|
|
Boats at the marina, Port Albert
|
Port Albert
Attractive and historic port.
Port Albert, located 238 km south-east of Melbourne,
was one of Victoria's earliest settled ports. Although the area is
often mentioned in Aboriginal myths, it remained undiscovered by
Europeans until 1841. In the first two months of that year, the site of
the future township was visited by three separate exploration parties,
marking an appropriately enthusiastic start to a town that would make a
dramatic rise to prominence in the ensuing decades.
On January 2nd, 1841, the Clonmel foundered off the coast and
the survivors' favourable reports attracted a group of speculators
known as the 'Gippsland Company'. They arrived two weeks after
explorer, Angus McMillan, who was searching for a port from which to
ship cattle to Van Dieman's Land. Three months later, in May, the first
settlers arrived.
The initial site of the township, known as 'Seabank' or 'Old
Port', was abandoned and the new township of 'New Leith' was
established 3 kms to the south. The name Port Albert was soon adopted,
in honour of the Queen's consort.
Port Albert's early commercial development was largely
carried out by John and Robert Turnbull. It soon became the principal
town and administrative centre of Gippsland and a port for the region's
trade with Melbourne and Van Dieman's Land. Its initial prosperity was
based upon its proximity to the cattle trade between Gippsland and the
future Tasmania. A 250-metre timber jetty, constructed to facilitate
the growing traffic, today makes a pleasant place for an afternoon
walk.
Port Albert was ideally situated to benefit from the extra
trade generated by the discovery of gold at Walhalla and Omeo in the
1850s. The fishing industry emerged the following decade. However, the
settlement began to decline in importance as the interior of Gippsland
was opened up. This process was greatly accelerated by the coming of
the railways in the 1870s and 1880s, which also provided an alternative
trade link with Melbourne. More than two-thirds of the population
disappeared between 1891 and 1933. Today, the town continues to
function as a supply port for Wilsons Promontory.
Articles concerning the early history of the port
were written by a local official, George Dunderdale, and collected in
The Book of the Bush (1898). His house still stands on the road to
Tarraville. One local story concerns the discovery of a dress and a
towel in a canoe in 1841. They were supposed to belong to a Scottish
woman who had survived a shipwreck. It was rumoured that she was being
held by aborigines and local natives confirmed that a white woman was
living with a tribe nearby. Although search parties did find a group of
local Aborigines in possession of a manufactured item featuring the
image of Brittania the actual woman was never found. True or not, the
story probably reflects the fears of the pioneers and it was certainly
used as a justification for the maltreatment of Aborigines. Early
settler Angus McLean was one of a number of writers who used the tale
as the basis of literary fiction in Lindigo, The White Woman (1866).
Local sources also suggest that escaped convicts from
Van Dieman's Land made their home in the area.
Things to see:
Historic Buildings
Port Albert's early importance is reflected in the
number of substantial buildings dating from the 1850s and 1860s. The
rugged Port Albert Hotel, licensed in 1842, claims to be the oldest pub
continually in operation in Victoria. Opposite the Yacht Club, with a
view of the jetty, the hotel was originally constructed from
prefabricated timber, though the current brick structure dates from
1858. An old weatherboard section at the front of the building was
ruined by fire in 1893. Between the hotel and the wharf is the former
Bond Store (1852), which held goods awaiting the payment of customs duties.
The local post office is a solid structure with gabled
roof, rounded windows and, on both sides, projecting wings and
attractive verandahs supported by classical-style columns. Founded in
1864, it is probably Gippsland's first and certainly one of Victoria's
oldest mail centres.
|
|
Port Albert Maritime Museum
|
Port Albert
Maritime Museum
The Maritime Museum, in Wharf Street, was once the
Bank of Victoria. Built in 1862, it received gold from the fields to
the north. It now houses memorabilia of the port's nautical past,
including a cannon from the wreck of the Clonmel. Notes concerning an
automobile tour of the district are also available. The museum is open
7 days a week from 10.30 am to 4.00 pm daily from the 1st September to
31st May. In winter it is open on weekends, school and public holidays
or by request. Museum phone / fax is (03) 5183 2520.
Derwent Hotel
Diagonally opposite the museum, on the corner of Wharf
and Victoria Streets, is the old Derwent Hotel, with its painted brick
exterior, timber verandah, and steep corrugated-iron hip roof. Erected
in 1858 by John Foster (see entry on Maffra) to accommodate passing diggers, it
is no longer open to the public.
South Street
A monument to Angus McMillan stands in the roundabout
at the South Street entrance to Port Albert. At one time, this street
constituted the dividing line between the port and the government
township of Palmerston, established alongside. It contains public
structures such as the police station (1856) and the rudimentary
Immigration Depot (1857-8), through which large numbers of
gold-prospecting Chinese immigrants once passed. Although somewhat
altered, it is considered a significant instance of the vernacular
architectural style utilised in the public buildings of the early
colonial period.
Also on South Street, near the monument, is McKenzie's store.
Built in 1858, it is now a private home. Other buildings of that decade
are a store and bakery on Tarraville Road and the former customs house.
Nooramunga Marine and Coastal Park
Port Albert is situated within the bounds of the
Nooramunga Marine and Coastal Park, which stretches eastwards from Port
Welshpool to an area beyond one of the region's better locales for
swimming, Mann's Beach. The park incorporates a number of offshore
islands, such as Snake Island (see the entry on Port Welshpool), which are havens for
various parrots, sea eagles, migratory birds and other fauna. Fishing
is permitted. The Sunday Island race also departs from Port Albert
every November.
| |
Motels
|
| |
| |
Port Albert Motel/Hotel
Wharf St
Port Albert
VIC
3971
Telephone: (03) 5183 2212
Rating: **
|
| |
| |
Hotels
|
| |
| |
Port Albert Hotel
Wharf St
Port Albert
VIC
3971
Telephone: (03) 5183 2212
|
| |
| |
Caravan Parks
|
| |
| |
Seabank Caravan Park
Old Port Rd
P.O. Box 68
Port Albert
VIC
3971
Telephone: (03) 5183 2315
Rating: ****
|
| |
| |
Restaurants
|
| |
| |
Port Albert Motel/Hotel
Wharf St
Port Albert
VIC
3971
Telephone: (03) 5183 2212
|
| |