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LocationRAGLAN-ELMHURST ROAD RAGLAN, PYRENEES SHIRE LevelHeritage Inventory Site |
What is significant? How is it significant? Why is it significant? [Source: Victorian Heritage Register]
The Glut log chute is a rare surviving example of a log delivery system which operated during the early period of Victorian sawmilling. The chute was constructed by Charles Tunbridge around 1863 to deliver logs to his steam sawmill near Raglan, north of Beaufort. The site features the remains of a 300 metre chute formation descending steeply from the Mount Cole plateau towards Fiery Creek. The chute is 1.5 metres wide and 0.5 metres deep, carefully sited to avoid the large granite outcrops which dot the hillside.
The Glut log chute is of historical and scientific significance to the State of Victoria.
The Glut log chute is historically and scientifically significant as an early and well preserved example of a nineteenth-century log delivery route. Log chutes are rare in Victoria and Tunbridges is a substantially intact formation of its kind. The remains of the chute demonstrate the engineering required to operate in steeply forested terrain. Sawmilling in the Mount Cole area provided timber products which were crucial to the success of the local gold mining industry.
Forestry and Timber Industry
Timber extraction - log hauler site