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Founding the Local Area: Rutherglen: Gold: |
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To provide for the rush, Calico and Hessian business houses sprang up. Twenty-one licensed hotels were founded with dancing saloons and places of entertainment. The men outnumbered the woman twenty to one. Cartloads of women were encouraged to move up from Melbourne. The women were hired to dance in the evenings. Many of these women married and settled in the area. From the original twenty-one hotels, three now remain, The Star, The Victoria, and Poaches Paradise. Rutherglen quickly established into a commercial centre. By January 1861 Rutherglen had it's own newspaper, three schools, a police station, and a large selection of shops lining the main street from end to end. The Rutherglen area had suddenly grown to a population of 20,000 people within months. By the 1880's the rush had slowed a great deal, many people moved away from the area and more and more mines closed. One mine now called, 'The Great Northern' closed in 1886. Jack McKay and John Hicks purchased the site believing that they would find gold. The previous owners had abandoned the mine at 216 feet with no success. Jack and his party cleaned the old shaft and only had to dig 6 feet before finding Gold. They found a lead of fifty foot wide by three foot thick. This mine was then sold to a Ballarat company for 14,000 pounds. This became one of Victoria's largest Gold mines producing over 107,000 ounces of gold with profits exceeding 190,500 pounds. This started a second rush that lasted until World War I. Wine: In the last 30 years, Rutherglen wines are again making an impact into local and international markets. Many Gold medals are being won around the world - especially with the full-bodied reds, Muscat and Tokay wines. |