Description
Clarendon House was built in 1836 and is registered by the National Trust Aboriginal inhabitants of the Evandale area. Evandale hosts a primary school, churches, parks, pubs, shops and a fire station.
Nearby locations include Nile, Deddington and Perth. The first inhabitants of the present site of Evandale were Tasmanian Aborigines (Palawa). The site lies at the interface of country originally belonging to the Ben Lomond and North Midlands Nations (most likely the Panninher Clan). The ethnographic record in regards to aboriginal populations in the North Midlands of Tasmania is scanty, as many of the original inhabitants were displaced or did not survive the first colonial occupation of the South Esk Valley in the early 1800s. However, archeological remains of Palawa campsites and artifacts existed on the river flats just below the present site of Evandale (now Rotary Park) and also at Native Point, 2 km downstream, which was a known 'resort of the natives'. The Evandale region also appears to have encompassed an aboriginal route from the Tamar Valley to the Lake River and it is likely that this area was a hunting ground and meeting point for local clans of the North Midlands Nation.
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Museums: Agricultural, Local history
Historical sites: Houses
Attribution
This listing includes content imported from the Wikipedia article on Clarendon House (Evandale, Tasmania)