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Mount Gambier, SA: The second city of South Australia

Mount Gambier located on the slopes of a volcano is about 450 kilometres (280 mi) south-east of the capital Adelaide and is the second most populated city in South Australia.


The Bungandidj Aboriginal People

The Bungandidj Aboriginal Australian people from the Mount Gambier referred of the volcanic mountain as 'Berrin' and to the peak as 'ereng balam' or 'egree belum', meaning 'home of the eagle hawk.'
South Australian Aborigines - very early 1900s, Kaye
Christina Smith (1809–1893), generally referred to as Mrs James Smith, was a teacher and Christian missionary who documented the lives, customs, legends, and language of the Buandig Indigenous Australians (historically spelled Booandik), published in 1880, who live in south-eastern South Australia and western Victoria.

INTRODUCTION.

THE aborigines of the South-East were divided into five tribes, each occupying its own territory, and using different dialects of the same language. Their names were "Booandik, "Pinejunga," " Mootatunga," "Wichintunga," and " Polinjimga."

They were divided, irrespective of their country, into two classes — " Kumite" and "Kroke." A Kroke must always take a Kumite gor (female) for a wife, and a Kumite must take a Kroke gor to wife. The children were said to belong to the mother's class.

The Kumites were classed under five "totems," or family symbols, and the Kroke under four ; and all things, animate and inanimate, were said to belong to one or other of these totems. I append a few : —

KUMITE TOTEMS.

Boorte moola (fishhawk), Boorte parangal (pelican), Boorte wa (crow), Boorte wilier (black cockatoo, Boorte karato (innoxious snake), smoke, honeysuckle, blackwood, fire, frost, dog, rain, thunder, lightning, stars, moon, fish, stringy bark, seal, eel, &c.

KBOKE TOTEMS.

Boorte wirmal (owl), Boorte wereo (teatree scrub), Boorte mooma (edible root), Boorte kara-al (white crestless cockatoo), duck, wallaby, opossum, crayfish, turkey, quail, poolatch, kangaroo, sheaoak, sunmier, sun, &c.

The above lists do not restrict the selection of a wife, but bear upon the food a man might eat. It was considered wrong to kill or use for food animals of the same totem as one's self. When forced by humger, one might break this rule by formally expressing sorrow for haying to eat one's friends, and no evil results followed; but sickness and death were the penalties of wilful wrongdoing in this particular.

The Booandik Tribe of South Australian Aborigines: A Sketch of Their Habits, Customs, Legends ...

by Christina Smith (read here)

1800s

Lieutenant James Grant aboard the Lady Nelson sighted and named Mt Gambier in 1800 after a Lord of the British Admiralty.

1820s

First contact between the Bungandidj and Europeans occurred in the early 1820s.

1830s

In November 1834 Edward Henty settled near Portland.

Stephen Henty of Portland traversed the area in 1839 and came upon the dormant Mount Gambier volcano and the Blue Lake. (Ketla Malpi is one of four lakes in the dormant volcano complex and are sites of cultural significance to the Boandik people)

1840s

The Hentys built stockyards by Browne’s Lake and their sheep and cattle thrived on the rich volcanic soil, despite the theft of their sheep and shepherds speared to death in 1844. However, their claim on the land was short-lived, as they were essentially ‘free-camping.’ Henty was not an official SA settler so the government ordered him off the land. 

Evelyn Sturt Esq., younger brother of Captain Charles Sturt, secured an Occupational Licence from the South Australian Government on 6th March 1844.

Governor George Grey, Governor of South Australia's, expedition to South Australia's South East in 1844, was accompanied by artist George French Angas. The land was then surveyed by Forrest and Dickson, two members of the Royal Sappers & Miners in 1845. 

By the late 1840s, small-scale farming began in the area.

The first commercial building on Watson Terrace was Alexander Mitchell's hotel, built in 1844. In 1847, the hotel became the Mount Gambier Hotel, owned by John Byng, an African-American citizen.
Launceston Examiner (Tas. : 1842 - 1899), Saturday 29 August 1846
Adelaide Observer (SA : 1843 - 1904), Saturday 7 August 1847
In November 1847,  two police and three men tracked a group of Aboriginal people who had taken about 300 sheep to the coast. In their attempt to handcuff them, spears were thrown at them, and during the ensuring fight, four were shot dead. (2.)

Dr Edward Wehl began a flour mill in 1849.

1850s

Mt Gambier was a small collection of buildings surrounding the Cave Garden, where there was a water source.

Christina Smith and her son Duncan Stewart learnt the Bungandidj language and Duncan was appointed as an interpreter for this language in 1853. 

Hastings Cunningham founded 'Gambierton' in 1854.

In 1854, the Smith's moved to a small farm near Mount Gambier, where Christina opened a night school teaching Aboriginal orphans and adults until her husband's death in 1860.

Christina opened a day school in 1864, in Mount Gambier teaching scripture and the rudiments of a basic education to Aboriginal children. After a viral epidemic and loss of support for her school and with student numbers reduced to 4, the school closed in 1868, although it continued as a home for Buandig orphan children.
Christina Smith (c. 1865). She wrote a treatise entitled 'The Booandik Tribe of South Australian Aborigines' recording the tribe's rites, songs and language and including biographies of converts.
One of the earliest known photographic plates of Mount Gambier was taken on Watson Terrace in 1856.
Early view of Mount Gambier, showing Mitchell's Hotel, SA

1860s

First National Bank, Mt Gambier, SA
In 1864 work began on the pink dolomite stone Courthouse and was completed in 1878.

Mt Gambier Post office was built 1865 as a Telegraph Station.
1860s Mount Gambier Telegraph Office, SA
Mt Gambier, SA, 1866
The Mt Gambier gaol was completed on 8 January 1866.

The railway connecting Mount Gambier to Naracoorte was initially approved by the Parliament of South Australia in 1867.
Crouch's store, Mount Gambier. William Allen Crouch arrived in South Australia on the 'Templar' in 1845 and became a pastoralist. He arrived in Mount Gambier in 1849 and in 1852 he took over H. Crouch's store which he ran until he sold the business in 1870. 1867, SLSA
Commercial Street, Mt Gambier, SA, 1868
Mount Gambier’s first major public hospital was built with community fundraising in the 1860s. It was demolished in 1971.

1870s

Photograph of the first Mount Gambier Hospital, which was established in 1869 and demolished in 1971. The building was designed by Government Architect Robert George Thomas between 1867-69. The hospital was built of stone in the Italian gothic style featuring towers and cloistered verandahs. The two storey stately building had two wings and was typical of the Victorian era with decorative dressings around the doors, windows, cupolas, large ornate chimneys and even featured a widow's walk. The foundation stone was laid in February 1867 by James C Lyon. 1870, SLSA
By 1871 the population was 5519.

The forest reserves near Mount Gambier were sown with more than 200,000 trees in the late 1870s. Mostly, eucalyptus, pine, catalpa, planes, elms and oaks.
First store operated by R Woodruff, Mount Gambier, SA, 1870, SLSA

1880s


Mount Gambier Institute, SA, 1880
CORROBOREE.—A second corroboree by the members of the Booandik tribe of aborigines at present at Mount Gambier was given in the show ground on Wednesday evening. Nine only took part. The corroboree commenced at half past seven, and concluded at about half past eight. The night being dark a good fire was lit, and the display was managed somewhat better than the first one. About 150 persons witnessed the scene. Border Watch (Mount Gambier, SA : 1861 - 1954), Saturday 26 February 1881
Barrett's Temperance Hotel, Mount Gambier, 1882
An epidemic of scarlet fever swept the town in June, 1875. (1.)

1890s

Commercial Street, Mount Gambier. SA, 1890

Commercial Street, Mount Gambier. SA, 1890

Flour mill, which dates back to 1885, in 1892, SLSA
Express and Telegraph (Adelaide, SA : 1867 - 1922), Saturday 29 April 1893

1900s

Basil Watson visits Mount Gambier in a homemade aircraft similar to a Sopwith Pup. 
THE MOUNT GAM BIER WINTER STEEPLECHASE, SA, Adelaide Observer (SA : 1843 - 1904), Saturday 4 July 1903
Mt Gambier, SA, Australasian (Melbourne, Vic. : 1864 - 1946), Saturday 2 July 1904
Mt Gambier, Post Office, SA, 1904, SLSA
The Savings Bank of South Australia at Mt Gambier was built from 1906, SA
JUBILEE OF THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, MOUNT GAIMBIER. Observer (Adelaide, SA : 1905 - 1931), Saturday 25 April 1908
Pioneer's House, Mount Gambier, SA (B 37350), 1910, SLSA

WWI

Walter Patrick Winterfield #394 Although 'Bob Winterfield' is written on the reverse, there are only 3 soldiers named Winterfield from Mount Gambier area in WW1 and none are named Bob. One is aged 19, one is 18 and the other is 42, which would describe this man. Kaye
Australia Day, 1917, Mount Gambier, SA, SLSA

Commercial Street, Mount Gambier, SA, 1910

1920s

Mt Gambier High School football team, South Australia - 1923, Kaye

1920s

Register (Adelaide, SA : 1901 - 1929), Tuesday 25 October 1927
Haig's Gragage, Mount Gambier, SA, 1928
Mt, Gambier's Last Cab, SA, Register News-Pictorial (Adelaide, SA : 1929 - 1931), Thursday 25 July 1929

1930s

RAAF making constant use of Mount Gambier Aerodrome.

Miss Cicelv Jane Bourke, a long-time resident of Mount Gambier and founder of a prvate school she ran for over-sixty years, passed away Saturday 1934. 
Border Watch (Mount Gambier, SA : 1861 - 1954), Thursday 1 July 1937
Neway Stores in Commercial Street, Mt Gambier, South Australia - 1938, Kaye
Commercial Stret, Mt. Gambier, S.A. - 1930s, Kaye
VISIT TO DINGLEY DELL. About 1,500 people made a pilgrimage to Dingley Dell, once the home of the poet Gordon, in connection with the Centenary of Mt. Gambier. Visitors being welcomed outside Gordon's cottage by the president of the A.N.A. Chronicle (Adelaide, SA : 1895 - 1954), Thursday 4 March 1937

1940s and WWII

Mt. Gambier War Workers, Mrs E. 0. Kirby (Commandant 1 , Sister F. Schinckel Sister in Charge), Mrs C.Fairhead i Assist. Commandant), and VAD personnel.Weekly Times (Melbourne, Vic. : 1869 - 1954), Wednesday 30 September 1942
Instruction on a cloth model by Lieut. W. J. White to the N.C.O.'s school of the VDC  (Mt Gambier). Weekly Times (Melbourne, Vic. : 1869 - 1954), Wednesday 30 September 1942
Mt. Gambier Airman Killed In Action. Mr and Mrs. A. M. Watson, of Mt. Gambier, have received a telegram from the Air Force Board, announcing the death in action.of their son,. Malcolm. They were informed^ that the 'remains "were buried near Sollum. Flying-Officer Malcolm Hector Wktson was born in Mount Gambier in Il9 j'6. He joined the firm of Eider, Smith and Co, and was attached to thfe Mt. Gambler- branch for several months. From Mount Pleasant he was transferred to Broken Hill, and thence to Angaston as manager. When war broke out In 1939 he enlisted in-the Air- Force and went to the Middle East. He took part in a battle-in Libya on November 22, after which he was-reported missing. Narracoorte Herald (SA : 1875 - 1954), Friday 13 February 1942
Cpl. Jack Hopgood, who was officially welcomed home last night, after having been a PQW in Java
for nearly four years. Cpl. Hopgood returned to Mt. Gambier yesterday accompanied by hiswife. Border Watch (Mount Gambier, SA : 1861 - 1954), Saturday 13 October 1945
Border Watch (Mount Gambier, SA : 1861 - 1954), Saturday 21 April 1945
At the Mt Gambier Show, SA, Chronicle (Adelaide, SA : 1895 - 1954), Thursday 6 November 1947
 AFTERNOON OFF, INDIA V SOUTH AUSTRALIA COUNTRY TEAM Shops arid business houses in the town of Mount Gambier will close at 1 pm on Tuesday and Wednesday next for the public of the town to join with the expected crowds of thousands of visitors to witness the India v. S A, Country cricket match at Vansittart Park. Entrance to the ground will be 2/7, and to the grandstand 2/- extra. Special provision is being made for invalid's cars, and these may enter through the Victoria Terrace gates and will be directed to their positions. 17 January 1948 The Border Watch

The Mount Gambier premises of Elder, Smith & Co. Ltd, with a Kain and Shelton stock transport loaded with sheep driving past. Vehicle is a Ford Jailbar articulated truck. 1948. State Library of SA

1950s

THESE are members of Mount Gambier's East and West teams who took part in a recent club match at
Vansittart Park oval — (front row, from left) Messrs. L. Weston, R. Marks, F. Zanker, K. Duigan; (second row) Messrs. P. Brookes, J. Eliis, D. Webster, A. Banks, J. Shepherdson; (third row) Messrs. S. Seebohn, J. Guest, F. Williams, C. O'Neil; (at back) Messrs. M. Matthews, T. Hall, C. Carlson, I. Dow, B. Little, W. Battye, R. Higgs. Chronicle (Adelaide, SA : 1895 - 1954), Thursday 23 March 1950
THE MBHA (Mothers’ and Babies’ Health Association) at Mount Gambier, with Sister M. Harrison in charge of and her mother, Mrs. J. D. F. Harbison, president of the local branch of the association. Chronicle (Adelaide, SA : 1895 - 1954), Thursday 23 March 1950
Mac's Hotel in Mt. Gambier, S.A. - circa 1950s, Kaye
Commercial Street, Mt Gambier, South Australia - 1950s, Kaye
POPULAR Saturday night rendezvous for Mount Gambier's younger set is The Barn Palais, 
five miles south of the town on the 500-acre property of grazier Mr. A. P. Spehr. Resting 
between dances are (clockwise) Heather Millowich, Kevin Aston, Lorna Dowman, Max Jane 
way, Betty Cook, Eric Spring, Barbara Holow ay, Peter Matters, Mrs. and Mr. R. K. Millard, 
Mr. and Mrs. J. Baldwin. Chronicle (Adelaide, SA : 1895 - 1954), Thursday 23 March 1950
IN less than 18 months the Mount Gambier Aquatic Club's 150 members have cleared land 
and raised enough money to build boat landings, diving platforms, and a smart clubhouse on 
the picturesque shore of Valley Lake. Chronicle (Adelaide, SA : 1895 - 1954), Thursday 23 March 1950
THE 100-bed, 88 year-old Mount Gambier Hospital is charmingly situated on a wooded hill overlooking the town. Matron A. J. Mower (extreme right in white veil) is pictured here with the hospital's nursing staff. Chronicle (Adelaide, SA : 1895 - 1954), Thursday 23 March 1950
Mt Gambier Show scenes, SA, Chronicle (Adelaide, SA : 1895 - 1954), Thursday 2 November 1950
Mt Gambier Show scenes, SA, Chronicle (Adelaide, SA : 1895 - 1954), Thursday 2 November 1950
The Mount Gambier unit. E Companv of the 27th Infantry Battalion. S.A. Border Watch (Mount Gambier, SA : 1861 - 1954), Tuesday 4 March 1952
Two-Day Race Meeting at Mt.Gambier, SA, Chronicle (Adelaide, SA : 1895 - 1954), Thursday 18 June 1953
The Royal Progress at Mt. Gambier, SA, News (Adelaide, SA : 1923 - 1954), Thursday 18 March 1954,
Corner of Commercial St & Penola Rd, Mount Gambier in South Australia. 1955. SLSA
Photograph of tobacconist, hairdresser, and 'Allan Dowdell' cycle and radio business taken on 17th May 1958, Mount Gambier. Cars are parked along the street. This image has no known copyright restrictions.

1960s

On 9 December 1954, Mount Gambier was officially declared a city.

2020s

In 2020, the railway station building was restored to original condition by the City of Mount Gambier Council.

The Mitre 10 site in Mount Gambier with its heritage-listed flour mill, which dates back to 1885, has a proposal to redevelop the area, which may involve demolishing parts of the historic structure.

Around Mount Gambier
The Mount Gambier Court House is a landmark building, designed by George Thomas Light, the assistant colonial architect, and constructed of local pink dolomite. Built in 1865,SA
Heritage building, Mt Gambier, SA
Mt Gambier Town Hall and clock built in 1882. Tower 1883
In 2020, the Mt Gambier railway station building was restored to original condition by the City of Mount Gambier Council. Now used as a community space
The Centenary Tower built from 1900 to mark Captain Grant naming of the Mount in 1800. It opened in 1904, Mt Gambier, SA
The Caledonian Society of Mount Gambier was established in 1884. The foundation of the Mount Gambier Caledonian Society Hall, situated in Penola Road, was laid by Mr. George Riddoch on August 9th 1913
The Capitol Theatre opened on 4th April 1928. Seating was provided in orchestra and balcony levels. By 1951, it was operated by the Clifford Theatres circuit. By 1956, it had been re-named Odeon Theatre
Former 1866 Mt Gambier Gaol, SA. Now accomodation


Thing To Do and Places To Go

MOUNT GAMBIER AVIATION MUSEUM

Historic Hotels of Mt Gambier

City Heritage Walk (Mt Gambier)

Mount Gambier Court House Museum

Arts and Cultural Centre

Mt Gambier Places To Visit

Tantanoola Caves SA- only 20 minutes outside Mt Gambier SA

Books To Read

THE MOUNT GAMBIER MURDERS Maxwell Stuart Sims

The Limestone Road, Nicole Alexander

Bindoon, WA: Escape the City to Rural Charm

Bindoon, WA, 84 km north of Perth, in the Shire of Chittering, is a tourist destination, with its stone buildings and museum. 

Bindoon, derives from Aboriginal words, likely meaning 'place where the yams grow.' The name Chittering is believed to have come from the Aboriginal word 'Chitta-Chitta' meaning 'the place of the Willy Wagtails.'

 The Yued Aboriginal People

The Bindoon area is in the traditional lands of the Yued people, a dialectal group of the broader Noongar Aboriginal peoples inhabiting the region north of Perth.
Aboriginal with hunting kit, Sunday Times (Perth, WA : 1902 - 1954), Sunday 14 January 1940,
The Aboriginal traditional marriage system based on strict kinship and moiety rules designed to prevent intermarriage between close relatives and ensure community survival.

Kinship Rules: Marriage rules were specific, and individuals were forbidden from marrying someone from the same 'class' or kinship group.

Moiety System: The Noongar people, including the Yued, traditionally used a matrilineal system with two main moieties (kin groups): Manitjimat (white cockatoo) and Wardongmat (crow). A person inherited their moiety from their mother, and a Crow man could only marry a Cockatoo woman, and vice versa.

Arrangement and Timing: Marriages were often arranged to form alliances and ensure a wide network of relations. Girls typically married around puberty, while men married later, often in their late twenties or older.

Ceremony and Recognition: There was often no single, formal marriage ceremony. A union was typically recognized by the community when a couple began living together publicly and assuming mutual responsibilities, such as sharing a campfire.

Polygyny and Divorce: Marriages could be polygynous (a husband having multiple wives), while a wife had one husband at a time. Divorce was possible by mutual consent or unilaterally, often signified by the termination of cohabitation.

The Rainbow Serpent or Waugal (also spelled Waakal or Wagyl) is regarded as an ancestral being and central figure in Dreaming stories and is revered as the creator and protector of all freshwater sources.

The Waugal is believed to have carved the rivers, lakes, and waterholes as it moved across the land. To the Yued people, the serpent created the Moore River by moving from one waterhole to another, and its track is a 'dreaming track.'

1830s

By 1836, the Chittering valley had been explored by George Fletcher Moore who returned in 1841, and settled in the area.

1840s

In 1829, W.L. Brockman emigrated to the Swan River Colony in Western Australia. He became the first person to take up land in what is now the Shire of Bindoon in 1843. The Brockman River runs though the property which covered both sides of the road in the area around of Bindoon Hill. 

In 1844, Trowbridge William Haselwood bought the property and built a dwelling, which from 1848, became an unofficial 'post office' where mail was collected and delivered. The ruins of the original homestead can still be seen north of the town.
This is a photograph of William Locke Brockman (1802–1872), early settler and politician in colonial Western Australia. The original photograph is help by the Battye Library, catalogue number 62104P.
In the 1860s, Brockman became involved in the public push for representative government.

1850s

Joseph Purser brought the property in 1852. Purser was a miller and possibly built the flour mill on the banks of the river. By 1857, the property was called Bindoon, (previously Bingdoon) and operated as a wayside inn and post office. Joseph had the monthly mail service tender between Gingin and Victoria Plains until 1863.
Perth Gazette and Independent Journal of Politics and News (WA : 1848 - 1864), Friday 6 October 1854

1860s

After Purser was killed at the mill in 1866, the widowed Frances Purser married James Atkinson in 1868, and Atkinson continued the mail run.

1870s

In 1875, Atkinson took the second wayside license in the area, and called his wayside inn the 'Shepherd's Home.' The Shepherd's Home ceased to operate in 1879.

1890s

On 21 March 1893, the original Gingin Road Board was formed. It incorporated the areas of Chittering, Bindoon and Muchea which are now in the Chittering Shire.

A report from the State Records office details a gold find at Bindoon in August 1896.
Holy Trinity Anglican Church, Bindoon, WA, about 1890s. the oldest public building in the Shire of Chittering

THE TRIAL.
The charge preferred against Mr. Brock-
man was that of ill-treating an aboriginal
native named Cooardie, who was in his
service, by placing him in stocks for a
whole night without food, and by acting
in other ways towards him.
West Australian (Perth, WA : 1879 - 1954), Thursday 9 February 1899

1900s

Stephens bought the place from Findlater who had originally bought Stephens to work for him. The mill never worked from when Stephen's bought the place in 1919. 

Sam and Mary Stephens lived in place until 1941 when their son Greg Stephens had the new homestead built on the Great Northern Highway frontage on the west rise of Bindoon Hill.

Tom Hayden moved into the place during the time he worked for Eric Stephens. After a cyclone came through and blew the roof off, Hayden moved elsewhere, and the place became a ruin. Greg and Eric Stephens were brothers who owned the place. When they divided the property, Greg took the land on the west and Eric took the property on the east side of the highway. Greg later became ill and sold his entire property to Nic Humphries. See more
MR. J. SHEPPERD'S HOMESTEAD AT BINDOON, ON THE MIDLAND RAILWAY.,Western Mail (Perth, WA : 1885 - 1954), Friday 14 March 1913

WWI

PRIVATE JOHN ALBERT WOODS, killed in action at Dardanelles. Son of .Mr S Woods, of Midland Junction; grandson of the late John Woods, of Fair Lawn, Victoria Plains; grandson of late Edmund Keane Byrne, Mount Pleasant, Bindoon: and grand- nephew of Mr. Robert Jones, GinginBrook;Daily News (Perth, WA : 1882 - 1955), Friday 25 June 1915

1920s

The Chittering: Valley, Bindoon. WA. Western Mail (Perth, WA : 1885 - 1954), Thursday 1 July 1920
COUNTRY CRICKET WEEK : RURL TEAMS VISITING THE CAPITAL BINDOON-CHITTERING. Western Mail (Perth, WA : 1885 - 1954) Thu 12 Mar 1925 
A newspaper article in 1934 mentioned a tradition of "Moondyne Joe" knowing of rich gold near Bindoon, and another report of a 'rich gold reef' discovered there.
Catherine Musk, a wealthy Western Australian landowner and widow donated in 1936, a large property near Bindoon to the Catholic Christian Brothers. She stipulated that the land was to be used for
the settlement of orphaned and needy boys on their own farms. This did not happen.

Brother Francis Keaney, who ran Boys Town, told the boys, 'This property was left to you by Mrs Musk and everything you are doing is for your benefit.' Keaney, became known for his cruelty and using child labour, with boys as young as 10, building the large granite buildings on the site. (THE BINDOON FILE: BOYSTOWN, BINDOON, 1947-54.) Lionel P. Welsh
Bindoon parlour coach, Bindoon to Perth, WA, 1930s

1940s and WWII

Victory in WWII cost the British socially, mentally and economically. The loss and economic restraint greatly impacted ordinary people. Many children were placed in institutions.

In September 1947, the SS Asturias arrived in Fremantle with 147 boys and girls. Many of the boys were sent to the isolated Bindoon institution, 60 miles north of Perth, run by the Catholic Christian Brothers order.

Children as young as 10 were put to work at the abandoned farm to clear the ground, with shovels and picks and then to construct the dormitories and other essential buildings. Those who resisted or could not do the required labour, were flogged, as they were for many trivial 'offences.'

An environment of deprivation and extreme cruelty and abuse was the norm at this institution,. Most of these vulnerable children had been placed in institutions due to family poverty, having a single mother, family fracturing or the families inability to cope.

The revelations about the principal of Bindoon Boys Town from 1942 until 1954, Brother Francis Paul Keaney, are so heinous that his grave was later dismantled by the church.
WX14753 Tpr. H. Densley, Bindoon. Western Mail (Perth, WA : 1885 - 1954), Thursday 12 March 1942
Sunday Times (Perth, WA : 1902 - 1954), Sunday 10 October 1943
Chittering-Bindoon Home Guard platoon will assemble at Bushmead rifle range for annual musketry course.
The West Australian (Perth, WA : 1879 - 1954)aturday 8 May 1943 
THESE TENTS were the boys and Brothers' residence in March, 1942 (Bindoon, WA). .Sunday Times (Perth, WA : 1902 - 1954), Sunday 15 October 1944
Bindoon, WA, Vol. 15 No. 1 (6 January 1945) 
 One of dams built by boys. Bindoon,  WA, Vol. 15 No. 1 (6 January 1945)
Dormitory at Bindoon, WA, Vol. 15 No. 1 (6 January 1945) 
Built by boys between 16 and 18, Bindoon, WA, Vol. 15 No. 1 (6 January 1945) 
Work began at Bindoon, 8 March 1942. Boys laying tiles, Bindoon, WA, Vol. 15 No. 1 (6 January 1945) 
Boy in charcoal pit at Bindoon, WA,   Vol. 15 No. 1 (6 January 1945) 
The boys clearing land at Bindoon, WA,  Vol. 15 No. 1 (6 January 1945) 
Schoolroom at Bindoon, WA,  Vol. 15 No. 1 (6 January 1945) 
Boys building Bindoon, WA,  Vol. 15 No. 1 (6 January 1945) 
After World War Two, Bindoon became a hub for soldier settlement and military training. 
Western Mail (Perth, WA : 1885 - 1954), Thursday 25 November 1948
Technical school, partially completed, Bindoon, WA. Lives and homes in Bindoon are being threatened by an out-of-control bushfire, Western Mail (Perth, WA : 1885 - 1954), Thursday 25 November 1948
Walkabout.Vol. 15 No. 9 (1 September 1949)
Boys' Town, Bindoon, WA, Walkabout.Vol. 15 No. 9 (1 September 1949)

1950s

By the 1950s there was little more than a post office, garage and general store.
Sixteen of the Maltese boys who arrived at Fremantle in the liner Asturius yesterday before they left to go to St. Joseph's trade and farm school at Bindoon. Mr. Joseph Abela (left) and Father R. Vella both travelled with the boys as welfare officers. Father Vella is also the chaplain for Maltese immigrants.West Australian (Perth, WA : 1879 - 1954), Monday 23 June 1952
The townsite was gazetted in 1953.

Western Mail (Perth, WA : 1885 - 1954)  Thu 23 Dec 1954 
Bindoon, NSW, Western Mail (Perth, WA : 1885 - 1954), Thursday 23 December 1954

1970s

Bindoon Boots began as Bindoon Cottage Craft in 1972.
Some senior students having a barbecue at the Stefanellis Bindoon property. WA. https://www.flickr.com/photos/barkochre/

1980s-90s

Bindoon Rock Festival was held in the 1980s and 1990s.
Bindoon Rock Festival, WA, 1980s
Bindoon: Tales of horror from those days... and nights. Read here

2000s

After a ten-year negotiation process and Supreme Court proceedings, the 'Catherine Musk Fund' was finally settled in 2010. A total of over $300,000 was distributed to former residents of Bindoon who applied for grants.

A bushfire started by lightning near the town in 2013, burnt over 2,000 hectares (4,942 acres) of farmland and bushland.

Prince Harry visited the Bindoon Bakehaus & Cafe in 2015.

In March 2222, lives and homes in Bindoon were threatened by an out-of-control bushfire,

Most of the training and selection for a special forces regiment of the Australian Army takes place in Bindoon.

Around Bindoon




The Chittering Road Board is a heritage listed building constructed during the inter-war period. Completed in 1929 the building is an example of Inter War Free Classical Style civic architecture. Bindoon, WA
The first ball was held in the Bindoon Hall on 24 June 1939, Bindoon, WA
Bindoon General Store established in 1936, WA
The Scottalian Bindoon Hotel was built in 1947, WA
Old house on the Bindoon to Moora road, WA
The crumbling ruins at the farm, Castle Hill, Bindoon, WA. The remains are heritage listed.
These cottages were built in the 1880s. 
Bindoon Military Training Area (MTA) is a military training facility located near Bindoon, Western Australia. It is a part of the Australian Defence Force's (ADF) training infrastructure and is primarily used by the Australian Army for conducting military exercises and training activities. 

Things To Do and Places To Go

Bindoon Heritage Museum Location: Situated at 3 Teatree Rd, Bindoon WA

Attractions & Activities

Read

Orphans of The Empire: The Shocking Story of Child Migration to Australia – 1998 by Alan Gill.

The Forgotten Children Fairbridge Farm School and its Betrayal of Britain's Child Migrants to Australia, David Hill. (2007)

The Bindoon file (1990) by Lionel P. Welsh (edited by Bruce Byth) gives a first-hand account of life in Bindoon as a child migrant.

A Prayer for Blue Delaney (part of a historical fiction quartet) by Kirsty Murray, tells the story of a boy escaping the 'cruelties of Bindoon Boys' Home.'