A history of Tarnagulla and Districts.
Centre of the Victorian Goldfields, Australia.
Article researched and written by Donald W. Clark.
The Bet Bet Road District, which included the
township of Tarnagulla was proclaimed on the 14th January,
1861. The township of Tarnagulla was defined in the
Government Gazette of 1861 page 409 and the township of
Newbridge was defined also on page 407.
The Bet Bet Road District met on Tuesday, March 26, 1861, at
Grant's Bet Bet Hotel, for the purpose of appointing a
chairman for the ensuing year. Charles Cameron was elected as
President and G. Cook was elected Secretary. Members of the
Board were: Messrs R. McRae, T Costello, C. McKindley, D.
Kirk, Jas. Forbes, H. McKindley, Jas. Nixon, and H. Bottam.
Engineer was R. T. McMillan. Assistant Engineer and Collector
was Mr S. Cameron. All of the Board's meetings were held at
Grant's Hotel on the Bet Bet Creek until March 27th, 1863.
About the time that the next elections were due, a Local
Government Bill was on its way through Legislature, and
extended powers which would be given to all local bodies.
This caused considerable rivalry between the Tarnagulla and
Dunolly sides of the district. The Tarnagulla residents were
determined that they would have a much greater say in the
affairs of the Board and would have a majority in the new
Board; so much so, that on the day of the election,
Wednesday, 18th March, 1863, every available person travelled
from Tarnagulla, by all types of conveyance, to the polling
centre, where they swamped the polls, winning five out of the
nine seats, and G. Cook as Secretary.
Two police constables were on duty at the polling centre and
at about 5 pm, Sergeant Webb with three constables arrived
from Dunolly on foot in heavy rain. After the election was
completed and the nine members were declared elected, the
meeting proceeded to fix the rate for the coming year. This
was finally settled at 3d in the pound. The meeting was
broken up several times by brawls, and finally everything got
out of control ending in one huge brawl involving almost
every one present, including a big party of Chinese who had
arrived to vote. Nearly every movable article in the hotel
was broken into pieces and all of the windows smashed in. One
of the constables present remarked: "It banged a
Tipperary election hollow."
The first meeting after the election was held on March 27th,
1863 when Mr Pierce was elected as chairman; other members of
the Board were Messrs. McDougall, Hammond, Beynon, Shaw,
McBride, Cameron, Costello, and Minto with Geo. Cook again as
Secretary. Mr Pierce moved that meetings be held at the
Company's Hotel, Tarnagulla, in the future. This was agreed
to, and the first meeting was held at this hotel on Tuesday,
21st April, 1863, and from then on until Tarnagulla left the
Board in 1864.
The rate of threepence in the pound as fixed on March 18th,
1963 was never collected because the cost involved would be
greater than the receipts, but the new Local Government Act
authorised the increase in the rates to fifteen pence in the
pound. The Board therefore decided that it would collect the
rates in the future.
Following a public meeting of residents of Tarnagulla and
Newbridge a petition, in accordance with the requirements of
the Municipal Corporation Act 1863, Section 11, was presented
to the Governor. This was signed by 163 household residents
of Tarnagulla and Newbridge, in the Parish of Tarnagulla,
praying to His Excellency to constitute a borough under the
style and title of the Borough of Tarnagulla, within the
boundaries as set out. This area included the township of
Tarnagulla and the township of Newbridge, west of the centre
of the Loddon River.
The Borough of Tarnagulla was constituted by the Governor in
Council along the boundaries as set out in the petition, and
Robert W Hammond was appointed under the Municipal
Corporations Act 1863, to be the officer by and before whom
should be conducted the first election in the proclaimed
Borough of Tarnagulla. The Councillors elected were: Jas.
Ray, G. Barlow, R. H. Burstall, J. Pierce, Thos. Bayliss,
Henderson, Martin, Newington, and Prendergast, with Jas. Ray
being elected as first Mayor of the Borough.
The Borough Seal was designed to embody the Royal Arms of
Great Britain, with mining and agricultural emblems to
represent Tarnagulla and Newbridge respectively.
The streets of Tarnagulla, namely, Commercial Road,
Gladstone, Stanley, Elgin, North, Beynon, Bulwer, Lytton,
Canning, Clyde, Wood, Welsh, Camp, Victoria, King, Poverty
and Wayman Streets were defined in the Government Gazette of
1865, page 849; and the streets of Newbridge were set out on
page 848 and were, Jennings, Ramm, and James, Nelson, Parker,
Market, Gifford, Lyons and Raglan Streets.
Up until August, 1866, Council Meetings were held in
privately owned premises such as hotels etc. In August 1866,
the Borough Council amalgamation purchased the two storey
building in Commercial Road, previously known as the
Company's Hotel, which was built in 1859 at a cost of 2000
pound, for 200 pounds plus an additional 150 pounds for the
furniture etc. An outbuilding of the premises still houses
the Fire Brigade. The Hotel premises were those which were
used by the Bet Bet Road District Board but were later used
by the Colonial Bank as bank premises until new bank premises
were built at the corner of Poverty Street and Commercial
Road. The bank had had considerable work done on the hotel,
including repainting and embellishing the interior, the
removal of the heavy cornice from the front of the building
and having the front of the building Stuccoed.
The Borough Council occupied this building as Council
Chambers until 31st October, 1915, on which date was held the
last meeting of the Borough of Tarnagulla Council as a
separate Council. Present were: Crs. Martin (Mayor), Duggan,
Newman, Ison, Ramsay, McKenzie, Jennings, Ramm, and James.
The Borough Council was forced to amalgamate with the Bet Bet
Shire Council by an order in Council of 6th September, 1915,
and as from the 1st of October, 1915, all borough Councillors
were entitled to attend Shire meetings. This was until
August, 1916, when a fresh elections took place. The cause of
the amalgamation was that the revenue was only 260 pounds
which was 40 pounds short of the required amount to permit
the Borough to qualify under the Local Government Act.
Cr. J. E. Duggan who was a Borough Councillor for 16 years
was the first to be elected to the Tarnagulla Riding of the
Shire. He was later joined by Donald M. Calder on October
21st, 1915.
Two Councillors of the Old Borough were elected to
Parliament: Cr. Thos. Comrie was elected to the Legislative
Council and Cr. D. J. Duggan was elected to the Assembly, and
became a member of Cabinet and appointed Minister of Lands.