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A disused picture theatre in
the main street of
Tambo
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Tambo
A
quiet, old style country town.
To the traveller speeding along the Mitchell Highway
from Charleville to Longreach, Tambo seems nothing special. Located 200
km from Charleville and 208 km from Barcaldine it's just another town
in western Queensland. A sign at the southern end of the town announces
that it has a population of about 500 and is located 398 m above sea
level. This would hardly cause the traveller to even pause.
A closer look reveals that it is a town which has been
held in time. Tambo is a country town out of the 1940s or 1950s.
There's a couple of lazy pubs, a disused picture theatre which looks
like it closed its doors only yesterday, a general store which still
feels like a general store - drapery, vegetables, groceries - and a
number of old buildings which date back to the 1870s and 1880s.
Tambo proudly claims that it is the oldest town in
Central Western Queensland. Certainly it was surveyed and gazetted in
the early 1860s and settlement began in 1863.
The first European through the area was Sir Thomas
Mitchell who described the region around present day Tambo as 'downs
and plains extending westward beyond the reach of vision'. Even the
Barcoo River, which is frequently nothing more than a necklace of
waterholes, was described as 'a river traceable to the remotest verge
of the horizon'. It was on the basis of these recommendations that the
town was established.
Initially it became an important stopping place
for itinerant carriers and drovers. A blacksmith's shop was established
and by 1865 there was a pub for the thirsty travellers making their way
from Charleville to Longreach.
Things to see:
Post Offices
Most notable are the two post offices in the main
street. The operational one was built in 1904. It still has the charm
of the time and its open weatherboard design is attractive.
Over the road is the original post office which
was built in 1876. The key can be obtained from the Council Offices
next door but there is little point unless you are interested in old
bottles or telegraphic equipment.
Influenza Memorial
At the southern end of town is a grim reminder that
even ina place as remote as Tambo was affected by the deadly influenza
epidemic of 1919. A memorial beside the road has the following
dedication: 'Reginald Sylvester Barry (late manager of Tambo Station)
who died on 17 June 1919. He worked unceasingly to save those people in
Tambo stricken with pneumonic influenza and at the end of the epidemic
contracted the disease himself and died. Erected by the residents of
Tambo and District in January 1920.'
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Tourist Information
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Tambo Shire Council Chambers
Tambo
QLD
4478
Telephone: (07) 4654 6133
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Motels
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Tambo Mill Motel
Arthur St
Tambo
QLD
4478
Telephone: (07) 4654 6466
Rating: ****
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Hotels
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Club Hotel/Motel
Arthur St
Tambo
QLD
4478
Telephone: (07) 4654 6109
Rating: **
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Royal Carrangarra Hotel
Arthur St
Tambo
QLD
4478
Telephone: (07) 4654 6127
Rating: *
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