Over Cherry Tree Hill: 150 Years of Pioneer Settlement

Piddington, Margaret
ISBN: 0731663985 Category:

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AUSTRALIANA

First Edition.

  • 243 p. : ill., maps, ports. ; 29 cm. #261124
  • Cherry Tree Hill (N.S.W.) — History
  • Running Stream is a locality in New South Wales, Australia. It is named after the creek flowing through the area. Running Stream is accessed on the Castlereagh Highway. The bus stop near the intersection with Mount Vincent Road is serviced several times a day by buses operated by NSW TrainLink departing from Lithgow railway station towards Gulgong, New South Wales.[2][3]

    Running Stream has a cafe, public telephone and postbox facing the Castlereagh Highway. It has a community hall and previously had a primary school.[4] The community today is primarily farming, however historically there have been a number of mines in the vicinity These included the Cherry Tree Hill deep lead underground gold mine operated in the 1930s and Razorback Mine operated around 1876 to 1903 and 1910.[5]

    A stone church and small cemetery off New Olivers Road have local heritage listing.[6] The church building was St John’s Union Church opened in 1906 but not presently in use.[7] Headstones in the cemetery are dated from 1859 to 1983.[8] the building continues to house historic records.[9]

    The bounded locality of Running Stream includes a historic locality named Cherry Tree Hill towards Ilford. The gazetted locality of Cherry Tree Hill is in a different region of New South Wales, north of Inverell.

  • Margaret Piddington relates its history in Over Cherry Tree Hill. One hundred and eighty years ago, or thereabouts, local trooper James Minehan unlocked a spring by making a small hole in the side of a rock. It became a life-support for weary travellers, stockmen and stock after a long journey on a hot day up a formidable hill. In 1879 road contractor George Harris developed the well and was paid two pounds by the Inspector of Roads for his inventiveness. Fifty years later the arch was added, built from stone from an old house in Ilford and engraved with the words “Wishing Well”. A Bicentennial grant funded a parking area, walking path and plaque thus making the wishing well a place of historical significance as well as a tourist attraction. Except that currently it can only be inspected from a distance of about thirty metres, while balancing on a couple of logs, which inevitably unload you into six-inch-deep watery marsh. We couldn’t tell if the plaque is still there.

Additional Information

AuthorPiddington, Margaret
Number of pages243
PublisherThe Cherry Tree Hill Community Press
Year Published1989
Binding Type

Hardcover in Dustjacket

Book Condition

Near Fine

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