Difference between revisions of "Black Hill"

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(Names associated with Living in Black Hill)
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[[File:M1351-12-wiki.jpg|800px|thumb|right|''Quartz Crushing Battery, Base of Black Hill, Ballarat, 1855"]]
 
[[File:M1351-12-wiki.jpg|800px|thumb|right|''Quartz Crushing Battery, Base of Black Hill, Ballarat, 1855"]]
 
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[[File:GILL ST - The first quartz crushing battery - 2004.110-wiki.jpg|1000px|thumb|right|Samuel Thomas Gill, ''First Quartz crushing Battery,  Base of Black Hill, Ballaarat. 1855,'' colour lithograph. <br>Art Gallery of Ballarat, gift of Dr. Philip Moulton, 2004.]]
 
[[File:GILL ST - Ballaarat Flat from the Black Hill - 2004.111-wiki.jpg|1000px|thumb|right|Samuel Thomas Gill, ''Ballaarat Flat, from the Black Hill - 1855,'' lithograph on paper.<br>Art Gallery of Ballarat, Ronald Wrigley Estate, 1979.]]
 
[[File:GILL ST - Ballaarat Flat from the Black Hill - 2004.111-wiki.jpg|1000px|thumb|right|Samuel Thomas Gill, ''Ballaarat Flat, from the Black Hill - 1855,'' lithograph on paper.<br>Art Gallery of Ballarat, Ronald Wrigley Estate, 1979.]]
  

Revision as of 22:39, 6 August 2017

Quartz Crushing Battery, Base of Black Hill, Ballarat, 1855"
Samuel Thomas Gill, First Quartz crushing Battery, Base of Black Hill, Ballaarat. 1855, colour lithograph.
Art Gallery of Ballarat, gift of Dr. Philip Moulton, 2004.
Samuel Thomas Gill, Ballaarat Flat, from the Black Hill - 1855, lithograph on paper.
Art Gallery of Ballarat, Ronald Wrigley Estate, 1979.

On the morning of 03 December 1854 the government forces crossed Yarrowee Creek at Black Hill. The exact point is unknown due to mining activity of the years. From the top of Black Hill tot eh north one of the diggers on duty saw the Military and Police and fired a single warning shot to the diggers. It was heard in the Eureka Stockade but they waited for a second confirming shot that was never fired. [1]


The order to fall in and be silent was given, and when Captain Thomas had spoken a few words we were put in motion, led by Captain Wise. The party had not advanced three hundred yards before we were seen by the rebel sentry who fired, not at our party, but to warn his party in the Stockade. he was on Black Hill.[2]


In a letter written by Dr George Wakefield to his father dated 01 May 1856 he described:

I am living at the foot of an immense mountain called the Black Hill which is composed of quartz reefs containing immense quantities of gold. It seems to be the origin of the gold leads in this district as they commence from it. The amount of gold taken by some parties is scarcely credible .... The population too would astonish a few, here we have representatives of all the nations of the face of the globe not the least wonderful of which is the aboriginal nation. I have frequently been present at their corroborees, and their skill in throwing the spear, boomerang etc., is wonderful. I saw the boomerang thrown yesterday. It went completely out of sight & in about 6 (seconds) descended at the feet of the thrower ... (Bowden 1977: 92) [3]

Names associated with Living in Black Hill

Frederick Vern

Henry Wise

Also See

Abodes

References

  1. The Eureka Trails publicity brochure, undated.
  2. Letter from John Neill, 40th Regiment dated 7 February 1870
  3. Ian D. Clark, Another Side of Eureka - the Aboriginal presence on the Ballarat goldfields in 1854- Were Aboriginal people involved in the Eureka Rebellion?, University of Ballarat, 2007.