ABOUT

The Premier Hotel

The Premier Hotel was built in 1894 by a gentleman named Edward McLarty. He bought the mail coach run between Perth, Bunbury and Vasse in 1888 from the then government. When the railway was opened in 1893, Edward auctioned off the mail coaches and subsequently built the Premier Hotel.

Edward McLarty was the father of Sir Duncan Ross McLarty, a decorated war hero and former Premier of Western Australia from 1947 - 1953. The original building was built with two storeys with a single storey wing at the rear. It stands in spacious grounds on the right bank of the Murray River and corner of South West Highway (formerly George Street) and Williams Road. The second storey was built with a large L shaped veranda that faced both roads. The first floor veranda was covered by a bull nosed tin roof and featured an ornate balustrade with valances and brackets between each wooden post. A large entablature, rendered with cement and adorned with the name Premier Hotel, topped the building.

Pinjarra

Pinjarra is located 87 km south of Perth and 21 km south east of Mandurah, in the South West agricultural region (now know as the Peel Region). In 1830 Thomas Peel was granted a substantial area of land from Cockburn Sound to the Murray River. In 1831 part of the land was reserved for a town site. Subsequently the township of Pinjarra was built near a ford over the Murray River.

The name Pinjarra is thought to be a derivative of Pindjarup, which is the name of a tribe of aboriginals that frequented the area. It is widely thought the name Pindjarup means place of swamp. Pinjarra was shown on earlier maps as either Pinjarrup or Pinjarrah but was later officially recorded as Pinjarra.

  • Historic Pinjarra

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  • River Crossing Near Pinjarra

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