Woodend bandstand was erected as a memorial to J.C. Keating. Such was the esteem in which he was held that a public subscription raised £700.
Ned Kelly and the blacksmith
The Redmonds’ forge in Woodend was a place where not only could you get your horse shod or your wagon repaired but you could be sure of a warm welcome.
Flock to the Rock
Until European settlement, Hanging Rock was hidden in the landscape by trees and undergrowth. It was part of the run that Edward Dryden leased from the government for £10 a year from 1839 until the land was surveyed in the 1850s.
The mystery of the missing stone
Woodend’s Five Mile Creek bridge was widened in 1958. Every stone was numbered and put back in its original place, except for one.
Before petrol, customers here bought beer
McKenzie’s Hotel sat roughly where Woodend’s BP petrol station and 19th Hole car park stand, and was built by Alfred McKenzie in 1853 as the London & Liverpool Hotel.
The house designed by Canberra’s architect
This house in the Macedon Ranges was one of several in Australia to have been designed by the American architect Walter Burley Griffin.