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Glen Innes, NSW: Celtic Heritage

Glen Innes, located in the New England region of New South Wales, Australia, is a town with charm, and history dating back to the early 1800s.

The town was named after Archibald Clunes Innes, a pastoralist and former Commandant of Port Macquarie penal colony.
 

The Ngarabal People

The Ngarabal are an Aboriginal people of the area from Ashford, Tenterfield and Glen Innes. They called the area "Hol'pin", meaning many casuarinas near a large plain.

As regards ritual or ceremonial and “ornamental” surgery, I saw no natives with the septum nasi pierced. The Ngarrabul Blacks told me that neither circumcision nor knocking out the incisor teeth was practised in their tribe, nor was that remarkable rite, urethrotomy or mutilation of the penis, described amongst other Australian people. Scarification of the body (erroneously termed ‘ tattooing”), however, was performed after attaining adult years. It was entirely optional, and members of either sex could be so adorned if they felt disposed—an advantage that some at least did not avail themselves of. The form and distribution of the lines, etc., made by this operation differed materially in different tribes, and travellers say that many tribes could be thus easily distinguished by the bodily markings of their members.

Obstetrics in Ngarrabul were quite simple. The female relatives, sister, mother or grandmother, looked after the patient and her baby. The men knew but little about such matters, and held aloof.   
A woomera is an Australian Aboriginal wooden spear -throwing device. 
Ngarrabul and other aboriginal tribes. Part Iby J Macpherson, 1903

https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/6320685#page/783/mode/1up

1818

In 1818, John Oxley, surveyor of Australia, explored the Liverpool Plains. The southern end of the plains became known as "New England". 
Portrait of John Oxley, 1810, by unknown, watercolour, State Library of New South Wales, MIN 306

1830s

In 1838, the first squatter came to the Glen Innes district

Glen Innes district was called Stonehenge Station, which was occupied by Thomas Hewitt in 1838 for Archibald Boyd making him the first settler in the district.

Two stockmen with long flowing beards, William Chandler and John Duval, were among the first European settlers of the district from 1838. And they were called the Beardies, because they introduced other squatters to the region it became known as the “Land of the Beardies.” (now is the title of the Glen Innes Museum)

1840s

Archibald Clunes Innes became bankrupt in the depression of the 1840s, the station was taken over by the Bank of Australasia who later sold it to Archibald Mosman (Sydney suburb was named).
Archibald Clunes Innes 
1850s......in January, 1854. When he came to

Glen Innes they were building a wood-
en store for Fletcher and Ross. The
town was a very small place then. Mr.
James Martin had a store and the post
office, and the rest of the settlement was really nothing but a few huts.

The old Beverley Arms Hotel was where the present
Great Central is now. It was later
called the Telegraph.
The hotel was
kept by Mr. Regan,

The police quarters were moved
from Wellingrove to Glen Innes in
1858. The lock-up was a small one and
could only hold six prisoners.

The first flower mill was put up by
the late Mr. P. H. Henderson in the
mill paddock, about 1857 or '58.

Archibald Mosman
owned Furracabad, Mr. Walter Neild
being manager. Major Innes first took
up Furracabad Station, and GlenInnes
was named after him.
EARLY STATIONS.
Mr. Oswald Bloxsome owned Ran-
ger's Valley and Dundee, Captain Dit-
mas reigned at Clareveaulx.
Glen Innes Examiner (NSW : 1908 - 1954) 

Glen Innes was gazetted as a town in 1852 and the first lots were sold in 1854. The first hotel in Glen Innes was likely the Telegraph Hotel, established in 1854. (later replaced by the Great Central Hotel in 1874)

The post office was established in August 1854 and the court in 1858.

In 1859, a basic four-roomed building for Court of Petty Sessions.was built.

1860s

The "first road" to Glen Innes was built in the 1860s, known as the Old Glen Innes Road or Old Grafton to Glen Innes Road, connecting the New England tablelands to the coast.
BLANKET DAY" FOR THE ABORIGINALS AT THE GLEN INNES COURT HOUSE IN 1864, Queenslander (Brisbane, Qld. : 1866 - 1939),
Newcastle Chronicle (NSW : 1866 - 1876), Wednesday 12 February 1868 ("Thunderbolt Glen" refers to an area near Glen Innes, New South Wales, that is associated with the famous bushranger Captain Thunderbolt (Frederick Ward). 

1860s


In 1866, the population was around 350, with a telegraph station, lands office, police barracks, courthouse, post office and two hotels.
The First Hotel (Regan's 'Telegraph'. Glen Innes, NSW, OLD GLEN INNES (1939, October 14). Glen Innes Examiner (NSW : 1908 - 1954),

1870s

In Grey Street - Glen Innes, NSW, 1870, SLNSW. PD
Tin was discovered in the district in the 1870s.

The Court House opened in 1873-4.
Australian Town and Country Journal (Sydney, NSW : 1870 - 1919), Saturday 22 March 1873
Glen Innes Masonic Lodge began in 1874.
Glen Innes Examiner and General Advertiser (NSW : 1874 - 1908), Wednesday 26 May 1875
Glen Innes Examiner and General Advertiser (NSW : 1874 - 1908), Wednesday 26 May 1875
Glen Innes Examiner and General Advertiser (NSW : 1874 - 1908), Wednesday 26 May 1875
Glen Innes Examiner and General Advertiser (NSW : 1874 - 1908), Wednesday 26 May 1875
Town Hall, Glen Innes, NSW, 1870s, Australian Town and Country Journal (Sydney, NSW : 1870 - 1919)
Looking from Wentworth Street North along Grey Street - Glen Innes, NSW, 1875, SLNSW, PD
Corner Wentworth and Grey Streets - Glen Innes, NSW, 1875, SLNSW, PD
MESSRS. H. & R. A. LEWIS' STORE, GLEN INNES, NEW ENGLAND, Illustrated Sydney News and New South Wales Agriculturalist and Grazier (NSW : 1872 - 1881), Wednesday 12 January 1876
The first Glen Innes Hospital, NSW. And Dr Wrigley
The old Glen Innes Hospital dates back to 1877. 

1880s

John Frederick Utz, a storekeeper from Germany, established the Sunlight Flour Mill at Glen Innes in 1881, and was mayor of the municipality in 1883.
Glen Innes Examiner and General Advertiser (NSW : 1874 - 1908), Tuesday 17 April 1883,
Glen Innes Examiner and General Advertiser (NSW : 1874 - 1908), Tuesday 17 April 1883
The Great Northern Railway arrived in 1884.

In 1884 the streets were illuminated by 25 gas lamps, lit by Lamplighter Henry Wheeler.

Kwong Sing’s store opened in 1886 by Mr Wong Chee.

Henry Parkes opened the Town Hall in Glen Innes in 1888.

1890s

Glen Innes, NSW, Australian Town and Country Journal (Sydney, NSW : 1870 - 1919), Saturday 24 July 1897
First fire brigade in Glen Innes - Glen Innes, NSW, 1888, SLNSW, PD

1900s

Town Hall, Glen Innes, NSW, The Australasian (Melbourne, Vic. : 1864 - 1946)  Sat 15 Sept 1900

Glen Innes Post and telegraph Office,  NSW, Australasian (Melbourne, Vic. : 1864 - 1946), Saturday 15 September 1900
Glen Innes Police Courts, NSW, Australasian (Melbourne, Vic. : 1864 - 1946), Saturday 15 September 1900
Public School, Glen Innes, NSW, The Australasian (Melbourne, Vic. : 1864 - 1946) Sat 15 Sept 1900
The old Glen Innes Hospital, NSW, no date
Dr Macpherson exhibited an aboriginal stone'chisel weighing 100 turned up by the plough at Beaufort, near Glen Innes such implements were in use by the Ngarrabul tribe in shaping the handles of shields  back were made from the good of the black kurrajong LINNEAN SOCIETY. (1902, May 2). The Sydney Morning Herald (NSW : 1842 - 1954)
Glen Innes Agricultural Research & Advisory Station was established as ‘The Glen Innes Experiment Farm’ (later ‘New England Experiment Farm’) in 1902. Initially, the aims of the station were: To study the agricultural and pastoral problems of the Northern Tablelands. To produce improved varieties of agricultural and pastoral plants. To improve methods of culture and management of crops, pastures and livestock
M'INTYRE'S COACH LEAVING GLENINNES ON A WET DAY, Queenslander (Brisbane, Qld. : 1866 - 1939), Saturday 25 July 1903,
A bush home near Glen Innes, NSW, Sydney Mail and New South Wales Advertiser (NSW : 1871 - 1912), Wednesday 29 April 1903
Matron and two of the nurses of the GLEN INNES HOSPITAL.Sydney Mail and New South Wales Advertiser (NSW : 1871 - 1912), Wednesday 22 March 1905
Glen Innes, NSW, Queenslander (Brisbane, Qld. : 1866 - 1939), Saturday 1 July 1905
Glen Innes, NSW, Sydney Mail and New South Wales Advertiser (NSW : 1871 - 1912), Wednesday 22 March 1905
OFFICE OF THE "GLEN INNESGUARDIAN."OFFICE OF THE "GLEN INNES EXAMINER."Queenslander (Brisbane, Qld. : 1866 - 1939), Saturday 1 July 1905
Glen Innes, NSW, Queenslander (Brisbane, Qld. : 1866 - 1939), Saturday 1 July 1905
Cissing and Rutherford, Grocers in Glen Innes, N.S.W. - 1908, Kaye
Stacey's Business, Glen Innes, NSW, Sydney Mail and New South Wales Advertiser (NSW : 1871 - 1912), Wednesday 3 February 1909
WILLIAMS' CLUB HOTEL. GLEN INNES, NSW. Sydney Mail and New South Wales Advertiser (NSW : 1871 - 1912), Wednesday 3 February 1909
Public School, Glen Innes, N.S.W.- circa 1912, Kaye
The new Students' Quarters, Government Experiment Farm. Australian Town and Country Journal (Sydney, NSW : 1870 - 1919), Wednesday 21 February 1912
Glen Innes Football Team, NSW, Sydney Mail (NSW : 1912 - 1938), Wednesday 24 September 1913
,Back Row, Reading from Left to Right — W. Elkirigton, H. Legge, D. Poulter, F. Tremble, J. McGregor, J. Pedlow. Middle Row— H. Watts, H. Heavener, D. Neal, G. Griffin, K. McDonald, 'S. Bliss, J. Williams. Sitting— F. Spence, R. Jones.

WW1

Trooper Claude Loudsale son of Mr. and Mrs. Jas. Lonsdale,
Glen Innes, Aged 24 Years.Killed in Action..Glen Innes Examiner (NSW : 1908 - 1954), Thursday 1 
July 1915
The Church of England And Catholic Church, Glen Innes, NSW, Australian Town and Country Journal (Sydney, NSW : 1870 - 1919), Wednesday 21 July 1915
Grey St, Glen Innes, NSW, Australian Town and Country Journal (Sydney, NSW : 1870 - 1919), Wednesday 21 July 1915
A GLEN INNES FAMILY RECORD.
Mrs. Heydon, of Glen Innes, has the proud distinction of having fifteen grandchildren
as well as one son who have responded to the call of duty.
See here

Sunday Times (Sydney, NSW : 1895 - 1930), Sunday 3 December 1916, page 9

LAST OF HER HER TRIBE

ANOTHER QUEEN DIES

"Queen Fanny," who had ruled over the Oban tribe of aboriginals for the past forty years, died in the Glen Innes Hospital the other day. "Queen Fanny," who was sixty-five years of age at the time of her death, was practically the last of her tribe. The Oban blacks were, in the early days, a very formid-able and hostile tribe, numbering several hun-dred, and early pioneers experienced great difficulty in coping with their marauding expeditions. 

Traces of early troubles are still to be seen in the manner in which the old home steads in the district are built — the plan adopted resembling a system of blockhouses, for mutual protection. The late Andrew Coventry had some very trying experiences with the Oban natives, who made periodical raids on his cattle, apparently delighting in seeing the infuriated beasts running about with spears in their sides. On one occasion the blackfellows killed one of his stockmen. When the natives eventually became tamed they began to disappear very rapidly, in fact to this day where one bulk of the tribe went to is something of a mystery. Of late years the remnant of the tribe, numbering about a score all told, has been engaged in marsupial trapping near the Oban River, and they also obtain gold from the river. It is stated that before the white people ever came to New England, a big nugget was discovered by one of the blacks and rolled into a water hole. Later, when the blacks ascertained the value of gold, a search was made for the nugget but it has never been discovered, although to this day the natives have a hope of finding the treasure.
Glen Innes War Time Tea Room — Committee and Helpers. .The War Time Tea Room and Produce Depot was opened in the main street of Glen Innes on October 7, 1915, by a number of voluntary workers, for the purpose of raising funds to send to the War ChestAustralian Town and Country Journal (Sydney, NSW : 1870 - 1919), Wednesday 26 July 1916 See names here
'Armistice Day' in Grey Street, Glen Innes, New South Wales, 11 November 1918, SLNSW
Anzac Day March, Glen Innes, NSW, ca. 1919, SLNSW

1920s

Grey Street, Glen Innes, N.S.W. - circa 1920, Kaye
Tattersall's Hotel at Glen Innes, N.S.W. - 1920s. The original Tattersalls Hotel, built on the site of the Commercial Hotel in 1875 by Glen Innes' second mayor, Samuel Bowler Redgate. Kaye
Sydney Mail (NSW : 1912 - 1938), Wednesday 2 February 1921
The Power House to provide electricity began operation on 21 August 1922.
Glen Innes Soldiers' Settlement Estate, NSW, Dated: by 31/12/1921, www.records.nsw.gov.au/ PD
Title: Grey Street, Glen Innes. Dated: No date, www.records.nsw.gov.au/ PD
Glen Iness CWA was formed in 1923. In 1924 they purchased a cottage for £625 with seven-rooms to also provide rest rooms. That year 206 women used the rooms, including 82 expectant mothers and 13 ill women.
Country Women's Hockey Carnival, Sydney Morning Herald (NSW : 1842 - 1954), Saturday 8 June 1929
The Powerhouse 1929 Crossley Premier and the 1937 Bellis & Morcom 22A engines

1930s

Grey 
Street, Glen Innes, N.S.W. - circa 1930, Kaye

THE UNEMPLOYED £550 F OB GLEN INNES WATER SUPPLY SCHEME, Barrier Miner (Broken Hill, NSW : 1888 - 1954), Saturday 9 August 1930

Devons which carried off all the main prizes in their section at Glen Innes for Mr. C. D. Judge, of Ben Lomond, Sydney Mail (NSW : 1912 - 1938), Wednesday 23 March 1932
THE EXECUTIVE OF THE GLEN INNES BRANCH OF THE RED CROSS SOCIETY.Glen Innes Examiner (NSW : 1908 - 1954), Saturday 5 May 1934
Glen Innes, NSW, about 1930s, PD, Kaye
The original Bank at Glen Innes, NSW, was built ca.1874. This Bank building was built in 1929. Queensland University of Technology, 1935
Glen Innes Examiner (NSW : 1908 - 1954), Thursday 12 August 1937. (Roxy, demolished)

1940s

Glen Innes Butter Factory, NSW, Glen Innes Examiner (NSW : 1908 - 1954), Thursday 29 February 1940,
GLEN INNES AIRMAN PRISONER OF WAR IN GERMANY.Those in the group are :
Standing (left to right). Ian Mclntosh, Fowler, McColm, Kerwin Doyle. Sitting deft to right): Cornish and Mulligan..Glen Innes Examiner (NSW : 1908 - 1954), Saturday 7 March 1942
Acting Squadron-Leader Peter J. Turnbull, of Glen Innes, who is reported missing in air operationsin New Guinea.Sydney Morning Herald (NSW : 1842 - 1954), Wednesday 2 September 1942
Truth (Sydney, NSW : 1894 - 1954), Sunday 19 June 1949

Where They Live :' Seventeen aborigines — seven adults and ten children are 1iving in these humpies on Glen Inncs Common. ,Glen Innes Municipal Council this week decided to ask for tlis removal of the aboriginal families living in crude, unsanitary cciiditions on The Common to 'a place where strict supervision can be given towards making thek lives more comfortable.'Glen Innes Examiner (NSW : 1908 - 1954), Friday 17 June 1949

1950s

Grey Street, Looking South, Glen Innes, NSW, RAHS
First brick of the Glen Innes hospital laid. Messrs. E. S.'Clementson) , Sister Sturttridge, Matron Noonan, a workman and Mr. Tratt. .Glen Innes Examiner (NSW : 1908 - 1954), Friday 21 March 1952,

Around Glen Innes

Glen Innes, NSW
The Glen Innes Town Hall was built and opened in 1888, though some sources suggest it was built in 1887. 

Imperial Hotel Glen Innes, NSW, constructed 1901
The Great Central Hotel was established in 1874 and is one of the oldest commercial buildings in Glen Innes, NSW
The Railway Hotel, GLEN INNES, NSW, opened in March 1885
Club Hotel in Glen Innes, NSW, built 1906
St Joseph's Convent, Built in 1916 it was initially used as a convent for the Glen Innes Catholic School
The Kwong Sing War general store in Glen Innes, established by Wong Chee in 1886
Westpac Bank was built 1884-1885, formerly the Australian Joint Stock Bank, Australian Bank of Commerce and Bank of New South Wales. Victorian Italianate with bay windows.
Created in 1991/92, the Australian Standing Stones in Glen Innes Highlands is the national monument to Celtic people
Glen Innes Railway Station, NSW, https://www.flickr.com/photos/shebalso/

Things To Do and Places To Go

Heritage Walk ( more than 30 heritage-listed buildings)

Museum

The social organization of Australian tribes


Ngarrabul and other aboriginal tribes. Part I


"Thunderbolt Glen"is an area near Glen Innes, New South Wales, that is associated with the famous bushranger Captain Thunderbolt (Frederick Ward).

Minerama, a gem and fossicking festival

Australian Celtic Festival, Land of the Beardies Festival

Kings Plains Castle Bed & Breakfast

Mount Britton, QLD: Once a Gold Rush Town

Mount Britton is 130km west of Mackay, QLD.

Mount Britton (originally Britten) was a gold-mining town in the Mackay region, that was named by William Landsborough in 1856, for, James Britton. 

Aboriginal Peoples

Norman Tindale estimated the tribal lands of the Barna as covering around 3,200 square miles (8,300 km2), centering on the headwaters of the Isaac River, and running west as far as the Denham Range. Their southern frontiers were around Cotherstone. They were also present around Grosvenor Downs. The Wiri lay to their north, and their eastern flank bordered the western boundaries of the Barada.
Mackay region Aboriginal people, 1872

1880s

Post and telegraph station at Mount Britton, QLD, ca. 1880, SLQLD
Men standing outside the Mount Britton Hotel, Mackay district, QLD, 1881?, SLQLD
Early In January of 1881, a party of prospectors, comprising W. Orange, D. Nolan, and Thompson M'Fadzcn started out from Nebo In search of gold or any other valuable metal. They travelled via Lake Elphinstone, Mt. Gothard (an old copper mine on the. head of Bee Creek), thence across to the head of Cooper Creek to what Is known as The Stork, near Mt. Roberts. So far they had not found anything payable, so they turned for home again. On their way they camped a night at a little station called Tongwarry, about six miles from Nebo. 

Here they met a man named Ward, who had just finished a job of fence repairing. He was also a prospector, and in conversation he mentioned that a man named Jim Heenan had worked with him for a few weeks, and showed him some gold which ho said he'd Just got up in the ranges, at the same time pointing towards Mount Britten and Marling Spikes (some peaks that are visible for a great distance). Orange was in favor of turning back and prospecting the ranges referred to, but Nolan and M'Fadzen, who were married men with homes in Nebo, said "No." Then Ward suggested he would go back with Orange, so that was agreed upon.

Next day Nolan and M'Fadzen went on to Nebo. Orange and Ward went prospecting. They followed Cooper Creek up to the junction of Oakey Creek, then along the latter until up to very near the head. They made camp and started fossicking. They got colors in several places, and as they went farther up the gully they found traces of some other prospector's presence, such as pot holes here and there. However, next day they struck payable gold. This was early in February, 1881. They called the place Nuggety Gully, and they pegged out a prospecting area. (Twenty men's ground, also two men's ground, making a total of 22 men's ground) .

I may here mention that a miner's right entitles a man to 50 x 50 feet, and the prospectors are allowed twenty times that area for a period of, I think, three months, in which to prove it payable or otherwise, and if payable they have priority over any claim they care to peg out within that area. The rest of the area is thrown open to the public. After they marked trees at the four corners, also put in pointed pegs and written notices in prominent places, claiming the ground, they returned to Nebo, each sworn to secrecy.

Orange wired to Clermont warden's office their applications for the areas pegged out. However, Ward got too much rum in and gave the show away and within a week there were ovcr 20 men on the field. Claims were pegged nut all along the gully, end everywhere near it.

RUSH BEGAN. Tho news spread like wildfire and people came from all parts, some on horseback, others on foot, and a few with wheelbarrows. Tents sprung up like mushrooms. 


During the- latter part of 1882, the Government had a telegraph line erected from Nebo to the field.

Cobb & Co. ran a line of coaches from Mackay to the field for three months.

Reckitt and Mills had a very fine reef, much nearer the town, colled the Edith Mary. This reef was very rich in what the miners call pockets.

After the reefs got going in full swing, quite a little town sprung up in their vicinity— a sort of mining suburb of the main settlement, Mr. Dick Absolon built a hotel and Mr. E. J. Marryatt, of Lamberts, built a nice little store and post office....

There was a lot of gold got over on Moonlight Creek, a couple of miles west of Mt. Britten.

The distance by road was approximately 90 miles. Business' men of Mackay thought a shorter way could be found, so arranged with that great bushman, the late James Muggleton, to try and find a short cut to the field; and he did.
WRITTEN FOR THE 'MERCURY' BY MR. JAMES PERRY here

The gold field was opened in 1881, when several nuggets were found in the alluvial deposits of Nuggety Gully and Oaky Creek. (Information taken from: B. Dunstan, Queensland mineral index, 1913)
Royal Mail Hotel and doctor's cottage, Mount Britton Goldfield, ca. 1881 Two rough bush buildings made from bark are pictured on the Mount Britton Goldfield, ca. 1881. Gold miners can be seen standing outside the hotel building on the right. SLQLD
Mount Britton Goldfield, QLD, ca. 1881, SLQLD (The goldfield was known as the Nebo Goldfield and it was about 20 miles south west of Eton Railway Station and 43 miles by rail and road south west of 
John Mills and his wife, Mt. Britton, QLD, SLQLD
In 1881, gold was discovered not far from the Finch-Hattons' station. Harold Flnch-Hatton (1856-1904) wrote his memoirs "Advance Australia", in1885 (Finch-Hatton, the fourth son of the Earl of Winchilsea and Nottingham, spent eight years in Australia between 1875 and 1883.

While I was on Mount Britten diggings, a man came in, wheeling his Lares and Penates [his personal effects] before him in a wheelbarrow. The whole certainly weighed over 150 pounds, and he had wheeled it through 200 miles of heavy blacksoil country, in pouring rain, in just a fortnight's time.

Queenslanders feared the arrival of Chinese miners, and placed legal obstacles to keep them off the goldfields (45 Chinese miners eventually came to Mount Britton in 1886):

By and by a mob of Chinamen, the most patient, persevering, hard-working of all the races under the sun, will start and systematically "gound-sluice" the whole course of the creek, from one end of the workings to the other, and make a real good thing of it.

When I first arrived on Mount Britten goldfield there were seventy men on it, all living in tents. The only building that had any appearance of permanence about it was a butcher's shop and store, made out of a few sheets of bark and saplings. Flour had run out, the drays having all stuck in the mud half-way from port to the diggings; but there were tea, sugar, and tobacco, and a few tools to be had, and any amount of beef, supplied by fat cattle from the neighbouring run, two or three of which were run in every week into a sapling yard near the butcher's shop, and killed. For some time beef was all we had to eat; but it was very good, and there was plenty of it, so we were glad enough to get it. ...

The rush to Mount Britten was stopped before it assumed a serious phase, but at no time was the field capable of supporting more than 200 men on payable gold. Most of those who came were rank new-chums at digging. Instead of setting to work to look for a new run of gold, they generally confined themselves to the melancholy pastime of sitting down and watching others getting it, and by and by, finding that, with a few exceptions, gold is no more to be picked up without hard work on a diggings than anywhere else, they cleared out, leaving the fortunate ones who had secured good claims to work them out.

 Read here

A duel was ‘“ought'"on the
Mount Britten goldfield in 1880s. The
principals were a Polish doctor and three
Italian gold-claim jumpers. The doctor
was a colourful figure in early Queensland
history. His usual dress while in camp
consisted of green-striped pyjamas, a red
shirt, red cotton night-cap, and untanned
— greenhide— slippers.

As a goldfield the Mount Britten diggings
 did not amount to much; but the
doctor — and other early comers — got pay
able gold.  It was while he was away from
his claim, attending an injured miner,
that the three Italians took the opportunity
of “jumping’" it. There was only
one policeman on the field, an Irish constable, 
and when appealed to by the doctor 
he would not interfere in any way.
The doctor then challenged the leader of
the trio to fight a duel for possession,
and the challenge was accepted. Although
shots were exchanged, the duel proved
inconclusive, as the policeman put in an
appearance and brought it to an end
before damage was done to either combatant. 
That night the doctor loaded
both his horse pistols and went down to
the Italian's camp. The following day the
doctor was in possession of his claim and
the Italians were nowhei'e to be found. An
abandoned tent with its sides riddled with
large-bore bullet-holes gave a hint as to
the haste of going .

(1.)

Mount Britten lies west of Mackay some
65 miles, and is reached via Eton Railway
Station, the terminus of the railway line, and
is noted for the large number of nuggets
which were unearthed at the opening of the
field in March, 1881.
(2.)
View of the Edith Mary mine at Mount Britton, ca. 1885, QLD, SLQLD
Edith Mary mine at Mount Britton,, QLD, ca. 1885, SLQLD
The Mount Britten field lies about a mile from the township, which is very picturesquely situated between the mountains and Oaky Creek,...(3.)
Queensland Figaro and Punch (Brisbane, Qld. : 1885 - 1889), Saturday 24 September 1887

1900s

School group belonging to Mount Britton Provisional School in Mount Britton, QLD, ca. 1901, SLQLD
Albert Reckitts established, along with John Henry Mills, a photographic studio "Reckitt and Mills" in Mackay before moving to Mount Britton. His gold mine was named named in 1881, after Albert's daughter Edith Mary Reckitt, who died. Read here
Thc Late Mr. Albert Reckitts.The Late Mr. Albert Reckitts, with his wife, came from England to Queensland in 18G4, and was for a short, time in business at Toowoomba, at which place his wife died in 18GG, leaving ono surviving child out of four. Mr. Reckitts returned to England, taking with him his daughter throe years old, and having placed her with his two sisters ho returned to Queensland, and entered Into the sugar growing industry at Tallegalla Plantation, Maryborough district. After a few years ho sold out, and started a photographic business at Cooktown, being an early arrival at that place. Subsequently, he joined partnership with Mr. J. H. Mills, of Brisbane, and together they toured the south-western and western part of Queensland, in 1S81 tile Mount. Britten gold rush broke out, and there tho partners went into book keeping and gold mining, having secured a valuable reef known as thc "Edith Mary." In 1887 Mr. Reckitts again wont to England, but returned to Mount Britten, and took up his residence with his old partner in a property owned by himself. Here ho continued in apparently good health till he died, on March 24, after an Illness of about threo weeks. Although of a very retiring nature, ho was loved and respected generally. (Albert was related to the creator of the Reckitt’s Bag Blue washing whitener)
Mills family, Mt. Britton, QLD, ca. 1906, SLQLD
Pugh's (Queensland) official almanac, directory and gazetteer.(1907) 
Australian South Sea Islander family home at Mount Britten near Mackay, Queensland, 1907,SLQLD
Children standing outside Cairnedie residence at Mount Britton, QLD, ca. 1907, SLQLD

WWI

When World War I broke out in 1914, William James O’Grady enlisted at the age of 32 on 8th December 1915, in Rockhampton, Queensland. No. 4522. His profession is listed as a farmer from Mackay. At the time, he was working on his mother’s and brother’s farm in Sarina which they had purchased only three years prior. Born in February 1883 at Mount Britton (Sarina),

1940s and WWII

Daily Mercury (Mackay, Qld. : 1906 - 1954), Friday 26 March 1943

2000s

In July 2016, the Barna people were gramted Native Title to approximately 2,699 km2 (1,042 sq mi), together with another portion of land, 530 km2 (200 sq mi), to be shared with Widi people, covering land and waters south-west of Mackay and north-west of Rockhampton in the Bowen Basin.

In the 2021 census, Mount Britton had a population of 4 people.

Around Mount Britton

 Old mining equipment & materials on display.

Trolley at the Mt. Britton historical village. Mount Britton is a historical township in Nebo Shire, Queensland, Australia. The township began in 1881 with the discovery of a gold field, and at its height had a population of 1500 inhabitants. At the 2006 census, Mount Britton and the surrounding area had a population of 255. When alluvial and shallow reef gold diminished by the late 1880s, the town experienced a decline and was eventually abandoned. It currently exists as a historical site maintained by Nebo Shire.
Mount Britton in the Nebo Shire, QLD
Mount Britton in the Nebo Shire, QLD
Mount Britton in the Nebo Shire, QLD
Mount Britton in the Nebo Shire, QLD
Mount Britton in the Nebo Shire, QLD
Mount Britton in the Nebo Shire, QLD
140 year old fig tree planted to celebrate the land holders first child in 1883. Mount Britton in the Nebo Shire, QLD

Things To Do Places To Go

Read: Advance Australia! Chapter 12

Nebo Museum

Mount Britton is an abandoned gold mining town

 Mount Britton Free Camp

Nearby Moonlight Dam offers a basic camping area with water and toilets and is a picturesque and tranquil area for bird watching and a picnic.