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Fields of wheat - typical of
the area around Lake Grace
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Lake Grace
(including Lake King)
Small and typical wheatbelt township.
Lake Grace is a small town located 353 km south
east of Perth. It is a typical wheatbelt township characterised by the
inevitable grain silos, bulk loading facilities and single pub.
The first European to explore the area was the
indomitable Surveyor General John Septimus Roe who passed through the
area south of the present townsite in 1848 and named Mt Madden, the
most prominent granite outcrop in the area.
Roe was on an expedition to survey and explore the
south-east interior of Western Australia. He was accompanied by two
soldiers from the 95th regiment, two members of the Surveyor General's
Department, and an Aboriginal guide named Souper.
To gain some insight into the kind of experiences that
Roe and his party must have had there has been an excellent brochure,
the Roe Heritage Trail, produced which covers 23 km of the route he
took in the last days of October 1848. The trail starts at Roe Hill
near the Old Newdegate Road which is to the west of the main
RavensthorpeLake King road. It was here that Roe's party split
with one half moving towards Lake King while the other half travelled
towards Mt Madden.
The two groups joined up at the base of Mt Madden
which Roe named after Dr Richard Madden, Western Australia's Colonial
Secretary. Mt Madden is now a popular picnic location and the climb to
the top of the outcrop, which is 386 m above sea level, is quite easy
and affords excellent views over the surrounding countryside.
Roe's reports on the countryside he visited (he
pushed further west on this journey and returned along the coast from
Esperance) did not engender any great rush for settlement.
Even the establishment of Holland's Track from Broomehill to
the goldfields in 1893 (the tracks made by the drays and wagons can
still be seen between Lake Grace and Newdegate (ask for directions from
the local Shire Office) could not encourage people to move into the
area in significant numbers.
In 1909 the surveyor, F. S. Brockman, named Lake
Grace after his wife, Grace Bussell. Shortly afterwards settlement
occurred in the area but it wasn't until 1914 that Lake Grace got its
own school. An Australian Inland Mission Hospital was built in the town
in 1925 and around this time the tiny wheatbelt townships of Newdegate
(1924), Varley (1928) and Lake King (1928) were established.
Things to see:
Lake Grace
The major attraction in the Lake Grace area (apart from
Mt Madden) is Lake Grace itself. Part of an ancient river system which
probably flowed more than 20 million years ago it was reduced to a lake
about 5 million years ago and gradual silting made it into the shallow
lake which exists today.
The clearing of the land around Lake Grace at the turn
of the century has resulted in the whole area experiencing long term
salinity problems as the water table rises to the surface bringing
dissolved salts with it. Entry to Lake Grace township from Dumbleyung
involves crossing a narrow causeway across the lake which offers an
excellent opportunity to observe the level of salination in the lake.
The area around Lake Grace is noted for the variety of
small mammals including the western mouse, white tailed dunnart,
Mitchell's hopping mouse and the ashy-grey mouse.
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Motels
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Caltex Roadhouse & Motel
Stubbs St
Lake Grace
WA
6353
Telephone: (08) 9865 1050
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Hotels
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Lake Grace Hotel/Motel
Stubbs St
Lake Grace
WA
6353
Telephone: (08) 9865 1219
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Caravan Parks
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Lake Grace Shire Caravan Park
Mather St
Lake Grace
WA
6353
Telephone: (08) 9865 1263
Rating: **
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Restaurants
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Caltex Roadhouse & Motel
Stubbs St
Lake Grace
WA
6353
Telephone: (08) 9865 1050
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