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Cecil Hotel
Cecil Hotel In 1919 the hotel was cut into sections and transported to its present site by bullock teams. (information Jon Graham)
100 Centre Street (The Main Street),
Casino,
NSW 2470
Charcoal Inn
Casino New South Wales Accommodation Queenstown
Charcoal Inn
68 Centre Street,
Casino
NSW 2470
Commercial Hotel
The Commercial Hotel was established in 1869 and renovated in 1890. It is the second oldest business in Casino.
New South Wales
74 Walker Street,
Casino
New South Wales 2470
Commonwealth Hotel
Commonwealth Hotel Corner of Canterbury Street.
105 Walker Street,
Casino
New South Wales 2470
Oxford Hotel
Oxford Hotel Hotel reopened in June 2006 after lengthy renovations.
161 Walker Street,
Casino
New South Wales 2470
Casino New South Wales Accommodation Self Catering
Royal Hotel Motel
Royal Hotel Motel
130 Walker Street,
Casino
New South Wales 2470
Tattersalls Hotel
Commercial Hotel
The Commercial Hotel was established in 1869 and renovated in 1890. It is the second oldest business in Casino.
New South Wales
74 Walker Street,
Casino
New South Wales 2470
Commonwealth Hotel
Commonwealth Hotel Corner of Canterbury Street.
105 Walker Street,
Casino
New South Wales 2470
Oxford Hotel
Oxford Hotel Hotel reopened in June 2006 after lengthy renovations.
161 Walker Street,
Casino
New South Wales 2470
Casino New South Wales Accommodation Self Catering
Royal Hotel Motel
Royal Hotel Motel
130 Walker Street,
Casino
New South Wales 2470
Tattersalls Hotel
Tattersalls Hotel The Hotel was established in 1859 and is the oldest business in Casino.
135 Barker Street,
Casino
New South Wales 2470
Tourism New South Wales
One Tree New South Wales | |
---|---|
Coordinates | 34°10′S144°42′E / 34.167°S 144.700°ECoordinates: 34°10′S144°42′E / 34.167°S 144.700°E |
Established | 1862 |
Postcode(s) | 2711 |
Location |
|
LGA(s) | Hay Shire |
County | Waradgery |
State electorate(s) | Murray |
Federal Division(s) | Riverina |
One Tree is a location on the Cobb Highway on the flat plain between Hay and Booligal in the Riverina district of New South Wales, Australia. In 1862 a public house was built there, originally called Finch's Inn and the locality developed as a coach changing-stage and watering-place between the Murrumbidgee and Lachlan rivers. One Tree village was surveyed and proclaimed in 1882, though the location remained as just an amenity on the plain, centred on the hotel.
The existing One Tree Hotel is the second building of that name to occupy the site. The first hotel was destroyed by fire in 1903. The hotel was re-built in the same manner as the original structure (by the provisions of the insurance policy). The licence of the One Tree Hotel was relinquished in 1942 by its last publican, Frank McQuade. The One Tree Hotel is an important historical building, providing a tangible link to the heyday of pastoral settlement in the Riverina.[1][2][3]
The name ‘One Tree' derives from the presence of a large gum tree on the otherwise treeless plain (called the One Tree Plain). The landmark tree was destroyed by a storm in January 1900.[3]
Structure of the hotel[edit]
The One Tree Hotel is constructed of split cypress-pine logs, with verandahs on three sides and a hipped corrugated-iron roof. Twelve-paned windows are located between the four panel doors which open along the verandahs. There is a detached kitchen and small weatherboard shed at the rear of the building. The building was an accurate 1903 replication of the original 1862 hotel which had been destroyed by fire. The insurance company, the Australian Mutual Fire Insurance Society, stipulated the hotel was to be replaced with one identical to the original.
The One Tree Hotel was placed on the Register of the National Estate in May 1991.[3]
Literary associations[edit]
An alternate name for One Tree was 'Hell', and the locality was referenced in Banjo Paterson's poem Hay and Hell and Booligal.[3] An alternate suggestion is that 'Hell' refers to Hells Gate, a property near Maude, between Hay and Balranald.[2]
References[edit]
- ^'One Tree Hotel, Outside Hay NSW'. Gday Pubs. Retrieved 1 February 2007.
- ^ abSydney Morning Herald article on Hay, NSW
- ^ abcdAustralian Heritage Database listing
Wikimedia Commons has media related to One Tree, New South Wales. |
External links[edit]
- Photo of the One Tree Hotel by Andrew Schipp, submission to a 2004 photo competition run by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.