Mia Mia Community Plan Review 2013

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Mia Mia Community Plan Review 2013
Mia Mia
          Community Plan
          Review 2013
Mia Mia Community Plan Review 2013
Reviewing the Plan
As part of a Community Engagement Project, the Mia Mia Mechanics' Institute organised a series of
workshops. The items in the old community plan were mailed to community members, along with an
invitation to attend a community dinner to discuss the changes needed for the plan. 56 community
members attended the first workshop and we developed a mailing list to keep all those involved with
the plan review.

A list of all the proposed amendments to the plan was subsequently circulated, with an invitation to
attend a second workshop and BBQ. At the workshop we discussed the final content for our revised
plan and we allocated names to various projects. The focus areas shown on Pages 11 – 13 were then
circulated to community members with a request for final suggested amendments.

The plan was accepted at a meeting of the Mia Mia Mechanics' Institute early in 2013 and several of the
projects in the new plan are well underway, particularly

Item 1.4 - Produce a book on the history of Mia Mia, and
Item 4.1 - Continue a regular newsletter, and.
Item 4.2 - Develop a welcome letter and district service package".

Other projects are progressing at a slower pace. Items shown with "ongoing" in the timeline column are
indeed ongoing, especially Item 1.1 "Support and promote existing and new community events."

We now have an email list for advising those who have requested our email community newsletter, and
that list is growing in number.

The history project team (Item 1.4) applied for a grant to produce a history book of Mia Mia & District
and the application was successful. It came with a completion date of September 2014 so a good deal of
community energy is being spent on that project. As a result of promoting events around the history
project we have renewed contact with prior residents as well as current residents, which help enrich our
community life. We expect to implement the plan as shown by the end of 2015, although some items
can only happen if we have some financial support from external sources, including our local councils.

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Mia Mia Community Plan Review 2013
Contents
                         The importance of a Community Plan              Page 4

                         Mia Mia - Our History
                            The Beginning                           Pages 5 - 6
                            Burke and Wills                             Page 7
                            McIvor Gold Escort Robbery                  Page 7
                            The first flight of an                      Page 8
                            Australian-made Aeroplane
                            The Heritage Bridge                   Pages 9 - 10

                         Focus Areas
                            Economic                                    Page 11
                            Environment                                 Page 12
                            Infrastructure                              Page 12
                            Health and Wellbeing                        Page 13

                         Mia Mia - results from the              Pages 14 - 15
                         2011 Census

                         Mia Mia Events                                 Page 16

                         Mia Mia in 2013                         Pages 17 - 18

                         Contact Details:

                         Email: miamisocial@gmail.com
                         Web: www.miamiavic.com

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Mia Mia Community Plan Review 2013
The importance of a Community Plan
This community plan was developed by the community of Mia Mia during 2012 and 2013. Community
members were invited by mail to workshops organised by the Mia Mia Mechanics' Institute. An
important consideration for the community is that Mia Mia is a rural area where almost all the land is
privately owned.

While some may see tourism potential for activities such as walking and cycling tracks around Lake
Eppalock, these create potential risks for lakeside landowners who already are required to spend time
protecting their properties from damaged fences, interrupted water access, discarded rubbish and badly
managed camp fires.

The ten items in the Focus Areas, on pages 11 – 13, show the priorities of the community over the next
three years. Only those action items that community members felt they had the resources to contribute
to are included in the plan.

We now have Mia Mia mailing lists, both email and postal, so we can keep community members
informed of meetings and other events.

A newsletter for Mia Mia residents, the quarterly Mia Mia Messenger, started in March 2013, this is
item 4.1 in our plan.

A New Resident Kit (Item 4.2) is being developed and a working group has been set up to investigate the
preparation and production of a book on Mia Mia history (Item 1.4).

All community members are welcome to assist in all items in the plan as well as enjoy the various
events, including community dinners that are staged at Mia Mia Hall.

How you can be involved
We are happy to add all Mia Mia residents and landowners to our
distribution lists. To have your details added to the distribution lists,
please send an email to the Mia Mia community email address at
miamiasocial@gmail.com We hope that all new residents and
landowners will become involved in our community activities. Our web
address is: www.miamiavic.com

As our needs change, the plan should reflect those changes. We receive
outside funding support to implement only those items on our plan.
When we discover a new need, with a higher priority than those in the
plan, then we need to add that new need to the plan before applying for
support. The addition of a new item may lead to removal of an existing
item, and so the plan evolves and remains current.

Community planning is a concept endorsed by local government across
Victoria. Development of Mia Mia's revised Community Plan 2013 has
been supported by the City of Greater Bendigo with some assistance from
the Victorian Department of Planning and Community Development.

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Mia Mia Community Plan Review 2013
Mia Mia – the beginning
Major Thomas Livingstone Mitchell passed through the district now known as Mia Mia in October 1836, on
his way back to Sydney from Portland on his third journey through Southern Australia. He gave a glowing
report on the farming potential of the land he passed through in Victoria. His Camp 13 was just southeast of
what is now the township of Mia Mia, where Pohlman's Creek meets Briggs Creek and eventually becomes
Wild Duck Creek, close to the boundary of the City of Greater Bendigo and Mitchell Shire. Mitchell then
proceeded just south of Heathcote towards what is now Nagambie.

  Pohlman’s Creek

Mitchell's account of the favourable country through which he had passed attracted the attention of settlers.
By 1840 most of Central Victoria was occupied by new settlers. New South Wales was in the grip of drought
and overlanders arrived from the north and settlers from Tasmania crossed Bass Strait with their flocks and
herds from over-stocked Tasmania. These men did not own the land but paid an annual fee of £10 to occupy
a run, the size of which varied according to the size of their flock.

Henry Munro was the first person to select land in the area. He selected some 30,000 acres in 1838, as the
Spring Plains Run. His land stretched from the foot of Mt Alexander across to the McHarg Ranges. Munro
sold the land in early 1843 to William McGill, who in turn sold it to Patrick Maine in December of the same
year.

Maine built a log hut east of the land where the township of Mia Mia now stands, and erected a log hut on a
rise nearby, possibly in 1844. The hut became popular as an overnight resting place for travellers along the
nearby ‘Major’s Line’, which at that time was the principal ‘highway’ in Central Victoria. His hut became
known as ‘Maine’s Mia Mia’, which today is known as Mia Mia. Some early documents show the spelling as
Mia Mi, others as Miami.

In July 1838, Chas Hutton settled at Moorabbee, then known as Campaspe Plains and now located on the
eastern side of Lake Eppalock. His shepherds roamed over all the area around Mia Mia and far to the north.
Within a couple of years Barfold, Spring Plains, Wolfscrag and Tourbourie were separately occupied and they
effectively limited the southern boundary of Moorabbee to roughly the Major’s line of track.

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Mia Mia Community Plan Review 2013
The Mia Mia
    Inn ruins

In 1848 a hostelry, the Mia Mia Hotel, built by Henry Farrell, was located in what became Valley Road, just
above the bluestone ruins still visible behind the bus shelter. It was bought by Michael Madden in 1854.
Madden's widow ran the hotel after her husband's death. In 1858, she married Fred Westblade and they ran
the hotel until 1871 when they leased it to their son-in-law Thomas Dwyer. In 1898 Patrick Dwyer bought the
Inn freehold, the bluestone hotel whose ruins are clearly visible today. The little settlement of Mia Mia grew
up around the hotel.

 The Mia Mia
 Post Office ruins

Mia Mia was surveyed by Philip Chauncey in 1859. He demarcated allotments, named streets, and declared
Mia Mia a township in 1861. The population was then 31. By 1868, Mia Mia boasted a school, 2 stores (1
licensed), at least 2 smithies and the Mia Mia Inn, besides many small settlers living nearby.

Ewen Matheson conducted the licensed store, and it was there that the first Presbyterian services were held
by the Rev. David Renton of Heathcote.

(Adapted from Jack Ross’s Mia Mia Presbyterian Church 1872-1972 the first 100 years, unpublished, n.d. and from his "Mia
Mia School 1869-1969 booklet).

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Mia Mia Community Plan Review 2013
Burke & Wills Exploration
                                                                   The Burke & Wills Track, sometimes called the
                                                                   Mia Mia Lancefield Road or the Three Chain Road,
                                                                   is a sealed road between Lancefield and Mia Mia.
                                                                   It originally formed part of a stock route from the
                                                                   north to ports in Melbourne. In 1860, the Burke
                                                                   & Wills Scientific Expedition team, on its journey
                                                                   to cross Australia from south to north, followed
                                                                   this track from Melbourne to Mia Mia where the
                                                                   expedition team's men, horses and camels spent
                                                                   two days. Some of the exploration party stayed at
                                                                   the Mia Mia Inn, some camped at what is now the
                                                                   Recreation Reserve, also known as The Flat, on
                                                                   the corner of Westblade Street.

McIvor Gold Escort Robbery
On Wednesday, July 20th 1853, a private escort for gold started out from McIvor diggings (now known as
Heathcote) and was going to Melbourne via Kyneton. This escort had a cart containing 2,223 ounces of
gold and about £700 pounds in money, packed into two boxes. When they were just outside of Mia Mia
they came across a log thrown across the road and were ambushed by robbers who took the two boxes.
Most of the escort were badly injured including the horses. As soon as the news became known a
massive search was undertaken by all in the area. Eventually they arrested three men and in September
1853 they were convicted and executed in October the same year.

Reference: The “Told by the Pioneer Series; Recollections of a Victorian Police Officer” by John Sadler

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Mia Mia Community Plan Review 2013
The first flight of an Australian-made aeroplane
In 1910, an aeroplane was designed and constructed by John
Robertson Duigan (born 1882) and his younger brother,
Reginald Charles Duigan on their parent’s property, Spring Plains
at Mia Mia. After many trials, the first flight was achieved by
John on 16th July 1910, making this the first flight of an
Australian aeroplane. The plane's official flight was at
Bendigo racecourse on 11th May, 1911, before
600 spectators.

In 1960, to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the first flight a pylon with the plane’s propeller was
erected on the Burke & Wills Track, in front of the place where the plane first flew. In 2012 the Duigan
family helped the Mia Mia community commemorate the centenary of the first flight with a number of
celebrations, and a replica of the Duigan plane was constructed by the CSIRO. Images of the flight are
available at www.duigancentenaryofflight.org.au and the monument can be visited 5 kilometres down
the Burke & Wills Track, also known as the Mia Mia Lancefield Road.

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Mia Mia Community Plan Review 2013
The Mia Mia Heritage Bridge
Mia Mia Bridge or Redesdale Bridge, built in the years
1867-8, is a unique wrought-iron lattice-girder
through-truss road bridge on stone-masonry
abutments, with divided lanes and a longitudinal
timber deck. It is historically, scientifically and
aesthetically significant at State level, and stands out
clearly above other Victorian examples of stone-
masonry, iron and timber-topped colonial bridges for
several reasons.

The Mia Mia Bridge was built to allow a cross-country
mail route that linked the prosperous gold fields
centres of Kyneton and Heathcote. It is the second-
oldest lattice-girder bridge in Victoria, after
Hawthorn Bridge, and is in more original condition
than that bridge. It was constructed from parts of a
larger iron-bridge consignment originally imported
from England in 1859 to bridge the Yarra River at
Hawthorn, but replaced for that purpose when the
ship carrying it to Melbourne caught fire and was
scuttled in Hobson's Bay.

When salvaged it became the subject of a
controversial attempted 'deal' with the Victorian
Government and lay neglected for several years,
before much of its ironwork was modified and sold
by the Port Phillip Foundry to the combined Shires of
McIvor and Metcalfe for use at the Campaspe
crossing. The bridge site can claim historical
significance in its own right, it being claimed at the
bridge's official opening to be adjacent to the scene
of a significant early colonial battle between local
Aborigines and early European settlers of the area.

The divided-lane through-truss design at Mia Mia was
created specifically for this difficult Campaspe River
crossing site and is unique. The design of the original
Hawthorn bridge from whose components the Mia
Mia Bridge was constructed, had involved three rows
of trusses below deck level. When these materials
were used as through-trusses at Mia Mia, the three
above-deck trusses had to be linked and stabilised by
two sets of unusual custom-built overhead arches,
which give this bridge its striking appearance. Its
lengthy single clear span of 54.7 metres, without use
of intermediate piers, differs from the multiple-span

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Mia Mia Community Plan Review 2013
designs of our other rural lattice-girder bridges. It also features a longitudinal deck, once common with
this type of bridge but now very rare on surviving bridges of the colonial era.

The few other surviving Victorian examples of this lattice-girder type are of deck-truss design (with
trusses below deck level). They are not divided-lane bridges and their visual impact is totally different.

The Mia Mia Bridge and site are also outstanding in aesthetic terms. Its siting, high above a broad and
deep river valley where stone-masonry intermediary piers would be impractical, distinguishes it from
other colonial Victorian lattice-girder truss bridges. Soaring iron arches linking unusually lengthy and tall
triple-through-trusses of attractive wrought-iron work, combined with the physical ruggedness and
visual impressiveness of this difficult river-crossing site, make it one of Victoria's most aesthetically
appealing road bridges.

The Mia Mia Bridge is substantially intact, with recent replacement of the timber crossbeams and
decking and an increase in the height of the arch trusses. A recent collision with a truck necessitated
repairs to the trusses and abutments. (Adapted from the Victorian Heritage Register and the National
Trust entries).

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Focus Areas
1.       Economic
Goal                                                    Timeline          Partners

1.1    Support and promote existing and new             Ongoing           MMMI (Mia Mia Mechanics'
       community festivals & events such as Flower                        Institute) Committee and
       Show, Trivia Night, Twilight Opera, Big Sing,                      The Flat committee
       Muster of the Lambs, and Community Dinners.

1.2    Establish an annual cultural event that brings   By 2015           Heather McCormack,
       together the professional artists of the area.                     Frank Firkin, Anton Hasell,
                                                                          Victoria Hartcup

1.3    Investigate the inclusion of a Mia Mia Slow      By 2014           Julia Sievers, Jenny Dempster,
       Cooking Competition in the Muster of the                           Wendy Hulls, Sue O'Sullivan
       Lambs event at The Flat.

1.4 Produce a book on the history of Mia Mia.           By 2014           Jim Coombe, Wendy Hulls,
                                                                          Mary Bennett, Gwen and
                                                                          Brian Ellis, Annette Coombe,
                                                                          Anthony Ryan, Kate Hicks

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2.       Environment
Goal                                                      Timeline      Partners

2.1    Provide storyboards at places of local             By 2015       MMMI and the "The Flat"
       geographical & historical interest .                             Committees

                                                                        .Baynton Sidonia Landcare
2.2    Ensure community members are aware of local        Ongoing       Group; Campaspe Valley
       Landcare and other environmental                                 Landcare Group
       organisations' projects in the region.                           North Central Catchment
                                                                        Management Authority

2.3    Ensure community members are aware of fire                       Mia Mia CFA Rural Brigade
       protection measures and the local resources        Ongoing
       and activities of the Country Fire Authority
       (CFA).

3.       Infrastructure
Goal                                                      Timeline      Partners

3.1    Maintain the Mia Mia Mechanics' Institute (The     Ongoing       "The Flat" Committee and the
       Hall) and The Flat (Mia Mia Recreation Reserve)                  MMMI Committee
       so they are safe & attractive for sport, passive
       recreation, tourism and community events.

                                                Mia Mia Recreation Reserve

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4.        Health & Wellbeing
Goal                                                      Timeline            Partners

4.1    Continue a regular community newsletter for        By 2013             MMMI Committee and all
       Mia Mia residents that include dates and                               community members.
       contact details of all local events, current
       social, craft, and environmental groups, and
       encourages new groups.
       (See also 2.2 above).

4.2    Develop a welcome letter & district service          By 2013           MMMI Committee to seek
       package for new & existing residents, updated                          ideas on content from
       each year for distribution to all community                            community members.
       members. Suggested items for such a package
       include CFA fire prevention recommendations,
       a local trade/services directory, a list of contacts
       for local community groups, and a
       'neighbourhood watch' contact list.

                                                                              MMMI and “The Flat”
4.3    Create an annual award for Mia Mia                 By 2014             Committees and Mia Mia
       Community Volunteer recognition.                                       Rural Fire Brigade (CFA).

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Mia Mia - Snapshot of results
from the 2011 Census
At the time of the 2011 Census, there were 265 people in Mia
Mia. Of these, 53.2% were male and 46.8% were female.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people made up 3.8% of the
population.

Age

Mia Mia                                                 Greater Bendigo

                 Males                  Females                                 Males                   Females

 90+ yrs                                                  90+ yrs
80-89 yrs                                                80-89 yrs
70-79 yrs                                                70-79 yrs
60-69 yrs                                                60-69 yrs
50-59 yrs                                                50-59 yrs
40-49 yrs                                                40-49 yrs
30-39 yrs                                                30-39 yrs
20-29 yrs                                                20-29 yrs
10-19 yrs
                                                         10-19 yrs
  0-9 yrs
                                                           0-9 yrs
            30      20   10     0      10     20   30            8000   6000   4000   2000     0      2000   4000   6000   8000
                              Number                                                         Number

The median age of people in Mia Mia is 49 years which is higher compared to the median age for
Greater Bendigo which is 38.

The most common ancestries in Mia Mia are English 31.3%, Australian 27%, Irish 12.2%, Scottish 11%
and German 3.8%.

Median Weekly Income
People aged 15 years and over

                                Mia Mia                  Greater Bendigo                     Victoria
Personal                        $398                     $513                                $561
Family                          $883                     $1,245                              $1,460
Household                       $742                     $991                                $1,216

The personal, family and household median weekly income for residents in Mia Mia is significantly lower
compared to Greater Bendigo and Victoria. In Mia Mia, 34% of households had a gross weekly
household income of less than $600 compared to 28.1% for Greater Bendigo and there was no one
counted as having a gross weekly income of more than $3,000.

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The median weekly rent in Mia Mia is $92 which is lower compared to Greater Bendigo which is $200.
100% of households renting in Mia Mia paid less than 30% of the household income on rent compared
to 91.5% in Greater Bendigo.

The median monthly mortgage repayment in Mia Mia is $1,300 which is the same as Greater Bendigo.
Households with mortgage repayments less than 30% of household income in Mia Mia are 88.9% which
is lower compared to Greater Bendigo with 92.5%. Households with mortgage repayments greater than
30% of household income is 11.1% which is higher compared to Greater Bendigo with 7.5%.

Family Composition

                               Mia Mia (%)                    Greater Bendigo (%)             Victoria (%)
Couple family without          63.2                           39.2                            36.7
children
Couple family with             25.0                           41.0                            46.0
children
One parent family              11.8                           18.3                            15.5
Other family                   0.0                            1.5                             1.8

In Mia Mia there are more couple family without children compared to couple family with children and
one parent families. Compared to Greater Bendigo and Victoria, Mia Mia had more couple family
without children.

In Mia Mia, 66.7% were family households (family households refer to a household with at least one
child under the age of 15 years), compared to 68.8% in Greater Bendigo. The proportion of single or
lone person households in Mia Mia is higher compared to Greater Bendigo with 30.6% and 24.5%
respectively.

Dwellings

                               Mia Mia (%)                    Greater Bendigo (%)             Victoria (%)
Occupied Dwellings             62.8                           90.7                            88.7
Unoccupied Dwellings           37.2                           9.3                             11.3

Of the total of private dwellings in Mia Mia, 62.8% were occupied. This rate of occupancy is
considerably lower compared to Greater Bendigo and Victoria. The average number of bedrooms per
dwelling in Mia Mia is 3 and the average number of people per household is 2.3.
Source: Australian Bureau of Statistics Code SSC20888 (SSC) Web page link:
http://www.censusdata.abs.gov.au/census_services/getproduct/census/2011/quickstat/SSC20888?opendocument&navpos=220

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Mia Mia Events
For more details on these events, or for information on
hiring the Mia Mia Hall, please check our website at
www.miamiavic.com

Australia Day Breakfast
Mia Mia's Australia Day breakfast is well supported by the
community, attracting over one hundred people each
year. A flag raising and communal singing of the national
anthem is followed by a guest speaker and then a
traditional Aussie breakfast is served.

Mia Mia Annual Flower Show
and Lunch
The Mia Mia Flower Show and luncheon at the Mia Mia
Mechanics' Institute (the Hall) attracts people from all
over Central Victoria. There are references to this annual
event as far back as 1934. The show is open to all and
entries are accepted up to 11AM on the day of the show.
In 2012 our guest speaker, a member of the Victorian
Orchid Judging Panel, gave a passionate talk on growing
orchids, showing some of his beautiful collection.

The Big Sing
After the 2009 Black Saturday fires the Mia Mia Rural Fire
Brigade was 'adopted' by a Melbourne choir, The Souffle
Sisters, managed by Paula Curotte. Paula helped organise
a very successful multi-choir Bushfire Benefit Concert in
Melbourne to raise funds to assist the Mia Mia Rural Fire
Brigade purchase a community owned tanker. These
wonderful choirs continue to raise money for our brigade
with this annual event.
                                                                              Mia Mia Twilight Opera
                                                                    This is a wonderful opera recital by emerging
                                                                    young Australian opera stars. The performers
                                                                      are sponsored by the Alice Amy McDonald
                                                                           Scholarship Trust which is managed by
                                                                            community members David and Lynne
                                                                          McDonald. The audience enjoys superb
                                                                                   singing and piano playing by an
                                                                               accomplished group of performers.
                                                                                 The wood panelling on the walls,
                                                                              floor and ceiling of the Mia Mia Hall
                                                                                   provide excellent acoustics. No
                                                                                   microphones, no amplification,
                                      Mattia, Michelle, Dario and              just beautiful sounds that have the
                                      Gaetano perform at the                      audience, clapping and cheering
                                      Mia Mia Twilight Opera                       with several standing ovations.

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Mia Mia in 2013
In more recent times as growth and progress has happened, Mia Mia has become known for its natural
attractions.

Mia Mia is part of the Heathcote wine region which has generated a growth in tourism. Long held
events such as the Australia Day Breakfast, the Flower Show in October, and newer events such as a
February Opera Recital, the Big Sing, local art shows, and community dinners are well attended.

In October 2013, the new Country Fire Authority station was opened in Mia Mia. The brigade also
received a new $200,000 four-wheel drive light tanker.

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Mia Mia in 2013

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