Tamworth

Tamworth,,New,South,Wales,,Australia,-,Feb,12,,2023:,Historical

Tamworth. Whether you call it the Country Music Capital of Australia, the National Equine Capital of Australia, or Australia’s First City of Lights, there’s no denying that it is a fascinating place. Most famous for its Country Music Festival, the second biggest country music festival in the world, it nevertheless a ttracts visitors from around the world to its world class Australian Equine and Livestock Events Centre, the biggest of its kind in the southern hemisphere. 

Tamworth was also the first city in the southern hemisphere to use electric street lighting, hence its “First City of Lights” tag. We first visited Tamworth on the way home from our Top End trip in 2009 and although we arrived late in the day and had only one night’s stay, we were impressed by the little we did see and promised ourselves that we’d return one day. Well, “one day” turned out to be only a few months later and we set off for a long weekend in this amazing city.

The Songmakers Tribute

It was a little after lunch time on a cool but sunny October day when we arrived at the Austin Tourist Park ([star][star][star][star]) in Tamworth. With so much to see and do here we didn’t waste any time getting our camp set up and then made our way to the Tourist Information Centre for some brochures.

Behind the Information Centre is a path bordered by large stones. These stones each have plaques set into them for the Songmakers Tribute. Started in 1982, the tribute is presented annually to a song writer who has made a lasting and important contribution to song writing. Often overlooked in the guide books, it’s fun finding the names of some of Australia’s country music legends mixed in with more than a few names we’d never heard of.

Songmaker Awards

Oxley Lookout

Inside the Information Centre we learned that the best place, in fact the only place, to literally see ALL of Tamworth, is from the Oxley Lookout. Named for the explorer John Oxley, who passed through this region in 1818, the lookout is located on a plateau some 591 metres (1940 feet) above sea level and we made the trek to the top in a bitingly cold wind. The lookout is set in a bushland reserve with plenty of picnic facilities but it was the view that caught our attention. What a magnificent panorama stretched out before us! It was truly spectacular and it almost made me forget how cold I was. Almost. 

View from the Oxley Lookout

The Lonely Planet review for the Oxley Lookout suggests that you grab a bottle of wine, the one you love (anyone will do!), and head to the lookout to watch the sun go down over the Liverpool Ranges. Apparently it’s the best seat in the house and I certainly wouldn’t have said no to their suggestion if it hadn’t been so cold. But the substantial breeze (howling gale was more like it!) had a wind chill factor that made Antarctica a garden spot! And so we made the trek back down to the tourist park and settled in for a quiet dinner and our “first night” ritual of a bottle of Two Tails bubbly.

There’s a lot to see in Tamworth

Saturday dawned sunny and bright, if a little cool, after a night that saw the temperature plummet to around a chilly 2°C (35.6°F). I shivered through my shower muttering things like“Whose idea was this, anyway!”, but thankfully, the wind had died down and the temperature was climbing with the sun.

First night bubbly with Two Tails

The Big Golden Guitar in Tamworth

Golden Guitar Complex

One of the first places we visited this day was the Big Golden Guitar, by far the biggest attraction in the country music realm. A 12 metre (40 feet) high replica of the famous trophy presented to the winners of the Country Music Awards each year in January, it is a marvellous tribute to Tamworth’s country music heritage. We’d made a brief stop here during our previous “one night stand” and now I wanted to see more. Inside the Golden Guitar Complex is the Roll of Honour, a complete list of Golden Guitar winners since the awards began in 1973, and the Gallery of Stars Wax Museum covering all of Australia’s   country music stars from pioneers like Tex Morton and Smoky Dawson to the legendary Slim Dusty and today’s stars such as Lee Kernaghan and Beccy Cole. Each star was represented by a life-like wax figure in individual settings, and a mini-biography and I happily spent a good deal of time wandering around and reading about my favourite singers.

Bicentennial Park, Tamworth

Leaving the complex, we drove into town to Bicentennial Park, a brilliant expanse of green grass and ponds that are home to hundreds of ducks; a very peaceful and relaxing space in the centre of town. At the southern end of the park is the memorial to the Light Horse Brigade of World War I. A magnificent statue of a Waler horse, sculpted by Newcastle sculptor Tanya Bartlett, is a fitting tribute to those men of the ANZAC corps who served in the Boer, Sudan, and First World Wars. We wandered through the park watching families and children at play, fed the ducks some bread (I  began to feel a bit like the Pied Piper when they started following us),and succeeded in avoiding being run down by hordes of children, young and not-so-young, on the bicycle paths.

Near the northern entrance to the park stand four bronze busts, immortalizing some of our country music greats; Buddy Williams, Tex Morton, Stan Costa, and Gordon Parsons who wrote Slim Dusty’s most famous hit, The Pub With No Beer. These legends stand forever watching over our country music capital. Across the road from the park is Hands of Fame Corner featuring the handprints of the stars set in cement. Sort of like a mini-Grauman’s Chinese in Los Angeles, it was fun picking out the ones that we recognised. It was in 1977 that the first hands were pressed into posterity and today there are over 270 hands of famous country music sons and daughters.

Bicentennial Park

Museums and Galleries in Tamworth

Tamworth isn’t only about country music, though. It has a rich history and exploring the city’s heritage is fascinating. The railway station was built in 1878 and the stuccoed brick post office in 1886. The Tamworth Historical Society is located in the city’s .first residence, the Calala Cottage Museum and it includes a working blacksmith shop. The Powerhouse Museum houses a large collection of 20thCentury electric appliances as well as the largest collection of electric light bulbs in Australia. Over lunch we pored through the various brochures that we’d picked up at the Information Centre trying to decide what to see this afternoon. After wandering around so many country music attractions during the morning I felt the need for something a little more sedate and we both agreed that a visit to the Tamworth Regional Gallery was in order.

Outstanding artworks at the Tamworth Regional Gallery

The Gallery is celebrating its 90th anniversary this year (2009) and it currently has an exhibition of porcelain and glass works entitled “Tame the Flame” by local artist Dennis Chapman. A teacher at the local TAFE college, his exhibition displays some truly outstanding examples of slumped glass work.

Hands of Fame

 Over its 90-year history, the Gallery has collected a  diverse and varied range of art works from wood carving to delicate textiles and I was looking forward to seeing the glass exhibition as well as many other displays, little realising that our entire afternoon would be spent there. It was all so fascinating and terribly easy to lose oneself in the intricate artworks. There was one display of a plywood cityscape that just took our breath away. It was called “Shiftwork” by Richard Giblett and depicted the city with its mirror image as though on water. I can’t begin to imagine the patience one would need to do something like that; it’s way beyond me! Before we realised it, the afternoon had slipped away and the staff at the Gallery were waiting to close the doors. So, reluctantly, we made our way back to camp.

A dining experience in Tamworth

We decided that we would have dinner this night at the SSS BBQ Barn and I have to say that it was one of the best steaks I have ever eaten. Friendly and attentive staff and the relaxed atmosphere completed the picture. And so, pleasantly satiated, we set off to visit Joe Maguire’s Pub and the Noses of Fame, the noses of some country music stars imprinted in concrete.

I did wonder if they had to be sober when the imprinting was done. Well, it took some finding but finally we arrived at this much anticipated venue. And at that point our euphoria came to a crashing halt. Talk about disappointed! Outside on the driveway there was a bunch of holes poked into the cement and someone had scribbled some very illegible names there. I wouldn’t have thought that such a poor imitation of the Hands of Fame would rate a mention in the tourist guides, but it does. Very poor, very disappointing, and a total waste of time.

Tame the Flame

A visit to Bendemeer

It was a little cool when we awoke on Sunday morning although not nearly as cold as Saturday and it did warm up nicely later on. The plan for today was the Tangaratta Winery with a stop at the Information Centre on our way out of town. And it was lucky that we did; it seems that Tangaratta is only open on Sundays for functions. Instead we decided on a drive to the little town of Bendemeer, some 30 minutes drive northeast   of Tamworth. Bendemeer is known as the Gateway to New England, mainly because in the past its river crossing was the only route to the tablelands. A bridge was eventually built over the river in 1874. The town, settled in 1830, has but one claim to fame and that is that Fred Ward, alias the bushranger Captain Thunderbolt, held up the northern mail coach there in 1864. Exciting stuff! 15 minutes north of Bendemeer on the New England Highway is Banalasta, quite possibly the Tamworth area’s best kept secret and a property like no other. It is 6011 hectares (approx. 14850 acres) and has a lavender farm, the largest certified organic eucalyptus plantation in the world, and a vineyard and winery. Wines are produced here under the Blickling Estate label.

Banalasta

The beautiful gardens around the on-site visitor centre and the odd native animal wandering through make Banalasta a “must- see” at any time. Surrounded by cool and shaded verandahs for the summer months and a wood fire inside for when the weather is cool, the centre has a café that provides light lunches and morning and afternoon teas as well as a cellar door for wine tastings and purchases and a boutique shop where you can buy lavender and eucalyptus products made on the premises. I must admit that several of these found their way onto my credit card much to John’s amusement.

A stop at TREC (Tamworth Regional Entertainment Centre)

Back in Tamworth we made a stop at the Regional Entertainment Centre, about 5 kilometres (3 miles) south of town. The venue for the Country Music Awards each year in January, the multi-purpose centre has seating for over 5000 people and is the biggest of its kind outside of capital city metropolitan areas. Since construction was completed in 1999, the centre has hosted thousands of events including concerts, trade shows, conferences, community, and charity events, to name a few. Tamworth is in the New England region of New South Wales, approximately half way between Sydney and Brisbane.  Located on the western side of the Great Dividing Range, the city sits on the banks of the Peel River and is the seat of government for the region.

Although famous for the Country Music Festival, it is also recognised nationally as the sporting horse capital of Australia and is the headquarters for several major equine associations. There’s much more to Tamworth than meets the eye as we’ve discovered in our time there but our few days in Tamworth had come to an end and we spent a quiet evening packing up camp ready for an early start the next morning. To say we’re impressed with Tamworth doesn’t quite convey our feelings; neither one of us would have any trouble living there permanently. The town has everything you could possibly want and the people are open and friendly. If only it was a few hundred kilometres closer to the ocean it would be perfect. Tamworth . . . the welcome mat is always out.

The Entertainment Centre

2009

The information contained in this journal is derived from our personal recollections of our visit to this town or region and is correct as at the time of publication. austracks accepts no responsibility should any of this information be incorrect or misleading due to changes, improvements, or upgrades that may have occurred to places and/or attractions since our visit.

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