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Bridge over the Richmond
River near Coraki |
Coraki
Historic river port on the junction of the Richmond and
Wilson Rivers.
Located 740 km north of Sydney via the Pacific Highway,
Coraki is an interesting, historic and attractive river port
located significantly at the junction of the Richmond &
Wilson Rivers. Throughout the nineteenth century the town
established itself as the most important river port in the
district largely due to the entrepreneurial efforts of
William Yabsley and W.T. Yeager.
The first Europeans into the area arrived in the 1830s
looking for suitable cedar trees to cut and ship out. They
settled around Coraki where there were, at the time, there
were good stands of red cedar. Life was hard and they lived
in simple rough bark huts which they moved as they shifted
from one stand of cedar to the next.
The first permanent settler into the area was William
Yabsley who, in 1849, obtained a lease to Brook Station.
This was the beginning of the settlement which was
eventually to become the thriving port of Coraki. Coraki is
an Aboriginal word. No one is sure of its meaning although
many have assumed that it was the Aboriginal name for the
junction of the two river.
It was entirely due to the endeavours of William Yabsley
that the settlement grew. His first undertaking was to build
a shipyard which for many years built ships which plied both
the Wilson and Richmond Rivers. He also opened a general
store providing provisions for people living in the area and
conducted a school for both his family and the apprentices
who worked in his shipyard. This established a long running
family tradition and Yabsleys are now spread out throughout
the Department of Education in New South Wales.
By the 1860s Coraki was the major port on the Richmond
River and was far more substantial than Lismore. Through the
port came the cedar and pine which was being cut up river.
New settlers arrived in the district in considerable
numbers in the early 1860s. A street plan for the village of
Coraki was drawn up in 1866. In the next two years a general
store, the first hotel and a small cedar school building
were all constructed on Richmond Terrace. In 1863 W.T.
Yeager purchased the first steam tug to work on the Richmond
River and established a saw mill, wharves and a shipyard
across the river from Coraki. Three years later in 1866 the
Reverend John Thom brought the first sugar cane cuttings to
the area thus beginning one of the district's major
agricultural activities. The town continued to prosper
throughout the 1870s with large numbers of ships making the
trip from the heads at Ballina up the river to collect the
supplies from the wharves. Coraki's importance at this time
was partly due to the fact that the Richmond River became
shallower upstream and consequently passengers and goods
needed to be transferred from ocean going vessels to
shallower vessels to be able to reach the towns of Casino
and Lismore. There is little doubt that the prosperity of
the town at this time was largely due to the entrepreneurial
skills of both William Yabsley and W. T. Yeager who had
become the most successful shipowners on the Richmond River.
By 1870 the Coraki post office had been completed and in
1881 the thriving town had its own police station. By 1886
the North Coast Steam Navigation Company had established its
head office at Coraki and in that same year Coraki was
chosen as the place for the publication of the new local
newspaper, the 'Richmond River Herald'.
By the 1890s Coraki was the most prosperous town in the
district. The first municipal council was formed in 1891,
the local School of Arts was opened in the 1893, the first
Coraki show was held in 1896 and the town's butter factory
was opened in 1898. It looked as though Coraki would
dominate the local region but as the twentieth century
evolved, and as both Lismore Casino grew in importance (as
river transport declined and rail and road grew in
significant), so Coraki became a smaller and quieter
community. Today it is a small centre located away from the
highway but still on the Richmond River. Its appeal is that
it offers an insight into one of the great river ports of
the 19 th century.
Things to see:
Mid-Richmond Historical Society Museum
Located in Adams Street in the old Woodburn Shire Council
building this museum provides an interesting array of
information about the history of the Coraki district. It is
open on Wednesdays from 10.00 a.m. - 3.00 p.m. and Saturday
1.00 p.m. - 4.00 p.m. It can be opened by appointment ring
(02) 6683 2089 or (02) 6683 2086.
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Yabsley House
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Yabsley House
This attractive timber building on the outskirts of town was
constructed in 1911 and therefore is not the home of the
original William Yabsley. In recent times it has been owned
by the New South Wales politician Michael Yabsley and used
as a guest house. It is a fine example of a handsome timber
dwelling and shows the prosperity of the town before the
Great War.
Historic Buildings in the Town
Most of the towns historic buildings are located on Richmond
Terrace, the Richmond River is on one side of the street and
the other side are the Police Station which is located in
the former Court House (1888) and was designed by the
notable architect James Barnet; the ANZ Bank is in the
former E.S. & A. Bank which dates from 1911 and further
along the street are the historic Club Hotel and the Coraki
Hotel.
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Coraki