Black Snake

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  • Опубліковано 28 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 167

  • @angusthornett
    @angusthornett  Рік тому +5

    All people still wanting calendars should order now to get delivery before Christmas. They'll be posted delivered soon.
    www.etsy.com/shop/thenandnowhobart?ref=dashboard-header

    • @MicahLambert
      @MicahLambert Рік тому

      Hey Angus, any chance those tshirts are coming back?

    • @angusthornett
      @angusthornett  Рік тому

      If you DM on Instagram I may be able to get you one. @@MicahLambert

    • @leandabee
      @leandabee Рік тому

      Looking forward to getting mine 🤗

  • @lanceduke3522
    @lanceduke3522 Рік тому +21

    Mate where you stood at the end of the clip behind the old servo, was all under ground cells where the convicts lived, I grew up on the hill beside the caravan park and watched them fill in the tunnels and cells in early 80’s.

    • @bmw_m140i_aus7
      @bmw_m140i_aus7 Рік тому +2

      I hope they moved the convicts out before they were filled in...

    • @lanceduke3522
      @lanceduke3522 Рік тому

      @@bmw_m140i_aus7no they left the convict skeletons in place a 120 years after they died 🤡

    • @angusthornett
      @angusthornett  Рік тому +4

      I'm not disputing what you saw. It's a shame there aren't better photo records of such things. Back before digital photos a lot of things just weren't recorded.

  • @ihjcmaccrimmon
    @ihjcmaccrimmon Рік тому +21

    Great work, thanks.
    The train and many others were removed due to the hazards of rusting steel work and sharp exposed edges.
    And, with the rusting, asbestos lagging around the boilers became a problem.
    I loved to play on this train, and still miss seeing it.

    • @fixxundfertig
      @fixxundfertig Рік тому +2

      That makes sense. Is that also the case with those that were at Tynwald Park in Norfick and in West Hobart? They were the best playgrounds.

  • @peterbateman8018
    @peterbateman8018 Рік тому +22

    I loved the restraint you displayed around the removal of an actual steam-train, that was replaced with a tonka-toy. The world, these days……

  • @jessicahalliday22
    @jessicahalliday22 Рік тому +17

    Fascinating! I've never noticed the Black Snake Inn while crossing that bridge. Now I'll definitely pay attention. I hope there is some sort of restoration once the Bridge works are complete.
    This is a great video. I really respect how you view convicts as victims in the building of these historical places, whereas others can see them as criminals who were getting what they deserve. I can't even imagine how awful it must have been to have lived in those times. Thank you for seeing them all as human beings and not just the label history has assigned to them.

    • @angusthornett
      @angusthornett  Рік тому +1

      Convict transportation was done purely to generate free labour when the English Government was settling Australia. It had nothing at all to with their prisons being full. That line was propaganda.

  • @mcrazza
    @mcrazza 9 місяців тому +2

    On a recent trip to Bridgewater with my 74-year-old father he recalled a little story from his father as a kid about being warned he would be sent to the Watch House if he was caught misbehaving. This must have been as far back as the 1910s. The original purpose of the Watch House had long ceased but its memory still existed.

  • @ninitech6230
    @ninitech6230 Рік тому +7

    Great video, thanks. It reminded me of the tragic ferry accident that happened at Black Snake in 1818. The ferry was overloaded and capized. 12 passengers drowned, including my ancestor, 6 year old Isabella Williams. So sad.

  • @dsf427
    @dsf427 Рік тому +11

    Love hearing the history of tassie. So much but known only by a few. You should have been a history teacher with the dog as your assistant

    • @angusthornett
      @angusthornett  Рік тому +1

      I wouldn't be a good teacher. I'll stick to UA-cam.

  • @leahrosevear4160
    @leahrosevear4160 Рік тому +4

    Appreciate learning more about my home state Angus. I can only imagine the extremely hard life of the convicts who made the causeway.

  • @leandabee
    @leandabee Рік тому +6

    I really liked your light sarcasm with the mention of the 'dangerous' train at the park and the poor excuse that replaced it😅🤭🤦🏼‍♀️ . It's fascinating seeing the area from the air. Great work again 👏 👍

  • @TheVeganTravelShow
    @TheVeganTravelShow 10 місяців тому +3

    We love how much old stuff is still left standing in Tassie. Where I’m from they bulldozed a historic hut to put up an intersection. Not many people would remember that hut anymore.

  • @tdub5899
    @tdub5899 Рік тому +6

    Another thought provoking video. Well done.

  • @MatthewHarrold
    @MatthewHarrold 10 місяців тому +2

    I remember that train, you captured my younger brothers house twice with your excellent drone footage, he has a perch above the new bridge construction. Another excellent bit of Tassie history. Thanks mate. $0.02

  • @catrionahall8435
    @catrionahall8435 Рік тому +2

    So glad it is still there, it has fascinated me ever since I came here to live many years ago. Thank you for giving it some attention and filling in its history.

  • @TheCornish123456
    @TheCornish123456 Рік тому +4

    Spent a month odd touring around Tassie in 2009 found it to be the most interesting part of Australia. Have been binge watching your fascinating videos. Was mostly there for the nature now wish i had paid more attention to the human interest element.

    • @angusthornett
      @angusthornett  Рік тому +2

      Social history is, generally speaking, an under-examined area of world culture.

  • @kyleroberts2651
    @kyleroberts2651 Рік тому +3

    True Agnus, that approach to Hobart does exude an indifferent an unsure sense of place.

    • @angusthornett
      @angusthornett  Рік тому

      It'll likely feel rather different when the new bridge is completed.

    • @carrier411
      @carrier411 6 місяців тому +1

      there aren't even any 'WELCOME TO HOBART" Signs are there? I can't recall if there are, but it's certainly a different vista and atmosphere coming in via the Bridgewater bridge rather than the Tasman bridge entrance into Hobart!

  • @xyfalcon66
    @xyfalcon66 Рік тому +5

    I hope you do Pontville and Brighton such rich Tasmanian history

  • @tomgoodful
    @tomgoodful Рік тому +6

    My wife's 4x great grand father was forced to work the quarry. A great video Angus.

  • @thefmi5209
    @thefmi5209 Рік тому +4

    Love your videos... great insight. Dog is super too.

  • @corinnecoombs2956
    @corinnecoombs2956 Рік тому +2

    I look forward to seeing them both renovated and turned into fabulous cafes or restaurants. Something people can access and enjoy. Good on you Angus

  • @kellimaher3866
    @kellimaher3866 Рік тому +2

    Hi Angus Kelli here thank you so much for the photo with my partner the other week his name is Les you met him at Lutana Woodlands I absolutely love the photo we are going to get it framed can't wait for your next video

    • @kellimaher3866
      @kellimaher3866 Рік тому

      Would you like a copy of the photo it turned out really really good😊

    • @angusthornett
      @angusthornett  Рік тому +1

      Was good to have a yarn. You guys could make videos about detecting.

  • @johorgan7640
    @johorgan7640 Рік тому +3

    Kia Ora from N.Z. Great video. The Causeway is very much part of Tasmania's history - and Australia. Built, as you said, by convicts with only shovels, pick axes and wheelbarrows, quarrying the stone in the hill behind the buildings that are still there today. Punishment - for whatever reason - to be put in a 'cell' so small that you could only stand up. How many people travel over the Causeway and have absolutely no idea of its history. As you come across the bridge from Brighton, the white double storied house on the hill - slightly to the right - was the overseers house I understand. Single storied dwelling at the time of the Causeway being built. My daughter-in-law's Grandfather farmed just passed the Causeway on the New Norfolk road. The buildings and quarry always fascinated me on my trips to Tasmania. Knew there was a story to be told there. When the new bridge is completed let's hope that the powers that be leave the causeway as a tribute to those who built it.

    • @nicholasgunson2945
      @nicholasgunson2945 Рік тому +1

      Causeway is heritage listed so has to stay. Also digging it up would be an environmentally poor decision as it traps a lot of crap in the water from going upstream to new Norfolk.

    • @johorgan7640
      @johorgan7640 Рік тому

      @@nicholasgunson2945 - that is great to read it is heritage listed 👍👍👍👍👍

  • @marper72
    @marper72 Рік тому +3

    That Train you speak of is now at the Don River Railway 👍

  • @alanyt2000
    @alanyt2000 7 місяців тому +1

    Thanks

    • @angusthornett
      @angusthornett  7 місяців тому

      Thanks you very much, mate. It’s a big help for the channel. I’ve got a new video on the abandoned Apsley train line coming out this Sunday.

    • @alanyt2000
      @alanyt2000 7 місяців тому

      @@angusthornett Don't mention it, mate. This is amazing work, and much appreciated.

  • @waratah5422
    @waratah5422 Рік тому +3

    The hard times the workers endured is what helped Tasmania achieve it's statis that is so full of history that we should never forget our beginning

    • @angusthornett
      @angusthornett  Рік тому +1

      If people are interested it's available to examine.

  • @diannerowley9358
    @diannerowley9358 Рік тому +2

    Always wanted that house at Black snake lane. Gee your dog has grown so sweet.

  • @CheekyKoala
    @CheekyKoala Рік тому +1

    Wow! I’d forgotten about the old train at Granton!!
    I also had no idea that they we’re finally replacing the old bridge!! (Nearly 6 years since I left Tasmania)

  • @shelleyoreilly3047
    @shelleyoreilly3047 Рік тому +1

    Fantastic as always!

  • @carokat1111
    @carokat1111 Рік тому +2

    Really interesting. Thank you.

  • @AustralianRadioindie
    @AustralianRadioindie 8 місяців тому +1

    Cheers for the historical lessons

  • @jennifercrawley6795
    @jennifercrawley6795 Рік тому +1

    I also love your restraint Angus. I had no idea of most of the history of Black Snake. Why would the Government not make more of this historic site?

    • @angusthornett
      @angusthornett  Рік тому

      These things cost money. And it's of limited interest to most people. The historic sites that get best preserved tend to be the ones turned into tourist attractions, like Port Arthur. That's generally true across the globe.

    • @rodericklohrey1746
      @rodericklohrey1746 9 місяців тому

      The Black Snake Inn was in private ownership. The recent owner's large collection of antique Huon pine furniture is on permanent display at the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery in Hobart. I often detoured from the highway to admire that fine old inn. For many years a 1930s car was parked behind the inn, from a distance it may have been an Alvis, a beautiful and expensive vehicle.

  • @rushmorebig
    @rushmorebig Рік тому +2

    Thanks for your efforts. Lots of old & sad convict energy in the area.

  • @vman7321
    @vman7321 Рік тому +2

    Very interesting, I feel a connection to that area, as an 8th Gen Convict “stiock” Rowbottom’s Rd is around the corner my family name, unknown if I’m connected to the naming, but I like to think somehow I am

  • @vandiemenskol
    @vandiemenskol Рік тому +2

    Good work and keep it up.

  • @Mikesbunny1423
    @Mikesbunny1423 Місяць тому

    Loving your videos

  • @NoName-ds5uq
    @NoName-ds5uq Рік тому +3

    The old watch house used to sell fishing supplies when it was a servo too. I also remember playing on that locomotive in Granton and another one in Stanley as a kid. I had no idea about the Black Snake Inn though. I’ve seen it so many times and wondered, but never found out until now. That’s now obvious why there’s a Black Snake Road in Granton. It’s funny that we don’t have Black Snakes in Tassie though! Just Tiger Snakes and Lowland Copperheads which are usually black here(you usually need to get close enough to see the head scales to differentiate 🤣), along with a few White Lipped Snakes.
    Thank you Angus!

    • @georgeburrows9807
      @georgeburrows9807 Рік тому +2

      Black snakes are tiger snakes

    • @angusthornett
      @angusthornett  Рік тому

      Thanks for watching, mate.

    • @TheCornish123456
      @TheCornish123456 Рік тому

      Went on a hike on Burnie Island and had plenty of close encounters with black snakes, never got close enough to see what kind of lippy they had on...

  • @julzdalton1746
    @julzdalton1746 Рік тому +2

    I remember the train and the convict museum. Is the building privately owned? It would be wonderful to see it reopen as a tourist attraction again. Thanks again for another interesting video.

  • @cloudstreet8214
    @cloudstreet8214 Рік тому +1

    Excellent. Thank you.

  • @pmacgowan
    @pmacgowan Рік тому +2

    Another great video Angus, by the way I remember looking for fossils in that query on a Geology excursion

  • @Guvna947
    @Guvna947 Рік тому +5

    I'd been wondering about that building. I live in Maydena and would really like it if you did a story on our town.

    • @angusthornett
      @angusthornett  Рік тому +1

      Perhaps in the future.

    • @Guvna947
      @Guvna947 Рік тому

      @@angusthornett that would be great.

  • @GavinSadewasser
    @GavinSadewasser Рік тому +1

    Oh wow, it looks so very different now from when I moved there in 1969 as a 5 year old with mum and dad, we collected our mail from the train station and yes,we did very much enjoy playing on the train, we went to the park and watched them put it there.

    • @angusthornett
      @angusthornett  Рік тому

      Will look different again when the new bridge is completed.

  • @nathandarwin7160
    @nathandarwin7160 Рік тому +4

    My friend owned that property.
    Last time I was inside the bottom floor was gutted and the upstairs was in disrepair.
    This was about 7 years ago

    • @georgeburrows9807
      @georgeburrows9807 Рік тому +1

      Strange I don’t remember your name or your visit

    • @nathandarwin7160
      @nathandarwin7160 Рік тому

      @@georgeburrows9807 I came around a few times with John.

    • @georgeburrows9807
      @georgeburrows9807 Рік тому

      John ?
      0:38

    • @georgeburrows9807
      @georgeburrows9807 Рік тому

      Ooh sorry Nathan yes I remember you now, it’s sad about the death of John, I miss his sarcastic commentary greatly
      How’s life with you ?
      Where are you ?
      What are you doing ?

    • @nathandarwin7160
      @nathandarwin7160 Рік тому

      @@georgeburrows9807 hi George. I wasn't aware John had passed away. That is sad news, he will be missed.
      Life has changed a lot for me over the last 3 years but I'm doing OK.
      I hope they are not taking to much of your land building that bridge.
      Take care George.

  • @willdurand4026
    @willdurand4026 Рік тому +1

    hey angus i was wondering if you would be able to do a video on the structural remains up on knocklofty, would be interesting to know what they were

    • @angusthornett
      @angusthornett  Рік тому

      If you're wondering about that square bit on concrete that's the remains of an earlier smaller reservoir that was replaced with the big one now.

  • @jadesmith6823
    @jadesmith6823 Рік тому +1

    Brilliant 👍

  • @blackdogRexy
    @blackdogRexy Рік тому +3

    Its amazing how often you would see an old steam train as part of a playground when growing up in the 60s and 70s in Tassie. You almost never see them nowadays.

    • @angusthornett
      @angusthornett  Рік тому

      I believe the one at Deloraine is the last one. It's covered in fencing so you can't really play on it. There's one at Margate but that's not a public playground.

  • @rynorx7
    @rynorx7 Рік тому +2

    Great video! Do you know anything about the old homestead further up black snake rd that was demolished for the new bridge? I was devastated when i saw it get knocked down 😢

    • @angusthornett
      @angusthornett  Рік тому +2

      Perhaps something I'll cover in the future. The heritage authorities did recommend that it be saved.

  • @grahamwood156
    @grahamwood156 5 місяців тому

    I had a small average up Black Snake lane we loved it

  • @robinadderley6755
    @robinadderley6755 Рік тому +4

    The locomotive was put into the park on a temporary track across the road, I can remember being held up there in the car while they did it.

    • @angusthornett
      @angusthornett  Рік тому

      What year do you reckon it was?

    • @Paganitzu
      @Paganitzu Рік тому +1

      ​@@angusthornett 20 May 1973. I have in my possession a silent black and white video of the maneuver.

    • @angusthornett
      @angusthornett  Рік тому

      You should post it.@@Paganitzu

    • @Paganitzu
      @Paganitzu Рік тому

      @@angusthornett I'm not sure I'd be allowed. The video comes from the Archive Office of Tasmania. They would have copyright over it.

    • @lukebremner159
      @lukebremner159 Рік тому

      librariestas.ent.sirsidynix.net.au/client/en_AU/tas/search/detailnonmodal/ent:$002f$002fARCHIVES_ITEMS$002f0$002fARCHIVES_ITE_DIX:NS1757-1-1/one?qu=20&qu=May&qu=1973&qf=FORMAT_LINCTAS%09Format%09film%09film
      The archives have the footage but it doesn't look like it has been digitized, or at least isn't available on their official you tube channel.

  • @TassieDIY
    @TassieDIY Рік тому +1

    I remember playing on that train at the park when I was a child in the early 90s
    And now I know why the train was there! Haha awesome video mate 🤙

    • @angusthornett
      @angusthornett  Рік тому

      Thanks, mate. Train in playgrounds are great.

    • @timlyall2061
      @timlyall2061 Рік тому

      They sure are, and an icon in very many WA country towns, growing up in the 50's and '60's. As covered by an earlier comment, there too they pointedly disappeared around the '90's under council duty of care considerations. Of note though it's only been quite recently that Tasmania's own town of Perth has replaced their loco with a smaller, less "dangerous" version.
      As newcomers to the island, (only 20 yrs) we often reflect what an additional asset it would be if there were more train journeys available like the West Coaster. Going to watch more of your work now Angus, though I suspect it's more a labour of love to you, making it all the more enjoyable to we followers! 😀@@angusthornett

  • @fredeverett4340
    @fredeverett4340 Рік тому +1

    Great vlog Angus. It used to be a pleasant mile from Granton to the old lime kilns. Now it looks like a dog’s dinner and I expect it will remain so. What is the future of the old causeway for the Bridgewater bridge?

  • @SuePeppiatt-ws7wb
    @SuePeppiatt-ws7wb 8 місяців тому +1

    It was a fantastic park back when the engine was there. Not used much anymore

  • @stripeyhorse
    @stripeyhorse Рік тому +1

    great video mate. i lived in claremont and used to ride my bike in blacksnake lane and around granton. never knew about the name..

    • @angusthornett
      @angusthornett  Рік тому

      Thanks, mate. That area looked so different even back in the 80s and 90s.

  • @Paganitzu
    @Paganitzu Рік тому +5

    The steam locomotive you mention in the video (MA1) hasn't gone far. It's up the road at the New Norfolk Station, the base of the dormant Derwent Valley Railway. A subject of a future video perhaps?

  • @neilashworth9302
    @neilashworth9302 12 днів тому

    I just spent 3 weeks in tassy went al over. I was hard to find in the west history on the Franklin river protest even on bob browns sites going back in may

  • @paulwilson6250
    @paulwilson6250 Рік тому +4

    I had an elderly man a while back tell me that at one stage It was a zoo as such and they used to have seals there. Not sure as to how accurate that is though!

    • @blackdogRexy
      @blackdogRexy Рік тому

      I definitely remember going to a zoo there in the 70s. Its funny but the animals I remember most were the Cape Barren Geese they had there.

    • @blackdogRexy
      @blackdogRexy Рік тому +1

      I just weirdly remember it was called Woodburn or something similar.

    • @leandabee
      @leandabee Рік тому +6

      It is true. It was called the Woodville zoo, I went there once or twice 😊

  • @AmandaWard-f6g
    @AmandaWard-f6g Рік тому +3

    Hi Angus I have passed by that bridge and building many times and didn't even give it a thought as to how it got there.
    I like the title of your newest mini documentary 'black snake'.
    I think it's an appropriate name for that wetland.
    At least when people are visiting the area it might remind them to be on the lookout for those venomous reptiles.
    Next time I am passing the old convict building I shall say a little thankyou for all the pain people endured.
    We just all take things for granted these days.
    I wonder what they made of all the black swans in that stretch of the river. I am told the English only knew of white swans. When they saw black one's here they knew they were in hell.
    Sounds like they were....
    Say hi to dog for me.
    From Amanda

    • @angusthornett
      @angusthornett  Рік тому +1

      Cheers, Amanda. The dog said hello back.

  • @moibenson4616
    @moibenson4616 Рік тому +1

    As I recall...Quite some ago when I was an Army, I posted to Hobart, we had an occasion to be near the abanded location; an old timer (then!) mentioned that during WW11 it was also a "house of ill repute"-not that I know anything about such questionable establishments of course...

  • @stephengeorge7510
    @stephengeorge7510 Рік тому +1

    Caught some really good sea run trout off that causeway of a night.

  • @CheekyKoala
    @CheekyKoala Рік тому +1

    For those of us who no longer live in Tassie, could you give us a better look at where the new bridge is going in please😘😘

  • @AVMamfortas
    @AVMamfortas Рік тому +2

    You are fast becoming a State Treasure.

    • @angusthornett
      @angusthornett  Рік тому

      Overly generous.

    • @AVMamfortas
      @AVMamfortas Рік тому +1

      @@angusthornett Hmmmm. Perhaps. But I do not know of anyone else that makes such personal, meticulous and educational local history as you do. You 'show' Tasmania so well.

  • @kyleroberts2651
    @kyleroberts2651 Рік тому +3

    These buildings need to be saved and repurposed so they have living history.

  • @woofdoggy1236
    @woofdoggy1236 Рік тому +2

    Thanks. The past is disappearing quick.

    • @jesusislukeskywalker4294
      @jesusislukeskywalker4294 Рік тому

      the entire nation is 😳

    • @angusthornett
      @angusthornett  Рік тому

      Everything is always changing. All buildings will eventually be gone.

    • @woofdoggy1236
      @woofdoggy1236 Рік тому

      Yea I say that to myself when I see a new subdivision.
      I used to stop occasionally and look at that building and never realised. That it was the one and only Black snake. Forget the stories that were attached to it. But maybe Cash hung out there for a while

  • @carrier411
    @carrier411 6 місяців тому +1

    is this a new bridge that will sit alongside the existing one to increase traffic flow ? or is the current one going to close? I used to live in Hobart, left in 2020, so I find your videos very interesting. 😀👏

  • @bigm383
    @bigm383 Рік тому +3

    I guess geographical location killed anyone’s desire to preserve that beautiful Gothic house. Compare it with Stoke House in North Hobart, beautifully preserved, heritage listed and regarded a the finest example of Gothic architecture in Australia. May be worth a video!
    Thanks for the video!

  • @bigears4014
    @bigears4014 Рік тому +9

    A beautiful property left to deteriorate , I wonder what the government has planned for it , sell it to a friend for $1

    • @georgeburrows9807
      @georgeburrows9807 Рік тому +5

      It’s most likely the government will sell it again after the bridge is completed
      Hopefully to some with the time, money and enthusiasm to renovate it

  • @janinecollins938
    @janinecollins938 7 місяців тому

    Some of my ancestors use to live here and own it back in the day

  • @dragonfly_86
    @dragonfly_86 Рік тому +3

    Our convict history and what happened to the Aboriginals is so sad. It wasn't all that long ago either :(

    • @nicholasgunson2945
      @nicholasgunson2945 Рік тому +2

      Mostly forgotten too.

    • @naomipurdy7045
      @naomipurdy7045 Рік тому +2

      Only a handful of generations.

    • @jesusislukeskywalker4294
      @jesusislukeskywalker4294 Рік тому

      ⁠transportation was literally human trafficking.. some reports say that 20% of convicts where boys aged between 11 and 14. obviously not something that the powers that be want Australians to be aware of..

  • @hawthorngrove3629
    @hawthorngrove3629 Рік тому +1

    I played on the old train as a kid, as did some of my children

  • @bigears4014
    @bigears4014 Рік тому +1

    Another family that this bridge has plagued is the owners of cypress grove, everything that they owned is now gone ,other than one tree

  • @pippacarron1861
    @pippacarron1861 11 місяців тому +1

    "Many more men could drink than read". Though it wasn't reading that eventually emptied the pubs, but rather television. "The dog's acting as foreman ..." Hilarious!. Sad about the train engine.

  • @georgeburrows9807
    @georgeburrows9807 Рік тому +2

    It’s amazing how over the years anyone from this guy to noted history writers including teachers of history at UTAS can incorporate so many errors into their narratives
    All they had to do was contact me and I could have given a well research narrative and put them in touch with the official historian and painstaking researcher my mate Dan Cerchi for a fully documented history
    Sadly not much about other the places mentioned are very accurate either
    But there you go I’m only commenting because I was the longest owner ever of this Black Snake Inn, nearly 55 years before the government gave me little choice but to sell to them after they substantially changed the plans for the roadworks associated with the replacement bridge

    • @WascallyWabbitt
      @WascallyWabbitt Рік тому +1

      I drive past there multiple times daily George (Metro) It always amazed me that the remnants of the stumps of the ferry wharf (all be it sticks) are still visible at low tide.

    • @angusthornett
      @angusthornett  Рік тому +3

      Someone in your position is capable of writing their own perspective, on this subject and others.

    • @georgeburrows9807
      @georgeburrows9807 Рік тому

      ⁠@@angusthornett
      yes indeed and it has been written in great and well researched detail
      I feel this accurate publication is adequate and thus sufficient
      Over the years there have been other material that is available about the Inn, the replica ferry boat and the important Huon Pine furniture collection
      These materials are available for sharing, just for the asking, but unfortunately writers, producers and academics rarely bother to go to a living resource ( 55 years ownership ) and thus avail themselves to access of the detailed documented private publication which has been regularly updated over the last 40 or so years
      That experience and knowledge extends more widely than just the Black Snake Inn and even involved the building of a replica of the type of ferry boat used here called the Ramping Lion now part of the Tasmanian Maritime Museum collection
      It also includes the story of the creation of the largest collection of Colonial Huon Pine furniture once used on an everyday basis at the Black Snake Inn and now an extremely important part of Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery collection and incidentally the largest collection of Huon Pine furniture in the world and many items can be viewed at the museum and associated sites
      Private collectors enthusiasts are very happy to share knowledge and experience and feel satisfied with their contributions to history, culture etc without excessive exposure

    • @jesusislukeskywalker4294
      @jesusislukeskywalker4294 Рік тому

      @@georgeburrows9807i would be interested in learning more.. maybe you guys could revisit the site together.. possibly there’s still opportunity for a “part 2” .

  • @stephendaft9547
    @stephendaft9547 Рік тому +1

    The place of accommodation became a petrol station for many years

  • @ldnwholesale8552
    @ldnwholesale8552 15 днів тому

    I dont even recognise that area now. And have driven it numerous times over 50 + years. Not for the last 20 or so however.

  • @Vivianblue.
    @Vivianblue. Рік тому +1

    Not that long ago Black Snake Inn was for sale along with the parcel of land and a retro house which any Tom, Dick or Harriet could purchase or was that just all bulldust and fairytales to cover-up some secret already done deal behind the scenes... 🤔

    • @georgeburrows9807
      @georgeburrows9807 Рік тому +2

      No deal was done, the government made it difficult to sell privately because it was subject to the provisions of Project of State Significance

  • @SteveMack
    @SteveMack Рік тому +1

  • @rynorx7
    @rynorx7 Рік тому +4

    Is it true that Charles Darwin visited the inn?

    • @georgeburrows9807
      @georgeburrows9807 Рік тому +3

      Yes

    • @tanethomas
      @tanethomas Рік тому +1

      You’d know a thing or two about that, wouldn’t you, George? 😂

    • @georgeburrows9807
      @georgeburrows9807 Рік тому +3

      @@angusthornett he would have had his drink in the building that is still there, which was completed 1832/33

  • @SuePeppiatt-ws7wb
    @SuePeppiatt-ws7wb 8 місяців тому +1

    This lot bull dozed the train line…but are meant to be putting back?

    • @angusthornett
      @angusthornett  8 місяців тому

      Train isn’t coming back. Gone ten years ago.

  • @chrishill6276
    @chrishill6276 Рік тому +1

    The previous owner let it deteriorate

  • @geoffszczypior644
    @geoffszczypior644 6 днів тому +1

    Can you do the train that went in the bridgewater river .
    The bridge rail crossing gave out nose in it went There is a picture i have seen it.

  • @SuePeppiatt-ws7wb
    @SuePeppiatt-ws7wb 8 місяців тому +1

    It was a fantastic park back when the engine was there. Not used much anymore