Yetholme
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Yetholme () is a village in
New South Wales ) , nickname = , image_map = New South Wales in Australia.svg , map_caption = Location of New South Wales in AustraliaCoordinates: , subdivision_type = Country , subdivision_name = Australia , established_title = Before federation , es ...
, Australia, originally known as Fryingpan and Frying Pan. The town is near Frying Pan Creek. It is situated east of Bathurst and west of Lithgow.


Naming

Within the Bathurst regional local government area, the designated village is within the parish of Yetholme, and county of Roxburgh; which mirrors the Scottish village namesakes of
Kirk Yetholm Kirk Yetholm ('kirk yet-ham') is a village in the Scottish Borders region of Scotland, southeast of Kelso and less than west of the border. The first mention is of its church in the 13th century. Its sister town is Town Yetholm which lies ...
and
Town Yetholm Town Yetholm ('town yet-ham') is a small village in the Scottish Borders in the valley of the Bowmont Water opposite Kirk Yetholm. The town colours are green and yellow. The centre of the small village is made up of the village green surro ...
, within the Scottish parish of
Yetholm Yetholm is the parish that contained the villages of Kirk Yetholm and Town Yetholm in the east of the former county of Roxburghshire, nowadays in the Scottish Borders The Scottish Borders ( sco, the Mairches, 'the Marches'; gd, Crìoc ...
, and the former Scottish county of
Roxburghshire Roxburghshire or the County of Roxburgh ( gd, Siorrachd Rosbroig) is a historic county and registration county in the Southern Uplands of Scotland. It borders Dumfriesshire to the west, Selkirkshire and Midlothian to the north-west, and Berw ...
(now
Scottish Borders The Scottish Borders ( sco, the Mairches, 'the Marches'; gd, Crìochan na h-Alba) is one of 32 council areas of Scotland. It borders the City of Edinburgh, Dumfries and Galloway, East Lothian, Midlothian, South Lanarkshire, West Lothi ...
). The name was in use for the Australian parish by 1834, when Charles Marsden was given a claim for land of at Dirty Swap, Fish River. Yetholme village's 'Fryingpan' name was to change in 1866 when the church district was divided: :We have been able to relieve the Hartley clergyman from the charge of the extreme western part of his district by attaching it to O'Connell. Formerly, the district of Hartley extended to within ten miles of Bathurst, and was about forty miles in extent from east to west. The portion taken from it includes Kirkconnell, Mitchell's Creek, and a small valley across which the main road runs, and where the usual collection of houses constituting a township rejoices in the name of Fryingpan. Any one who halted in it on a hot day, as we did, would be at no loss to discover the reasons which had suggested the name. The good taste of the Surveyor-General's department has decreed that in future it shall bear the euphonious designation of Yetholme. Here is a school, and a teacher who cares for the young people on Sunday; and as the private house in which the Sunday-school is held is small and inconvenient, and a church service cannot be held there, it was agreed that an effort should be made to build a church. Land has been secured, some promises have been made, and I have pledged tho Church Society to give £50 towards a stone or brick building, to hold 100 people, in which a Sunday-school may be hold every Sunday, and divine service by the clergyman once a month.


Origins

By 1860, a township had formed with several substantial and well-built dwellings, and a 'commodious' National School. In 1863 crown lands were set aside and declared as suburban land for the Village of Yetholme, at , of , around Leigh, Parsons, and Fardell Streets. A post office called Yetholme was designated in mid-1866. The town was part of the stage coach route from Sydney to Bathurst, had three hotels, stores, bakers, butcher shops, and blacksmiths, pre-train line. By 1890, the public hotels, bakers and butchers were gone. Until 1836 the road from Sydney to Bathurst passed through
Hartley Hartley may refer to: Places Australia *Hartley, New South Wales *Hartley, South Australia **Electoral district of Hartley, a state electoral district Canada *Hartley Bay, British Columbia United Kingdom *Hartley, Cumbria *Hartley, Plymou ...
, Bowenfels and
O'Connell O'Connell may refer to: People *O'Connell (name), people with O'Connell as a last name or given name Schools * Bishop Denis J. O'Connell High School, a high school in Arlington, Virginia Places * Mount O'Connell National Park in Queensland ...
. By the end of 1836 a new road to Bathurst was constructed from Bowenfels, via Rydal and Yetholme. Together with good perennial streams, the area was known for its commercial supply of fruits: apples, pears, plums, cherries, gooseberries, raspberries, and currants. There are also the mineral deposits – although not in commercial quantities – of gold, silver, copper, manganese, limestone, and
molybdenite Molybdenite is a mineral of molybdenum disulfide, Mo S2. Similar in appearance and feel to graphite, molybdenite has a lubricating effect that is a consequence of its layered structure. The atomic structure consists of a sheet of molybdenum ato ...
.


Facilities

The Kirkconnell Public School is named for the large property that was in the neighbourhood owned by the blands which was later subdivided into property's and forestry and named its own town. Kirkconnell, the Kirkconnell property was used as an orchard and to this day is family owned as an organic produce farm Saint Paul's Anglican Church, in Porters Lane, which was opened in May 1868, and has an adjacent cemetery with headstone inscriptions dating from 1873. A sign of the decline in prosperity of the area was noted by 1890 with the 'rather neat brick Anglican Church' in badly want of repair.


References

{{authority control Towns in New South Wales