The citation for Bothwell in the Australian Register of The National Estate describes Bothwell as:
"... an agricultural settlement on the Clyde River, set in a modified landscape, surrounded by low naturally vegetated hills. Consistently it is a loose grid plan settlement with large lot sizes. Civic details include avenue plantings and Queens Square. Dense pine plantings occur en route to the showground. Important homesteads occur on the west side of the river. It has two village centres, with fine churches and cemeteries grouped about Queen's Square. The general character of the town is one of looseness, internal open spaces being important, with consistent architecture generally in good condition. The settlement is important for its formal layout which is emphasised by continuing civic consciousness in building and landscape."[3]
History
For many thousands of years before European colonisation, the Bothwell area was the home of the Mairremmener people, who migrated seasonally between the mountains and the coast.[4] Led by Tongerlongerter, they fiercely resisted the occupation of their territory, as part of what is known as the Black War.[5]
Bothwell traces its formal founding to 1822,[6] when several families of Scottish origin settled in the area that was to become the town.[7][8][9] It was named after Bothwell in Lanarkshire, Scotland.
It was laid out in 1824 by surveyor Thomas Scott,[3] with a more detailed plan designed in 1837 allocating space for a market place, school, police, magistrate and parsonage. The town extended as far east as the blocks on the east side of Kent Street and north to Alexander Street.[10] A further plan was drawn up in 1900, the town had by then extended further east to William Street and north to Elizabeth Street and the market place now named as Queen's Square. The school was granted a larger site in this plan, between Mary and Michael Streets, where it is located currently.[11]
The heritage registered[12][13] hotel at the corner of William and Patrick Streets, currently called The Castle Hotel, dates from 1829[14] and is the second oldest continuously licensed hotel in Tasmania.[15]
St Luke's Presbyterian, now Uniting, Church opened in 1831. It faces east and is prominently located on Market Place adjacent to Queen's Square, at the end of Alexander Street. It was used by both Anglicans and Presbyterians until the Anglican church, St Michael and All Angels, opened in 1889.[16]
At the first census of population in Tasmania, taken on 1 January 1842, Bothwell had a population of 947, comprising 672 males and 274 females.[18] In 1870, Bothwell had a population of 1300, in 1881 it was 1049[19] and in 1891 it was 1482.[20]
Bothwell was also the site of a radio telescope, built in the 1960s, in nearby Dennistoun, by one of the pioneers of radio astronomy, Grote Reber.
Golf
The first game of golf in Tasmania, and among the earliest games of golf in Australia, was played in Bothwell. The course at the Ratho property was until recently thought to be the oldest golf course in Australia, which was thought to have been built in the mid-1850s. Jane Williams, daughter of Ratho's first owner Alexander Reid,[7] wrote in 1890 that golf was first played in the area sometime before 1860:
"...it (golf) was introduced over 30 years ago by Mr. William Wood, brother of Mr. Dennistoun Wood, of Dennistoun, and that it flourished as long as the Scottish element prevailed in the Bothwell district, when through death and other changes golf ceased to be practised in Bothwell."[22]
Alexander Arthur Reid of Ratho, grandson of the above-mentioned Alexander Reid,[7] wrote in 1930 that his father, Alexander Reid Jr., penned a letter written in the early 1860s stating that he was starting a golf club in Bothwell with 15 or 16 members. Arthur Alexander Reid also mentioned that he remembered the "queer-shaped old clubs."[23]
The newly opened links at Ratho were reported in The Tasmanian Mail in August 1911:
"Mr and Mrs. Reid gave a golf afternoon on the newly laid-out Ratho links, at Bothwell, on Saturday, when a handicap mixed foursomes for trophies given by the host and hostess was played... The new course is a really excellent one, the turf being naturally suitable for golf, and the grass greens are all wonderfully good. Every hole has its difficulties, and the spoiling nature of the course adds to its attractiveness. The length of the course (9 holes) is 2,551 yards.[24]
Golf in Australia started at Grose Farm in Sydney, with the first reliably documented match played in 1839 by A.B. Spark.[25]
Bothwell is home to the Australian Golf Museum, housed in the sandstone former school house.
Bothwell Literary Society
Australia's first country-town literary society was established in Bothwell in 1834 as a debating society by the Scottish born minister Rev. James Garrett.[26] The society built a meeting place in 1837, the same year that Sir John Franklin became its patron. In this building the society established one of Australia's earliest public libraries.[27]John Mitchel wrote about the library in 1852, stating that:
"Bothwell has a very tolerable public library, such library as no village of similar population in Ireland had."[26]
Bothwell features several distinctive styles of architecture, including Georgian, Queen Anne Revival and Victorian. It has many buildings listed on the Tasmanian Heritage Register, Register of the National Estate and the National Trust, from stone cottages to churches.
Wentworth House
One of the larger houses is the two storey Georgian Wentworth House, located on Wentworth Street on the west side of the Clyde River. Construction, at a cost of £560 was started in 1830 by convict builders, for Captain, later Major, D'Arcy Wentworth, brother of explorer William Wentworth, and one of Bothwell's early police magistrates. The house was originally called Inverhall and was single storey.[29] The house was further added to by Major Charles Schaw, an assistant police magistrate in Bothwell, at a cost of £4000.[30] The citation in the Australian Register of the National Estate describes Wentworth as:
"A very unusual two storey Georgian house... Main north facade has off-centre portico with grouped casement windows flanked by pilasters to one side and a single window at level two to the other side. The east facade is possibly the most attractive, with three pairs of French doors with bracketed cornice and heavy 3 dormer window (with pilasters) above the eaves line. Central Decorative chimney. Fine garden and setting.[31]
St Luke's
St Luke's is the second oldest Presbyterian church in Australia, the oldest being the Ebenezer Church in the Hawkesbury region of New South Wales, which is also the oldest extant church building in Australia.[14] It is a sandstone Georgian style chapel, constructed between 1828–31 and designed by John Lee Archer.[32] It has a square, Norman style tower with a castellated parapet, lancet windows and a Gothic doorway which was restored by the National Trust in 1968.[16] Of particular interest are the carvings above the main doorway:
"Daniel Herbert, the genius convict stonemason-sculptor who carved the images on the sides of the bridge at Ross, is credited with creating these strange images which may depict a Celtic pagan god and goddess. Herbert was known for his droll sense of humour. If they are pagan it is amusing to note that Governor Arthur upon inspecting the church ordered the architect, John Lee Archer, to change the rounded windows because they were 'unchristian'."[29]
Nant Mill
The Nant property was established by Edward Nicholas of Nant, Monmouthshire, Wales, in 1821. The Nicholas family were among the earliest European settlers in Bothwell. The buildings on the property comprise a homestead, outbuildings, cottage and mill.
The heritage registered watermill[12] was built in 1857 and is powered by the waters of the Clyde River. It is a two-storey sandstone Georgian style building. There was an earlier mill on the property built in 1825, the only remnant of which is a brick barn adjacent to the 1857 building.[33] In 2007 a significant restoration and conversion to a whiskey distillery were undertaken by noted Tasmanian architectural firm Circa Morris-Nunn.[34][35]
Notable residents
In alphabetical order by surname.
John Frost chartist and convict, lived in Bothwell when he was assigned to W. Chester
William Weston 3rd Premier of Tasmania, lived in Bothwell for a time after his marriage to Ann Elphinstone, daughter of Captain William Clark of Bothwell
^ ab"Bothwell Historic Town". Australian Heritage Database. Australian Government Department of Agriculture Water and the Environment. Retrieved 17 January 2022.
^"Castle Hotel & Hall". Australian Heritage Database. Australian Government Department of Agriculture, Water and the Environment. Retrieved 22 January 2022.
^ ab"Bothwell". Sydney Morning Herald. Fairfax Media. 8 February 2004. Retrieved 25 January 2022.
^ ab"St Lukes Uniting Church". Australian Heritage Database. Australian Government Department of Agriculture, Water and the Environment. Retrieved 22 January 2022.
^Premier Postal History. "Post Office List". Premier Postal Auctions. Retrieved 16 June 2012.
^"HAMILTON". The Mercury. No. 6220. Tasmania, Australia. 20 May 1881. p. 3. Retrieved 26 January 2022.
^"The Census Returns". Tasmanian News. No. 3195. 28 April 1891. p. 3. Retrieved 26 January 2022.
^"Mitchels Cottage". Australian Heritage Database. Australian Government Department of Agriculture Water and the Environment. Retrieved 26 January 2022.
^Williams, Jane (28 July 1890). "GOLF IN TASMANIA". The Mercury. No. 6374. Retrieved 26 January 2022.
^Culliton, Harry (8 March 1930). "Golf in the Forties". The Australasian. No. 4235. Victoria, Australia. p. 29. Retrieved 26 January 2022.
^"GOLF". The Mercury. No. 12, 908. Tasmania, Australia. 8 August 1911. p. 2. Retrieved 26 January 2022.
^"Golf in Sydney 1839". Australian Golf Heritage. Australian Golf Heritage Society. Retrieved 26 January 2022.
^ abcRamsay, Mary. "Bothwell Literary Society". The Companion to Tasmanian History. University of Tasmania. Retrieved 26 January 2022.
^"Literary Society Library (Former)". Australian Heritage Database. Australian Government Department of Agriculture, Water and the Environment. Retrieved 26 January 2022.
^"Wentworth House". Australian Heritage Database. Australian Government Department of Agriculture, Water and the Environment. Retrieved 22 January 2022.
^Smith, Roy S. "Archer, John Lee (1791–1852)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Australian National University. Retrieved 22 January 2022.