And they are with us still! Street signs from the suburbs of Geelong, Geelong West, Manifold Heights, Belmont Newtown and Corio. |
These first settlers arrived in the region in 1836 following John Batman, keen to find pasturage for their stock. With this in mind, various groups set out to investigate the area - in particular the explorer and surveyor John Helder Wedge and the ill-fated Hesse and Gellibrand. From early 1836, stock was landed at Williamstown, Point Henry and Indented Head and left in the care of shepherds, whilst the squatters made their own explorative journeys in search of suitable runs. At the same time, some travelled overland with their flocks from New South Wales.
Amongst the very earliest settlers were representatives of the Derwent Company. Formed from the remains of John Batman's Port Phillip Association they were a group of Tasmanian settlers who had set out in 1835 to acquire land in the Port Phillip district from the indigenous occupants. Despite the government in New South Wales declaring Batman's transaction with the Wurundjeri people invalid, they came anyway.
By the late 1830s the Derwent Co. held 26,000 acres of land extending across the "Portland Bay" region including the Barwon, Moorabool and Leigh Rivers. Its members included Captain Charles Swanston, Major William Drumond Mercer and his son George Duncan Mercer, Thomas Learmonth, George Armytage and David Fisher.
"Barwon Falls" 1848 as painted by Charles Norton, artist, civil servant and squatter on the Barwon River. Image held by the State Library of Victoria |
George Russell, 1852. Pioneer, settler and manager of the Clyde Company. Image held by the Victorian State Library |
By 1842 however, the Derwent Co. was being wound up, with various founding members purchasing leases in their own right. The Clyde Co. survived until 1857/1858 at which time George Russell bought the freehold of Golf Hill, an area of 8,500 acres which he eventually expanded to 28,000 acres.
Today, through the foresight of Victoria's first Lieutenant-Governor, Charles Joseph La Trobe, a record remains which details many of these early settlers and their holdings. During his governorship on 29th July, 1853, La Trobe wrote to Victoria's pioneering settlers asking them if they could in turn reply to him, describing what they remembered of the dates and places in which they and their contemporaries had settled in the 1830s. His request generated some 58 replies from across the newly-declared colony - several of them dealing with settlement along the Barwon, Moorabool and Leigh Rivers - they were eventually compiled by Thomas Francis Bride and published in 1898 titled: Letters from Victorian pioneers: being a series of papers on the early occupation of the colony, the aborigines etc.
Lieutenant-Governor Charles La Trobe. Photo held by Ballarat Heritage Services |
From this and other sources, including the various newspapers of the day and government gazettes it is possible to build a fairly good picture of who these pioneering settlers were and where they held their various squatting runs.
The following table - whilst no doubt incomplete - shows who many of the initial landholders were and when they took up their runs. In each case I have attempted to identify the original occupant, however in some cases there may have been an earlier squatter on the land whom I can't identify through online records. If I find further information I will update accordingly.
As time has progressed, it has seemed appropriate to add some early properties to the list below which were not original squatting runs, but were rather the next generation of estates, established once land was opened up for sale. Examples include the Hope brothers at 'Darriwill' and 'Lynnburn' as well as Dr John Learmonth at 'Lawrence Park' all on the lower reaches of the Moorabool River.
Barwon River
|
||
Caroline
Newcombe and Anne Drysdale
|
1841
|
|
Geelong
|
Derwent
Co. (David Fisher)
|
1837
|
Kardinia
|
Dr
Alexander Thomson
|
1837
|
Highton
|
John
Highett
|
1837
|
Barrabool
Hills
|
John Charles Darke
|
c1837
|
Roadknights
|
1836
|
|
Pollocksford
|
Captain
Pollock
|
1836
|
Murgheboluc
Flat
|
Yuilles
|
1836
|
Weatherboard
|
Derwent
Co (David Fisher)
|
1837
|
(Toolun,
St Leonards & Waterloo Plains)
|
Thomas
Austin and Brothers
|
1837
|
Henry
Hopkins
|
1837
|
|
Derwent
Co (Thomas Armytage)
|
1836
|
|
Yan Yan
Gurt*
|
Roadknights
|
1838
|
Deans
Marsh*
|
Roadknights
|
1848
|
Wesleyan
Church
(Rev
Francis Tuckfield)
|
Buntingdale
Mission Station
|
August
1839
|
Paraparap
|
Frederick
Dewing
|
1838
|
Gerangemete
|
Roadknights
|
1839
|
Ricketts
|
Thomas
Rickett
|
<September
1837
|
River
Station
|
Roadknights
|
1840
|
William
Harding (with John Highett)
|
1837
|
|
Murdeduke (originally part of Mt Hesse)
|
John
Highett (with William Harding)
|
1837
|
St
Stephen
|
John
Stephens
|
<1841
|
Long
Water Hole/Barrunah Plains*
|
Derwent
Co. (James Austin)
|
1837
|
Warrambine*
|
Derwent
Co. (Prentice)
|
<1842
|
Moorabool River
|
||
John
Anthony Cowie & David Stead
|
March
1836
|
|
George
& Robert Hope
|
1846
|
|
Batesford
|
Alfred
& John Bates
|
1837
|
Manifold’s
Ford (aka Dog Rocks/Batesford)
|
Thomas
& Peter Manifold
|
1836
|
Thomas
and John Learmonth
|
1839
|
|
Sutherland’s
Creek*
|
Joseph
Sutherland
|
1836
|
George,
James & Robert Hope
|
1846
|
|
Russell's
Bridge
|
Clyde
Co. (George Russell)
|
1836
|
William
Taylor & Dugald McPherson
|
1840
|
|
Robert von Stieglitz
|
March/April
1838
|
|
John
Norman McLeod
|
1837
|
|
Blakeney
& George Airey
|
1840
|
|
John
Norman McLeod
|
October 1837
|
|
John
Wallace
|
1838
|
|
Bungal
|
George
Egerton
|
1838?
|
John
Anthony Cowie & David Stead
|
1838
|
|
David
Stead
|
1838
|
|
Hunterston
|
William
Patterson?
|
1840s
|
Peerewerrh
|
Fairbairn
& Gardner
|
<1849
|
Borambeta
|
Charles
& Joseph Bradshaw?
|
<1849
|
Bolwarra
|
James
Clarke?
|
1837?
|
Ballan
|
Robert
William Stieglitz
|
1838
|
Leigh/Yarrowee River
|
||
Weatherboard
|
Derwent
Co. (Thomas & Somerville Learmonth)
|
April
1837
|
(Native
Creek No. 1)*
|
Derwent
Co. (Thomas & Somerville Learmonth)
|
April
1837
|
(Native
Creek No. 2) (later Woolbrook)*
|
Derwent
Co. (Thomas & Somerville Learmonth)
|
1837
|
(including
Upper Leigh & Tall Tree Creek Stations)
|
Clyde
Co (George Russell)
|
1839
|
(later Barwonleigh)
|
Derwent
Co. (Thomas & Somerville Learmonth)
|
April
1837
|
Alexander,
Charles & John Wilson
|
1844
|
|
Cargerie
|
George
Frederick Read Jnr
|
January
1838
|
Mount
Mercer
|
Derwent
Co. (David Fisher)
|
March
1838
|
Mount
Mercer Cattle Station
|
Derwent
Co. (Major William Drummond Mercer)
|
1838?
|
Hugh
Niven
|
January
1839
|
|
Warraneep
|
Levitt brothers and one other
|
1840
|
Waverley
Park (later Bonshaw)
|
Henry
Anderson
|
1838
|
Thomas
& Sommerville Learmonth
|
1838
|
|
Archibald
B & WC Yuille
|
February
1838
|
It is worth remembering also that runs often changed hands repeatedly (sometimes within a matter of months) and areas of land could be transferred in part or wholly between settlers meaning that the boundaries of properties shifted over time as squatters expanded or consolidated their holdings, forming and dissolving partnerships on a regular basis.
During the 1850s and 60s, following the dispersal of the Clyde and Derwent Companies, leases changed hands and the pre-emptive rights to various properties were purchased. The era of the squatter had well and truly reached the three rivers.
It's nice to see the City of South Barwon logo still alive on the Learmonth Street sign, 20 years after amalgamation.
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