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Wangi Falls, Litchfield Park
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Batchelor
(including Rum Jungle and Litchfield Park)
The entrance to one of the Northern Territory's
most beautiful and untouched parks.
Batchelor lies 98 km south of Darwin. It came to
prominence with the discovery of uranium at Rum Jungle. Today it is the
entrance to the magnificent Litchfield Park with its series of
spectacular spring-fed creeks and falls.
The town was named after the South Australian Labour
politician Egerton Lee Batchelor (1865-1911) who became Minister for
the Northern Territory in 1911. The town was of little consequence
until it became a large Allied airforce base during World War II. Prior
to that it has seen brief periods of mining activity and at one point,
in order to try and encourage settlement of the area, the South
Australian government had given away blocks of land. At another time it
was a centre for market gardening when Chinese gardeners moved into the
area.
Batchelor's moment of glory occurred in 1949 when Jack White
discovered uranium at Rum Jungle. Mining in the area began in 1952 and
the town grew rapidly during the early 1950s. The mine was closed in
1963 and the uranium treatment plant closed down in 1971.
Today, with a population of 358, the town's survives on
tourism (particularly as a major access point to Litchfield Park) and
the Batchelor TAFE, a unique residential tertiary college specifically
catering for Aboriginal students.
Things to see:
Rum Jungle
11 km to the north of Batchelor is the area known as
Rum Jungle. The origin of the name 'Rum Jungle' is unclear. There are
at least three stories, equally hilarious, vying for credibility. One
argues that the area got its name because a group of teamsters, taking
rum to the miners at Pine Creek, managed to drink 80 gallons of their
cargo while passing through the area. Another, as recounted by Jessie
Litchfield in her Far-North Memories, suggests that the area got its
name 'because a party of government officials once went there on
important departmental business. They were lost among their empty
bottles, and a relief party was sent out to show the way to go home'. A
version recounted by the Northern Territory Historical Society claims
that the local hotel keeper once ran out of all liquor apart from rum
when there were a lot of campers around. The campers were all forced to
drink rum leading to one man remarking 'This is a rum place to camp
at'. Either way Rum Jungle acquired its name through some incident
where rum was drunk to excess.
Rum Jungle came into existence in 1872 when the
Overland Telegraph construction party found gold at Yam Creek. The
first miners arrived in the area after trekking down the road made by
the telegraph parties. It subsequently became a popular resting place
for teamsters because the area had good feed and water. In 1874 a Mr
Lithgow built The Rum Jungle Hotel out of rough timber and sheets of
stringy bark. The completion of the railway from Darwin to Pine Creek
led to the demise of the hotel which was closed down in 1889. During
its brief fifteen year history the hotel saw one teamster killed when
he accidentally drank carbolic acid thinking it was rum, another
teamster was killed after an argument about a game of cards, and in
1884 the teamsters massacred an undetermined number of local Aborigines
(men, women and children) to revenge the deaths of four white
prospectors at the Daly River copper mine.
The town, thinly disguised as Black Adder Creek, appears
in Xavier Herbert's novel Capricornia. Herbert worked in the area as a
railway fettler in the 1920s.
Rum Jungle Mine is not open to visitors.
Apparently the town was revitalised for tourists but
some 4WD 'hoons' drove in and damaged the area so it was closed and
locked. There are moves by the Batchelor Tourist Association to open
Rum Jungle to conducted tours. For further information ask as the Rum
Jungle Motor Inn in Batchelor.
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Magnetic Anthills near
Litchfield Park
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Litchfield Park
The area's newest tourist attraction is Litchfield Park
which, if its roads are upgraded and its development controlled, could
well rival Kakadu. Certainly its falls, and the swimming holes at the
base of the falls, are more accessible and equally as attractive as
those at Jim Jim in Kakadu. Already the Park, which is only 2 hours
drive from Darwin, is becoming a popular weekend drive for the locals.
The picnic area at Wangi Falls, with its large natural pool, its
interesting walking trails, and its twin falls, is an ideal place for a
day out. There is a real feeling of being in a tropical paradise. The
vegetation around the falls is thick and luxuriant and the water is
beautifully clear.
The most up to date information, particularly as far as
roads and access are concerned, is available on the Litchfield Park
brochure produced by the Conservation Commission of the Northern
Territory.
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Motels
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Rum Jungle Motor Inn
Rum Jungle Rd
Batchelor
NT
0845
Telephone: (08) 8976 0123
Facsimile: (08) 8976 0230
Rating: **
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Hotels
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Bark Hut Inn
Annaburroo
Batchelor
NT
0845
Telephone: (08) 8976 8988
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Lodges & Chalets
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Lake Bennett Wilderness Lodge
Stuart Hwy
Batchelor
NT
0845
Telephone: (08) 8976 0960
Facsimile: (08) 8976 0960
Rating: ***
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Caravan Parks
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Banyan Tree Caravan Park
Windmill Rd
Batchelor
NT
0845
Telephone: (08) 8976 0330
Facsimile: (08) 8976 0330
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Batchelor Caravillage
Rum Jungle Rd
Batchelor
NT
0845
Telephone: (08) 8976 0166
Rating: **
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Coomalie Caravan Park
Stuart Hwy
Batchelor
NT
0845
Telephone: (08) 8976 0155
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Restaurants
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Rum Jungle Motor Inn
Rum Jungle Rd
Batchelor
NT
0845
Telephone: (08) 8976 0123
Facsimile: (08) 8976 0230
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