Longford, Tasmania

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Template:Use Australian English Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox Australian place

Street map of Longford

Longford is a town in the northern midlands of Tasmania, Australia. It lies 145 m above sea level at the convergence of the Macquarie River and the South Esk River,<ref name=northernmidlands>Template:Cite web</ref> 21 km south of Launceston and a 15-minute drive from the airport. It is just south of the Illawarra Road, a road connecting the Bass and Midland Highways. It has a population of 3,863 (2016 census)<ref name="population" /> and is part of the Northern Midlands Council area. The region is predominantly agricultural, noted for wool, dairy produce and stock breeding.

History

Pre-European settlement

The Longford region was the traditional land of The Panninher (par-nin-her) clan of the North Midlands Nation. This clan was known as the Penny Royal Creek Tribe by colonials, named after the old European name for the Liffey River (Aboriginal: Tellerpangger). The Panninher occupied land from Drys Bluff to the Tamar, Evandale and south to the Conara region. The Norfolk Plains region was the site of hunting and the boundary of the Aboriginal road from the Liffey River valley to the Lake River Valley and thence to the Central Highlands.

Settlement

In 1806 the first Europeans, Jacob Mountgarrett and Ensign Hugh Piper, passed through the area, and in the following year Lieutenant Thomas Laycock camped near the current site of the town<ref name=theage>Template:Cite web</ref> during his overland journey from Launceston to Hobart.

Settlers started to arrive in 1807 as farmers were moved from Norfolk Island to Van Diemen's Land (the original name used by Europeans for Tasmania). Governor Macquarie granted land rights to the settlers, who originally called the area Norfolk Plains. The town, originally called Latour, grew up around the hotel (later known as the Longford Hotel) which was built in 1827 by Newman Williatt. In 1833 the town was renamed Longford,<ref name=theage /> probably at the suggestion of the land commissioner Roderic O'Connor.<ref>Tasmanian Almanac: Addenda, J. Walch & Sons, 1968, p.287.</ref>

Settlers used free convict labour to build some fine houses and estates.<ref name=disconvertasmania>Template:Cite web</ref>

Prominent among the early settlers, the Archer family built a number of grand houses and estates in the area.<ref name=disconvertasmania /> Thomas Archer emigrated from England to Australia in 1811, and retired from government service in 1821 to develop his Template:Convert estate. By 1825 he held Template:Convert in the area and his success persuaded first his brother Joseph, then his brothers Willam and Edward and their father, to join him.

Together they farmed and developed the land, and built a number of homesteads which are among the finest in northern Tasmania: Woolmers Estate, Brickendon Estate (both on the Australian National Heritage List), Panshanger, Northbury, Fairfield, Cheshunt, Woodside, Palmerston and Saundridge.<ref name=ADOB>Template:Cite book</ref> Six generations of Archers have lived in Woolmers, from 1817 to 1994; it is now owned by the Woolmers Foundation Inc and is open to the public.<ref name=Woolmers>Template:Cite web</ref>

Norfolk Plains Post Office opened on 1 June 1832 and was renamed Longford in 1856.<ref name = "Post Office">Template:Cite web</ref>

Adjacent to a 21st-century recreation ground is the remains of a dam. This dam, known as the Longford Mill Dam, was built in the 1840s by John Badcock to power a flour Mill at nearby Newry.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Historic buildings

Woolmers, near Longford
Panshanger, near Longford
Heritage Corner, from the early 1830s
Brown's Big Store, 1889

Longford district has many buildings included on the Tasmanian Heritage Register. Many significant historic buildings were constructed between 1830 and 1850, including:

  • Christ Church (1839), sandstone, with square tower, lancet windows and buttresses, in the Old Colonial Gothick Picturesque style. The church clock and bell were both gifts from King George IV.<ref name=theage /> The cemetery includes many prominent local families including the Archer, Brumby and Reiby families.<ref name=ChristChurch>Template:Cite AHPI</ref> The land on which it stands is named Illawarra because of Lucy Margaretta Davey, the daughter of Lt Governor Mad Tom Davey.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
  • Queen's Arms Hotel (1835), a double-storey brick and stuccoed building in the Old Colonial Georgian style
  • Blenheim Hotel (1846), a two-storey Georgian brick and stuccoed building and a major townscape element in Longford
  • Tattersalls Hotel (now Longford Library) (Template:Circa), a two-storey red brick corner building with neo-classic moulded surrounds to doorways
  • The Racecourse Hotel (1838) (former), a two-storey brick Georgian coaching inn, originally built to become the railway station for Longford; has also been a private hospital. It is now a B&B.<ref name=theage />
  • Longford Railway Bridge, a bridge of Template:Convert opened in 1871 and which crosses the South Esk River.<ref name="RNE">Template:Cite AHD</ref><ref name="THR">Template:Cite web</ref>

Facilities

Longford has a Service Tasmania shop, supermarkets, a bakery, a butcher's shop, two banks, a post office, antique shops, hotels, cafés, take-aways, hairdressers and service stations.<ref name=LOAC>Template:Cite web</ref> A kindergarten and large primary school provide education for younger children; secondary students travel to the District High School in Cressy or to one of the schools in Launceston.<ref name=parishprofile>Template:Cite web</ref>

The town has a sports centre and a bowls club. Two local bus companies provide transport to school and to Launceston. Longford public library is part of the State Library of Tasmania's statewide public library network and is open every weekday.<ref name=library>Template:Cite web</ref>

Healthcare is provided by local doctors and dentists. Toosey Memorial Hospital provided private healthcare from the 1920s and became a public hospital in 1950. However, in 1990 it became a residential care centre for elderly people,<ref name=Toosey>Template:Cite web</ref> and the nearest hospital is now in Launceston.

Employment

In the Template:CensusAU, the most common industries of employment for Longford residents were:<ref name="population" />

  • 7.2% – sheep, beef cattle and grain farming
  • 4.5% – school education
  • 3.5% – meat and meat product manufacturing
  • 2.9% – residential care services
  • 2.5% – foad freight transport

Local businesses

Swift Australia (Southern) Pty Limited runs Longford abattoir, and is one of the state's largest regional employers.<ref name=planning>Template:Cite web</ref> The plant processes 450 beef and 1500 smallstock per day and employs 460. Tasmania is the only Australian state that has banned the use of Hormonal Growth Promotants (HGPs) in cattle, so the plant guarantees its products are free of HGP.<ref name=swift>Template:Cite web</ref>

Selborne Biological Services runs a biotechnology manufacturing facility in Longford, producing bovine serum and other blood products such as polyclonal antisera and protein fractions, destined for the biotech, pharmaceutical, veterinary, and diagnostics industries. They take advantage of the fact that Tasmania is free of BSE and scrapie.<ref name=SBS>Template:Cite web</ref> For the same reasons, International Therapeutic Proteins has farms with manufacturing facility for antitoxins and other biologics in Longford.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Koppers Inc has a wood treatment plant in Longford. The company produces treated wood poles, piling timbers and other timber for outdoor use.<ref name=Koppers>Template:Cite web</ref>

Other local employers include Longford Brickworks, an Agricultural Machinery business called Agline, Longford Sawmill, and service industry jobs. Many people commute to work in Launceston.

Recreation

Racecourse

The Longford Racecourse is the oldest continuously operating racecourse in Australia.<ref name=northernmidlands /> Longford is home to many horse studs and training facilities, and the Longford races are held annually on New Year's Day, with thoroughbred horse racing and the Elders Webster Longford Cup.<ref name=Elders>Template:Cite web</ref>

Longford Show

The annual Longford Show was first held in 1858 and is one of the longest running rural shows in Australia.<ref name=NationalMuseumOfAustralia>Template:Cite web</ref> Held in October, it attracts between 7000 and 8000 people. It includes equestrian events, poultry and dog shows, chopping and tree felling, sheep and fleeces, rides and games, as well as displays of artwork from local schools.<ref name=show>Template:Cite web</ref>

Longford motor racing circuit

From 1953 to 1968, two Australian Grand Prix, several Tasman Cup races and touring car and motorcycle championship were organized on the Template:Convert Longford Circuit.<ref name="longfordraces">Template:Cite web</ref>

Longford Golf Club

Longford has a popular golf course south of the town, with eleven holes, seven of which have alternate tees.<ref name=golf>Template:Cite web</ref>

Woodstock Lagoon Wildlife Sanctuary

Woodstock Lagoon Wildlife Sanctuary is a natural wetland area which is a nesting and breeding sanctuary for waterfowl. Its total area is around 160 ha.<ref name=theage /> Jointly owned by Dr Tatiana Petrovsky and brothers Bill and Jamie Cox, the area is now permanently protected under Conservation Covenant under the Protected Areas on Private Land program. Not only are waterfowl and swans provided with a habitat, but numerous other species, including endangered species like the green and gold frog, are thriving there.<ref name=landline>Template:Cite web</ref>

Notable residents

Born in Longford

Died in Longford

  • Tom Roberts, the Australian impressionist artist, is buried at the bluestone Anglican Church on the Illawarra Road<ref name=northernmidlands /><ref>^ Peter Jerrim (2007-01-17). "Anglican Parish of Longford-Perth" (pdf). Anglican Church of Australia Missionary Diocese of Tasmania. http://www.anglicantas.org.au/index.php?item=file&target=longford_perth_parish_profile. Retrieved 2009-12-27.</ref>
  • Catherine Smith (née Keane), born 19 April 1832 in Castlebar, County Mayo, Ireland, arrived in Van Diemen's Land in 1849. Died in Longford, 1925. Believed to be the last remaining Tasmanian convict of the transportation era at the time of her death.

See also

References

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