Silverton Hotel
At the heart of Silverton, a town that seems to exist in a kind of temporal suspension out in the far reaches of inland New South Wales, stands a pub built in 1918 on the foundations of something older still—an original hotel dating back to 1884. It occupies the centre of this remote outback settlement with the kind of quiet, inevitable presence that speaks of deep roots and enduring purpose. This is a place where the landscape has not changed dramatically in living memory, and the pub itself has become as much a fixture of the terrain as the surrounding country. The building carries the modest, practical character of early twentieth-century outback hospitality—the kind of establishment where a cold beer has always been the point, and where the verandah offers both shelter and vantage. Inside, there is the particular atmosphere of a country pub that has served generations: the accumulation of small details, the quiet hum of local life intersecting with passing trade, the straightforward offer of a meal and a room for the night. It is the sort of place where the furnishings and fixtures bear the honest marks of their use. What distinguishes this pub beyond its longevity is its unlikely career in cinema. It has become one of Australia's most filmed hotels, appearing in several notable outback films and television productions, including *Mad Max II* and *Wake in Fright*—works that themselves seem to have captured something essential about the remote interior and the particular character of its establishments. Yet the Silverton Hotel remains, fundamentally, a working pub: it serves its meals, pours its beers, offers its rooms, and hosts its functions. The cameras have come and gone, but the pub endures in the quiet heart of the town.