Attunga New South Wales | |
---|---|
Coordinates | 30°55′46″S 150°50′42″E / 30.92944°S 150.84500°E |
Population | 633 ( 2006 census) [1] |
Postcode(s) | 2345 |
Elevation | 374 m (1,227 ft) |
Location | |
LGA(s) | Tamworth Regional Council |
State electorate(s) | Tamworth |
Federal division(s) | New England |
Attunga is a small farming community in the New England region of New South Wales Australia.
The name is an Aboriginal word for "a high place", and was originally the name for a nearby farm operated by pastoralist John Brown in the 1840s. [2] The land had previously been part of a 313,000-acre (1,270 km2) grant to the Australian Agricultural Company in 1834 and had been used to graze 6,000 sheep. [3]
The village of Attunga was gazetted in 1847 [4] but early settlement appears to have been slow. The first recorded burials at the Attunga Cemetery date from 1872 with the earliest inscriptions dated 1881. [5] BHP opened a limestone quarry there in 1919. [6]
Population growth remained slow until the mid-twentieth century. The current population of 633 includes families of commuters to Tamworth. Services in Attunga currently include a primary school, supermarket, hotel and sports ground, and rural fire service headquarters.
The late English singer-songwriter Max Bygraves owned "Attunga Park", an 84-hectare farm near the town of Murwillumbah.
The main industries are sheep and cattle farming, and limestone mining from a mine to the east of the town. The town abuts the Attunga State Forest, a popular walking and camping destination. [7]
The town was served by the Barraba branch railway line until the local station was closed in 1985.
Recent drought conditions have caused bank erosion along Attunga Creek, as a result of stock movements across and along the creek bed. In 2006 the town of Attunga received funding for a major program of bank stabilisation and revegetation to restrict stock movements to defined corridors near the waterway. [8]
Vodafone will serve the town and surrounding area with mobile phone service as part of the National Blackspot Program from Q4 2016.
Attunga New South Wales | |
---|---|
Coordinates | 30°55′46″S 150°50′42″E / 30.92944°S 150.84500°E |
Population | 633 ( 2006 census) [1] |
Postcode(s) | 2345 |
Elevation | 374 m (1,227 ft) |
Location | |
LGA(s) | Tamworth Regional Council |
State electorate(s) | Tamworth |
Federal division(s) | New England |
Attunga is a small farming community in the New England region of New South Wales Australia.
The name is an Aboriginal word for "a high place", and was originally the name for a nearby farm operated by pastoralist John Brown in the 1840s. [2] The land had previously been part of a 313,000-acre (1,270 km2) grant to the Australian Agricultural Company in 1834 and had been used to graze 6,000 sheep. [3]
The village of Attunga was gazetted in 1847 [4] but early settlement appears to have been slow. The first recorded burials at the Attunga Cemetery date from 1872 with the earliest inscriptions dated 1881. [5] BHP opened a limestone quarry there in 1919. [6]
Population growth remained slow until the mid-twentieth century. The current population of 633 includes families of commuters to Tamworth. Services in Attunga currently include a primary school, supermarket, hotel and sports ground, and rural fire service headquarters.
The late English singer-songwriter Max Bygraves owned "Attunga Park", an 84-hectare farm near the town of Murwillumbah.
The main industries are sheep and cattle farming, and limestone mining from a mine to the east of the town. The town abuts the Attunga State Forest, a popular walking and camping destination. [7]
The town was served by the Barraba branch railway line until the local station was closed in 1985.
Recent drought conditions have caused bank erosion along Attunga Creek, as a result of stock movements across and along the creek bed. In 2006 the town of Attunga received funding for a major program of bank stabilisation and revegetation to restrict stock movements to defined corridors near the waterway. [8]
Vodafone will serve the town and surrounding area with mobile phone service as part of the National Blackspot Program from Q4 2016.