Kalgoorlie, Western Australia
From Open Encyclopedia
Image:Kalgoorlie sat.gif Image:Kalgoorlie location map in Western Australia.PNG Image:WestAusMap-doton-Kalgoorlie.png
Kalgoorlie (30°45′S 121°27′E) is a large Western Australian mining town located about 600 km east of Perth. Its current approximate population is 35,000. The name Kalgoorlie is derived from the local Aboriginal expression Karlkurla (pronounced gull-gull-la), meaning "place of the silky pears".
In June 1893, prospectors Patrick (Paddy) Hannan, Tom Flanagan, and Dan O'Shea were travelling to Mt Youle when one of their horses cast a shoe. During the resultant halt in their journey, the men noticed signs of gold in the area, and decided to stay put. On June 17, 1893, Hannan filed a Reward Claim, leading to hundreds of men swarming to the area in search of gold and Kalgoorlie was born. The mining of gold, along with other metals such as nickel, has been a major industry in Kalgoorlie ever since. The concentrated area of large gold mines surrounding the original Hannan find is often referred to as the Golden Mile, and is considered by some to be the richest square mile of earth on the planet. The town's population about 30,000 people in 1903. In 1917, a standard gauge railway line was completed, connecting Kalgoorlie to the city of Port Augusta, South Australia, across 2000 km of desert.
Places, famous or infamous, that Kalgoorlie is noted for include its water pipeline, designed by C. Y. O'Connor, which brings in fresh water from Mundaring Weir near Perth; its Hay Street brothels (the street itself was apparently named after Hay Street, Perth); its two-up school; the goldfields railway loopline; the Kalgoorlie Town Hall; the Paddy Hannan statue/drinking fountain; the Super Pit; and Mt Charlotte lookout. Its main street is Hannan Street, named after the town's founder.
The town of Kalgoorlie and the shire of Boulder amalgamated on February 1, 1989 to become the city of Kalgoorlie-Boulder. It is the largest inland city in Western Australia.
For eastward train travellers, on the trans-continental 'Indian Pacific' service, Kalgoorlie is the last town encountered for hundreds of kilometres before entering the vast expanse of the Nullarbor Plain. The Prospector train run by Transwa provides daily services to Perth.
Notable people from Kalgoorlie
- Matt Birney, Western Australia's Liberal Opposition leader
- John Cornell, actor and movie producer
- Walter Lindrum, Australian world champion professional billiards player
- Barry Marshall, physician and 2005 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine winner
- Kevin Bloody Wilson, singer and comedian
- Dean Kemp, premiership-winning Aussie Rules footballer
- Tim Rogers, singer/songwriter
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See also
| Transwa Prospector | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bonnie Vale | ↔ | Kalgoorlie | ||
| Indian Pacific | ||||
| East Perth | ↔ | Kalgoorlie | ↔ | Port Augusta |


