Bushranger Hotel

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Location24 Church Street (Federal Highway), Collector, Upper Lachlan Shire, New South Wales, Australia
Coordinates34°54′44″S 149°25′54″E / 34.9123°S 149.4317°E / -34.9123; 149.4317
Built18601861
The Ben Hall Sites - Bushranger Hotel
Bushranger Hotel is located in New South Wales
Bushranger Hotel
Location of The Ben Hall Sites - Bushranger Hotel in New South Wales
Bushranger Hotel is located in Australia
Bushranger Hotel
Bushranger Hotel (Australia)
Location24 Church Street (Federal Highway), Collector, Upper Lachlan Shire, New South Wales, Australia
Coordinates34°54′44″S 149°25′54″E / 34.9123°S 149.4317°E / -34.9123; 149.4317
Built18601861
Official nameThe Ben Hall Sites - Bushranger Hotel; Kimberley's Commercial Hotel; Kimberley's Inn
Typestate heritage (built)
Designated8 October 2010
Reference no.1827
TypeHotel
CategoryCommercial

Bushranger Hotel is a heritage-listed hotel located at 24 Church Street (Old Federal Highway), Collector, in the Southern Tablelands region of New South Wales, Australia. It is one of a group of historic sites labelled the Ben Hall Sites for their association with bushranger Ben Hall, along with Ben Hall's Death Site, Cliefden, Escort Rock, the Grave of Ben Hall and Wandi. It was built from 1860 to 1861. It is also known as Kimberley's Commercial Hotel and Kimberley's Inn. It was added to the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 8 October 2010.[1]

The first official land grants in Collector were to a father and son, Terrence and Terence Aubrey Murray in 1829. The Murrays sub-divided part of their grant in 1841 and apparently gave many of the lots to employees. Around 1851 Thomas Kimberly, a leather-worker, opened a boot shop in the town, and his Wellington boots became well known across the State.[1]

Ten years later (1860–61) Kimberly built Kimberly's Commercial Hotel (Bushranger Hotel). Kimberly incorporated his boot shop into the Hotel building. There were five hotels in Collector at this time, catering to the flood of prospective gold miners rushing to the gold fields at Kiandra. Collector was also a staging post on the way to the Monaro area.[1]

On 26 January 1865 Ben Hall, John Gilbert and John Dunn had begun the morning holding up people on the road south of Goulburn until they were scared away by a detachment of troopers. They then moved operations to the outskirts of Collector, where they took eight men and boys hostage, forcing them into town. Hall and Gilbert went into Kimberley's Commercial Hotel for money and firearms while Dunn guarded the captives outside and turned a traveller away by firing several shots in his direction. Meanwhile, Constable Samuel Nelson the only police officer in town at the time, made his way to the Hotel, being joined along the way by one of his sons. Another one of his other sons had been taken captive and was already outside the Hotel. Dunn, on seeing Nelson approach, took cover behind a fence and called on Nelson to halt. When he failed to do so Dunn fired a rifle, hitting Nelson in the stomach. Dunn then pulled out his revolver and fired, this time hitting him in the face. Nelson fell dead. Nelson's son escaped into town as Dunn fired on him. On hearing the shots, Hall and Gilbert came out of the Hotel and, after rifling the Nelson's body and taking his belt and firearms, they left town.[2][1]

A memorial to Constable Nelson has since been erected next to the hotel.[1]

The later history of the Hotel has been overshadowed by its associations with Ben Hall, but it is known to have been licensed by a Mrs Marlin.[3] The building is still operating as a hotel with a bistro and accommodation.[1]

Description

Heritage listing

References

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