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Notes:
Amherst is a former gold mining township 13 km south-west of Maryborough and 135 km north-west of Melbourne.
The nearest neighbouring township is Talbot, 5 km southwards. Amherst predates Talbot, and was a borough before gold discoveries brought Talbot into existence.
Amherst is on Daisy Hill Creek and is situated at what were once important cross roads. Gold was discovered there at a number of locations during 1852-55. A town was surveyed and town lots sold in 1855. An Anglican school was opened in 1856 and a Presbyterian school in 1860. In addition to those denominations there was also a Wesleyan church (1857).
Amherst borough was proclaimed on 22 October 1858. The name probably commemorated Lord Amherst, Governor General of India, later Earl Amherst, who died in 1857.
In 1859 gold was discovered at Talbot, and several rich finds followed. Within a few years Talbot rivalled Amherst, and in 1875 Amherst became a ‘suburb’ of Talbot borough.
By 1861 the Amherst borough had over 2000 people including Talbot, males outnumbering females by about 2 to 1. During the 1860s there was a hospital, a court of petty sessions, three hotels, and a diverse gold mining industry. Within 40 years, Amherst’s mining activity had greatly lessened and its population was endowed with civic and religious institutions. It was described in 1903 in the Australian handbook:
City/Town : Latitude: -37.1455725, Longitude: 143.6691315
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