|
|
Boats at low tide near the
jetty at Port Welshpool
|
Port
Welshpool (including Welshpool and Barry Beach)
Quiet port on the Gippsland coast.
Port Welshpool is located 191 km south-east of
Melbourne via the South Gippsland Highway. Located at the north-eastern
margin of Corner Inlet, it is not surprising that it initially relied
almost exclusively on the ocean's marine life for its prosperity. An
anchorage, apparently established offshore near Snake Island, was used
by whalers as early as the 1830s.
The region was explored in the 1840s by the Gippsland
Company, whose interest was stimulated by Count Paul Strzelecki's
explorations of Gippsland and by the wreck of the Clonmel near the
entrance of Port Albert. The area became part of a substantial land
lease, stretching from the Albert to Agnes Rivers, taken out by John
Gellion and partners, a Mr. Rickard and a Mr. Stratton.
According to an early surveyor, the town was named after
Patrick Welsh, who settled in the district and became a land-holder in
the Alberton area. He had plans to make the port a major transportation
centre for the produce of Gippsland. However, the journalist John
Stanley James, claimed in 1886 that the name came from a village on the
border of Wales and Shropshire.
The town was gazetted as Welshpool in 1851, and was only
officially renamed in 1952. Settlement and trading began almost
immediately as the town was thought to have considerable potential. An
800-foot jetty was constructed in 1859 but burned down soon afterwards.
Its replacement was used to facilitate the shipment of cattle and
timber to New Zealand and Tasmania and to receive the fishermen's
catches and imported supplies. The famous Australian novelist Hal
Porter, who wrote portions of his autobiography, The Watcher on the
Cast-Iron Balcony (1963), at nearby Hedley, recalled that cattle were
steered in their hundreds across a long sand bar to Snake Island for
pasturing.
Chinese communities established themselves around the inlet
as curers of fish and wandering Indian hawkers with their exotic wares
became part of the local landscape. In 1889, a steam sawmill was built
at Hedley by Mr Maison, who transported his railway sleepers, jetty
piles and fish baskets to the port by bullock train, until a tramline
was laid. Maison also received a badge of honour from the French
government for the quality of the paving rocks he supplied for paving
the streets of Paris.
A hotel from a temporary township called Seaforth
became the Port Welshpool Post Office in the late nineteenth century
and it still serves that function today, although it has been
considerably altered over the years. An early dwelling in Turnbull St,
known as 'Crescent', dates from c.1873.
In 1891, the arrival of the railway boosted the local fishing
industry as it meant that the produce could be transported directly to
Melbourne on a daily basis. The fish were carried to the station by
horse and wagon until a tramline, which also ferried locals about for
social occasions, was laid in 1904. Rail was eventually replaced by
road transport in 1940.
When they were exploring the area Bass and Flinders
recorded a flock of approximately 133 million mutton birds in the area.
They reported that it was 80 yards long, 300 yards wide and, travelling
at an estimated 50 m.p.h., took 90 minutes to pass overhead. The birds
return to the Inlet every November, although in significantly reduced
numbers. A rather more unfortunate event connected with nature was the
beaching of 300 whales in 1957, which attracted about 10,000 people to
the township.
Today, Port Welshpool is a popular holiday and beach resort
destination.
Things to see:
|
|
Loading wool at Port
Welshpool dock
|
Attractions in
the area
Fishing is hugely popular with both gummy shark and
trevally being particularly common. Wilsons Promontory National Park
and the islands of Corner Inlet can be reached by launch or sailboat
from the port. There is a launching ramp and boats can be hired
locally. Hog deer, an endangered species in their native Asia, have
been introduced into a State game reserve on Snake Island, in order to
bolster their numbers.
Port Welshpool Museum
The Port Welshpool Museum, open daily, features marine
displays and an unusual assortment of maritime curios. The house, built
in 1881, was one of the first substantial dwellings to be constructed
at Port Welshpool. The builder, J. Avery, had to walk 21 miles from
Port Albert every Monday, and returned by foot each weekend. It is
thought to be one of the oldest buildings in the shire of South
Gippsland. On the lawn is the fishing boat, the Janet Isles, which was
used by the house's owners, the Smith family, for several generations.
Barry Beach
Barry Beach, a few kilometres west, is a supply base
for the oil rigs of Bass Strait. Steel platforms are constructed here
and towed into the strait, where piles are driven through the hollow
legs and a deck is welded on. An observation area, overlooking the
terminal, has been organised.
The area was reputedly named after
jack-of-all-trades, John Baragwanath, who owned land at the mouth of
the Agnes River. Skilled at ironwork, photography, and surveying, he
manufactured his own camera and telescope and assisted the locals in
the guises of an informal doctor, a legal counsellor, and a bush
dentist - always carrying a set of forceps with which to yank out
troublesome teeth.
Harold Lasseter - the man who made and prompted
numerous expeditions to central Australia by claiming that a mother
lode of gold, known as Lasseter's Reef, was there to be mined - lived
in the area for his last thirty years. He died returning from one of
his own trips in about 1931.
Welshpool and other attractions
The township of Welshpool, a few kilometres to
the north, relies upon the dairy and wool industries. 9 km north-west
of Welshpool you can visit one of the highest waterfalls in Victoria at
the Agnes Falls Reserve, where the river plunges 60 m over the gorge.
The damming of the river above the falls ensures the water supply to
Welshpool and other local towns. Walking tracks, picnic and barbecue
facilities are available. To get there, head west along the highway and
turn off at Slades Hill Road, near the school. The route is signposted.
Return via Toora for maximum scenic value.
| |
Hotels
|
| |
| |
Pier Port Hotel
Lewis St
Port Welshpool
VIC
3965
Telephone: (03) 5688 1333
|
| |
| |
| |
Welshpool Hotel/Motel
Main St
Welshpool 3966
Port Welshpool
VIC
3965
Telephone: (03) 5688 1209
|
| |
| |
Caravan Parks
|
| |
| |
Long Jetty Caravan Park
Lewis St
Port Welshpool
VIC
3965
Telephone: (03) 5688 1233
Rating: **
|
| |
| |
| |
Port Welshpool Caravan Park
Lewis St
Port Welshpool
VIC
3965
Telephone: (03) 5688 1273
Rating: **
|
| |
| |
Restaurants
|
| |
| |
Pier Point Hotel
Lewis St
Port Welshpool
VIC
3965
Telephone: (03) 5688 1333
|
| |