|
|
The view from Five Rivers
Lookout
|
Wyndham
Exotic
and unusual isolated town in the far north of Western Australia.
Wyndham, Western Australia's most northerly town,
is about as isolated as any town in Australia can be. It sits on the
edge of the Cambridge Gulf slowly boiling under the oppressive tropical
sun, surrounded by salt lakes, desert and mudflats which stretch to the
horizon. It is located 3351 km from Perth via the North West Coastal
Highway and 930 km from Derby.
It is, like so many of the towns in the Kimberleys,
actually two towns. There is old Wyndham (known as Wyndham Port)
sweltering in the heat under that part of the Erskine Range known as
'The Bastion' and, a few kilometres up the Gulf on the road to
Kunanurra there is Wyndham Three Mile (sometimes known as Wyndham East).
The traditional Aboriginal inhabitants of the area were
the Djeidji, Dulngari and Aruagga tribes who lived on the rich harvest
of seafood available in the gulf.
The first European explorer into the area was Phillip
Parker King who sailed the 83 ton cutter Mermaid around La Crosse
Island and into the body of water he subsequently named Cambridge Gulf
after the then Duke of Cambridge. King arrived in the region on 19
September 1819. He had been given the brief to explore the far western
Australian coast and discover a river 'likely to lead to an interior
navigation into the great continent'. He sailed up a river (which was
subsequently named after him) and, unable to find any signs of fresh
water on the mudflats, departed.
King's description was so pessimistic that no
Europeans visited the area for the next sixty years. It wasn¹t until
1879 that Alexander Forrest (see Kunanurra for more detail) travelled
through the area and sent back reports of the huge pastoral potential.
These reports excited the interest of Solomon Emanuel and Patrick
Durack who sent a party to the area in 1881 which confirmed Forrest's
earlier assessment.
In 1883 John Forrest, at the time the WA
Commissioner of Lands, surveyed the area and hinted that the area Œbore
distinct indications of gold¹. It was in that same year that Patrick
'Patsy' Durack began his epic trek from southwest Queensland to the
region with 7250 head of breeding cattle and 200 horses. It was the
longest overlanding of cattle ever attempted in Australia and lasted 2
years and four months.
1884 saw the first settlement of the East Kimberley.
The isolation of the area at this time was truly horrific. The Cushidoo
was the first ship to land supplies at the site of Wyndham. The
supplies were meant for the Ord River Station but by the time people
from the station arrived to collect the shipment the local Aborigines
had removed all but a few bags of well hidden flour. This was also the
year when Charlie Hall (see Halls Creek) discovered gold in the East
Kimberley thus sparking a goldrush to the region.
In 1885 Wyndham was established as a port and trading
station. A couple of general stores were opened and the first shipment
of cattle and sheep arrived in the Gulf.
By 1886 the town was booming. There were six pubs (including
a large two storey building which was only knocked down in 1965), ships
landed at least 5000 miners who all headed off to the Halls Creek
goldfields, a townsite near the present day meatworks was surveyed and
blocks of land sold (mostly to speculators who never inspected their
purchases), and a number of shanties and resting spots grew up along
the track to the goldfields. It is known that during this boom there
were times when up to 16 vessels were moored in Cambridge Gulf.
The goldrush at Halls Creek was short lived. By 1888 the
rush was over and the effect on the fortunes of Wyndham was obvious.
One remnant from this period is the ruins of the Magistrate¹s Residence
(turn east around the northern end of the mudflats beyond the hotel at
Wyndham Port - it is worthwhile stopping at the Tourist Information
Centre and getting a copy of the mud map of the two townships).
There seems to be some confusion about the
Magistrate's Residence. Some sources claim that it was never completed
because the local Aborigines harassed the builders. Others claim that
the walls once rose to a height of 22 feet (6.7 metres) and that a
number of magistrates lived in the residence until it was closed down
in the early 1900s.
From 1888 until 1919 Wyndham was a tiny settlement
serving the pastoral interests in East Kimberley. Stories of this
period have an amusing, outback feel to them. The arrival of the
Overland Telegraph Line in 1889 provided the local Aborigines with an
excellent source of spearheads as they climbed up the poles and helped
themselves to the ceramic insulators. In 1900 the population of the
town comprised 61 people of voting age of whom 60 voted for federation.
The solitary anti-federationist never disclosed his or her identity.
By 1912 money had virtually disappeared from the town's
economy with everything being paid for with promissory notes known as
'shinplasters' which were issued by publicans and storekeepers. To the
delight of the people who issued them these 'shinplasters' often became
illegible if left in a sweaty pocket for too long.
By World War 1 the town was effectively controlled by the
Duracks who owned the nearby cattle stations. It was therefore
appropriate that in 1913 the WA Government started constructing the
Wyndham Meatworks. Work was interrupted by the war but the Meatworks
were finally completed in 1919. They continued to be the town¹s main
economic raison d¹etre until they was closed down in 1985. The last
bullock was killed and exported on 10 October, 1985.
Today Wyndham Port is still operational but it exports
live cattle to Asia and lead and zinc to Korea. The town¹s newest
industry is an export crocodile farm (located just beyond the old
Magistrates Residence). It is hoped that eventually up to 3000
crocodiles a year can be farmed.
With a population of between 1200-1500 Wyndham is now partly
sustained by tourism as more and more travellers visit this strange and
exotic old port.
Writers and commentators have not been terribly kind to
Wyndham. Most of the travel writers have suggested that the town has a
special charm but, having said that, they have proceeded to paint a
picture which has more than a passing resemblance to hell.
In 1951 George Farwell in his book The Outside Track
described the town as 'a lonely pin-point of settlement upon a vast and
empty landscape of tidal estuaries, mangroves, unpeopled valley floors
and barren, tree-less ranges' and two years later Leslie Rees painted a
grim picture of the town as having a foreground of 'empty 44-gallon
drums, beer bottles, old tins, bits of sheet iron, termite-eaten wood.
A background of salt marshes and harsh, desolate hills under the torrid
sun'. Neither of these descriptions is flattering to Wyndham. However
they do evoke the strangeness of this town on the far edge of the
continent.
Things to see:
Five Rivers Lookout
A suitable starting point is Five Rivers Lookout. It
is clearly signposted from Wyndham Three Mile and rises to the east of
the town offering one of the most dramatic views anywhere along the
Australian coastline. The view over the five rivers (the Durack, King,
and Pentecost to the south, Forrest to the west and Ord to the north)
and the vast mud flats which sprawl in every direction give the lookout
a viewpoint which can only be bettered by actually flying over the town.
|
|
The Big Crocodile in the main street
|
The Big Crocodile
At the entrance to Wyndham Three Mile there is a
huge 20 metre long concrete crocodile in the middle of the road. It is
hard to avoid it. This Œtourist attraction¹ is an interesting example
of computer technology. Designed and built by sculptor Andrew Hickson
the students from the Halls Creek TAFE it consists of 5.5 km of steel
rod, 10 rolls of bird mesh and 6 cubic metres of concrete. It was
created by photographing a crocodile and having a computer at Curtin
University plot 2400 mathematical coordinates of the crocodile's shape.
Crocodile Lookout
The town's fascination with crocodiles is justified.
Cambridge Gulf is teeming with them. At the port (just north of the
wharf) is the Crocodile Lookout but it is more historical than a
reality. This used to be the site where blood from the town¹s meatworks
drained into the Gulf. The local crocodiles, eager for a little blood
or leftover meat, would gather on the muddy banks of the river. Today
the site is typical crocodile territory - muddy mangroves and muddy
water - but a visitor would be lucky to see a crocodile.
Wyndham Port
Near the Crocodile Lookout are the old meatworks
buildings and at the beginning of the road to the lookout is a small
display of the trains and cranes which operated on the wharf. The
original late-nineteenth landing (Anton¹s Landing) was burnt down in
1944 and the wharf which now services Wyndham Port was first built in
1919 to coincide with the opening of the meatworks. 40 metres north of
the wharf is the wreck of the Koolama which sank in 1947. It is totally
submerged but a hint of its location can be determined by the swirling waters.
While in Wyndham Port stop at the Old Post Office (on
the western side of the road) which is now the Tourist Information
Centre and Post Office Museum. It is located over the road from the low
security prison, surely one of Wyndham Port¹s strangest sights. It is
quite common to see prisoners knocking fruit from the trees in the
prison grounds or sitting on the grass sunning themselves and watching
the world go by.
Wyndham Three Mile
At Wyndham Three Mile the local Aboriginal population
have constructed a set of huge statues depicting an Aboriginal family
complete with a dingo and kangaroo (this is one block to the east of
the main street). In the same street is a wonderful relic of Wyndham¹s
steamy nights - a classic outback cinema with comfortable deck chairs,
a small screen and enclosed projector booth.
|
|
The Grotto near Wyndham
|
The Prison
Tree and The Grotto
The area around Wyndham is surrounded by places of
great interest. Along the King River road is a Prison Tree, a hollowed
out old baobab tree which was used as a temporary lockup by the local
police, and on the road to Kunanurra The Grotto (signposted at the west
of the road) is worth a visit. Staircases carved out of the rock lead
to a quiet waterhole oasis in a kind of cool amphitheatre. It is one of
those strange anomalies in the landscape. Access to the Grotto is along
2 km of reasonable dirt road.
| |
Tourist Information
|
| |
| |
Wyndham Tourist Information Centre
Koolama St
P.O. Box 38
Wyndham
WA
6740
Telephone: (08) 9161 1281
|
| |
| |
Hotels
|
| |
| |
Wyndham Community Club Hotel
Great Northern Hwy
Wyndham
WA
6740
Telephone: (08) 9161 1130
Rating: **
|
| |
| |
| |
Wyndham Town Hotel
19 O¹Donnell St
Wyndham
WA
6740
Telephone: (08) 9161 1003
Rating: ***
|
| |
| |
Farm & Eco Holidays
|
| |
| |
Drysdale River Station
PMB 9
Wyndham
WA
6740
Telephone: (08) 9161 4326
|
| |
| |
| |
Parry Creek Farm
Parry's Creek Rd
Wyndham
WA
6740
Telephone: (08) 9161 1139
|
| |
| |
Caravan Parks
|
| |
| |
Three Mile Caravan Park
Baker St
Wyndham
WA
6740
Telephone: (08) 9161 1064
Rating: **
|
| |
| |
Camping & Other
|
| |
| |
K-Annus Accommodation
6 O'Donnell St
Wyndham
WA
6740
Telephone: (08) 9161 1401
|
| |
| |
Restaurants
|
| |
| |
Wyndham Community Club Hotel
Great Northern Hwy
Wyndham
WA
6740
Telephone: (08) 9161 1130
|
| |
| |
| |
Wyndham Town Hotel
19 O¹Donnell St
Wyndham
WA
6740
Telephone: (08) 9161 1003
|
| |