Bendigo
Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.
Bendigo, city, central Victoria, Australia, in the central upland area of the state; it is about 93 miles (150 km) northwest of Melbourne by road.
Founded as a sheep run in 1840, the city’s official name was Sandhurst until 1891, when it was formally changed to honour a local prizefighter who compared his own prowess to that of the English pugilist known as Bendigo. Declared a municipal district in 1855 and a shire in 1863, Bendigo became a city in 1871. An important gold discovery on Bendigo Creek (1851) brought rapid growth and created an impressive city with fine examples of Victorian architecture and tree-lined streets. Mining ceased in 1955.
Bendigo is now the commercial focus of a region that produces livestock, fruit, poultry, wheat, dairy products, vegetables, and wool. Its livestock market, one of the largest in Australia, handles more than 1,000,000 sheep each year. Winemaking in Bendigo dates to the mid-19th century, and the region’s soils produce high-quality red wines. Diversified industries include iron, clothing, ceramics, armaments, hardboard manufacture, and food processing. Tourism is also important; the city’s attractions include Rosalind Park, the Bendigo Art Gallery, and the Golden Dragon Museum complex, which commemorates the many Chinese miners who worked in the Victoria goldfields. The Bendigo Pottery, located northeast of the city in Epsom, is the oldest pottery works in Australia. A rail centre, Bendigo is also the junction of the Calder, Loddon Valley, Eppalock, and Midland highways. Cultural resources include the Bendigo branch of La Trobe University; the city also has two cathedrals, the Roman Catholic (opened 1901, completed 1977) being a splendid example of early English Gothic architecture. Pop. (2001) urban centre, 68,715; (2011) urban centre, 82,795.