at Anglers Rest Perhaps the most notable feature of Anglers Rest is the historic Blue Duck Inn, standing alongside the Omeo Highway crossing of the Cobungra River. The local area is in fact commonly referred to simply as 'the blue duck', rather than Anglers Rest, in reference to the prominence of this hotel. The original 1900
timber slab building operated as a
butcher shop, servicing
gold miners on what was at the time a walking track from Omeo to the gold fields around Mount Wills. In 1912 a successful miner called Billy O’Connell purchased the establishment and obtained a
hotel licence on the understanding that the main road would pass the building. After the road was surveyed this did not eventuate, and the
inn gained its name when O'Connell nailed a
panning dish out the front and wrote 'Blue Duck' on it, blue duck being the term for a failed gold lease. In the 1920s O'Connell relocated the hotel to its current location by moving two houses through
the bush from Omeo on
horse drays; one of these is the current main building of the inn, while the other was placed further up the hill as his
home, on the site of the existing
cabin accommodation. O'Connell also built a small log building behind the pub, which was staffed for a time by the
Education Department as Anglers Rest Primary School (State School Number 4286), mainly to educate O'Connell's own children. The Blue Duck Inn soon became popular with
anglers, who even in those days travelled from as far away as
Melbourne for the fishing, including the Chairman of Commissioners on the
Victorian Railways,
Sir Harold Clapp. Clapp became so enamoured with the inn he arranged for
apprentices at the
Newport Railway Workshops to
cast the
bronze blue duck that still stands at the entrance. The O'Connells moved on in 1946, and the inn went through several hands before declining trade resulted in it relinquishing its liquor licence in 1967. The Blue Duck Inn was eventually refurbished and re-licensed in 1998. ==Bushfires==