https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/88633110?searchTerm=Hensher%20and%20co.%20of%20elysian%20flat&searchLimits=If you read the above article you will see that the Aurora Company "failed to get off the ground" so to speak.
Hensher and Co. did discover payable gold.
However, the ground had already been 'claimed' and held by two other companies (the New Union Jack Company and the New Wellington). Therefore the ground could not be 'pegged' and the Aurora Company could not establish a claim and begin mining.
With speculation in the Company and the discovery shares were offered and 'snapped up' however not within the laws of mining of the day. Investors demanded their money to be refunded.
There is no Aurora Company registered in the year of 1881 in the Victorian Government Gazette.
Location (Neilborough, north of Bendigo, Victoria.)
https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/88632700?searchTerm=%22neilborough%22%20AND%20%22Hensher%22&searchLimits=dateFrom=1881-01-01|||dateTo=1881-12-31Bendigo Advertiser, Thursday 14th April 1881, Page 3, Raywood.
A party at Elysian Flat, who are prospecting for Hensher and Co., have come on quartz with gold in it, which, should it prove payable, will open out quite a new field. The claim is situate about a quarter of a mile north of the Shamrock Hotel, the depth from which the prospect was obtained was 46 feet, and just below the old alluvial.