Aboriginal Art Site - SA
This very special site has many fine examples of stone rock engravings, rock cuttings and paintings. Also here is a permanent spring amongst the rocks.
Old Stone Tank and windmill - SA
Another fine example of a stone water tank, constructed from local stone and still in use today, well over 100 years since it was first constructed. Get out of your vehicle and now walk the few hundred metres to your left up the dry creek bed for a very special surprise.
Old Stone Tank - SA
This stone tank and windmill lies at the base of the Ketchowla Hills. These hills are very rugged and are the extreme eastern edge of the Adelaide Geosyncline - that is a huge area of accumulated sedimentary rock which includes the Mount Lofty and Flinders Ranges.
Piltimitiappa Homestead Ruins - SA
These old ruins in this area all that remain of the once great property built by William Dare in the 1850’s. The old stone tanks and windmill on the left hand side of the road are still used to water stock.
Dares Hill Summit - SA
Panoramic view to the east. The hills ahead and to the right are the Wonna Range, Chinamans Hat Hill and Ketchowla Hill. The Valley below is the Piltimitiappa Valley.
Wooded area and Creek Erosion - SA
Through this area, the country is well wooded with Mallee and eucalypts. The large creek to the right has springs and slate and notice the spectacular chasm caused by water erosion. This is the last of this scenery and within a few kilometres; the scenery and vegetation will change dramatically.
Thomas Hut Ruins - SA
Today all that remains of Thomas Hutt is the old book leaf chimney. A perfect spot to listen to the silence and the have a cup of coffee.
Sir Hubert Wilkins Homestead - SA
This lonely restored cottage was the birth place of one of South Australia’s, and Australia’s least known Adventurers and Polar Explorers. If you wish to view the inside of this restored cottage, please make sure that you have collected the key before you reach this spot. After inspecting this site, you must now retrace your steps and make your way to Mount Bryan East.
Peppermint Gully - SA
This woodlands area has dense stands of Peppermint Box Mallee, which is home to many parrots, cockatoos and other native wildlife.
Mount Bryan East - SA
The old abandoned buildings on the right hand side of the road are the old Church and School. Sir Hubert Wilkins was a student at this school.
The complete area that this route traverses through was the home for thousands of years of the Ngadjuri Walpa Juri Aboriginal people. Just north of the old
Ketchowla Homestead, can be found some of the best examples of Ngadjuri rock engravings, ceremonial markings and rare rock paintings in any of their areas of travel.
The first European to visit this area, was the then Governor of
South Australia, George
Gawler who named the largest hill in the area on the 12th December 1839 after a
young visiting Englishman, Henry Bryan who was in Governor
Gawler’s care and the youngest member of his exploration expedition.
Wanting to play a part in the field of exploration, Governor
Gawler, proposed a voyage along part of the Murray River well before it was fashionable to do so. With his small team gathered, they set off and were guided by the then South Australian Surveyor General, Charles Sturt. At one point, a group of hills in the northern distance caught their attention, and with the possibility of finding good pastoral lands, and a spur of the moment decision, the group set out for these distant hills and the massive peak on the horizon. This large Peak was then named “Mount Bryan” by Governor
Gawler after his
young English guest. Nearing theses hills, the group separated and neither group then knew anything of how the others fared until they returned to the River. Charles Sturt and Henry Inman survived by killing and eating one of their horses while Governor
Gawler returned in a state of exhaustion. Henry Bryan was lost and was never seen alive again. His death remained a mystery of the bush, as his body was never found, and the high peak in the vicinity became his
memorial.
The ruins of William Dares “Piltimitiappa Homestead.” offer a lot of history. .” Born in London in 1824, William and his elder brother, George sailed to their new homeland of
Australia in 1838. Undertaking various jobs, William headed from
Adelaide to
Victoria’s Eaglehawk gold diggings and returned in less than 12 months, with over £700 in his pocket, which in those days would have been a huge sum of money. Securing the lease of 80 square kilometres of land to the east of
Hallett, William engaged local Aboriginals to guide him to his yet unvisited lands. Being led to the top of the largest hill on the way to his property, the very same hill that we had just previously visited, namely
Dares Hill Summit, William noticed that the foot of the hill was a swathe of dark green vegetation across a narrow creek valley, and decided at once that that was going to be the location of his new homestead. William selected his head station close to the creek, fenced the property and stocked it with sheep. Over the years William built the stone homestead, stone woolshed and stone water tanks. For over 35 years, William and his family went through the ravages of Dingos and drought and the big job of taking his wool clip had to
Kapunda by Bullock wagon, many days travel away back in the 1800’s. Over the years, much of William’s property was resumed and subdivided, but William retained his homestead at Piltimitiappa until the 1880’s and died in 1892 and was buried on a nearby property.
The ruins of Ketchowla also offer some very important history. In the 1850’s, Christopher Giles, father of the famous explorers, Ernest and Alfred Giles, acquired Ketchowla Station and originally established his head station approximately 3 kilometres north of the now derelict homestead, at a place known as “The Springs”. Because of its permanent water supply, it made the perfect place to establish the homestead in an otherwise waterless landscape. Like all parts of
Australia, a permanent supply of water also meant that is was an important place for the local Ngadjuri Aboriginal people.
Another very important piece of Australian history also has its origins in this area as well.
Australia’s least known Adventurers and Polar Explores was born here in
Mount Bryan East. On the 31st October 1888, George Hubert Wilkins was the youngest and 13th child born to Harry and Louisa Wilkins. George was born in this now restored homestead and attended his schooling days at the nearby
Mount Bryan East School. In
search of adventure and something out of the ordinary, he was a stowaway on board of a ship from Port
Adelaide hoping to make it to England. Being removed from the ship in Algiers, he was captured by gun runners and rescued by a
young Moslem girl, and finally made it to London just after his 21st Birthday.
Learning how to fly in 1910, he was the first person to take moving pictures in a war zone in the Balkan’s in 1912. In 1914 he walked more that 300 kilometres to rescue Stefansson in the Arctic. With the outbreak of World War 1, he returned to
Australia and joined the AIF and went to France as an Official photographer, was awarded the Military Cross twice and was described by Australian General Monash as the bravest man he had ever met. In 1928 his dreams were fulfilled when he became the first person to fly more than 3000 kilometres in just over 20 hours across the Arctic, for which he was knighted by King George V. By the end of 1928, he was the first to make flights over the Antarctic. In 1929 Sir Hubert became the first and probably the only Australian to circumnavigate the world by airship, the “Graf Zeppelin” in a 22 day journey. In 1931, in another world first, Sir Hubert purchased a submarine from the US Navy for $1 named the Nautilus, and made the first ever attempt for an under-
ice voyage by submarine under the Arctic Ocean to the North Pole. From 1942, Sir Hubert was employed by the United States Army, as a consultant in their planning division and later as Arctic consultant. In February 1958 on his way back to Alaska from the Antarctic, Sir Hubert returned to his birthplace here at
Mount Bryan East and spent several days in the area. On the 30th November 1958, Sir Hubert died from a heart attack and the British Government wanted to bury him in Westminster Abby. At the request of his wife, Lady Suzanne Wilkins, he was cremated and on the 17th March 1959, his ashes were scattered at the geographical North Pole by US Submarine Commander Colvert from the nuclear submarine “Skate”.
On Sunday 29th April 2001, over 300 people gathered to see the official opening of the restored cottage by Dick Smith.
As you pass over the
grid and enter Collinsville Stud, you will be passing through
Australia’s most important Merino Sheep Stud, which has been synonymous with the Australian Wool Industry for over 100 years, and which was responsible for up to one third of all sheep genetics in the Australian Sheep Industry. Collinsville had a massive impact on the quality of merino sheep, here in
Australia and overseas and has scored dozens of world record prices paid for stud rams, with one ram being sold for an astronomical $400,000.00