xenith: (Eucalypt)
Just adding a bit extra to the entries about Long Marsh Dam, the never completed, very abandoned dam and accompanying "settlement" in the middle of the bush that we visited in 2011.

There is a lonely bush grave, of a worker who was killed on site, Thomas Collins, aged 36. This is him. Looked him up to see if there was any (easy) way to find out who was working there, but if you ignore that rather large final entry, the only indication is a possible "L M" in the "Station of Gang" entry. The records of men on either side of him don't have this, so they weren't allocated on the basis of ship either. It might have been an interesting thing to follow up on :)
xenith: (Steps)
I should get this done and move onto something else.

Photo 30


Continuing the account of our trip to the Long March Dam site. The background is in the earlier posts, although as a quick summary, work on the dam started about about 1840 using probationary labour, with the intention of providing irrigation for farms in the Midlands, but was abandoned a few years later due to economic and political factors. The site consists of a partially completed dam, an abandoned sandstone quarry and the nearby settlement that housed the workers.

Part 1 - Arriving
Part 2 - Dam & Quarry

And so we move onto the town... except there is a slight detour on the way.

On to slight detour )
xenith: (Steps)
Part 1 - Arriving

Photo 3

I strongly recommend (re)reading the previous post because it has the background information, and I can't remember what I said so I don't expect anyone else to.

Quotes in italics from Lifeblood of a Colony: a history of irrigation in Tasmania by Margaret Mason-Cox

Lots of photos )
xenith: (Steps)
Last Sunday Northern Midlands Business Association members and guests visited the Long Marsh Dam site. The advertisement for the visit says "The construction of Long Marsh dam by convict labour commenced in 1840 but was not completed. The site is Heritage Listed and has remnants of convict engineering works, settlement ruins and a gravesite." I don't think it counts as probation station though I have seen it referred to as such. (There is a cache at the site too.)

Photo 40

There were about 16 people on the tour, in five vehicles, and our guide was David Downie, a Northern Midlands councillor and farmer, who has a 4WD ute and isn't afraid to use it. The convoy left Campbell Town just after 10 am and three hours later we reached the start of the walking track.

It doesn't usually take 3 hours. The first road we went down, the bridge was out, but the sign saying this was very helpfully just before the bridge, not up where the road started.

Photos, really. )

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