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A memorial to John Baxter who was Eyre's travelling companion when he crossed Australia in 1841.
The museum captures the significant elements of the earliest settlement in the Moora area, dating back to the 19th century.
The Bluebird Replica Dumbleyung is a full-sized replica of Donald Campbell's boat, Bluebird, which set the world water speed record in 1964 on Lake Dumbleyung.
Built in 1908 this building has played the role of theatre, library and municipal offices. It is best known for the stage curtain painted by internationally renowned theatre artist Phillip Goatcher.
Check out the cemetery and its headstones with the many illnesses and diseases that plagued the miners but no longer exist. 1km from the Broad Arrow township.
Stone monument of WA's earliest conflicts between Aboriginals and Europeans south of Mullewa
The headstones at Pioneer Cemetery (1892-1894) and the Coolgardie Cemetery (1894 - today) tell the story of the people from all over the world who worked in the Goldfields.
One of the first hotels in the State that the WA government paid for. It was built in 1903 and cost 6000 pounds.
Built in the early 1930s, the church was built by architect, John Hawes. The building reflects the early solar design which attempts to protect the building from the harsh Australian summers.
1908 building with theatre and extensive collection of memorabilia in the Council Chamber. Home to the original Paddy Hannan Statue.
Situated in the heart of the town, a monument that commemorates the miners who gave "the golden mile" its golden international name. Erected in 1984.
Statue of the horse Hardy Norseman who uncovered gold in the town. His owner Laurie Sinclair later found the rich gold source that became the second richest goldfield in WA.
The Ongerup Museum Started in 1978 in the Old Railway Barracks Building, then aquired a historic farmhouse on site which now houses a Native food & Medicine, and Local wildlife display.
Statue of Paddy Hannan. Have a drink from his water bag.
Pingelly was originally just a railway siding built by the Western Australian Land Company in 1889 and the town grew around it.
Local government building in Western Australia
Shackleton Bank in Bruce Rock, Australia, is a historic site that has become a popular tourist attraction.
Statue of St Katherine - patron saint of miners in the middle of the square.
In December 1929, Rev. Dalis James Davies arrived from Wales to be the first resident Rector of Morawa.
St Paul's Church is the first consecrated Church in Narembeen. The church served the Anglican community from 1929 until 1965. It was opened as a museum for the Historical Society in 1969. After Restoraion it was re-opened as a Church Museum in 1999. It is also a memorial to the Pioneer Women of the Narembeen District.
THE BIG RAM - weight 4 tonnes, length 13 metres, height 9 metres, width 6 metres. Fibreglass statue overlooking town.
A historical village of 23 original and replica buildings from West Australia's past.
Local legend says that two Aboriginal tribes clashed in a war in this location. Back then, the nearby Gnamma Hole would be filled with rainfall. A larger Gnamma Hole was covered to stop stock falling
This building dating back to 1895 was the home of the first Warden, John Finnerty. Restored by the National Trust, the property is an example of life in the late 1890s.