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The pipeline from Mandaring
to Kalgoorlie near
Tammin
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Tammin
A
typical, unassuming wheatbelt township
Located 178 km east of Perth, Tammin is a typical
wheatbelt town which derives its name from the tammar or tammar
wallaby, a small wallaby which was the first Australian marsupial ever
sighted by Europeans. The tammar, which only stands about 60 cm, is
capable of withstanding droughts of over six months.
Tammin is a classic wheatbelt one street town with
huge wheat silos (constructed in 1960 they were the first concrete
silos built in Australia) and a railway line on one side of the road
and the faithful old Tammin Hotel and a few shops on the other side.
The success of the town (if a town with a population of
about 500 people can be deemed successful) was largely due to the
arrival of the Coolgardie water pipeline in 1902. This was less than a
decade after the arrival of the first settler, John Packham, a Sussex
farmer who had arrived in Australia in 1888, who settled in the area in 1893.
Of course Packham wasn't the first European to pass
through the area. That indomitable wheatbelt explorer and well digger,
Charles Cooke Hunt, of whom John Forrest is supposed to have remarked
'Will I ever find a place where this man has not been before me',
camped at Tammin Spring on 12 July 1864. He noted that the area had
'fair feed and good water' but claimed that the feeding ground was a
strip only '3 miles long and 1 mile broad'. It was hardly a description
designed to lure graziers into the area.
in 1865, as he passed through the area, Hunt had his men
construct a well. His diary entry for 4 March records: 'During the
early part of the day the working party engaged sinking well - having
made a hole about 10 ft long by 7 ft broad and 6 ft deep - by noon we
obtained a plentiful supply of water for travelling purposes.'
Things to see:
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Hunt's Well
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Hunt's Well
It is hard to overemphasise the importance Hunt's wells
played in the opening up of the whole wheatbelt area. He provided vital
water holes for both stockmen and for the gold prospectors who came
through the area on their way to Kalgoorlie and Coolgardie. Before the
arrival of O'Connoršs pipeline Hunt's wells were the major source of
water throughout the area.
Hunt's Well is clearly signposted. It is located to the south
of the town.
Charles Gardner Memorial
To the west of the town is the Charles Gardner
memorial surrounded by over 50 species of native wildflower. Gardner
was the Government Botanist and his name is also commemorated in the
Charles Gardner National Park which lies 16 km south of the town and is
a delight when the wildflowers are in bloom. It is important as a
reserve for sandplain flora especially the rare Casuarina fibrosa.
Yorkrakine Rock
Like so much of the wheatbelt Tammin has its own rocky
outcrop. Yorkrakine Rock, 26 km to the north of the town, is a huge
outcrop rising 341 metres and covering 160 hectares and is a popular
place for picnics and bushwalking.
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Tourist Information
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Tammin Tourist Information Centre
c/- Shire Office
P.O. Box 53
Tammin
WA
6409
Telephone: (08) 9637 1101
Facsimile: (08) 9637 1117
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Hotels
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Tammin Hotel/Motel
Donnan St
Tammin
WA
6409
Telephone: (08) 9637 1004
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Restaurants
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Tammin Hotel/Motel
Donnan St
Tammin
WA
6409
Telephone: (08) 9637 1004
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Tammin Roadhouse
Great Eastern Hwy
Tammin
WA
6409
Telephone: (08) 9637 1002
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