| A Quick
History of Early Herberton
On the 6th June 1875 James Venture Mulligan
discovered tin ore in the Wild River near Herberton. He wrote in his journal
that " there may be any quantity of it here, but what use is it at
present …"
Mulligan was one of the early white explorers who trekked through
this area, often traversed only by the Aboriginal people. He was driven by
a search for mineral wealth - mainly gold.
Another early settler, John Atherton, whose attention was mostly centred on
cattle, directed a small party of which John Newell was a member, to the same
site in November 1879. However they were not successful in finding payable
quantities of ore and returned to the already established tin diggings at Tinaroo.

Great Northern Mine, 1930s
Rumours in early 1880 that Chinese miners were planning to move to a new find,
revived the interest of several members of that earlier party. A group of four,
William Jack, John Newell, Thomas Brandon and John Brown, on the assumption
that the new find could be near the Wild River, returned to the area and this
time found payable quantities of ore.
They traced the source of the ore up a small gully now locally known as Prospectors
Gully (shown on some maps as the Great Northern Gully) and after initially
failing to recognise the significance of the outcrops of black rocks, soon
realised they were the discoverers of a major find. It was, in fact, lode tin,
as distinct from alluvial ore, and one of the richest finds in Australia.
The following day they posted notice of the claim. The date was 20th April
1880.
Local folklore tells of the smelting of some samples in a tree stump to verify
what it was, followed by an epic overland ride by John Newell to Thornborough
to lay claim to the find.

The first mining operations actually commenced on the 8th May. By the end
of that month 100 tons of tin ore were stacked on the field. The first
tin from Herberton arrived in Cairns on 17th July.
After Warden Mowbray laid out the town on 21st August, tents and bark huts
began to give way to sturdier timber buildings. By 11th September, Herberton
could boast an hotel, a butcher shop, and three stores, and the original
discoverers had purchased a 60 acre (24 hectare) reward claim they called the Great
Northern.
The first women arrived on the field about the same time with the coming of
the Bimrose family, followed by the Arbouins.
John Moffat's arrival in mid October 1880 saw the foundations laid for one
of the North's greatest mining empires. He quickly invested in the field and
by November, machinery to treat the ore was on its way from Port Douglas. About
the same time, the first mail service was begun from Cairns.
By Christmas of that year the field boasted a population of 300 men and 27
women. High expectations of a great future were ushered in with the skirl of
the pipes, played by Hugh Harrison, a publican at the time, at a picnic to
mark the start of the New Year of 1881.

Grace Street, Herberton 1884
Expansion continued rapidly. During 1881 the School of Arts Committee was formed,
first using a bark hut and soon thereafter the present building. Two newspapers
vied for news. New hotels were built and a report lists licensees for twenty-four
such establishments in the immediate district up to 1900. 'Second to none
of the first class hotels in the Colony' was the grand Post Office Hotel, subsequently
destroyed by fire in 1930.
At the end of 1881, Herberton became the seat of local government for the
area with the formation of the Tinaroo Divisional Board. By 1888, the town's
importance had risen to the extent that the immediate area became a municipality
with one of the founders of Herberton, John Newell, becoming first mayor. The
municipality was subsumed into a larger area called the Herberton Divisional
Board in 1895. Herberton remained the centre of local government
for what was called the Shire of Herberton until amalmagation in March 2008. Herberton now forms part of the Tablelands Regional Council.
Meanwhile, mine after mine opened. In the hill behind the Mining Musuem
and near the Great Northern were the Wild Irishman, the Home
Rule, the St Patrick, the Young American, the Erin-Go-Bragh,
the Dawn of Hope, the Cornishman, the Southern
Cross, the Irish National Land League, and the Soggoarth -
to name but a few.
The names are poignant hints of the origins of the miners as well as their
hopes and fears.
Two such hopes and fears were centred around transport problems and the original
inhabitants of the area – the Aboriginal people.
The substantial wet of 1882 had shown how urgent was the need for reliable
transport of life's necessities into the area as well as movement of mineral
production out to a coastal port. Trail blazing and agitation for a railway
became dominant activities. Christie Palmerston and John Doyle are two notable
bushmen of these times.
Ironically, while the choice of Cairns as the rail outlet and port for Herberton
ensured the growth of that city, the railway did not reach Herberton until
1910 when the pioneering township had already begun a steady decline.
Herberton also did not escape the racial tensions of the time. TheAboriginal
people did not appreciate the loss of living space nor the treatment they received
at the hands of some whites. Consequently, a mailman was killed at Wondecla
and two miners at Watsonville were also speared.
A punitive expedition by the Nigger Creek Mounted Police remains a lasting
memory of harsh treatment for descendants of those people. Tribal numbers were
also reduced by relocation to Mona Mona Mission and the 1918 'flu epidemic.
The Chinese did make it to Herberton but mainly as gardeners and shopkeepers.
A large population lived on the northern outskirts of Herberton until local
agitation helped move them to Chinatown at Atherton.
In fact, descendants of some Aboriginal people have strong family linkages
with the early Chinese. The cultural bridge is even more pronounced, as a number
of these descendants also became well-respected miners in the white - dominated
Herberton field.
Politics also exercised the minds of local people. Newell was member for Woothakata
in the Queensland Parliament for two terms 1896 -1902 and thus saw in Federation.
After some initial coolness to the proposal, he also had some involvement in
the push for a new state in North Queensland.
It should also be remembered that the vote from the mining fields of Herberton
and Charters Towers was what tipped the balance for Queensland to support Federation,
thus making the required majority of people and states in the referendum to
see this dream become a reality.
Although Herberton has subsequently declined from its pre-eminent position
as the premier township on the Atherton Tablelands, that decline has created
a legacy of heritage unparalleled in Far North Queensland.
Heritage Listing of the Great Northern Mine
The Great Northern Minesite was listed on both the Register of the
National Estate and the Queensland Heritage Register in 1979. The site
is now in public ownership and will be the subject of conservation works
over the next few years. The site is available for visitation.
Click to go to Great Northern Mine information

The following is an
extract from the Cultural Heritage Branch, Environmental Protection
Agency, Queensland.
Discovered in 1880 by a group of prospectors
including future trading partners William Jack and John Newell, the
Great Northern Freehold Mine became one of Australia’s leading
lode tin producers. John Moffat, who was to establish a mining empire
in North Queensland, had acquired an interest in the mine by September 1880.
Within a year, over 150 mines were being worked in the area and the town of
Herberton had become the thriving centre of the tinfield. Herberton thus became
the first town on the Atherton Tableland. The Great Northern Mine remained
profitable for investors for many years until commercial mining operations
ceased in the early 1960s. Today the mine is of significance because of the
rarity and the intactness of its original steam haulage plant, which surpasses
any in Queensland. The Great Northern Mine has a significant place in Queensland's
mining history for its central role in the development of the mining industry
on the Atherton Tableland and the development of Cairns as the major port in
far north Queensland.
More information available at:
http://www.derm.qld.gov.au/
(Search Herberton in Resource Centre/Heritage Conservation/Queensland Heritage Register)
Contact Us at the Mining Museum and Visitor Information
Centre

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