This blog provides information, stories, links and events relating to and promoting the history of the Wimmera district.
Any additional information, via Comments, is welcomed.



Tuesday 26 February 2013

Historic trees

Now you can use your iPhone to find the most important trees anywhere in Victoria listed on the National Trust's Register of Significant Trees.

Comparable to the Trust's other app the 'Lost 100' as mentioned in a previous post App for the lost, this app utilises similar technology to map sites, direct you to them.

The App gives you access to a database of trees and lets you easily find trees using the GPS functionality of your iPhone. Explore nearly 1,200 entries from the Register of Significant Trees.


Mapped - Bunya pine in St Arnaud


Since 1996 the National Trust of Australia (Vic) has been actively working towards protecting and promoting our heritage for future generations to enjoy.
The Register of Significant Trees of Victoria was launched by the National Trust in 1981.The purpose of the Register is to recognise and record significant trees with the aim of improving their management, encouraging their protection and where possible extending their life span.

Swamp Oak specimen
SwampOak Casaurina obesa is a highly distinctive species, the cladodes usually having a strikingly tangled appearance and its habitat being swamp margins. Stands of swamp oaks are generally located on flat terrain with gilgai-patterned grey heavy clay. The Casuarina obesa forms a dense, tangled thicket about 6 metres high, with a very sparse herbaceous layer. It is a rare specimen due to its very localised distribution. Situated beside the Wimmera Highway west of Natimuk, it is estimated to be approximately 110 years old. It has a spread of 7metres, girth of 2metres, and height of 10metres. Its condition is considered to be Fair.
The crown of the plane tree
London Plane Tree Platanus X acerifolia, in the grounds of Horsham House in Roberts Avenue. This tree is one of the most outstanding in Horsham. It contains large lower limbs to the north and south and has previously had other lower limbs removed. The tree is well structured and requires little arboricultural intervention. Although the tree appears to have a slightly lopsided crown, no evidence of pruning to produce this shape is apparent. Unfortunately, the driveway runs over its root system, but it appears to have been this way for some time. This particularly old tree of over 100 years is an outstanding example of the species. Spread = 25m, girth 4.2m, height 28m, it was classified in 2003.

Marking the entrance to the first Apsley School
English Oak Quercus Robur Two English Oaks(only one of which is recommended for nomination) were planted in 1902 to commemorate the Relief of Mafeking. The siege of Mafeking started in October 1899 at the beginning of the Anglo-Boer war in South Africa. The English troops, led by Commander Baden Powell turned out to be an inadequate force against the Boers. They were holed up in Mafeking for 217 days before being rescued by reinforcements and Baden Powell returned to England as a hero.
The two trees are planted on either side of the entrance to the former school grounds. The trees are on the north side of the Wimmera Highway, adjacent to the Apsley Hall. The trees are now 111 years old and measure approximately girth – 3.2m, spread - 20m, height – 20m. They were classified in 2004.

Weeping Yellow Gum
Oaks planted by Walter Laidlaw plaque


Yellow Gum Eucalyptus leucoxylon An unusual weeping form of Yellow Gum of horticultural value is growing on the side of the Western Highway near Lawloit, west of Nhill. The Cameron Reserve was established to preserve the important landmark tree after the Western Highway was diverted. The tree is well known for its very attractive weeping habit, and its curious growth form where two large trunks rise at ground level. Classified in 1986, the tree is approximately 221 years old with measurements: spread – 22m, girth - west trunk 2.743, east trunk 3.35, and height – 21.33m.
Spreading Grey Box
Grey BoxEucalyptus Microcarpa, near the Wimmera River and Burnt Creek in Mardon Drive Horsham. This particularly old and venerable tree was classified in 2004 for its horticultural value, contribution to landscape,and for its outstanding size. Located between two properties, it is the largest known in the area and possibly one of the oldest at around 500 years old. There are unidentified scars on the tree and it is in the vicinity of known scar trees used by local Aborigines. Its spread = 17m; girth = 3.1m, and height = 16m. It is in good condition.

Just a warning - the app will take up about 264MB of your device's storage.

Friday 15 February 2013

Railways - Tramways

To conclude this series on local railways, is a final post devoted to the district tramways.
Grampians Tramway - a tramway was built from Stawell to carry Heatherlie quarried stone to the main railway line.
Embankment at Stawell West, where the line crossed the Wimmera Highway
Trolley at the Heatherlie Quarry
The Mt Difficult Heatherlie “Grampians freestone” sandstone quarry, was established in the early 1860s. The quarry employed between 100-150 men. The Heatherlie township was surveyed in in the 1880s, but most workers preferred to live in Stawell Large quantities of stone were taken from the quarry between 1880 and 1930, demand dropped with the Depression of the 1890s and the quarry closed in 1892/93. It operated spasmodically between 1900 and 1938, and closed again in 1938, due to lack of orders. It finally ceased major operations in 1941. Heatherlie stone was used for several local buildings in Stawell, including the Court House, the Town Hall, the Anglican Church and St Patrick's Roman Catholic Church. The stone was also used on the construction of significant public sites in Melbourne – Parliament House, the State Library & Melbourne Town Hall.
Stawell, taken by Mark Bau standing on the Grampians Line in 1982
In 1881, a contract for construction of a government-financed Stawell to Heatherlie branch railway was signed. The tramway was 15 miles long and used 50lb rails, Victoria Railways constructed sidings at Fyans Creek in 1885, and at the quarry in 1886. The first train of stone from the quarry reached Stawell in February 1882. Stone was moved in blocks weighing up to 11 tons. The line was duplicated from the Grampians Junction to Stawell Station in 1889. There were also sidings for the Stawell Brickworks which was abolished in 1965, and a siding for the Stawell woollen mills, and a flour mill siding close to the Stawell station.
Line to the sidings - grain silo on left, woollen mill chimney (white), brickworks chimney (centre), Grampians line parallel to Melbourne line on the right.
For many years after its construction tourists and day-trippers also used the line. The railway line was officially closed in 1949 and dismantled in 1950s. There are a few remnants still visible - raised earth, some of the sleepers and a few rails still in place at the end of the line.
The Melbourne line, Grampians line & sidings line looking towards the Stawell station
A Rail Trail following the Grampians line starts at Stawell West, and heads west towards the Grampians the first 2.5km are on a path south of the original easement. The rest of the trail (about 9km) is along the old rail alignment, parallel to Mt Dryden Rd. and close to Lake Lonsdale. At Heatherlie, the trail can be walked for about 1.5km towards Stawell.
The Grampians tramway walking track at Heatherlie
Warranook (Wal Wal Ballast Pits Line) Tramway
The Warranook tramway was constructed to access the gravel pits providing railway ballast for the Murtoa-Warracknabeal section of the Patchewollock line. The tramway ran from Wal Wal station name changed from Warranook to Wal Wal in 1887) to Riachella just over 5 miles away. It was constructed in 1884-85, with a timber bridge over the Dunmunkle Creek. Gravel was extracted from a number of sites until 1906, later sections were utilised for timber gathering, and in 1920s for carrying wheat. The line was dismantled in 1936. The Riachella Tramline Road is now on the alignment of the tramline. 
Riachella
 McKenzie Creek Tramway
The Horsham Borough Council and the Shire of Wimmera operated the McKenzie Creek Tramway to a stone quarry which transported road making materials from McKenzie Creek (about 8kms south of Horsham) on second-hand railway trucks hauled by horses. One truck at a time was hauled up the hill from the quarry, then two horses together pulled the load to the depot at the showgrounds. The McKenzie Creek quarry was the nearest source of suitable stone for roadwork improvements. Firewood for the brick kilns near the Wimmera River bridge were also conveyed along the tramline.

A picnic group using the McKenzie Creek tram, 1920 from "Horsham in focus"
Construction of the line from the top of McPherson Street in Horsham began in 1884 and the horse tramway opened in 1885 and ceased operating in 1927. The tramway was dismantled as unemployment work during the Depression, and the rails sold for telephone poles. Special picnic trains operated from time to time conveying residents in open wagons for picnic parties at Bungalally.
McKenzie Creek Quarry site today

 Mt Zero Quarry Tramway
The Mt Zero Quarry provided beaching stone used in the construction of Taylors Lake (1919) and Pine Lake (1928) storages. The horse-drawn tramway was laid down from the quarry to Taylors Lake and later lifted and moved to Pine Lake. The formation is still visible in places.
Mt Zero from south of Taylors Lake
Sources: "A history of the Grampians Tramway" R.K. Whitehead, "Horsham in focus" Noelene Jenkinson & Marie Foley, "A story of Horsham" Brian Brooke & Alan Finch, Mark Bau's VR.net site.