Extensive Definition
Coolgardie is a small town in the Australian state
of Western
Australia, 558 km east of the state capital, Perth.
It has a population of approximately 1,400 people.
Although Coolgardie is known to most Western
Australians as a tourist town and a ghost town population wise, it
was once the third largest town in Western Australia (after
Perth and Fremantle). At
this time, mining of alluvial gold was a major industry: supplying
the flagging economy with a new, radiant hope. Many miners suffered
under the harsh conditions: for a few it was worth it, as they left
with pockets heavier. Most men, however, left poorer than they had
started off, with hopes dashed.
History
The town was founded in 1892, when gold was discovered in the area. Australia had seen several major gold rushes over the previous three decades, mostly centred on the east coast, but these had mostly been exhausted by the 1890s. With the discovery of a new goldfield, an entire new gold rush began, with thousands flocking to the area. By 1898, it was the third largest town in the colony, with a population of 15,000, and another 10,000 in the surrounding region. At its peak, 700 mining companies based in Coolgardie were registered with the London Stock Exchange. The town also supported a wide variety of businesses and services, including a railway, a swimming pool (first public baths in the state), many hotels and several newspapers.The value of Coolgardie to the colony in the late
1890s was so
significant that it was used as leverage to force Western Australia
to join the Australian
federation -
Britain and the eastern colonies threatened to create a new
state to be named Auralia around
Coolgardie and other regional goldfields, such as
Kalgoorlie, if the government in Perth did not agree to hold a
referendum on federation. The Western Australian government
reluctantly complied and a referendum was held just in time to
become a founding state in the new federation. When federation did
occur in 1901,
Coolgardie was the centre of a federal electorate, the Division
of Coolgardie. Soon after in November 1901, Alf Morgans
from the state electorate of Coolgardie was elected
Premier of Western Australia. Albert Thomas also of Coolgardie
was elected the first Member of Dundas, an electoral division south
of Coolgardie. However, the gold began to decrease in the early
1900s, and by
World
War I, the town was in serious decline. The federal electorate
was abolished in 1913 due to the
diminished population as many of its residents left for other towns
where the gold was still plentiful, and it soon ceased to be a
municipality. The situation remained unchanged throughout the
century, as its population slipped to around 200 and it became a
virtual ghost town. An
example of this decline is in March 1896 Coolgardie's main street
was lit by an electric light, but by April 1924 the same street was
lit by four Hurricane Lamps.
Despite this, many of the buildings from its peak were retained,
which in recent years has helped start a small revival in the
town's fortunes. The development of a tourist industry has once
again created some employment in the town, resulting in a small
increase in population, and it appears to be no longer in danger of
dying completely.
The Coolgardie
safe is a low-tech refrigeration unit named
after the small mining town, invented in the 1890s.
Present day
Coolgardie is host to the annual Coolgardie Day
during the Kalgoorlie 'Race Round' season. Coolgardie Day offers
the usual attractions of a country town field day, with something
of a mining slant. Until recently Coolgardie Day featured the
Coolgardie Rockdrilling Championships, in which underground miners
compete in different events to see who can bore a hole the fastest
through a concrete block using an airleg drill. Classic miners such
as Wayne 'Wick' Hills, Gary 'The Ledge' Ledger, Peter Eastley,
Richard 'Rotten' Timbs and others come out of the woodwork for the
rockdrill, dust off the skills and go head to head in furious
combat to the roar of the airleg.
Coolgardie today is once again the centre of a
municipality, the Shire
of Coolgardie. Historical markers have been placed around the
town to inform tourists of significant locations, and there are
several active museums, including the visitor's centre, old railway
station, and the
National Trust-owned
Warden Finnerty's Residence.
Transport
Great Eastern Highway (National Highway 94) runs through the town as Bayley Street. Just to the town's east, Highway 94 turns south onto Coolgardie-Esperance Highway, which heads towards Norseman, the starting point of the route east across the Nullarbor Plain.The Transwa
Prospector train stops 14 km north of the town at
Bonnie Vale.
Mining field
In the 1890's there were four mining fields gazetted with Coolgardie as reference point :- Coolgardie Gold Field (1894)
- East Coolgardie Gold Field (1894)
- North Coolgardie Gold Field (1895)
- North East Coolgardie Gold Field (1896)
Despite the changes to the Kalgoorlie region,
Coolgardie still has a Mining Registar
External links
References
coolgardie in Danish: Coolgardie
coolgardie in French:
Coolgardie