James Riley, US Civil War Veteran, Grave - Beechworth, VIC, AUSTRALIA
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member 2BluFish
S 36° 20.705 E 146° 41.483
55H E 472306 N 5977731
James Riley, a US Civil War veteran, is buried on the other side of the world in Beechworth Cemetery - in the Australian state of Victoria
Waymark Code: WMBWT4
Location: Victoria, Australia
Date Posted: 06/28/2011
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Turtle3863
Views: 13

Headstone inscription
James Riley
1 Serg Co D
155 Regt
NY INF
1829
1901

In its golden days, men and women came to Beechworth from, the USA, England, Ireland, Scotland, Wales, and China. Many of these stayed on to become long term residents. At its peak, Beechworth town had over 30,000 residents. Surrounding areas and mining camps sprang up as thousands of miners rushed into areas such as Spring Creek, Reedy Creek, Silver Creek, the Nine Mile Creek and the Woolshed.
In its heyday from 1852-1857, this was a fabulous gold region and centre of government; but its power, wealth and influence were short lived. At its wildest moments of gold discoveries, Woods related how an early party of prospectors retrieved a pan of gold weighing 14 lb (about 7 kg). Another lucky party, said Woods, cleared some 50lb (approx. 25 kg) of gold in a week. And so began a rush into this remote region. During the first election campaign in 1855, one candidate, Daniel Cameron, rode a horse shod with solid gold horseshoes. The extravagance of this event is still commemorated as the logo for Beechworth is a golden horseshoe.

At the time, Beechworth was far removed from the centre of colonial administration in Melbourne both in distance and time taken to travel. The local debates around the potential railway into Beechworth encompassed a broad gauge (5ft 3ins) option or a narrow gauge (2ft 6ins) system, between Wangaratta and Beechworth and these debates and options appeared in the Ovens and Murray Advertiser newspaper. Ironically, in the 1890s a narrow gauge system did eventuate nearby, running from Wangaratta to Whitfield. Finally,a railway, the broad gauge, arrived at Beechworth in September 1876, but by that stage the town and its gold production was waning. Unfortunately the rail line was closed in 1977 and dismantled, after 101 years of service.

During its boom times, Beechworth town boasted a range of industries including, a tannery, jewellers, boot makers, a brewery, blacksmiths, livestock sale yards. It had schools, a convent, hotels, a prison with imposing stone walls, a hospital, a mental hospital, court house, police barracks, stage coach companies and a powder magazine.
Related Website: [Web Link]

Terrain Rating:

Visit Instructions:
To post a log for this waymark a photo of you, the sign at the waymark with your GPS in view must be uploaded.
Search for...
Geocaching.com Google Map
Google Maps
MapQuest
Bing Maps
Nearest Waymarks
Nearest U.S. Civil War Sites
Nearest Geocaches
Create a scavenger hunt using this waymark as the center point
Recent Visits/Logs:
Date Logged Log User Rating  
blingg visited James Riley, US Civil War Veteran, Grave - Beechworth, VIC, AUSTRALIA 07/13/2018 blingg visited it
Earthbound Chief visited James Riley, US Civil War Veteran, Grave - Beechworth, VIC, AUSTRALIA 09/28/2017 Earthbound Chief visited it
bucketeer visited James Riley, US Civil War Veteran, Grave - Beechworth, VIC, AUSTRALIA 12/15/2015 bucketeer visited it
FLIPPER&CO visited James Riley, US Civil War Veteran, Grave - Beechworth, VIC, AUSTRALIA 04/06/2012 FLIPPER&CO visited it

View all visits/logs