Home » Themes » Landscape » Settlement
Pioneers of Maytown & Palmer River GoldfieldsPrint Page
The monument commemorates the pioneers of Maytown and the Palmer River Goldfields.
Once the busy administrative and commercial centre for the lucrative Palmer River goldfield,in 1886 the population of Maytown reached 154 Europeans and 450 Chinese. There was no Christian church, but there was a Chinese temple. By the turn of the century the town had a branch of the Government Savings Bank, a state school, courthouse, school of arts, hospital, police barracks, one hotel, eight stores – four of which were Chinese, a baker, saddler and Miners Institute.
The population was 252 Europeans and 422 Chinese. But, by 1924 only Wah Chong & Company’s store remained open. Buildings like the school that closed in 1925 remained, abandoned, until World War Two in the hope of a mining revival. Mining has continued on the field but has always been too small-scale to revive the township. The decline in gold mining activity on the Palmer River is essentially what saw its demise.
Location
State: | QLD |
---|---|
Area: | AUS |
GPS Coordinates: | Lat: -16.051171 Long: 144.289164 Note: GPS Coordinates are approximate. |
Details
Monument Type: | Monument |
---|---|
Monument Theme: | Landscape |
Sub-Theme: | Settlement |
Approx. Event Start Date: | 1873 |
Approx. Event End Date: | 1945 |
Dedication
Approx. Monument Dedication Date: | 1983 |
---|
This monument and time capsule has been erected in memory of the pioneers and their families who founded and established this historic Maytown and the Palmer River Goldfields
1873 - 1945.
Erected by the Palmer River Historical Preservation Society 1983.