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Waratah, Tasmania

Locality in Tasmania, Australia

Waratah, Tasmania

Summary

Locality in Tasmania, Australia

FieldValue
typeother
nameWaratah
statetas
imageWaratah Falls 20171121-069.jpg
captionWaratah Falls in Waratah with part of the town in the background
coordinates
pushpin_label_positionright
lgaWaratah-Wynyard Council
postcode7321
timezoneAEST
utc+10
timezone-dstAEDT
utc-dst+11
pop
maxtemp12.3
mintemp3.6
rainfall2162.8
location1Burnie
dist162.9
dir1SSW
location2Devonport
dist2106
dir2SW
location3Launceston
dist3186
dir3W
location4Hobart
dist4354
dir4NW
stategovBraddon
fedgovBraddon

| timezone-dst= AEDT | utc-dst = +11

Waratah is a locality and town in North Western Tasmania adjacent to Savage River National Park. The town was constructed to support a tin mine at Mount Bischoff. It is built at the top of a waterfall, and water was diverted from the stream to provide water for mine sluicing and processing. At the , Waratah had a population of 249. It was also the first town in Australia to have electric street lights in 1886.

History

Tin was discovered at Mount Bischoff by James "Philosopher" Smith in 1871. The mine operated successfully at first. The easy ore was all extracted by 1893 when sluicing was discontinued. Mining continued opencut on the face of the mountain, and underground. The underground mine closed in 1914, but surface mining continued for some time before it also ceased after the price of tin slumped in 1929. The mine was reopened by the Commonwealth Government in 1942 to support the war effort, but it finally closed in 1947. It was the mine that produced power for 400 incandescent streetlights in 1886. Mount Bischoff Post Office opened on 1 September 1874 and was renamed Waratah in 1882.

In the vicinity of the locality, a number of smaller mines worked at the same time as the Mount Bischoff workings. Mount Magnet silver mine was connected by the Mount Magnet Tramway within 10 miles south west of the town.

Politics

At the 2007 Australian federal election, the polling place at Waratah Primary School registered a total of 148 votes. 72 votes (49.32%) were cast for the Labor candidate Sid Sidebottom, 54 votes (36.99%) were cast for the Liberal candidate Mark Baker and 17 votes (11.64%) were cast for Greens candidate Paul O'Halloran.

Climate

Waratah Falls

Waratah has a cold Oceanic climate (Köppen climate classification: Cfb), particularly cool by Australian standards and bordering on a Subpolar oceanic climate (Cfc). It is one of the coldest and wettest localities in Tasmania. The town has a high frequency of cloudy days and maximum temperatures often fail to get above 10 C, even in summer. Snow is common through the winter and spring, sometimes occurring in summer, and heavy rainstorms can be experienced throughout the year. Extremes have ranged from 32.8 °C (91.0 °F) to -5.5 °C (22.1 °F). Waratah's wettest month on record was May 1923 with 644.8 mm (25.3 in) of rain recorded.

|Jan record high C = 32.8 |Feb record high C = 32.7 |Mar record high C = 31.7 |Apr record high C = 23.3 |May record high C = 19.4 |Jun record high C = 14.4 |Jul record high C = 12.5 |Aug record high C = 16.7 |Sep record high C = 18.5 |Oct record high C = 25.5 |Nov record high C = 27.8 |Dec record high C = 31.7 |year record high C = 32.8 |Jan record low C = -0.2 |Feb record low C = 0.0 |Mar record low C = -1.7 |Apr record low C = -3.9 |May record low C = -5.5 |Jun record low C = -4.7 |Jul record low C = -5.0 |Aug record low C = -5.0 |Sep record low C = -3.9 |Oct record low C = -5.0 |Nov record low C = -3.9 |Dec record low C = -0.6 |year record low C = -5.5

|Jan record high C = n |Feb record high C = n |Mar record high C = n |Apr record high C = n |May record high C = n |Jun record high C = n |Jul record high C = n |Aug record high C = n |Sep record high C = n |Oct record high C = n |Nov record high C = n |Dec record high C = n |year record high C = 27.3 |Jan record low C = n |Feb record low C = n |Mar record low C = n |Apr record low C = n |May record low C = n |Jun record low C = n |Jul record low C = n |Aug record low C = n |Sep record low C = n |Oct record low C = n |Nov record low C = n |Dec record low C = n |year record low C = -3.6

References

References

  1. {{Census 2021 AUS
  2. (September 2005). "Nomination of Duck Reach Power Station as a Historic Engineering Marker".
  3. Interpretive sign at the former mine site
  4. Phoenix Auctions History. "Post Office List". Phoenix Auctions.
  5. "Polling Place - Waratah". Australian Electoral Council.
  6. {{BoM Aust stats. (27 January 2022)
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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