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The Taroom
Hotel
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Taroom
Small
rural service centre.
Taroom is a small service centre located 464 km west
of Brisbane via the Warrego and Leichhardt Highways.
The first European into the area was Ludwig
Leichhardt who not only passed through but actually carved his initials
in the old coolibah tree which stands right in the middle of the main
street. Not surprisingly the town sees the Leichhardt tree as one of
its premier attractions. On this tree, on his dubious and ill-fated
expedition from Jimbour to Port Essington, Leichhardt carved L L 44
(Ludwig Leichhardt 1844).
Unfortunately the bark began to grow over the marking and a
worker was sent along to chip the bark away so that everyone could see
the L L 44. The worker, so the local story goes, didn't quite
understand his instructions, took to his job just a little too
enthusiastically, and managed to chip the L L 44 off as well.
Today all that is left is a very healthy, if unmarked, tree
and a large photograph of the original tree (in its proper condition)
on the wall of the Westpac Bank.
Apart from carving the tree Leichhardt, when he did
finally get back to Sydney in early 1846, declared that the countryside
around Taroom was magnificent and, within months, there was a grab for
land. Even before Leichhardt's return to Sydney some of the local land
had been taken up. As early as November 1845 a station named Taroon was
being leased. However with the news of the richness of the soils the
area boomed.
By the 1850s there was a popular camping site near the Dawson
River which was known as Bonners Knob. This was the precursor of the
town. In 1856, with the arrival of the post office, Bonners Knob was
officially changed to Taroom which was an Aboriginal word probably
meaning 'pomegranate'.
It was during the 1850s that the area around
Taroom gained its reputation as one of the bloodiest killing fields in
Australia. The local Aborigines, the Yeeman, fought for their land
against the encroachment of European graziers. They fought with such
determination that they were eventually wiped out. And in the process a
man named Billy Fraser almost certainly killed over 100 members of the
tribe making him the greatest mass murderer in Australian history.
The story of this sorry chapter in Australian history
starts with the arrival of Andrew Scott in the area in 1853. Scott
established Hornet Bank Station in the Upper Dawson some 40 km west of
the modern day site of Taroom. The Yeeman started killing Scott's sheep
and the grazier called in the hated native police to deal with 'the menace'.
In 1856 Billy Fraser took over the lease of Hornet
Bank. On 26 October 1857, while Fraser was away in Ipswich, the Yeeman
attacked Hornet Bank, killed Fraser's mother, raped and murdered his
three sisters, killed his three brothers, and disposed of three other
people who were working on the station. The result of this attack was a
series of reprisals which resulted in a period of virtual frontier war
which saw Aborigines shot at random. A woman was shot in the main
street of a nearby town. An Aboriginal jockey was shot at a race track.
It was random slaughter and within a decade it had wiped the Yeeman out.
Today Hornet Bank station remains much as it was in the
1850s. Nearby there is a cairn to the memory of those whites on Hornet
Bank who were killed by the Yeeman. To visit the grave site you should
contact the Taroom Historical Society who will, in turn, get permission
from the Hornet Bank station manager. The graves, and a memorial to
Andrew Scott and his family, are located on a rough flat some distance
from the Hornet Bank homestead. There is no real road to the site.
Things to see:
Taroom & District Historical Society
Clearly signposted in the main street is the Taroom &
District Historical Society Museum (it is one block from the post
office) which, like so many good folk museums, is a repository for the
artefacts of white settlement in the area.
Ludwig Leichhardt Memorial
The town's bicentennial project was a memorial to
Ludwig Leichhardt (a large sandstone slab with three bronze plaques)
which is located in the Ludwig Leichhardt park in Yaldwyn Street east
of the Leichhardt tree.
Taroom Hotel
One of the most impressive buildings in town is the
superb Taroom Hotel on the bottom corner of the main street. This
marvellous example of traditional Queensland pub architecture looks
like a pub out of a Ken Maynard cartoon, and is definitely worth a visit.
Police Lagoons
Some 15 km north of the town the Leichhardt Highway
crosses Palm Tree Creek with its rare Livistona cycad palms. On the
Taroom side of the crossing are a chain of lagoons known as the 'Police
Lagoons' because of their proximity to where the local contingent of
native police had their barracks. The area is maintained as a picnic
spot by the Taroom Shire Council.
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Tourist Information
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Taroom Shire Council Chambers
Yaldwyn St
Taroom
QLD
4420
Telephone: (07) 4627 3211
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Motels
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Cattle Camp Motel
Taroom St
Taroom
QLD
4420
Telephone: (07) 4627 3412
Rating: ***
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Hotels
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Leichhardt Hotel/Motel
Dawson St
Taroom
QLD
4420
Telephone: (07) 4627 3137
Rating: **
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Taroom Hotel
Yaldwyn St
Taroom
QLD
4420
Telephone: (07) 4627 3408
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Bed & Breakfast/Guesthouses
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Bauhinia Park Guesthouse
(22 Km SW of Taroom)
Taroom
QLD
4420
Telephone: (07) 4627 3493
Rating: ***
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Caravan Parks
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Taroom Caravan Park
Short St
Taroom
QLD
4420
Telephone: (07) 4627 3218
Rating: *
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