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Mansfield - Past and Present

Enlargement of map showing Taungurang clans in N.E. Victoria

The Aboriginal people who inhabited the Delatite area for at least 10,00 years before Europeans arrived belonged to the Taungurung clan.  They held alliances with several other clans and language groups in Victoria who together are known as the Kulin Nation. Information courtesy: Delatite Indigenous Reference Group

"The recorded history of Mansfield which dates back to the 1830's is a story of adventure, courage and determination, and as was the case with so many other rural settlements, its fortunes fluctuated as it passed from the 19th to the 20th century.

Mansfield is located 200 kilometres north-east of Melbourne, Victoria in a wide valley surrounded by mountain ranges.  To the west lie the Strathbogies and The Paps;  north-west, Mount Samaria;  north, the Tolmie Plateau;  est the Great Divide with Mounts Buller, Stirling and Timbertop (or Warrambat as it was called);  and to the south, the low hills of the Blue Range.  These mountains give raise to the Broken, Howqua, Jamieson, Goulburn, Delatite and Big Rivers."

"The first European settles came during the squatting boom of the late 1830's.  Because there was no pasture improvement in place, large runs were needed, and squatters were always in search of good grazing land.  In 1838 a company was formed in Scotland headed by the Marquis of Ailsa, and also included George Watson and a lawyer named Alexander Hunter Snr.  In 1839 Watson and Alex Hunter Jnr. were sent as company representatives to take up land in Van Diemans' Land.  However, they were quickly attracted to Port Phillip where they found good land at Keilor, and subsequently at 'Ballowra' at Seven Creeks near Euroa.  Later in 1839 it is reported that an employee, Andrew Ewan, was despatched from 'Ballowra' to search for strayed horses.  He crossed the Strathbogie Range,. came down Merton Creek, found the horses, but more importantly recognised a green lush valley fed by some good streams.  Immediately John "howqua" Hunter and Hunter Campbell came to investigate.  The legend has it that they camped overnight below the Paps, close to the junction of the Delatite River and Brankeet Creek, and at night were so frightened by  sounds of a corroboree being conducted nearby, that they called the spot Devil's River.  As 'Ballowra' was already overstocked, the Hunters moved cattle and horses to this new run which they called 'Wappan' (after the Aboriginal name for the Delatite River, Wappang).

By 1846 several other squatters had moved into Devil's River country including Chenery and Goodman on the other side of the Delatite River;  David Waugh in the Piries area;  Edward Bell a friend of the Hunters at Mimamaluke south of Mr Waugh's run;  Wardrop & Clarke of Change;  W.F. Arundel of Barjarg, (a cousin of the Hunters).  Taken from The Mansfield Valley, 150 Years of History.

"In 1851 the township and agricultural reserve of Mansfield began to emerge at the foothills of the Victorian North East ranges near Mt. Batters.  The land selected for the township bordered Fords Creek at the junction of four of the main Pastoral Runs of this area:  Mount Battery Run, Maindample Run, Banumum Run and Loyola Run.  An area was excised from the junction of these runs, and a survey into one acre allotments followed.  This, together with a survey of two cross roads, each three chains in width, allowed space for bullock wagons and horse drawn coaches to turn with ease.  The main road running East/West was named High Street, and the cross road running North/South was given the name of Highett Street, after William Highett who held a pastoral licence for the Maindample Run at that time.

At the public auction in Benalla in June 1854 the first town lots were sold at an average price of £8 per acre.  Alfred and George Chenery of Delatite Station purchased four allotments, and built an iron structure that incorporated Mansfield's first Hotel, Store and Post Office - the initiation of Mansfield traders."  Taken from Mansfield High Street Traders 1854-2000 and early Highett Street Traders, published 2004.

 

One of the well known landmarks in Mansfield, formerly the Convent of our Lady of Mercy, It is now known as one of the districts most popular resorts, the Alzburg Inn


A school was opened in 1858 by the Anglicans and Free Presbyterians, who built churches in 1865 and 1866 respectively. Mansfield was proclaimed a shire on 31 December, 1866, by when the township also had two hotels, a courthouse, a steam flour mill and a hospital. In addition to sheep grazing, Mansfield had dairying (butter factory opened in 1893) and cultivation for oats, potatoes and fruit. About 25 km north of Mansfield, near Tolmie, a party of Mansfield police were searching for the Kelly gang in October, 1878. When two of them camped at Stringybark Creek they were bailed up by the outlaws. One of the police made a break for freedom and was killed. Two other police who returned to the camp were also killed. A monument to the three policemen was erected the following year (through public donations) at the intersection of Mansfield's two main streets. The monument stands at the front of a wide central plantation which runs down the main commercial street. 

     

Above are the graves of the three murdered policemen, located in the Mansfield Cemetery.         L-R Michael Kennedy, Thomas Lonigan and Michael Scanlan.

The memorial dedicated to the fallen policemen - located at the intersections of High and Highett Streets - This photo was taken circa 1960

In 1891, after more than a decade's lobbying, a branch railway line was opened from Tallarook to Mansfield. The line provided improved access for agricultural products to the Melbourne markets. Until 1919 the Mansfield Shire was confined to the northern pastoral regions. The mining towns along the Jamieson to Woods Point road were in the Howqua Shire, and Woods Point had been a borough between 1865 and 1894. In 1919 part of the Howqua Shire was added to Mansfield Shire, increasing its area by half. As well as adding mining areas to the Shire, Howqua had large forest areas. About fifty kilometres east of Mansfield is Mount Buller, and during the 1920s the Ski Club and local interests began to open it up as a tourist resort. The postwar development of the Mount Buller snow resort has added substantially to Mansfield as a tourist destination or as a stopover. Westwards, the development of Lake Eildon as a boating and recreation site has also brought tourists to Mansfield. In 1964 the State tourism authority began promoting Mansfield as the Gateway to Leisureland. Mansfield has also benefited from horse-riding holidays in the hills to the east. "The Man from Snowy River" was filmed east of Mount Buller in 1982. The main shopping street has been enlarged by several new groups of shops. The railway station has been converted to a tourism and information centre.

The railway station - circa 1900


M
ansfield has State primary and secondary schools and Catholic and Steiner primary schools. The shire offices are the main office for the newly de-amalgamated Mansfield Shire. The court house (1879), the former police stables (1886), the police memorial and the railway station are on the Victorian Heritage Register. The main street, Highett Street, is named after William Highett, who was a squatter on the Maindample pastoral run. He came form Tasmania with his brother John, who grazed stock near the Dandenong Creek and named the Melbourne suburb of Highett. John Highett later settled at Geelong and named his property Highton, now a Geelong suburb, after his family's farm at Weymouth, England. His son, Francis, built Highton Manor at Mansfield in 1896, which has been converted to a motel and restaurant. The district's residential property market is buoyant. In 1987 the median house price was $59,000 and in 1996 it was $82,125. On 18 November, 1994, Mansfield shire was united with Benalla shire, Benalla city and part of Violet Town shire to form Delatite shire. In addition to the places already mentioned the Mansfield shire contained Bonnie Doon, Merton, Merrijig and Tolmie. Mansfield's town census populations have been 385 (1871), 1,110 (1911), 1,323 (1947), 1,956 (1971) and 2,178 (1991). The shire's census populations were 2,344 (1871), 3,800 (1891), 4,275 (1966) and 8,471 (1991). The increase in the last twenty-five years indicates the trend to rural/residential living in districts outside the township.  After a lengthy process, in October 2002 the Shire of Mansfield was de-amalgamated from the Rural City of Benalla.