|
|
View across the river from
the swimming
hole
|
Avoca
Attractive
town on the road from Launceston to the East Coast.
Located 83 km south east of Launceston via the Midland
Highway, Avoca is attractive town on the main road east across to St
Helens, St Marys and Bicheno. Located on the banks of the South Esk
River it was originally named 'St Paul's Plains' by John Helder Wedge
who surveyed the area in 1833.
The area was first explored and settled by Europeans in the
1820s but it wasn't until the 1830s, when convict probation stations
were established at Avoca, Fingal, St Marys and Falmouth, that roads
and bridges were built. The ready supply of cheap labour from the
probation stations probably had much to do with opening up of the area.
The official settlement and establishment of the town
occurred in 1834. Its economic reason for existence was a mixture of
farming and the mining of coal and tin. Only the farming exists today.
By any measure Avoca is a small and charming riverside
settlement.
Things to see:
St Thomas' Anglican Church
There is an attractive riverside park as well as a
pleasant park in the centre of town. The town has a number of
significant historical buildings. St Thomas' Anglican Church, built in
the Romanesque Revival style to a design attributed to James Blackburn
(the architect who built the beautiful church at Port Arthur), was
consecrated on 8 May 1842. The church dominates the town from its
position on the hill at the top of Blenheim Street. It is well worth a
visit. Notice that some of the pews still carry their original numbers
and that up the back of the church is a large pew which was built for a
particularly large church warden.
|
|
The beautiful Parish Hall in
the main street
|
Historic Buildings
Other buildings of note include the former Rectory
and Marlborough House (1845) in Blenheim Street, the Parish Hall (built
around 1850) and Union Hotel (1842) in Falmouth Street - the town's
main street, and the Bona Vista, a superb stone residence (off Storys
Creek Road) which was built for Simeon Lord Jr. The son of the great
entrepreneur, Simeon Lord Jr was a noted Tasmanian and Queensland
pastoralist who founded Victoria Downs station and was the father of
two members of parliament. The Bona Vista, with its basement cells and
its sandstone terrace, is a fine example of Georgian architecture. It
was built around a courtyard and would have been the centre of social
life in the district in the 1840s and 1850s.
In 1853 two bushrangers held up the homestead and shot a
local constable. They were subsequently caught and both were executed.
A nice irony is the fact that Tasmania's most famous bushranger, Martin
Cash, worked as a groom at the property.
|
|
In autumn the hedges in the
area are covered with
berries
|
Rossarden
20
km to the north is the tiny village of Rossarden which lies under
Stacks Bluff which towers 1527 m above sea level. Rossarden was once
one of Australia's major tin producing towns but it closed down in 1982.
Views of Ben Lomond Range
The road which passes through Rossarden and joins Avoca
and Fingal offers superb views of the rugged Ben Lomond Range which
rises to the north of the village.
| |
Tourist Information
|
| |
| |
Avoca Visitor Information Centre
Shell Road House
4 Falmouth St
Avoca
TAS
7213
Telephone: (03) 6384 2157
Rating:
|
| |
| |
Hotels
|
| |
| |
Avoca Union Hotel
Falmouth St
Avoca
TAS
7213
Telephone: (03) 6384 2121
|
| |