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Grand Central Hotel in the
main street
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Wangaratta
(including Tarrawingee)
Large city on the Ovens and King Rivers
Wangaratta is a regional capital of some 17 500 people
located 233 km north-east of Melbourne via the Hume Freeway and 150 m
above sea-level. It is also the northern starting point of the Great
Alpine Road. The plentiful water supply must have been a major
attraction to early settlers. The Ovens and King Rivers, which wind
tortuously through the eastern section of town, meet at Wangaratta,
leaving a number of lagoons and billabongs in their wake. Furthermore,
Three Mile Creek runs along the western edge of town and One Mile Creek
through the centre. Plenty of parkland has been preserved.
The area around Wangaratta is one of the country's
major producers of wine although local agricultural production is
diverse. Within the city itself are several textiles plants, light
engineering works and an extensive retail sector.
Prior to European settlement the area was occupied by the
Pangerang Aborigines. The first white men in the area were probably the
explorers Hume and Hovell who crossed the river 22 km downstream of the
present townsite in 1824. They named the river Ovens after Irish-born
soldier and chief engineer of NSW Major John Ovens (an aide-de-camp to
Governor Brisbane).
Surveyor Thomas Mitchell crossed the river on or
near the townsite during his 'Australia Felix' expedition of 1836 which
effectively delineated the first Sydney-Melbourne Road. As Melbourne
emerged others followed in his wake, fording the river on the future
townsite which became known as the Ovens Crossing Place.
Meanwhile, George Faithfull established the 'Wangaratta'
cattle station on the Ovens River in 1837 or 1838. He had plans to push
further south but, when overlanders in his employ headed south from
this point, they were killed by Aborigines (see entry on Benalla) and he decided to remain at
'Wangaratta'. The name derived from an Aboriginal term possibly meaning
'nesting place of cormorants'.
The first settler at the actual crossing site was
Thomas Rattray who established a sly grog shop and a punt service
adjacent the southern riverbank in 1838 to capitalise on the growing
through-traffic. The following year the enterprise was sold to William
Clark, regarded as the 'Father of Wangaratta'. He built a slab-timber
store with a bark roof and 4-cm slits in the slabs instead of windows,
to prevent ingress for attacking Aborigines and to enable the egress of
gunfire. He later built a larger and better structure which served as
the Hope Inn. A postal outlet opened in 1843.
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Free Library in the main street
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John Bond then built
a slab-and-bark store and inn on the other side of the river where
noted Presbyterian clergyman John Dunmore Lang stayed in 1846.
A settlement of slab-and-bark structures began to appear
by the crossing with the first brick building erected in 1848. The
township was laid out the following year.
In the early 1850s the settlement was almost deserted as
people flocked to the new gold diggings but it soon began to prosper
from the traffic to the Ovens diggings and the subsequent demand for
produce and fresh meat. More town allotments were sold in 1855 - the
year a bridge over the Ovens River replaced the old punt service which
had recently been manned by a gentleman who had been providing
information about stock traffic to horse and cattle thieves. After the
bridge appeared he became a bushranger.
The location of the bridge caused some surprise. Legend has
it that the surveyor was thrown out of Clark's inn and he therefore
recommended the Murphy St site to steer custom away from Clark who was
situated in Ovens St.
In all, ten inns emerged and a brewery but it was the town's
role as a service centre which held the key to its development. A
courthouse was erected in 1859 and the settlement became a borough in
1863. Work began on St Patrick's Catholic Church in 1865.
Notorious bushranger Dan 'Mad Dog' Morgan committed some
robberies in the area in 1860 after breaching his ticket-of-leave
conditions. On about April 2, 1865 he stole a racehorse at Tarrawingee,
11 km south-east of Wangaratta, headed south-east to Tawonga, then
north-west. On April 8 he bailed up a property 13 km west of Wangaratta
and forced the women to make him breakfast. When some neighbours passed
by he took their finest horse and gave false indications of his
intentions.
Morgan then got lost in dense bush until he encountered
Robert Telford, the overseer of Peechelba Station, 35 km north of
Wangaratta. Telford was forced, at gunpoint, to take Morgan to the
homestead where he gathered the household together and assured them he
only wanted a horse and a meal. Morgan had not slept for five days and
was evidently starved of company for he relaxed and chatted and stayed
overnight instead of capitalising on his lead.
In the course of the night servant girls escaped and informed
a nearby neighbour who gathered arms and sent word to the police at
Wangaratta. Overnight, troopers and civilians surrounded the homestead
and waited until Morgan emerged at about 8.00 a.m. Although
Superintendant Cobham told the posse that he favoured a shot to the
legs so Morgan could be caught alive, a stationhand, John Wendlan (who
was perhaps anxious to be the man to bring Morgan down) fired the only
shot. The bullet hit the bushranger's shoulder and then pierced his
throat. He was dragged to a woolshed where he died nearly six hours
later.
Popular demand led to the brief public display of his body at
Wangaratta where it was lain against some wool bales, revolver in hand
and eyes propped open with matchsticks for a safe photo opportunity.
Superintendant Cobham had Morgan's beard skinned from his face as a
souvenir (he took it to Benalla and had it pegged out to dry) and other
sources suggest that tobacco pouches were made from his scrotum and
other portions of his skin.
Furthemore, Morgan's reputation as a gorilla-like sub-human
and a criminal prone to psychopathic rages aroused the interest of the
medical fraternity. Consequently, Morgan was decapitated and his head
was sent to Melbourne for phrenological studies aimed at seeking
physiological correspondences to his criminality.
The humiliation of his corpse caused an outcry in some
quarters and both Superintendant Cobham and Dr Dobbyn (the coroner)
were suspended until local support caused their reinstatement. After
arguments about the 1000 pounds reward, Wendlan's pre-emptive strike
paid off. He received half the money, with the servant girls,
volunteers and police divying up the remainder.
Another famous bushranger who spent most of his
life in the Wangaratta district (see entries on Euroa, Glenrowan and Beechworth) was Ned Kelly. Prior to
being outlawed he also worked as a builder in the area and some of his
handiwork is thought to have been carried out on the Catholic Church at
Boorhaman (19 km north of Wangaratta) and at Tarrawingee.
The railway arrived at Wangaratta in 1873 and, by
1884, the town had around 1400 residents, four churches, three flour
mills, a tobacco factory, two breweries, several foundries, a tannery,
a hospital and a town hall. A theatre in Murphy St served as a venue
for Dame Nellie Melba at the turn of the century.
A wool-processing mill was opened by local citizens
in 1923 for the advancement of the community and textiles have remained
important to the city to this day. In the years since World War II
Wangaratta has become a prosperous business centre. It was declared a
city in 1959.
The Wangaratta Rural Expo is held in February at the
Wangaratta Livestock Selling Complex and the Agricultural Show in
October. The major local event on the calendar is the Wangaratta
Festival of Jazz and Blues which attracts artists of genuinely
international stature. It incorporates the National Jazz Awards and is
held on the Melbourne Cup weekend in November. Two regional events are
the Winery Walkabout on the Queen's Birthday weekend in June and
March's Wine and Food Weekend.
Things to see:
Tourist Information
The Wangaratta and Region Visitor Information
Centre is located at the corner of Tone Rd and Handley St, tel: (03)
5721 5711. It is home to an unusual one-sixth scale model of a 1950s
home which features some surprising miniatures and there are changing
displays.
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St Patrick's Roman Catholic Church
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Historic
Buildings in Town
The Information Centre has a 'Walk Through History'
pamphlet delineating some of the town's historic buildings, although
many have not survived the town's expansion.
St Patrick's Roman Catholic Church, faced with granite from
the Warby Ranges, was designed by William Wardell in the Gothic Revival
style. The initial construction was carried out between 1865 and 1871
although the nave was completed and a fine Gothic tower added in 1905.
A wing was added to the sanctuary in the 1960s. Located at the corner
of Ryley St (a section of the main road) and Ford St, it features some
fine stained-glass windows.
The Cathedral Church of the Holy Trinity (1908-09),
at the corner of Ovens and Docker St, features a timber belfry with a
peal of eight bells which were transferred from a disused church in
Lancashire, England where they were cast in 1806. The interestingly
patterned brick walls include a cement-coated brick from the first
church on the site. Above it is a history of the church set in tiles.
Nearby is a two-storey Edwardian house known as Bishop's
Lodge. It was built in 1904 as the residence of Wangaratta's first
bishop after the church was declared a cathedral.
One of the city's oldest surviving buildings is the
former ES & A Bank building (1875) at 49 Reid St. This two-storey
rendered-brick structure is a Classical design with a three-bay facade
erected around a central entrance with Doric columns.
The post office in Murphy St (a portion of the main
road) dates from 1873 although it has been extensively altered.
'Warra' (1908) at 3 Murdoch Rd is a rambling private
brick residence of an unusual design defined as 'Federation Art
Nouveau' by the National Trust.
Wangaratta Cemetery
The cemetery, at the south-western end of town
(corner of Tone Rd and Mason St), contains the headless body of
notorious bushranger Dan 'Mad Dog' Morgan who was shot and killed at
Peechalba station, 35 km north of town. After a gruesome public display
and defilement of his corpse (see introduction to town) the remainder
of his body was buried outside the cemetery's bourn. The fence was
later relocated and the grave can now be found inside the small gate at
the northern front end of the cemetery, near the toilet block.
Exhibitions Gallery
The Exhibitions Gallery is situated in the former
Presbyterian Church (1898) in Ovens St. It has changing displays of
photography, social history, architecture, fine arts, applied arts,
jewellery and design with a focus on contemporary issues. It is open
from 10.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. Wednesday to Saturday and from midday to 5
p.m. Sunday to Tuesday. Entry is free, tel: (03) 5722 0888.
Wangaratta Museum
The Wangaratta Museum is situated in the former fire
station (1895) in Ford St. It displays local memorabilia and is open
Sundays and most public holidays from 2.00 p.m. to 5.00 p.m.or by
appointment, tel: (03) 5721 3095.
Merriwa Park
Merriwa Park (adjacent Murphy St) has a fine sunken
garden. Wildlife can be seen adjacent the King River.
Air World
Air World is an aviation museum which boasts over 30
authentic vintage Australian aircraft, many of which are in operative
condition. Other exhibits include aviation engines (including some of
the first ever built) and antique bicycles. There is an aviation theme
playground, a souvenir shop, a cafeteria and a restaurant. Guided tours
are available by prior arrangement, as are joy flights in either
vintage or modern craft. It is located 7 km south of town along the
Greta Rd at the Wangaratta airport and is open daily, tel: (03) 5721 8788.
Tarrawingee
Tarrawingee, from an
Aboriginal word said to mean 'plenty of water', is located 11 km
south-east of Wangaratta on the Ovens Highway. An early squatter was
Sir Francis Murphy, the speaker of Victoria's first Legislative
Assembly.
At Tarrawingee the Beechworth road splits off from the Ovens
Highway. Just a few houses along the Beechworth Road, set well back, is
the Plough Inn, a two-storey hotel built in 1864 for Hopton Nolan from
bricks manufactured on-site. An important coaching stop, it was
allegedly patronised by Ned Kelly who worked at Tarrawingee for a
period. A brick stable block is attached.
Adjacent are the 'Carinya' store and homestead,
built in 1860 for Thomas Ladson but bought out by Nolan in 1880. Both
are still in the hands of the Nolan family. The 12-room homestead
features a ballroom, extensive cellars and original and antique
furnishings. It is now a guesthouse although there is a tea room for
the general public.
Also of ineterst are St Peter's Anglican Church (1866)
and the Star Hotel (1860s) which is now a private residence.
Warby Range State Park
The Warby Range State Park (6880 hectares) is located
10km west of Wangaratta. Access is directly off the Hume Freeway with
entry points from either Warby Range Road, Yarrawonga Road or
Glenrowan-Boweya Road.
The area was first settled by Ben Warby (after whom the park
is named) in 1844. It achieved a brief moment of notoriety when, for a
time during the 1870s, it was thought that Ned Kelly was hiding in the
ranges and observing the goings-on at Glenrowan from the top of Mount Glenrowan.
The park was established in 1978 and increased in
size in 1989. It is characterised by waterfalls (particularly Briens
Gorge Falls), a long, steep eastern escarpment, forest and woodlands of
stringbark and red gum, extensive areas of spring-time wildflowers and
blackboys, excellent views across to the Victorian Alps and an
extensive range of wildlife including black wallabies, echidnas,
wedge-tailed eagles, lorikeets, barking owls and sugar gliders.
The park has a number of walks. The most popular are the
track to the summit of Mount Glenrowan (9.4 km return from the
Taminick-Wangaratta Road), and the short walks to Briens Gorge Falls,
Salisbury Falls and Jubilee Falls.
Ryans Lookout offers excellent views across to the Alps. It
is accessed via Wangandry Road (which runs off the Yarrawonga Road).
Winter and spring are the best times to view the park. For more
information contact either the Ranger-in-Charge in Wangaratta on (03)
5721 5022 or the Glenrowan Tourist Centre on (03) 5766 2367.
Killawarra State Forest
The Killawarra State Forest lies at the northern end
of Warby Range State Park yet it is characterised by rather different
landscape and vegetation types - red ironbark, grey box, Blakely's
wattle, heath and wallaby grass, populated by swamp wallabies, echinnas
and bats. The Forest Camp Picnic Area was created on the site of an old
internment camp used in World War II. Head north along the road towards
Yarrawonga and turn off, heading west at the locality of Killawarra
which is 15 km north of Wangaratta.
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Tourist Information
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Wangaratta and Region Visitor Information Centre
Cnr Tone Rd & Handley St
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 5711
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Motels
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Advance Motel
55 Parfitt Rd
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 9100
Rating: ****
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Crana Motel
93 Tone Rd
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 4469
Rating: ***
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Gateway Wangaratta
29 Ryley St
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 8399
Rating: ****
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Millers Cottage Motel
Cnr Ovens & Old Hume Hwys
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 5755
Facsimile: (03) 5721 5755
Rating: ***
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Ryley Motor Inn
52 Ryley St
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 6388
Facsimile: (03) 5721 6132
Rating: ***1/2
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Wangaratta Motor Inn
Cnr Ovens & Roy Sts
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 5488
Rating: ***
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Wangaratta North Family Motel
11 Ely St
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 2188
Rating: ***
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Hermitage Motor Inn
Cnr Mackay & Cusack St
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 7444
Facsimile: (03) 5722 1812
Rating: ****
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Park View Motor Inn
54 Ryley St
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 5655, 1800 032 475
Rating: ****
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Warby Lodge Motor Inn
55 Ryley St
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 8433
Facsimile: (03) 5721 9533
Rating: ****
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Hotels
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Pinset Hotel
30 Reid St
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 2183
Rating: **
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Royal Victoria Hotel/Motel
25 Faithful St
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 5455
Rating: **
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Vine Hotel
Detour Rd
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 2605
Rating: **
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Westside Tavern
Appin St
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 3123
Rating: **
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Caravan Parks
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North Cedars Caravan Park
Hume Hwy
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 5230
Rating: ****
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Wangaratta Caravan & Tourist Park
79 Parfitt Rd
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 3368
Facsimile: (03) 5722 3832
Rating: ****
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Wangaratta Painters Island Caravan Park
Pinkerton Cres.
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 3380
Rating: ***
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Restaurants
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Cafe Martini Restaurant
Murphy St
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 9020
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Crystals Bistro Wangaratta
Reid St
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 9061
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D'amico's Licensed Restaurant
Cnr Greta & Vincent Rds
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 6544
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Great Gourmet's Inn
Ryley St
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 3979
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Gwenies Take Away
Muntz St
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 3363
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Hollywood's Pizza
Murphy St
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 9877
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Hong Kong Palace Restaurant
Murphy St
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 2235
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Jake's Restaurant
Cusack St
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 4551
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Jardine Restaurant
Reid St
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5722 1994
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Koon Wah Restaurant
Faithful St
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 3318
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Lettuce Eat
Ovens St
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 8097
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Park View Motor Inn
54 Ryley St
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 5655, 008 032 475
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Peter's Cellar 47 Restaurant
Ryley St
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 6309
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Pinset Hotel
30 Reid St
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 2183
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Royal Victoria Hotel/Motel
25 Faithful St
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 5455
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The Old Town 'N' Country Tavern
Cnr Greta Rd & Mason St
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5722 1788
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Wangaratta Gateway
Ryley St
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 8399
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Wangaratta Motor Inn
Cnr Ovens & Roy Sts
Wangaratta
VIC
3677
Telephone: (03) 5721 5488
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