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Kids Matter #2 Traditional Cache

This cache has been archived.

Bunjil: Cache Archived
Unfortunately, steps have not been taken to address the issue/s associated with this placement, as per the maintenance expectations in the Guidelines.

As explained in previous logs, the cache is now being de-listed (Archived) as abandoned. If there are components or remnants of the cache, please recover them as we don't want to litter our environment with Georubbish.

If you wish to contact a Reviewer regarding this cache, please send an email via the profile - Bunjil, and quote the Cache Name and GC Identification Code.

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Hidden : 6/9/2015
Difficulty:
1 out of 5
Terrain:
2 out of 5

Size: Size:   small (small)

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Geocache Description:

You will be looking for a screw top fruit container a little distance away from the bridge itself as this area is quite popular with river users and locals. We apologise for the area being quite littered with rubbish and camping remnants, hopefully you can see past this to view the beauty of the bridge and river.


Kids Matter is a program ran at the local school of which we do some hands-on activities. We were the second group that were lucky enough to experience geocaching with one of our teachers over the past 12 months, it's been super fun finding nearby caches and adding to the number of caches available around Nagambie by hiding our own.

Chinamans Bridge
Close to a significant icon in the Nagambie area, Chinamans Bridge is an extensive timber bridge which spans the Goulburn River. It is believed to have been constructed in 1891 and at the time was known as Kerris Bridge.  The bridge included a lift span to enable sawmill and recreation steamers to continue to utilise the Goulburn River. The Nagambie Sawmill steamer passed through the bridge six times a week during the 1890s. Chinamans bridge originally carried the Nagambie-Heathcote Road across the Goulburn River, however the road has now been re-aligned to be carried over the river by a new bridge nearby. Chinamans Bridge was given its name because the Nagambie-Heathcote Road, once known as Chinamans Road, was in an area populated by Chinese market gardeners up until 1916. Chinamans Bridge is a timber girder bridge with hand hewn squared timber stringers strutted to the piers and timber corbels and deck. The arrangement of spans supports the view that the bridge at one time incorporated a lift span to provide for the passage of river traffic, however only the timber fenders remain. The drawbridge span was replaced, around 1940, with a steel span.

Why is it significant?
Chinamans Bridge, Nagambie is of architectural importance as one of the earliest completely timber road bridges in Victoria. Although it has lost much of its mechanism, the bridge is a rare surviving example of a bridge which included a vertical lift span. Chinamans Bridge is of historical importance for its associations with the expansion of Victoria's infrastructure in the 1890s and for its role in the development of transport systems. It is especially associated with the growth of the township of Nagambie and is an indication of the district's prosperous sawmilling industry during the 1890s. Chinamans Bridge is of historical importance as a reminder of the steam boat era in Victoria during the 1890s, when rivers were still used in preference to roads for recreational and commercial purposes.

Information sourced from: http://vhd.heritage.vic.gov.au/places/result_detail/869?print=true

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