Broad Arrow, Western Australia

Broad Arrow
Western Australia
Broad Arrow
Coordinates 30°26′54″S 121°19′47″E / 30.4484°S 121.3297°E / -30.4484; 121.3297Coordinates: 30°26′54″S 121°19′47″E / 30.4484°S 121.3297°E / -30.4484; 121.3297
Established 1896
Postcode(s) 6431
Location
LGA(s) City of Kalgoorlie-Boulder
State electorate(s) Electoral district of Kalgoorlie
Federal Division(s) O'Connor

Broad Arrow is a ghost town in Western Australia, located 38 km north of Kalgoorlie and 633 km east of Perth, Western Australia. It is on the Kalgoorlie to Leonora Road.

History

Initially called Kurawah, gold was first discovered there in 1893 which triggered a gold rush in the region north of Kalgoorlie. The Broad Arrow Goldfield was gazetted on 11 November 1896, and in 1897 the municipality of Kurawah was declared.

The town derives its name from the markers, in the shape of a broad arrow, left on the ground by a miner, Reison, who left them to direct his friends who were following him to a gold discovery he had made. His mine was also named Broad Arrow.[1]

Extensions to the Eastern Goldfields Railway line from Kalgoorlie to Menzies was begun in August 1897, and reached Broad Arrow on 6 November the same year.[2] The railway station included a 350 ft (110 m) passenger platform.

At its peak the town had 15,000 residents, eight hotels and two breweries as well as a stock exchange. Other facilities included a hospital, three churches, Salvation Army Hall, a chemist, two banks, police station with resident magistrate, a mining registrar, a post office, a cordial factory, six grocery stores and two draperies, and blacksmith and bakers' shops. The town was the administrative centre for smaller settlements in the area including Ora Banda, Smithfield, Black Flat, White Flag and Grant's Patch.

A 10,000,000 imp gal (45,000 kl) dam was built for the Public Works Department in Broad Arrow in 1897.

The population of the town was 337 (218 males and 119 females) in 1898.[3]

By the 1920s the gold had run out and the town had been abandoned.

The movie Nickel Queen was filmed there in 1971, using the town's remaining hotel, the Broad Arrow Tavern. The Tavern remains open for travellers today and is noted for having almost every wall covered with handwritten notes from past visitors. In recent years the area has had renewed life with mining companies re-establishing operations, like the Paddington Gold Mine.

References

  1. Western Australian Land Information Authority. "History of country town names – B". Retrieved 12 November 2010.
  2. "Assessment Documentation - Railway Water Tower, Broad Arrow" (PDF). Heritage Council of Western Australia. 28 March 2002. Retrieved 5 September 2008.
  3. "Population of Western australia". Western Mail. Perth, Western Australia: National Library of Australia. 22 April 1898. p. 23. Retrieved 28 May 2012.

Further reading

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