The area around the Campaspe River was known as Yalooka, which for thousands of years was home to the Pinpandoor, the local tribe of Aboriginal Australians. Rochester (via
Rowechester) was named after Dr John Pearson Rowe, who had a hotel here before the township was gazetted in 1855. The Post Office opened on 11 May 1863 and the town was reached by the railway line from
Bendigo (connecting it to
Melbourne) in 1864. The Rochester Magistrates' Court closed on 1 January 1990. The town was the birthplace in 1904 of Australian racing and endurance
cyclist, Sir
Hubert Opperman, affectionately known as
Oppy. There is a museum dedicated to Oppy in Moore street, and a statue of him winning the 24-hour
Bol D'Or race in
Paris in 1928. On his 90th birthday,
Oppy donated one of his
Malvern Star bicycles to the museum. ==The town today==