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Clunes, Victoria

Clunes is a town in Victoria, Australia, 36 kilometres north of Ballarat, in the Shire of Hepburn. At the 2016 census it had a population of 1,728.[1]

Clunes
Victoria
Main street of Clunes
Clunes
Coordinates37°18′0″S 143°47′0″E / 37.30000°S 143.78333°E / -37.30000; 143.78333
Population1,728 (2016 census)[1]
Establishedmid-1850s
Postcode(s)3370
Elevation310 m (1,017 ft)
Location
LGA(s)Shire of Hepburn
State electorate(s)Ripon
Federal division(s)Ballarat
Mean max temp Mean min temp Annual rainfall
19.6 °C
67 °F
6.3 °C
43 °F
575.2 mm
22.6 in

Clunes is best known as the site of Victoria's first registered gold discovery in 1850 and its first gold strike in 1873, which lasted three months. A campus of Wesley College is based in Clunes and parts of the original Mad Max (1979) were filmed in the town, famously showcasing the Creswick Creek Bridge, in Clunes’s more regional farming area. Other films include “Ned Kelly” (2016) and Stan TV series “Bloom” (2018). The annual Clunes Booktown Festival began in 2007 and draws significant tourism to the area, with over 10 book shops around the town.

History edit

Pre-colonial edit

The Dja Dja Wurrung, an Aboriginal Australian people belonging to the Kulin nation, first inhabited the region which included Clunes. Most of their population was decimated in the twenty years after Scottish explorer Thomas Mitchell surveyed the land in 1836. This was due to the introduction of European occupation and diseases;[2] for example, 6–10 tribesmen were killed in the 1839 Blood Hole massacre at the nearby Glengower station.[3]

Mitchell probably encouraged his fellow clansmen to take up pastures which, on his travels, were bordered by a line dug into the earth by his drays. They included overlander Donald Cameron, who took up a 12,000 ha (120 km2) run in mid-1839 and named it Clunes for his Scottish hometown, building a homestead in the 1850s. While Cameron was the first European settler, his run was soon bordered by those of other Scottish pastoralists.[2][4]

Pastoral and gold rush edit

 
View of Clunes and the Port Phillip and Colonial Gold Mining Company operations in 1861

In March 1850, a party of four, including Cameron and his friend William Campbell MLA, found traces of gold on his station. The discovery initially was kept secret as it was feared that announcing it would be detrimental to the Clunes run.[5]

In April 1851, German physicist George Hermann Bruhn arrived at Clunes while on a journey to examine the Colony of Victoria's mineral resources and was shown specimens of gold by Cameron. Bruhn spread the discovery across Australia and sent specimens to the Gold Discovery Committee on 30 June. After confirming the area was auriferous, James Esmond—who had been informed by Bruhn—and his co-worker James Pugh enlisted the help of sawyers Burns and Kelly; they obtained gold in quartz rocks near Clunes on 29 June. The Geelong Advertiser announced these findings on 7 July and the precise location of Esmond's discovery on 22 July.[5]

William Campbell's announcement in Melbourne and Davies news item triggered the gold rush in Victoria. The township was established a few years later and subsequent gold mining predominantly driven by the Port Phillip and Colonial Mining Company which was mining the site of the discovery[6] saw the town's population rising to well over 6,000 residents in the late 1880s.[citation needed]

Clunes post office opened as early as 1 October 1857[7] and in 1874 Clunes was connected to the Victorian railway network. Clunes station was opened in the same year.[citation needed]

In 1873 mine employers attempted to introduce Saturday afternoon and Sunday shifts. The miners refused to sign the new terms outlined in their contract renewals and went on a strike that lasted 3 months. Some days into the action the miners organised the Clunes Miners' Association and what were to become known as the Clunes riots, successfully resisting the use of Chinese labour from Creswick[8] as strikebreakers.[9]

From the 1850s through to 1893, when gold mining eventually came to an end, Clunes was an important gold production location in Victoria. Surrounded by grassland, meadows and pastures, the town has preserved many of its elegant historic buildings and is recognised as one of the architecturally most-intact gold towns in Victoria.[citation needed]

Twentieth century edit

The Clunes Magistrates' Court closed on 1 January 1983.[10]

21st century edit

Booktown edit

The idea of transforming Clunes into a European-style booktown was first conceived and developed by Councillor Tim Hayes, Linda Newitt, Graeme Johnston and Tess Brady.[citation needed] Clunes held its first "Booktown for a Day" event on 20 May 2007. Over 50 booksellers from around Australia set up shop for the day in the town's heritage buildings.[citation needed] Renamed to "Back to Booktown" a year later and to "Clunes Booktown Festival" in 2012, as of 2008 was holding the event each year on the first weekend in May.[11]

The event has won recognition and awards, including:[citation needed]

  • 2008: Hepburn Shire's Community Event of the Year
  • 21 January 2010: John Brumby, premier of Victoria, said during the Australia Day Luncheon: "In Victoria we even have our very own booktown. The regional community of Clunes in north-west Victoria sees its future as a cultural destination centred around literature. As well as their successful 'Back to Booktown' festival, just last month our Government helped launch the new Creative Clunes Community Bookshop."
  • 23 November 2010: Australian Civic Trust Award of Merit in the Human Category to "Back to Booktown", for its use of heritage buildings in a "respectful, as against destructive use"
  • 19 April 2012: Clunes given "International Book Town" status, by the International Organisation of Book Towns
  • 2013: Australia Day awards for Hepburn Shire's Community Event of the Year, to "Children's Booktown 2012'

Wesley College campus edit

Between 2000 and 2008, Clunes underwent a noticeable transformation and rejuvenation[12] following the decision by Wesley College, Australia's largest co-educational private school, to establish a campus for Year 9 students in the town. Opened in 2000, about 80 students take up residency in the Wesley Clunes Residential Learning Village in the centre of town and become part of the local community for an eight-week period each term. Where they learn how to live in a shared house and how to live with others when they grow up.[citation needed]

Sport edit

 
Clunes Football Ground, home of the Clunes Magpies

The town's Australian rules football/netball team is the Clunes Magpies, competing in the Central Highlands Football League and Central Highlands Netball League.[13]

Golfers play at the Clunes Golf Club on Golf Course Road.[14]

Clunes has a cricket club playing in the Maryborough District Cricket Association.[citation needed]

Clunes has a lawn bowls club that competes in the Ballarat District Bowls Division.[citation needed]

Transport edit

Clunes railway station is located on the Mildura line.[citation needed]

When the state government announced the Victorian Transport Plan, along with V/Line services being extended to Maryborough, Clunes was not part of the plan (with the only stations being Creswick and Maryborough). However, as a result of protest by the town, the Government announced on 17 June 2010 that Clunes would be reopened and included on the line.[15]

In film edit

Notable residents or place of birth edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Australian Bureau of Statistics (27 June 2017). "Clunes (State suburb)". 2016 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 9 July 2017.  
  2. ^ a b "Talbot and Clunes Conservation Study" (PDF).
  3. ^ Evershed, Nick; Ball, Andy; Allam, Lorena; O'Mahony, Ciaran; Nadel, Jeremy; Earl, Carly. "The killing times: a massacre map of Australia's frontier wars". the Guardian. Retrieved 2 September 2021. The specific source cited is Massola, A. (1969) Journey to Aboriginal Victoria, Rigby, Adelaide, p.88
  4. ^ "Clunes". The Sydney Morning Herald. 11 December 2007. Retrieved 31 March 2023.
  5. ^ a b Report From The Selective Committee Of The Legislative Council On The Claims For The Discovery Of Gold In Victoria (PDF) (Report). Melbourne: Victorian Legislative Council. 10 March 1854. Retrieved 31 March 2023.
  6. ^ History of The Port Phillip Mining Company
  7. ^ Premier Postal History. "Post Office List". Retrieved 11 April 2008.
  8. ^ Ballaret Courier 1873
  9. ^ The Ballarat Star (Vic. : 1865–1924) Wed 10 December 1873 Page 2 RIOTS AT CLUNES
  10. ^ "Special Report No. 4 - Court Closures in Victoria" (PDF). Auditor-General of Victoria. 1986. p. 79. Retrieved 12 April 2020.
  11. ^ . Clunes.org. Archived from the original on 1 May 2008. Retrieved 8 February 2008.
  12. ^ . aare.edu.au. Doug Lloyd and Tamara Downey. 12 March 2009. Archived from the original on 21 October 2008. Retrieved 12 March 2009.
  13. ^ Full Points Footy. . Archived from the original on 7 September 2008. Retrieved 25 July 2008.
  14. ^ Golf Select. "Clunes". Retrieved 11 May 2009.
  15. ^ "Possibility of reopening railway stations". The Maryborough District Advertiser. 26 August 2011.
  16. ^ "Tomorrow when the War Began". Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
  17. ^ Kachka, Boris (4 June 2017). "How to End a TV Show: An Exclusive Look at the Making of The Leftovers Finale". www.vulture.com.
  18. ^ "Picnic at Hanging Rock review – tale of missing schoolgirls haunted by its own retelling". TheGuardian.com. 10 May 2018.
  19. ^ "Bloom is proof Australian TV can be as bold as anything from overseas". 27 December 2018.
  20. ^ "Watch True History of the Kelly Gang". Stan.
  21. ^ "From Cairns to Clunes to Cannes". Jo Roberts. theage.com.au. 27 May 2008. Retrieved 27 May 2008.
  22. ^ "Beadle, Jane (Jean) (1868–1942)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University.
  23. ^ Blainey, G, The Rush that Never Ended, MUP, 1978.
  24. ^ "Jobson, Nancy (1880–1964)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University.
  25. ^ "Lewis, Robert (Bob) (1878–1947)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University.
  26. ^ "Longstaff, Sir John Campbell (1861–1941)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University.
  27. ^ "Tarrant, Harley (1860–1949)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University.
  28. ^ "Nick Hind".

External links edit

  • Clunes tourism information
  • , by Jerome Small
  • Clunes campus, Wesley College
  • Clunes Football Netball Club

clunes, victoria, clunes, town, victoria, australia, kilometres, north, ballarat, shire, hepburn, 2016, census, population, clunes, victoriamain, street, clunesclunescoordinates37, 30000, 78333, 30000, 78333population1, 2016, census, establishedmid, 1850spostc. Clunes is a town in Victoria Australia 36 kilometres north of Ballarat in the Shire of Hepburn At the 2016 census it had a population of 1 728 1 Clunes VictoriaMain street of ClunesClunesCoordinates37 18 0 S 143 47 0 E 37 30000 S 143 78333 E 37 30000 143 78333Population1 728 2016 census 1 Establishedmid 1850sPostcode s 3370Elevation310 m 1 017 ft Location139 km 86 mi from Melbourne34 km 21 mi from Ballarat92 km 57 mi from BendigoLGA s Shire of HepburnState electorate s RiponFederal division s BallaratMean max temp Mean min temp Annual rainfall19 6 C 67 F 6 3 C 43 F 575 2 mm 22 6 in Clunes is best known as the site of Victoria s first registered gold discovery in 1850 and its first gold strike in 1873 which lasted three months A campus of Wesley College is based in Clunes and parts of the original Mad Max 1979 were filmed in the town famously showcasing the Creswick Creek Bridge in Clunes s more regional farming area Other films include Ned Kelly 2016 and Stan TV series Bloom 2018 The annual Clunes Booktown Festival began in 2007 and draws significant tourism to the area with over 10 book shops around the town Contents 1 History 1 1 Pre colonial 1 2 Pastoral and gold rush 1 3 Twentieth century 1 4 21st century 1 4 1 Booktown 1 4 2 Wesley College campus 2 Sport 3 Transport 4 In film 5 Notable residents or place of birth 6 References 7 External linksHistory editPre colonial edit The Dja Dja Wurrung an Aboriginal Australian people belonging to the Kulin nation first inhabited the region which included Clunes Most of their population was decimated in the twenty years after Scottish explorer Thomas Mitchell surveyed the land in 1836 This was due to the introduction of European occupation and diseases 2 for example 6 10 tribesmen were killed in the 1839 Blood Hole massacre at the nearby Glengower station 3 Mitchell probably encouraged his fellow clansmen to take up pastures which on his travels were bordered by a line dug into the earth by his drays They included overlander Donald Cameron who took up a 12 000 ha 120 km2 run in mid 1839 and named it Clunes for his Scottish hometown building a homestead in the 1850s While Cameron was the first European settler his run was soon bordered by those of other Scottish pastoralists 2 4 Pastoral and gold rush edit nbsp View of Clunes and the Port Phillip and Colonial Gold Mining Company operations in 1861 In March 1850 a party of four including Cameron and his friend William Campbell MLA found traces of gold on his station The discovery initially was kept secret as it was feared that announcing it would be detrimental to the Clunes run 5 In April 1851 German physicist George Hermann Bruhn arrived at Clunes while on a journey to examine the Colony of Victoria s mineral resources and was shown specimens of gold by Cameron Bruhn spread the discovery across Australia and sent specimens to the Gold Discovery Committee on 30 June After confirming the area was auriferous James Esmond who had been informed by Bruhn and his co worker James Pugh enlisted the help of sawyers Burns and Kelly they obtained gold in quartz rocks near Clunes on 29 June The Geelong Advertiser announced these findings on 7 July and the precise location of Esmond s discovery on 22 July 5 William Campbell s announcement in Melbourne and Davies news item triggered the gold rush in Victoria The township was established a few years later and subsequent gold mining predominantly driven by the Port Phillip and Colonial Mining Company which was mining the site of the discovery 6 saw the town s population rising to well over 6 000 residents in the late 1880s citation needed Clunes post office opened as early as 1 October 1857 7 and in 1874 Clunes was connected to the Victorian railway network Clunes station was opened in the same year citation needed In 1873 mine employers attempted to introduce Saturday afternoon and Sunday shifts The miners refused to sign the new terms outlined in their contract renewals and went on a strike that lasted 3 months Some days into the action the miners organised the Clunes Miners Association and what were to become known as the Clunes riots successfully resisting the use of Chinese labour from Creswick 8 as strikebreakers 9 From the 1850s through to 1893 when gold mining eventually came to an end Clunes was an important gold production location in Victoria Surrounded by grassland meadows and pastures the town has preserved many of its elegant historic buildings and is recognised as one of the architecturally most intact gold towns in Victoria citation needed Twentieth century edit The Clunes Magistrates Court closed on 1 January 1983 10 21st century edit Booktown edit The idea of transforming Clunes into a European style booktown was first conceived and developed by Councillor Tim Hayes Linda Newitt Graeme Johnston and Tess Brady citation needed Clunes held its first Booktown for a Day event on 20 May 2007 Over 50 booksellers from around Australia set up shop for the day in the town s heritage buildings citation needed Renamed to Back to Booktown a year later and to Clunes Booktown Festival in 2012 as of 2008 update was holding the event each year on the first weekend in May 11 The event has won recognition and awards including citation needed 2008 Hepburn Shire s Community Event of the Year 21 January 2010 John Brumby premier of Victoria said during the Australia Day Luncheon In Victoria we even have our very own booktown The regional community of Clunes in north west Victoria sees its future as a cultural destination centred around literature As well as their successful Back to Booktown festival just last month our Government helped launch the new Creative Clunes Community Bookshop 23 November 2010 Australian Civic Trust Award of Merit in the Human Category to Back to Booktown for its use of heritage buildings in a respectful as against destructive use 19 April 2012 Clunes given International Book Town status by the International Organisation of Book Towns 2013 Australia Day awards for Hepburn Shire s Community Event of the Year to Children s Booktown 2012 Wesley College campus edit Between 2000 and 2008 Clunes underwent a noticeable transformation and rejuvenation 12 following the decision by Wesley College Australia s largest co educational private school to establish a campus for Year 9 students in the town Opened in 2000 about 80 students take up residency in the Wesley Clunes Residential Learning Village in the centre of town and become part of the local community for an eight week period each term Where they learn how to live in a shared house and how to live with others when they grow up citation needed Sport edit nbsp Clunes Football Ground home of the Clunes Magpies The town s Australian rules football netball team is the Clunes Magpies competing in the Central Highlands Football League and Central Highlands Netball League 13 Golfers play at the Clunes Golf Club on Golf Course Road 14 Clunes has a cricket club playing in the Maryborough District Cricket Association citation needed Clunes has a lawn bowls club that competes in the Ballarat District Bowls Division citation needed Transport editClunes railway station is located on the Mildura line citation needed When the state government announced the Victorian Transport Plan along with V Line services being extended to Maryborough Clunes was not part of the plan with the only stations being Creswick and Maryborough However as a result of protest by the town the Government announced on 17 June 2010 that Clunes would be reopened and included on the line 15 In film editMany of the external scenes and some internal scenes in the 2003 film Ned Kelly starring Heath Ledger were shot in Clunes The Old State Bank in Fraser Street was used for the internal scenes featuring the Euroa bank robbery citation needed Clunes also appears in the films Mad Max starring Mel Gibson as the town the Toe Cutters gang arrive at to collect the Night Riders body and the remake of the 1950s classic On the Beach It also appears in the ABC television series Queen Kat Carmel amp St Jude Something in the Air and Halifax f p citation needed Clunes was once closed off to the public for the TV show The Mole in 2001 The mission in that episode was to direct one of the contestants to pick up another contestant in a blacked out car citation needed Tomorrow When the War Began aired on ABC3 in early 2016 16 Much of the series finale of the HBO show The Leftovers was filmed in Clunes 17 The Picnic at Hanging Rock 2018 remake filmed exterior scenes in the Clunes main street 18 The Stan series Bloom used Clunes as its central township 19 Some scenes for the True History of the Kelly Gang when 20 One short film shot in Clunes is Julius Avery s 13 minute movie Jerrycan Jerrycan won the 2008 Jury Prize at the 61st Cannes Film Festival in France for short films with its portrayal of restless teenagers in rural Victoria 21 Notable residents or place of birth editJean Beadle 1868 1942 labour leader feminist and social worker 22 Rivett Henry Bland 1811 1894 manager of the Port Phillip and Colonial Gold Mining Company from 1852 and the Clunes Quartz Mining Company who oversaw the development and success of the mine 23 Nancy Jobson 1880 1964 headmistress 24 Robert Bob Lewis 1878 1947 jockey 25 Sir John Longstaff 1861 1941 artist 26 Harley Tarrant 1860 1949 businessman 27 Daryl Jackson AO b 1937 prominent architect citation needed Nick Hind b 1994 AFL player 28 References edit a b Australian Bureau of Statistics 27 June 2017 Clunes State suburb 2016 Census QuickStats Retrieved 9 July 2017 nbsp a b Talbot and Clunes Conservation Study PDF Evershed Nick Ball Andy Allam Lorena O Mahony Ciaran Nadel Jeremy Earl Carly The killing times a massacre map of Australia s frontier wars the Guardian Retrieved 2 September 2021 The specific source cited is Massola A 1969 Journey to Aboriginal Victoria Rigby Adelaide p 88 Clunes The Sydney Morning Herald 11 December 2007 Retrieved 31 March 2023 a b Report From The Selective Committee Of The Legislative Council On The Claims For The Discovery Of Gold In Victoria PDF Report Melbourne Victorian Legislative Council 10 March 1854 Retrieved 31 March 2023 History of The Port Phillip Mining Company Premier Postal History Post Office List Retrieved 11 April 2008 Ballaret Courier 1873 The Ballarat Star Vic 1865 1924 Wed 10 December 1873 Page 2 RIOTS AT CLUNES Special Report No 4 Court Closures in Victoria PDF Auditor General of Victoria 1986 p 79 Retrieved 12 April 2020 Clunes Back to Booktown Clunes org Archived from the original on 1 May 2008 Retrieved 8 February 2008 Who s Owning Whom and Why Does It Matter Looking at Learning as Community Development aare edu au Doug Lloyd and Tamara Downey 12 March 2009 Archived from the original on 21 October 2008 Retrieved 12 March 2009 Full Points Footy Clunes Archived from the original on 7 September 2008 Retrieved 25 July 2008 Golf Select Clunes Retrieved 11 May 2009 Possibility of reopening railway stations The Maryborough District Advertiser 26 August 2011 Tomorrow when the War Began Australian Broadcasting Corporation Kachka Boris 4 June 2017 How to End a TV Show An Exclusive Look at the Making of The Leftovers Finale www vulture com Picnic at Hanging Rock review tale of missing schoolgirls haunted by its own retelling TheGuardian com 10 May 2018 Bloom is proof Australian TV can be as bold as anything from overseas 27 December 2018 Watch True History of the Kelly Gang Stan From Cairns to Clunes to Cannes Jo Roberts theage com au 27 May 2008 Retrieved 27 May 2008 Beadle Jane Jean 1868 1942 Australian Dictionary of Biography National Centre of Biography Australian National University Blainey G The Rush that Never Ended MUP 1978 Jobson Nancy 1880 1964 Australian Dictionary of Biography National Centre of Biography Australian National University Lewis Robert Bob 1878 1947 Australian Dictionary of Biography National Centre of Biography Australian National University Longstaff Sir John Campbell 1861 1941 Australian Dictionary of Biography National Centre of Biography Australian National University Tarrant Harley 1860 1949 Australian Dictionary of Biography National Centre of Biography Australian National University Nick Hind External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Clunes Victoria nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Clunes Clunes tourism information Reconsidering White Australia Class and racism in the 1873 Clunes Riot by Jerome Small Clunes campus Wesley College Clunes Football Netball Club Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Clunes Victoria amp oldid 1220704902, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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