Old Canberra Inn
When Joseph Shumack built this place from slab timber in 1857, Canberra did not yet exist as an idea. The inn stood as a waystation in the landscape, offering shelter to mail-coach travellers moving between Yass and Queanbeyan, its rough walls a familiar sight to those who knew this country before the city claimed it. That heritage runs deeper than mere years—it speaks to a time when such buildings were less monument than necessity, their survival a quiet accident of usefulness that stretched across more than a century. The Old Canberra Inn arrived in Lyneham in 1974, relocated but recognisable, carrying its slab-built character into a changed landscape. Inside, the rustic timber setting still holds something of that earlier function: a room where people gather, where strangers become temporary companions over a drink, where the building itself seems to remember its purpose. The counter remains, as counters do, a place where transactions happen and conversations begin. Ten craft beer taps now pour rotating independent Australian brews—a modern gesture, certainly, but one that preserves the simple logic of the old coaching stop: good drink, reliable hospitality, the kind of place people return to. The kitchen turns to local sustainable produce and makes space for different diets, suggesting a pub that thinks carefully about who sits at its tables. Weekend live music echoes through the timber, and the games that occupy its corners speak to the unhurried rhythms of a proper pub. Whether one comes for the counter meal or simply the company, there is something steadying about a building this old, still doing what buildings like this have always done: offering a room, a drink, and the presence of other people. In Lyneham, it continues.