Gold Find Came As A Flash Of Light
By David Ellis
One day in the mid-1800s when a prospector named David Lindsay was sweltering
away in a dry creek bed where it was 40-degrees in the shade - and there was no
shade - he stopped to pick at a brilliantly coloured stone from which flashes of
red danced devilishly under the harsh Central Australian sunlight.
With his small hand pick he chipped away at the stone, revealing what he
reckoned must have been the biggest ruby he'd seen in his life. And when more
followed, and more followed those, he walked the 40km up the creek to a small
gold prospecting camp at Arltunga to celebrate at its sly-grog tent.
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Arltunga Hotel
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A few months later on the opposite side of the world, some Dutch gem experts
whistled aloud at the stones that spilled from a small purse sent to them from
Australia. They had to be the best rubies they'd seen in a long time.
So they too took a celebratory drink at the prospects of a wealthy new find in
the far-off antipodes.
But the celebrations on both sides of the world were short-lived: the brilliant
'rubies', rumours of which had now started a 'ruby rush' to the Outback, were
only red garnets, worth but a fraction of what everyone had hoped.
So for David, and the other hopefuls, it was back to gold prospecting,
collecting what specks and tiny nuggets they could among the gravel at Arltunga...
until David Lindsay's ever-vigilant eyes spotted an alluvial vein on a hill just
up from his creek.
This turned out to be a far more worthwhile prospect, and soon a gold stamp was
brought in to pound the rich ore David had spotted. By the late 1800s the little
tent site of a hundred prospectors had swollen to an itinerant 2000 with a
police station, stores, assayers offices, government supervisors, a pub - and a
cemetery.
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Remains of the abandoned original gold stamp
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And so Arltunga became the first European settlement in Central Australia,
preceding Alice Springs, and at one stage having a 'resident' population of 300
supporting the miners.
The mines yielded some 6-million pounds worth of gold between the late 1800s and
early 1900s, and while most were abandoned by the time of World War I, some were
still being worked until the 1950s... one until 1998.
The 'ruby boom' meanwhile had died a very quick death.
Arltunga lays in the East MacDonnell Ranges in desert country 110km east of
Alice Springs. There's an un-manned Visitors Centre with a fascinating
collection of historic photos and memorabilia from the time when hopefuls with
only the thought of gold on their minds, trudged 600km from the railhead at
Oodnadatta with all they owned in swags on their backs, or in wheelbarrows.
A self-operated slide show is also available at the Visitors Centre with photos
and maps on-screen of suggested areas of interest nearby.
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Arltunga: Police Cell
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And there are the ghostly tumble-down reminders of what was once a town: the
police station, its stand-alone cell-from-hell in which temperatures reached
45-plus (before that, prisoners were simply chained to the policeman's iron
bed,) the gold stamp and cyanide works, stone floors of one-time houses and a
stone pub, abandoned mine workings, sign-posted historic trails, and shaded
picnic grounds.
The original hotel - a sign said Sleep Where You Like, But Not On The Bar - has
long been nothing more than a ruin, and the most-recent, Arltunga's only
business in recent years, pulled its last beers and closed a few months back.
National Parks' rangers are the only ones in this ghost town and during the
'cooler winter months' between May and September obligingly help visitors with
information about the site, and offer suggestions on places to visit on foot, by
bicycle or by car. The picnic grounds have BBQ facilities and shade shelters,
but camping is not permitted (you can camp at the nearby Terphina Gorge Nature
Park,) and visitors must to take all their rubbish away with them.
And yet as remote as it is, you don't need 4WD to get here: the road is sealed
for the first 70km from Alice Springs, and is gravel for the next forty - "a yob
filter" as regulars who enjoy escaping to Arltunga describe it.
For information about holidaying in Central Australia and visiting Arltunga,
phone Central Australian Tourism on 1800 645 199.
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Arltunga: little remains of first European settlement in Central Australia
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