|
|
Looking across to Snug from
the boathouse south of the
town
|
Snug
Small
town now a commuter belt settlement
Located 30 km south of Hobart on the Channel
Highway between Kingston and Kettering, Snug is another small town on
the D'Entrecasteaux Channel which has attracted city dwellers and
people interested in alternative lifestyles. Once a centre for fruit
growing and timber cutting it has become urbanised in the last few decades.
Snug, like all the places along the D'Entrecasteaux
Channel, was first sighted by Europeans in 1792 when Rear Admiral Bruni
D'Entrecasteaux sailed up the channel. Subsequent visitors included
Bass and Flinders and Lieutenant John Hayes.
The establishment of the colony at Hobart Town led to
explorations of the Channel coast and around 1810 the Snug River was
discovered and named because of its quiet and 'snug' surroundings.
In the 1820s North West Bay, on which both Snug
and Electrona are located, was being used as a port and a saw milling location.
The area around Snug was first settled in the 1830s
and 1840s when timber cutters moved in and settlers took up land. The
settlers cleared land and used it either for mixed farming or for
orchards where they grew apples and berries. The rugged terrain between
Snug and Hobart ensured that, like so many of the towns in the
D'Entrecasteaux Channel, Snug was regularly visited by ketches and
barges which traded along the coast.
Some time during the 1840s and 1850s a small settlement
grew up at Snug. There is little evidence of its origins. All that can
be said is that in 1854 a Captain Butler-Stoney wrote of the area:
'About two miles from the river we cross a small, clear brook called
'the Snug River', which discharges its scanty stream into an inlet,
whose quiet and agreeable seclusion has given a name not only to the
little stream, but also to the neighbouring countryside. A short
distance from here are the remains of an excellent edifice, built
originally by Mr Tomkins, but which the desolating bush fires of
January 1854, utterly destroyed, excepting the mere brick walls. At
that time it was used as an hotel.'
It seems that Snug has been particularly vulnerable to
bushfires. The bushfires which ravaged southern Tasmania in February
1967 wreaked havoc on Snug. Eleven people in the town died and in the
Kingborough municipality 303 houses, 96 cottages and shacks, 9
factories, 12 shops, 13 churches and halls were destroyed. In Snug
itself 80 of the town's 120 houses were destroyed as well as two
churches, two shops and more than half of the local school.
Things to see:
Channel Folk Museum
The major attraction in Snug is the Channel Folk
Museum at 648 Channel Highway. It was opened in 1979 and has
subsequently been ungraded. Apart from an extensive collection of old
photographs and records the museum includes displays detailing the
history of the Electrona carbide works, the local scallop industry, and
the timber industry. There are interesting displays of farm, domestic
and blacksmith's tools as well as a carefully recreated country
kitchen.
| |
Hotels
|
| |
| |
Snug Tavern
545 Channel Hwy
Snug
TAS
7054
Telephone: (03) 6267 9238
|
| |
| |
Caravan Parks
|
| |
| |
Snug Beach Caravan Park
34-36 Beach Rd
Snug
TAS
7054
Telephone: (03) 6267 9138
Rating: ***
|
| |
| |
Restaurants
|
| |
| |
Channel Pizza Parlour
Channel Hwy
Snug
TAS
7054
Telephone: (03) 6267 9799
|
| |