(2nd from left), Richard Ormsby Kerr (centre) and Beyers (2nd from right), with reef gold from Star of Hope mine, 1872, attributed
Henry Beaufoy Merlin The discovery of gold was the discovery that changed a nation. Twenty-eight years after the Fish River discovery, a man named
Edward Hargraves discovered a 'grain of gold' in a billabong near Bathurst in 1851. Hargraves returned to New South Wales from the
Californian goldfields where he was unsuccessful. Hargraves decided to begin searching for gold in the state of New South Wales. The geological features of the country around Bathurst, with its
quartz outcrops and gullies, seemed similar to those of the Californian fields. In February 1851, Hargraves and his guide, John Lister, set out on horseback with a pan and rocking-cradle, to Lewis Ponds Creek, a tributary of the Macquarie River close to Bathurst. On 12 February 1851, they found gold at a place called
Ophir named by William Tom's father after a region in the Old Testament noted for its fine gold. Hargraves said that "once in the creek bed he somehow felt surrounded by gold".... Whilst Hargraves called Lister his "guide", there has been controversy as to whether it was John Lister and William Tom or
Edward Hargraves who discovered the gold, with the Legislative Assembly select committee in 1890 determining in favour of Lister and Tom. Initially keeping the find secret, Hargraves travelled to Sydney and met the Colonial Secretary in March. Soon the claim was recognised and Hargraves was appointed the "Commissioner of Lands". He received a £10,000 reward from the New South Wales government, as well as a life pension and a £5,000 reward from the
Victorian government. Due to a dispute with his partners, some of the reward was withheld. The find was proclaimed on 14 May 1851 and within days the first Australian gold rush began with 100 diggers searching for their gold. By June there were over 2,000 people digging around Bathurst, and thousands more were on their way. In 1852, the yield was 850,000 ounces (24½ tonnes). The
Great Western Road to Bathurst became choked with men from all walks of life, with all they could carry to live and mine. Gold was found in other parts of New South Wales, very soon after the discovery at Ophir, particularly in the area around
Braidwood, which also experienced a rush of gold-seekers. Largely due to the gold receipts into the colonial government
treasury bringing immense wealth to the colony of New South Wales, ==Social impact==