Rankins Springs
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Rankins Springs is a village in the
Riverina The Riverina is an agricultural region of south-western New South Wales, Australia. The Riverina is distinguished from other Australian regions by the combination of flat plains, warm to hot climate and an ample supply of water for irrigation ...
region 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 ...
in
Carrathool Shire The Carrathool Shire is a local government area that borders both the Riverina and Far West regions of New South Wales, Australia. The Shire comprises and is located adjacent to the Mid-Western Highway and north of the Sturt Highway. The l ...
and on the
Mid-Western Highway Mid-Western Highway, sometimes Mid Western Highway, is a state highway located in the central western and northern Riverina regions of New South Wales, Australia. The highway services rural communities and links the Great Western, Mitchell, ...
. At the 2011 census, Rankins Springs had a population of 299 residents living in 145 private dwellings. This dropped to 174 in 2016, but rebounded to 208 in 2021. The settlement is strung out along the Mid-Western Highway and adjacent railway line.  The main agricultural activities of the district around Rankins Springs are the growing of crops such as wheat and oats, and beef-cattle and wool-production.


History

The history of Rankins Springs is a story of two settlements 10 kilometres (6 miles) apart.  The earlier locality was situated near a water source at the junction of several roads and operated essentially as a hotel, store and post-office, with adjoining paddocks on freehold land.  The later village of Rankins Springs developed around the terminus of a railway branch line completed in 1923.


The original settlement

The site of the original township is 10 km (6 mi) north-east of its current location, off the Rankins Springs Road near a narrow gap in the Conapaira Range.  The name of the locality probably refers to Arthur Ranken, a pastoralist with extensive holdings in New South Wales, including the “Cunimbla” run south of the
Lachlan River The Lachlan River is an intermittent river that is part of the Murrumbidgee catchment within the Murray–Darling basin, located in the Southern Tablelands, Central West, and Riverina regions of New South Wales, Australia. The Lachlan River ...
(in the vicinity of present-day Forbes) which he had occupied by the late 1840s.  In common with other Riverina pastoralists, Ranken supplied stock to the Victorian market (a trade that escalated from the mid-1850s as the population increased in the wake of the Victorian gold-rushes).Buxton, Gordon L., ''The Riverina 1861-1891: An Australian Regional Study'', Melbourne University Press, 1967.  The “Rankin’s Springs” location probably got its name as a place where water could be reliably found on a stock-route across the dry country between the Lachlan and Murrumbidgee rivers.  The location of the springs at the foot of the Conapaira Range is nearby to a break in the hills, an ideal place for stock and vehicles to cross the rocky range. Permanent settlement at the Rankin's Springs locality was established in 1869.  This was a period of increased population and consolidation of Riverina townships as the New South Wales government sought to encourage closer settlement in the inland regions.  By the late 1860s the large pastoral runs held by leasehold were beginning to be broken up under legislation that allowed “ free selection before survey” of crown land.  The location of Rankin's Springs at the convergence of district roads and its proximity to a supply of water, provided an opportunity to provide amenities to the travelling public and residents of the district. In the early 1870s a hotel was constructed at Rankin's Springs.  The hotel stood on freehold land comprising 104 acres, excised from the “Naradhan” pastoral run, that was sold in several lots in about 1871 and May 1872.’Future Lease of Rankin's Springs Hotel, Post Office, and Store’, ''Riverine Grazier'' (Hay), 27 May 1892, page 3.  In April 1872 a publican's license was issued to John Dwyer for the Rankins Springs Hotel.  In November 1873 the license was transferred to William Blood, who held it only briefly.  In July 1874 the publican's license was transferred to James Graham who held the license during the next fourteen years until June 1888 (apart from a period from March 1881 to October 1882 when the license was transferred to Graham's brother-in-law John King). A post-office was established at Rankins Springs on 1 September 1875 with James Graham as postmaster.  Weekly mail services were established linking Rankins Springs post-office with
Narrandera Narrandera ( ) until around 1949 also spelled "Narandera", is a town located in the Riverina region of southern New South Wales, Australia. The town lies on the junction of the Newell and Sturt highways, adjacent to the Murrumbidgee River, and ...
(via
Barellan Barellan is a small town in Narrandera Shire in the Riverina region of New South Wales, Australia. On Census night 2021, Barellan had a population of 276. It is a quiet Riverina wheat town on the Burley Griffin Way, with characteristic silos, ...
) and with Wollongough (modern Ungarie).  The post-office was located in a separate building that functioned as a store.‘Sticking Up a Mail Coach’, ''Riverine Grazier'' (Hay), 25 March 1887, page 2. On 12 February 1887 the mail coach travelling from Cudgelligo (Lake Cargelligo) to Whitton stopped at Rankins Springs to collect mail, before proceeding on its way.  Soon after leaving Rankins Springs the driver “pulled up to open the gate at the Four Mile” when “a masked man appeared with a rifle, stuck him up, and asked him for the mail bags, pointing the gun at him at the same time”.  After the robbery was reported two policemen from Darlington Point and Whitton arrived to investigate the crime.  After gathering material and circumstantial evidence the constables arrested John King, a resident of Rankin's Springs and brother-in-law of the publican and postmaster, James Graham.  King was taken in custody to Hay.  He was tried at the Hay Quarter Sessions in March where he was found guilty by a jury and sentenced to “ten years penal servitude”. In June 1888 the publican's license for the Rankins Springs Hotel was transferred to Alfred Marshall, who held the license for the next five years.  The “permanent spring of fresh water” on the freehold land adjoining the hotel maintained its flow during the 1888-9
drought A drought is defined as drier than normal conditions.Douville, H., K. Raghavan, J. Renwick, R.P. Allan, P.A. Arias, M. Barlow, R. Cerezo-Mota, A. Cherchi, T.Y. Gan, J. Gergis, D.  Jiang, A.  Khan, W.  Pokam Mba, D.  Rosenfeld, J. Tierney, an ...
that devastated the Riverina region.  In early 1892 there was a fire at the Rankins Springs Hotel “which destroyed the premises”.  In an advertisement for a future lease of the hotel the owner (Alex. Smith of Roto) stated he intended “to erect new and suitable premises (consisting of stone hotel and kitchen, also store and post office of stone, three detached bedrooms, of timber, also commodious stable of timber, and necessary out-offices)”.  The building of the stone-built hotel premises was expected to be completed in early 1893. John Hannan took over the license of the newly built Rankins Springs Hotel in 1893 and continued in that role until 1923, occupying the property under a series of tenancy and leasing arrangements.  In about 1918-9 John Baxter purchased the hotel and the surrounding pastoral property.  In September 1923 the hotel license was transferred to William Campbell under the terms of a ten-year lease.  In 1926 the Rankins Springs Hotel was described in the following terms by Sergeant Sykes, Licensing Inspector for the Licensing District of Hillston: ::The hotel building is of stone and cement, and the main building is in a fair state of repair.  There are five bedrooms for the use of the public and three for the use of the members of the household.


The village at the railway terminus

In January 1923 a
railway line Rail terminology is a form of technical terminology. The difference between the American term ''railroad'' and the international term ''railway'' (used by the International Union of Railways and English-speaking countries outside the United Sta ...
was opened connecting Rankins Springs region with Barmedman, a station on the central western railway connecting Lake Cargelligo to Cootamundra.  The new railway line by-passed the site of the Rankins Springs Hotel and adjoining land (despite previous expectations that the line would go that way).  The Rankins Springs station, where the branch line terminated, was built at a location 10 km (6 mi) to the south-west of the hotel.  The new branch line provided transport for the agricultural produce of the surrounding district as well as passenger services. In July 1926 the growing settlement of Rankins Springs, developing alongside the recently-completed railway terminus, was described in the following terms: ::The village of Rankins Springs, at the head of the railway, is growing fairly rapidly.  There is a population of about 120 in the village.  There are a number of buildings there, and others are being erected, including a public hall, garage, baker's shop, and store.’Rankins Springs Hotel’, ''Wyalong Advocate and Mining, Agricultural and Pastoral Gazette'', 23 July 1926, page 2. A series of meetings of the Hotel Licensing Board were held in 1926 and early 1927 at
West Wyalong West Wyalong is the main town of the Bland Shire in the Riverina region of New South Wales, Australia. Located west of Sydney and above sea level, it is situated on the crossroads of the Newell Highway between Melbourne and Brisbane, and the ...
to determine the status of the license of the Rankins Springs Hotel at the original location (north-east of the developing village at the railway terminus).  It was eventually decided to transfer the license to a new hotel to be erected on land acquired at Rankins Springs village by the hotel owner, John Baxter.  The new hotel, named the Rankins Springs Hotel and described as "an up-to-date two-storey brick building", was completed by September 1928.''Riverine Grazier'' (Hay), 9 October 1928, page 1.'Big Fire at Rankins Springs', ''West Wyalong Advocate'', 2 June 1939, page 2. A police station was opened at Rankins Springs in October 1928. The new Rankins Springs Hotel was destroyed by fire soon after it was built.  Its replacement, a two-storey brick structure also called the Rankins Springs Hotel, had taken its place by early 1930 “erected at a cost of many thousands of pounds”. On 31 May 1939 a fire "completely gutted" the Rankins Springs Hotel.  The fire had started early in the morning in a billiard room adjacent to the hotel.  The flames, fanned by a strong breeze, quickly spread to the top-storey of the main building with the volunteer fire fighters hampered by a “lack of fire-fighting appliances and water”.  The damage was partially covered by insurance and in June 1939 the owner John Baxter called for tenders to rebuild the hotel.  After the fire the licensee Fred Lucks (or Luks) carried out his business in temporary premises.  A new hotel was erected at a cost of £7000 and opened in early 1941.  It was “a two storey building, containing 17 bedrooms, two parlors, two lounge rooms, several bathrooms”, with “hot water connected throughout”.  The new hotel, named the Conapaira Hotel, boasted a “new and modern bar which has an excellent refrigeration service” provided by a £700 “electric plant”. In 1951 a film titled ''Rankins Springs is West'' was released by the Shell Company of Australia to promote “modern
kerosene Kerosene, paraffin, or lamp oil is a combustible hydrocarbon liquid which is derived from petroleum. It is widely used as a fuel in aviation as well as households. Its name derives from el, κηρός (''keros'') meaning "wax", and was regi ...
burning appliances for country folk”.  Described as the story of a typical Australian country town “where city facilities of gas and electricity are not available”, the film depicts “the every day story of life of local residents”.  The film was shown in country centres via the Shell Company's mobile film unit and advertised as affording the opportunity “of seeing methods by which modern kerosene burning appliances can provide even the most remote home with city standards of comfort and convenience”. In 1974 the NSW Government carried out massive cut-backs in country rail services which included the cessation of the train passenger service to Rankins Springs. In December 1982, in the midst of a major drought, the ''Canberra Times'' published an article representing Rankins Springs as “a township that is hanging on to life”.  The village was described as a “service town for the graziers around and its main features are the petrol station, the post-office, the hotel and the caravan park”.  It was observed that with improved roads “and the lure of better shopping in Griffith” the township “had been pared back to essential services”.  Mrs. Dulcie Wood, who had been Rankins Springs’ post-mistress since 1967, said “the town offered little for young people who had left school”, with many having to leave the area. In 2004 the railway grain freight service from the village ceased when the Barmedman to Rankins Springs branch line was closed. In 2008 a water treatment plant and reticulation system for the village of Rankins Springs was completed, providing clean drinking water to the community.  Residents had previously relied on raw water sources such as rainwater or untreated
bore water An artesian aquifer is a confined aquifer containing groundwater under positive pressure. An artesian aquifer has trapped water, surrounded by layers of impermeable rock or clay, which apply positive pressure to the water contained within th ...
, supplemented by transported supplies of potable water.


Natural environment

The area surrounding Rankins Springs is within the Lachlan Plains subregion of the extensive Cobar
Peneplain 390px, Sketch of a hypothetical peneplain formation after an orogeny. In geomorphology and geology, a peneplain is a low-relief plain formed by protracted erosion. This is the definition in the broadest of terms, albeit with frequency the usage ...
Bioregion (comprising 9.2 percent of New South Wales).


Birdlife

Rankins Springs and the surrounding district has an abundance of native fauna, with birdlife being particularly conspicuous and varied.  Amongst the parrot species found in the area are the
glossy black cockatoo The glossy black cockatoo (''Calyptorhynchus lathami''), is the smallest member of the subfamily Calyptorhynchinae found in eastern Australia. Adult glossy black cockatoos may reach in length. They are sexually dimorphic. Males are blackish bro ...
,
superb parrot The superb parrot (''Polytelis swainsonii''), also known as Barraband's parrot, Barraband's parakeet, or green leek parrot, is a parrot native to south-eastern Australia. It is a dimorphic species and one of three species in the genus ''Polyte ...
and
Major Mitchell's cockatoo Major Mitchell's cockatoo (''Lophochroa leadbeateri''), also known as Leadbeater's cockatoo or the pink cockatoo, is a medium-sized cockatoo that inhabits arid and semi-arid inland areas of Australia, though it is seen regularly in other climat ...
.  Threatened native bird species that can be found in the district include
malleefowl The malleefowl (''Leipoa ocellata'') is a stocky ground-dwelling Australian bird about the size of a domestic chicken (to which it is distantly related). It is notable for the large nesting mounds constructed by the males and lack of parental ca ...
,
Gilbert's whistler The Gilbert's whistler (''Pachycephala inornata'') is a monotypic species of bird endemic to Australia, scattered in semi-arid zones of southern Australia. Taxonomy The family Pachycephalidae originated within the Australo-Papuan region. Toget ...
,
chestnut quail-thrush The chestnut quail-thrush (''Cinclosoma castanotum'') is a native Australian bird of the family Cinclosomatidae. These scrub birds are endemic to Australia and found in all states - barring Tasmania. They are relatively uncommon and are isolate ...
,
shy heathwren The shy heathwren (''Hylacola cauta'') is a species of small bird in the family Acanthizidae, endemic to Australia. They inhabit mostly mallee woodland that has relatively dense shrub and heath understorey. Taxonomy Their taxonomic name was ...
and the
painted honeyeater The painted honeyeater (''Grantiella picta'') is a species of honeyeater in a monotypic genus. Taxonomy A member of the family Meliphagidae, ''Grantiella picta'' is the sole species under this genus. The painted honeyeater was first described ...
.  Seven designated birdwatching sites are located in the Rankins Springs area (some of them with hides), which are strategically located to optimise the experience for birdwatchers.Map showing the location of birdwatching sites:


Jimberoo National Park

Jimberoo National Park is located eight kilometres north of Rankins Springs.  The national park was formerly a state forest dedicated in July 1979 (with extensions added in May 1981).  Jimberoo National Park was reserved on 1 January 2011 and consists of 1161 hectares.  It was established "to protect remaining areas of cypress pine woodlands" within "a heavily cleared agricultural region".‘Jimberoo National Park: Statement of Management Intent’, Office of Environment and Heritage, NSW National Parks & Wildlife Service, May 2014, . Jimberoo National Park is a part of the rocky ridges and foothills that extend through the Cocoparra, Conapaira and Naradhan Ranges.  Woodland communities dominated by bimble box (''Eucalyptus populnea''), white cypress pine (''Callitris glaucophylla''), Dwyer's red gum (''E. dwyeri'') and black cypress pine (''C. endlicheri'') are found within the national park.


Pulletop Nature Reserve

Pulletop Nature Reserve is 22 kilometres south-west of Rankins Springs, consisting of 145 hectares of remnant mallee woodland surrounded by agricultural land.  The topography of Pulletop Nature Reserve is flat to gently undulating, with highly permeable sandy loam soils.  The shrub and woodland communities are dominated by four species of multi-stemmed mallee eucalypts.  The area was dedicated as a reserve in 1963. Pulletop was the location of intensive scientific research that began in 1951 into the behaviour and ecology of the malleefowl by Harry Frith, who was based at Griffith and worked for the CSIRO.  Frith wrote nine scientific papers on the species as well as an important popular book, '' The Mallee-Fowl: The Bird That Builds an Incubator'' (1962), which included guidelines for malleefowl conservation. Isolated and surrounded by cleared farmland, Pulletop Nature Reserve is a refuge of natural habitat for many native species within the region.  A total of 123 mallee and woodland birds have been recorded within the reserve, although there have been significant declines of some species attributed to the small size of the reserve, its isolation within mostly cleared land and predation by cats and foxes.  The reserve's emblematic species, the malleefowl, was last observed there in the 1980s and “is now considered to be locally extinct”.


Rankins Springs grevillea

A subspecies of the rosemary grevillea has the common name of the Rankins Springs grevillea (''Grevillea rosmarinifolia'' subsp. ''glabella'').  The plant, which grows in mallee or shrub associations in sandy soils, is endemic to the Rankins Springs district extending to the region around Griffith.Newsletter No. 61, Grevillea Study Group, Association of Societies for Growing Australian Plants, March 2002, 'Vic Activity Reports: Field Trip to Riverina', page 3.


Gallery

File:Rankins Springs Post Office & Garage.JPG, Post office and petrol station File:Rankins Springs Railway Sign.JPG, Relocated train station sign File:Rankins Springs War Memorial Hall.JPG, War Memorial Hall


References


External links


Rankins Springs Railway Station
{{authority control Towns in New South Wales