, dedicated to Tom Flanagan in September 1981 Official Western Australian recognition for the prospecting skills of Hannan and partners began to emerge in the year following the find, with the grant of two blocks of land in Kalgoorlie in 1894. Then in 1904 small life pensions were accorded to Hannan and Shea (Flanagan no longer being alive). And thereafter on notable anniversaries of the find (25th, 50th, 100th) official ceremonies and plaques eventuated. In 1981 the
Bendigo Advertiser of Thursday 10 September, page 7, announced the discovery of Thomas Flanagan's unmarked grave in the White Hills Cemetery in Bendigo. Reporter David Horsfall wrote: The grave was found by namesake, Mr B.J. (Barney) Flanagan, who claims in an article in the
Kalgoorlie Miner of August this year [1981] to be no relative, has done extensive research on the origins of the [gold] field. He thinks Flanagan found the first gold, and induced Hannan to stay with him. He researched his subject in the Battye Library in Perth, the Latrobe Library in Melbourne, and the National Library in Canberra ... and in Bendigo. The same year, 1981, a street in the Kalgoorlie suburb of
Hannans was named Flanagan Parade. In 1993 the citizens of Kalgoorlie-Boulder paid for the restoration of the Bendigo grave, with a smart and durable monument and headstone to mark his burial place in the H5 section of White Hills Cemetery. The headstone replicates an error on the death certificate: Flanagan's age was 67 not 57, as we know now that his baptismal certificate is available. Flanagan's brother, John Flanagan, and his wife and children are all buried together across the cemetery, in section E4, in a family grave created in 1901 at the request of Margaret O'Halloran. ==References==