The Hotel Australia in Laverton, Western Australia, still stands today. It has changed very little over the years, as you will see from the following photographs. The building has been reused for lots of different purposes over the years, but the façade has remained throughout its various uses.
Originally, the Hotel Australia was built in 1899. Laverton was then the centre of a booming gold mining district and was named after Dr Charles Laver. The architect was W.E. Robertson, and the builders were the Palini Brothers. The hotel was completed with a front bar, saloon bar, billiard and smoking room, carriage room and stables for Cobb & Co coaches, a lofty dining room, finest kitchens and 8 bedrooms with baths. Pressed metal ceilings throughout, acetylene gas lighting and a covered outdoor area that could sit 250 people for concerts and receptions. It even boasted an elaborate bridal chamber.
Kalgoorlie Miner Newspaper 25th April 1921:
A pioneer and resident in the person of Mr George McOmish, proprietor of the Hotel Australia, died early Wednesday morning. The deceased had been in precarious health for the past six months. After recovering from an illness that lasted for several weeks, he had the misfortune to have his right arm broken through a kick from a horse. This necessitated him becoming an inmate of the local hospital, where he subsequently developed pleurisy.
He was removed to St. John of God Hospital in Kalgoorlie, where he remained for a couple of weeks and returned home, but never improved. The immediate cause of death was hemorrhage. The late Mr McOmish was a Scot and came to Australia when he was 17 years of age. After spending a few years in New South Wales, he came to Western Australia about 26 years ago and went prospecting in various parts of the goldfields. He, with three others in the mid-nineties, was the proprietor of the British Flag mine, to which Laverton owes its existence, the name (Laverton) being prompted by the fact that the mine was taken over from them by Dr Laver. The deceased had been, in turn, a prospector, butcher, hotelkeeper, and pastoralist. Recently, he sold his Mt. Weld station, 12 miles from Laverton, to a returned soldier. He was a part-owner of the Palace Hotel and Hotel Australia in Laverton. He leaves a widow and a son, who is 18 years of age.
The hotel was delicensed in 1927 before becoming a soft drink factory, a boarding house and then a garage. It then lay in disrepair until 1969, when exploration discovered Mt Windarra Poseidon Nickel. In 1970, it became ‘The Coach House Cafe-Restaurant and Milk Bar’, an amusement parlour with an outdoor cinema and roller drome. Then, in 1987, it became ‘The Coach House News Agency’. Photograph by Frank Indrisie
Daily News Perth, 5th May 1948.
LAVERTON – Eight tons of old bricks are now being cleaned in Laverton for consignment to Kalgoorlie for the St. John Ambulance Society. They are to be used for a new garage and office. The bricks are being taken from the old Hotel Australia, a large single-storey building well known to old-timers. When the district declined in importance, the hotel was delicensed and became a boarding house, known until recently as Hayes’ Hostel. If this trial consignment proves satisfactory, others may follow, and the whole building may be demolished.
Robin Smith tells me – I would like to add that in the 1940’s, my father was the manager of the ‘Laverton General Store’ that was housed in this building. I was born and educated in Laverton from 1939 till 1952, hence I have very fond memories of that shop. I could almost see my father behind that huge counter, bagging potatoes or cutting cheese. On the Wednesday train day, he would deliver food orders to Mt Weld and Mt Monger stations .
His name was Kerswell Alpha Gibson, always known as Jack ( I wonder why😊 ).





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