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Home > Ocean Baths > Mollymook Bogey Hole
 

Name: Mollymook Bogey Hole

The Bogey Hole is a large circular tidal ring-of-rocks pool located at Collers Beach and accessed via Golf and Riversdale Avenue at Mollymook. Inadvertently enlarged and improved by silica-mining activities.

(This image taken on 25 January 2003.)

click for larger view
Location: Riversdale Avenue, Mollymook, NSW, 2539
(Latitude South 35d 20m 34s, Longitude East 150d 28m 40s)
Shoalhaven City > Shoalhaven
Access to toilet/change facilities
Actively maintained
Disabled Access
Men
Women
Children
 
Current Use: Ocean baths.
Condition: The Bogey Hole provides safe shallow water ideal for families with young children and people who prefer a calm spot for a dip or safe snorkelling or a special place for a picnic. No facilities.

Before 1900
The Mollymook Bogey Hole may long have been used by Aboriginal people for hundreds or thousands of years as a swimming place, as a fish trap and as a place to dive for lobsters and shellfish. Strategic placement of rocks could supplement a natural enclosure and form channels to direct fish into waiting nets or spears.

Around 1900
Collers Beach, generously made accessible to the public by the Coller family, was a very popular retreat and picnic area for local people, partly because of the safe swimming at the Bogey Hole.

1905
John Coller stopped all public access to Collers Beach.

1914
Collers Beach remained the favourite picnic place and many locals learned to swim at the Bogey Hole. even after the Collers Beach property was closed to horses and vehicles, due to visitors' failures to close gates.

1917
Investigations by the Illawarra brick company revealed that silica from the headland at Mollymook known as Flint Point 'gave promise of yielding a refractory brick equal in quality to the world's best silica brick'.

Around 1918
Flint Point was mined for silica. Rocks that were almost pure silica were transported to Ulladulla, then shipped to Port Kembla and Newcastle to be crushed and made into refractory bricks to line the furnaces of the steelworks. The mining of silica meant Flint Point itself virtually disappeared. There was subsidence in the cliff faces along the northern side of the headland and big rocks were removed from the Bogey Hole. When the silica quarrying increased the size of the Bogey Hole, people were quick to take advantage of it as a good place to swim, even though pieces of broken quartzite on the pool's sandy bottom were often razor sharp and very dangerous.

After the 1920s
Silica mining became uneconomical. When the quarry men and their shacks disappeared, fishermen, swimmers and picnickers came back in increasing numbers. Communal Boxing Day and New Year's Day picnics at the Bogey Hole continued. After a young local man drowned, possibly taken by a shark, local people acquired a real fear of entering the surf and swimming in the open sea.

1933
Children were still learning to swim in the Bogey Hole.

Late 1940s and early 1950s
The Mollymook Country Club attracted families because of its golf links and the nearby Bogey Hole.

1960s
The Bogey Hole and Collers Beach became better known to surfers.

2006
Mollymook's Bogey Hole was considered a visitor attraction and an enhancement to the value to nearby properties.

Late 1940s and early 1950s
Modern Mollymook began in the late 1940s and early 1950s with the subdivision of land by real estate developers and development of the Mollymook Golf course.
Lots of Aboriginal middens still existed along Mollymook Beach.

1960s
As Canberra's population grew, increasing numbers of Canberra residents holidayed around Mollymook.

To be added.
 A ring-of-rocks pool inadvertently improved for bathing by silica mining. An interesting comparison with known Aboriginal fish trap sites and better known ring-of-rocks ocean pools like the bogey holes at Bronte and Bondi, the Soldiers Baths at Newcastle and the Avoca Beach Children's Pool.

A significant site for generations of Mollymook residents and visitors.

Assessed significance: Local.
Current heritage status: Not yet given heritage status.
 

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