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Kilmore confirmed Victoria’s oldest inland town

By Eden Hynninen

CAREER research scientist and previous Kilmore resident Martin Williams has discovered – after 164 years of speculation – that Kilmore is the oldest inland town of Victoria.

Mr Williams has done something that previous historians and writers have not done – cross reference newspaper articles, books and first-hand accounts dating back to 19th century in minute detail.

“What I’ve done is gone back and had a look at primary source documents at the State Library and the Public Records Office. I also found much of this information on the Trove online database,” he said.

“It seems in about 1855 there were questions in the Kilmore Standard of Freedom newspaper itself that people thought Kilmore might become the oldest inland town in Victoria. It already was and by a long way. It came up again and again through the 19th and the 20th centuries. The oldest documents that exist now prove without any doubt that Kilmore is the oldest town.

“Kilmore was the only place for a 10 year period where you could lease or buy small arable blocks of land from 1841-1851 in inland Victoria. In 1851 the population was over 2000 and the nearest town of Seymour was only 138 – it was a great deal bigger than anywhere else. This was mentioned in a lot of newspapers in Victoria on a big scale.”

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Kilmore was discovered by the famous Overlander and explorer of South Australia Charles Bonney on about March 21, 1837.

“He did two things that are really impressive. He blazed the trail on Sydney Road with a tomahawk between Kilmore and Melbourne.

This is proven in newspapers and maps, he also found this unique local area called the Kilmore plains,” he said.

“There are three permanent creeks running through this area and with its volcanic soil, it was extremely fertile. Bonney actually made the first sheep station on the Kilmore plains. He took the best of it and built one of his sheep/out stations exactly on Kilmore.

Mr Williams said he became interested after reading Bonney’s well-known biography.

“He actually referred to the fact that among the most important things he’d ever done, it was finding the fertile district of Kilmore and blazing Sydney Road. I twigged that Kilmore was so important to him because he knew that it was the first inland town,” he said.

“Previous writers and historians knew that Bonney had something to do with it but they had no certainty – they hadn’t done enough cross referencing with the original newspapers that verified works written often vaguely in books.”

Mr Williams has updated the Wikipedia information on Kilmore’s history and had suggested the Council recognise officially, in its own right, that Bonney was the founder of Kilmore and the Sydney Road through it.

“They should say that we as a council should name something after him. Now that people are aware of this information he is more important to Kilmore than previously known,” he said.

“Many well know writers referred to Bonney finding fertile land in Kilmore and the blazed trail of Sydney Road. Writers like Ernest Favenc and George Barton in 1897 referred again in their writing that Bonney had found the fertile land of Kilmore and blazed the trail of Sydney Road – these are things that people missed.

“A further recognition could be made that that the second holder of the Kilmore Plains was Dr Richard Julian Hamlyn who took over Bonney’s outstation right on Kilmore town, at the site of the old State School, and not at Kilmore East as previously speculated.”

Whittlesea Pacers winless at weekend

By Jackson Russell

Whittlesea Pacers lost all three of their Big V games at the weekend.

The Pacers’ men opened the weekend with an 82-62 loss to Latrobe City Energy at home which coach Brian Vaughns called a ‘capitulation’.

It was all Whittlesea early, as the Pacers outscored Latrobe City 29-12 in the first period.

The Pacers led by as much as 16 in the second before the Energy started to gather momentum. Two quick runs by the Energy cut the lead to eight points at half-time.

Whittlesea was able to stem the bleeding in the fourth before a late 8-0 Latrobe City run shut down any hopes of a comeback.

Emmerson Potts-Broughton led the Pacers with 21 points, five rebounds and four assists while import Hakeem Simon has 10 points and 16 rebounds.

The Pacers weren’t able to bounce back on Sunday, going down 85-48 to Warrandyte Venom on the road.

Whittlesea coach Brian Vaughns said the wheels fell off when Potts-Broughton has to be taken off the court with a concussion on Saturday.

“Once he went out, there went our firepower. He had 21 points at that time so that did it and we couldn’t recover from there,” he said.

The Pacers’ women had a tough time too, suffering a 92-52 loss to Hume City Broncos.

Rachel Bell had 37 points and seven rebounds in the loss but made the only impact on the scoreboard.

Panthers lose heartbreaker

By Jackson Russell

Wallan Panthers didn’t have the weekend they were hoping for with the men splitting their back-to-back and the women dropping a crucial game in their finals race.

The Panthers’ men opened their weekend with a 79-70 win over Melton Thoroughbreds on the road.

After a back and forth first period, the Panthers went on 13-0 run on their way to opening up a 20-point lead in the third before Melton was able to reel them in.

It wasn’t enough as the Panthers hit some big shots late and held on for the win.

Trace Cureton led the Panthers with 15 points, six rebounds and four assists while Hayden Annett had 14 points, six rebounds and seven assists.

The Panthers weren’t as lucky on Sunday, losing to Mildura Heat 85-84 at home in heartbreaking fashion.

The Panthers led by as much as 10 points in the second period before the Heat went on a 16-2 run to lead by seven points at half-time.

The margin blew out to 15 points before the Panthers came back to take a 84-83 lead with 20 seconds to go.

After Mildura missed a three-point shot on the buzzer, Leo Viitala called for a foul during the rebound which sent the Heat to the line for the game-winning free throws.

Trace Cureton continued his hot streak with 27 points, seven rebounds and three assists while Leigh Saffin had 18 points, seven rebounds and two assists.

Wallan coach Carey Paps said despite the comeback, the Panthers never should’ve been in that position.

“I was pretty proud of the comeback but we were disappointed with our defence that let them back in in the first half, that’s what really hurt us. We shouldn’t have been in that position,” he said.

Wallan takes on Southern Peninsula Sharks on the road next week with a chance at a home final on the line.

“As long as we win, we should have a home final. If we lose and Craigieburn win, we could drop to sixth.”

Wallan’s women also suffered a close loss, going down 71-67 to Melton Thoroughbreds on the road.

Wallan was in control for most of the first three quarters before Melton went on a 24-6 run to lead by eight points early in the fourth.

The Panthers fought back to regain the lead but it was gone just as quickly as Melton held off the comeback.

Rebecca Romeo led the Panthers with 19 points, six rebounds and three assists while Alex Darby had 17 points, seven rebounds and one assist.

The Panthers close out the season on the road with a tough ask against top-placed Melbourne University.

Lucky 13 for Laurimar

By Jackson Russell

Laurimar’s perfect record remains intact after 17-point win over Heidelberg West on Saturday.

The Power are still on top of the Northern Football Netball League division three ladder with a 13-0 record, three games clear of Panton Hill and five games clear of Kilmore.

Laurimar started well, opening up a 12-point quarter time lead after kicking 3.6 (24) to two goals straight.

The Hawks stayed close to the Power in the second term to keep the margin to 10 points at half-time but Laurimar extended its lead in the third.

Scoring opened up in the final term as both sides tried to gain an advantage.

After kicking five goals in three quarters, Heidelberg West kicked five goals in the final term, trying to steal an upset win.

The Power wasn’t having any of it, replying to each goal to take home their 13th straight win.

Laurimar coach Justin Sherman said it was a great win with seven of the Power’s best 22 out.

“We were ecstatic the guys we brought in from the reserves could step up and play a role,” he said.

“It was a very big character defining win and I thought the way we handles the crunch situations was a credit to the boys.

“For us, we talk about playing our role so I thought everyone contributed. I thought the new guys did that and our senior players led the way.”

Laurimar will have a well-deserved bye this week before hosting a Panton Hill in a one versus two blockbuster on August 3.

Heidelberg West 10.10 (70) def by Laurimar 12.15 (87)

HEIDELBERG WEST
Goals: M. Reinke 2, J. Grimshaw 2, R. Offer 2, B. Fogarty, D. Offer, B. Wright, J. Marris.
Best: D. Offer, L. McKenna, B. Rawson, B. Fogarty, S. Condello, B. Muir

LAURIMAR
Goals: D. King 2, L. Wilson 2, J. Cecil 2, J. Sherman 2, J. Lawson, J. Wilkins, J. Stewart, W. Jacovou.
Best: J. Leather, W. Jacovou, L. Wilson, J. McKinnon, K. Sheehan, J. Lewis.

Eagles close in on top spot

By Jackson Russell

Whittlesea’s run to the top of the ladder continued with a 44-point away win over St Mary’s on Saturday.

The Eagles are now second of the NFNL division two ladder, behind Banyule only on percentage after the Bears dropped a game to Diamond Creek.

Whittlesea missed the jump, allowing St Mary’s to kick four goals to three in the first term to trail by 10 points at quarter time.

They were able to right the ship in the second term, booting six goals to one to take a 20-point lead into half-time.

The Eagles extended their lead in the third term with a four goal to two quarter to lead by 34 points at the final change.

Whittlesea closed out the win by going on a tear in the final term, piling on five more goals.

Whittlesea coach Blair Harvey said it was a great win against the in-form side of the competition.

“They challenged us early but we responded. We were able to over run them with our fitness in the second quarter then able to stay ahead in the second half,” he said.

“We had a pretty even contribution from everybody so it was pretty hard to pick a best player to be honest.”

The Eagles host 4-6 Fitzroy Stars next week before taking their last bye in Round 15.

“We’re just looking for consistency more than anything and making sure we stay up and playing our style of football not matter who we’re playing,” Harvey said.

“I think if we can do that, the results will take care of themselves.

“We’re enjoying playing week to week without any breaks. Our momentum is really good so I’m not sure how that bye’s going to go but it is how it is and we’re just going to have to deal with it.”

St Mary’s 10.14 (74) def by Whittlesea 18.10 (118)

ST MARY’S
Goals: C. Petroro 2, M. Guldon 2, D. Ronalds, R. Hanlon, N. Daisley, T. Cotter, J. Wolczko, M. Hocking.
Best: D. Ronalds, N. Daisley, M. Guldon, T. Cotter, J. Dean, T. Cantwell

WHITTLESEA
Goals: N. Pupillo 5, C. Bland 3, P. Higgins 2, M. Andrews 2, N. Stefanile, B. Watson, C. McCabe, R. Carter, X. Dimasi, C. Taplin.
Best: T. Falls, M. Atta, N. Andrews, N. Pupillo, M. Andrews, M. Coen

Blues fail to tame Lions

By Jackson Russell

South Morang closed the gap on Kilmore to just half a game on the Northern Football District League division two ladder after a 17-point win over the Blues on Saturday.

Kilmore are third on the ladder at 8-4, two games behind Panton Hill and only a draw ahead of South Morang.

It was a topsy-turvy game but it started slow as the two sides were only able to kick a goal each in the first term as the Blues held a one-point lead at quarter time.

South Morang got the first blow in the second term, kicking five unanswered goals while holding Kilmore scoreless and take a 32-point lead into half-time.

The Blues came out of the sheds for the third term like a house on fire, booting seven goals to one to lead by 10 points at three-quarter time.

Kilmore wasn’t able to carry that momentum forward as the Lions chipped away at the lead in the final term, kicking four goals to none to steal the win.

Kilmore coach Nathan Phillips said it was disappointing to drop a winnable game.

“We’ve got to win games like that if we want to compete come the end of the year. There’s still a lot of footy to be played so we want to win those games” he said.

“Our second half was good but we were horrendous in the first quarter, we didn’t use that breeze at all.

“We can’t give sides a chance like that and expect to win. They played well with the breeze and we could’ve defended better but the first was the quarter that really hurt us.

“Leigh Irons was really good all day through the midfield and Ben Cooney kicked all his goals in the third quarter. Paxton went into the ruck in the second half and gave us lots of opportunities.”

The Blues host Mernda this weekend with a chance to solidify their place in the finals.

“Every game we’ve played in the last four weeks has been pretty important and this is another one,” Phillips said.

“We need to win this one, we’re not guaranteeing ourselves a spot but it helps if we win this one.

“We’ve got the toughest run home so we’ve got to play our best footy and that’s what we need to do anyway if we want to compete against the top sides if we make it.”

South Morang 11.9 (75) def Kilmore 8.10 (58)

SOUTH MORANG
Goals: A. Colaidis 3, J. Hewson 2, M. Dickson, J. Potter, N. Dalmau, T. Hall, L. Golledge, L. Nicol.
Best: T. Hall, J. Hewson, M. Robinson, B. Brown, C. Giannone, L. Shelton.

KILMORE
Goals: B. Cooney 4, J. Kinnear 2, L. Chapman, M. Swindells.
Best: L. Irons, G. Paxton, R. McLaughlin, S. Skidmore, B. Cooney, D. Matthew

Tigers score second win

By Jackson Russell

Lancefield was able to score its second win of the Riddell District Football Netball League season, running over the top of bottom-placed Rockbank by 94 points on Saturday.

After a scoreless first term, the Tigers finally got the ball rolling in the second, kicking six goals to one to take a 34-point lead into half-time.

Lancefield kept the Rams scoreless in the third term, adding five more goals to lead by 66 points at three-quarter time.

With the result beyond doubt, the Tigers cruised home to the win with four more goals.

Lancefield coach Chris Collins said he was rapt with the win.

“It’s never easy going over there. They’re always a bit of a challenge whether it’s the team or the conditions, it’s always rough over there,” he said.

“We expected a battle and it was for the first but we had the game under control after that.

“It’s a cliché but it was genuinely a good team effort across the board.

“Young Alan Sinclair had a great game, Nathan Malone played really well, Andrew Sanderson played well across half back line and Ross Moloney went well on the wing.”

Collins said days like Saturday made it easier to take some off the losses during the season.

“It makes it all worth it. We’re aware of where we’re at and we need to make sure we take advantage of the opportunities we have to win,” he said.

“We have Woodend Hesket this weekend so we’re hoping to give them a good run for their money.”

Rockbank 1.4 (10) def by Lancefield 15.14 (104)

ROCKBANK
Goals: A. Close.
Best: M. Baumgartner, J. Baumgartner, M. Lalli-Cafini, S. Woodroffe, T. Dutton, B. Williams.

LANCEFIELD
Goals: L. Malone 3, P. Kaufmann 3, N. Malone. 2, W. Bell 2, M. Bowden 2, A. Fonua, C. Collins, A. Sanderson.
Best: A. Sinclair, N. Malone, L. Malone, M. Bowden, S. Ilgoutz, J. Dalgleish.

Burras too strong for Roos

Broadford had a tough day at the office after a 20-goal loss to Diggers Rest at home on Saturday.

The loss is Broadford’s 10th of the season, which keeps them two games clear of the wooden spoon and two games back from eighth-placed Woodend Hesket.

Broadford were able to stay somewhat within reach in the first term, trailing by 27 points after kicking one goal to five.

The Kangaroos were only able to add three behinds in the second term while Diggers Rest added give more to lead by 55 points at half-time.

The punishment continued in the third term as the Burras held Broadford scoreless and added six more majors to their tally.

Broadford finally got back on the scoreboard in the final term, but it was too late as Diggers kicked another six goals to stroll to a win that drew the Burras level with ladder-leaders Romsey.

Broadford 2.7 (19) def by Diggers Rest 22.7 (139)

BROADFORD
Goals: R. Johnson, J. Scully.
Best: R. Gardener, A. Norris, J. Scully, J. Welch, C. Hall, J. Hibbens.

DIGGERS REST
Goals: D. Costigan 7, A. Del Papa 5, J. Wallace 4, T. Taylor 2, A. Tyquin 2, K. Owens, T. Delahey.
Best: L. Delahey, A. Del Papa, D. Costigan, A. Tyquin, N. Pinder, T. Taylor.

Romsey drops vital game

By Jackson Russell

Romsey came back to earth with a thud after a 54-point loss to an undermanned Riddell in a first versus second on the ladder clash.

The Redbacks started well, kicking the first two goals before Jaidyn Caruana snapped the Redbacks’ third.

Riddell replied with two of their own to trail by four points at quarter time.

The Bombers won the game with their outstanding second term, kicking eight goals unanswered to lead by 43 points at half-time.

The Redbacks were able to get back on the scoreboard in the third term but Riddell extended their lead out to 55 points with a three goal to one quarter.

Facing an insurmountable challenge, Romsey was able to stay even with Riddell in the final term but the match was over early.

Romsey coach Corey O’Sullivan said the first 10 minutes were played just as a team should play with the wind, long and direct through the corridor but it started to go wrong after that.

“The last 15 minutes of the first, for whatever reason, we started to chip the ball and Riddell were able to pressure us better and score two goals into the wind,” he said.

“We just didn’t play smart footy and in the second quarter, when Riddell get up and going, they’re really hard to stop.

“It was a bad loss for us, we didn’t bring a level of intensity that’s required when a side gets on top and we weren’t able to shut them down which was the most disappointing thing about the day.

“The other thing was Riddell had some major players out of their side so it was a fantastic win for them but made it so much harder for us.

“We just couldn’t match their intensity and that’s an area we need to work on.”

The loss was just Romsey’s third for the season and brings the Redbacks level with Riddell and Diggers Rest on premiership points on

The Redbacks are just one percentage point ahead of Diggers Rest, making every goal crucial.

Romsey 6.7 (43) def by Riddell 15.7 (97)

ROMSEY
Goals: A. Paterson, J. Carroll, J. Naylor, J. Caruana, J. Jedwab, M. Burkett.
Best: N. Blair, N. Rayment, J. O’Sullivan, J. Jedwab, M. Goodwin, M. Burkett.

RIDDELL
Goals: E. Foreman 4, H. Ross 2, L. Henson 2, D. Tarczon 2, T. Alkemade, G. Urquhart, P. Sahlberg, L. Tarczon, R. Miller.
Best: R. Miller, L. Tarczon, T. Ford, P. Sahlberg, D. Tarczon.

Wallan falls to Rupertswood

By Jackson Russell

Wallan was unable to hold down a win at home on Saturday, suffering a 19-point loss to Rupertswood.

The loss is a crucial one as it drops Wallan to fourth on the Riddell District Football Netball League ladder, a game behind Romsey, Riddell and Diggers Rest.

It was a slow start as the two rivals felt each other out.

Wallan kicked the only goal in the first term to lead 1.5 (11) to 0.2 (2) at quarter time.

The Sharks gathered a bit of momentum in the second term, holding the Magpies scoreless and kicking 3.9 to take an 18-point lead into half-time.

Wallan replied in-kind in the third term, keeping Rupo to just a single behind while booting four goals to lead by eight points at the final break.

Rupertswood really hit their stride in the final term, kicking five goals to one to run away with the win.

Wallan assistant coach Spencer Mathieson said the Magpies wanted to back up last week’s performance with another win.

“We were doing just that after a good start with the breeze but to their credit, Rupertswood kept us to six scoring shots which was costly,” he said.

“Rupertswood were better with the breeze, had more scoring shots with it and deserved their victory.”

Mathieson said Corey Grindlay, Cam Nickson Chris Barton, Ricky Schraven and Jake Layley were the standouts in the loss.

Wallan has a bye this week before travelling to Lancefield, followed by Riddell at home and Woodend Hesket away to finish the season.

Wallan 6.9 (45) def by Rupertswood 8.16 (64)

WALLAN
Goals: C. Barton, C. Grindlay, A. Saladino, S. Morris, J. Layley, R. Schraven.
Best: C. Grindlay, J. Layley, C. Nickson, C. Barton, R. Schraven, C. Hamilton.

RUPERTSWOOD
Goals: N. Grigg 2, J. Berry 2, S. Hetherington, J. Baillie, B. Swallow, J. Barnard.
Best: B. Swallow, J. Tentonello, D. Putt, N. Egan, J. Berry, M. Knight.