Caloola is a locality in the
Central West region of New South Wales. There once was a small village of the same name but it is a ghost town today. At the 2016 census, the locality had a population of 88.
Location
Caloola is 28 km south-west of
Bathurst and 24 km east-south east of
Blayney, by road. The nearest settlement is the village of
Newbridge, 7 km to the west. The locality lies on either side of Trunkey Road, the road between
Bathurst and
Trunkey Creek.
History
Aboriginal and early settler history
The area now known as Caloola is on the traditional land of the
Wiradjuri
The Wiradjuri people (; ) are a group of Aboriginal Australian people from central New South Wales
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people. The name Caloola is probably a settlers' rendering of an aboriginal word and is said to mean "old battleground". After settler colonisation, Caloola lay within the
County of Bathurst, Parish of Lowry.
In 1853, Caloola Creek was included as a goldfield within the Western Goldfields. There was a short-lived gold rush to Caloola Creek. By 1858, most of the ethnic-European gold diggers had moved on and the field had about 150 ethnic-Chinese miners working there.
Despite the presence of alluvial gold, the main impetus for further settlement, during the 1850s, seems to have been agriculture. Settlers in the area were petitioning for the establishment of a post office in 1856. The post office was opened in 1858 and operated from a newly built store.
In 1865, the
Caloola Union Church was built. This church was unusual, in that the building was controlled by a local trust and made available to any denomination to hold church services.
Bushrangers
Gold in areas nearby, such as
Tuena and
Trunkey Creek, and improvements made to the roads to Bathurst and Tuena, generated passing traffic for Caloola, which in turn attracted
bushranger
Bushrangers were originally escaped convicts in the early years of the British settlement of Australia who used the bush as a refuge to hide from the authorities. By the 1820s, the term had evolved to refer to those who took up "robbery under ...
s. In the early 1860s, the small settlement at Caloola—without any police—had more than its share of mayhem, largely but not only due to
Ben Hall,
John Gilbert and their criminal associates.
In late 1862, the owner of the store and inn at Caloola was shot during a robbery. Two of the robbers, Charles Ross and—unrelated—Alexander Ross, were convicted of attempted murder and
hanged
Hanging is the suspension of a person by a noose or ligature around the neck.Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd ed. Hanging as method of execution is unknown, as method of suicide from 1325. The ''Oxford English Dictionary'' states that hanging in ...
in 1863.
On 30 July 1863, the store was again robbed by two men, believed to be the bushrangers,
John Glbert and
John O'Meally. The storekeeper rode to
Bathurst to inform the police about the robbery.
On 23 September 1863, Caloola was the site of a raid by a gang of five notorious bushrangers, Ben Hall, John Gilbert, John O'Meally,
John Vane
Sir John Robert Vane (29 March 1927 – 19 November 2004) was a British pharmacologist who was instrumental in the understanding of how aspirin produces pain-relief and anti-inflammatory effects and his work led to new treatments for heart and ...
, and Michael Burke. At the time, as well as the store, Caloola had a blacksmith and a shoemaker. The storekeeper and the two others were handcuffed. The gang ransacked the store, taking what they needed and willfully destroying the rest, as revenge for the storekeeper previously having given information to the police. The gang stole two horses from an adjacent paddock to carry their loot—shooting dead some other horses that they could not catch—before adjourning to Caloola's public house and carousing, until ten o'clock at night. One of the gang,
John Vane
Sir John Robert Vane (29 March 1927 – 19 November 2004) was a British pharmacologist who was instrumental in the understanding of how aspirin produces pain-relief and anti-inflammatory effects and his work led to new treatments for heart and ...
, was later tried and convicted for his part in the raid, among other crimes. The other four members of the gang had all met violent deaths, by the end of May 1865.
Mining village
The impetus for the official establishment of a village was gold mining, after reef gold was found there in 1871. In 1897, there were three reef mines in the area. The most significant of these was the Caloola Creek Gold Mine. The Caloola Creek Gold Mining Co. had been registered in 1872.
The mine continued in operation, until at least 1914, and probably somewhat later.
The site of a village, with the official name of Egan, was set aside on 27 January 1871. The site was between the left bank of Caloola Creek and the right bank of its tributary McGeorges Creek, on either side of the road now known as Trunkey Road, which was originally its main street. Within the village, the main street was called Lanarch Street. Other planned streets of Egan included Belmore, Corrie and Caloola Streets.
The village had been planned in 1870. As a result of the Crown Lands Act of 1884, the village of Egan was proclaimed a village in 1885.
The manager of the Caloola Creek Gold Mine, in 1872, was Patrick Egan
and it seems likely that the village took its official name from his surname. However, as the locality was already known as Caloola, or Caloola Creek, and it had an existing church and post office, the village was always better known as Caloola. The village seems to have grown, but not very much beyond the few buildings that were already on its site by 1871.
A provisional school opened in 1871. An application was made for a public school at Caloola in August 1877. The public school opened in September 1877 and a board to control it was appointed in November of the same year.
A teacher's residence existed at Caloola by 1880. The public school closed in 1891, reopening again as a provisional school in 1896.
In 1904 residents were agitating for the opening of a public school. Tenders were called for the construction of a public school building in 1906. The school became a 'half time school' in 1909 and finally closed altogether, in 1917, after the mine had closed. In 1954, residents were once again advocating opening a school at Caloola, this time without success. The school was on the western side of Trunkey Road, at the southern end of the village.
In 1879, a contract was let for roadworks for a road connecting Caloola with Newbridge, which from 1882 lay on the
Main Western railway line
The Main Western Railway is a major railway in New South Wales, Australia. It runs through the Blue Mountains, Central West, North West Slopes and the Far West regions. It is with operational & under construction & repairs.
Description o ...
.
In 1902 and 1903, the size of the land allocated to the village was reduced and some streets closed, to more realistically reflect the future prospects of the village. By 1982, the village had been officially renamed Caloola and Trunkey Road had been realigned so that it ran slightly to the west of the old main street, Lanarch Street.
Present day
The locality of Caloola is largely an agricultural area.
Little remains of the village of Caloola. Old roads roughly corresponding to Lanarch and Belmore Streets are still discernible.
The
Caloola Union Church, and its associated cemetery survive. These are still managed and maintained by a local trust.
The church and the former schoolhouse and teacher's residence were on a local heritage item list in 2014.
Reference section
External links section
Map of the Parish of Lowry, with an inset diagram of the village of Egan (1942)Map of the Parish of Lowry, with an inset diagram of the village of Caloola (1982)
{{Bathurst Regional
Bathurst Region
Mining towns in New South Wales