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The bridge at Macksville
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Macksville
(including Taylors Arm and Scotts Head)
Quiet township on the Nambucca River
Macksville is an attractive town of 2900 people located
on the banks of the Nambucca River 498 km north-east of Sydney, 12 km
south of Nambucca Heads and 3 m
above sea-level. It is a fishing and oyster-farming centre which
services a productive area noted for its bananas and other tropical
fruits, along with vegetables, grazing, dairying and timber.
Prior to white settlement the area is thought to have been
occupied by the Kumbaingeri or Ngamba Aborigines.
It is probable that the first Europeans in the area were two
cedar-cutters and William Miles, a stockman from Yarrabandinni, who
explored the Nambucca and Bellinger Rivers while searching for timber
in 1839. Miles then guided surveyor Clement Hodgkinson into the area in
1841. Other cedar-getters followed.
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The lagoon in Macksville
Rotary Club
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The first white
settlers began to take up land after the 1861 Lands Act, establishing
large dairy herds. A small settlement known as Nambucca or Central
Nambucca emerged in the 1870s at the same time as Bowraville and
Nambucca Heads. All three were centres for the selectors,
timbergetters, fishermen and miners who lived in the district.
The town's present name derives from two Scotsmen,
known as Angus Mackay and Hugh McNally, who subdivided their selections
for a township which became known as 'Mack's Village'. In 1885 McNally
became the first licensee of the Star Hotel. To its east there was once
a public wharf used by steamers which picked up timber and cream from
the district. By 1897 the village had 120 settlers, a police station,
courthouse, post office, school and bank. The railway arrived in 1919.
A park in town is named after Frank Partridge, a local
who won the Victoria Cross in 1945 for leading a successful attack
against Japanese bunkers in the Bougainville campaign.
Fishing and boating are popular in Macksville and
there are boat ramps on both sides of the river. The Macksville Show is
held on the last weekend in April.
Things to see:
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The Star Hotel beside the
river at Macksville
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Tourist Information
The nearest information centre is at Nambucca
Heads, tel: (02) 6568 6954.
Star Hotel
The delightful old Star Hotel (1885), which is located
on River Street, not far from the Macksville Bridge, doesn't seem to
have changed in the last 50 years. It still has the old Tooths
advertisements on the walls depicting 1950s sports heroes all eager for
a Tooths. It is one of the shire's oldest surviving buildings. Local
red cedar were used for the bar and the staircase.
Pioneer Cottage
2 km east of the bridge, along River St, is Mary
Boulton's Cottage, a charming replica of a rough-sawn timber domicile
which is considered typical of those used by the early European
settlers, although the timber rather than earthen floor and internal
fireplace would then have been considered luxuries.
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Mary Boulton's Pioneer Cottage
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It is set in a
pleasant garden on the riverbank. The display includes an array of
antiquated utensils, furniture, costumes, horse-drawn vehicles, tools
of the trade and other memorabilia from the past. Mary Boulton is a
descendant of some of the valley's earliest European settlers. The
cottage is open by appointment, tel: (02) 6568 1457.
Taylors Arm
If you want to become an important footnote in Australian
history you could breast the bar at the former Cosmopolitan Hotel
(1903) and ask the publican 'How much would I have to drink to return
this hostelry to its previous moment of infamy?'
He'll look at you with quizzical disbelief and reply,
'Well, at the moment we're carrying about 620 litres in 13 kegs.'
At that point all you'd have to do is place an open
cheque on the counter, leap across the bar, lie on the floor under the
taps and open your mouth.
The reason is that the Cosmopolitan Pub [now it has changed
its name to the title of the song] was the subject of the song, 'The
Pub with No Beer' which dwells upon the regulars who used to drink at
this old and isolated timbergetters' watering hole in the 1940s.
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The famous "Pub With No Beer"
at Taylors Arm
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It is claimed that the
song's origins lie with some verse written by a Dan Sheahan of Ingham
in Queensland. However, the song is usually credited to bush worker
Gordon Parsons who may well have transformed Sheahan's verse. At any
rate it became a national number one in the hands of Slim Dusty.
The Cosmopolitan is now officially called The Pub with
No Beer in spite of its 620 litres on tap. The Pub With No Beer
Festival is held here every year at Easter, tel: (02) 6564 2101. It is
located 26 km west of Macksville at Taylors Arm.
Taylors Arm Rd heads west of Macksville off Wallace St. The
signposted scenic drive follows Taylors Arm, a major tributary of the
Nambucca River, through the river valley. The waterway was named after
Taylor and Co. who held a run which stretched from the present village
east to Warrell Creek where their head station was located.
Bakers Creek Station
8 km from the Pub With No Beer is Bakers Creek
Station which offers horseriding, fishing, rainforest walks, swimming,
canoeing and picnic-barbecue areas adjacent fine lakeside gardens.
Accommodation is also available. Bookings are essential, tel: (02) 6564 2165.
Scotts Head
15 km south-east of Macksville by road is Scotts Head
where surfing and swimming can be enjoyed. There are also facilities
for deep-sea fishing. It is named after a man named Scott who
established a cattle run in the area c.1841.
Way Way State Forest
Follow the Pacific Highway south for 7 km, turn left
into Rosewood Rd at Warrell Creek then follow the forest-drive markers
through regenerated forest and the old-growth rainforest along Way Way
Creek. There is an 8-km deviation road up to the panoramic Yarrahapinni
Lookout (490 m) on the watershed between the Macleay and the Nambucca
Rivers. The Pines Picnic Area is the starting point for the 500-m Way
Way Creek Forest Walk. Another approach to the forest is via Scotts
Head Rd.
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Motels
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Belle Vue Riverside Motel
Belle Vue Dve
Macksville
NSW
2447
Telephone: (02) 6568 1363
Facsimile: (02) 6568 3606
Rating: ***
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Golden Emblem Motel
Pacific Hwy
Macksville
NSW
2447
Telephone: (02) 6568 1977
Facsimile: (02) 6568 1534
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Mandarin Motel
24 Princess St
Macksville
NSW
2447
Telephone: (02) 6568 2222
Facsimile: (02) 6568 2288
Rating: ****
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Mid North Coast Motor Inn
Pacific Hwy
Macksville
NSW
2447
Telephone: (02) 6568 3544
Rating: **
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Hotels
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Nambucca Hotel
Cnr Wallace St & Pacific Hwy
Macksville
NSW
2447
Telephone: (02) 6568 1033
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Star Hotel
River St
Macksville
NSW
2447
Telephone: (02) 6568 1008
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Farm & Eco Holidays
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Cheviot Hills farmstay
490 Congarinni south
Macksville
NSW
2447
Telephone: (02) 6568 3190
Facsimile: (02) 6568 3190
Rating: **
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Restaurants
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Emblem Restaurant
Pacific Hwy
Macksville
NSW
2447
Telephone: (02) 6568 1534
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Giardino Cafe Pizza & Pasta Restaurant
28 McKay St
Macksville
NSW
2447
Telephone: (02) 6568 3216
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Golden Emblem Motel
Pacific Hwy
Macksville
NSW
2447
Telephone: (02) 65 68 1977
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Macksville Chinese Restuarant
Cooper St 2291
Macksville
NSW
2447
Telephone: (02) 6568 2291
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Mid North Coast Motor Inn
Pacific Hwy
Macksville
NSW
2447
Telephone: (02) 65 68 1544
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Pepper's Family Bistro
Cooper St
Macksville
NSW
2447
Telephone: (02) 6568 1740
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