Lottah
Lottah is a small town in Northeastern Tasmania. It lies north of the Tasman Highway; the closest settlement is Pyengana and the closest major town is St Helens. Lottah falls within the Break O'Day Council administrative region.
Tin was discovered in Lottah in about 1875.[1] The Anchor Mine became operational in 1880, and the town of Lottah grew up around the mine. At its peak, it had several hundred residents, and community facilities included a school, two hotels, two churches, a bakery, and a football club.[2] Lottah supported a small Chinese community, and one of its more notable residents was Senator Thomas Bakhap, who had a Chinese stepfather and worked as an interpreter.[3] People born in Lottah during its heyday include architecture professor Brian Lewis and RAAF officer Alan Charlesworth.[4] The Anchor Mine closed in 1950, at which point the town's population had been in decline for several decades.[2]
References
- ^ Goulds Country, TAS, Aussie Towns.
- ^ a b Lottah: Once-thriving mining town a virtual ghost town in Tasmania's north east, ABC Radio Hobart, 16 March 2016. Retrieved 19 October 2017.
- ^ BAKHAP, THOMAS JEROME KINGSTON (1866–1923), The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate
- ^ Charlesworth, Alan Moorehouse (1903–1978) at Australian Dictionary of Biography. Retrieved on 19 October 2017.
Further reading
- Richardson, Garry (2016), Lottah and the Anchor: the History of a Tin Mine and a Dependent Town, Forty South Publishing