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Omeo Post Office with the
town in the
background
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Omeo
Historic
goldmining town on the edges of the Snowy Mountains.
Omeo is an old goldmining town in the mountain
country 97 km north of Bruthen and 400 km north-east of Melbourne via
the Princes and Omeo Highways. Now a quiet and sleepy township of
around 300 people, based on cattle, sheep and timber, it was once a
rugged, unruly frontier town. Indeed, the first magistrate, Judge
Browne, better known as early Australian novelist Rolf Boldrewood
(famous for his novel Robbery Under Arms), regarded the Omeo goldfields
as the roughest in Australia.
The area was first sighted by Europeans when pioneer
naturalist, John Lhotsky, claimed, in 1834, to have seen, from the
southern alps, a wide plain that the Aborigines called 'Omeo'. The
indigenous peoples gathered quartz crystals, which they believed to
possess supernatural qualities, from the Omeo River. The Omeo Highway
follows the route they used for making contacts with other groups.
In 1835 George McKillop journeyed south from Monaro in New
South Wales in search of new pastures. Another member of the party,
James McFarlane, returned and founded what was probably the first
cattle station in Victoria - Omeo B at what is now Benambra - which he
sold in 1859. In his novel, Providence Ponds (1950), Stanley Porteous
described the sight which greeted the original settlers:
The creek valleys narrowed, the forests closed in, until
suddenly the Omeo basin fairly burst upon us - an open treeless plain,
encircled by a rim of mountains upon which the peaks of Mount Tambo and
the Three Brothers stood out distinctly....from its expanse came the
shimmer of two lakes, one large, one tiny.'
John Pendergast arrived with his two brothers in 1836
or 1837 and established the Mount Leinster station. His family, Welsh
immigrants who had settled for several generations in Ireland, are
perhaps the most prominent pioneers of the district as the other early
families soon moved further south. Pendergast's descendants still live
at Pendergast's Court. A hut from the property, built in 1868, is now
on display in Omeo's historical park in the centre of town.
Another early settler, John Hyland, settled west of Morass
Creek but sold his run to Edward Cooke in 1841. Cooke bred thoroughbred
horses for the army of India and shipped his cattle to Van Dieman's
Land by way of Port Albert. He later sold Hinnomunjie station, from two
Aboriginal words supposedly meaning 'no fish', and bought a run at
Holey Plains, near today's Rosedale (see entry on Rosedale).
Angus McMillan rested in the Omeo vicinity in 1839 while
following an Aboriginal track south to establish Numblamunjie station
on behalf of Lachlan Macalister. The name was changed to Ensay in 1844
by Archibald Macleod, after an island off the coast of Scotland.
McMillan used the station as a base for his extensive and
ground-breaking explorations of Gippsland to the south.
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The road between Bruthen and Omeo
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During the 1840s
squatters moving south into Gippsland used the area as a transit camp.
However, the history of Omeo changed in 1851 when pioneering geologist,
Reverend W.B. Clarke, while travelling south from Sydney on an
expedition, discovered gold at Livingstone Creek, named after another
member of McKillop's original party.
Two years later, when the population of Gippsland was little
more than 300, there were 70 men, all living in 30 tents, panning for
alluvial gold along Livingstone Creek. However, its isolation and the
mountainous terrain ensured that development and population growth
remained slow. Indicative of the difficulties was the fact that the
80-km journey from Ensay to Bairnsdale took four days on horseback. It
was also a 9-day walk from the goldfields in the Ovens Valley. The
population was still no more than 600 in 1863. Movement increased when
a track was cut between Port Albert and Bairnsdale. An influx of miners
occurred and new goldfields opened at Gibbo, Dry Gully, Cassilis,
Dartmouth, Brookville, the Wombat and Stirling. The unruliness of the
situation was not helped by the fact that no police were present at the
site until 1858. Initially, the gold warden from Yackandandah only
visited the field twice a year.
The goldrush reached its peak in the 1860s. Land settlement
began in 1870 and Omeo was declared a municipality in 1872. A Wesleyan
Church was opened in 1870, with the Roman Catholic Church following in
1874, the Church of England in 1892 and the Presbyterian Church in
1894. However, the stock of alluvial gold began to disappear and with
it went many of the miners. Chinese people moved into the area to work
the tailings and established market gardens.
A new boom began when reef gold was located at Sunnyside, Dry
Gully, Glen Wills and Cassilis. Heavy machinery to work the reefs was
hauled over the mountains by bullock teams and hydraulic dredges were
in operation in the 1880s. However, this supply too was soon exhausted
and the fields were abandoned by the start of the First World War. The
town suffered earthquakes in 1885 and 1892 and considerable damage was
caused by the infamous 'Black Friday' bushfires of 1939.
Although tin was mined at Glen Wills, Pilot Creek and
Limestone it was cattle and sheep which came to the fore with the end
of the gold days and cattle are still put out to pasture on the high
plains every summer. The annual sale, each March, of "cold country"
herefords is a major event on the local calendar. A rodeo is also held
each year.
Incidents of the Omeo gold days provided source material
for two landmark novelists of Australian literature, Henry Kingsley and
Rolf Boldrewood. In The Hillyars and the Burtons (1865), Kingsley wrote
of a number of diggers who died crossing the Great Dividing Range while
returning from a futile rush from Beechworth to the Omeo area in 1854,
having heard the tale that year at Beechworth from survivors of the
trek. Boldrewood wrote of the lawlessness of the area in Robbery Under
Arms (1888) and in Nevermore, where he dealt with the rustling of the
Kelly Gang (the Lawless brothers in the novel), the murder of Cornelius
Green (Con Gray) and the celebrated case of Tichborne, the heir to his
family's title and estates in England, who disappeared in the
goldfields.
Things to see:
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Water wheel in the A.M.
Pearson Historical Park
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A.M. Pearson
Historical Park
In the main street of Omeo is the A.M. Pearson
Historical Park which contains the original courthouse (1865) and its
Romanesque successor (1892), designed by A.J. MacDonald, who was also
responsible for the neo-Gothic post office at South Yarra in Melbourne
and the courthouse in Bairnsdale. The original log lock-up (1858) is
representative of both vernacular log construction techniques and of
the penal accommodation provided by the Public Works Department of
Victoria. The exterior of this solid structure is comprised of hardwood
logs, while the ceiling and internal walls are made from blackwood. An
iron-bar grille door and slit windows are the only openings. The gaol
was originally surrounded by a high fence and an armed guard watched
over the proceedings from an elevated sentry box. Prior to its
construction, prisoners were kept in leg irons in the warden's camp on
the banks of Commissioner's Gully. Other buildings in the park are the
old stables (1858), a blacksmith's shop, a water wheel, a post office
built in the 1890s and a small indoor museum. The town's first state
school (1866) is also extant. Contact (03) 5159 1445. The Park is open
on weekends, public holidays and by appointment.
Tourist Information and General Activities
An information centre is currently being built in
town adjacent to (and in association with) the Omeo German Cuckoo Clock
Shop and Gallery on the Great Alpine Rd, tel: (03) 5159 1552. It also
furnishes maps of and books about the historic area. Fishing in the
local waters can be rewarding, especially for those seeking trout. Gold
pans can be hired from the shire office and fishing equipment, bikes
and skis can be hired from Omeo Outdoors. Horseback safaris of the area
are also on offer in the warmer months.
Petersens Gallery
Resident artist Terry Petersen executes traditional
landscape paintings of the high country and its history. He is open
from Wednesday to Monday on Day Ave, tel: (03) 5159 1262.
Benambra and Lookouts
On the road to the picturesque township of Benambra,
23 km north-east, are McMillan's Lookout (933 metres) - which provides
panoramic views of Omeo, the Victorian alps and the surrounding
countryside - and Hinomunjie station, where portions of the original
homestead are still standing.
A few kilometres north-east of Benambra are the Three
Brothers, three mountain peaks named after the Pendergast brothers. For
mountain climbers, McFarlane's Lookout is further north. Directions can
be obtained at Benambra. As an alternative, follow the Lake Omeo Road
out of Benambra, around Lake Omeo and on to Mount Blowhard for an
excellent view of the valley. The road to the left leads back to Omeo.
Knocker Track
7 km north along the Omeo Highway is the turnoff on the
right onto Omeo Valley Rd. 12 km along this road, and 1 km below the
Hinomunjie Bridge, the sealed section runs out. Those with four-wheel
drives may wish to turn left in order to explore the interesting 17-km
Knocker Track, formerly the old Omeo to Glen Wills and Sunnyside coach
road. It rejoins the highway between Glen Wills and Sunnyside.
Anglers Rest
Parts of the highway to the north are unsealed and can
be snow-bound in winter although the scenery is quite stunning. 29 km
north of Omeo along the highway is a tranquil and popular fishing,
canoeing and bushwalking spot known as Anglers Rest, situated on the
Cobungra River. The Blue Duck Inn offers accommodation (tel: 03 5159 7220).
Rocky Valley Rd
40 km north of Omeo is a turnoff to the left into the
Rocky Valley Road which leads to Falls Creek alpine village and the
Bogong high plains where bushwalking and fishing expeditions are
popular. Kangaroos, wallabies and emus can be seen in the area and the
wildflowers which bloom in the late spring are worth seeing. The road
is unsealed to Falls Creek (36 km) and closed in the ski season.
Glen Valley, Glen Wills and Mt Wills
48 and 51 km respectively from Omeo are the tiny old
goldmining settlements of Glen Valley and Glen Wills. Further north you
will see Mt Wills (1750 m) to the left. The summit offers excellent
views of the Alps. It can be accessed along the Australian Alps Walking
Track (655 km) which crosses the highway at Sunnyside. For further
information ring 131 963.
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Dry Gully Suspension Bridge
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Remnants of the
Goldrush Days at Livingstone Creek
On the Alpine Road to Mount Hotham about 1 km from the
centre of town small gold workings can be seen along the banks of
Livingstone Creek, where gold panning can still be practiced by the
eternally hopeful. Spanning the creek, a little upstream from the new
Dry Gully Suspension Bridge, is the Memorial, built as a practical war
memorial by returned diggers in 1919. On the far side of the old bridge
is a parking area and a sign which points the way along a walking track
which crosses the creek by footbridge then moves along the river banks
and past the old brick pumping station. Beyond are the old 'oriental
claims' where Chinese workers operated the world's largest hydraulic
sluicing operation. This historic site is surrounded by man-made cliffs
up to 30 metres in height which still have minute traces of gold. Old
tunnels can be seen in the hillside. The entrance to one of these
tunnels is accessible from the path which leads to the main area of the claims.
The earth which comprises the huge cliffs was shifted
with water. To this end a dam was built 19 km away, up Livingstone
Creek. The water was carried by races, which can still be seen along
the sides of the valley, to a level well above the site of the
operations. It was then pumped through pressure nozzles which were used
to spray water at high velocity against the cliffs. The gravel was
washed into trenches, in which were placed sluice boxes to catch the
gold. The silt and water flowed into the creek while larger rocks were
removed by hand. The size of the stones in the mullock heaps suggests
how difficult the labour could be. Pieces of petrified wood can also be
found in the rock piles. Mount Kosciusko can be seen from Mount
Kosciusko Lookout, a little further along the Alpine Road.
Victoria Falls
25 km west of Omeo are the Victoria Falls, on the
Victoria River. The state's first hydro-electric scheme was established
here in 1908 to supply power to the Cassilis mines. To this end the
water from the falls was used to drive a large turbine. However, the
operation was not very successful due to water shortages and it was
sold off to a Tasmanian concern in 1916. This site has also been
declared an historic area.
Exploring the Surrounding Area
The approach to Omeo along the Omeo Highway, via
Bruthen, winds north for almost 100 km along sealed roads beside the
Tambo River. It essentially follows the route of the first European
travellers. En route are a number of curiously-named historic sites:
Monkey Creek (7 km north of Bruthen) was named by Angus McMillan after
the "monkey bears" (koalas); Walsh's Cutting (15 km north) after a
coach driver who died when a brake failure caused his vehicle to
plummet down the hill; 1000-Pound Bend after either the cost of repairs
and insurance when two coaches collided or the cost of constructing the
road at this troublesome spot; Barksleds (24 km) after huts built on
the bank above the present site to house wattle bark; Piano Bridge
Creek (27 km) after the tendency of the old bridge's panels to bounce
up and down like piano keys. In the same area the Pig and Whistle is
said to be the spot where railway surveyors collected their liquor when
their boss denied them access to the local hotel. Jew's Pinch (30 km)
immortalises a Jewish hawker whose vehicle met with difficulties at
this spot. Lock-Up Creek (33 km) was once the site of a lock-up built
to house prisoners in transit from Omeo to Bairnsdale behind the Sir
Walter Scott Motel, since burned down. Snake's Back (35 km) recalls the
old road's curvature. Haunted Stream (35 km) is named after its
connection with the murder of Ballarat Harry; Name Stone Point (36 km)
after a stone, now gone, which was adorned with travellers' doodlings;
Dead Horse Flat (39 km) after a horse which was dragged along for some
distance, dead, after being tied by a halter, while still alive, to the
rear of its owner's wagon. Mr Stringy, at the same location, was cut
from a tree by a member of a 1920s bridge gang. Battle Point (41 km)
was named after a fight between two bullock drivers or road foremen and
Devil's Backbone (45 km) after the tortuous nature of the country.
There are also some fine swimming holes, bushwalks and fishing spots
along the road.
The first significant town to be reached is Tambo Crossing,
formerly the point at which the overland track from Port Albert crossed
the waterway. The road continues north, passing through open country
with mountains on either side of the river valley, to Ensay, once
celebrated for its wool production. Here the road crosses the Tambo
River then winds away for 12 km until it recrosses the river at
Doctor's Flat, named after the physician and companion of Angus
McMillan, the first doctor in the area. Off the main road in a peaceful
setting and surrounded by fords is the Little River Inn, stylistically
similar to the original inn built in Ensay in the late nineteenth
century. Further north is Swift's Creek. In its heyday it was the
central town of the Tambo Valley, with cattle and sheep markets, a
prosperous butter factory, a bank and numerous stores. An old historic
homestead in the mountains, erected on the pastoral run of P.V. Buckley
-at the time the most isolated station in East Gippsland - is 'Bindi',
which retains outbuildings such as the sheep wash and woolshed, built
at different times and with different materials. The sleeping quarters
and cookhouse were constructed in the 1850s of local stone and the
timber slab dwelling was erected shortly thereafter. The homestead
itself was also built of local stone, in 1880. Later work mostly
entailed the extension and enhancement of the existing structures.
The remaining distance from Swifts Creek to Omeo can be
covered along the Omeo Highway or a more picturesque and historic route
can be pursued by turning left along the good gravel road to Tongio
West and Cassilis, once goldmining centres of sufficient importance to
cause the Omeo coach service, at the turn of the century, to shift its
regular route away from the main road so as to take in the newer towns.
The remnants of the ten-head Warden Battery, used in the 1890s for reef
mining, can be found at Tongio West. Old weatherboard cottages are
scattered around the valley and parts of another old battery are
evident at Cassilis. Leavings of brightly coloured sand still trickle
down the valley in this area. Between Swift's Creek and Omeo the road
rises over 300 metres.
Other Activities
Fishing in the local waters can be rewarding,
especially for those seeking trout. Gold pans can be hired from the
shire office and fishing equipment, bikes and skis can be hired from
Omeo Outdoors. Horseback safaris of the area are also on offer in the
warmer months.
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Motels
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Omeo Motel
Park St
P.O. Box 87
Omeo
VIC
3898
Telephone: (03) 5159 1297
Rating: ***
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Hotels
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Blue Duck Inn Hotel
Omeo Hwy, Anglers Rest via
Omeo
VIC
3898
Telephone: (03) 5159 7220
Facsimile: (03) 5159 7212
Email: blueduckinnhotel@yahoo.com.au
Rating: *
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Hilltop Hotel
Day Ave
Omeo
VIC
3898
Telephone: (03) 5159 1303
Rating: *
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The Omeo Golden Age Private Hotel
Day Ave
P.O. Box 21
Omeo
VIC
3898
Telephone: (03) 5159 1344
Rating: ****
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Bed & Breakfast/Guesthouses
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The Manse Guesthouse
Cnr Omeo Hwy & Day Ave
Omeo
VIC
3898
Telephone: (03) 5159 1441
Rating: ***
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Apartments
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Cobungra View Holiday Apartments
Lot 12 Fox Crt
Cobungra 3898
Omeo
VIC
3898
Telephone: (03) 5159 1467
Rating: ****
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Colonial Motel Omeo
159 Day Ave
P.O. Box 95
Omeo
VIC
3898
Telephone: (03) 5159 1388
Rating: ***
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Livingston Holiday Apartments
Omeo Hwy
P.O. Box 25
Omeo
VIC
3898
Telephone: (03) 5159 1308
Rating: ***
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Caravan Parks
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Holston Tourist Park
Old Omeo Hwy
P.O. Box 91
Omeo
VIC
3898
Telephone: (03) 5159 1351
Rating: **
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Restaurants
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Hilltop Hotel
Day Ave
Omeo
VIC
3898
Telephone: (03) 5159 1303
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Howard's Hut
Day Ave
Omeo
VIC
3898
Telephone: (03) 5159 1500
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Mesley's Restaurant
166 Day Ave
Omeo
VIC
3898
Telephone: (03) 5159 1400
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Omeo Motel
Park St
P.O. Box 87
Omeo
VIC
3898
Telephone: (03) 5159 1297
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The Omeo Golden Age Private Hotel
Day Ave
P.O. Box 21
Omeo
VIC
3898
Telephone: (03) 5159 1344
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