The
Strzelecki Track, from
Lyndhurst in the south to
Innamincka, South Australia and beyond in the north used to be one of the driest and loneliest tracks to transport mobs of fat cattle to the Adelaide market. It was
Captain Starlight, of
Robbery Under Arms fame, who gave the track notoriety. In 1870 Henry Arthur Readford, better known as
Harry Redford, or Starlight, drove a thousand head of stolen cattle from Queensland, down the
Barcoo and
Cooper past
Mount Hopeless, to
Blanchewater where he sold them for $10,000. Although he was caught and went on trial for his crime, he was found not guilty by a jury largely impressed with his audacious feat of blazing a new cattle stock route, making him one of the greatest drovers in Australian history. (1953). The
Murranji Track in the Northern Territory, also known as the
Ghost Road of the Drovers, was pioneered by the famous overlander
Nathaniel Buchanan in 1881, when he drove large mobs of cattle along it. When Buchanan travelled the Murranji Track the Murranji Waterhole was one of the vital sources of water. If it was dry the cattle and horses faced a 110-mile 'dry stage' before reaching the next water. This route was considered the worst stock route of all. In one horrendous trip across this Track in 1905 one man died, all but two stockmen deserted the drover, 800 cattle and 11 horses died. Evidence has been found that five or six persons definitely died around the Murranji Waterhole and about 12 on the whole track, while trying to negotiate it. The
Birdsville Track is also a notorious stock route. The 520 km Birdsville Track was developed in the 1880s and runs across desert in some seasons, from
Birdsville, Queensland to
Marree just north of the
Flinders Ranges in South Australia. The remote track skirts the
Simpson Desert and the
Sturt Stony Desert and drovers relied on government provided artesian bores to water their stock along the route. On several occasions during the early years there were big losses of stock on this route. In 1901 Jack Clarke left Warenda Station, Queensland with 500 fat bullocks but only had 72 when he reached Marree. Stock is now transported on trucks and the track is mostly used by tourists. The
Canning Stock Route was regarded as the loneliest and one of the most difficult routes. Crossing the
Great Sandy Desert, the
Little Sandy Desert and large portions of the
Gibson Desert, it is almost 2,000 km long. It is a place of living history - the longest heritage trail in Australia. A series of wells, first dug between March 1908 and April 1910 by a party under the leadership of surveyor
Alfred Canning, connect the stock route. These wells are generally situated on or near native water sources (
soaks). In the early years of the stock route, several drovers were killed by
Aboriginal people defending their land and water sources. The
Tanami Road or Tanami Track follows a cattle
droving route northwest from the
MacDonnell Ranges just north of
Alice Springs to
Halls Creek. The Barkly Stock Route in the Northern Territory was also pioneered by Nat Buchanan and known for the epic cattle drives of the past that passed through the area en route to Queensland. Today this is a road known as the Overlander's Way (
Barkly Highway) and is used by great road trains and visitors. The
Cobb Highway is part of a very significant Travelling Stock Routes network that traverses New South Wales. The
Bradfield Highway, which passes over the
Sydney Harbour Bridge is a designated Travelling Stock Route. ==Current situation==