Our next destination on our stopover in Alice Springs was the Old Telegraph Station. This place has a lot of history.
This complex, 4 km north of the Alice Spring town centre was declared a heritage site in 2004. This was just one of 12 repeater stations along what was known as the Overland Telegraph Line, which when completed in 1872, stretched from near Adelaide to Palmerston as Darwin was known then. This line was connected to an undersea communications cable which ran from Europe to Java, to the north of Australia. ( Java is actually closer to Darwin than Sydney, so that northern town was an obvious choice) When the line was completed and linked to the undersea cable , instead of messages taking 40 days to travel from London to Australia, they now only took 24 hours. Eventually other Australian colonies were linked by telegraph line.
So this station at Alice was the first white settlement in this part of central Australia. It closed in 1932 when a new Post office was built and the precinct was later used as a residence and educational institution for part Aboriginal children until 1942, when it was taken over by the army during WW2. After the war it was returned to the Aboriginal Affairs department until 1963 when it became a historical reserve.
What lovely old stone buildings...
On our tour we had Georgia as our guide...she had only been a guide for 3 weeks...but she was good!
So then the wooden posts were replaced by metal poles like this one outside the old post office
There were exhibits to look at...the 'tyres' on the homemade handcart were made with pieces of cork! Ingenious way of making do with what was to hand.
The town of Alice Springs is on the Todd River...but all is not how that sounds. The Todd River rarely has any water flowing...it's just a sandy river bed. It is described as an 'ephemeral river' on this website here.
And in typical Aussie larrikin spirit, Alice Springs has the annual Henley on Todd Regatta (since 1961) in which people race bottomless vessels by carrying/running them on the course on the dry river bed! Apparently the organisers take out insurance in case the river does flow when the regatta is due.
This complex, 4 km north of the Alice Spring town centre was declared a heritage site in 2004. This was just one of 12 repeater stations along what was known as the Overland Telegraph Line, which when completed in 1872, stretched from near Adelaide to Palmerston as Darwin was known then. This line was connected to an undersea communications cable which ran from Europe to Java, to the north of Australia. ( Java is actually closer to Darwin than Sydney, so that northern town was an obvious choice) When the line was completed and linked to the undersea cable , instead of messages taking 40 days to travel from London to Australia, they now only took 24 hours. Eventually other Australian colonies were linked by telegraph line.
So this station at Alice was the first white settlement in this part of central Australia. It closed in 1932 when a new Post office was built and the precinct was later used as a residence and educational institution for part Aboriginal children until 1942, when it was taken over by the army during WW2. After the war it was returned to the Aboriginal Affairs department until 1963 when it became a historical reserve.
What lovely old stone buildings...
On our tour we had Georgia as our guide...she had only been a guide for 3 weeks...but she was good!
She has the same fascination with John McDouall Stuart's achievements in exploration of this part of Australia that I have had from my school days. And everyone in the group listened attentively as we had a very informative talk from Georgia...then it was time to explore further.
This is an example of the posts that were originally used for the telegraph posts carrying the wire...unfortunately the termites kept destroying the posts . |
There were exhibits to look at...the 'tyres' on the homemade handcart were made with pieces of cork! Ingenious way of making do with what was to hand.
Georgia explained that this tree was already growing here when the station was built 1871-72 |
And in typical Aussie larrikin spirit, Alice Springs has the annual Henley on Todd Regatta (since 1961) in which people race bottomless vessels by carrying/running them on the course on the dry river bed! Apparently the organisers take out insurance in case the river does flow when the regatta is due.
What an interesting place! Cork for tires! Love it.
ReplyDeleteGod bless.
Great to share this excursion with you Maria. What a difference it must have made for communication time to go from 40 days to 24 hours! Guess there'd have been a lot of maintenance required over those huge stretches of remote country because of the termites. Beautiful stone buildings, and I love those ghost gums. Thanks for this interesting post :D)
ReplyDeleteSuch an interesting history, Maria. I love the bit about the races. LOL! Typical Aussies!
ReplyDeletewhat a wonderful trip ypu are having and both history and geography thrown in too
ReplyDeleteWhat an interesting post!
ReplyDeleteDidn't see this. Thanks for sharing. So very interesting xx
ReplyDeleteThe hill behind the animal yards was my daily walking destination from town, and particularly beautiful up there on full moon nights...you can watch the sun go down as the moon comes up, it's magical. If you go down the other side of the hill there's a track that joins the Larapinta Trail, and tucked away there in the bush is a very old cemetery, graves of one of the early managers at the Telegraph Station and his family, including very tiny graves.They all had influenza and didn't survive. So much history in Alice.
ReplyDeleteMaria , I am having a wonderful sight-seeing tour, thanks to your great pics & writing... you sure are covering many miles & you will have just as many great memories of it when you get home!
ReplyDeleteTake care & be safe x