong Kong Restaurant
443 Argyle St
Moss Vale
NSW
2577
Telephone: (02) 4868 2208
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Mexican Madness
494 Argyle St
Moss Vale
NSW
2577
Telephone: (02) 4869 1800
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Moss Vale Services Club
Cnr Argyle & Yarrawa Sts
Moss Vale
NSW
2577
Telephone: (02) 4868 1333
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New Happy Garden Restaurant
Old Argyle Square
Moss Vale
NSW
2577
Telephone: (02) 48 69 1065
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Peking Restaurant
Moss Vale Mall
Moss Vale
NSW
2577
Telephone: (02) 4868 2366
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Pinky's Pizza Ribs On The Run
Willow Dve
Moss Vale
NSW
2577
Telephone: (02) 4869 1313
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Sattahip Thai Restaurant
Central Hotel
Moss Vale
NSW
2577
Telephone: (02) 4869 1891
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Seafood Affair Licensed Restaurant
515 Argyle St
Moss Vale
NSW
2577
Telephone: (02) 4868 1726
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The Argyle St Bistro
Argyle St
Moss Vale
NSW
2577
Telephone: (02) 4868 1599
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The Bunker Restaurant
Arthur St
Moss Vale
NSW
2577
Telephone: (02) 4868 1511
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Cafés
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Cafe Graziella
348 Argyle St
Moss Vale
NSW
2577
Telephone: (02) 4868 1711
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Cafe Pronti
Shop 11 Moss Vale Mall
Moss Vale
NSW
2577
Telephone: (02) 4868 2997
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Nancy's Place
486 Argyle St
Moss Vale
NSW
2577
Telephone: (02) 4868 1429
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New Astor Cafe
312 Argyle St
Moss Vale
NSW
2577
Telephone: (02) 4868 2972
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Skeets Refreshment Room
Platform 2, Railway Station
Moss Vale
NSW
2577
Telephone: (02) 4869 1088
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Valley Spot Cafe
Kirkham St
Moss Vale
NSW
2577
Telephone: (02) 4868 3040
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