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Bowenvale

Towns & Destinations

Central Goldfields Shire Council VIC, PO Box 194, Bowenvale, VIC 3465
03 5461 0610

Description

Timor, also known as Timor-Bowenvale, is a mainly rural area in the Central Goldfields Shire of Victoria, Australia.

Timor, also known as Timor-Bowenvale, is a mainly rural area in the Central Goldfields Shire of Victoria, Australia. It is located 8 kilometres north of Maryborough, Victoria and 178 kilometres (111 mi) northwest of Melbourne, the state capital.

According to the 2016 Australian census, the populations of the statistical areas making up the Timor area were 181 in Bowenvale, 58 in Timor, and 24 in Timor West. Comparisons with previous censuses must be made carefully due to radical changes in statistical area boundaries.

History
Names

Places names used in the area over time have included Chinaman's Flat, Butcher's Bridge, Cox Town or Coxtown, Central Chinaman's, Leviathan Reef, Timor Creek, Lower Alma, Timor West or Lime Kiln Plains, Dwyer's Bridge, Bowenvale, and Timor.

The term "Bet Bet" must be identified by its context, as its use in earlier times was not only for the Bet Bet Creek. Just as the now-Castlemaine area on the Loddon River was referred to as "of the Loddon" and "Loddon," locations near the Bet Bet Creek were referred to as "of the Bet Bet" and shortened, confusingly, to "Bet Bet". This is not to be confused with the current Bet Bet hamlet, further downstream on Route C278, which in earlier times was known as Grant's Bridge. Much historic documentation, especially maps, includes the word lead. A lead is an underground seam of gold deposits, and has nothing to do with the metal lead.

The historical records for the area are confounded not just by changing place-names, but by formal boundaries being at the confusing crossroads of divisions between various government administrative sections, including between the Counties of Talbot and Gladstone, between the civil Parishes of Bet Bet and Maryborough, between the former local government Shires of Bet Bet and of Tullaroop, which surrounded the Borough, later City, of Maryborough, and between modern administrative regions. Most authorities used the Bet Bet Creek as a boundary, but the Town of Timor straddles it. The shared boundary between the civil Parishes of Maryborough and Bet Bet is partly Bet Bet Creek Road.

Early history

The area was a small part of the territory of the Djadjawurrung people. The first non-indigenous arrivals came from Britain in the late 1830s and 40s and created two huge sheep runs known as Charlotte Plains and Norwood. The Timor-Bowenvale area straddles a section of their shared boundary. The comments made about the region's indigenous people by early Norwood resident Alfred Joyce in his reminiscences give some insight into tensions of early settlement.

Gold Rush Era

The first gold discoveries occurred in 1854 or 1855. By June 1855, newspapers regarded "Chinaman's Flat" as a well-known site for prospectors and used "the head of Chinaman's Flat" to describe an area to the west of the current Maryborough-Bowenvale-Timor Road about 5 km from modern Maryborough. This name came from the groups of Chinese immigrants largely from Guangdong Province in southern China who made up a large proportion of the early gold seekers.

Butcher's Bridge and Cox Town

The track into the Maryborough area became well-established during the next twelve months. Towards the end of 1856, a shorter route between Maryborough and Dunolly was enabled by a young entrepreneur named Cox Butcher who built a basic bridge and an accompanying inn, called The Bridge, at the nearby Bet Bet Creek crossing, close to where a small number of water carriers and gold seekers were living. That location became known as Butcher's Bridge and then Cox Town, gradually shifting towards the latter.In October 1856, a major rush to a particular point on the Chinaman's Flat Lead began, resulting in the discovery of a gold-bearing quartz reef later named the Leviathan. Urban areas grew along both sides of the Lead. On the west side, there was a Primitive Methodist Church, a post office named Chinaman's Flat, a reading room, and at least one private school. The urban settlement on the east side, which seems to have also been called Chinaman's Flat, spread along the main track from Maryborough to Dunolly via Cox Town, and was probably more commercial. In 1863, following more than a year of agitation and petitioning by the community, a government-regulated school named Chinaman's Flat opened in the western community, eventually in a solid-brick building on what is now Denyer's Road.

Establishment of Timor and Decline of Chinaman's Flat

By 1857, the Maryborough & Dunolly Advertiser was predicting that Cox Town would eventually become a permanent creek-crossing settlement. By October 1861, the Tullaroop Road Board and the Bet Bet Road Board, whose shared boundary was the Bet Bet Creek, were in negotiations, encouraged by letters to the Maryborough and Dunolly Advertiser, to replace Cox Butcher's bridge with a more solid one with side rails. On 20 August 1866, a surveyed town north of what is now Bet Bet Creek Road, located in the civil Parish of Bet Bet and straddling the Bet Bet Creek itself was proclaimed, and named Timor.Chinaman's Flat was initially the larger community, but as gold-winning became more complex and capital intensive, people moved to be closer to the huge mining operations exploiting the mainly north-trending leads nearer to and beyond Bet Bet Creek. Increased numbers of permanent buildings were constructed around the junction of Timor Road and Bet Bet Creek Road.The land for State School 1207 Timor, on Bet Bet Creek Road on the Chinaman's Flat border, was "temporarily reserved from sale, etc" on 15th April, 1878. The current school building opened in 1880, and was later substantially extended in weatheboard.

In the areas close to Maryborough, an increasing percentage of "reefers" in the remaining population were working the booming Leviathan mine and several smaller parallel gold reefs. The community and Chinaman's Flat School were renamed Leviathan Reef.The school closed in 1902, with some pupils transferring to S.S.1207 Timor, and others to S.S.848 Alma The local names Chinaman's Flat and Central Chinamans faded with disuse, but the name of the main drainage course, Flat Creek, is still used.

Establishment of Bowenvale

A "Bowen Park" in Timor was declared on 26 January 1874.probably after George Bowen, Governor of Victoria 1873–79, The first use of the name "Bowenvale," for the sections of Chinaman's Flat seems to have been before November 1877. It was applied to the electoral division of the Electoral District of Maryborough and Talbot for that area. The Electoral Registrar was an Edward Beedon of Chinaman's Flat. Eventually the long main road and surrounding urban strip that abutted Timor at Bet Bet Creek Road, and had been populated and mined for decades, was surveyed, and on 11th January 1887 gazetted as an unnamed town. The documentation proclaiming its name as Bowenvale has not yet been found.

20th Century

Eventually the deep mines were overwhelmed by underground water, in spite of increasingly large pumping plants. The mines used long beam engine water pumps of up to 30 tons, and at least two of their massive stone arch-shaped fulcrums are still standing. Over the past century, these have gradually been re-imagined as "arches," "archways," and "pump house entrances," "boiler house entrances," or even "mine entrances."

Large scale mining ceased during World War I, though the working of mullock heaps, which used cyanide for gold extraction, lasted longer. Much of the gravel from the leads and reefs was removed for construction.Miners gradually moved away to other areas with ore or coal and onto other employment in New South Wales, particularly Broken Hill, or Western Australia, Queensland, New Zealand, or South Africa. Many moved to cities and the areas to the north of Victoria, particularly those settlements along the Maryborough to Mildura railway line, which had benefitted from the 1910 sale of Crown Land along its Murrayville-Pinnaroo branch. Many buildings were relocated by jinker to Maryborough or to developing farming areas, some over long distances.In 1926, a memorial to the large number of local men who had volunteered to serve in World War I was erected in Bowenvale. Not long after, a new Catholic Church was erected diagonally opposite it in Timor. These addresses represented the naming split across the middle of the community.

A storm on New Year's Eve in 1960 severely damaged both the Community Hall and the Church of England Church in Bowenvale, which were then demolished. The community replaced the Hall but the Church was not rebuilt. The last hotel in the area, The Victoria in Bowenvale, closed in April 1961, and the last store, in Timor, closed in 1997. The Primary School, S.S.1207, had its weatherboard extension removed in 1937, but remains open.

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Details

Type: Rural areas

Population: 101 - 1,000

Time zone: UTC +11:00

Area: 17.929 km2

Elevation: 51 to 200 metres

Town elevation: 193 m

Population number: 181

Local Government Area: Central Goldfields Shire Council

Location

Central Goldfields Shire Council VIC, PO Box 194, Bowenvale, VIC 3465

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