Queen Adelaide Dining Car |
Breakfast on board the Indian Pacific on day 2 was a brisk affair - a full breakfast efficiently served in the dining car as we pulled into Broken Hill shortly after 7 a.m.
The outback town of Broken Hill came into existence in the 1880s when
one of the world’s richest ore deposits was discovered. The Broken Hill Proprietary was soon formed to mine silver, lead and zinc.
BHP operates today as BHP Billiton, one of the world's largest global resources companies.
BHP operates today as BHP Billiton, one of the world's largest global resources companies.
The Miner's Memorial above the town |
At the time the pit ponies were considered more valuable than the men and boys who worked the mines.
The Miner’s Memorial located atop the Line of Lode remnants overlooking the town is a striking site and a moving experience to visit.
A mining relic of the past in Broken Hill |
Broken Hill must have been quite the place during the peak of its
success with pubs on every street corner and hotels aplenty. The Palace Hotel for one, with its tribute to
Botticelli’s “Birth of Venus” replicated on the second floor
ceiling. This establishment was featured
in “Priscilla, Queen of the Desert”. Who can forget Mitzi Del Bra's hopeful utterance - “here’s
hoping they have a decent cocktail bar” - before he and his fellow drag queens
crossed the Palace Hotel’s threshold.
The town’s jail reveals some interesting stories too, in particular
the Australian Government’s decision during World War Two to conceal its gold
reserves in the jail. Fear of invasion
from the north was very real and given Broken Hill’s location the jail provided
excellent cover. Apparently there was also a Plan
B: if the worst happened the gold’s next
resting place would be the mine itself.
Keeping up appearances in the social hierarchy of town was also
apparently important back in the day. A grisly wag with
a gleaming silver earring informed us that when a few new houses were built on
Billy Goat Hill, the neighbourhood became known as Angora Heights. Sounds to me like a bar story that grew legs.
Farmlands of South Australia pass by during lunch in the Queen Adelaide Restaurant |
All aboard, we pulled away from Broken Hill station and before long crossed from New South Wales into South Australia where the tracks turned south to Adelaide.
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