Place of Many Crows (Part 8) By Eric Irvin 22 August 1953Daily Advertiser (Wagga Wagga) |
A brief history of the foundation of Wagga Wagga This is the
eighth of a series of articles, to appear daily, tracing the
history of the foundation and early growth of the town of Wagga
Wagga. The complete history will be published in book form later. |
From the letter of July 31, 1849
(quoted yesterday) it is clear that Wagga had been surveyed as a
township at that date, and allotments marked out. This assumption is proved true by a
letter of F. A. Tompson's dated September 19, 1849,
in which he states: "Wagga Wagga not yet having been gazetted as a
township, although measured and subdivided." According to R. J. E. Gormly (15)
surveyor Thomas Scott Townsend made the first plans of the town in April,
1849. It was not long after the date of
this letter that the Sydney and Goulburn Heralds carried news of
the proposed sale, in Sydney of land at Wagga, and the proclamation of
the establishment of the township of Wagga. The Goulburn Herald announced that
land would be offered for sale by public auction at the old
Military Barracks, George Street, Sydney on Wednesday, November 21,
1849, the land to consist of ten South Wagga lots and eight North
Wagga lots; and in its issue of December 6, 1849 carried the following
notice: Low
prices "Wagga Wagga. A site has been
fixed upon for a township at Wagga Wagga, on the Murrumbidgee
River. A copy of the approved plan may
be seen at the office of the Surveyor General, Sydney, or at the
police office, Wagga Wagga." (16). The Sydney Herald on the other
hand, announced the date of the land sale as being November 22, and announced
the establishment of the town in its issue of November 26, 1849. The ten South Wagga allotments were
sold at prices ranging from £10 to £4each. They were located in Section 1,
numbers 1 to 5, (Section 1 is the block bounded by Gurwood,
Fitzmaurice, Kincald and Trail Streets) and
Section 4, numbers 1 to 5 (Section 4 is the block bounded by
Kincaid, Fitzs- maurice,
Crampton and Trail Streets). These allotments, in both
sections had Fitzmaurice Street frontages. Numbers 1 to 5 in Section 1
were all bought by J. J. Roberts, from the corner of Gurwood Street to roughly the centre of the block. Buyers of Section 4 allotments, from
the corner of Kincaid Street to roughly the centre of the block, were: S.
D. Gordon (1), C. Tidyman (2), S. D. Gordon (3) and 4),
T. S. Townsend (5). The prices paid for these allotments
were, naturally enough, very low, for Wagga was not Gazetted as a town ship
until the day after the sale. Not only was it unknown, but there was
nothing whatever in 1849 to indicate that it would grow to any size. However, by the time the next
public auction of Wagga land was held (in the following year)
things were somewhat different. Stores and houses (of a kind) had
been built, and there was every indication that the town of Wagga
was destined not only to stay put, but also to grow. Second
sale The second sale o£ Wagga land was
the first to be held in Wagga itself. The sale was conducted at the
Court House by F. A. Tompson on July 31,
1850, and 33 allotments were disposed of - 25 in South Wagga and eight
in North Wagga. The average price realised per
allotment was £10. 13. 11, or £21. 7. 10 per
acre, the highest price paid by Robert Davison for the Kincaid -
Fitzmaurice Street corner of Section 1. At this sale the remaining allotments
in Section 4 (6 to 20) were sold. The third land sale took place in
Wagga the following year, on January 23, when South Wagga lots only were made
available. Eleven were sold, made up of the last of the allotments
available in Section 1 (12 to 20) and two lots (5 and 6) in Section 5. (Seption 5 is the river bank block bounded by
Kincaid, Fitzmaurice, and Crampton Streets.
Lots 5 and 6 are centre lots). This
sale showed a drop in prices, for the average was £6. 11. 2 per
allotment. The highest price paid was £14 for
allotment 6, Section 5. From all this it will be seen that, after
Wagga had been surveyed and laid out, and up to the end of the year
1851, Wagga consisted of that area of land enclosed by Gurwood, Fitzmaurice, Crampton
and Trail Streets, bisected by Kincald
Street. This particular area remained the business
section until well into the 'sixties, after which more substantial and
flood-free buildings were built up to the then boundary of Wagga, the Wollundry Lagoon. Early in the same year (1851) a
request for Section 7 (the block bounded by Crampton,
Fitzmaurice, Travers and Trail Streets) to be opened up for sale
was forwarded from Wagga to Sydney. In August of that year, also, ten
lots were sold at auction in North Wagga. On September 3, nine
allotments in Section 7 were sold (the whole of the Fitzmaurice Street
frontage, plus a Crampton Street allotment next
to the Crampton Fitzmaurice Street corner allotment).
At this sale, thanks to the discovery of gold, prices were lower
than they had ever been, each allotment realising only £4. After this there were several
auction sales, but no buyers. The gold rush, drought and floods
brought everything to a standstill in Wagga until almost the end of
1853. Soon sold out As is usual when a
new town or suburb is opened up, the majority of buyers who, either
in person or by proxy, obtained the 18 Wagga allotments which were
auctioned in Sydney were people who apparently bought on the chance
of the land suddenly increasing in value, rather than from any real
need for land in the new township. J. J. Roberts, for instance was
living in Wagga at the time he bought his land, then being licensee
of Wagga's first hotel, the Wagga Wagga Inn. From the scant records available about
him, it would seem that he sold out towards the end of 1850 and left Wagga. S.
D. Gordon, as far as this account of Wagga is concerned is only a name -
though he may have been related to the John Gordon who was aWagga magistrate in 1851. Christopher Tidyman
was Wagga's second blacksmith (the first was John Franklin). T.
S. Townsend was the man who surveyed the town. The eight North Wagga allotments
sold on November 22, 1849, were bought by Robert Davison (of Gundagai),
Duncan Menzies, William Davis, William Brown and William Hendrie. Robert Davison was a storekeeper and hotel
proprietor of Gundagai. At the first auction sale of land
in Wagga itself (July 31 1850) he bought land In South Wagga, and
later erected Wagga's first brick store. His licence to sell spirits at
this store dates from October 18 1851: in 1885 he sold out to
George Forsyth, and Wagga saw him no more. Davison is always referred to
erroneously, as Dr. Davison. He was, in fact an-apothecary and
amateur surgeon, and on occasion set bones quite successfully. He had practised as a chemist in Wollongong
for some years, and went to Gundagai in 1842. (17). The term 'doctor' was given in
the early days to almost every purveyor of pills and medicine. As
late as 1854 a Sydney Herald correspondent writing from the Westgarth
(Vic.) gold diggings said: "Everybody in the line, from the
apothecary upwards, is doctor here." Of Duncan Menzies little more is
known than that he later bought additional land at North Wagga. The same may be said of William
Davis, although according to R. J. E. Gormly he was a member of
a family which was in residence at North Wagga as early as October,
1844. (18). William Brown opened the first
hotel in North Wagga (the New Ferry Hotel) and operated Wagga's first punt, of William Hendrie
nothing is known. These, then, were the men who
bought the first Wagga land offered for sale. Of them all, not one remained in Wagga
ten years later, some having died and the others having passed on. References (16) In point of fact, the proclamation
appeared in the N.S.W. Government Gazette of November 23. 1849.
"Notice is herby given that a site has
been fixed upon for a township at the under mentioned place ...Wagga
Wagga on the Murrumbidgee." (17 R.A.H.S. Vol. XXXIII Part 3
1947. Earliest Gundagai Medical Practitioners, by Richard T. Kennedy,
M.B., B.S. (18) In the Dally Advertiser. |