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General History of the Heathcote Region |
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Major Thomas Mitchell passed through the area in 1836 on his return journey from Portland to Sydney. The wheel marks left in the wet ground by the large expedition's bullock wagons came to be known as the Major's line by the 'overlanders who followed in his footsteps in the late 1830's. The Major Mitchell Track today crosses from Redesdale in the west to Graytown in the East. The first 'overlanders' from Sydney started to move flocks of sheep South in the 1830's and the whole region was settled by the 1840's, by men who controlled very large pastoral runs. The runs covered vast areas that stretched in the north of the region from the Campaspe to the Mt Camel Range and from Spring Plains, Redesdale and Mia Mia to Tooborac. Wolfscrag, later to become Wild Duck Creek Station, was acquired by E. M Curr's father in 1841. Curr himself a few years later took up large tracts of land at Colbinabbin and ran the properties jointly for some years before selling Wolfscrag and moving to Colbinabbin. Thus from earliest times the inhabitants moved around and interacted within this area with Heathcote becoming its commercial and administrative centre. Heathcote's population ballooned to 20,000 during the gold rushes of the 1850's and became the major centre of the area which it continues to be today for the whole of the region. It became the major staging post for the goldfields in the area. Graytown in the east at the height of the rush had a population exceeding 20,000 for the few years that gold held out. There has recently been in the Costerfield area a revival of the gold industry because of the viability of new extraction methods. The major agricultural activities since gold rush days have been in grazing sector; cattle, sheep and wool; horticulture and crops such as wheat, barley tomatoes etc. in the northern part of the area. The forests of the region have supported a commercially sustainable and viable forestry and wood industry from the middle of the last century right up to the present, providing many people in the district with employment. Today the district has seen a new and vibrant variety of agricultural activity. The grape growing and winemaking industry has become a major activity that has boosted employment and enlivened the tourist industry. The Heathcote Wine and Food Festival, the wineries, the local restaurants, and a proliferation of accommodation places are all playing a part in encouraging and promoting the region. Heathcote as the centre of the shire of Mclvor drew on a large area that stretched from Pyalong in the south, Mia Mia in the West, the Campaspe plains and the Mt Camel Range in the north to Graytown in the East. Heathcote remains the only town of considerable size in the region. Heathcote was originally proclaimed a District on 26th June 1863 and later proclaimed the Shire of Mclvor on the 23rd December 1864. The northern end of the district was partly in the Waranga Shire which gained Shire status in 1865. The amalgamation of shires in 1995 changed all the borders in the area. Rather than wanting to join The City of Greater Bendigo and the Shires of Campaspe, Strathbogie and Mitchell, many people in the Shires of Waranga and Mclvor wished to be part of a separate entity because of their perceived social, economic and historical ties. For many their wishes were defeated at a public meeting in Heathcote in early 1995. The Shires of Waranga and Mclvor were split up. Nevertheless, Heathcote is still seen as the centre of the district by the people of the region. |
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