Dairy Industry Museum
Members of the Society For Creative Anachronism will be adding a medieval twist to the Queensland Dairy Industry Museum’s Open Day on Saturday, October 5

South Burnett and Cherbourg On ShowOctober 3, 2013

The Queensland Dairy Industry Museum will be holding an Open Day with a special medieval twist on Saturday, October 5.

Between 10:00am and 2:00pm, the Museum will be running working displays of butter making, hand milking and shingle splitting.

Dairy Industry Museum
How is butter made? See the process at a working butter-making display

There’ll also be displays of antique engines, blacksmithing and a draught horse-driven grain grinder.

Children can enjoy a puppeteer, a jumping castle and miniature ponies; and billy tea, damper and other light refreshments will be available too.

And for some completely quirky and off-beat fun, members of the South Burnett’s Society For Creative Anachronism will be on the grounds in costume with medieval crafts and weapons.

The Dairy Industry Museum is located at 2 Sommerville Street on the southern side of Murgon, just off the Gayndah Road, and it was established in 1988 to recognise the importance that dairying once played in the area.

Dairying began in the Murgon area in the early 1900s when the railway came to the town, and grew quickly after a local progress association successfully agitated for a railway goods shed in 1908.

However, most milk and cream produced in the area at that time was railed to Tiaro. And to avoid losing suppliers to a new factory that had opened in Kingaroy, Murgon and Tiaro interests combined to open a butter factory at Murgon in 1913.

Branch lines opening up the Proston and Windera areas in the 1920s expanded dairying production even further.

And this, in turn, led to the enlargement of the Murgon butter factory in 1928 and later the creation of the Murgon Cheese Factory, which operated until 1995.

The Museum is a treasure trove of historic buildings and memorabilia that chronicle all this history.

Its large complex houses several historic buildings including Trinity House (c. 1893), an original Burnett slab construction homestead; Castra, the first house built in Murgon (c. 1904); the old Bank Of NSW building (c. 1906); and an old chapel (1932).

The Museum’s collection includes:

  • Newspapers from 1800
  • Wage books, 1930 from the Butter Factor in Murgon
  • All machinery used in dairy farming, from 1890-2000
  • Large butter vats
  • Cheese-making machines
  • Powdered milk machines
  • Butter boxes, cream separators
  • Collection of old exchanges and phones
  • Books dating back to the 1800
  • A very large lapidary collection
  • And much more.

Admission to the Open Day is $5 for adults, and children under 12 are free.

You can contact the Museum by phoning (07) 4169-5001.