An agricultural and administrative centre located on a knoll rising from highly modified plains. A classified historic town, Evandale is a storehouse of superb Georgian heritage buildings which remain in largely original condition.
Where Is it?
Evandale is 20 km south of Launceston on Evandale Road via Midland Highway.
Annual Events
Evandale hosts the Australian National Penny Farthing Championships in February each year.

Things To See And Do
Markets
EVANDALE MARKET
Logan Rd, Evandale
Trading: Every Sunday – 8am – 1pm
Type: General. Phone: (03) 6391 9191
Evandale’s historic buildings include: Old State School; ‘Cambrook’ outbuildings; ‘Summer Field’ (old Police Residence); Dr. Stewart’s House; Water Tower; Prince of Wales Hotel (c.1836); Old Manse (1838-40); ‘Blenheim’ and outbuildings (1832); ‘The Laurels’ (1830s); Council Clerk’s Residence; Council Chambers (1867); Post Office (1888); Old School House; Robert Wale’s House; Village Antiques and Old Butchery (c.1840); former Royal Oak Hotel and Stables (c.1840); Clarendon Hotel and store (1847); RSL Club (built as Methodist Chapel, 1836); Marlborough School and Library; Brown’s Shop and Storehouse; ‘Riverview” ‘Pleasant Banks’ homestead and outbuildings (1838).
Famous Sons
John Batman, the founder of Melbourne, and landscape painter John
Glover lived near the town with Glover memorialised in an annual art
prize and a statue at Falls Park.
John Kelly, father of the bushranger Ned Kelly, worked in the township as a convict.

Surrounding Area
Clarendon House
Clarendon House is arguably one of Australia’s greatest Georgian houses still standing today. It has formal gardens and grounds, a tree lined avenue, Italianate facade, restored early colonial outbuildings and is owned by the National Trust. The wealthy grazier and merchant James Cox (son of William Cox) had the house built in 1838.
Woolmers Estate
Prominent among the early settlers, the Archer family built a number of grand houses and estates in the area. They farmed and developed the land, and built a number of homesteads which are among the finest in northern Tasmania. Six generations of Archers have lived in Woolmers Estate, from 1817 to 1994; it is now owned by the Woolmers Foundation Inc and is open to the public. Regarded as the most authentic remaining example of an Australian pioneer farm, it has established a National Rose Garden, with more than 4,000 roses on display.
Brickendon Historic Farm
One of Tasmania’s World Heritage Convict Sites, Brickendon Historic Farm and Convict Village was built by William Archer in 1824; the village is still owned by his descendents. The complex affords the a rare chance to see a Georgian homestead, convict-built Gothic chapel, Dutch barns, chicken house, blacksmith shop and tool shed and stay in historic farm cottages. There is also a four hectare (10 acre) historic garden for you to explore.
John Glover: artist
Glover arrived in Van Diemen’s Land (now Tasmania), Australia
on his 64th birthday in 1831, two decades before the goldrush of the
1850s. He brought with him a strong reputation as a landscape painter.
He acquired one of the largest grants of land in Van Diemen’s
Land at the time at Mills Plains, Deddington. He named his new property
Patterdale after Blowick Farm, a property near Patterdale, at the foot
of Ullswater in the English Lake District, which he had once owned.
Glover is best known now for his paintings of the Tasmanian landscape.
He gave a fresh treatment to the effects of the Australian sunlight on
the native bushland by depicting it bright and clear, a definite
departure from the darker “English country garden”
paradigm. Note this example ‘Patterdale Farm’. His
treatment of the local flora was also new because it was a more
accurate depiction of the Australian trees and scrubland. Glover noted
the “remarkable peculiarity of the trees” in Australia and
observed that “however numerous, they rarely prevent your tracing
through them the whole distant country”. ‘Natives on the
Ouse River’ One of his most subjective works, this painting is
informed by European notions of an Antipodean Arcadia, with Indigenous
people living in a landscape unsullied by European contact. However, it
stands in marked contrast to the actual situation of the traditional
owners of Ouse River country – the Braylwunyer people of the Big
River nation – which was one of dispossession and violence at the
hands of the colonists. John Glover’s last major work was painted
on his 79th birthday.
The John Glover Society was established to honor and promote
Glover’s memory and his contribution to Australian art. The
society commissioned a life-size statue of Glover unveiled in February
2003 in Evandale. It also runs an annual landscape art competition
called the Glover Prize in Tasmania. It is the richest art prize
in Australia for landscape painting.