GANDERS REEF MINE SITE
OFF GROWLERS CREEK ROAD WANDILIGONG, ALPINE SHIRE
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Statement of Significance
The Growlers Creek Gold Bucket Dredge Site consists of a largely buried timber pontoon. The skeletal remains of the pontoon is very overgrown by trees, ferns and blackberries, but appears to measure approximately 25 metres x 10 metres
The Growlers Creek Dredge was built in 1924. The dredge worked from 1924-30, after which it was stripped and parts used in the construction of the Freeburgh dredge.
The Growlers Creek Gold Bucket Dredge Site is of historical, archaeological and scientific importance to the State of Victoria.
The Growlers Creek Gold Bucket Dredge Site is historically and scientifically important as a characteristic and well preserved example of a form of gold mining used in Victoria from the early 1900s. Bucket dredges were introduced into Victoria from New Zealand and were widely used until the 1950s. A bucket dredge comprised a floating pontoon on which an endless chain of iron buckets revolved around a long frame or ladder which could be raised or lowered. The bucket line excavated all the material to a depth to be dredged. Bucket dredging sites are now rare in the State, and surviving sites are important key ingredients in an understanding of the development of alluvial gold mining technology.
The Growlers Creek Gold Bucket Dredge Site is archaeologically important for its potential to yield artefacts and evidence which will be able to provide significant information about the technological history of gold mining.
[Source: Victorian Heritage Register.]
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GANDERS REEF MINE SITE - History
Heritage Inventory History of Site:
Gander's (sometimes known as the Specimen) was among the first reefs opened up on the Upper Ovens goldfield, in 1859. In early 1860 it was one of just a handful of reefs from which stone had been crushed, and was among the richest. The Gander's Reef Co. was working by shaft and tunnel, close to the creek. They crushed at Gitchell's battery on Morse's Creek and installed a pump and engine for draining their shaft in 1861. Yields fell off during that year, making the reef unpayable. Attention briefly shifted to the northern portion of the claim. Gander's Reef was again worked in 1867-8, although not very profitably.
In 1886, a diamond drill struck gold at depth on the Gander's line. The Diamond Drill Co. was formed to work it, with a capital of £10,000. A new shaft was sunk, pumping and winding plant installed, and an office and blacksmith's shop erected. Hopes of a quartz mining revival for the whole district hinged on the Diamond Drill Co.'s success. But when the reef was reached, through sinking and driving, in mid-1888, it was found to be barren of gold. Local shareholders urged an investigation 'to ascertain how a golden core was drawn from a reef that otherwise carries not a trace of the colour of gold.' The Diamond Drill Co. immediately stopped work and removed its plant, despite local opinion that, with perseverence, gold-bearing stone would certainly be struck within 50 or 60 ft. After the Gander's Reef failure, the local mining scene sank even deeper into its slump.Heritage Inventory Description
GANDERS REEF MINE SITE - Heritage Inventory Description
Features are: tunnels and surface workings on the spur above the creek, and a shaft and mullock dump on the creek flat.
Heritage Inventory Significance: The site has scientific significance because of its age and rarity.
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GROWLERS GOLD BUCKET DREDGE SITEVictorian Heritage Register H1303
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LORD OF THE HILLS CREEK TRACK MINEVictorian Heritage Inventory
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GANDERS REEF ADITVictorian Heritage Inventory
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