Showing posts with label gold. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gold. Show all posts

Thursday

Australia’s largest gold robbery

stage coach hold up in 1862 in Eugowra NSW Australia
Stage coach hold-up, Eugowra Rocks, oil on canvas, 137.5 x 183 cm
by Patrick William Morony (1858-1939) painted in 1894.


It was at Eugowra, on the 15th June, 1862 that Frank Gardiner, and his gang of bushrangers, robbed the Ford & Co. coach on its way from Forbes to Bathurst in New South Wales. It was Australia’s largest gold robbery - 14 thousand pounds worth of gold and banknotes.
The rock, in the painting, above, where the bushrangers waited to ambush the coach is now called Escort Rock after the fact that the coach was a gold escort meaning it escorted or carried gold from one place to another.
Gardiner's gang included Ben Hall, John Gilbert, Henry Manns, Alex Fordyce, John Bow, John O'Meally, and Dan Charters.
"...the greatest achievement of Gardiner's gang, the Lachlan escort robbery; at Engowra Rocks, about forty-five miles distant from the town of Orange. Here the escort coach, carrying a sergeant and two troopers, was impeded by two bullock teams, without drivers, drawn across, the road. The driver made a circuit round them to pass, and when the coach neared a clump of rocks four men rose from their shelter. They were attired in red shirts, their faces were blackened, and they were armed with rifles. They dis charged their rifles in a volley at the coach. A bullet pierced the driver's hat, and another perforated his coat skirt. The constables in the coach were not hit. Then four other bandits stood up, and fired a second volley, whereupon the horses bolted, and the coach was upset. The gang rushed upon it and fired again. The sergeant was wounded in three places, and Trooper Horan in two. Trooper Haviland was uninjured, and he fled into the bush with the driver. The robbers carried away the escort boxes, two rifles, and the coach horses. Haviland and the driver ran to Clement's Station, and re turned with a party of men, who found only the scattered contents of the mail bags. These they gathered up, and, after obtaining fresh horses, proceeded on the road to Orange with the wounded police. They also discovered the bullock drivers, who had been bailed up by the gang,  ordered to draw their teams across the  road, and hide themselves in the bush, with, their faces on the ground. The coach arrived at Orangeat six o'clock   on the following evening. Shortly after it left the post office, a bullet struck Constable Haviland in the head, and killed him instantly. Doubtless it came from the rifle of one of the gang, who must have been lingering on watch in the   neighbourhood unseen. The robbers'  booty was heavy ; the escort boxes con tained 5509 oz. of gold, representing £22,000 in value, and £7490 in Oriental Bank notes. The gang consisted of Gardiner, Ben Hall, Gilbert, O'Mally, John   Bow, Alexander Fordyce, Henry Manns, and Daniel Charteris. They divided the booty into eight shares. Gardiner, For dyce, and Charteris put their gold on one of the coach horses, and proceeded towards the Weddin Mountains. The others took their shares separately, and went on other tracks. On ths following day Sir Frederick Pottinger, who was district superinten dent of police, set forth in pursuit of the bandits with eleven troopers, twenty   armed volunteers, and two black track ers. They followed the trail of Gardiner  and his two companions, whose pack horse became exhausted at the foot of the Weddin Range. While they were engaged in removing the gold they caught sight of their pursuers approaching, and fled into the hills, leaving behind 1239 oz. of gold, which fell into the hands of the police. Some time after Charter is turned informer. Manns, Fordyce, and Bow were arrested; Manns was hanged, and the other two were sentenced to life imprisonment. Gardiner disappeared. Hall, Gilbert, and O'Meally went on their way of blood and plunder for three years longer in defiance of the police.

The huge escort robbery was Gardiner's final exploit." TROVE: The Capricornian Newspaper. Rockhampton, Qld. Saturday 14th October 1905.

Read the details of the robbery here.

Linked up at History and Home

Friday

Goldmining @ 1869

public domain image
Queensland, Australia.

This photograph was taken by Richard Daintree, geologist and photographer, who was born in 1832 in  England. In 1852 he joined the gold rush to Victoria, Australia.  Unsuccessful as a prospector he became assistant geologist in the Victorian Geological Survey until 1856. He rejoined the Geological Survey in 1859  pioneering the use of photography in field-work. In 1864 he became a resident partner with William Hann in pastoral properties in the Burdekin country of North Queensland. There he was able to indulge his passions for both photography and prospecting. When the pastoral boom collapsed he used his knowledge to open up goldfields at Cape River (1867), Gilbert (1869) and Etheridge in 1869-70. John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland.


GOLD TIMELINE IN AUSTRALIA

1851 - Edward Hargraves discovers gold in Bathurst, NSW and the 'Gold Rush' begins.1851 - Gold was discovered in Bendigo, Victoria. 

1859 - Queensland made a colony.

1865 - Cape River goldfield in North Queensland discovered by Richard Daintree.
1867 - Cape River Gold Mine opened.

1869 - Convicts no longer sent to Australia.
1869 - Gilbert gold mining.
1869 - Etheridge gold mining.
1872 - Palmer River Gold Rush, Palmer River, Queensland
1893 - Gold discovered in Western Australia at Kalgoorlie.
1896: Coolgardie, Western Australia gold discovered.



The discovery of gold in Australia saw a rise in bushranging activity. This was because gold was being transported from the gold fields to the cities leaving the transportation open to highway robbery and gold nuggets were small for their worth and relatively easy to sell once stolen and unlike jewellery or money could not easily be identified.
       

    Sunday

    Victorian gold rush

    Canvas town in South Melbourne, Victoria in the 1850's.
    Canvas town in South Melbourne, Victoria in the 1850's

    The gold rush in Victoria started in 1851.
    A tent city, known as Canvas Town was established at South Melbourne. The area became a slum area home to thousands of migrants from around the world who came in hope of finding their fortune in the goldfields.
    On 20 July 1851 Thomas Peters found specks of gold at what is now known as Specimen Gully. This led to a rush to the Forest Creek diggings, claimed as the richest shallow alluvial goldfield in the world.
    This discovery was soon followed by larger finds at Ballarat and Bendigo. Later gold was found at Beechworth in 1852, Bright, Omeo, Chiltern and Walhalla.  At its peak two tonnes of gold per week went into the Melbourne Treasury.
    The population of Melbourne and Victoria grew swiftly. In 1851 it was 75,000 people and ten years later over 500,000.
    The population boom caused social tension due to the lack of available land for small farming.  These on-going tensions culminated in the Kelly Outbreak of 1878 according to John McQuilton in The geographical dimensions of social banditry: The Kelly outbreak, 1878-1880.

    Friday

    The gold rush

    public domain image
    Cassilis Gold Mine, circa 1900

    Cassilis is in Gippsland, Victoria. At the peak of the gold rush, it was a thriving mining centre with a population of over 500. Gold-bearing quartz was found there in 1885.

    Tuesday

    Australia's population during gold rush years

    Australia during gold rush years
    Prospector's Hut, Upper Dargo, Gippsland, Victoria, Australia in 1870.

    During the gold rush era between 1850 to 1870, Victoria dominated the world's gold output.
    Australia's population increased dramatically mainly due to the gold discoveries with people trying to 'strike it rich'. In 1851 the Australian population was 437,655 and 10 years later it had grown to 1,151,947.

    Find out more about the gold rush in Australia.

    Sunday

    Gold mining town Walhalla, Victoria.

    Gold mining town Walhalla, Victoria1863

    Walhalla, a small town in Victoria,  Australia, was  founded as a gold-mining community in early 1863.  The town's name is taken from Valhalla from the Vikings.
    The first gold was found in Victoria in 1851, which lead to the Victorian gold rush.

    A group of prospectors who had been exploring in creeks flowing into the Thomson River valley found gold sometime during late December 1862 or early January 1863. A claim was pegged out and a member of this group, former convict Edward Randel, registered the claim at the outpost town on Bald Hills on 12 January under his assumed name, Edward "Ned" Stringer. Although he was presented with a monetary reward of £100 for his discovery, Stringer was unable to capitalise on his finds, dying in September 1863. Although the settlement was soon rechristened Walhalla after an early mine, the creek running through town still bears his name.

    The rush that inevitably followed news of this find was slowed to some extent by the goldfield's remote and inaccessible location, but many miners soon found their way there. In February 1863, John Hinchcliffe discovered an immensely rich quartz reef in the hill just above the creek, which he named Cohen's Reef, after a storekeeper at Bald Hills. Cohen’s Reef - yielded over 50 tonnes of gold, making Walhalla one of Victoria’s richest and most vibrant towns, and home to thousands: with hotels, shops, breweries, churches, school, jail and its own newspaper.

    The picture above is of the Long Tunnel Extended Gold Mine (LTEM) which was one of the richest mines of Walhalla.  This mine was the second most productive mine in the area (after the Long Tunnel) and in total produced 13,695 kg of gold until it closed in 1911.

    Friday

    Fossicking for gold in Australia in the 1800's

    WA goldfields
    Western Australian Museum ExploreWa GoldfieldsGetting Gold
     
    Victorian Gold rush

    
    Fossickers at the creek at Nerrena, Victoria during the gold rush.
     
    Goldrush days  Australia
    Early Goldrush days in Coolgardie, Western Australia
    via The Mining Chronicle
    Gold miners outside a bark hut, Queensland, ca. 1870 Two gold miners dressed in working clothes outside a slab bark hut
    with mining tools nearby.
     
    TIMELINE OF AUSTRALIAN GOLD RUSH ERA
    1851: Ballarat and Bendigo, Victoria
    1852: Beechworth, Victoria
    1858 - 1859: Bright, Omeo, Chiltern,Victoria
    1863: Walhalla, Victoria
    1872: Palmer River Gold Rush, Palmer River, Queensland
    1893: Kalgoorlie, Western Australia
    1896: Coolgardie, Western Australia
     
     
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