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Beechworth

Beechworth is a well-preserved historical town located in the north-east of Victoria, Australia, famous for its major growth during the gold rush days of the mid-1850s. At the 2021 census, Beechworth had a population of 3,290.

Beechworth
Victoria
Panorama of Beechworth town centre
Beechworth
Coordinates36°21′34″S 146°41′13″E / 36.35944°S 146.68694°E / -36.35944; 146.68694
Population3,290 (2021 census)[1]
Postcode(s)3747
Elevation560 m (1,837 ft)
Location
LGA(s)Shire of Indigo
State electorate(s)Benambra
Federal division(s)Indi
Mean max temp Mean min temp Annual rainfall
18.4 °C
65 °F
7.8 °C
46 °F
959.7 mm
37.8 in
Localities around Beechworth:
Chiltern Wooragee
Eldorado Beechworth
Everton Upper Murmungee Stanley
Spring Creek diggings, c1855. Photo by Walter B Woodbury
Church, Beechworth, c1855. Photo by Walter Woodbury
Woolshed Creek c1855. Photo by W.B. Woodbury
Woolshed Creek
Beechworth historic precinct in Ford Street

Beechworth's many historical buildings are well preserved and the town has re-invented itself and evolved into a popular tourist destination and growing wine-producing centre.

History edit

Beechworth Parish and Township plans were prepared, named and certified by George D. Smythe after he had left the family estate near Liverpool in 1828, then again near Launceston, Tasmania, in 1838.

Originally used for grazing by the settler David Reid, the area was also sometimes known as Mayday Hills until 1853.[2] The Post Office opened on 1 May 1853 as Spring Creek and was renamed Beechworth on 1 January 1854.[3]

One Indigenous name for the area of unknown origin and language is Baarmutha.[4]

Gold edit

Between 1852 and 1857, Beechworth was a gold-producing region and centre of government; however, its power, wealth and influence were short-lived. According to Carole Woods, an early party of prospectors retrieved a pan of gold from the area weighing 14 pounds (6.4 kg).[5] Another lucky party cleared some 50 pounds (23 kg) of gold in a week.[6] And so began a rush into this remote region. During the first election campaign in 1855, one candidate, Daniel Cameron, rode a horse shod with solid gold horseshoes. The extravagance of this event is still commemorated as the logo for Beechworth is a golden horseshoe.

At the time, Beechworth was far removed from the centre of colonial administration in Melbourne both in distance and time taken to travel. The local debates around the potential railway into Beechworth encompassed a broad gauge (5 ft 3 in / 1,600 mm) option or a narrow gauge (2 ft 6 in / 762 mm) system, between Wangaratta and Beechworth and these debates and options appeared in the Ovens and Murray Advertiser newspaper. Ironically, in the 1890s a narrow gauge system did eventuate nearby, running from Wangaratta to Whitfield. Finally a broad gauge railway arrived at Beechworth in September 1876,[7] but by that stage the town and its gold production was waning. The rail line was closed in 1977 and dismantled, after 101 years of service.

During its boom times, Beechworth town boasted a range of industries including, a tannery, jewellers, boot makers, a brewery, blacksmiths, livestock sale yards. It had schools, a convent, hotels, a prison with imposing stone walls, a hospital, a mental hospital, court house, police barracks, stage coach companies and a powder magazine.

 
Beechworth State Bank of Victoria

In its golden days, men and women arrived from the United States, United Kingdom and China. At its peak, Beechworth town had over 3,100 residents.[8] Surrounding areas and mining camps sprang up as thousands of miners rushed into areas such as Spring Creek, Reedy Creek, Silver Creek, the Nine Mile Creek and the Woolshed increasing the population on the Ovens to around 22,000.[9] The Chinese were not allowed to live in Beechworth town and resided on the outskirts. Numerous controls, regulations and licence checks were enforced on the Chinese miners (see: Woods; also McWaters; also O'Brien; and Cronin). Beechworth Cemetery has a large preserved section of early Chinese miners/pioneers. The presence of the Chinese goldminers around Beechworth and throughout Victoria's north-eastern region created social unrest and these are recorded in O'Brien's; Woods'; and Cronin's works below.

Recent years edit

The Beechworth Magistrates' Court closed on 1 January 1990.[10]

Notable figures edit

Like many Australian country towns associated with the early goldfields, Beechworth had its share of colourful characters and villains. Among the infamous during the 1870s was the one-time Livery Stable owner, later the 'Dog Officer', at some other time the 'Pound Officer' and another time shire revenue officer, John Phelan.[11] Phelan was a continual litigant, correspondent to the newspapers and advertiser. His official and officious escapades were mockingly reported in the local paper.[12]

Robert O'Hara Burke edit

Robert O'Hara Burke, leader of the ill-fated Burke and Wills expedition was stationed in Beechworth as Senior Inspector of Police from 1854 to 1857.[13] Policeman John Sadleir, one of the Kelly Gang pursuers, was also stationed in Beechworth during its early days.(Harvey)

The Burke Museum is located in Loch Street and holds primary materials on Beechworth and the surrounding district's past. Source materials include newspapers, photos, artefacts, clothing, paintings, exhibitions, published local histories and unpublished theses on the district and displays dating back to the gold discoveries, early Chinese miners and workings of the 1850s.

Sir Isaac Isaacs edit

Isaac Isaacs was Australia's first native-born Governor-General, appointed in 1931. The Isaacs family moved from Yackandandah to Beechworth in 1867 to help their son to gain a better quality education, first enrolling him in the Common school then in the Beechworth Grammar School. He became dux in his first year. In his second year he was employed part-time as an assistant teacher at the school, and took up after school tutoring of fellow students. In September 1870, when Isaacs was just 15 years old, he passed his examination as a pupil teacher and taught at the school from then until 1873. Isaacs was next employed as an assistant teacher at the Beechworth State School, the successor to the Common school.[14]

From 1875 Isaacs moved to Melbourne for work and to undertake law studies. His connection to Beechworth was re-established when he was elected as the member for Bogong in the Victorian Legislative Assembly from May 1892 until May 1893 and between June 1893 and May 1901. Isaacs further represented Beechworth and surrounding areas when he was elected to the first Federal Parliament in 1901 to the seat of Indi. He served until 1906 when he was appointed to the High Court.

His little-known brother John Alfred Isaacs was also a lawyer and represented Ovens, the local electorate, from 1894 to 1902, but died insolvent and embroiled in matrimonial problems.

Ned Kelly edit

The outlaw Ned Kelly had many links to Beechworth – he spent time in HM Prison Beechworth and fought a famous boxing bout with Isaiah "Wild" Wright in the back of a local hotel.[15] Aaron Sherritt and Joe Byrne of the Kelly Gang came from the Woolshed goldmining camp, outside of Beechworth town. It was in Beechworth gaol that twenty-one men, suspected Kelly Gang supporters, relatives and other sympathisers were held without trial or evidence for over three months, by the Chief Commissioner of Police Captain Standish, under the Outlawry Act.[16]

George B. Kerferd edit

George B. Kerferd (1836–1889), a longtime resident of Beechworth, became a Premier of Victoria and was a major participant in ensuring Beechworth had a railway connection to Melbourne.

John Buckley Castieau edit

 
The Commercial Hotel, Beechworth, c1855

Castieau (1831–1885) was the Prison Governor at Beechworth from 1856 to 1869. The prison, famous for its huge granite walls was known as "Castieau's castle". As the Governor of the Melbourne gaol in 1880 he was an official witness to the hanging of Ned Kelly. His diaries were later published (2004) as The Difficulties of My Position.[17] In this book a drawing from the Australian Sketcher, 14 August 1880 shows Castieau sitting with Ned Kelly during his remand (p. 278) and also a photo of his signature as one of the witnesses to the Kelly hanging (p. viii). Castieau was an early member of Melbourne's Garrick Club.[18]

Sir Albert Edward (Bert) Chadwick edit

Born in 1897, died in 1983. Sportsman, businessman and sports administrator.[19]

Alfred William Foster edit

Born in 1886, died in 1962. Judge.[20]

Climate edit

At the southernmost end of the South West Slopes, Beechworth has a cool climate much of the year. On account of its western longitude, summer warmth is inconsistent, often punctuated by cold fronts and cool changes (unlike in north-eastern Victoria proper where summers are rather stable). Beechworth's climate is thus more reminiscent of that in central Victoria. As one of the higher towns in the state, snowfalls can be expected each year, sometimes falling in moderate to heavy amounts.

Rainfall records are found as early as 1858, but temperature readings did not commence until 1908.

Climate data for Beechworth Composite (1908–1986, rainfall 1858–2023); 580 m AMSL; 36.37° S, 146.71° E
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 39.3
(102.7)
40.0
(104.0)
36.7
(98.1)
27.6
(81.7)
23.2
(73.8)
20.5
(68.9)
19.8
(67.6)
20.9
(69.6)
25.6
(78.1)
28.9
(84.0)
36.2
(97.2)
37.5
(99.5)
40.0
(104.0)
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 27.3
(81.1)
27.3
(81.1)
23.9
(75.0)
18.6
(65.5)
13.9
(57.0)
10.7
(51.3)
9.6
(49.3)
11.3
(52.3)
14.3
(57.7)
17.8
(64.0)
21.5
(70.7)
25.1
(77.2)
18.4
(65.2)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) 13.4
(56.1)
13.8
(56.8)
11.4
(52.5)
7.9
(46.2)
5.3
(41.5)
3.4
(38.1)
2.6
(36.7)
3.4
(38.1)
4.9
(40.8)
7.0
(44.6)
9.3
(48.7)
11.6
(52.9)
7.8
(46.1)
Record low °C (°F) 1.8
(35.2)
2.9
(37.2)
−0.6
(30.9)
−1.7
(28.9)
−3.9
(25.0)
−3.9
(25.0)
−5.6
(21.9)
−3.7
(25.3)
−3.0
(26.6)
−1.7
(28.9)
−1.0
(30.2)
0.9
(33.6)
−5.6
(21.9)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 51.7
(2.04)
50.5
(1.99)
61.6
(2.43)
66.4
(2.61)
91.6
(3.61)
109.5
(4.31)
109.5
(4.31)
106.6
(4.20)
90.8
(3.57)
89.1
(3.51)
69.6
(2.74)
62.5
(2.46)
959.7
(37.78)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.2 mm) 6.1 5.8 6.7 8.1 11.3 13.3 14.9 14.9 12.7 11.4 9.1 7.7 122.0
Average afternoon relative humidity (%) 34 37 41 50 62 68 69 63 55 50 43 38 51
Source: Australian Bureau of Meteorology; Beechworth Composite

Newspapers edit

In its golden heyday Beechworth boasted two influential newspapers: The Ovens and Murray Advertiser and The Constitution and Mining Intelligencer. These papers engaged in fierce competition and for a while were daily issues. The papers circulated far and wide throughout the district and the colony of Victoria.(O'Brien) Both papers represented the views of their respective readerships sometimes to the exclusion of all others.(O'Brien) Even today, these old papers are an important historical research tool as most editions from the early 1850 survive and are micro-filmed and are available at the Burke Museum and most state and national libraries throughout Australia. These two local papers provide rich primary sources for many historians of Beechworth and its surrounds, plus the Kelly Gang historians.(See: Woods (1985); McMahon (2000); Lane (1978); McQuilton (1979); Jones (1995); McWaters (2002); O'Brien (2005); and Wild & McMahon (2006))

The Ovens and Murray Advertiser still survives as a local paper.

Tourism edit

 
Beechworth Gallery.
 
Victoria Police Station Beechworth 1880's-1990's (1858) at sunrise

Beechworth is a popular tourist destination. Attractions include Ned Kelly-themed displays at the old court house and the Ned Kelly Weekend, a recreation of the Kelly legend. It commemorates the anniversary of the outlaw's committal hearing held in the historic Beechworth Courthouse from August 6 to 11, 1880. Other popular draws to the area are its many annual festivals, including the famous Golden Horseshoes Festival Easter Parade through the centre of town, the Burke Museum, Forests Commission museum, waterfalls, Gun Powder Magazine, Newtown Bridge (Stone Bridge), Tail Race (Mining Race), Spring Creek Water Falls, Spring Creek Gorge, Beechworth Lunatic Asylum ghost tours, lakes, historic buildings, goldfields, walks, the Beechworth Bakery, Beechworth Honey, brewery, the lolly shop and night tours, restaurants and wineries. The town is one end point of the Murray to the Mountains Rail Trail.

The music video for famous singer/actor Jason Donovan's 1989 hit "Too Many Broken Hearts" was filmed in Beechworth.

Sport edit

The town has an Australian Rules football team (Beechworth Football Club) competing in the Tallangatta & District Football League.[21]

Golfers play at the Beechworth Golf Club on Balaclava Road.[22][23] A dedicated cross-country and downhill mountain biking track, the Beechworth Mountain Bike Park, is maintained by the Beechworth Chain Gang Mountain Bike Club.[24] Beechworth skate park is located close to the Beechworth pool. It has three bowls: one big, one medium and one small. Beechworth also has a swimming complex consisting of three pools of varying sizes for babies, kids and adults. The adult pool is about 25 metres long. It has five lanes and it is not very deep. It has an electric barbecue and also has a canteen with cold drinks and snacks.[25]

The Beechworth Wanderers Cricket Club currently play in the Wangaratta & District Cricket Association and have teams in A., A Reserve, B & C Grade, plus Under 16's, 14's and 12's.

Books on Beechworth edit

 
Beechworth Old Priory

Considering the present nature of the town, a surprising range and variety of books exist on Beechworth town, its adjoining goldfield camps, its surrounds and its heady goldfield days. These include numerous histories, a treasure of local histories, theses, material on bushrangers, police, Chinese, riots, the coming and going of the railway and novels set in the district.

Histories edit

  • Griffiths, Tom. Beechworth: An Australian Country Town and its Past, Greenhouse, North Melbourne, 1987. (solid research piece on a post-gold boom town and its re-invention)
  • McQuilton, John. The Kelly Outbreak 1878–1880, Melbourne University Press, Carlton, 1979. (wonderful insight into the Kelly Outbreak in NE Victoria and its geographical causes)
  • O'Brien, Antony. Shenanigans on the Ovens Goldfields: The 1859 Election, Artillery Publishing, Hartwell, 2005. (a solid, controversial piece with good insights into the social conflicts which emerged on the Ovens goldfield during an election year)
  • Shea, Peter, M (2010)Champagne From Six To Six (A short social history of Recreations and Entertainments at the Beechworth and Ovens goldfields 1852–1877) Conn: Eloquent Press Illus, 189pp (informative first hand accounts of cultural activity on the Beechworth and Ovens Goldfields)
  • Woods, Carole. Beechworth: A Titan's Field, Hargreen, North Melbourne, 1985. (a wide-ranging solid research piece on Beechworth from its earliest days 1830s to the late 19th century)
  • Williams, Jennifer. Listen to what they say, 2005. (a comprehensive oral history of the town from the early 20th century to the modern era)
  • Cronin, Kathryn. Colonial Casualties: Chinese in Early Victoria, Melbourne University Press, Carlton, 1997, (encompasses the Chinese miners of Northeastern Victoria)

Local histories edit

  • Clarke, Stan. How Old is Your Grandma, Beechworth, 1987. (on the district's freemasons)
  • Hanson, Anne. A White Handkerchief, Beechworth, 2010 (the story of Elizabeth Scott, the first woman hanged in Victoria and tried at the Beechworth Courthouse)
  • Harvey, R. C. Background to Beechworth: From 1852, Albury, 1952. (plus subsequent editions)
  • Hawley, G. & Davidson, R. Beechworth Sketchbook, Rigby, Adelaide, 1972.
  • Hyndman, Ian. Beechworth Cemetery – A stroll through history, Bethel Publications, Beechworth, 1988.
  • Hyndman, Ian. History of Beechworth, Bethel Publications, Beechworth.
  • Lane, Leo. History of the Parish of Beechworth 1854–1978, Parish of Beechworth, 1978. (on the Catholics of the district)
  • McMahon, D. M. The Golden Gum Tree: Hiram Allen Crawford, 1832–1916, Brisbane, 2000. (on an American pioneer in the district, who operated a stage coach company)
  • McMahon, H. Denise. & Wild, Christine G., American Fever Australian Gold ( Americans and Canadians involved in Northeast Victoria's Gold Rush), Middle Park, Qld. 2008
  • McWaters, Viviene. Beechworth's Little Canton, Albury, 2002 (on the Chinese goldminers at Spring Creek)
  • Shennan, M. Rosalyn. The 1855 Ovens Election and the Gold Horseshoes, Noble Park, 1990. (on an election event in 1855)
  • Shennan, M. Rosalyn. A Biographical Dictionary of the Pioneers of the Ovens and Townsmen of Beechworth, Noble Park, 1990. (A valuable resource tool for goldfields family researchers)
  • Williams, David. Gold and Granite Grandeur: Living History of Beechworth, Stanley and Eldorado, 1994. (fine drawings of the buildings, churches and forest trees of the area)
  • Wild, Christine, G. & McMahon, Denise, H. Old News Today: Tales of the Upper Murray: newspaper snippets from 1876–1900 3 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine, McClure, Wodonga, 2006 (local newspaper cuttings 1876–1900 with hundreds of family names and events)

Unpublished theses edit

  • O'Brien, Antony. Awaiting Ned Kelly: Rural Malaise in North-eastern Victoria 1872–73, B.A. (Hons), 1999 (sighted in Burke Museum).
  • McCullough, J. Beechworth After the Gold Rush: A study of its development to 1956, B.A. (Hons), Dept of Geography, Melbourne University, 1971.
  • Shea, Peter, M; (1994) Leisure as a Basis of Culture Selected Social Formations Beechworth 1852–1877) Master of Arts (Hon.), Monash University, Thesis Copy Donated by Author to Burke Museum 1996

Biography edit

  • Brown, Max. Australian Son, 1948 (plus subsequent editions) (Social insights and contemporary 1940s photos of Beechworth and its immediate surrounds)
  • Finnane, Mark. (Ed.), The Difficulties of My Position, The Diaries of Prison Governor John Buckley Castieau 1855–1884, National Library of Australia, Canberra, 2004. (insight into Beechworth's colonial society in the 1850s, '60s and '70s) ISBN 0-642-10793-9
  • Sadleir, John. Recollections of a Victorian Police Officer, 1913. (includes an insight into the land turmoils surrounding the Kelly Gang)
  • Gee, Margaret. A Long Way from Silver Creek, 2000. (a moving account of growing up in post-war Beechworth)
  • Jones, Ian. Ned Kelly a Short Life, Lothian, Port Melbourne, 1995. (a definitive account of the Kelly story)
  • Jones, Ian. The Friendship that destroyed Ned Kelly: Joe Byrne and Aaron Sherritt, Lothian, Port Melbourne, 1992.
  • Kenneally, J.J. The Inner History of the Kelly Gang, 1929 (plus many subsequent editions) (This work gives insights into the Beechworth locale, the Beechworth court sessions and colonial policing)

Novels set in part around Beechworth edit

Food edit

  • O'Toole, Tom. Secrets of the Beechworth Bakery, Bas, Melbourne, 2001.

Rail edit

  • Larsen, Wal. The MayDay Hills Railway, Wal Larsen, Bright, 1976.

Chinese goldminers in the region edit

  • Kaufman, R. J. The Chinese on the Upper Ovens Goldfields: 1855–1920, LRGM, Bright, 1997. ISBN 0-646-34017-4
  • Groom, Jocelyn. Chinese Pioneers of the King Valley, Centre for Continuing Education, Wangaratta, 2001. ISBN 0-909760-23-3
  • Talbot, Diann. The Buckland Valley Goldfield, Specialty Press, Albury, 2004 ISBN 0-9757170-0-6
  • O'Brien, Antony. Shenanigans on the Ovens Goldfields, Artillery Publishing, Hartwell, Vic., 2005 (cited above) Chapter 3.

References edit

  1. ^ Australian Bureau of Statistics (27 June 2017). "Beechworth (Urban Centre/Locality)". 2016 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 1 October 2007.  
  2. ^ "A DIAMOND WEDDING". Albury Banner and Wodonga Express. 4 March 1904. Retrieved 10 April 2018.
  3. ^ "Post Office List". Phoenix Auctions History. Retrieved 23 March 2021.
  4. ^ Clark, Ian D. (2002). Dictionary of Aboriginal placenames of Victoria. Heydon, Toby, 1972-, Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages. Melbourne: Victorian Aboriginal Corp. for Languages. ISBN 0-9579360-2-8. OCLC 54913331.
  5. ^ Woods, p. 10
  6. ^ Woods, p. 16
  7. ^ "The Ovens Valley Goldfields Railways", Eardley, Gifford, Australian Railway Historical Society Bulletin, December, 1968 pp. 281–294; January, 1969 1–18
  8. ^ O'Brien, Shenanignas, pp. 17–18.
  9. ^ Woods, p. 92
  10. ^ "Review of Legal Services in Rural and Regional Victoria" (PDF). Parliament of Victoria Law Reform Committee. May 2001. pp. 291–292. Retrieved 12 April 2020.
  11. ^ O'Brien, 'Awaiting Ned Kelly' & Jones, The Friendship, p. 29.
  12. ^ O'Brien
  13. ^ . www.beechworth.com.au. Archived from the original on 24 August 2006. Retrieved 30 October 2016.
  14. ^ Gordon, Max (1963). Sir Isaac Isaacs. Adelaide: Heinemann.
  15. ^ . www.beechworth.com.au. Archived from the original on 16 November 2006. Retrieved 30 October 2016.
  16. ^ Jones, pp. 177–178
  17. ^ John Buckley Castieau (Mark Finnane, editor), The difficulties of my position; the diaries of prison governor John Buckley Castieau 1855–1884, National Library of Australia, Canberra, 2004.
  18. ^ "More Wilsonians". The Newsletter: an Australian Paper for Australian People. Vol. 12, no. 46. New South Wales, Australia. 31 July 1909. p. 2. Retrieved 20 March 2021 – via National Library of Australia.
  19. ^ "Chadwick, Sir Albert Edward (Bert) (1897–1983)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University.
  20. ^ "Foster, Alfred William (1886–1962)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University.
  21. ^ Full Points Footy, , archived from the original on 16 May 2008, retrieved 25 July 2008
  22. ^ "Beechworth Golf Club".
  23. ^ Golf Select, Beechworth, retrieved 11 May 2009
  24. ^ . Archived from the original on 26 June 2009. Retrieved 8 July 2009.
  25. ^ "Swimming pools". www.indigoshire.vic.gov.au. Retrieved 15 July 2020.

External links edit

  • Australian Places – Beechworth 24 August 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  • Beechworth climatology, Australian Bureau of Meteorology, from the original on 28 March 2009, retrieved 16 February 2009
  • Beechworth Cemetery deceased records and online map at Chronicle Cemetery Map

beechworth, well, preserved, historical, town, located, north, east, victoria, australia, famous, major, growth, during, gold, rush, days, 1850s, 2021, census, population, victoriapanorama, town, centrecoordinates36, 35944, 68694, 35944, 68694population3, 2021. Beechworth is a well preserved historical town located in the north east of Victoria Australia famous for its major growth during the gold rush days of the mid 1850s At the 2021 census Beechworth had a population of 3 290 Beechworth VictoriaPanorama of Beechworth town centreBeechworthCoordinates36 21 34 S 146 41 13 E 36 35944 S 146 68694 E 36 35944 146 68694Population3 290 2021 census 1 Postcode s 3747Elevation560 m 1 837 ft Location284 km 176 mi NE of Melbourne39 km 24 mi SW of Wodonga38 km 24 mi E of WangarattaLGA s Shire of IndigoState electorate s BenambraFederal division s IndiMean max temp Mean min temp Annual rainfall18 4 C 65 F 7 8 C 46 F 959 7 mm 37 8 inLocalities around Beechworth Chiltern WoorageeEldorado BeechworthEverton Upper Murmungee StanleySpring Creek diggings c1855 Photo by Walter B WoodburyChurch Beechworth c1855 Photo by Walter WoodburyWoolshed Creek c1855 Photo by W B WoodburyWoolshed CreekBeechworth historic precinct in Ford StreetBeechworth s many historical buildings are well preserved and the town has re invented itself and evolved into a popular tourist destination and growing wine producing centre Contents 1 History 1 1 Gold 1 2 Recent years 1 3 Notable figures 1 3 1 Robert O Hara Burke 1 3 2 Sir Isaac Isaacs 1 3 3 Ned Kelly 1 3 4 George B Kerferd 1 3 5 John Buckley Castieau 1 3 6 Sir Albert Edward Bert Chadwick 1 3 7 Alfred William Foster 2 Climate 3 Newspapers 4 Tourism 5 Sport 6 Books on Beechworth 6 1 Histories 6 2 Local histories 6 2 1 Unpublished theses 6 3 Biography 6 4 Novels set in part around Beechworth 6 5 Food 6 6 Rail 6 7 Chinese goldminers in the region 7 References 8 External linksHistory editBeechworth Parish and Township plans were prepared named and certified by George D Smythe after he had left the family estate near Liverpool in 1828 then again near Launceston Tasmania in 1838 Originally used for grazing by the settler David Reid the area was also sometimes known as Mayday Hills until 1853 2 The Post Office opened on 1 May 1853 as Spring Creek and was renamed Beechworth on 1 January 1854 3 One Indigenous name for the area of unknown origin and language is Baarmutha 4 Gold edit Between 1852 and 1857 Beechworth was a gold producing region and centre of government however its power wealth and influence were short lived According to Carole Woods an early party of prospectors retrieved a pan of gold from the area weighing 14 pounds 6 4 kg 5 Another lucky party cleared some 50 pounds 23 kg of gold in a week 6 And so began a rush into this remote region During the first election campaign in 1855 one candidate Daniel Cameron rode a horse shod with solid gold horseshoes The extravagance of this event is still commemorated as the logo for Beechworth is a golden horseshoe At the time Beechworth was far removed from the centre of colonial administration in Melbourne both in distance and time taken to travel The local debates around the potential railway into Beechworth encompassed a broad gauge 5 ft 3 in 1 600 mm option or a narrow gauge 2 ft 6 in 762 mm system between Wangaratta and Beechworth and these debates and options appeared in the Ovens and Murray Advertiser newspaper Ironically in the 1890s a narrow gauge system did eventuate nearby running from Wangaratta to Whitfield Finally a broad gauge railway arrived at Beechworth in September 1876 7 but by that stage the town and its gold production was waning The rail line was closed in 1977 and dismantled after 101 years of service During its boom times Beechworth town boasted a range of industries including a tannery jewellers boot makers a brewery blacksmiths livestock sale yards It had schools a convent hotels a prison with imposing stone walls a hospital a mental hospital court house police barracks stage coach companies and a powder magazine nbsp Beechworth State Bank of VictoriaIn its golden days men and women arrived from the United States United Kingdom and China At its peak Beechworth town had over 3 100 residents 8 Surrounding areas and mining camps sprang up as thousands of miners rushed into areas such as Spring Creek Reedy Creek Silver Creek the Nine Mile Creek and the Woolshed increasing the population on the Ovens to around 22 000 9 The Chinese were not allowed to live in Beechworth town and resided on the outskirts Numerous controls regulations and licence checks were enforced on the Chinese miners see Woods also McWaters also O Brien and Cronin Beechworth Cemetery has a large preserved section of early Chinese miners pioneers The presence of the Chinese goldminers around Beechworth and throughout Victoria s north eastern region created social unrest and these are recorded in O Brien s Woods and Cronin s works below Recent years edit The Beechworth Magistrates Court closed on 1 January 1990 10 Notable figures edit Like many Australian country towns associated with the early goldfields Beechworth had its share of colourful characters and villains Among the infamous during the 1870s was the one time Livery Stable owner later the Dog Officer at some other time the Pound Officer and another time shire revenue officer John Phelan 11 Phelan was a continual litigant correspondent to the newspapers and advertiser His official and officious escapades were mockingly reported in the local paper 12 Robert O Hara Burke edit Robert O Hara Burke leader of the ill fated Burke and Wills expedition was stationed in Beechworth as Senior Inspector of Police from 1854 to 1857 13 Policeman John Sadleir one of the Kelly Gang pursuers was also stationed in Beechworth during its early days Harvey The Burke Museum is located in Loch Street and holds primary materials on Beechworth and the surrounding district s past Source materials include newspapers photos artefacts clothing paintings exhibitions published local histories and unpublished theses on the district and displays dating back to the gold discoveries early Chinese miners and workings of the 1850s Sir Isaac Isaacs edit Isaac Isaacs was Australia s first native born Governor General appointed in 1931 The Isaacs family moved from Yackandandah to Beechworth in 1867 to help their son to gain a better quality education first enrolling him in the Common school then in the Beechworth Grammar School He became dux in his first year In his second year he was employed part time as an assistant teacher at the school and took up after school tutoring of fellow students In September 1870 when Isaacs was just 15 years old he passed his examination as a pupil teacher and taught at the school from then until 1873 Isaacs was next employed as an assistant teacher at the Beechworth State School the successor to the Common school 14 From 1875 Isaacs moved to Melbourne for work and to undertake law studies His connection to Beechworth was re established when he was elected as the member for Bogong in the Victorian Legislative Assembly from May 1892 until May 1893 and between June 1893 and May 1901 Isaacs further represented Beechworth and surrounding areas when he was elected to the first Federal Parliament in 1901 to the seat of Indi He served until 1906 when he was appointed to the High Court His little known brother John Alfred Isaacs was also a lawyer and represented Ovens the local electorate from 1894 to 1902 but died insolvent and embroiled in matrimonial problems Ned Kelly edit The outlaw Ned Kelly had many links to Beechworth he spent time in HM Prison Beechworth and fought a famous boxing bout with Isaiah Wild Wright in the back of a local hotel 15 Aaron Sherritt and Joe Byrne of the Kelly Gang came from the Woolshed goldmining camp outside of Beechworth town It was in Beechworth gaol that twenty one men suspected Kelly Gang supporters relatives and other sympathisers were held without trial or evidence for over three months by the Chief Commissioner of Police Captain Standish under the Outlawry Act 16 George B Kerferd edit George B Kerferd 1836 1889 a longtime resident of Beechworth became a Premier of Victoria and was a major participant in ensuring Beechworth had a railway connection to Melbourne John Buckley Castieau edit nbsp The Commercial Hotel Beechworth c1855Castieau 1831 1885 was the Prison Governor at Beechworth from 1856 to 1869 The prison famous for its huge granite walls was known as Castieau s castle As the Governor of the Melbourne gaol in 1880 he was an official witness to the hanging of Ned Kelly His diaries were later published 2004 as The Difficulties of My Position 17 In this book a drawing from the Australian Sketcher 14 August 1880 shows Castieau sitting with Ned Kelly during his remand p 278 and also a photo of his signature as one of the witnesses to the Kelly hanging p viii Castieau was an early member of Melbourne s Garrick Club 18 Sir Albert Edward Bert Chadwick edit Born in 1897 died in 1983 Sportsman businessman and sports administrator 19 Alfred William Foster edit Born in 1886 died in 1962 Judge 20 Climate editAt the southernmost end of the South West Slopes Beechworth has a cool climate much of the year On account of its western longitude summer warmth is inconsistent often punctuated by cold fronts and cool changes unlike in north eastern Victoria proper where summers are rather stable Beechworth s climate is thus more reminiscent of that in central Victoria As one of the higher towns in the state snowfalls can be expected each year sometimes falling in moderate to heavy amounts Rainfall records are found as early as 1858 but temperature readings did not commence until 1908 Climate data for Beechworth Composite 1908 1986 rainfall 1858 2023 580 m AMSL 36 37 S 146 71 EMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 39 3 102 7 40 0 104 0 36 7 98 1 27 6 81 7 23 2 73 8 20 5 68 9 19 8 67 6 20 9 69 6 25 6 78 1 28 9 84 0 36 2 97 2 37 5 99 5 40 0 104 0 Mean daily maximum C F 27 3 81 1 27 3 81 1 23 9 75 0 18 6 65 5 13 9 57 0 10 7 51 3 9 6 49 3 11 3 52 3 14 3 57 7 17 8 64 0 21 5 70 7 25 1 77 2 18 4 65 2 Mean daily minimum C F 13 4 56 1 13 8 56 8 11 4 52 5 7 9 46 2 5 3 41 5 3 4 38 1 2 6 36 7 3 4 38 1 4 9 40 8 7 0 44 6 9 3 48 7 11 6 52 9 7 8 46 1 Record low C F 1 8 35 2 2 9 37 2 0 6 30 9 1 7 28 9 3 9 25 0 3 9 25 0 5 6 21 9 3 7 25 3 3 0 26 6 1 7 28 9 1 0 30 2 0 9 33 6 5 6 21 9 Average precipitation mm inches 51 7 2 04 50 5 1 99 61 6 2 43 66 4 2 61 91 6 3 61 109 5 4 31 109 5 4 31 106 6 4 20 90 8 3 57 89 1 3 51 69 6 2 74 62 5 2 46 959 7 37 78 Average precipitation days 0 2 mm 6 1 5 8 6 7 8 1 11 3 13 3 14 9 14 9 12 7 11 4 9 1 7 7 122 0Average afternoon relative humidity 34 37 41 50 62 68 69 63 55 50 43 38 51Source Australian Bureau of Meteorology Beechworth CompositeNewspapers editIn its golden heyday Beechworth boasted two influential newspapers The Ovens and Murray Advertiser and The Constitution and Mining Intelligencer These papers engaged in fierce competition and for a while were daily issues The papers circulated far and wide throughout the district and the colony of Victoria O Brien Both papers represented the views of their respective readerships sometimes to the exclusion of all others O Brien Even today these old papers are an important historical research tool as most editions from the early 1850 survive and are micro filmed and are available at the Burke Museum and most state and national libraries throughout Australia These two local papers provide rich primary sources for many historians of Beechworth and its surrounds plus the Kelly Gang historians See Woods 1985 McMahon 2000 Lane 1978 McQuilton 1979 Jones 1995 McWaters 2002 O Brien 2005 and Wild amp McMahon 2006 The Ovens and Murray Advertiser still survives as a local paper Tourism editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it June 2008 nbsp Beechworth Gallery nbsp Victoria Police Station Beechworth 1880 s 1990 s 1858 at sunriseBeechworth is a popular tourist destination Attractions include Ned Kelly themed displays at the old court house and the Ned Kelly Weekend a recreation of the Kelly legend It commemorates the anniversary of the outlaw s committal hearing held in the historic Beechworth Courthouse from August 6 to 11 1880 Other popular draws to the area are its many annual festivals including the famous Golden Horseshoes Festival Easter Parade through the centre of town the Burke Museum Forests Commission museum waterfalls Gun Powder Magazine Newtown Bridge Stone Bridge Tail Race Mining Race Spring Creek Water Falls Spring Creek Gorge Beechworth Lunatic Asylum ghost tours lakes historic buildings goldfields walks the Beechworth Bakery Beechworth Honey brewery the lolly shop and night tours restaurants and wineries The town is one end point of the Murray to the Mountains Rail Trail The music video for famous singer actor Jason Donovan s 1989 hit Too Many Broken Hearts was filmed in Beechworth Sport editThe town has an Australian Rules football team Beechworth Football Club competing in the Tallangatta amp District Football League 21 Golfers play at the Beechworth Golf Club on Balaclava Road 22 23 A dedicated cross country and downhill mountain biking track the Beechworth Mountain Bike Park is maintained by the Beechworth Chain Gang Mountain Bike Club 24 Beechworth skate park is located close to the Beechworth pool It has three bowls one big one medium and one small Beechworth also has a swimming complex consisting of three pools of varying sizes for babies kids and adults The adult pool is about 25 metres long It has five lanes and it is not very deep It has an electric barbecue and also has a canteen with cold drinks and snacks 25 The Beechworth Wanderers Cricket Club currently play in the Wangaratta amp District Cricket Association and have teams in A A Reserve B amp C Grade plus Under 16 s 14 s and 12 s Books on Beechworth edit nbsp Beechworth Old PrioryConsidering the present nature of the town a surprising range and variety of books exist on Beechworth town its adjoining goldfield camps its surrounds and its heady goldfield days These include numerous histories a treasure of local histories theses material on bushrangers police Chinese riots the coming and going of the railway and novels set in the district Histories edit Griffiths Tom Beechworth An Australian Country Town and its Past Greenhouse North Melbourne 1987 solid research piece on a post gold boom town and its re invention McQuilton John The Kelly Outbreak 1878 1880 Melbourne University Press Carlton 1979 wonderful insight into the Kelly Outbreak in NE Victoria and its geographical causes O Brien Antony Shenanigans on the Ovens Goldfields The 1859 Election Artillery Publishing Hartwell 2005 a solid controversial piece with good insights into the social conflicts which emerged on the Ovens goldfield during an election year Shea Peter M 2010 Champagne From Six To Six A short social history of Recreations and Entertainments at the Beechworth and Ovens goldfields 1852 1877 Conn Eloquent Press Illus 189pp informative first hand accounts of cultural activity on the Beechworth and Ovens Goldfields Woods Carole Beechworth A Titan s Field Hargreen North Melbourne 1985 a wide ranging solid research piece on Beechworth from its earliest days 1830s to the late 19th century Williams Jennifer Listen to what they say 2005 a comprehensive oral history of the town from the early 20th century to the modern era Cronin Kathryn Colonial Casualties Chinese in Early Victoria Melbourne University Press Carlton 1997 encompasses the Chinese miners of Northeastern Victoria Local histories edit Clarke Stan How Old is Your Grandma Beechworth 1987 on the district s freemasons Hanson Anne A White Handkerchief Beechworth 2010 the story of Elizabeth Scott the first woman hanged in Victoria and tried at the Beechworth Courthouse Harvey R C Background to Beechworth From 1852 Albury 1952 plus subsequent editions Hawley G amp Davidson R Beechworth Sketchbook Rigby Adelaide 1972 Hyndman Ian Beechworth Cemetery A stroll through history Bethel Publications Beechworth 1988 Hyndman Ian History of Beechworth Bethel Publications Beechworth Lane Leo History of the Parish of Beechworth 1854 1978 Parish of Beechworth 1978 on the Catholics of the district McMahon D M The Golden Gum Tree Hiram Allen Crawford 1832 1916 Brisbane 2000 on an American pioneer in the district who operated a stage coach company McMahon H Denise amp Wild Christine G American Fever Australian Gold Americans and Canadians involved in Northeast Victoria s Gold Rush Middle Park Qld 2008 McWaters Viviene Beechworth s Little Canton Albury 2002 on the Chinese goldminers at Spring Creek Shennan M Rosalyn The 1855 Ovens Election and the Gold Horseshoes Noble Park 1990 on an election event in 1855 Shennan M Rosalyn A Biographical Dictionary of the Pioneers of the Ovens and Townsmen of Beechworth Noble Park 1990 A valuable resource tool for goldfields family researchers Williams David Gold and Granite Grandeur Living History of Beechworth Stanley and Eldorado 1994 fine drawings of the buildings churches and forest trees of the area Wild Christine G amp McMahon Denise H Old News Today Tales of the Upper Murray newspaper snippets from 1876 1900 Archived 3 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine McClure Wodonga 2006 local newspaper cuttings 1876 1900 with hundreds of family names and events Unpublished theses edit O Brien Antony Awaiting Ned Kelly Rural Malaise in North eastern Victoria 1872 73 B A Hons 1999 sighted in Burke Museum McCullough J Beechworth After the Gold Rush A study of its development to 1956 B A Hons Dept of Geography Melbourne University 1971 Shea Peter M 1994 Leisure as a Basis of Culture Selected Social Formations Beechworth 1852 1877 Master of Arts Hon Monash University Thesis Copy Donated by Author to Burke Museum 1996Biography edit Brown Max Australian Son 1948 plus subsequent editions Social insights and contemporary 1940s photos of Beechworth and its immediate surrounds Finnane Mark Ed The Difficulties of My Position The Diaries of Prison Governor John Buckley Castieau 1855 1884 National Library of Australia Canberra 2004 insight into Beechworth s colonial society in the 1850s 60s and 70s ISBN 0 642 10793 9 Sadleir John Recollections of a Victorian Police Officer 1913 includes an insight into the land turmoils surrounding the Kelly Gang Gee Margaret A Long Way from Silver Creek 2000 a moving account of growing up in post war Beechworth Jones Ian Ned Kelly a Short Life Lothian Port Melbourne 1995 a definitive account of the Kelly story Jones Ian The Friendship that destroyed Ned Kelly Joe Byrne and Aaron Sherritt Lothian Port Melbourne 1992 Kenneally J J The Inner History of the Kelly Gang 1929 plus many subsequent editions This work gives insights into the Beechworth locale the Beechworth court sessions and colonial policing Novels set in part around Beechworth edit O Brien Antony Bye Bye Dolly Gray Artillery Publishing Hartwell 2006 Courtenay Bryce Four Fires 2001 Food edit O Toole Tom Secrets of the Beechworth Bakery Bas Melbourne 2001 Rail edit Larsen Wal The MayDay Hills Railway Wal Larsen Bright 1976 Chinese goldminers in the region edit Kaufman R J The Chinese on the Upper Ovens Goldfields 1855 1920 LRGM Bright 1997 ISBN 0 646 34017 4 Groom Jocelyn Chinese Pioneers of the King Valley Centre for Continuing Education Wangaratta 2001 ISBN 0 909760 23 3 Talbot Diann The Buckland Valley Goldfield Specialty Press Albury 2004 ISBN 0 9757170 0 6 O Brien Antony Shenanigans on the Ovens Goldfields Artillery Publishing Hartwell Vic 2005 cited above Chapter 3 References edit Australian Bureau of Statistics 27 June 2017 Beechworth Urban Centre Locality 2016 Census QuickStats Retrieved 1 October 2007 nbsp A DIAMOND WEDDING Albury Banner and Wodonga Express 4 March 1904 Retrieved 10 April 2018 Post Office List Phoenix Auctions History Retrieved 23 March 2021 Clark Ian D 2002 Dictionary of Aboriginal placenames of Victoria Heydon Toby 1972 Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages Melbourne Victorian Aboriginal Corp for Languages ISBN 0 9579360 2 8 OCLC 54913331 Woods p 10 Woods p 16 The Ovens Valley Goldfields Railways Eardley Gifford Australian Railway Historical Society Bulletin December 1968 pp 281 294 January 1969 1 18 O Brien Shenanignas pp 17 18 Woods p 92 Review of Legal Services in Rural and Regional Victoria PDF Parliament of Victoria Law Reform Committee May 2001 pp 291 292 Retrieved 12 April 2020 O Brien Awaiting Ned Kelly amp Jones The Friendship p 29 O Brien Robert O Hara Burke www beechworth com au Archived from the original on 24 August 2006 Retrieved 30 October 2016 Gordon Max 1963 Sir Isaac Isaacs Adelaide Heinemann Ned Kelly Beechworth www beechworth com au Archived from the original on 16 November 2006 Retrieved 30 October 2016 Jones pp 177 178 John Buckley Castieau Mark Finnane editor The difficulties of my position the diaries of prison governor John Buckley Castieau 1855 1884 National Library of Australia Canberra 2004 More Wilsonians The Newsletter an Australian Paper for Australian People Vol 12 no 46 New South Wales Australia 31 July 1909 p 2 Retrieved 20 March 2021 via National Library of Australia Chadwick Sir Albert Edward Bert 1897 1983 Australian Dictionary of Biography National Centre of Biography Australian National University Foster Alfred William 1886 1962 Australian Dictionary of Biography National Centre of Biography Australian National University Full Points Footy Beechworth archived from the original on 16 May 2008 retrieved 25 July 2008 Beechworth Golf Club Golf Select Beechworth retrieved 11 May 2009 Beechworth Chain Gang The Beechworth Mountain Bike Club Archived from the original on 26 June 2009 Retrieved 8 July 2009 Swimming pools www indigoshire vic gov au Retrieved 15 July 2020 External links edit nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Beechworth nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Beechworth Victoria Australian Places Beechworth Archived 24 August 2006 at the Wayback Machine Beechworth climatology Australian Bureau of Meteorology archived from the original on 28 March 2009 retrieved 16 February 2009 Beechworth Cemetery deceased records and online map at Chronicle Cemetery Map Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Beechworth amp oldid 1191269605, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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