Henry's Bridge Hotel
In 1858, as Echuca was being imagined into existence, Henry Hopwood planted a hotel beside his punt. It was a practical gesture—a place for river commerce and travellers to settle—but also the founding act of a town. The Henry's Bridge Hotel still stands on that threshold between land and water, between ordered streets and the Murray's amber sprawl, much as it did when the first guests took shelter in its rooms. The building carries its own era lightly. What strikes you first is simply its presence: the solidity of mid-Victorian construction, the broad verandahs that belong to a climate where people conduct half their lives in shade, the sense of a place that has absorbed more than a century and a half of arrivals and departures. The historic river-port precinct unfolds around it—warehouses and wharves, the whole architecture of a town born from water commerce—and the pub remains its natural centre, the old gathering point where the business of the river and the life of the town have always converged. Inside, the long licensed room holds the kind of patina that cannot be manufactured: the specific wear of countless elbows on timber, the layered quality of air in a space where people have sat and talked and waited. There is nothing self-conscious about it. The bar offers cold beer in the Australian manner. The café and dining rooms serve those who want something more than a drink, and the rooms upstairs remain available to travellers—a continuity unbroken since Hopwood's day. To walk in is to enter not a museum piece but a working pub that happens to be genuinely old, where the past is not a separate category but simply the shape of the present. The Murray flows past outside, much as it always has.