Ravine (Lob's Hole), NSW.
Run No. 177
Portion No.s
Originally about 00000 Acres
LOB'S HOLE ("The Hollow")
The dramatic scenery in the Lob’s Hole/Ravine area, at the junction of the Yarrangobilly and Tumut Rivers, is claimed to have been the inspiration for “The Hollow” in Australia’s premier bushranging novel - Rolfe Bolderwood’s “Robbery Under Arms” - though others believe it was the Burragorang Valley. "The Hollow" was the secret place, ringed by mountains, where the bushrangers hid out between forays.
Lob’s Hole (or Lobbs Hole) was located on one of the routes from Victoria to the Kiandra diggings. The approach to Lob’s Hole was so steep it was claimed horses had to ride down Brandy Mary Spur on their haunches (this has been disputed by people who know something about horses).
Mining for gold was followed by mining for copper, with the establishment of the Lobbs Hole Copper Mine in 1908. Copper had been identified in the valley at the time of the discovery of gold but at that time it had been thought the country was too inaccessible to allow extraction (see below).
For many years after the gold rush residents of Kiandra used this sheltered valley to escape the rigours of the Kiandra weather. The river junction is now flooded by the Blowering Dam but the mud brick walls of the old hotel at Ravine are still partly standing.
* * * * * * *
Lob's Hole was the subject of two articles in the Sydney Morning Herald titled "Alpine Sketches" at the time of the Kiandra gold rush. Following are extracts:
__________________
October 27, 1860
LOB'S HOLE. - This peculiar feature of the Alpine regions is situated about seven miles from Kiandra, lying somewhat north-east from the township, and to the left of the Tumut Road and telegraph line. It affords a short cut for foot passengers and horsemen from Victoria, but no dray or wheeled vehicle can be made to ascend its rough and jagged heights....
'Tis seldom we have beheld such a bold wild chaotic scene. It bursts upon you at once, for whilst walking a few hundred yards on the level table top and stooping down to examine the fused calcined quartz that crops out around, you suddenly come upon an upheaved bed of slate, whose shaly edges jut out perpendiculary from between the quartz, and form a kind of rampart to the wide volcanic basin beneath. Another step, and the eye measures an almost perpendicular depth of 2400 feet. The eye wanders over the tops of thickly growing gum trees, extending from beneath the feet down, down over seven measured miles into the valley beneath, where, like a silver ribbon, winds the river of the Tumut, until lost at the extreme end of the vista between its rugged guardian ranges.....
__________________
December 15, 1860
LOB'S HOLE. - Descending. Down, down. - From the sumit of Lob's Hole, down steep, rugged, winding paths, over out-cropping quartz rock intermixed with slate, now slipping down slopes of forty-five degrees, now winding along the backs of ridges, now carefully threading narrow paths, with barely a foothold for a horse along the sides of steep hills, where one false step would send horse and man rolling down into a ravine many hundred feet below - down, always down hill, for nearly eighteen hundred feet, through brushwood and stunted gum for about three miles, with occasional prospects of never-ending hill and vale, until the sound of falling water strikes refreshingly on the ear.....
Then, by pleasant ascents and descents, following the stream - o'er hills clothed with verdure and covered with myriads of delicate wild flowers - we halt again on the banks of the ever widening brook, about ten miles from the summit. Here lie riches whose extent remain - and, from the formation of the country probably ever will remain - unexplored. The sun strikes on the lode, the ground glows with all the hues of the rainbow, and copper of superior richness stands revealed - the lead cropping out for many yards on the bank, and runing across the bed of the creek. A small hole has been dug, specimens obtained, and declared by the Mint authorities to average nearly 40 per cent of pure copper. Pity 'tis that from the inaccessibility of this vale such deposits must remain unproductive; and pity 'tis so - for until the iron horse is superceded by the aerial machine, they must remain the property of mother earth.....
The house kept by a Mr Horsely is neat and clean, the cheer good and moderate, and seldom have I enjoyed my ease in mine inn more than on this evening, when, after a good dinner and a soothing pipe I lay me down to rest in as good a bed as any Sydneyite could desire.
__________________
An account of Lob's Hole also featured in the Adelong and Tumut Express at the time of the establishment of the Lobbs Hole Copper Mine in 1908. To read it follow the link below (warning: may be slow to load).
Link: Lobbs Hole - Adelong and Tumut Express, December 18, 1908
1920 - Mr. John Cheney, jun., owner of the Opossum Plains station, who arrived at Wagga on Friday, tells a pathetic story of the lonely death of a drover and his horses in the mountains about Kiandra. It appears that Mr. Cheney, who is a large sheepowner, and knows every inch of the mountain country, where he depastures sheep every summer, decided to move a couple of mobs of his sheep from Kiandra. On August 11 he started with 3,000 sheep, accompanied by Mr. Michael Shanley, 63 years of age. They took the sheep to Lob's Hole, a distance of ten miles, in four days. Snow was thick everywhere, and barrels had to be drawn through the snow to make a track for the sheep. Every creek had to be bridged, and at one place a dray was placed in the bed of the creek and planks set down for the sheep to cross on.
On the afternoon of arrival at Lob's Hole Mr.Shanley started back for Kiandra, intending to go on to Adaminaby, and Mr. Cheney proposed returning next morning to move another mob to Cooma. Four feet of snow fell at Kiandra over- night, and Mrs. Foeram walked four miles through the snow from Ravine to warn Mr. Cheney that a message from Kiandra by telephone stated that the snow was too deep for a start to be made.
As no news was received of Mr. Shanley a party was organised, and set out on snow shoes tosearch the drifts. After three days the party found a huge hole in a drift about 20 ft deep. With difficulty the snow was cleared away, and Mr. Shanley and two horses were found at the bottom frozen to death. - (Ref- The Advertiser (Adelaide, SA : 1889-1931) Wednesday 25 August 1920).