Wiluna
Isolated township which came into existence
with the arrival of gold fossickers
Located 949 km from Perth, 185 km east of
Meekatharra and 518 m above sea level, Wiluna (the name probably comes
from the Aboriginal word Œweeluna¹ or Œweeloona¹ which could have meant
either Œbush curlew¹ or Œplace of winds¹) came into existence after
gold was found in the area in 1891.
The first European into the area had been John Forrest
who, in 1875, passed through the area, established a food and supplies
depot at Weld Spring 230 km north of the present townsite, and
experiencing problems with the very unfriendly local Aborigines, built
a small fort.
Gold was first discovered by William Earl and John
Connelley in 1891 and, due to a reliable water supply, the town
prospered while never becoming a boisterous boomtown like Menzies or Leonora.
Travelling through the area in 1900 May Vivienne,
whose account of her visit appears in Travels in Western Australia,
observed that the town had Œthree hotels and stores¹ and that
watermelons, tomatoes and fresh water helped relieve the awful desert temperatures.
Wiluna¹s great claim to historical fame is based
on its location at the southern end of the lonely Canning Stock Route.
This is not a drive to be undertaken lightly. 1800 km from Wiluna to
Halls Creek (or vice versa) through the Great Sandy Desert and Gibson
Desert, past vast salt lakes and hopping from one well to the next is
enough to test the mettle of any 4WD vehicle and its occupants. It is
essential to be totally self-sufficient for the entire journey and to
notify the police at both the departure and arrival points.
The original stock route was surveyed by Alfred Wernam
Canning - who gave his name to the route. The proposal had been in
existence since the 1890s. It had been championed by the graziers of
the East Kimberley who, because their cattle suffered from Œred water
fever¹, were quarantined from the West Kimberley and Pilbara. The
graziers argued that a dry, overland route (in spite of the dangers)
would kill off the Œred water fever¹ ticks. The route was surveyed in
19067 and the 54 vital wells (each about 30 km apart) were dug in 190810.
The town really came alive in the 1930s. The low
grade ore had discouraged many miners but a Perth entrepreneur, Claude
de Bernales, developed a successful extraction method and in the 1930s
his Wiluna Gold Mines Ltd saw the town boom with the population
reaching 9000 and businesses springing up to meet the increased demand.
A fascinating account of life in Wiluna at this time
is available in writer-prospector James Doughty¹s Gold in the Blood.
His image of the street where he lived captures Wiluna¹s isolation
perfectly: ŒIf one cared to walk to the end of Seventh Street, and keep
going into the trackless, sometimes stony, sometimes sandy desert, one
might go a thousand miles without encountering another living soul.¹
His image of the town at this time is powerful and evocative:
ŒIt lay in the desert on the road to nowhere, an
isolated township of tin-roofed shanties, drab and dilapidated with the
passing years. More than a hundred empty miles to the west was
Meekatharra. Leonora was almost double that distance to the south and
the east. These two faded towns were railheads, outposts on the edge of
things. Wiluna lay beyond; a central point for a fan of desolation that
swept out and upwards into uncomputed distances.¹
Today Wiluna is nothing but a glimmer of its
former glory. A lonely outpost on the edge of a vast desert with all
its raison d¹etres removed. Little mining. No railhead. No Canning
Stock Route. The only recent achievements have been those of the local
Ngangganawili Community who have set up a citrus orchard and an emu
farm both of which have proved successful.
Things to see:
Canning Stock Route
A useful and detailed guide titled the Canning Stock
Route - Retracing the Halls CreekWiluna Stock Route (1910-1958) is one
of the excellent Heritage Trail publications. Contact (08) 9322 4375
for details on its availability.
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Motels
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Club Motel/Hotel
6 Wotton Street
Wiluna
WA
6646
Telephone: (08) 9981 7012
Rating: **
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Caravan Parks
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Wiluna Caravan Park
Lennon St
Wiluna
WA
6646
Telephone: (08) 9981 7021
Rating: *
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Restaurants
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Club Motel/Hotel
6 Wotton Street
Wiluna
WA
6646
Telephone: (08) 9981 7012
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