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Looking over Queenstown from
the hills above the
town
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Queenstown
Copper
and gold mining town set in a surreal landscape
Queenstown, its hills stripped of timber to fire
the local copper smelters and permanently denuded by the noisome
sulphurous fumes which belch from the smelters, is a surreal nightmare.
Its river is polluted. It has the appearance of a deserted moonscape.
Yet beyond the reaches of its devastation lie undulating hills covered
in the morning mists. In winter its skies are still heavy with dark,
low clouds which are such a distinctive part of the climate of the
western coast.
By any measure Queenstown is one of the wonders of the
world. It is a profound reminder of humanity's capacity to destroy and
pollute and, in that sense, it deserves to be seen by everyone.
Located 256 km west of Hobart and 180 km south of Burnie,
Queenstown is a copper mining town. The area was first explored by
Charles Gould in the 1860s but its inhospitable environment deterred
settlement and it wasn't until 1881, when Cornelius Lynch found gold in
a creek near Queen River, that prospectors and miners began to move
into the area. Many of the miners came from the Pieman River diggings
to the north. They travelled down the coast to the port at Strahan and
walked inland to the diggings.
Two years later three miners - Bill and Mick
McDonough and Steve Karlson - discovered the rocky outcrop known as
Iron Blow. The find was opened in 1883 and by 1888 the Mount Lyell Gold
Mining Co. had been formed. It operated out of a town called Penghana.
The area has been mined continuously over the past 110 years. There was
little alluvial gold and consequently heavy equipment was required. An
eight stamp battery was brought in in 1889 but the gold deposits had
been exhausted by 1891. It was then that the mining company turned its
attentions to copper. A new company, Mount Lyell Mining Co, was formed
and the first smelters, created by an American metallurgist Robert Carl
Sticht, were in operation by 1895. The following year Penghana was
destroyed by fire and a new settlement at the present site of
Queenstown was established.
The copper smelters wreaked havoc on the
surrounding landscape. Not only did the sulphur fumes kill off plants
in the area but the eleven furnaces required vast quantities of timber
and the mining company simply cut down the forests to fuel the fires.
It has been estimated that hundreds of men were employed as timber
cutters and that over 3 million tonnes of timber were cut down between
1896 and 1923. At its peak the furnaces were consuming 2,040 tonnes of
wood each week. The combination of timber felling, the sulphur fumes
and the heavy rainfall in the area (which washed away the top soil)
ensured that by 1900 the whole valley looked like a desert.
The establishment of Queenstown in 1896 saw the
construction of a hotel and a general store. Three years later a
railway from Strahan (it is located on the coast 41 km away) was
completed and in 1901 the Empire Hotel, which still stands, was
completed. It was a suitable symbol of the town's increased prosperity.
By 1903 the local mining companies (Mount Lyell and North
Lyell) had combined and Queenstown had become the area's major mining
centre. By 1914 a hydro-electric scheme had been completed at Lake
Margaret and by 1928 a major refinery had been opened. The first road
(prior to that all traffic had been by sea from Macquarie Harbour) to
Hobart was opened in 1932.
Mount Lyell Mines continued to operate the mine until
1972 when they were taken over by the Renison Gold Company. In 1995 the
mine became part of Copper Mines of Tasmania (CMT - Mt Lyell). It still
operates today but is always in danger of fluctuating prices in the
world copper market.
In recent times there has been an argument about the
reforestation of the hills around Queenstown. Some locals, quite
correctly, have claimed that the denuded hills are a tourist
attraction. Others have felt that the rainforest which characterises
the area should be encouraged to regrow.
Things to see:
Visitor Information Centre
Lyell Tours on Duffield Street operate as the Tas
Visitor Information Centre. They can be contacted on (03) 6471 2388.
Fax: (03) 6471 2222. They can arrange tours of the mines and advise of
trips around the town and the hinterland.
There is an independently owned and operated site devoted to
Queenstown at http://www.queenstowntasmania.com. Check it out.
Copper Mines of Tasmania (CMT - Mt Lyell) - Tours
Lyell Tours operate a number of tours of the mines.
There is a surface tour (lasting about 1 hour) which runs at 9.15 a.m.
and 4.00 p.m. and the underground tour, lasting 3 1/2 hours starts at
8.30 a.m. and 1.30 p.m. There are strict controls on the underground
tour. It cannot take children under the age of 12 and it caters from
groups between 2 and 6. It is wise to book for the tours in the summer
months. Contact (03) 6471 2388. Fax: (03) 6471 2222.
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The monument at Queenstown
with the Empire Hotel in the background
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Mt Lyell No
3 Engine at the Miners Siding (a Bicentennial Project)
The first railway in the area travelled from Strahan
to Queenstown and was opened in 1896. It used a rack and pinion system
and was known as the ABT. This historic ABT engine, which is now
located opposite the Gallery Museum and near the Queen River, is a
vital part of the town's heritage. It is part of a Bicentennial
Diorama. At periodic intervals a strategically located pair of loud
speakers let out a loud toot-toot and then proceed to make steam engine
noises. The Engine has now been restored, along with the Mt Lyell No 1
Engine that was housed at the West Coast Pioneer Museum at Zeehan, as
part of the Rebuilding of the ABT Railway as a tourist railway, and
both are now working on the re-built line. The Miners siding site is
soon to be re-developed and its main display item will be a Jumbo
Underground Drill Rig.
Historic Walk
There is a brochure titled 'The Walkabout Queenstown'
published by the Project Queenstown Committee. The town is now a
classified historic town and it is not surprising that the brochure
lists 25 locations (all within easy walking distance of each other)
which take the visitor past most of the town's significant buildings.
Empire Hotel
At its height Queenstown was home to 14 hotels. The
Empire, at 2 Orr Street, is one of the finest still standing. Completed
in 1901 it has a beautiful handmade blackwood staircase.
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The Galley Museum
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Galley Museum
Located in Queenstown's first brick hotel, the
Imperial (1898) (corner of Driffield and Sticht Streets), the Galley
Museum was established by Eric Thomas. As the brochure explains: 'there
are in excess of 800 photographs displayed in seven rooms. All have
been collected by Mr Thomas with a great amount of detail typed under
each photo. The photos cover the history of the West Coast from the
establishment of Mt Bischoff at Waratah to the development of
Queenstown and Strahan.'
Around Queenstown
Views of the Valley
No visit to Queenstown is complete without getting
some kind of overview of the damage done to the valley. The best
vantage points are on the Queenstown-Hobart road which winds down into
the valley and offers spectacular views of the devastation. The other
popular lookout is known as Spion Kop and is located in the centre of
town - follow the signs on Hunter Street.
Gormanston
Gormanston had a
population of 1,760 in 1901. Today there are about ten families still
living in this historic mining town. Located 6 km from Queenstown (ask
at Lyell Tours for directions) it was the original mining settlement
being established in 1881 by miners and growing rapidly with the
discovery of Iron Blow. In 1884 the first post office on Tasmania's
west coast was built here and in 1897 it was so important that it was
the base for North Lyell Copper Co.
Linda
Once a prosperous mining town
Linda is now a ghost town. It is located 8 km from Queenstown and is
well worth a visit by people interested in seeing how towns, once they
have outlived their usefulness, simply die. Linda was the site of a
serious underground mining disaster when, in 1912, a fire killed 42
miners. Its last hotel, the Royal, closed in 1952.
Lake Margaret Power Station
Australia's second oldest working hydro-electricity
station (the one at Moorina is older) lies north of Queenstown in the
Yolande River Valley (ask at Tourist Information for directions). It
was completed in 1914 and still contains machinery from that period.
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Tourist Information
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Lyell Tours
1 Driffield St
Queenstown
TAS
7467
Telephone: (03) 6471 2388
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Motels
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Mt Lyell Motor Inn
1 Orr St
Queenstown
TAS
7467
Telephone: (03) 6471 1888
Rating: ***
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Queenstown Motor Lodge
54 Orr St
Queenstown
TAS
7467
Telephone: (03) 6471 1866
Rating: ***
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Westcoaster Motor Inn
Batchelor St
Queenstown
TAS
7467
Telephone: (03) 6471 1033
Rating: ****
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Silver Hills Motel
Penghana Rd
Queenstown
TAS
7467
Telephone: (03) 6471 1755
Facsimile: (03) 6471 1452
Rating: ***
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Goldrush Motor Inn
Batchelor St
Queenstown
TAS
7467
Telephone: (03) 6471 1005
Facsimile: (03) 6471 1084
Rating: ***
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Hotels
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Commercial Hotel
Driffield St
Queenstown
TAS
7467
Telephone: (03) 6471 1511
Facsimile: (03) 6471 1826
Rating: ***
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Empire Hotel
2 Orr St
Queenstown
TAS
7467
Telephone: (03) 6471 1699
Facsimile: (03) 6471 1788
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Mt Lyell Motor Inn
1 Orr St
Queenstown
TAS
7467
Telephone: (03) 6471 1888
Rating: ***
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Bed & Breakfast/Guesthouses
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Mountain View Holiday Lodge Bed & Breakfast
1 Penghana Rd
Queenstown
TAS
7467
Telephone: (03) 6471 1163
Facsimile: (03) 6471 1306
Rating: **
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Penghana Guesthouse
32 The Esplanade
Queenstown
TAS
7467
Telephone: (03) 6471 2560
Facsimile: (03) 6471 1535
Rating: ****
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Apartments
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Pioneers Retreat Holiday Apts
Batchelor St
Queenstown
TAS
7467
Telephone: (03) 6471 3033 or 1800 064 977
Rating: ***
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Cottages & Cabins
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Lyell Cottage
5 Preston St
Queenstown
TAS
7467
Telephone: (03) 6471 2388
Rating: ****
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Caravan Parks
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Queenstown Cabin & Tourist Park
19 Grafton St
Queenstown
TAS
7467
Telephone: (03) 6471 1332
Rating: ***
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Camping & Other
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Pioneer's Retreat Holiday Villas
Batchelor St
Queenstown
TAS
7467
Telephone: (03) 6471 1033
Rating: ***
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Restaurants
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Commercial Hotel
Driffield St
Queenstown
TAS
7467
Telephone: (03) 6471 1511
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Empire Hotel
2 Orr St
Queenstown
TAS
7467
Telephone: (03) 6471 1699
Facsimile: (03) 6471 1788
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Goldrush Motor Inn
Batchelor St
Queenstown
TAS
7467
Telephone: (03) 6471 1005
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J J's Coffee Lounge
7 Orr St
Queenstown
TAS
7467
Telephone: (03) 6471 1793
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Maloneys Restaurant
54 Orr St
Queenstown
TAS
7467
Telephone: (03) 6471 1866
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Mt Lyell Motor Inn
1 Orr St
Queenstown
TAS
7467
Telephone: (03) 6471 1888
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Old Prospector Restaurant
Batchelor St
Queenstown
TAS
7467
Telephone: (03) 6471 1033
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Silver Hills Motel
Penghana Rd
Queenstown
TAS
7467
Telephone: (03) 6471 1755
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Vic's Bistro BYO Restaurant
1 Penghana Rd
Queenstown
TAS
7467
Telephone: (03) 6471 1163
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