Berambing
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Berambing is a rural locality in the Blue Mountains of
New South Wales ) , nickname = , image_map = New South Wales in Australia.svg , map_caption = Location of New South Wales in AustraliaCoordinates: , subdivision_type = Country , subdivision_name = Australia , established_title = Before federation , es ...
,
Australia Australia, officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a Sovereign state, sovereign country comprising the mainland of the Australia (continent), Australian continent, the island of Tasmania, and numerous List of islands of Australia, sma ...
. The settlement is clustered around the
Bells Line of Road Bells Line of Road is a major road located in New South Wales, Australia, providing an alternative crossing of the Blue Mountains to the Great Western Highway. The eastern terminus of the road is in , 51 km northwest of Sydney, where the road ...
, between
Windsor Windsor may refer to: Places Australia * Windsor, New South Wales ** Municipality of Windsor, a former local government area * Windsor, Queensland, a suburb of Brisbane, Queensland **Shire of Windsor, a former local government authority around Wi ...
and Lithgow, west of
Bilpin Bilpin is a small town on the historic Bells Line of Road in the City of Hawkesbury local government area in the Blue Mountains, west of Sydney, New South Wales. Bilpin is known as "Land of the Mountain Apple". Fruit orchards and gardens thriv ...
. It is situated across both the
City of Hawkesbury The City of Hawkesbury is a local government area of New South Wales, Australia, part of which is at the fringe of the Sydney metropolitan area, about north-west of the Sydney central business district. Hawkesbury City is named after the Hawkes ...
and
City of Blue Mountains The City of Blue Mountains is a local government area of New South Wales, Australia, governed by the Blue Mountains City Council. The city is located in the Blue Mountains range west of Sydney. The Mayor of Blue Mountains City Council is coun ...
local government areas. The settlement had a population of 106 people at the . Berambing is known for its apple, nuts and stone fruit orchards. The natural environment of the area attracts visitors, and the village is in close proximity to the
Mount Tomah Botanic Garden The Blue Mountains Botanic Garden, originally known as the Mount Tomah Botanical Garden, is a public botanic garden located approximately west of the Sydney central business district at in the Blue Mountains, in New South Wales, Australia. Th ...
and the
Wollemi The Wollemi National Park () is a protected national park and wilderness area that is located in the northern Blue Mountains and Lower Hunter regions of New South Wales, in eastern Australia. The park, the second largest national park in New S ...
and Blue Mountains national parks.


History


Aboriginal occupation

The Berambing locality is within the traditional territory of the Darkiñung people (known as ‘The Branch’ natives by European settlers after their first contact in the vicinity of the Grose River, a tributary of the Hawkesbury River, near Richmond). The Aboriginal people used the term 'Wollombi' or 'Wollemi' to describe themselves or their country. The people of the Darkiñung language group occupied the ranges from Richmond to Maitland, with part of their country incorporating the catchment areas of the Hawkesbury river tributaries. Aborigines probably occupied the high ridges (such as the Berambing locality) only intermittently according to the season.


European exploration

In November 1804
George Caley George Caley (10 June 1770 – 23 May 1829) was an English botanist and explorer, active in Australia for the majority of his career. Early life Caley was born in Craven, Yorkshire, England, the son of a horse-dealer. He was educated at the F ...
, with three convicts in his party, attempted to cross the Blue Mountains along the northern edge of the
Grose Valley The Grose Valley is a rugged valley in the Blue Mountains, New South Wales, Australia. It has been formed by the Grose River, the headwaters of which are in the Mount Victoria area. The valley is located between the Great Western Highway and ...
and passed to the south of Mount Tomah. Caley ascended a mountain south-west of Berambing that he named
Mount Banks Mount Banks, a mountain within the Explorers Range of the Blue Mountains Range that is a spur off the Great Dividing Range, is located within the Blue Mountains National Park, approximately west of Sydney in New South Wales, Australia. Mou ...
before turning back. In August 1823 Archibald Bell, the nineteen year-old son of the police magistrate in the Windsor area, travelled along the route that would later become the Bell’s Line of Road. On the journey from Richmond to Mount Tomah Bell followed the directions of an Aboriginal woman who had travelled the route. He initially failed to find a safe descent to the west from Mount Tomah, but returned a month later and was able to travel into the Hartley valley. Bell found the greatest difficulty on the journey “was in the thick part of his way to Tomah, so much so that in one place he was forced to cut his way through three miles”. Bell used the Aboriginal term ‘Balcamatta’ to describe the country below Mount Tomah where he encountered difficulty proceeding. Upon his return in September 1823 Archibald Bell sent his report of the route over the Blue Mountains to Governor Brisbane. Soon afterwards the surveyor-general
John Oxley John Joseph William Molesworth Oxley (1784 – 25 May 1828) was an explorer and surveyor of Australia in the early period of British colonisation. He served as Surveyor General of New South Wales and is perhaps best known for his two exp ...
instructed his assistant-surveyor
Robert Hoddle Robert Hoddle (21 April 1794 – 24 October 1881) was a surveyor and artist. He is best known as the surveyor general of the Port Phillip District (later known as the Australian state of Victoria) from 1837 to 1853, especially for creation of ...
to survey Bell's line of road. Hoddle completed the task and his survey report was submitted in November 1823. The road across the mountains was soon afterwards cleared and formed by convict labour.Motor Tour
''Maitland Daily Mercury'', 3 November 1939, page 4.


Settlement

In June 1829 in a published "List of Towns and Stations… published for general information" the following was included: "Tomah Mountain, on Bell’s Road to Bathurst" (in Northumberland county), 60 miles from Sydney. George M. C. Bowen, who had previously been a land commissioner and surveyor, was granted 2,560 acres (1,036 ha) in 1831 at Berambing near Mount Tomah, which he named 'Bulgamatta'. Bowen described Mount Tomah as “the highest and central elevation of the group which adjoined my land”. Bowen sold his landholding in 1836. The location of 'Bulgamatta' homestead was known as 'Old Tamah' in the mid-1950s and is now the location of the Chapel Hill Retreat (in Berambing Crescent). With the establishment of pastoral runs beyond Bathurst and Mudgee herds of sheep and cattle began to be driven along Bell’s Line of Road to the markets at Homebush. The road from Mount Tomah to the Hawkesbury floodplain was often precarious and difficult to travel along. The drovers in charge of stock "would be met at Mt. Tomah by a pilot, whose duty it was to see the travelling flocks and herds through to the lowland plain below Kurrajong". The road served as ‘Bell’s Live Stock Route’ for many years, “practically until the western railway undertook the work of transporting the stock to market” from the mid-1870s. The following description of Berambing was published in January 1861: ::"Berambing is between two and three miles from the summit of Mount Tomah, which is concealed by the intervening forest; but its elevation is considerable, and the climate is cool, bracing, and agreeable, and to those who can really appreciate nature there is a rich fund of enjoyment, and a field of research rendered doubly interesting from having been the scene of some of Allan Cunningham's botanical wanderings... Immediately bordering on Berambing the forest consists of peppermint, stringybark, grey gum, and mahogany. Recent rains had rendered the road muddy, and rather impeded our progress." Author of children's books and environmentalist,
Hesba Fay Brinsmead Hesba Fay Brinsmead (''Hesba Fay Hungerford''; 15 March 1922 in Berambing, New South Wales – 24 November 2003 in Murwillumbah) was an Australian author of children's books and an environmentalist. Biography Upbringing Brinsmead's parents, ...
, was born in Berambing in 1922 and her upbringing in the area inspired much of the background for her books. The property established by Brinsmead’s parents at Berambing was named 'Sookaboomi' (Javanese for 'Longtime'). Her ''Longtime'' trilogy was set in the area and based on her experiences during her childhood and teenage years. In August 1925 it was reported that official approval had been given for the provision of a mail service between Bilpin and Berambing. Mr. E. K. Hungerford of Berambing was contracted to convey the mails twice a week between the two places. In December 1954 the Hawkesbury Development Company Ltd. (having the electricity franchise for most of the Colo Shire) completed the extension of the electricity supply "from Bilpin township to Berambing post office". In January 1955 it was reported that "Berambing residents are very pleased that electricity is now available, and already a number have the good fortune to have their homes wired and connected". Four sub-stations were installed "and supply made available to 27 homes".


2019 bushfire

In December 2019 Berambing was severely impacted by the Gospers Mountain bushfire. In an effort to contain the massive fire firefighters had commenced a large backburn in the Mount Wilson and Mount Irvine areas, but with the dry conditions, heavy fuel loads and erratic weather conditions, the backburn quickly grew out of control. Under deteriorating conditions the bushfire crossed Mount Irvine Road and on 15 December it reached Mount Tomah, Berambing and Bilpin, destroying numerous houses and other buildings, before crossing Bell’s Line of Road into the Grose Valley. The Gospers Mountain fire was the largest forest fire ever recorded in Australia, burning more than 500,000 hectares.


Planning objectives

The Blue Mountains Local Environmental Plan of December 1991 (in pursuance of section 70 of the NSW Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979) included the following “additional objectives” for Mount Wilson, Mount Irvine, Mount Tomah and Berambing: ::(a) To conserve the low density, semi-rural heritage and natural landscapes. ::(b) To conserve areas of natural vegetation which provide key landscape and ecological elements, in particular, the rainforest and tall open forest communities on basalt soils. ::(c) To retain a pleasing combination of formal avenues and roadside plantings, private gardens and landscaping, forests and stands of natural vegetation, attractive rural and semi-rural landscape, local vistas and distant views. ::(d) To maintain the characteristics of the existing local roads, (i.e. curves, rises and falls, limited carriageway width, unpaved shoulders and verges, and adjacent vegetation and attractive plantings). ::(e) To conserve historic buildings, their curtilages and landscaped settings. ::(f) To ensure that the individual and cumulative impact of development does not have an adverse effect on stream catchments particularly associated with water supply or the Blue Mountains National Park. ::(g) To encourage a high quality of design. ::(h) To locate sensitively public utilities to minimise environmental and visual impact. ::(i) To minimise the impact of development on the Blue Mountains National Park by providing buffer areas and protecting wildlife corridors.The Blue Mountains Local Environmental Plan 1991
''Government Gazette of the State of New South Wales'', 27 December 1991 (Issue No. 183), page 10788.


References


External links

{{authority control Towns in New South Wales Suburbs of the City of Blue Mountains City of Hawkesbury 1832 establishments in Australia