Coal Mines Historic Site Convict Precinct Walk Tasman Peninsula Tasmania Australia Hike Penal Colony Tour

If you think being a prisoner at a Tasmanian penal colony sounds bad, add coal mining to that prison sentence and you get something truly awful. Such was the case in the 1830s and 40s when, just after the famous Port Arthur Penal Colony was established, convict laborers were sent to another part of the Tasman Peninsula to work in coal mines (and you can imagine that working conditions in the mines were not a top priority). What remains of the mine-prison is now an Australian National Heritage Site. Several walking tracks explore the Coal Mines Historic Site, including a 0.8-kilometer (0.5-mile) loop through the Convict Precinct. The Convict Precinct Circuit takes about half an hour to complete, as you learn about the area’s history while exploring ruins of the barracks and prison cells.

With its pristine coastline, the Tasman Peninsula seems like a paradise today, but British colonizers saw the peninsula as a natural prison because it connects to the Forestier Peninsula via a narrow isthmus at Eaglehawk Neck that made it easy to defend against escaping convicts. Coal Mines Historic Site is located in the northwest corner of the Tasman Peninsula, where you can set out from a car park along Coal Mines Road. The wide, level track into the Convict Precinct will quickly reach the first ruins, made of stucco and wood. Walk through the ruins, following a rusty chain that has been set up along the wall as a timeline for the area’s history. A sign explains that:

Every meter of this chain stands for five years of history – as you follow it, you’ll walk through two centuries.

Coal Mines Historic Site Ruins
The chain through the ruins

Here is a sample of the timeline told along the links of the chain:

  • 1803 – First European settlement in Tasmania at Risdon Cove on the River Derwent
  • 1830 – Establishment of the Port Arthur Penal Colony
  • 1833 – Surveyors discover an outcrop of coal at this site
  • 1834 – Government begins coal mining through convict labor from Pot Arthur
  • 1837 – Mining expert Dr. Lhotsky surveys the mine and reports dangerous faults
  • 1841 – Government introduces the probation system
  • 1845 – Peak of population and production. 576 convicts, 27 military personnel, 125 civilians (including 12 women and 90 children) live at the station. 11,375 tons of coal are produced
  • 1846 – Building of new solitary cells and private apartments to separate the men’s sleeping quarters.
  • 1848 – Government closes the mine because of low quality coal, production inefficiency and concerns about the ‘moral state of the station.’ Mines leased to private operators Clark and McShane
  • 1851 – Military guard removed from the Coal Mines Station
  • 1870s onward – Mining continues under a succession of private leaseholders. The buildings fall into disrepair
  • 1920s – Stone and timber from the ruins are taken to be re-used in apple sheds and farmhouses
  • 1971 – 214 hectares proclaimed Coal Mines Historic Site under the National Parks and Wildlife Act.
  • 1990 – Ongoing conservation programs begun by the Department of Parks, Wildlife, and Heritage
  • 2007 – Coal Mines Historic Site is placed on the National Heritage List because it offers rare insight into Australia’s convict history and the use of hard labor to exploit local resources

The chain ends as you leave the ruins and continue along the wide path, exiting the forest to a grassy clearing on the coast where there are ruins of several larger buildings. Convicts were held in the punishment cells in the buildings to your left and closer to the bay are the ruins of the barracks and other settlement building.

Coal Mines Historic Site Ruins
Ruins at the coal mine site

Walk down the trail along these ruins past roofless walls with square windows and crumbled corners. There are views across Norfolk Bay as the trail curves to the left along the coast around the ruins of the barracks. Step right up and walk inside the barracks. Within each door there is a hallway with four small rooms on each side.

Coal Mines Historic Site Ruins
Inside the barracks

The walking trail passes the building to reach a junction. The track to the right continues along the coast to Plunkett Point, but you should take the trail to the left to explore more of the ruins in the Convict Precinct. The trail goes up a slight hill, effectively going up one story of the old buildings. The trail goes along the right side of a grassy area where there are many ruined buildings, but there’s no need to stay on the trail. You can walk out on the grass and right up to the ruins. Walk out to the wall above the ruins closest to the coast and look down on the cells of the barracks that you were just inside.

Coal Mines Historic Site Ruins
Ruins at the Coal Mines Historic Site
Coal Mines Historic Site Ruins
Ruins at the Coal Mines Historic Site

There are ruins from a few other buildings too. This area had a hospital, chapel, school, and bakery when the Saltwater River Coalfield was at its peak in the 1840s, with close to 600 convicts working here, along with 27 military personnel, wives, children, and other civilians.

Initially, only the worst prisoners from the Port Arthur Penal Settlement were sent to work in the coal mines as punishment (in 1841, convicts began going directly to the coal mines). The threat of the mines probably helped keep some of the other prisoners inline, as a sign amongst the ruins explains:

Port Arthur was no picnic, but convicts sent from there to the Coal Mines knew they were in for an even tougher time. Underground, the mining work was brutally hard and above ground, convicts labored quarrying stone, cutting timber, and hauling coal wagons. Breaches of discipline were punished with floggings and solitary confinement on a ration of bread and water.

You can see some of the solitary confinement areas as you continue up the trail toward more ruins. Tall orange posts mark the perimeter of the “separate apartments.” This two-story building had over 100 small ruins for convicts. These private sleeping cells were built in 1845 in an effort to reduce homosexual activity among the prisoner population. Concerns over what was called the ‘moral state of the station’ became one of the reasons the government shut down its penal colony.

The trail curves around the ruins of the separate apartments to reach even grimmer lodging, the solitary punishment cells. Walk down the corridor of this windowless brick building, which was built around 1843 to seem like it was below ground. You can poke your head into one of the small, dark cells and imagine the conditions. This 36-cell building was a terrible place to be held, but it was actually an upgrade from a 4-cell jail built within one of the underground mines. Convicts compared being held in an underground punishment cell to being buried alive and it was the most feared discipline a convict could receive.

Coal Mines Historic Site Ruins
The corridor in the solitary punishment area

As you walk past a second row of solitary confinement cells and return to the trail, you will be quite thankful for your freedom. Walk a short way back to the car park on the lest leg of the trail to complete the circuit. There is no fee or permit required to visit Coal Mines Historic Site. Dogs and bikes are not allowed, but there are toilets at the car park for the Convict Precinct. If you are looking for a nearby place to camp after your walk, continue up the road to Lime Bay State Reserve.

Directions: Take Tasman Highway (A3), 25 kilometers east of Hobart to the town of Sorell. You will come to an intersection in the center of town where A3 makes a 90-degree turn. Take the road leaving A3 at this intersection, which is Coles Street/Arthur Highway (A9). This will be a right turn if you are coming from Hobart. Drive 60 kilometers on A9 to the Tasman Peninsula and turn right onto Nubeena Road (B37), which is just past the Tasmanian Devil Conservation Park and 9.5 kilometers past Eaglehawk Neck. Drive 9 kilometers on B37 and turn right on Saltwater River Road (C341), following signs for Saltwater River and Coal Mines Historic Site. Go 9.4 kilometers, turn right on Coal Mines Road, and drive another 2.2 kilometers to the car park at the start of the walk, which will be on the right.

Trailhead address: Coal Mines Road, Saltwater River, TAS 7186, Australia
Trailhead coordinates: -42.988141, 147.714598 (42° 59′ 17.30″S 147° 42′ 52.55″E)

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These photos were taken in April of 2014. Click to enlarge.
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Tagged with · Mines · Ocean Views · Ruins · Saltwater River · Tasman Peninsula
Distance: 0.8 kilometers / 0.5 miles · Elevation change: 10 meters / 30 feet

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