At East Pillinger at the end of the 19th century, you would have found a bustling port town with three wharves, a sawmill, a brickworks, an ore crusher, and railway carriages rattling about laden with bricks, wood and copper ore. Hundreds of men worked the mine here, and were catered for with miners’ huts, a dining hall, and a band and billiards hall. If you had sought refuge from the sulphurous fumes coming from the mine’s smelters, the neighbouring town of West Pillinger – a short ferry ride across the Kelly Basin – would have offered stores, hotels, sports clubs, a school and even a police station.
East Pillinger grew quickly as an industry town, established by James Crotty for the North Mount Lyell mining company, but the region thrived…
