Rosevears Hotel
The Rosevears Hotel stands on the western bank of the Tamar River in northern Tasmania, its brick structure a tangible remnant of the 1850s—built from earth quarried on the very property where it still commands the water's edge. It began as the Rose Inn, licensed to William Henry Rosevears in the 1840s, when river traffic meant something, when crews making passage along the Tamar needed a stopping place and a drink. That lineage persists in the building's bones, in the way it anchors itself to both the land and the living history of a working waterway. What makes the hotel distinctive is how it has allowed itself to evolve without forgetting what it was. The present structure, that 1854 brick building, now opens toward the river through floor-to-ceiling glass—a contemporary gesture that somehow deepens rather than erases the old pub's character. The panoramic views of the Tamar spread wide across the dining space, accommodating up to a hundred guests, yet the warmth of a country licensed room persists: the kind of place where you can still order counter meals and sit quietly with a cold beer, or linger over regional food and wine. The valley's wine country frames the whole experience, adding another layer to what draws people here. Upstairs, twenty-six rooms offer accommodation with private balconies—a practical modernity that suits the hotel's role as both a local hub and a waypoint for visitors discovering the region. There is something apposite about staying overnight in a building that once sheltered transient crews, now welcoming people who come by choice rather than necessity. The hotel remains tethered to its river, its town, and its long, unhurried history.