Wallabadah - Culture and History

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This was published 15 years ago

Wallabadah - Culture and History

The original Aboriginal inhabitants of the district were the Kamilaroi peoples who called the area 'Thalababuri' (its meaning is uncertain). The Kamilaroi tribe was subdivided into clans and classes which determined marital possibilities (girls being often betrothed in infancy and married by about 14). They wore opossum clothing and, for ceremonial or ornamental purposes, smeared themselves with red ochre and pipe clay, scarred their bodies and wore decorative headwear. The males hunted while the women gathered fruit. Weaponry consisted of elaborately carved clubs, spears and boomerangs and stone or flint tomahawks and knives. Fishing was carried out with the aid of weirs, spears and nets made of grass or bark.

The first European settlers began squatting in the district around 1830 and the Wallabadah Station (44 000 acres) was taken up about 1835. The current homestead (built in 1900) is 5 km east of the township.

A village emerged which was of some importance in the 1850s, being located at the road junction of the mail coaches which came from the north and north-west. This prospect proved too tempting for Thunderbolt, then the most notorious bushranger in the colony, who robbed the northern mail coach at Wallabadah in 1867.

The town was also of some importance as a service centre for the surrounding area. However, it was surpassed by Quirindi when the railway arrived at the latter in 1877. Wallabadah became a soldier settlement location after World War II.

Although it is an attractive landmark on the highway there is little in particular to see, other than a couple of historic buildings. Australia's first country racing club was established at Wallabadah in 1852 and the Wallabadah Cup is still held on New Year's Day (the current racecourse was built in 1898). There is a caravan park and picnic area on the banks of the creek and a small golf course.


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