The Village Settlements were
communes
A commune is an alternative term for an intentional community. Commune or comună or comune or other derivations may also refer to:
Administrative-territorial entities
* Commune (administrative division), a municipality or township
** Communes of ...
set up by the South Australian government under Part VII of the ''Crown Lands Amendment Act 1893'', a scheme intended to mitigate the effects of the depression that was affecting the Colony. It followed the New Zealand V''illage Settlements Act'' and similar schemes in Canada and New South Wales, and concurrently with Victoria. It followed the "
blockers" scheme espoused by
George W. Cotton.
Thirteen settlements were surveyed:
Lyrup,
Pyap,
Kingston
Kingston may refer to:
Places
* List of places called Kingston, including the six most populated:
** Kingston, Jamaica
** Kingston upon Hull, England
** City of Kingston, Victoria, Australia
** Kingston, Ontario, Canada
** Kingston upon Thames, ...
,
Waikerie
Waikerie ( ) is a rural town in the Riverland region of South Australia on the south bank of the Murray River. At the , Waikerie had a population of 2,684. The Sturt Highway passes to the south of the town at the top of the cliffs. There is a ca ...
,
Moorook,
Ramco,
Holder,
Murtho
Murtho is a locality in South Australia. It is north-east of Renmark and Paringa. It is bounded by the River Murray on its north and west sides and the Victorian border on the east.
Land around Murtho today is used for vineyards and orchards ...
,
New Residence,
Gillen,
New Era and
Charleston-on-Murray all on the River Murray,
Mount Remarkable
Mount Remarkable is a mountain in South Australia located in the Flinders Ranges about north of the centre of the capital city of Adelaide and immediately north-west of the town of Melrose, which was once named Mount Remarkable itself, and wh ...
in the
Mid North
The Mid North is a region of South Australia, north of the Adelaide Plains and south of the Far North and the outback. It is generally accepted to extend from Spencer Gulf east to the Barrier Highway, including the coastal plain, the souther ...
, and
Nangkita to the south of Adelaide.
Holder and Murtho were proclaimed as Village Settlements by May 1896, Lyrup, Pyap, Kingston, Waikerie, Moorook and Ramco followed.
The Village Settlement Aid Society was formed to give financial and other assistance to the "villagers". Its secretary was
Thomas Hyland Smeaton.
The settlements
Murtho
Some upstream (north) from Renmark, Murtho was better financed than the others, demanding £60 from families and £40 from singles as start-up capital. Its chairman was Henry Cordeaux ( –1902). Dubbed "gentleman farmers", the Murthoites were Utopian idealists rather than impoverished workers. Among those who lost substantial sums were John Napier Birks (1845–1929) and Walter Richard Birks (1847–1900), of Adelaide's prominent
Birks family
Dr. George Vause Birks ( 1815 – 31 January 1858) was a medical doctor who with his family emigrated to South Australia in 1853, and died there less than four years later. Their family was significant in the commercial life of the young city of A ...
. In 1897 some 60 or 70 acres were under irrigation, but the project was abandoned in 1899 after most settlers had left.
[ A major factor in the failure of Murtho was the expense and problems involved in pumping the water: the land allocated was some above the river level, necessitating an expensive and inefficient double-acting plunger pump. The settlers were incapable of the communistic spirit needed for the project to survive crop failures, and the Government-appointed manager (Samuel McIntosh) made only occasional contact with the settlers. Transportation of supplies and produce was hugely expensive, slow, intermittent and unreliable.
]
Lyrup
160 acres of Government land on the banks of the Murray was allocated to the cooperative on perpetual lease; 98 men, 40 married women and around 70 juveniles left Adelaide by train on 20 February 1894 for Morgan, thence to Lyrup by steamboat. The committee of trustees consisted of R. P. Bambrick (chairman), F. P. Shelley, S. J. Gallary, F. G. Godwin, and E. Dwyer. The Treasurer was J. Errey and the Secretary R. H. Lawrence (Lawrance?). In March 1895 there were 78 members and around 330 total, and the chairman was Ross. It benefited from its proximity to Renmark, and cooperation from Chaffey Brothers
William Benjamin Chaffey CMG (21 October 1856 – 4 June 1926) was a Canadian engineer and irrigation planner who with his older brother George Chaffey developed what became the Californian cities of Etiwanda, Ontario, and Upland in the Uni ...
' settlers.
Pyap
The next settlement downstream from Lyrup, about 3 miles west of Loxton, it started out in March 1894 with 94 members on and a total population of 388. The founding chairman was A. H. Brocklehurst and the secretary J. W. Rawnsley; a year later there were 75 and a total population of around 400.
New Residence
The next settlement downstream (about 10 miles north!) from Pyap, with 14 members and population of 75 on . The settlement had failed by 1896 and vacated in 1897. It was taken over by a private lessee.[
]
Moorook
The next settlement downstream (about 10 miles north) from New Residence. In 1896 they had 20 members and a total population of 100.
Kingston
This settlement had the advantage of pre-existing buildings from Thurk sheep station. Chairman was J. Weatherall and D. Holberton the secretary. There were 21 married members and a total population 100, and suffered from insufficient finance.[
]
Holder
Started in March 1894 with 71 members; a year later there were 53 and a population of around 250 on an area of . This settlement also had the advantage of a substantial building already from a previous sheep station. In May 1894 the chairman was S. Dyke and the secretary H. Crocker. In 1895? the chairman was C. Anderson and the secretary W. Barker. In 1901 it was allowed to convert from a commune to individual holdings.[
]
Waikerie
On 19 February 1894, an advance party of twenty left for the Waikeri (as it was then spelled) settlement, for which 5,200 acres had been surveyed. Sir E. T. Smith helped financially.
Chairman was a Mr. Malcolm, secretary J. Rowe. The initial settlers consisted of 65 men, 85 women and around 50 children. Fourteen of the original 65 members (mostly single men) split from the party to found Ramco and a year later there were 34 members in a population of 154.
Ramco
An area of 3,400 acres settled by 14 members, mostly single men, who left Waikerie settlement, and in mid-1894 were given a second chance at Ramco, about downstream (west) of Waikerie. Its first chairmen were successively George Malcolm, Edward Quinn; Harry Blizard the secretary.
Charleston
Around upstream from Gillen, the first settler was a Mr. Morgan who lived in a steamer moored in the river. It appears that this never eventuated as a village settlement.
*Note this location, named for D. M. Charleston, MP, MLC (1891-1901) has no relation to the Adelaide Hills town of Charleston, named for its founder, Charles Dunn.
Gillen
The only settlement on the north banks of the Murray, around upstream from New Era, this settlement of 60 men and their families was subject to an early split; the original trustees and chairman leaving. George Mitchell was the new chairman. This settlement came in for most criticism in an 1895 survey of sanitary arrangements. Named for Peter Paul Gillen
Peter Paul Gillen (7 July 1858 – 22 September 1896) was a storekeeper and politician and an activist for Aboriginal rights within Australia in the colonial days of South Australia. He studied, recorded and documented many ancient Aboriginal cer ...
MHA, Commissioner for Crown Lands and champion of the Village Settlement scheme, it was one of the first to fail.[ "It was an example of communism in its worst phase, and the experiment at Gillen resulted in a dead loss to the State of 3,580 pounds."
]
New Era
upstream from Morgan
Morgan may refer to:
Arts and entertainment
* ''Morgan – A Suitable Case for Treatment'', also called ''Morgan!'', a 1966 comedy film
* ''Morgan'' (2012 film), an American drama
* ''Morgan'' (2016 film), an American science fiction thriller
* ...
was settled by 25 men, mostly married, many fishermen from Port Adelaide, and about 40 children on . First chairman was G. Ashby, followed by a Mr. Carr. The venture failed in 1896 and the land taken over by a private company. The Cadell area now includes the land of New Era.
Mount Remarkable
around from Melrose Melrose may refer to:
Places
United Kingdom
* Melrose, Scottish Borders, a town in the Scottish Borders, Scotland
** Melrose Abbey, ruined monastery
** Melrose RFC, rugby club
Australia
* Melrose, Queensland, a locality in the South Burnett R ...
, on the western side of the Wilmington road, was settled by a party led by J. W. Hack.
Nangkita
An area of , of which is swamp, nestled between two hills, about 5 km east of Mount Compass. Its chairman of trustees was J. Mossop and McKinlay the secretary. There were 25 men, 16 women and 43 children, all from Port Adelaide, teetotalers, and known to each other. Some success was achieved in growing tobacco and flax but food crops were attacked by grubs. Government resumed the lease in 1898.
Into the twentieth century
*"Map #" refers to the River Murray sequence of maps in ''South Australian Waters'', a publication of the Boating Industry Association of South Australia, which follows the path of the Murray, so is a useful index of sequence up the river (Tailem Bend is 30, Morgan 71, Renmark 111, roughly 5 km per page).
References
{{authority control
History of South Australia
Towns in South Australia
Settlement schemes in Australia