Emmaville is a town on the
Northern Tablelands in the
New England region of
New South Wales,
Australia
Australia, officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a Sovereign state, sovereign country comprising the mainland of the Australia (continent), Australian continent, the island of Tasmania, and numerous List of islands of Australia, sma ...
. It is in the
Glen Innes Severn Council district.
Emmaville is at an elevation of 890 metres
AHD. At the
2006 census, the Emmaville "urban centre/locality" had a population of 247 (in the 2001 census it was 303
) and there were 535 persons usually resident in the Emmaville region.
History
Emmaville is located on the lands of the
Ngarabal people, and the area remains of great significance to them today. The Ngarabal name for the land where the township is now located is "Marran", meaning "plenty of leeches".
Tin was first discovered on Strathbogie Station in 1872 and the settlement was called ''Vegetable Creek'' after the Chinese market gardens which developed to service the mining population. Being a private township it was never notified or proclaimed as a town or village. The population of the area in the early 1900s was about 7,000 and included 2,000 Chinese people. It was renamed in 1882 after Emma Greville, the wife of the then state Governor
Lord Augustus Loftus. The name ''Vegetable Creek'' is preserved in the name of the local 17-bed hospital.
A school was established in 1875 and it had 70-80 pupils in its first year.
In 1927, the school moved to its present site.
Emmaville established the first medical fund in New South Wales, with aim of keeping a doctor in town and to build a hospital. In 1891, lectures were given at the hospital and the St John Ambulance Brigade was formed as a result of this.
Tin and arsenic were mined at the Ottery Mine, Tent Hill not far from Emmaville, from 1882 when a huge tin lode was found by Alexander Ottery. The site has now been rehabilitated by the NSW Department of Mineral Resources and is open to tourists.
Emmaville Panther
This is described as "one of Australia's most famous manifestations of a cryptic animal". It was variously said to be a large
black panther
A black panther is the melanistic colour variant of the leopard (''Panthera pardus'') and the jaguar (''Panthera onca''). Black panthers of both species have excess black pigments, but their typical rosettes are also present. They have been d ...
or a
marsupial lion, and was sighted in February 1958
and on various occasions in the later 1950s and 1960s. There are no native
big cats in Australia. One suggestion is that this beast escaped from a travelling
circus whose owner chose not to report the escape.
Emmaville today
Emmaville's industries are tourism, agriculture, and mining. There is a
Mining Museum which includes a collection of mineral specimens and photographs of the town's history.
Fossicking is a local tourist activity.
This neat and tidy village has a post office, general store, two craft shops, a swimming pool, a caravan site and two hotels. Emmaville also has a pre-school and a central public school with 60 primary and 28 secondary pupils. Since 2004 Emmaville School has catered for stage 6 students in year 11 and 12 although all of their studies except English and Maths are supplied by Dubbo school of Distance Education.
[ The Vegetable Creek Hospital in Emmaville has 13 residential beds, 4 acute beds and 2 accident and emergency beds a total of 19 beds and is part of the Hunter New England Local Health District.
]
Media
Emmaville is served by community radio station 2CBD FM. As well as broadcasting on two local FM frequencies 91.1 Deepwater and 105.9 Glen Innes, it has a live 24/7 feed via the internet. The station is the only radio station with studios in Glen Innes and is run by volunteers and presents local information and a diverse mix of music.
Heritage listings
Emmaville has a number of heritage-listed sites, including:
* 8 km north-east: Ottery Mine
Ottery Mine is a heritage-listed former mine located 8 km north-east of Emmaville, Glen Innes Severn, New South Wales, Australia. It was built from 1882 to 1939. The property is owned by the New South Wales Department of Primary Industrie ...
on the New South Wales State Heritage Register
Notable people
Notable people from or having lived in Emmaville include:
* Richard 'Dick' Ashley Atkinson (1913-1944) was born on 21 May 1931 at Emmaville. He was an air force officer, part of the British defence force and a mining engineer.
* Frank James Coughlan
Frank James Coughlan (7 June 1904 – 6 April 1979) was an Australian jazz musician and band leader. He is described in the ''Australian Dictionary of Biography'' as "One of the most influential musicians in the development of jazz in Australia. ...
(1904-1979), jazz musician
* Pearl Duncan
Pearl Maud Duncan Booth (27 April 1933 – 19 July 2022) was an Australian teacher, anthropologist and academic. A Gamilaraay woman, she was the first known tertiary-qualified Indigenous teacher in Australia. She was named a Queensland Great i ...
, retired teacher, anthropologist, academic and Aboriginal elder.
* Clifford Kwan-Gett
Clifford Stanley Kwan-Gett is an Australian-born Chinese American engineer, physician, and artificial heart pioneer.
Kwan-Gett was born as Clifford Gett in 1934 in Emmaville, New South Wales, a small tin mining town in the Australian bush. His fat ...
, an engineer, physician, and artificial heart pioneer.
* Thomas James Richards (1882-1935), army officer, Olympian, rugby union coach and player and sports writer
* Arthur H. P. Moline
Arthur is a common male given name of Brythonic origin. Its popularity derives from it being the name of the legendary hero King Arthur. The etymology is disputed. It may derive from the Celtic ''Artos'' meaning “Bear”. Another theory, more wi ...
(1877-1965) managed the Cock's Pioneer Tin operation from 1909 to 1913; his three sons were all born in the cottage hospital in Emmaville; he was a Mining Engineer who knew Dick Atkinson, and he went on to have a noted career, including managing Mt Lyell in Tasmania, and being heavily involved in the uranium industry in the 1950s and 1960s.
* Charles Curnow Scherf (1917-1949), airforce officer, grazier and soldier
* Debbie Wells (born 1961), former sprinter who competed in the 1976, 1980, and 1984 Summer Olympics.
References
External links
Emmaville Mining Museum
Emmaville on Walkabout site
{{authority control
Mining towns in New South Wales
Towns in New England (New South Wales)
Tin mines in Australia
Glen Innes Severn