Bung Bong is a township in Victoria between the rural towns of Avoca and Maryborough. The township is divided, with the Western section in the Pyrenees Shire and the Eastern section in Shire of Central Goldfields. The Bet Bet Creek runs towards the north through the middle of the township and then into the Loddon River. Bung Bong is located on the Pyrenees Highway. It is reported that the name 'Bung Bong' derives from the aboriginal words for 'swamp' or for 'swamp grass'. Bung Bong is also a region, which has a large range of native flora and fauna, South-East of the township is the Bung Bong Nature Conservation Reserve which is used by bush walkers and bird watchers.
Activities
In 1878 the Bung Bong Farmers' Club held their first "ploughing match". There were 18 entries in the competition to plough, "virgin soil, of a rich chocolate colour". It was reported, "that although the ploughmen were new to competitive trials, they showed by the excellence of their work their fitness for their calling." For the 1886 ploughing match there were 22 entries. It was held on the Abbott property, half a mile from the Bung Bong railway station and "the attendance was large". This time, 10 entrants used double furrow ploughs with one entrant, "exhibiting Gilsman's patent rotary harrows, which attracted great attention, and were pronounced excellent implements". At the Wareek Hall there is an Honour Roll, of those from the Bung Bong district, who fought in World War 1. It contains 19 names, including 5 names of those who did not return. Local volunteers have fought major bushfires in the region in December 1880, January 1881, January 1985 and the Black Saturday bushfires in 2009. Bung Bong horse, Richmond Lass, won 31 races and went on to win the 1969 Inter Dominion Pacing Championship. The horse was owned by Fred Miller of Richmond House. Gold has been extracted in the Bung Bong region and along the Bet Bet Creek. In 2018, commercial gold exploration has resumed.
Infrastructure
Copies of the land titles for the Bung Bong township, located on what subsequently became the Pyrenees Highway, at the Bet Bet Creek, for 1863 and for 1873 are available. The township area is now designated as the Bung Bong Streamside Reserve. Bung Bong Post Office opened on 1 February 1864 and closed in 1961. At the Bung Bong township, the old Glenmona Bridge was built over the Bet Bet Creek in 1871 and is the third oldest of its type in Victoria,. Its location is directly south of the new bridge over the Bet Bet on the Pyrenees Highway. The Pyrenees Shire Council has documented a number of significant properties in the Bung Bong - Homebush region in the Avoca Heritage Study: 1864 - 1994 - Volume 3.
Railway
Bung Bong is on the Avoca railway line, to the north of the town, where ballast was loaded from nearby basalt quarries. There was a Post Office at the Bung Bong station which opened in October 1877 and closed in June 1940. In 2017, there is a proposal entitled the, Murray Basin rail project designed to link Mildura to Portland with standard gauge track to carry grain and mineral sands. This upgrading will include the Maryborough to Ararat section of the line, past the site of the disused Bung Bong station. Community action has been successful in keeping a railway level crossing on a key arterial road open, after commencement of the new rail link. The Avoca line was reopened in 2018 after a complete rebuild as part of the Murray Basin Rail Project, which also extended the reach of the standard gauge network in Victoria.
Bung Bong, Wareek Cemetery
The cemetery is located at 413 Bung Bong-Rathscar Rd, Wareek VIC 3465. and in 2017 is being upgraded by the community with new fences and facilities. Information on the interments, with more details and images of the headstones - here.
Schools
There was a Primary School at Bung Bong which operated on the same block as the Church of England between 1872 and 1921. Approximately 5 km south of Bung Bong, on the Moore's Flat Road, is the now abandoned locality of Moore's Flat. There was a Moore's Flat Primary School.
Hall
The Bung Bong Temperance Hall was established by the Independent Order of Rechabites as 'Tent' 138. It is located on the Pyrenees Highway. It was built in 1876 on land donated by Mr Miller and was used for community activities including meetings of the 'Farmers Club'. The building was subsequently used as the Bung Bong Church of England. While the building is now unused, the site has become a popular stopping place for caravans.