Public Transport | Planning Permit | Business | Property Sold Price
  
Ironbark Median Price
House$505,000
Unit$356,600
The House price is 15% lower than last year.
Surrounding suburbs
Bendigo$729,100
Golden Square$596,900
Long Gully$441,600
West Bendigo$723,300
Ironbark Median Rent
House$457
Unit$260
The House rent is 22% higher than last year.
Ironbark property sold price
A40-56 MARONG ROAD, Ironbark
Distance:133.1 km to CBD; 2.4 km to Bendigo Station [Transport]

Neighbour Photos
Map | Street view | Nearby property price
Planning History:
Registered as Victorian heritage
Last updated on - May 13, 1999
The story of quartz mining on Victoria Hill lies at the heart of Bendigo's historical status as the world's richest and deepest reefing field. Gold was discovered on Victoria Hill in 1854, and by early 1855 claims had been taken up over its entire extent. Shafts were first worked by windlass, whip or whim, and primitive crushing batteries were in operation. By 1861, Victoria Hill had yielded at least 1,200,000oz in gold.
One of the early claims on Victoria Hill was owned by Prussian immigrants, Christopher Ballerstedt and his son Theodore. In 1854, they bought a claim on the hill for ??80, to which they subsequently added other claims, and from the quartz veins (called spurs), worked both by shafts and a large open cut, obtained gold worth nearly ??200,000. Christopher Ballerstedt was dubbed 'Father of the Hill' and has been credited as the first to debunk the theory at that time prevalent on the Bendigo field, that the gold content of reefs would diminish at depth. As his shafts plunged below the 200-foot level, the quartz remained rich in gold. His success inspired others, and so led the way to Bendigo's later status as the world's deepest and richest goldfield.
The Ballerstedts built Bendigo's grandest mansion, Fortuna. Theodore continued to work Victoria Hill after his father's death, but in 1871, convinced that his claim was exhausted, he sold both mine and mansion to George Lansell for ??60,000. Lansell's mine on Victoria Hill was called the 180, and operated under his ownership until his death in 1906. The mine supplied the initial wealth that made Lansell Bendigo's 'Quartz King'. George Lansell was such a force in Bendigo's mining history that his death was cited as one of the reasons for the decline of Bendigo as a quartz mining centre,
The Victoria Hill Quartz Gold Mines are of historical, archaeological and scientific importance to the State of Victoria.
The Victoria Hill Quartz Gold Mines are historically significant as the symbolic heart of Bendigo's famous goldfield. The mines are linked to nineteenth-century individuals (Christopher Ballerstedt and George Lansell) who played prominent roles in the evolution of Bendigo. Both men's fortunes and their influence on Bendigo, originated from mining operations carried out on the hill.
The Victoria Hill Quartz Gold Mines are historically and scientifically important as characteristic examples of an important form of gold mining. Gold mining sites are of crucial importance for the pivotal role they have played since 1851 in the development of Victoria. As well as being a significant producer of Victoria's nineteenth century wealth, quartz mining, with its intensive reliance on machinery, played an important role in the development of Victorian manufacturing industry. The Victoria Hill Quartz Gold Mines are important as
Nearby Public Transport:
Stop nameTypeDistance
Victoria Hill Historic Mining Site/Marong RdBus86 meters
Marong Rd/Booth StBus185 meters
Calder Hwy/Booth StBus198 meters
Chum St/Booth StBus488 meters
Chum St/Booth StBus494 meters
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The planning permit data is from the public websites.

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