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The Church ruins at Ebenezer
Mission
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Antwerp
Tiny
town in the Wimmera which was once an important Aboriginal mission.
Located 356 km north west of Melbourne and 22 km
north of Dimboola, Antwerp is hardly a township at all. In reality it
can hardly be called a town. It is no more than a grain silo, a general
store and about six houses stuck out in the middle of the Wimmera. The
major interest in the town lies in the Ebenezer Mission to Aborigines
which stands in ruins on the Dimboola side of the town.
Before European settlement the area around Antwerp was
characterised by mallee scrub (eucalypts), native pines, red gums and
ti-tree. The local Aborigines (probably known as the Wotjoballuk) moved
around the area relying on the local river, named Wimmera by Major
Mitchell in 1836, for their water and living off the local fauna and flora.
The first Europeans to settle the area were George Shaw
and Horatio Ellerman who arrived in 1846 and successfully applied for
130,000 acres to graze some 10,000 sheep. It was Horatio Ellerman who
named his property 'Antwerp' after the city in Belgium where he was
born. It is likely that Ellerman's son, Clarence Henry, who was born in
1852 was the first European child born in the Wimmera.
In 1858 two Moravian missionaries, the Reverend
Hagenauer and Reverend Spieseke, arrived in Victoria to work among the
Aborigines. They decided that they were most needed in the Wimmera and
they chose a site about 3 km south of Antwerp station on the Wimmera
River. By 1859 they had built a hut and, during that year with the
assistance of the local Aborigines, they built a church. It was
consecrated in 1860. At that time a local Aborigine named 'Pepper' was
baptised - thus becoming the first Christian Aborigine in the Wimmera.
By the late 1880s the town was thriving because of
the establishment of a large and successful eucalyptus oil distillery.
The oil was extracted from the mallee by a company which called itself
the Eucalyptus Mallee Oil Company. The oil was sold under the EMU brand
name.
Antwerp was never a large town. The last wedding in the
Ebenezer Mission church occurred as long ago as 1899 and the local
school, which finally closed in 1981, rarely had more than 20-30
students. When the school finally closed it had only 12 students.
Things to see:
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Monument to the Aborigines
buried in the cemetery at Antwerp
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The Aboriginal Monument
The Aboriginal Monument can be located at the
cemetery on the Dimboola side of town. The monument was established to
the memory of the Aborigines who were buried in the cemetery.
Ebenezer Mission
The Ebenezer Mission is about 1 km further south. The
graves at the ruins of the church are particularly interesting. There
are graves of both Aborigines and Lutheran missionaries. The
missionaries had been born in such exotic places as Bohemia and
Prussia. It is well worth a visit. It is located 2 km off the main road
between Jeparit and Dimboola.
Accommodation and Eating
There is no Accommodation and Eating in Antwerp. See
Dimboola for the closest facilities.