Saturday, 19th September, 1992, marked the
150th Anniversary of the granting of a licence for the first
hotel on the north bank of the Clarence River at Woolport.
Grafton was then called Woolport. The first two hotels were
on the south bank of the river at which was then known as The
Settlement, now South Grafton.
The licence was granted to
Thomas Hewitt on the 19th December, 1842 for the Woolpack Inn.
It was situated in the area west of Alumny Creek, bounded by
the north bank of the river, Turf and Pound Streets. This area
was also the site of the first store on the north side known
as Bentleys, which was later taken over by Hewitt, who became
Graftons first auctioneer in 1848. He was in the hotel until
1853, then William Collie had the hotel until 1856. Hewitt
again went into the hotel but nothing further is known of the
Woolpack. In the Clarence & Richmond Examiner of the 17th
December, 1874, Thomas Hewitt informs his friends and the public
of the Clarence River that he has obtained a licence and has
opened his premises as the Turf Hotel, on the corner of Turf
and Pound Streets, near the site of the present railway gates.
The hotel traded until 28th August, 1887, when Mrs. S. A. Hewitt
advertised it for sale, as she was leaving the district. Thomas
had died in 1876. About 1890 it was taken over as a private
boarding house by Robert White and later was unoccupied and
was burnt down on the 1st January, 1895. There was now no hotel
in that part of the town until the new Imperial was built,
now the Village Green, and was opened on the 5th January, 1904,
with Abraham J. Clark from Muswellbrook as licensee.
The first two hotels on the
south side were the Settlers Arms,
licensed 9th July, 1842 by James Durno,
near the mouth of Christophers Creek,
and near the former Webber’s Sawmill where the hulk
of the old train ferry, Induna, now lies in the mud; and the
Clarence, licensed 3rd August, 1842, by Patrick Bernie and
situated a few kilometers south of Copmanhurst at Red Rock,
opposite the site of Commissioner Fry’s headquarters
and Police Barracks on the north bank. It is said that the
exact site of Fry’s headquarters is where the existing
power lines
cross the Clarence River.