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Canola fields near
Cowra
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Cowra
Large
country town famous as a POW camp during World War II
Cowra is a town of 9500 people situated on the Lachlan
River, 310m above sea-level and 320 km west of Sydney at the junction
of the Mid Western and Olympic Highways. It is the commercial and
administrative centre of a shire in which the major industries are
livestock, wool scouring, vegetable growing and processing, vineyards,
furniture making and tourism.
Cowra is noted for its historical and natural attractions,
the magnificent Japanese Garden and Cultural Centre, quality
restaurants, wineries, galleries, craft shops and horse riding. The
public identity of the town has become bound up with the Cowra breakout
of 1944 (in which Japanese prisoners of war attempted to escape from a
local camp during World War II) and the subsequent association with
Japan. This history has led the town to focus on and promote the values
of pacifism and internationalism, which are at the centre of the annual
Festival of Understanding.
Prior to European settlement the area was
occupied by the Wiradjuri people. The first known white man in the area
was George Wilson Evans who passed near the townsite in 1815. He named
the area the Oxley Plains after his superior the surveyor-general. John
Oxley, guided by Aborigines, investigated a portion of the Lachlan
River and the adjacent lands in 1817, deeming it 'unfit for white
settlement'. He named the river after the then governor Lachlan Macquarie.
In 1831 cattlemen Arthur Rankin and James Sloan
from Bathurst became the first white settlers on the Lachlan. In the
early days the townsite was a river crossing known as 'Coura Rocks'.
Some sources indicate that a cattle station with this name was
established by a Reverend Fulton in subsequent years.
The first hotel on the townsite was established in 1846.
About 1847 the crossing became known as Cowra and the village was
proclaimed in 1849. In the 1850s the river crossing was used by gold
prospectors headed for Lambing Flat (Young) and Grenfell. A school was
established in 1857 and a bridge over the Lachlan built in 1870. The
railway arrived in 1886 and Cowra attained local government in 1888.
Reef gold was discovered at Mt McDonald to the south-east
(near what is now Wyangala Dam) in the 1880s and a settlement of 500
people developed. It was named after the McDonald brothers who first
discovered gold in the area. Alluvial gold was also found at Woods Flat
near Woodstock and in small quantities amidst the sands of the Lachlan River.
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Canola fields near Cowra
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A bridge across the
Lachlan was built at Cowra from 1891 to 1893. At the time it was the
country's longest single-span and total span bridge. A telephone
exchange was established in 1901, a water supply in 1909, a gasworks in
1912 and electric lighting was introduced in 1924.
Cowra POW Camp and the Cowra Breakout
A large army training camp was established just
outside Cowra in 1940 which trained some 70 000 personnel throughout
World War II. The following year, a prisoner-of-war (POW) camp was
built at the north-eastern outskirts of town. On 5 August, 1944, this
camp became the site of the largest mass POW escape in British military
history. It was also the only such escape attempt to occur in Australia.
At that time the camp contained about 4000
prisoners who were held in four separate compounds of 17 acres each. A
thoroughfare 700 metres long and 45 metres wide, known as Broadway,
divided Camps B and C from Camps A and D. Adjacent Broadway was a
10-metre strip known as No Man's Land, on each side of which was
barbed-wire security fencing. Camp B, hopelessly overcrowded, held 1104
Japanese POWs.
On 3 June, 1944, a Korean prisoner reported a conversation in
which he heard about a plan among the Japanese to attack the garrison,
seize arms and ammunition and escape. As a result security was stepped
up. Consequently, on 4 August, the leader of Camp B was handed a list
of internees to be transferred to the POW camp at Hay on 7 August. At
1.30 a.m. of 5 August a bugle sounded and the prisoners of Camp B
opened the hut doors. Screaming furiously, two groups - armed with
knives, chisels, forks, saws, axe handles and baseball bats - rushed
the wire separating them from Broadway while two other groups headed
for the perimeter wire on the other side of the camp. They threw
blankets over the barbed wire, or crawled under it, while others
dressed in heavy clothing, threw themselves on the wire for others to
climb over. 20 buildings were burned down due to prisoners overturning
heating braziers. The Australian Recruit Training Centre, 3 km away,
was alerted by telephone and flares.
Two privates, who manned one of the Vickers machine gun
trailers, were overrun and murdered, although Private Hardy managed to
sabotage his gun before his death. Another private was stabbed to death
in the fracas and a lieutenant was killed during the round-up the
following morning. Another four Australian personnel were wounded and a
civilian from Blayney died after a gun discharged in his vehicle during
the round-up.
378 Japanese POWs escaped although the media were kept
entirely in the dark about the event and local civilians were given
partial and at times false information.
Within nine days 334 escapees were recaptured by the
authorities and by civilians. One POW reached Eugowra, 50 km away.
Others had been killed and some committed suicide - two by laying their
heads on railroad tracks. In all 231 Japanese died and 108 were wounded
- three dying subsequently of their wounds. The organisers of the
break-out had ordered that civilians were to remain unharmed and this
proved to be the case.
One charming story entailed a Mrs Weir who refused to hand
over two escapees until she had given the men tea and scones as they
had not eaten for days. The men in question returned to the Weir farm
in the 1980s to thank the family.
Interestingly, the many Italian POWs were, for the
most part, cheerful and cooperative and worked agreeably outside the
camp while the Japanese POWs were surly, difficult and resentful.
Attempts at employing them outside the camp had proved a failure due to
their aggressive behaviour. Their lack of cooperation and the breakout
itself arose from an overwhelming sense of shame engendered by a code
of honour which viewed capture as a disgrace to themselves, their
families and their country. Japanese soldiers were supposed to commit
suicide rather than be humiliated by the subservience implicit in
imprisonment. Indeed most of the prisoners were taken when they were
too weak to offer resistance or they were merchant seamen scooped from
the waters. They gave false names as they felt news of their capture
would shame their families while the Japanese authorities reported all
those missing in action as dead. When informed of the deaths during the
breakout, the Japanese authorities asserted that those killed must have
been Japanese civilians as, it contended, there was no such thing as a
Japanese POW. When the internees returned many felt their 'shame' would
render them unworthy of return to Japanese society (some expected to be
executed) and half did not tell their families they had been POWs.
A Japanese war cemetery was established by agreement
with the Japanese government in 1964. It now contains the remains of
all Japanese POWs and civilian internees who died during their
imprisonment in World War II.
A student exchange program was established in 1970 between
Cowra High School and the Seikei High School in Kichijyouji in Tokyo.
The Japanese Garden and Cultural Centre was set up with the aid of the
Japanese government in 1978-79 to honour the dead on both sides.
A number of annual events grace the Cowra calendar. The
Festival of Understanding (which features a different guest nation each
year) is held in March, the Cowra Picnic Races and the Cowra Wine Show
in July, the Cowra Show in late September, Sakura Matsui (the Cherry
Blossom Festival) in early October, and, at the visitors' centre in
November, the Art and Craft exhibition and Rose Fair.
Things to see:
Tourist Information
Cowra Visitor Information Centre is located on
the western side of the bridge, in Olympic Park, on the Mid Western
Hwy. It screens a very good nine-minute film concerning the Cowra
breakout and Cowra's subsequent role in the world peace movement. The
centre can furnish pamphlets and information regarding local
attractions, accommodation, eateries, coming events, tour operators,
arts-and-crafts shops and art galleries. The centre is fronted by an
excellent rose garden (1000 bushes and 107 varieties) and it is open
from 9.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. daily, tel: (02) 6342 4333.
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The Japanese Gardens
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The Japanese
Garden and Cultural Centre
The magnificent Japanese Garden and Cultural Centre
was erected on a 5-ha site as a symbol of the historical ties between
Cowra and Japan. It was funded by the Australian and Japanese
governments and by private donations but is maintained on a non-profit
basis by tourism.
The garden was designed by Ken Nakajima, a world-renowned
figure in traditional Japanese landscape gardening, in liaison with the
School of Environmental Design from Canberra College of Advanced
Education.
Mr Nakajima has written that 'The Japanese treasure nature
and try to live with it. My Cowra garden takes this principle into
consideration as a 'motto' and treasures all existing objects. In this
respect, you will note that all gum trees and rocks on the site have
been utilised in their original state'.
The garden was designed to reflect the total Japanese
landscape. The mountain represents all Japanese mountains. A stream
flows down the mountain through a waterfall to a lagoon (representing
the mountain ponds) and on to a larger koi-filled lake which equates
with the ocean. Japan's cities are represented by the buildings,
trimmed hedges suggest rolling hills and each gravel path offers new
perspectives to convey the variety of views when meandering through the
Japanese landscape. The garden was also designed to blend in with the
indigenous environs. Consequently gum trees surround the garden.
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The Japanese Gardens
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A traditional tea
house sits on an island. There are wooden footbridges, a wisteria
pergola, a bonsho (calling bell), a temple lantern, a lookout over
Cowra and the valley, manicured shrubs and lawns and a delicate and
symbolic arrangement of rocks. The 113 species of flora includes water
lilies, cherry trees, wisteria, chrysanthemums, magnolia and Australian
natives and there are over 120 bird species in the garden. The overall
effect is one of serenity and harmony.
Traditional Japanese design has been employed in the
construction of the Cultural Centre which houses a display of Japanese
art including the Somenishiki Ornamental Vase, 500 hand-carved Japanese
dolls, Nanga paintings and a fossilised chrysanthemum estimated to be
over 70 million years old.
Within the complex is the Bonsai House (with Bonsai display),
a pottery house, a gift shop, a nursery, and the Chabana Restaurant
which fuses Japanese and Australian elements and furnishes views over
the garden. In the car park is a Japanese rock sculpture which
symbolises peace.
In early October, when the cherry blossoms bloom, the
centre becomes the focus of Sakura Matsuri, the Cherry Blossom Festival
during which there are demonstrations of Japanese arts and crafts,
recitals on the shakuhachi flute, tea ceremonies, martial arts
demonstrations, kite flying and Japanese food. The complex is open from
8.30 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. daily, tel: (02) 6341 2233.
To get there, head north off the highway (Kendall St) into
Brisbane St which becomes Scenic Drive before bending sharply to the
right into the Bellevue Hill Reserve. You will soon come to a turnoff
on the left to the centre.
Sakura Ave extends northwards from the centre past the POW
campsite to the war cemetery. When completed, cherry trees will line
the entire route.
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The Japanese
Gardens
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Bellevue
Hill Lookout and Fauna Reserve
If you do not turn off Scenic Drive into the Japanese
Garden you will soon come to a ring road on the right-hand side which
leads past a lookout that offers views over the Lachlan Valley and the
town. Adjacent the lookout is Bellevue Hill Fauna Reserve. There is a
walking track through the reserve with picnic-barbecue facilities.
The POW Camp
To the north of the Cultural Centre, Sakura Ave leads by
the remnants associated with the POW camp (see the introduction to
Cowra for the full story). At the corner of Sakura Ave and Farm Rd
(Evans St) is a memorial cairn and a monument to the many Italian POWs
in the camp who took no place in the breakout and who willingly, and
with good grace, did much labour in the area.
From the memorial cairn there is a walking track that
takes in the remains of the campsite. The land on the western side of
Sakura Avenue contains a large concrete slab by the roadside which
marks the site of the camp gaol. West of this slab is an old stone
military building which predates the camp and which was used as a
storage shed and just to the south of the slab are the remains of the
camp headquarters. To the south-west of the latter is the site of four
water storage tanks and due south of that is the original entry road.
The AMF (Australian Military Forces) quarters were located on the other
side of Sakura Ave, most of which is now private property.
A guiding map and pamphlet is available from the visitors'
centre which also has plenty of other excellent material relating to
the camp and the general context of its existence.
The Cemeteries
The Japanese POWs who died in the breakout were
originally placed in mass graves. The on-going care bestowed upon these
sites by the local RSL impressed Japanese visitors and, in 1964,
following discussions between the Japanese embassy and the local
council, a war cemetery was established to which the remains of all
Japanese POWs who died in Australia were transferred. It was funded by
the Japanese government and the land was ceded to the Japanese
government. It contains 522 graves, including Japanese nationals who
died during the attack on Darwin, and Japanese civilians who died in
internment camps.
In the adjacent general cemetery are the tombs of the
four Australian personnel killed during the breakout and a monument
associated with the graves of Indonesian detainees who died of natural
causes in the camp.
To access the cemeteries head north along Sakura Ave or
follow Redfern St north of the highway for a little over 3 km and turn
right into Doncaster Drive.
Heritage Buildings
Start an investigation of the town's few historic
buildings at Garden and Montgomerie Solicitors on the northern side of
Kendal St, between Lachlan and Macquarie Sts. It dates from 1875.
Nearby are Allan Gray & Co Auctioneers. This building was erected in
1861. The facade has been changed over the years.
Turn left into Macquarie St. The original St Peter's
Presbyterian Church, built of brick, is situated to the rear of the
present structure which dates from 1913.
Return to Kendal St and proceed east to the Brisbane St
corner where you will find the courthouse, a Federation-style brick
building with unusual gable ends built in 1879.
Slightly further along the street, and across the road, is
'Ilfracombe', built as a private home in 1879 and now a restaurant.
Return to Brisbane St and head south. At the Vaux St corner
is Cowra Public School (1882). Head west along Vaux St. At no.6 is the
old stone flour mill built in 1860. It is now a winery and function centre.
Walk around the corner into Lachlan St. Cross Kendal
St and turn left into Redfern St. To the right is the Australian Hotel,
the town's first, erected in 1846 although it has been completely
transformed over the years from the crude bark building that it once was.
Cowra Museums
Cowra Museums is an interactive war, rural and rail
museum with over 8000 exhibits including one of the country's largest
operating model railways, the Cowra POW Camp exhibition, as well as
nostalgic, historical and working war, rail, steam and farm machinery.
There are engines to start, machines to operate, sirens to sound,
bugles, tanks, jeeps, a canon, anti-tank guns, bayonets and other
weapons, dioramas, steam engines, old petrol bowsers, cars and
lawnmowers, old magazines and newspapers and many other items. It is
located 4 km east of the town centre on Sydney Rd (the Mid Western
Highway) and is open from 9.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. daily, tel: (02) 6342 2666.
Coleman's Country Corner
Coleman's Country Corner is a country music museum at
49 Mulyan St. It is open from 10.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. daily, tel: (02)
6342 1064.
Australia's World Peace Bell
Australia's World Peace Bell, a replica of the original
which hangs in the United Nations Building in New York, is located in
Civic Square, Darling St (just off Kendal St). It was bestowed upon
Cowra due to local efforts to foster peace and international understanding.
The Cowra Italy Friendship Monument
The Cowra Italy Friendship Monument, constructed in
1996, represents Italians who served on the side of the allies in World
War II, Italian POWs held in Australia, and Australian and Italian
service personnel who died in the war. It is located at the eastern end
of Kendal St.
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Aboriginal murals on the
bridge pylons
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Aboriginal Murals
Also of some interest are the Aboriginal murals on the
pylons of the Lachlan River Bridge. This project is easily accessible
from the Tourist Information Office as it is only a few hundred metres away.
The Lachlan Valley Railway Society
The Lachlan Valley Railway Society was set up to
restore and maintain steam locomotives and rolling stock. The
depot/museum is located in Campbell St, near the Brougham St
intersection, It is open from 9.30 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. on weekends and
steam-train rides operate on the second full weekend of each month and
on long weekends from March to November, tel: (02) 6341 1052.
Glenn Morton's and Other Galleries
6 km from the post office, on Darbys Falls Rd, is
Glenn Morton's Gallery which is open from 9.00 a.m. to 1.00 p.m. every
day except Sunday, or by appointment, tel: (02) 6342 3194.
Other galleries in town are Australiana Corner at 1
Kendal St which is open daily; the Caleen Art Collection at the council
chambers in Darling St (open Monday to Friday), and the Craft Shop at
106 Kendal St (open daily).
Observatory
Darbys Falls
Observatory is open every night (weather permitting) from 7.00 p.m. to
10.00 p.m. in winter and from 8.30 p.m. to 11.00 p.m. in summer, or by
appointment, tel: (02) 6345 1900. Follow Darbys Fall Rd for about 24 km
then turn left at the Observatory sign into Mt McDonald Rd, just before
Darbys Falls. Follow this road for almost 1 km then turn right into
Observatory Rd and drive to the parking area at the end (switch your
headlights off as soon as possible). The observatory is up the hill on
the left.
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Croote Cottage
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Croote Cottage
Not far from Cowra is Croote Cottage. Built by
convict labour in 1827, this four-roomed cottage is one of Australia's
oldest surviving residences and it is certainly one of the oldest
extant buildings west of the Great Dividing Range. It is a reminder of
a lifestyle which is long gone. It has been owned and lived in
continuously (until recently) by the Dowd family. Edna Dowd, who now
lives in a more modern dwelling next door, still does traditional tea
and scones for visitors who can experience, in a marvellously
unpretentious way, the simplicity of 19th-century rural living with all
its suffering and small pleasures. It is sadly no longer open to the public.
Wyangala Waters State Recreation Area
43 km south-east of Cowra along Darbys Falls Rd is Wyangala
Waters State Recreation Area which covers over 2000 ha, making it the
third-largest state recreation area in NSW. The lake has a storage
capacity of over one million megalitres and a surface area 2.5 times
that of Sydney Harbour. It is surrounded by timbered slopes with
granite outcrops. The dam wall is 1.5 km in length.
There are camping sites, a caravan park with on-site
vans, cabins, bungalows and cottages, walking trails through the
surrounding bushland, a kiosk/general store, canoes, paddleboats and a
houseboat for hire, four boat ramps, picnic areas, shelter sheds,
fireplaces, toilets, an amenities block, a country club at nearby
Wyangala village and a 9-hole golf course nearby. Other possibilities
include swimming, sailing, waterskiing, power-boating, tobogganing, and
parasailing. Paintball is available by booking only. The office is open
from 9.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. daily, tel: (02) 6345 0877.
Idle Water Slides have two slides, swimming pools and an
18-hole mini-golf. They are open on weekends and in school holidays
from October to the Easter, tel: (02) 6345 0808.
The dam is also renowned for its trout fishing (brown and
rainbow) and is also supplied with catfish, Murray cod, bream,
yellowbelly and silver perch.
Conimbla National Park
Conimbla National Park represents a rare surviving
example of the Central Western Slopes' natural vegetation. It consists
of open woodlands, low open forests and dry heaths inhabited by grey
kangaroos, swamp wallaby, shrub birds and parrots.
Head west of Cowra along the Mid Western Highway for
about 9 km. 2 km beyond the turnoff into the Lachlan Valley Way, turn
right into Barryrenie Rd. After 5 km there is a turnoff on the left
into a parking and picnic-camping area. The Wallaby Walking Track (one
hour return) starts here. It concludes at another picnic-camping area
further west along the Barryrenie Rd.
17 km along Barryrenie Rd (9 km unsealed) is a sign
indicating another picnic-camping area. The Ironbark Walking Track (90
minutes return) starts 100 m along this trail. It offers views east
towards Cowra and a fine perspective over the Cherry Creek Gully. The
sedimentary nature of the Conimbla Range is evident in the red lines of
the cliff faces.
If you wish to explore the western side of the park,
proceed west of Cowra along the Mid Western Highway for 30 km and turn
right into Bumbaldry Rd. For further information ring (02) 6851 4429.
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Canola fields near
Cowra
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Wineries
There
are a large number of vineyards and wineries in the Cowra area and
local wines can be tasted at four local outlets. The Mill Winery and
Function Centre is located in one of the town's oldest buildings (1860)
at 6 Vaux St and is open from 10.00 a.m. to 6.00 p.m. daily, tel: (02)
6341 4141.
The Quarry Restaurant and Cellars are located 4 km south of
Cowra on the Boorowa Rd (the Lachlan Valley Way). The cellars offer
wines from Cowra Estate, Hungerford Hill, Arrowfield Cowra Wines and
Richmond Grove. The restaurant also utilises local produce in its
modern cuisine, tel: (02) 6342 3650. It is open from 10.00 a.m. to 4.00
p.m. Tuesday to Sunday.
Chiverton, west of town on the Mid Western Highway,
specialised in chardonnay, semillon and shiraz and is open by
appointment only, tel: (02) 6342 9270.
Hermes Morrison Wines is open weekends and public holidays
from 10.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. or by appointment, tel: (02) 6345 0153.
Head north-east along the Mid Western Highway for 28 km then turn right
at the signpost into Nargong Rd and follow the signs.
Horseriding
Horseriding in the
area is offered by arrangement at Glenbrook (tel: 02 6342 3847).
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Tourist Information
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Cowra Visitor Information Centre
Olympic Park
Mid Western Hwy
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6342 4333
Facsimile: (02) 6342 4563
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Motels
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Aalana Motor Inn
161 Kendal St
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6341 1177
Facsimile: (02) 6341 1771
Rating: ***1/2
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Alabaster Motel
Lynch St
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6342 3133
Facsimile: (02) 6342 4075
Rating: ***1/2
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Civic Motel
Young Rd
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6341 1753
Rating: ***1/2
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Country Gardens Motor Inn
75 Grenfell Rd
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6341 1100
Facsimile: (02) 6341 1139
Rating: ****
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Cowra Crest Motel
133 Kendal St
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6342 2799
Facsimile: (02) 6341 1653
Rating: ***
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Cowra Motor Inn
3 Macquarie St
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6342 2011
Facsimile: (02) 6342 2323
Rating: **1/2
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Breakout Motel
181 Kendal St
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6342 6111
Facsimile: (02) 6342 6029
Rating: ****
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Vineyard Motel
Chardonnay Rd
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6342 3641
Facsimile: (02) 6342 6800
Rating: ***1/2
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Countryman Motor Inn
164 Kendal St
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6342 3177
Facsimile: (02) 6342 1748
Rating: ***1/2
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Hotels
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Australian Hotel
Bridge St
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6342 1596
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Cowra Hotel
2 Kendal St
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6342 1925
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Imperial Hotel
14 Kendal St
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6341 2588
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Lachlan Hotel
66 Kendal St
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6342 2355
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Lachlan Valley Motel/Hotel
162 Kendal St
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6342 2900
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Railway Hotel
154 Kendal St
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6342 2290
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Town House Motel/Hotel
15 Kendal St
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6342 1055
Rating: **1/2
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Caravan Parks
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Pine Trees Caravan Park
Gem Rd
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6342 1850
Rating: **1/2
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Cowra Caravan Park
Lachlan St
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6340 2110
Facsimile: (02) 6340 2110
Rating: ***1/2
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Cowra Holiday Park
Mid Western Hwy
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6342 2666
Facsimile: (02) 6342 2801
Rating: ***
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Restaurants
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Breakout Brasserie
37 Macquarie St
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6342 4555
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Countryman Motor Inn & Licensed Restaurant
164 Kendal St
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6342 3177
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Cowra Motor Inn Restaurant
3 Macquarie St
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6342 2011
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Garden of Roses Restaurant
49 Kendal St
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6342 1176
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Hong Kong Chinese Restaurant
130 Kendal St
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6342 4088
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Hoong Hing Chinese Restaurant
44 Kendal St
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6342 3477
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Lachlan Valley Hotel Restaurant
162 Kendal St
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6342 2900
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Neila
5 Kendal St
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6341 2188
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Red Carp Restaurant
Binni Creek Rd
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6342 5222
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The Cowra Mill Winery & Restaurant
6 Vaux St
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6341 4141
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The Quarry Restaurant
Boorowa Rd
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6342 3650
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Town House Motel/Hotel Restaurant
15 Kendal St
Cowra
NSW
2794
Telephone: (02) 6342 1055
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