Williamsford, Tasmania
Williamsford, Tasmania is the location of a former mining community, south of Rosebery, Tasmania and on the western lower reaches of Mount Read.
It was formerly reached by the North East Dundas Tramway a line which operated between 1896 and 1929.[1][2]
It was also the location of the Hercules Haulage - a 2 foot gauge haulage line on the western slope of Mount Read, and the later Rosebery - Williamsford Aerial Ropeway.
The town had an Australian rules team in the Rosebery Football Association until the competition disbanded in 1963.
By the late twentieth century there were no longer inhabitants of this community.[3]
The townsite is to become the new site of a collection of conifers. These conifers have been collected over the last 15 years from a number of Southern Hemisphere countries where they are approaching extinction. The collected species of trees are considered extremely rare living examples of prehistoric conifers and to be "the best collection in the world". [4]
See also
Notes
- ↑ http://www.railtrails.org.au/states/trails.php3?action=trail&trail=72&gallery=185#gallery for a picture of Williamsford Railway Station
- ↑ Atkinson, H.K. (1991). Railway Tickets of Tasmania. ISBN 978-0-9598718-7-6. page 113 - Williamsford railway station issues rail tickets between 1899 and 1917
- ↑ http://www.railtrails.org.au/states/trails.php3?action=trail&trail=72
- ↑ http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/scienceshow/conifers-back-home-in-tasmania/3017462
References
- Atkinson, H.K. (1991). Railway Tickets of Tasmania. ISBN 0-9598718-7-X.
- Blainey, Geoffrey (2000). The Peaks of Lyell (6th ed. ed.). Hobart: St. David's Park Publishing. ISBN 0-7246-2265-9.
- Rae, Lou (2001). The Abt Railway and Railways of the Lyell region. Sandy Bay: Lou Rae. ISBN 0-9592098-7-5.
- Whitham, Lindsay (2002). Railways, Mines, Pubs and People and other historical research. Sandy Bay: Tasmanian Historical Research Association. ISBN 0-909479-21-6.