Queenstown, Tasmania

{{Use Australian English|date=August 2019}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2020}}

{{Infobox Australian place

| type = town

| name = Queenstown

| state = tas

| image = 250px

| caption = Orr Street, from centre, looking west

| pop = 1808

| pop_year = {{CensusAU|2021}}

| pop_footnotes={{Census 2021 AUS|id=SAL60531|name=Queenstown (Tas.)|access-date=22 August 2022|quick=on}}

| elevation= 129

| est =

| postcode = 7467

| coordinates = {{coord|42|04|50|S|145|33|20|E|display=inline,title}}

| maxtemp = 16.4

| maxtemp_footnotes =

| mintemp = 5.6

| mintemp_footnotes =

| rainfall = 2408.2

| rainfall_footnotes =

| lga = West Coast Council

| stategov = Braddon

| fedgov = Braddon

| location1= Strahan

| dist1=41

| location2= Rosebery

| dist2=55

| location3= Burnie

| dist3=154

| location4= Hobart

| dist4=248

}}

Queenstown is a historic mining town in the West Coast region of the island of Tasmania, Australia. It is in a valley on the western slopes of Mount Owen on the West Coast Range.

At the {{CensusAU|2021}}, Queenstown had a population of 1,808 people.{{r|ABS}}

History

Queenstown's history has long been tied to the mining industry. This mountainous area was first explored in 1862. It was not long after that when alluvial gold was discovered at Mount Lyell, prompting the formation of the Mount Lyell Gold Mining Company in 1881. In 1892, the mining company began searching for copper. The final name of the Mount Lyell company was the Mount Lyell Mining and Railway Company.

Early in 1895 a Post Office was opened at Penghana, at the Queen River fork and crossing, about a kilometre north of present-day Queenstown on the road to Strahan; James Robertson was appointed the first postmaster.{{cite news |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article9339375 |title=The Gazette |newspaper=The Mercury (Hobart) |volume=LXV |issue=7811 |location=Tasmania, Australia |date=12 March 1895 |access-date=21 February 2019 |page=4 |via=National Library of Australia}} The only other substantial building nearby was Robertson & Hunter's store.{{cite news |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article9329056 |title=A Trip from Strahan to Mount Lyell |newspaper=The Mercury |volume=LXVII |issue=8212 |location=Tasmania, Australia |date=24 June 1896 |access-date=21 February 2019 |page=4 |via=National Library of Australia}}

Queenstown Post Office opened on 21 November 1896 and the Penghana office closed; Miss Mylan was the first postmaster.{{cite news |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article153520492 |title=Queenstown |newspaper=The Daily Telegraph (Launceston) |volume=XVI |issue=279 |location=Tasmania, Australia |date=24 November 1896 |access-date=21 February 2019 |page=3 |via=National Library of Australia}} The present-day Queenstown Post Office dates from 1902 and is heritage-listed. The name "Penghana" was adopted for a substantial house nearby, from around 1925–1944 the residence of Mount Lyell mine manager R. M. Murray, and persists today as Penghana Road.

A Queenstown South office opened in 1949 and closed in 1973.{{Cite web | last = Premier Postal History | title = Post Office List | publisher = Premier Postal Auctions | url = https://www.premierpostal.com/cgi-bin/wsProd.sh/Viewpocdwrapper.p?SortBy=Tas&country= | access-date = 16 June 2012}}

In the 1900s, Queenstown was the centre of the Mount Lyell mining district and had numerous smelting works, brick-works, and sawmills. The area at the time was heavily wooded. The population in 1900 was 5051; the district, 10,451. {{Citation needed|date=March 2008}}

The town was the base of the Queenstown Council until its amalgamation with other west coast councils in the 1990s. The town, in its heyday, had a collection of hotels, theatres, churches and schools that have largely disappeared since the demise of the Mount Lyell company in 2014.

The town was the base of the Organisation for Tasmanian Development started in 1982.

There was a brief boom in prosperity in the 1980s, with the building of several nearby dams by the Hydro. The Darwin and Crotty dams that comprise Lake Burbury (a popular fishing and recreation venue) were built during this period. These followed the cancellation of the Gordon-below-Franklin Dam in 1983 after strong campaigning by environmentalists in the 'No Dams' campaign.

Ecology

Image:Queenstown minesite area 1984.jpg

The mountains surrounding Queenstown have unusual pink and grey hues that come from the conglomerate rocks on the two most adjacent mountains - Mount Lyell and Mount Owen. The mountains surrounding Queenstown are often snowcapped through winter. Snow falls a few days out of the year.

Image:QueenstownTasmania.JPG

Owing to a combination of tree removal for use in the smelters, the smelter fumes (for about 40 years in the late 20th century) and the heavy annual rainfall, the erosion of the shallow horizon topsoil back to the harder rock profile contributed to the stark state of the mountains for many decades.

Typical of the successions that occur in fire-affected areas in Western Tasmania, the low shrubbery that has revegetated adjacent-to-hillside creeks is a very early stage of a long recovery for the ecology of the region.

There has been occasional concern by some local residents in the 1980s and since, that the low-level succession of plants might affect the stark 'moonscape' appearance of the southern parts of Mount Lyell and northern Mount Owen. Although there are still large areas incapable of sustaining regrowth due to the acute slopes and lack of soil formation, revegetation projects have been ongoing.{{Citation | author1=Anderson, Ian | title=Environmental cleanup? No thanks. (citizens thwart efforts of mining company to revegetate area) (This Week) | journal=New Scientist | publication-date=1993-11-13 | publisher=Reed Business Information Ltd | volume=v140 | issue=n1899 | pages=6(1) | issn=0262-4079 }}

The Queen River was for most of the history of the Mount Lyell company the recipient of mining effluent and the Queenstown sewage - which then continued into the King River and consequently the Macquarie Harbour.

The Mount Lyell Remediation and Research and Demonstration Program scheme has since removed the direct flowing mining waste and local waste from the rivers.

Current conditions

Image:Litoria burrowsae.jpg from Queenstown]]

Today, the town and district attracts significant numbers of tourists, on either organised tours or the hire car 'circuit' around Tasmania. The grand Empire Hotel overlooks the revived steam train station where rides to neighbouring Strahan are available through dense rainforest. The recent addition of mountain bike trails and white water rafting add to the town's growth as a tourist destination. Some older features continue to fascinate tourists, either the mountains, the slag heap, and the gravel football ground. Visitors can catch glimpses of the town's past at the local museum, or simply by driving up Orr Street, the old main street with the dominant Post Office tower.

The mining operation at the original Mount Lyell mine continues, with Copper Mines of Tasmania operating between 1995 and 1999 independently, after which it became part of an Indian company group - and its concentrates are shipped to India for processing. In 2021, Indian mining company Vedanta Limited divested its copper mining activities in Queenstown.{{cite web|url=https://www.commonwealthunion.com/indian-mining-company-to-divest-copper-mine-in-australia/|title=Indian mining company to divest copper mine in Australia|date=2 November 2021 |publisher=Commonwealth Union|access-date=25 October 2022}}

Exploration continues within the West Coast region for further economic mineral deposits, and due to the complexity of the geology, there is always the possibility that new mines will open: the Henty Gold Mine is a good example as it commenced operation in the 1990s.

Queenstown is the terminus of the West Coast Wilderness Railway, which travels southwards alongside the Queen River, and then along the northern slopes of the King River to the port of Strahan in Macquarie Harbour.

Queenstown Oval

Image:Queenstown Oval at sunset.jpg

Queenstown is well known for its unique football oval, which utilises gravel instead of grass. The Queenstown Oval was laid with gravel due to pollution from local mining and heavy rain making it difficult to grow grass. The oval was inducted into the Tasmanian Football Hall of Fame in 2007.{{cite web|url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-09-18/queenstown-gravel-oval-why-was-it-built/11499186|title=In Queenstown in Tasmania's west, they play football on gravel, not grass|date=18 Sep 2019|publisher=Australian Broadcasting Corporation|access-date=17 Feb 2025}}

Queenstown Heritage and Arts Festival

The Queenstown Heritage and Arts Festival was the first name of a biennial festival that celebrates Queenstown's history.

One significant historical event it has celebrated was the centenary of the 1912 North Mount Lyell Disaster in the second festival in October 2012.{{cite web|url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/2012-10-12/mine-disaster-rememberred/4309092?section=tas|title=Mine disaster remembered|date=12 October 2012|publisher=Australian Broadcasting Corporation|access-date=18 April 2018}}{{Citation | author1=Queenstown Heritage & Arts Festival (Tas.) | author2=Hicks, Peter, (performer.) | author3=Da Vida, Alma, (performer.) | author4=Simon de Little Digital Video Production (production company) | title=Queenstown Heritage & Arts Festival 2012, 12–14 October : centenary of the North Lyell Mine Disaster | publication-date=2013 | publisher=[Queenstown, Tasmania] Queenstown Heritage & Arts Festival | url=http://trove.nla.gov.au/work/182594158 | access-date=14 October 2016 }}

In the third festival in October 2014, the Hydro Tasmania centenary was a major component.{{Citation | author1=Queenstown Heritage & Arts Festival (Tas.) (issuing body.) | title=Queenstown Heritage & Arts Festival : no ordinary place. no ordinary festival | publication-date=2014 | publisher=[Queenstown, Tasmania] Queenstown Heritage & Arts Festival | url=http://trove.nla.gov.au/work/192129464 | access-date=14 October 2016 }}

With key events taking place at The Paragon Theatre, the festival rebranded as the Unconformity Festival in 2016.{{Cite news|url=http://www.themercury.com.au/entertainment/events/queenstown-heritage-and-arts-festival-to-be-rebranded-the-unconformity/news-story/d27ad1053b47ac4473cbf9ccf70faf04|title = Arts festival seeks cooler customer|newspaper = The Mercury|date = 12 September 2015}}{{Cite web |first = Asher | last = Warren | title = The Unconformity festival embraces the power and peculiarity of Tasmania's wild west | publisher = The Conversation | url = https://theconversation.com/the-unconformity-festival-embraces-the-power-and-peculiarity-of-tasmanias-wild-west-106147 |date= 2 November 2018| access-date = 7 June 2022}}

Climate

Queenstown has a very wet oceanic climate (Cfb), and is one of the wettest locations in Tasmania with an annual average rainfall of 2408.2 mm (94.8 in), spread throughout the year but especially concentrated in winter. Summers are cool to mild and prone to cold fronts off the Roaring Forties, although temperatures can occasionally rise above 30 °C, while winters are cool to cold and almost always cloudy; however, during rare clear spells overnight temperatures can drop well below freezing. Brief, light snow usually occurs several times each winter, with occasional heavier snow falling every few years. Queenstown is very cloudy, getting only 29.0 days of clear skies annually.{{cite web|url=http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/averages/tables/cw_097034_All.shtml|title=Climate statistics for Australian locations|website=www.bom.gov.au|access-date=18 April 2018}}

{{Weather box

|location = Queenstown (7XS, 1964–1995); 129 m AMSL; 42.10° S, 145.54° E

|metric first = Yes

|single line = Yes

|Jan record high C = 37.3

|Feb record high C = 36.3

|Mar record high C = 35.9

|Apr record high C = 29.5

|May record high C = 25.0

|Jun record high C = 19.5

|Jul record high C = 19.5

|Aug record high C = 21.0

|Sep record high C = 26.4

|Oct record high C = 29.0

|Nov record high C = 33.3

|Dec record high C = 35.3

|year record high C = 37.3

|Jan high C = 21.0

|Feb high C = 22.0

|Mar high C = 19.9

|Apr high C = 16.6

|May high C = 14.4

|Jun high C = 12.2

|Jul high C = 11.6

|Aug high C = 12.4

|Sep high C = 13.5

|Oct high C = 15.9

|Nov high C = 17.6

|Dec high C = 19.3

|year high C = 16.4

|Jan low C = 8.3

|Feb low C = 8.6

|Mar low C = 7.6

|Apr low C = 6.5

|May low C = 4.5

|Jun low C = 2.7

|Jul low C = 2.4

|Aug low C = 3.1

|Sep low C = 4.0

|Oct low C = 5.1

|Nov low C = 6.4

|Dec low C = 7.9

|year low C = 5.6

|Jan record low C = 0.0

|Feb record low C = 0.0

|Mar record low C = -1.1

|Apr record low C = -2.6

|May record low C = -6.0

|Jun record low C = -6.2

|Jul record low C = -6.7

|Aug record low C = -5.5

|Sep record low C = -3.9

|Oct record low C = -3.3

|Nov record low C = -1.5

|Dec record low C = -0.6

|year record low C = -6.7

|rain colour = green

|Jan rain mm = 149.9

|Feb rain mm = 98.8

|Mar rain mm = 147.2

|Apr rain mm = 211.3

|May rain mm = 241.4

|Jun rain mm = 212.7

|Jul rain mm = 268.6

|Aug rain mm = 267.5

|Sep rain mm = 248.5

|Oct rain mm = 209.9

|Nov rain mm = 183.7

|Dec rain mm = 168.7

|Jan rain days = 17.2

|Feb rain days = 12.9

|Mar rain days = 17.3

|Apr rain days = 20.6

|May rain days = 21.2

|Jun rain days = 19.9

|Jul rain days = 23.7

|Aug rain days = 24.6

|Sep rain days = 23.1

|Oct rain days = 21.7

|Nov rain days = 19.7

|Dec rain days = 18.6

|unit rain days = 0.2mm

|Jan afthumidity = 60

|Feb afthumidity = 60

|Mar afthumidity = 65

|Apr afthumidity = 72

|May afthumidity = 76

|Jun afthumidity = 77

|Jul afthumidity = 77

|Aug afthumidity = 73

|Sep afthumidity = 71

|Oct afthumidity = 64

|Nov afthumidity = 63

|Dec afthumidity = 63

|year humidity = 68

|source 1 = Bureau of Meteorology{{BoM Aust stats|site_ref=cw_097034|site_name=QUEENSTOWN (7XS)|access-date=24 September 2019|date=September 2019}}

|date=March 2013}}

Demographics

At the {{CensusAU|2021}}, Queenstown had a population of 1,808 people (929 males and 878 females). The median age was 47. Children aged 0–14 years made up 15.3% of the population and people aged 65 years and over made up 22.3% of the population.

According to the {{CensusAU|2021}}, the most common responses for religion in Queenstown were No Religion (40.5%), Catholic (22.0%), Anglican (16.7%), and Uniting Church (3.1%). Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people made up 6.7% of the population.

The median weekly personal income for people aged 15 years and over in Queenstown was $509 while the median weekly incomes for families and households were $1,371 and $851 respectively.{{r|ABS}}

Panorama

{{Wide image|Qtownpan.jpg|1250 px|Panorama of Queenstown}}

Gallery

File:Queenstown footy oval.jpg|link=|Queenstown gravel oval

See also

References

{{More footnotes needed|date=April 2009}}

{{Reflist}}

Further reading

  • {{cite book| author=Blainey, Geoffrey| title=The Peaks of Lyell | edition= 6th | publisher=St. David's Park Publishing | location=Hobart| year=2000| isbn=0-7246-2265-9}}
  • Davies P, Mitchell N and Barmuta L 1996 The impact of historical mining operations at Mount Lyell on the water quality and biological health of the King and Queen River catchments, western Tasmania. Mount Lyell Remediation Research and Demonstration Program. Supervising Scientist Report 118, Supervising Scientist, Canberra. {{ISBN|0-642-24317-4}}
  • Gardiner, B. & L.A. In shadow of Lyell Devonport, Tas.: B. & L.A. Gardiner, 1983. {{ISBN|0-9592424-2-2}} :
  • {{cite book| author=Whitham, Charles| title=Western Tasmania - A land of riches and beauty| edition= Reprint 2003| publisher=Municipality of Queenstown| location=Queenstown}}