Everything about Eucla totally explained
Eucla is the easternmost locality in
Western Australia, located in the
Goldfields-Esperance region of
Western Australia along the
Eyre Highway, approximately west of the
South Australian border.
It is the only location on the Eyre Highway that has a direct view of the
Great Australian Bight due to its position immediately next to the
Eucla Pass - where the highway moves out and above the
basin known as
Roe Plains that occurs between the Madura and Eucla passes.
History
The name Eucla is believed to originate from an
Aboriginal word "Yinculyer" which one source gives as referring to the rising of the planet
Venus. It was first used by Europeans for the area at some point before 1867.
In 1841,
Edward John Eyre became the first explorer to visit the area. In 1867, the president of the Marine Board of South Australia discovered a port at Eucla, and in 1870,
John Forrest camped at the location for nearly two weeks. In 1873, land was taken up at Moopina Station near the present townsite, and work commenced on a
telegraph line from
Albany to
Adelaide. Land was set aside at Eucla for the establishment of a manual repeater station, and when the telegraph line opened in 1877, Eucla was one of the most important telegraph stations on the line. The station was important as a conversion point because South Australia and Victoria used
American Morse code (locally known as the Victorian alphabet) while Western Australia used the
international Morse code that's familiar today. A jetty and tram line were also constructed for offloading supplies brought in by sea. The town was proclaimed a township and gazetted in 1885, and reached its peak in the 1920s, prior to the construction of a new telegraph line further north alongside the
Trans-Australian Railway in 1929.
In the 1890s a
rabbit plague passed through the area and ate much of the
Delisser Sandhills'
dune vegetation, thus destabilising the dune system and causing large sand drifts to encroach on the townsite. The original town was abandoned, and a new townsite established about 5 km to the east and higher up on the escarpment. The ruins of the telegraph station still stand amongst the dunes, and are a local tourist attraction.
Many of the pioneer farmers and telegraph operators were buried at Eucla, but as the sand dunes encroached onto their graves, some of the headstones and plaques were removed and can now be seen at the museum at Eucla.
In 1971, world-wide media publicity came to the town after reports and photographs emerged of a half-naked blonde girl who had gone wild and lived and ran with the kangaroos, who came to be known as the "
Nullarbor Nymph". The story subsequently turned out to be a hoax cooked up by the residents of the tiny settlement.
Present day
Eucla has a population of about 50 people, and is the largest stopping point between
Norseman and
Ceduna for travellers and trucks along the
Eyre Highway. It has a hotel and restaurant, a golf club (7km to the north), a museum dedicated to the Old Telegraph Station, and a meteorological station. These together with fishing are the localities major activities. There is a Travellers Cross that (despite its name) commemorates deceased local people.
Time zone
Eucla and the surrounding area, notably
Mundrabilla and
Madura, use the Central Western Time Zone of (in summer, UT+9:45). Although it has no official sanction, it's universally observed in this area, stopping just to the east of
Caiguna.
Transport
Eucla is a major stop-off point along the
Eyre Highway.
In October 2005, Greyhound Australia announced the closure of their Nullarbor service due to rising fuel prices and declining passenger numbers.
Climate
Eucla's climate is dry and usually mild, though very hot days can occur accompanied by hot northerly winds from the
Great Victoria Desert. Average maximum temperatures vary from 25-26°C from December to March, to 18°C in July. The average annual rainfall of 267 mm is evenly spread through the year, with monthly totals ranging from 14 mm in January to 31 mm in May. The highest temperature was 47.9°C (118.2 °F) on
3 January 1979.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Eucla'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://eucla__western_australia.totallyexplained.com">Eucla, Western Australia Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |