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Great Northern Mine
circa 1905
Click images to enlarge
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This site is now hosted at: http://www.coencapeyork.com
Coen was
founded as a log fort beside the Coen River
by Robert Sefton in 1876. The River's name, which it adopted, was chosen
more than 200 years earlier by a Dutch explorer on the West Coast, after
the Governer of Batavia (Dutch East Indies) who was Jan
Pieterszoon Coen.
Sefton and William Lakeland had discovered the Batavia/Wenlock River
goldfield in 1873. At the same time there had been a gold rush to Palmer
River further South, and a track was cut from there to Coen in 1878-80.
At first the gold was alluvial, and of poor quality, but reef gold was
found and the Coen field was "proclaimed" in 1892. Additional
finds nearby at Ebagoolah, 30 km South of Coen, extended the boom, but
it was over by 1910.
The Overland Telegraph was built betwen 1883 and 1887,
a few years later than the Adelaide to Darwin line which was opened
in 1872. European expansion and settlement were thereby accelerated.
Coen grew in the 1890's with the establishment of the Great
Northern Mine, also as a supply point for surrounding mines
and cattle stations.
A Post Office was set up in 1893,
and a school started in 1895. Chinese merchants
and market gardeners who had followed the gold-seekers set up in and
near the town. They also cut and exported sandalwood, assisted by Aboriginal
people.
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