A Short History of Dight Falls

  • Exploring the Yarra River

    Exploring the Yarra River
    Charles Grimes, Surveyor General of NSW, was the first European to explore the Yarra River with his survey party. He reported unfavourably on the prospects of settling there.
  • Melbourne Settlement

    Melbourne Settlement
    Melbourne was eventually settled. The first public land sales were held after the land was sub-divided.
  • Port Phillip Land Sales

    Port Phillip Land Sales
    John Dight purchased Melbourne block 88, which came along with 26 acres of land along the Yarra River for £481 at the Port Phillip land sales held in Sydney.
  • Leaving business

    Leaving business
    John Dight had a business for flour milling and he owned a mill near Campbell Town in New South Wales called Ceres. In April, he notified his customers through The Sydney Herald, telling them that he was leaving to go to Port Phillip.
  • The First Steam Powered Flour Mill

    The First Steam Powered Flour Mill
    The first steam powered flour mill was built in Melbourne. Before Dight had built his water powered mill, bricks were delivered from Tasmania.
  • Abandoning Flour Milling

    Abandoning Flour Milling
    The Dight family had abandoned flour milling and all of it was sold.
  • Sold

    Sold
    After the Dight family had abandoned flour milling, the property was then sold to Edwin Trennery. He then eventually subdivided the land.
  • The original mill on the river bank stayed unoccupied until, flour millers, Gillespie, Aitken and Scott constructed a new mill and associated buildings at the site. They worked under the name of 'Yarra Falls Roller Flour Mills'.

    The original mill on the river bank stayed unoccupied until, flour millers, Gillespie, Aitken and Scott constructed a new mill and associated buildings at the site. They worked under the name of 'Yarra Falls Roller Flour Mills'.
    The original mill on the river bank stayed unoccupied until, flour millers, Gillespie, Aitken and Scott constructed a new mill and associated buildings at the site. They worked under the name of 'Yarra Falls Roller Flour Mills'.
  • Sold

    Sold
    The mill race in a very similar position bluestone blocks from Dight's old mill building. A new mill and associated buildings were also constructed. This was then sold to the Melbourne Flour Milling Company.
  • The existing weir to Dight Falls

    The existing weir to Dight Falls
    A timber structure was built to provide water to the Melbourne Flour Milling Company.
  • Destroyed

    Destroyed
    The owner of the mill changed another time in 1909 before it was destroyed by a fire. The ruins of the mill race can still be found at Dight Falls today.
  • First Reconstruction Document

    First Reconstruction Document
    The first reconstruction document occurred in 1918 when a part of the timber weir washed away in the flood waters. The Minister for Public Works that the Weir would be rebuilt at the time, even though the area of these works are anonymous.
  • Distribution and Rebuild

    Distribution and Rebuild
    A breach of the weir prompted another distribution and rebuild of one and a half tonnes of rock from the edge of the weir downstream.
  • Flood

    Flood
    After a heavy rainfall, another further breach of the weir occurred. Most of the wailings, rock fill and timber decking had washed away or were damaged during this flood.
  • Barrier for Native Fish

    Barrier for Native Fish
    In Melbourne water, you could see that there was a barrier to fish migration constructed a rock fishway to allow to move around the weir. While at the time, it was considered best practise at the time, the rock fishway way was only effective and the Dight Falls Weir on goes to act as a major barrier to native fish migration in the Yarra River.