The BlackâÂÂAllan Line is the straight south-eastern portion of the state border between the Australian states of New South Wales and Victoria. It stretches north-west from Cape Howe on the Tasman Sea to Indi Springs, the headwaters of the Murray River. The Murray River then forms the remainder of the boundary between the two states until it reaches the South Australian borders.
In the 1840s, attempts to determine the nearest source of the Murray to Cape Howe were made by the then Acting Surveyor-in-Charge of Port Phillip District, Thomas Scott Townsend under the direction of NSW Surveyor General, Major Sir Thomas Livingston Mitchell. Townsend produced a plan showing the straight line between the springs and Cape Howe. In 1866 the Victorian Parliament deemed Townsend's marking of Cape Howe insufficient.
IN 1867 a suggestion was made by the then Bairnsdale Police Magistrate and Warden of Gold Fields Alfred William Howitt together with District Surveyor J.G.W. Wilmot led to the survey of the eastern border between Victoria and New South Wales. Howitt was concerned about which state had civil and criminal jurisdiction over newly discovered gold fields on Snowy River tributaries near where the border was thought to be, in particular the Bendock , Bonang, Delegate, Goongerrah and Nicholson rivers. At the time, around 80% of Bairnsdale's population were involved in gold mining, and tensions between local and Chinese miners were rising, leading to crime becoming a significant problem. Similar issues affected several major mining operating in the region, including on Delegate River.
In response, Victorian and NSW governments agreed in 1869 to share the costs of marking the boundary.
The line is named for Alexander Black and Alexander Charles Allan, the men who, between 1870 and 1872, surveyed the line that delineated the two colonies. The total length of the boundary surveyed from Station No.1 Forest Hill to the pile of stones at Conference Point Cape Howe was recorded as 109.396 miles and the azimuth determined as W 25ð 53' 58.00" N.
in 1869 Robert Ellery the Superintendent of Victorian Geodetic Survey and Government Astronomer (assisted by Surveyor William Turton) met with NSW Surveyor General Philip F. Adams (assisted by Surveyor Allan) at Cape Howe to decide the position of the eastern terminal of the border. The conference involved surveying the 20km of Cape Howe via making accurate geodetic observations. They agreed upon a certain point of rocks, as a suitable termination point for the border, which they named Conference Point. They also agreed to accept the border survey's adopted bearing line, if the measured line ended within 500 links (100.58m) of the point of rocks.
Towards the end of 1869, Alexander Black had investigated and surveyed the several springs that he considered to be the closest source of the Murray River to Cape Howe. His survey accurately determined the nearest source of the Murray River to Cape Howe using geodetic survey methods making observations from hilltop to hilltop. Black buried a large stone marked "A B 1870" 2 feet (61cm) below the ground on the computed border line, at the instrument station on the ridge closest to the adopted springs. Black named this observing position station No.1 on summit of "Great Dividing Range" at Forest Hill. Black placed No.1 instrument station 2250 links (452.63m) from the adopted springs. Black also constructed a 12 foot (3.66m) high stone cairn above the marker stone.
With the positions of each end determined, the bearing of the straight line border was computed, and each surveyor was deployed to mark the line.
In November 1869 Alexander Allan commenced his survey near Delegate River and marked the line to Cape Howe (approx.70 miles), traversing over Hensleighs Range, Mounts Tennyson, Buckle and Carlyle, and crossing the Genoa River. Allan's traverse at Conference Point terminated within a few inches of the mark made from Ellery and Adams.
Alexander Allan prepared a series of plans showing the results of his work to measure and mark the border between Delegate River and Cape Howe (Conference Point).
Alexander Black prepared a plan BL 01 showing the results of his work to measure and mark the border between the Delegate River and Cape Howe (Conference Point).
The surveyors built regular stone cairns to demarcate their survey line, most of which survive to the present.
The survey was also remarkably accurate for the time, only missing its precise end target by around . Victorian Government astronomer Robert Ellery was reportedly quoted as having described Black and Allan's work as;
The boundary of the Port Philip District of New South Wales was defined in the New South Wales Constitution Act, 1842 (UK) as
The Australian Constitutions Act, 1850 (UK) which established the colony of Victoria, uses the same definition.
Due to ongoing oversights between the states, however, the actual border was not officially (and legally) ratified until 2006.