Mathoura, New South Wales
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Mathoura is a small town in the
Riverina The Riverina () is an agricultural list of regions in Australia, region of south-western New South Wales, Australia. The Riverina is distinguished from other Australian regions by the combination of flat plains, a climate with significant seaso ...
region of southern
New South Wales New South Wales (commonly abbreviated as NSW) is a States and territories of Australia, state on the Eastern states of Australia, east coast of :Australia. It borders Queensland to the north, Victoria (state), Victoria to the south, and South ...
,
Australia Australia, officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a country comprising mainland Australia, the mainland of the Australia (continent), Australian continent, the island of Tasmania and list of islands of Australia, numerous smaller isl ...
, in the
Murray River Council The Murray River Council is a local government area in the Riverina region of New South Wales, Australia. This area was formed in 2016 from the merger of Murray Shire with Wakool Shire. The combined area comprises and covers the northern ban ...
local government area. At the , Mathoura had a population of 938. At the 2021 census the population was 1,002. The town's name may be derived from a
Yorta Yorta The Yorta Yorta, also known as Jotijota, are an Aboriginal Australian people who have traditionally inhabited the area surrounding the junction of the Goulburn and Murray Rivers in present-day north-eastern Victoria and southern New South Wale ...
word for 'windy'. (There is also a city called
Mathura Mathura () is a city and the administrative headquarters of Mathura district in the states and union territories of India, Indian state of Uttar Pradesh. It is located south-east of Delhi; and about from the town of Vrindavan. In ancient ti ...
in India.) Traditional
Yorta Yorta The Yorta Yorta, also known as Jotijota, are an Aboriginal Australian people who have traditionally inhabited the area surrounding the junction of the Goulburn and Murray Rivers in present-day north-eastern Victoria and southern New South Wale ...
lands lie on both sides of the Murray River roughly from Cohuna to Albury / Wodonga. They include towns such as Echuca, Shepparton, Benalla, Corowa and Wangaratta and extend northwards to just south of Deniliquin.


Cobb Highway

Mathoura is on the
Cobb Highway Cobb Highway is a state highway in the western Riverina and the far western regions of New South Wales, with a short section in Victoria, Australia, designated part of route B75. Initially an amalgam of stock routes, the highway extends fro ...
named after the Cobb & Company Coach services that ran along the same route from the
Murray River The Murray River (in South Australia: River Murray; Ngarrindjeri language, Ngarrindjeri: ''Millewa'', Yorta Yorta language, Yorta Yorta: ''Dhungala'' or ''Tongala'') is a river in Southeastern Australia. It is List of rivers of Australia, Aust ...
to
Wilcannia Wilcannia is a small town located within the Central Darling Shire in north western New South Wales, Australia. Located on the Darling River, the town was the third largest inland port in the country during the river boat era of the mid-19th c ...
on the
Darling River The Darling River (or River Darling; Paakantyi: ''Baaka'' or ''Barka''), is the third-longest river in Australia, measuring from its source in northern New South Wales to its confluence with the Murray River at Wentworth. Including its long ...
. Cobb & Co took over the coach run between
Moama Moama ( or ) is a town in the Murray region of southern New South Wales, Australia, in the Murray River Council local government area. The town is directly across the Murray River from the larger town of Echuca in the neighbouring state of Vic ...
(Maiden's Punt) and
Deniliquin Deniliquin () is a town in the western Riverina region of south-western New South Wales, Australia, close to the border with Victoria. It is the largest town in the Edward River Council local government area. Deniliquin is located at the inte ...
from Bevan and Co after the opening of the Melbourne Echuca rail line in 1864 and ran the service until the opening of the Echuca-Deniliquin rail line in 1876. Along this section, there were horse-changing stations at Yellow Waterhole (near the present Barmah turnoff), Moira Inn (just north of Moira Station), Mathoura, and Hill Plain.


History - 1800s

In 1848 a reserve was established on Gulpa Creek by Surveyor Townsend.  The locality became known as Redbank.  By 1853 W. Moore Carter had established an inn at Redbank and in 1856 he was permitted to purchase at £2 10s. per acre.  By 1860 Carter had about under cultivation, including a vineyard. A petition in 1859 called on the Government to put up the reserve at Redbank for sale.  However, there were others who considered a more suitable position for a village was at Hill Plain, where Mr. Stuckey had erected an inn (opened in June 1860 and managed by John Atkinson). In 1860 Surveyor McCulloch laid out the township of Redbank near the site of Carter's Redbank Inn.  In 1864 Carter was growing tobacco at Redbank (from which cigars were manufactured). A traveller passing through Redbank in mid-1865 stated that "Mr. Carter has established a brick public-house… situated on the bank of the Gulpa Creek".  The writer added: "I observed three or four acres fenced and stocked with fruit trees, withered and dried up". In 1865 Henry Burton, a circus proprietor, purchased the Redbank Inn; he held the licence until 1878 when it was transferred to T O'Sullivan. Mathoura Post Office opened on 1 September 1867. On 4 July 1876 the Deniliquin & Moama Railway opened. The station in the township of Mathoura was called Redbank. The line was quite flat, rising only 5m between Deniliquin and Moama. Redbank Station was at the summit (13m above Deniliquin) and initially was the only other station on the line. Redbank Station had a 76,000 litre tank which could be filled by a steam pump from the Gulpa Creek in 5 hours. 1877: A visitor returning in that year noted several changes including a powerful new crane at the Redbank Railway Station, a new and commodious refreshment room adjoining the ticket office, and a drinking fountain drawing on the pure sparkling water from the Gulpha Creek. As well as the Redbank and Bowtell’s Mathoura hotel (frequented generally by selectors) there was a butcher, draper, general store, blacksmith, and wheelwright. The extensive fish hauls from the Gulpha were sold into Melbourne via Echuca. The Redbank Saw-mills including Barbour’s supplied nearly the whole trade of Deniliquin with red-gum piles, sleepers, and building timber. 1879: On 2 June 1879, the Redbank Railway Station was renamed Mathoura. One reason was that Mathoura was the Government name for the town and parish. The other was that there was another Redbank (near Hillston) in NSW and one in Victoria and goods and parcels intended for
Redbank, Victoria Redbank is a town in central Victoria, Australia. The town is in the Shire of Pyrenees local government area, west of the state capital, Melbourne Melbourne ( , ; Boonwurrung language, Boonwurrung/ or ) is the List of Australian capital ci ...
were frequently forwarded to the ‘Mathoura’ Redbank. By 1879 it was reported that the village had about six houses of "straggling order" and was supported principally by the timber trade.  By 1882 a flour mill had been established at Mathoura; there were two hotels, the Mathoura Inn and the Railway Hotel, as well as a school, a Union church and a sawmill. 1883: John Boothman, licensee of the Railway Refreshment Rooms, Mathoura, appeared before the Moama Police Court in March 1883. Constable Baynes deposed that he was on duty at the railway platform, Mathoura, at 10:30 on the night specified, when he saw dancing taking place in the ladies' waiting room and on the platform. The charge was dismissed. 1884: A bale of wool from Mathoura won third prize at the Amsterdam International Exhibition.


History - 1900s


Mathoura and the campaign against the feather trade

In late 1906 and early 1907, Mathoura was the jumping-off point for the ornithologist and photographer A. H. E.
Mattingley Mattingley is a village and large civil parish in Hampshire, England. The village lies on the Reading road between the town of Hook and Reading. The River Whitewater runs through the parish. The village has one pub, named the ''Leather Bottle''. ...
on two trips to the St Helena swampland on the Edward River to the northeast of the town. On the second trip, he found the bodies of 50 white and plumed egrets shot by ‘plume hunters’ to sell to the fashion industry. Mattingley counted 70 nestlings that had died and 200 left to die of starvation. Mattingley’s published outrage (and the 7 photographs he took) travelled around Australia and the world. Mattingley’s work contributed to the already long-running campaign to eliminate the clothing industry's use of bird feathers. The wider campaign led to the US 1918 Migratory Bird Treaty Act and the
Importation of Plumage (Prohibition) Act 1921 The Importation of Plumage (Prohibition) Act 1921 (11 & 12 Geo. 5. c. 16) known also as the Plumage Act 1908, is an act of United Kingdom legislation passed in 1921. It had been proposed to the UK Parliament in 1908 as the Plumage Bill and was th ...
among other prohibitions.


First World War

The first Mathoura man to enlist for the First World War was Samuel Gardiner. War was declared (by the UK) on 4 August and Gardiner enlisted on 16 September 1914 at the age of 22. Gardiner was farewelled at a ceremony in the Shire Hall on Friday 13 November 1914. Speakers said they ‘appreciated his loyalty and courage in joining the colours, to protect, with thousands of others, the nation from German domination.’ Gardner replied saying that as a public speaker, he was no good, but at the front, he would do his best for the honour of Australia. (Loud applause.) The Chairman then presented Gardner with a ‘wristlet watch’. Gardiner (service number 534, 14th Infantry Battalion
1st AIF The First Australian Imperial Force (1st AIF) was the main expeditionary force of the Australian Army during the First World War. It was formed as the Australian Imperial Force (AIF) following Britain's declaration of war on Germany on 15 Aug ...
), left Melbourne on HMAT ''Ulysses A38'' on 22 December 1914. He was at
Gallipoli The Gallipoli Peninsula (; ; ) is located in the southern part of East Thrace, the European part of Turkey, with the Aegean Sea to the west and the Dardanelles strait to the east. Gallipoli is the Italian form of the Greek name (), meaning ' ...
from the landing until the last 'hop over' or attack on 21 August 1915 ( Hill 60) in which he lost a leg. He returned to Australia on 8 May 1916 and to the Mathoura district where for a time he was
Rabbit Rabbits are small mammals in the family Leporidae (which also includes the hares), which is in the order Lagomorpha (which also includes pikas). They are familiar throughout the world as a small herbivore, a prey animal, a domesticated ...
Inspector at Deniliquin. (Rabbit Inspectors were responsible for the administration and enforcement of the Pastures Protection Act which included the requirement for the landowner to suppress rabbits.) In his last years, he was often in hospital due to his war injuries. He died 22 April 1933 at about age 41 in Royal Park. Mathoura War Memorial: Report of unveiling. List of veterans


Mathoura’s day out. Victory picnic & procession

When the
armistice An armistice is a formal agreement of warring parties to stop fighting. It is not necessarily the end of a war, as it may constitute only a cessation of hostilities while an attempt is made to negotiate a lasting peace. It is derived from t ...
was signed, the residents of Mathoura decided to celebrate the event by holding a monster picnic on Wednesday 20 November 1918. The sports were preceded by a procession from the Murray Shire Chambers led by the Echuca Rangers' Band under the conductorship of Bandmaster F. E. Grimwood and Private Alexander Joss, who only returned home on the previous evening. Following the band were Miss Peters as John Bull, Red Cross nurses, and soldiers. Girls, ranging in age from 14 to five, represented all the Allied nations. Then came decorated cars followed by a
Kilt A kilt ( ) is a garment resembling a wrap-around knee-length skirt, made of twill-woven worsted wool with heavy pleats at the sides and back and traditionally a tartan pattern. Originating in the Scottish Highland dress for men, it is first r ...
ie
cots COTS may refer to: * Commercial off-the-shelf, products that are commercially available and can be bought "as is" * Commercial Orbital Transportation Services, a NASA program for delivery to the International Space Station by private companies * ...
Band (whose band leader 'a noted piper' came from Casterton), then decorated gigs, buggies, and carts.


Climate


Today

The town has an
Australian Rules Australian football, also called Australian rules football or Aussie rules, or more simply football or footy, is a contact sport played between two teams of 18 players on an Australian rules football playing field, oval field, often a modified ...
football team competing in the
Picola & District Football League The Picola & District Football Netball League (PDFNL) is an Australian rules football and netball league. The league covers a large area of northern Victoria (state), Victoria and southern New South Wales from Shepparton in the south to Jerild ...
. Golfers play at the course of the Mathoura Golf Club on the
Cobb Highway Cobb Highway is a state highway in the western Riverina and the far western regions of New South Wales, with a short section in Victoria, Australia, designated part of route B75. Initially an amalgam of stock routes, the highway extends fro ...
.


See also

* Mathoura Football Club


Redbank & the Tilt

Mathoura's early name 'Redbank' referenced the red-coloured rocks visible in the east face of the small cliff or
fault scarp A fault scarp is a small step-like offset of the ground surface in which one side of a fault has shifted vertically in relation to the other. The topographic expression of fault scarps results from the differential erosion of rocks of contrastin ...
formed by the
Cadell Fault The Cadell Fault is a north-south trending intra-plate Fault (geology), geological fault in the Riverina area of New South Wales and Victoria (Australia), Victoria, in Australia. It straddles the Murray River and, in quite recent geological tim ...
or Tilt which can be seen near the town. At some time or times 65,000 to 45,000 years ago earthquakes caused or found a crack in the earth’s crust. This energy escaped by pushing up a 60km wide, 250m thick section of crust, tilting it like a hinged and partly open trapdoor.
Deniliquin Deniliquin () is a town in the western Riverina region of south-western New South Wales, Australia, close to the border with Victoria. It is the largest town in the Edward River Council local government area. Deniliquin is located at the inte ...
and
Echuca Echuca ( ) is a town on the banks of the Murray River and Campaspe River in Victoria (state), Victoria, Australia. The border town of Moama is adjacent on the northern side of the Murray River in New South Wales. Echuca is the administrative cen ...
are at the northern and southern ends of the uplift with Mathoura in the middle, sitting on the high side and eastern edge of the Tilt. The actual edge of the scarp is a few hundred metres east of the Cobb Highway. The Gulpa Creek east of the town winds along the base of the scarp. The height and character of the scarp are most easily seen from the walking track on the far bank of the Gulpa Creek which follows the scarp and the creek. The path can be reached on foot by Cranes footbridge north of Clifton Street, a footbridge at the reserve on Gulpa Street North and the Pollys (Poleys) road Bridge to the south on the Jones Street/Picnic Point Road. The heat of the forces that lifted the crust, fused sand into striking, red-coloured rocks that gave the area its name. The intense redness of these rocks can be seen on the south side of Mitchell Street near its intersection with the Cobb Highway where a red rock has been used to support a plaque recording the NSW Governor’s presence at the ceremonial opening of the town’s sewerage pumping works. In
Chris Hammer Chris Hammer (born 1960) is an Australian journalist and writer of crime fiction. He is known for his best-selling Martin Scarsden series of novels. Early life and education Chris Hammer was born in 1960. Career Hammer has a 30-year caree ...
’s novel The Tilt, Mathoura appears as ‘Tulong’. (Hatheson is the real-life Deniliquin, Boonlea is
Moama Moama ( or ) is a town in the Murray region of southern New South Wales, Australia, in the Murray River Council local government area. The town is directly across the Murray River from the larger town of Echuca in the neighbouring state of Vic ...
, and Anglers Reach represents Picnic Point.)


Green Gully – the former course of the Murray River

Thousands of years ago the Murray River ran through the area of Mathoura. But the Tilt formed a massive dam that blocked this route. The water backed up into large lakes before finding its way west around the blockage. Some water pushed around the north end of the Tilt on a course we call the
Edward River Edward River, or Kolety is an anabranch of the Murray River and part of the Murray–Darling basin, is located in the western Riverina region of south-western New South Wales, Australia. The river rises at Picnic Point east of Mathoura, as a r ...
. The channel around the southern end of the Tilt is today’s Murray. The original and now empty Murray River watercourse (today called Green Gully) remains imprinted on the landscape. The old Murray River channel can be seen clearly in aerial photographs. On the ground, just west of Mathoura, Stirling Park Road and Solly Road run across Green Gully.


References


External links


Mathoura Rail Siding
{{authority control Towns in the Riverina Towns in New South Wales 1860 establishments in Australia Murray River Council