|
|
Powder-horn
Museum
|
Stockinbingal
Tiny
township on the South West Slopes of New South Wales.
Located midway between Cootamundra and Temora and 426
km from Sydney via the Hume Highway on the South West slopes,
Stockinbingal is a tiny settlement comprising one hotel, a takeaway
cafe (in the old Bank building) a few shops, a post office and a small
population of 250.
Like most Australian towns with Aboriginal names no one
knows exactly what the word 'Stockinbingal' meant. Local mythology says
it means 'full belly' but equally it is believed that the local water
supply, now known as Bland Creek, was known to the Aborigines at
Tocumbidgie or Tocumbimbil with 'tocum' meaning deep hole and either
'bingara' meaning creek or 'bimbil' meaning white leafed box tree.
Somewhere in the past someone added an 'S' and changed a letter or two
so that the result is a word no Aborigine would recognise.
|
|
The countryside to the east
of Stockinbingal
|
The area
around Stockinbingal was first settled sometime before 1848 but the
village of Stockinbingal was not proclaimed until 1885. By the turn of
the century the village had grown to become a significant service
centre for the surrounding pastoralists who concentrated their
attentions on wheat and sheep. There was a bank, a pub, a blacksmith, a
doctor and dentist, and numerous small businesses. There was even a
local photographer.
The local hotel was built in 1892 to cater for
the Cobb & Co coaches which used the village as a stopover on their
journeys from Harden to Temora. The following year the branch line from
Cootamundra to Temora was completed and the town became an important
railhead. In the years that followed the town grew rapidly and so, in
1893, a local police station was established and the local school was
opened in 1894.
Undoubtedly the most interesting hotel in the region was
that at Dinga Dingi which played host to bushrangers and Cobb & Co at
various times. To get to Dinga Dingi take the Milvale road at the
western end of Stockinbingal.
James Troy opened the Dinga Dingi (originally
spelt Dingy Dingy) Hotel in late 1879 to take advantage of the
Scrubyards goldrush. But Dinga Dingi (which was the legal spelling of
the settlement) goes back much further than that. On 22 June 1859
Catherine Dacey purchased 320 acres for £320 at Yeo Yeo Creek (now
known as the Bland Creek). By 1865 the homestead had a publicanıs
license and was known as the Shamrock Inn. The bricks for the Dinga
Dingi Hotel were made just 300 m away on the creek and all the nails
were hand made. Bushrangers frequented the old hotel and one of the
doors was holed by a bullet allegedly fired by one of them.
All that remains of the Scrubyards settlement now are two
graves, some broken china and rusted tin. Yet at the end of 1879 there
were as many as 1400 men on the goldfield with the usual facilities -
butchers shop, general store etc. There was a lack of water on the
field and by February 1880 (only 9 months after the initial rush)
people were leaving the area.
By March 1880 things were so bad that one account
reported: 'We are at present dull...nothing to enliven us not even a
fight. We have no money to get drunk...the butcher must see us through
now...in one hotel a notice is posted in the public room announcing
that all drinks are to be paid for on delivery.' The Scrubyards field
closed completely in 1881.
The first and only bank in Stockinbingal was the Bank of
New South Wales which set up an agency in 1907 and eventually built on
the corner of Hibernia and Martin Streets in 1921. The premises were
closed in 1974. It has recently been converted into a cafetakeaway
hoping to attract custom from the increasing flow of tourists
(particularly people from Canberra) who pass through the town.
Today the town is a small centre with many empty shops
and houses and no new development. Time and transportation have changed
Stockinbingal from a thriving township to a quiet community.
| |
Hotels
|
| |
| |
Commercial Hotel
32 Martin St
Stockinbingal
NSW
2725
Telephone: (02) 6943 1472
|
| |
| |
Restaurants
|
| |
| |
Commercial Hotel
32 Martin St
Stockinbingal
NSW
2725
Telephone: (02) 6943 1472
|
| |