Water Wheel History ›

How a working mill became a community-led hub.

A hundred and twenty-seven years on the same bend in the river — flour, fruit, fire, neglect, and a long volunteer rebuild. Here’s the honest version.

A short prelude

The river was here first. The wheel learned to keep its time.

Cement Creek joins the Yarra a few hundred metres from where the wheel now sits — a working confluence the Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung people have used and cared for for tens of thousands of years. The mill came late. It arrived in 1898, in the middle of a very particular moment: a cluster of hop farms, a fledgling township, and a need for somewhere local to grind flour and press fruit.

What follows is a timeline of that wheel — but it’s also a timeline of the township around it, and the long line of people, named and unnamed, who kept the wheel turning when nobody had asked them to. We’ve tried to tell it honestly. Where we’re not sure, we say so. Where the record is incomplete, we say that too.

Compiled by Eli Noor, Heritage & Story Lead, with the working group · revised March 2026.

Before the record

“This place has had keepers for as long as the river has had a name. We’re the most recent.”

The land on which the Hub stands is the unceded country of the Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung people of the Kulin Nation. The bend in the river, the springs feeding the leat, the redgums along the bank — all of it had been gathered, fished, and cared for in a continuous practice that long predates 1898. Our heritage record begins where the European paper trail begins; the older history is older still.

A working timeline

One hundred and twenty-seven years, in seven turns.

1898

The wheel is built.

James Renton commissions a 4.2-metre overshot wheel and a small flour mill on the southern bank. Hop farms upstream provide most of the early grain.

Yarra Ranges Heritage Register · 2014
1923

Fruit and feed.

Renton’s son rebuilds the head-race and adds a press shed, switching the operation from flour to apple juice and stock feed — meeting demand from the new orchards at Wesburn.

Upper Yarra Mail · 12 Aug 1923
1939

Black Friday — the wheel survives.

The Black Friday bushfires reach Warburton. The mill’s roof is lost. The wheel itself, half-submerged in the leat, survives. The community rebuilds the roof in eleven weeks.

Burnt eucalypts photographed in late 1939 Burnt-out eucalypts above the township · M. Lawson, late 1939
1962

The tea-room years.

The Renton estate leases the building to the Lyttelton family, who run it as a roadside tea-room for nineteen years. The wheel is restored as a turning ornament; the press shed becomes a kitchen.

From the oral history of M. Lyttelton, recorded 2024
1981 – 2017

The long pause.

The tea-room closes. The site changes hands twice, sits empty in between, and is briefly considered for demolition in 2009. It survives mostly because no one quite gets around to it.

Yarra Ranges Council · planning archive 2009 / R-114
2021

Lease and rebuild begin.

Eleven local volunteers form the Warburton Waterwheel Inc. and lease the site back from Council on a peppercorn rent. The wheel is dismantled, the bearings re-cast in Geelong, the roof reframed.

Volunteer rebuild day, autumn 2021 Working bee, autumn 2021 · J. Kemper
2026

Open again, slowly.

Five years on, the Hub runs as a volunteer-led visitor centre, shopfront for sixty-odd makers, and starting point for most walks in the valley. The wheel turns from 11 to 3, every day except Tuesday.

Annual report · 2025

“You don’t restore a wheel because anyone needs flour anymore. You restore it because a town that can fix what it has, can usually fix what’s coming.”

— Mara Jensen, opening speech, March 2022
People who remember

Three voices from the long pause.

Full oral-history archive ›
From the photo cabinet

Plates, prints, and one bad polaroid.

A small selection from the heritage working group’s photo cabinet. The full archive is searchable from the volunteer portal.

WW-001
c. 1912 Leat path, photographer unknown. Glass plate · 12 × 16
WW-014
1928 Fruit weighing day, the press shed. Silver gelatin · M. Lawson
WW-029
1939 After the Black Friday fires. Silver gelatin · M. Lawson
WW-051
1968 Lyttelton tea-room interior. Kodachrome · family album
WW-077
1991 Boarded windows, the long pause. Polaroid · J. Tyrrell
WW-098
2008 Leat overgrown, pre-Council survey. Digital · Yarra Ranges
WW-112
2021 Bearings recast in Geelong. Digital · J. Kemper
WW-141
2026 The wheel turning, last spring. Digital · S. Okafor

Sources & corrections

Where this account comes from.

  1. Yarra Ranges Heritage Register, entry HO-114 (2014). Available at the Council planning desk.
  2. Upper Yarra Mail, archive 1898 – 1962. Microfiche at Warburton Library.
  3. Lyttelton family papers, deposited 2024. Restricted; reading-room access by request.
  4. Renton family ledger fragments, 1898 – 1934. On loan from H. Renton.
  5. Oral histories, Heritage Working Group, recorded 2023 – 2026. 47 interviews to date.
  6. Aunty Rae Wandin, personal communication, 2024. Cited with permission.

If you spot something we’ve got wrong, or you have a photo, ledger or memory we should add — please write to heritage@yarravalleywaterwheel.org. The record is open, and we’d rather get it right slowly than fast.