Welcome Stranger: World’s largest gold nugget remembered

Between 1851 and 1861 Australia exported at least 30 million ounces (850 metric tons) of gold – more than one third of the world’s total.

The diggings were a casino but the prizes went more to men of strength and stamina. The acclimatised colonial was more likely to find gold than a migrant fresh from England; a barrel-chested labourer was more likely to succeed than a weedy clerk. Here was one of the rare instances in modern history where a great natural resource was more freely available to the poor than to the rich, for the poor were more accustomed to hard work, and only hard work could harvest the diggings.

Historian, Geoffrey Blainey

 

Most gold nuggets were small, weighing only a few ounces each. But every now and then a miner would unearth a spectacular find. News of these nuggets was broadcast everywhere and helped maintain the lure of gold.

 

The ‘Welcome Stranger’ nugget

When it was discovered in 1869 the ‘Welcome Stranger’ nugget was the largest gold nugget ever found. It was found by Cornish miner John Deason and his partner Richard Oates near Moliagul in central Victoria, long after the initial rushes. While digging around the roots of a stringybark tree Deason discovered the nugget lying only 3 cm below the surface.

The ‘Welcome Stranger’ was taken to the bank at Dunolly, but was so large that it had to be broken on an anvil at the local blacksmith’s before it could fit on the bank’s scales. After smelting it yielded 2,302 oz (about 71 kg) of solid gold.

Deason and Oates shared the fortune of nearly £10,000.

welcome stranger replica nugget

Object 9

Gold Rush: 20 Objects, 20 Stories

Replica property of Old Treasury Building.

 

<Previous Object   |   Next Object>

The replica

There was such public interest in large gold nuggets that replicas were often made. This replica was probably made by the Department of Mines from sketches done at the time of its discovery. It is made from plaster of Paris and painted.

 

The lottery of gold

All diggers dreamt of finding a nugget like this. But few were so lucky. Historians have suggested that perhaps ten per cent of miners made substantial fortunes, another ten per cent made enough to invest in a farm or business, while many just managed to keep themselves. Others found nothing at all. Author and miner William Howitt described gold digging as ‘a lottery, with far more blanks than prizes’.

The Welcome Stranger nugget

Miners and their families posing with the finders of the ‘Welcome Stranger’ nugget, 1869

PH๏τograph by W. Parker. Reproduced courtesy State Library Victoria

Related Posts

Carn Brea Castle: A Historic 14th-Century Landmark in the UK

Carn Brea Castle: A Historic 14th-Century Landmark in the UK

Perched dramatically atop Carn Brea hill in Cornwall, Carn Brea Castle is a striking 14th-century structure with a rich and varied history. Originally constructed in 1379 as a chapel—believed to be dedicated to St….

The New Mapping Tech Behind Nat Geo’s “тιтanic: The Digital Resurrection”

  The тιтanic is perhaps the most famous shipwreck in history. The ocean liner sank in the early hours of April 15, 1912, striking an iceberg on…

All 8,000 Members of the Terracotta Army Unearthed So Far Have Unique Facial Features

All of those soldiers have a unique face. And who knows how many more may be hiding out there? In March 1974, farmers digging a well in…

The Sleeping Beauty of the Capuchin Catacombs

Pure chance: from the worst location to a H๏τspot In 1534, the Capuchin monks in Palermo built their first monastery in Sicily – near the church of Santa…

Mangystau archaeologist makes geoglyph gallery to stimulate local tourism

ASTANA – Mangystau archaeologist and historian Andrei Astafiyev has made a gallery of geoglyphs reflecting nomadic arts, the first in the region’s Airakty-Shomanai mountain valley and in…

Pictured: ‘Vampire’ graves in Poland where skeletons were buried with skulls between their legs

Archaeologists have unearthed what they believe to be a vampire burial ground on a building site in Poland. The team of historians discovered graves containing four skeletons…