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The wide main street of
Coolgardie
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Coolgardie
Fascinating
and beautifully maintained major gold mining town
Located 558 km east of Perth and 425 m above sea level,
Coolgardie announces to the world that it is a 'ghost town' in spite of
the fact that it now has a healthy life as a tourist destination and it
has a population of nearly 2000 people.
It is, by any measure, a remarkable town. Today it is still
haunted by the memories of its glorious gold mining past. The main
street, Bayley Street, is still wide enough for a camel train to turn
around. It is still lined with imposing nineteenth century buildings -
old hotels, clubs, banks and office blocks - which stand in some kind
of strange loneliness waiting for the crowds to once again throng
outside and the town to come alive with the shouting and enthusiasm of
thousands of miners.
'It swarmed with diggers and speculators when the
teams arrived. Auctioneers bawled from their rostrums set up in the
open. Goods were sold before they left the camels' backs', is the way
Katherine Susannah Prichard described the town in The Roaring Nineties.
The Coolgardie area was first explored by H M Lefroy
in 1863 and by C C Hunt (1864) whose waterholes run all the way from
the western coast across the southern half of Western Australia. It was
as a result of Hunt's efforts that the area became accessible to Europeans.
Gold was discovered in the area by Arthur Wellesly
Bayley who, with his partner William Ford, rode into Southern Cross
with 554 ounces (16.8 kg) of gold which he had found at Fly Flat in
1892. It is worth noting that in the early days Coolgardie was
variously known as Bayley's Find, Fly Flat, the Old Camp and the Old Diggings.
The actual meaning of the name 'Coolgardie' has
caused a great deal of confusion. Some sources suggest that it comes
from the Aboriginal words 'Koolgoor-biddie' meaning 'the mulga tree in
the hollow' while others have suggested that 'golgardi' was a name
given to a prominent water hole, while still others claim that
'golgardi' (changed to Coolgardie by Warden Finnerty) was the
Aboriginal name for the district. In her book The Roaring Nineties
Katherine Susannah Prichard insists that 'Cookardie, the blacks called
the rocky pool at the end of the low ridge. The first prospectors
didn't care what the blacks called it. Coolgardie was near enough for them.'
Such was the excitement at Bayley's discovery that it
prompted the greatest gold rush in Australian history. Camels and
horses were hired or men simply walked the rough 192 km bush track from
Southern Cross. Given the climate and the harshness of the conditions
it is not surprising that someone penned the lines:
Damn Coolgardie! Damn the track!
Damn it there and damn it back!
Damn the country! Damn the weather!
Damn the goldfields altogether!
The development of the town was typical goldfields
hysteria. By 1896 the railway had arrived and by 1898 it was the third
largest town in Western Australia (after Perth and Fremantle) with a
population of 15 000 (with another 10 000 in the area) serviced by
three breweries, seven newspapers, and 26 hotels.
The town was laid out and named in 1893 and it became
a municipality the following year. The Post Office opened in 1895 and
the following year electricity and a swimming pool enhanced the hard
life of the miners. By 1897 the level of enthusiasm about the potential
of the region was such that over 700 mining companies had been floated
in London. The water pipeline arrived in 1903 and a year earlier the
town had seen the construction of the State Battery.
By World War I the town was in decline. People had
moved to Kalgoorlie where the gold was more plentiful and more
reliable. By 1921 Coolgardie had ceased to be a municipality. It had
brief periods of revitalisation when the price of gold improved. There
was a flurry of activity during the Depression and in the 1980s, when
the price of gold soared, a number of small operations started up. The
title of 'ghost town', while no longer true, was nearly a reality when
the population of this grand town dropped to less than 200.
Things to see:
Historic Coolgardie
Today Coolgardie offers a unique opportunity to
see what a major nineteenth century mining town must have been like.
The visitor eager to experience the enthusiasm which drove the town in
the 1890s should spend at least a day just wandering around the huge
number of weather resistant markers which record and recall the various
buildings around the town and recapture, through stories and
photographs, the past life of this remarkable centre.
The markers, with their old photographs and details of
the history of sites which are now no more than a ruin or a vacant
block, are an excellent example of how careful planning can make the
history of a town come alive.
Town Cemetery
Take, for example, the placard outside the town
cemetery at the western end of Bayley's Street. It gives an
extraordinary insight into what life was like in Coolgardie during the
boom period.
'A SAD RECORD
'The register of burials in the Coolgardie Cemetery
makes sad reading. Of the first 32 burials the name of 15 was unknown.
Of the first 61 buried the names of 29 could not be ascertained. In the
rush for gold identities had no place. There are frequent entries in
the register of 'male child' and 'female child' and the corresponding
entry 'fever'. The denomination of many was described as 'general'. In
many instances the burial service was conducted by the part time
undertaker. No one else was present. The bodies were carried to the
cemetery in a spring cart. Between 1894 and 1899 there were 1108
burials. From 1961 to 1966 there were only 43.'
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The Cemetery at Coolgardie
with the tombstone of Ernest Giles
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One of the
significant graves in this interesting cemetery is that of the explorer
Ernest Giles. To find his grave turn left as you enter the cemetery.
The grave is next to the very distinctive anchor headstone which is
about 50 metres to the left of main gates.
Another marker records 'Ernest Giles. One of the most
notable graves in this cemetery is that of Ernest Giles, an Englishman
whose name is associated with exploration in inland Australia. His
outstanding expedition was that in 1875 when he crossed from South
Australia to Western Australia making his way from waterhole to
waterhole in desert country in the far northeast and returning along a
line just south of the Tropic of Capricorn. He was a man who achieved
little personal success. His last days were spent in Coolgardie where
he worked as a clerk in a Government Office.'
Marble Bar Hotel
Similarly, a sign outside the old Marble Bar Hotel
(1897), offers an insight in the daily lives of miners.
'This is all that is left of the Marble Bar whose
reputation was such that it found a place in the memory of nearly every
pioneer resident of Coolgardie. The reasons for its popularity were
numerous. It supplied good cheap meals. The owners were always prepared
to give a free meal to a prospector down on his luck. Everyone was made
to feel welcome irrespective of whether he was well dressed or in dirty
clothes. The sparkling ginger beer dispensed at the Marble Bar was a
heady drink believed to be associated with the fact that almost next
door was a hotel. Later in its existence the Marble Bar was licensed
and remained a hotel until 1927.'
The architectural ostentation of the building stands as
a reminder of the extraordinary wealth which once existed in Coolgardie.
Warden's Court
The obvious starting point for any serious or
comprehensive look at old Coolgardie (and it is well worth spending the
time and exploring) is the magnificent three storey Warden's Court
building (when it was built it was reputed to be the largest building
in Western Australia outside Perth) in Bayley Street. It now houses the
town's museum which takes up two floors. It is genuinely very
interesting with detailed dioramas which give the visitor an idea of
what Coolgardie was like in its heyday. Next to the Museum is a piece
of C Y O'Connor's pipe which provided the town with a reliable water
supply in 1903.
Other buildings and sites of particular interest include
the local park, just along Bayley Street from the museum, which is like
an oasis. The town is surrounded by dry desert country and yet greenery
in the park and in front of the adjacent shire offices stands in stark
relief to the surrounding vegetation.
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The Gaol Tree in Hunt Street
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Gaol Tree
On Hunt Street (on the way to Warden Finnerty's
Residence) is the local Gaol Tree with replica chains attached. It is a
comment on the speed with which this wild town started. Before the gaol
was built prisoners were simply chained to this tree to await trial.
Warden Finnerty's House - The Residency
Warden Finnerty's house (located in McKenzie Street
off Hunt Street), known as 'The Residence', was built in Coolgardie in
1895. Finnerty played an important role in the history of Coolgardie
being the person responsible for the naming of the town and the person
who, while living at Southern Cross, actually granted the application
and lease which became known as 'Bayley's Reward lease No 133'.
The Residency was built at a cost of £2800 out of
stone which was 45 cm thick. It has 12 ft (3.66 m) ceilings which have
been clad in ripple metal. The building is a statement of the important
position Warden Finnerty enjoyed in the community at the time. It is
also an excellent example of architecture designed to protect people
against the harshness of the local climate. The verandahs are wide, the
windows are louvred and there is a ventilated roof lantern.
The building was purchased by the National Trust in
1976 and has since been restored to its original condition and
furnished in a 'manner that will reflect the period of Warden
Finnerty's occupancy and the prosperity of the times and the tastes of
the original occupants'.
Warden Finnerty's Residence is open for inspection
from 1.00 pm - 4.00 pm every day except Thursday and on Sundays it is
also open from 10.00 am - 12.00 noon.
Old Coolgardie Railway Station
In Woodward Street (one block south of Bayley Street)
the Old Coolgardie Railway Station (1896) stands pretty much intact.
For people interested in railway history the old steam train and the
antique carriages recall an earlier era. An exhibition inside the
station includes the famous Modesta Varischetti rescue - an incident in
1907 when a sudden rain storm trapped Varischetti underground for nine
days as people rushed to bail the water out of the mine and divers
desperately attempted to get to the man who was caught in an air lock
in the maze of mine tunnels. The drama, and Varischetti's dramatic
rescue, captured world attention at the time.
Ben Prior's Open Air Museum
Ben Prior's Open Air Museum, on the corner of Hunt and
Bayley Streets, is a marvellous raggle taggle museum full of bits and
pieces which recall the early history of the area. It is notable for
Ben Prior's original approach to spelling. Some of the captions on
exhibits really defy all spelling rules.
State Battery
A popular attraction outside of town is the tour of
the State Battery. It is the only fully operational battery in the
state and tours - contact either (08) 9026 6011 or (08) 9026 6090 -
include the opportunity to see gold being extracted and poured into
bullion bars. The building, which was erected in 1902, has been listed
by the National Estate as 'a representative industrial building form
which is still in use'.
This is but a brief list of the highlights of the town.
With well over 100 markers recording the history of the town and with
just about every building on Bayley Street being a structure of
historic importance (a total of 23 buildings in the town centre have
been listed on the National Estate register), it is reasonable to
suggest that Coolgardie could occupy an enthusiastic visitor for two
days. For people interested in one of the most exciting moments in
Australia's history this is a town which should not be missed.
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Tourist Information
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Coolgardie Tourist Information Centre
62 Bayley St
Coolgardie
WA
6429
Telephone: (08) 9026 6090
Facsimile: (08) 9026 6008
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Motels
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Coolgardie Caltex Motel
110 Great Eastern Hwy
Coolgardie
WA
6429
Telephone: (08) 9026 6049
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Coolgardie Motel
43 Bayley St
Coolgardie
WA
6429
Telephone: (08) 9026 6080
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Coolgardie Motor Inn
Great Eastern Hwy
Coolgardie
WA
6429
Telephone: (08) 9026 6002
Rating: **
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Hotels
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Denver City Hotel
Bayley St
Coolgardie
WA
6429
Telephone: (08) 9026 6031
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Railway Lodge Hotel
75 Bayley St
Coolgardie
WA
6429
Telephone: (08) 9026 6166
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The Haven Caravan Park
Great Eastern Hwy
Coolgardie
WA
6429
Telephone: (08) 9026 6123
Rating: **
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Bed & Breakfast/Guesthouses
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Goldrush Lodge Bed & Breakfast
75 Bayley St
Coolgardie
WA
6429
Telephone: (08) 9026 6446
Facsimile: (08) 9026 6446
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Caravan Parks
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Coolgardie Caravan Park
Bayley St
Coolgardie
WA
6429
Telephone: (08) 9026 6009
Rating: **
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Restaurants
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Coolgardie Motor Inn Restaurant
Great Eastern Hwy
Coolgardie
WA
6429
Telephone: (08) 9026 6002
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