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==History== ===Indigenous history and European settlement=== [[File:Bendigo Creek ST Gill.jpg|thumb|[[Bendigo Creek]], named after a local shepherd and amateur boxer who, in turn, earned the sobriquet because his fighting style resembled that of English bare-knuckle champion [[William Thompson (boxer)|William Abednego "Bendigo" Thompson]]]] The traditional owners of the [[Mount Alexander]] area, traditionally named Leanganook, that includes [[City of Greater Bendigo|Greater Bendigo]], are the [[Dja Dja Wurrung]] (Djaara) people. They exploited the rich local hunting grounds from which they were displaced by the arrival by [[History of Australia (1788β1850)|white settlers]], who established the first of many vast sheep runs in 1837. The Dja Dja Wurrung peoples experienced two waves of settlement and dispossession: from the south from 1837 and from the north from 1845.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Clark|first=Ian D.|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41539940|title=Scars in the landscape : a register of massacre sites in western Victoria, 1803-1859|date=1995|publisher=Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies|isbn=0-85575-281-5|location=Canberra|oclc=41539940}}</ref> The marked decrease in Dja Dja Wurrung population was also due to the arrival of non-indigenous animals; they use their noses to "root up" the nutritious [[Microseris scapigera|moon-nar tuber]] (yam daisy); after just a year it was noticed the plant was becoming scarce.<ref>Beth Gott, "Murnong β Microseris scapigera: a study of a staple food of Victorian Aborigines", ''Australian Aboriginal Studies'', no. 2, 1983, pp. 12, 14.</ref> Squatters in the area included: Donald Campbell at Bullock Creek in [[Ravenswood, Victoria|Ravenswood]]; J. and R. Bakewell to the north of Bendigo; Heap and Gryce to the north-west; Archibald McDougall to the west; Joseph Raleigh and James Robinson along the [[Campaspe River]] to the south; and Thomas, Jones and William Barnett to the east.<ref>The Squatters' directory : Containing a list of all the occupants of crown lands in the intermediate and unsettled districts of Port Phillip ... compiled from the Government Gazette ... (1849). Melbourne: Edward Wilson.</ref><ref>{{Citation | author1=Billis, R. V. (Ralph Vincent) | author2=Kenyon, A. S. (Alfred Stephen), 1867-1943 | contributor-last=Strachan|contributor-first=H. M.|contribution=Foreword| title=Pastoral pioneers of Port Phillip | date=1932 | publisher=Macmillan & Company Ltd. | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/18646346 | access-date=26 June 2020}}</ref> The Ravenswood "Mount Alexander North run", occupied from c. 1840 by Donald Campbell, was acquired by brothers Stewart and Robert Gibson in 1848, with Frederick Fenton later replacing one of the Gibson brothers. After the discovery of gold in 1851, Fenton sold provisions to the miners and agisted their horses. Becoming the sole owner of the Ravenswood run in 1857, Fenton built its substantial homestead.<ref>{{Cite web|title=The Bendigo Independent (Vic. : 1891 - 1918) - 10 Apr 1917 - p2|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-page24429707|access-date=2020-06-26|website=Trove|language=en}}</ref> Gold was officially discovered on Bendigo Creek at the north-eastern boundary of the Ravenswood run,<ref name=":0a">{{cite news |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article88546644 |title=THE BENDIGO ADVERTISER |newspaper=[[Bendigo Advertiser]] |volume=XXXV |issue=10,156 |location=Victoria, Australia |date=21 March 1888 |access-date=26 June 2020 |page=2 |via=National Library of Australia}}</ref> earlier known as the Mount Alexander North run, in October 1851. The creek had been named "Bendigo Creek" after a local shepherd and employee of the Mount Alexander North run nicknamed for the English bare-knuckle prizefighter [[William Thompson (boxer)|William Abednego "Bendigo" Thompson]]. The area was transformed in less than a year as tens of thousands of people arrived during the great gold rush in 1852. Widespread gold mining caused environmental devastation and permanent damage in the district, decimating and displacing the Dja Dja Wurrung<ref name=":0b">{{Cite book |last1=Lawrence |first1=Susan |title=Sludge : disaster on Victoria's goldfield |last2=Davies |first2=Peter |publisher=La Trobe University Press in conjunction with Black Inc |year=2019 |isbn=9781760641108 |edition=1st |location=Carlton, Victoria |oclc=1101283189}}</ref> and destroying the infrastructure they created over generations to maximise seasonal drainage patterns; the channels and weirs they built out of timber stakes, to slow receding summer flows, were wrecked; water holes where the people gathered in smaller groups during periods of scarce rainfall and from which they transported water in skin bags when moving, were muddied, polluted and drained; the soaks they had dug between banks into sandy sediment to tap into the water table were likewise obliterated. Some of their waterholes in rock platforms of creeks that they found or enlarged, then covered with slabs to protect them from animals, may still remain, unidentified.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Chen |first=Lovell |url=http://worldcat.org/oclc/1228917606 |title=Thematic environmental history : final report June 2013 |date=2013 |publisher=Lovell Chen |oclc=1228917606}}</ref><ref name=":0b" /><ref>{{Cite book |last=Morrison |first=Edgar |title=The Loddon Aborigines : tales of old Jim Crow |year=1981 |oclc=271522680}}</ref> === Gold mining boom === {{Further|Victorian gold rush}} [[File:Charing Cross Bendigo 1853.jpg|thumb|left|Bendigo, 1853]] Gold was officially discovered in the area in October 1851,<ref name=":0a" /> just after the other significant goldfields in neighbouring [[Castlemaine, Victoria|Castlemaine]], from where many diggers migrated, bringing the total population to 40,000 in less than a year. Many of these diggers were Chinese and their descendants still live in the region. [[File:Deep Gully Mine Bendigo.jpg|thumb|upright|Deep Gully Mine, 1857]] During 1852, under the direction of the [[Surveyor General of Victoria]], [[Robert Hoddle]], William Swan Urquhart was making a general survey of Mount Alexander and the surrounding ranges and the goldfields. He fixed the site of the township as "Sandhurst". On 13 July 1852, Hoddle passed on to Urquhart the request of Lieutenant-Governor La Trobe for a plan of the Mount Alexander gold workings, and his order that he mark out a reserve at the junction of Golden Gully with Bendigo Creek, and the camp on the west side of the creek below the junction. In late August La Trobe wanted him to report urgently on the best reserves for agriculture in the district. By 26 November he had mapped Bendigo Creek and Myers Creek and his survey of the [[Bendigo Valley]] and environs marked township reserves at Bullock Creek, Ravenswood and Happy Jack where settlement was already taking place. His plan ''General Survey of the Bendigo Goldfields showing the proposed reserves for townships. Drawn by W. S. Urquhart, Melbourne, November 1852'' recommended sites for national schools, churches, markets and other public purposes reserved from sale.<ref>{{Cite web|last=James|first=Ken|date=2009|title=The surveying career of William Swan Urquhart, 1845-1864 {{!}} PROV|url=https://prov.vic.gov.au/explore-collection/provenance-journal/provenance-2009/surveying-career-william-swan-urquhart-1845#_ednref22|access-date=2020-06-25|website=Provenance: The Journal of Public Record Office Victoria, issue no. 8, 2009. ISSN 1832-2522}}</ref> In 1853, a large protest called the [[Anti-Gold Licence Association|Red Ribbon Rebellion]] was held over the cost of the licence fee for prospectors, though it passed peacefully due to good diplomacy by police and miners' leaders. From being a tent city, the boomtown grew rapidly into a major urban centre with many grand public buildings. The municipality became a borough in 1863, officially known as [[Sandhurst (Colony of Victoria, Australia)|Sandhurst]] until 1891, but always unofficially as Bendigo. The railway had reached Bendigo by 1862, stimulating rapid growth, with flour mills, woollen mills, tanneries, quarries, foundries, [[eucalyptus oil]] production, food production industries and timber cutting. When the alluvial gold ran out, extraction of quartz-based gold continued in [[Shaft mining|deep shafts]] using industrial systems. [[Selection (Australian history)|Selection]] in the future [[county of Bendigo]] (created in 1869) commenced under the Land Act of 1865, with most settlement occurring around Sandhurst and [[Eaglehawk, Victoria|Eaglehawk]]. === Decline and regeneration === [[File:Sandhurst in 1884.jpg|thumb|left|Bendigo from Camp Hill, 1886]] Bendigo was declared a city in 1871. Rapid population growth brought a water shortage, partially solved with a new viaduct that harnessed the [[Coliban River]]. The architect [[William Charles Vahland (architect)|William Charles Vahland]] (1828β1915) left an important mark on Bendigo during this period. He is credited with the popular cottage design known as a Vahland House. The cottage design that has vastly been customised shares a common theme of a central door, a sash window either side, a central hallway that runs the entire length of the house and [[verandah]]s ordained in iron lace, a style that was soon adopted across the state of Victoria. Vahland also designed more than 80 buildings, including the [[Alexandra Fountain]], arguably the most prominent monument in Bendigo, with its granite dolphins, unicorns, nymphs and allegorical figures. A [[Trams in Bendigo|tram network]] was established by 1890, some of which is still in operation as a tourism service currently. [[File:Bendigo Streetscape.jpg|thumb|[[Alexandra Fountain]] in [[Charing Cross (Bendigo)|Charing Cross]], c. 1920s, now listed along with the surrounding buildings on the [[Victorian Heritage Register]]]] [[File:A Chinese woman wearing traditional qipao standing in the bushland with two borzoi dogs in the bushland of Bendigo, Victoria, Australia, 1930.png|thumb|A [[Chinese Australians|Chinese Australian]] woman wearing traditional [[Cheongsam|qipao]] standing in the bushland with two [[borzoi]] dogs in the bushland of Bendigo, Victoria, Australia, 1930s]] After a temporary drop in population, renewed growth occurred from the 1930s as the city consolidated as a manufacturing and regional service centre, though gold mining continues.{{citation needed|date=November 2022}} Recent growth has been most heavily concentrated in areas such as Epsom, Kangaroo Flat, Strathdale and Strathfieldsaye.{{citation needed|date=November 2022}} On 28 March 2013, the [[Dja Dja Wurrung]] people were formally recognised as the [[traditional owner]]s for part of Central Victoria, including the land on which the City of Greater Bendigo sits. In 1994, under municipal reforms of Victoria's [[Jeff Kennett|Kennett government]], the City of Bendigo was abolished and merged with the Borough of Eaglehawk, the Huntly and Strathfieldsaye shires, and the Rural City of Marong to form the larger City of Greater Bendigo. The population of the city increased from around 78,000 in 1991 to about 100,617 in 2012. Bendigo is currently one of the fastest-growing regional centres in Victoria.<ref name="forecast.id.com.au" />
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