Fatboys

No – nothing to do with a certain brand of motorbikes! Fatboys are the names of two rocks up near the Criffel Diggings and define an area broadly on the southeastern side of the Luggate Creek, opposite where the Criffel Diggings were situated – a goldfield discovered in 1883. So where is it? If you head towards Cardrona from Wānaka, not long after you pass Mt Barker you will come across “The Larches”, a station homestead hidden behind trees. If you look to your left and back a little from where you have come, the Criffel Diggings are approximately in that area up towards the top of the Criffel Range. In fact, the diggings are so high it was virtually impossible to successfully seek the alluvial gold during the cold winters.

The area where the gold situated is approximately 1,200+ metres above sea level. In 1885, the Mining Warden “Protected” all claims and mining privileges from 1 May to 31 October.

The name ‘Criffel’ incidentally originates in Dumfries in Scotland where many of the early settlers came from. It is a hill of 570 metres – lower than the NZ version at 1283 metres, though there are higher places on the Criffel Range. The diggings ranged from the height of 1200 to 1350 metres.

The late Stan Kane (a past President of the Upper Clutha History Society) wrote that three men by the name of Halliday (not the same family as the Halliday’s of Cardrona), Beattie and Wilson prospected the area in 1882 and discovered the main field in 1883. They managed to keep their discovery quiet for a short while, until 1884.

In 1885 there were 50 miners at the diggings and between them they had sold 1,000 ounces of gold the previous season. Halliday, Beattie and Wilson had obtained 300 ounces of gold and had 1,700 loads of wash dirt stacked for washing the next spring. This highlighted the need for water and in 1887, Halliday and Craig built water races to bring water to the diggings – Halliday’s was 15 miles long!

Despite the relative isolation, physical access difficulties and the snow and ice, there was money to be made – not just from the gold. Both Robert McDougall & Son (in June 1885) and William Monteith (in August 1885) advertised that they had made arrangements to open stores on the “Mt Criffel Goldfield”.

The Fatboys field was apparently discovered in 1887/8. It started a mini-rush, but the ‘pay-dirt’ ran deep under the slope. By 1889 only Neuman and his party were working the area.

Work continued on the Criffel Diggings in the 1890’s, the Eldorado Company having received a licence for 60 acres in 1898. Small numbers of other miners persisted but eventually it became uneconomic to mine further.

Location of Criffel Diggings. Fatboys is a little further to the southeast.

As Stan Kane once said on the origins of Fatboys – “This field is known as Fatboys. …. There appears two rocks. One a heavy square rock and alongside is a tall slim rock which reminds me of a picture of a young lady in the days when they specialised in corsets. It looks to me as though they are pulled up good and tight. I wonder if the description is a sarcastic throw-off.” (1993)

Stan Kane used to conduct tours of the goldfield in the 1990s and left his notes in the Records Room. Jill Hamel also wrote an extensive report for DOC in 1991.

The Diggings area

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