Marble Bar has been described as "the centre of the Pilbara back in the early 1900s". The town predates Port Hedland, Newman, and Karratha. The name Marble Bar was derived from a nearby
jasper bar mistaken for
marble and now known as Marble Bar, which runs across the bed of the
Coongan River. Several large
gold nuggets were discovered as a result of the goldrush. The 333
ounce Little Hero nugget, the 413 ounce Bobby Dazzler and the 332 ounce General Gordon nugget were all found in the goldfields around the town. By 1895, the town had its Government offices built; these are now
National Trust buildings. Cut from local stone, the buildings still stand today. The town's
Ironclad Hotel was built in the 1890s, and has been listed on the Western Australian register of heritage places since 2006. It is constructed of
corrugated iron, and was given its name by American miners who were reminded of the
ironclad ships of the United States navy. A telegraph line was proposed during discussion of the Estimates in January 1893 to link
Condon to Marble Bar. After approval, many basic administrative errors delayed or interrupted construction of the line to an area in which very significant gold finds were being mined. These mines needed communication with other centres – including to England. Finally the line was completed at the end of July 1894 - to the satisfaction of an increasingly irate community. A Post and Telegraph Office was opened on 25 August 1894. During
World War II,
United States Army Air Forces and
Royal Australian Air Force heavy bombers were based away
as the crow flies at
Corunna Downs Airfield. Allied airmen from the base attacked
Japanese forces as far away as
Borneo. The Port Hedland to
Marble Bar Railway opened on 15 July 1911, costing around £300,000 to build. Due to low traffic and high financial losses, the railway closed from 31 May 1951. This railway could be seen as a
narrow gauge precursor to the network of standard gauge
iron-ore railways that have since been created across the
Pilbara. In a 2002 memoir, British businessman
Alistair McAlpine (1942–2014) described staying a night in the town as part of a journey to find outback wildflowers: By early evening you arrive at Marble Bar - a small town that was the administrative centre for a once-prosperous region. Now all it boasts are large red-brick barracks, built in the form of a decorative castle, and the
Iron Clad Hotel, made of
corrugated iron (...) After your disturbed night in Marble Bar, the reason the Iron Clad has so few bedrooms becomes apparent: visitors drink most of the night and sleep where they drop. September is the perfect time to stay in Marble Bar, for the temperature is pleasant in a place where its range is enormous. In winter, the drunks try to share your cabin if the door is not locked. In summer, if you lock the door, you suffocate. ==Climate ==