Yea 3717

Yea 3717

Yea is a town of about 1,000 people 77 km. north-north-east of Melbourne, centrally located in the former Yea shire (1873-1994). It dominated the shire in terms of population, as the other villages or localities of which there were more than twelve, at no time have had over 200 persons, except Molesworth and district (212, 1921).

The first settlers in the Yea district were two prominent pre-gold rush personalities of Port Phillip: Peter Snodgrass had a licensed run, Murrindindi, south of Yea (1837) and John Cotton had Doongallook, west of Yea (1843). Snodgrass married Cotton's daughter in 1846 and took over Doongallook in 1853 in joint ownership with Cotton's son.

The township is on the Yea River where it is joined by several creeks. By 1855 there were a few buildings there, known as the Muddy Creek Settlement. Muddy Creek flows northwards from the Murrindindi direction. A government surveyor laid out a township, and it is thought that the surveyor, who was the guest of the Killingsworth station to the north-east, adopted the suggestion by the wife of Killingsworth's owner that the township be named after Colonel Lacy Yea, a Crimean War hero. Yea had been killed at Crimea five months before, and had been the commanding officer of the Victorian Surveyor-General, Andrew Clarke, in England. The first sale of town lots was in 1856.

Yea was on one of the routes form Melbourne to the Upper Goulburn goldfields, making it a convenient supply town. The surrounding area was predominantly pastoral. In 1859 a primary school was begun by the Anglican and Presbyterian churches, moving to a new government building in 1877. In 1869 the Yea District Roads Board was created and the shire was proclaimed on 28 November, 1873.

The 1880s saw a number of improvement come to Yea. A branch railway line from Seymour was opened in 1883, traversing some difficult country involving several cuttings and over twenty bridges. Work was begun on water supply and sanitation. Additional hotels and Purcells new store were opened. (Purcells has remained a traditional country store despite twentieth-century self-service retailing, and is on the Victorian Heritage register.) Bowling, cricket, football and rifle clubs were formed along with the Yea Mutual Improvement Society and library. In the 1890s Yea promoted its tourism potential by publishing scenic photographs for railway carriages and waiting rooms and by releasing trout in the King Parrot Creek.

In 1908 rural water-storage projects were being planned, and a proposal west of Yea at Trawool would have resulted in the inundation of Yea township. The Council persuaded the Government to choose Eildon, to the east. Electricity was connected to Yea in 1922, improved in 1926 and integrated with the State grid in 1944. In 1928 Yea won the Victorian Ideal Town Award. Being at the confluence of a number of streams the township is flood-prone, and severe floods occurred in 1934 and 1973. Flood damage to the shire's road and bridges has also been severe. The postwar years saw the opening of the town's hospital (1947), and the high school and the swimming pool (1956). A new civic centre, to replace the shire shall, was opened in 1963.

South-east of Yea is the Murrindindi forest and elsewhere there is some open woodland. A bushfire caused extensive loss in 1969, including the destruction of the Killingsworth homestead (c.1848). The railway closed in 1979. The township has maintained a population of around 1,000 persons since 1911 and has steadily added facilities for inhabitants and travellers. In addition to those already mentioned there is a showgrounds, golf course, tennis courts, indoor recreation centre, a Catholic primary school, two motels, four hotels, caravan park and an aged persons' hostel.

The Yea shire had 2,600 people in 1911. There were numerous small settlements, nearly all with a school at some time and mostly opened between 1870 and 1890. By 1916, however, eight small schools had closed (including Doogalook, Murrindindi and Murrindindi West), leaving about eight others in the shire. Between 1907 and 1928 the shire's boundaries were diminished in the directions of Healesville and Alexandra (twice) and enlarged in the direction of Seymour shire. Despite all these events the shire's population remained at about 2,600 from 1911 to 1961.

Local dairying activities have lessened. In 1994, the year of its amalgamation into Murrindindi shire, Yea shire had 36,000 meat cattle and 1,200 milk cattle. Sheep and fat lambs, however, were more numerous at 108,000. Of the 71,000 ha. of farm land 40,000 ha. were sown pasture. The total farm land was 51% of the shire's area of 139,232 ha. The Murrindindi forest, partly in Yea shire, had about 16,000 ha. available for timber production, and some of its output is milled at Yea. In the south of the former shire, below Glenburn, is the Kinglake National Park (10,300 ha.), and the adjoining Yea River Regional Park (200 ha.).

The southern part of the former shire is about 50 km. from Melbourne and shared the Kinglake locality with Eltham and Healesville shires. It is within acceptable commuting distance of Melbourne, The population of the former shire increased by 86% between 1961 and 1991.

On 18 November, 1994, Yea shire was united with Alexandra shire and parts of Whittlesea city and Eltham, Euroa and Healesville shires to form Murrindindi shire . In addition to Yea township the former shire included the localities of Caveat, Cheviot, Dropmore, Flowerdale, Ghin Ghin, Glenburn, Highlands, Homewood, Limestone, Molesworth, Murrindindi and Woodbourne.

The census populations of Yea township have been 117 (1861), 577 (1891), 1,112 (1911), 954 (1947) and 995 (1991). For the former shire they were 2,603 (1911), 2,620(1966) and 4,744 (1991).
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