Walgett
Important service town in the heart of rich agricultural
land and located on the Namoi River
Walgett is a town of 2100 people at the centre of an
enormous pastoral area which stretches to the state border.
The town is located by the Namoi River near its junction
with the Barwon River in northern NSW, 696 km north-west of
Sydney via Wee Waa (which is 124 km east) and 114 km north
of Coonamble . It is 135 m above sea-level.
Walgett proclaims itself the 'Gateway to the Opal Fields'
as it is situated on the road that leads north to Lightning
Ridge (76 km) and north-west to the Grawin, Glengarry and
Sheepyard Opal Fields.
It is essentially a railhead and stock transport centre
to the surrounding district which is based around the
production of wool, beef cattle, fat lambs, sheep studs and
wheat. Its riverside location also makes it a good spot for
fishing: Murray cod and yellowbelly being the predominant
catches.
The first European in the area was John Oxley who named
and crossed the Castlereagh River to the south during an
exploration of the interior in 1818. Charles Sturt pushed
further north along the Castlereagh in 1829, coming to
within 32 km of present-day Walgett.
Escaped convict George Clarke (see entry on
Boggabri) crossed the district with the Kamilaroi people
in the years 1826-1831. Upon his recapture he told of a vast
inland river called the Kindur which prompted the acting
governor to send Sir Thomas Mitchell to investigate the
claims. Mitchell encountered the Barwon River in 1832, a
little south of present-day Mungindi.
It was Mitchell's favourable report on the pastoral
prospects of the area which prompted squatters to fan out in
the 1830s, heading north from the Hunter Valley along the
Namoi then west along the Gwydir River to the Barwon, or
north from Bathurst and Mudgee along the Macquarie and
Castlereagh Rivers. The first settlement on the Barwon
occurred between 1839 and 1842.
Relations between the white settlers and the Kamilaroi
peoples along the Barwon and Macintyre Rivers were
particularly ugly. There were the usual conflicts over land,
food, customs and the rape of black women but matters
weren't helped by the Myall Creek Massacre (see entry on
Bingara) and the murderous actions of Major Nunn's troop
on the Namoi River. Both outrages were inflicted upon the
Kamilaroi and both occurred in 1838 as white settlement of
the Barwon was commencing. Along with drought and economic
recession, this conflict successfully slowed settlement
until the introduction of the native police whose tactics
and firearms had effectively quashed resistance by 1850. The
Aborigines then retreated. Some returned to work as station
hands. Today there are a relatively large number of
indigenous people in the town and outlying reserves.
A tent was pitched at a crossing on the Namoi River in
1851 (on the land now occupied by the golf course) and it
served as the colony's outermost post office. It was named
'Wallgett' (sic), although the spelling and pronunciation
varied greatly at first.
In 1859 a townsite was surveyed and gazetted on high
ground by Arthur Dewhurst who named two of the major streets
after himself. Namoi, Euroka and Wee Waa Sts were named
after landmarks to which they pointed, while Fox, Peel and
Pitt Sts were inspired by British prime ministers. As the
settlement was principally connected to the rest of the
colony via Wee Waa this was initially the main road.
However, when the main access road became that from the
south, Fox St functioned as the principal thoroughfare.
In 1860 a slab hut police station was built, a court of
petty sessions established and the first store and hotels
erected. Walgett became the centre of a new police district
in 1863. A courthouse and lock-up were added in 1865, though
drought hampered the development of the town and district.
In 1868 a party of travellers were bailed up by Captain
Starlight (Frank Pearson) and Charles Rutherford, who stole
monies and a pistol. However, this was the beginning of the
end for Starlight as the party were able to give good
descriptions of the men to the police who would capture
Starlight near Bourke the following year (for the full story
of Starlight see entry on
Enngonia).
However, from 1876, until the depression of the 1890s,
the town entered a boom period. As the original squatting
leases expired the area was slowly opened to closer
settlement. There was an influx of private and government
capital and improvements were made to the squatting runs
which were fenced and irrigated. Bore water was first tapped
in 1872 and sheep began to supplement cattle after
pleuro-pneumonia devastated the herds. A regular coach
service to Sydney commenced in 1874. Labour was in plentiful
supply as the goldfields wound down and the area experienced
a wool boom which encouraged the migration of free
selectors.
The first bank opened in 1876 and a school and hospital
were built. A bridge over the Barwon was built in 1877, and
1881 saw the completion of some more substantial government
edifices - namely a courthouse and police station in Wee Waa
St and a post office of brick. Future prime minister Edmund
Barton was the crown prosecutor at the first court of
quarter sessions in 1878. A brewery was established in the
1880s, though it closed in 1910.
Wool profits were briefly enhanced when Frederick
Wolseley of Euroka, an outlying station, completed work on
the world's first successful sheep-shearing machine on his
property in 1885. It was patented in 1887 and was
extensively implemented on local stations by the end of the
decade. However the depression was starting to kick in by
that time. The railway did not arrive until 1908.
The Walgett Rodeo is held in August, the annual show on
the second weekend in May and the Wool Festival on the
October long weekend.
Things to see:
Tourist Information
The local shire offices at 77 Fox St are the local tourist
information office (tel: 02 6828 1399) though Debbie Dwyer
at the Lightning Ridge Information Centre can offer more
precise information, tel: (02) 6829 1462.
Historic Grave
The first settler's grave is located at the rear of the
caravan park at the northern end of town.
Opal Fields
The Grawin, Glengarry and Sheepyard Opal Fields are located
north-west of Walgett via the tiny village of Cumborah which
is 48 km north-west of Walgett along a sealed road (obtain a
map, directions and an update on road conditions from the
shire office in Walgett before departing). A spring flows in
the midst of Cumborah and the gravel pits nearby are good
for fossicking. From there continue on the north-westerly
road for a further 13 km then head off to the left onto the
side road for 4 km to the Grawin field where 'The Light of
the World' (450 g) was found in 1928. There is a general
store, fuel supplies and a log-cabin clubhouse which is the
centre for a number of social and sporting events.
A link road heads in a southerly direction. It is 7 km to
the Glengarry field. There is an airstrip, a pub known as
the Glengarry Hilton, and an active social golf club.
The Sheepyard Field can be accessed from Glengarry. The
newest and most productive of the three fields, there is a
store and a public phone.
Narran Lake
Narran Lake, 96 km west, is one of Australia's largest
natural inland lakes and has an abundance of animal and
birdlife. It is an ideal location for birdwatching but there
are no facilities and it is on private property so access is
by prior arrangement only (contact the Walgett Shire Council
Offices on 02 6828 1399). The roads are not the best and are
definitely not to be attempted in wet weather.
Broadwalk
Business Brokers
Broadwalk Business
Brokers specialise in General Businesses for Sale, Caravan Parks for
Sale, Motels for Sale, Management Rights & Resorts for Sale, Farms for
Sale, Hotels for sale,Commercial & Industrial Properties for Sale.
Phone:
1300 136 559
Email:
enquiries@broadwalkbusinessbrokers.com.au
AUSTRALIAN BUSINESSES FOR SALE
COFFS HARBOUR BUSINESS BROKERS
BROADWALK BUSINESS BROKERS
GOLD COAST BUSINESSES FOR SALE
BRISBANE BUSINESSES FOR SALE
SYDNEY BUSINESSES FOR SALE
CARAVAN PARKS FOR SALE
BUSINESSES FOR SALE
MOTELS
FOR SALE
HOTELS
FOR SALE
Disclaimer
We advise prospective purchasers that we take no
responsibility for the accuracy of any information in the business
provided by vendors or their professional advisers and that they should
make their own enquiries as to the accuracy of this information,
including obtaining independent legal and/or accounting advice
Walgett