The first payable gold was discovered in Australia in 1851, not far from Bathurst, New South Wales by Edward Hargraves.Hargraves had carefully studied the geology of the area and, convinced that it was similar to that of the California goldfields, from where he had just returned, went prospecting. He enlisted the assistance of John Lister, a man who had already found gold in the region. Lister led Hargraves directly to where gold was found, at Summerhill Creek, at a site which Hargraves named "Ophir".
Hargraves has been credited with the discovery ever since, even though, by rights, credit should go to Lister. An enquiry in 1887 proved that John Hardmann Lister and James Tom were the first ones to find payable gold in Australia.
Australia's first payable gold was officially discovered in Australia in May 1851.
John Lister and William Tom were with Edward Hargraves when he discovered the first payable gold in Australia.
Australia's first gold field was the one where the first payable gold was discovered in 1851 - that is Ophir, at Summerhill Creek, near Bathurst in NSW.
1851 was the year that the first payable gold was discovered in Australia.
The first payable gold was discovered in Tasmania in February 1852, at Tullochgorum in Tasmania's east.
It was not actually a mineral that was found in Australia in 1851, but a metal. Payable gold was discovered in Australia in 1851, leading to the goldrushes.
In May 1851 after prospector Edward Hargraves claimed he discovered payable gold at Ophir near Orange.
The first payable gold was discovered in Tasmania in February 1852, at Tullochgorum in Tasmania's east.
The first payable gold strike in Australia is credited to Edward Hargraves (who actually enlisted the help of the Lister brothers).
He didn't.Edward Hargraves found the first payable gold in Australia in February 1851.
Yes. Edward Hargraves is regarded as the one who first discovered payable gold in Australia. There had been numerous gold discoveries in the decades preceding Hargarve's discovery but news of them had been suppressed.
The first payable gold strike in Australia was in 1851, and was made not far from Bathurst, New South Wales.Edward Hargraves had carefully studied the geology of the area and, convinced that it was similar to that of the California goldfields, from where he had just returned, went prospecting. He enlisted the assistance of John Lister, a man who had already found gold in the region. Lister led Hargraves directly to where gold was found, at Summerhill Creek, at a site which Hargraves named "Ophir".