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LocationGARDEN GULLY ROAD AND HARD HILL ROAD ARMSTRONG AND GARDEN GULLY ROAD GREAT WESTERN, ARARAT RURAL CITY, NORTHERN GRAMPIANS SHIRE
File Number601298LevelRegistered |
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The first gold was found at Hard Hill in January 1856 and it
continued to be the site of alluvial mining until the 1870s. The area
includes an almost intact example of an earthen water race system and
associated mining evidence, including domestic and other complexes. Hard Hill is important for its cultural and social associations with
the beginning of gold mining in Victoria, and in particular the Ararat
gold field, which experienced possibly the largest rush in the State. The Chinese Camp is an extraordinary example of a small isolated
Chinese mining community forcibly dispossessed from more profitable
Ararat goldfield, which experienced possibly the largest rush in the State. Hard Hill represents modest mid-nineteenth century alluvial mining
and the transient nature of domestic occupation associated with such
sites. Hard Hill 3 demonstrates the changing pattern of occupancy to
the more permanent settlement and exploitation of the region. The earth and stone water race, extending for over one kilometre
around the flank of the Hill, the large earthen dam and sluicing
demonstrate considerable ingenuity and engineering ability,
constructed as they were using only local resources and without the
benefit of sophisticated technology. The site is a representative example of a once common small-scale
mid-nineteenth century shallow lead alluvial mining landscape. The
cement workings in the same area are quite rare and are also
essentially intact. The other archaeological features at Hard Hill,
comprising habitation sites and refuse deposits associated with the
mining, rarely display such integrity. Hard Hill demonstrates a variety of mining techniques including
cement shallow alluvial sinkings and ground sluicing. Hard Hill, through both the archaeological and mining remains,
demonstrates an association with the Chinese miners who played an
important role in the history of the Victorian gold rushes. Hard Hill
4 in particular may have significant archaeological potential to
further reveal the daily activities of a cultural minority about whom
little was recorded. The discovery of gold at Hard Hill in 1856, one of the earliest on
the Ararat gold field, means that the site dates from the earliest
period of gold mining in Victoria.
Mining and Mineral Processing
Adit