Moree, New South Wales
Town in New South Wales, Australia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Town in New South Wales, Australia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Moree (/mɔːriː/) is a town in Moree Plains Shire in northern New South Wales, Australia. It is located on the banks of the Mehi River, in the centre of the rich black-soil plains. Newell and Gwydir highways intersect at the town. It can also be reached from Sydney by daily train and air services.
Moree New South Wales | |||||||||
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Coordinates | 29°27′57″S 149°50′02″E | ||||||||
Population | 7,070 (2021 census)[1] | ||||||||
Established | 1862 | ||||||||
Postcode(s) | 2400 | ||||||||
Elevation | 212 m (696 ft)[2] | ||||||||
Location |
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LGA(s) | Moree Plains Shire | ||||||||
County | Courallie | ||||||||
State electorate(s) | Northern Tablelands | ||||||||
Federal division(s) | Parkes | ||||||||
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The Weraerai and Kamilaroi peoples are the earliest known inhabitants of the area, and the town's name is said to come from an Aboriginal word for "rising sun," "long spring," or "water hole". The town was established by colonial British in the 1850s. They forced the local Aboriginal residents in missions, and later Aboriginal reserves.
The town, and in particular the Moree Baths and Swimming Pool, are known for having been visited by the group of activists on the famous 1965 Freedom Ride. This historic trip through northern NSW was led by Charles Perkins to bring media attention to discrimination against Indigenous Australians.
Moree is a major agricultural centre, noted for its part in the Australian cotton-growing industry, which was established there in the early 1960s. It is situated in the Moree Plains Shire. Moree is noted for artesian hot spring baths that are renowned for their reputed healing qualities.
At the 2021 census, the town of Moree had a population of 7,070.
The Weraerai and Kamilaroi peoples, whose descendants live in the town, were the earliest known inhabitants of the area.[3]
In 1832, Major Thomas Mitchell led a large expedition to the district after escaped convict George Clarke told the colonial authorities of the supposed existence of a great river called the "Kindur" that flowed through the region. Clarke had been a bushranger living a mostly tribal lifestyle with a Kamilaroi clan in the area to the south from 1827 to 1831. He had gained geographical knowledge important to the colonists. In January 1832, Mitchell crossed what is now known as the Mehi River around ten kilometres east of where the town Moree is now located.[4]
Squatters soon followed in Mitchell's wake, establishing pastoral runs in the vicinity, among which were 'Mungie Bundie' formed by brothers John Henry Fleming and Joseph Fleming in 1837, 'Boolooroo' formed by Robert Marshall in 1837, 'Wee Bolla Bolla' formed by Thomas Simpson Hall in 1838, and 'Mooree' (from a Kamilaroi term believed to mean either "long waterhole", "rising sun", or "long spring") which was formed by James Cox in 1838.[5][6]
Conflict between the colonists and Aboriginal people occurred soon after the arrival of the pastoralists. The whites murdered hundreds of Aboriginal people. Both groups of squatters and the New South Wales Mounted Police conducted punitive expeditions against the local Kamilaroi in what was termed at the time "a war of extermination".
For example, a large massacre of Aborigines occurred at John Cobb's Gravesend station in 1837, while in 1838 Major James Nunn and his mounted police killed at least forty at Waterloo Creek. Some of the surviving Mehi and Gwydir River Aborigines fled east to avoid the massacres. They were pursued by gangs of colonists, including one led by John Henry Fleming, a free settler of 'Mungie Bundie' station; in June 1838 he initiated the Myall Creek massacre. Those Kamilaroi who stayed in the region continued to be killed, including nine who died in a massacre by Charles Eyles at Pallamallawa, also in 1838.[6]
The Kamilaroi also suffered deaths from new infectious diseases, to which they had no immunity, displacement, and lack of access to life-sustaining resources. The pastoralists took over their water holes and hunting grounds. The Aboriginal people resorted to poaching of livestock to survive, and cycles of retaliation between settlers and the indigenous people continued. The local Aboriginal people mostly suffer second-class status today.[7]
In 1851 James Brand and Mary Geddes arrived with their Aboriginal servant girl Jane Laney. They built a general store on the banks of the river in 1852. They added a post office was added the following year. The family sold up and moved to the Hunter Region in 1857 but James died in 1858. The widowed Mary was left with six children to support. She returned to Moree to open another business, and in 1861 she opened the community's first inn.[8][9]
Moree was gazetted as a town in 1862, with land sales proceeding that year.[8]
A court of petty sessions was established in 1863. A severe flood took place in 1864. The first constable arrived and a police station was set up in 1865. The first church (Wesleyan Methodist) was built in 1867, when the town had a population of 43.[8]
As closer settlement proceeded, agriculture emerged as a thriving industry on the fertile flood plains. Banking began in 1876. The first local newspaper was set up in 1881, at which time the population was 295.
The town became a municipality in 1890. During 1894 construction of the Federation-style lands office started; it ended that year with the completion of the ground floor. (The building is now heritage listed.) The second storey was added in 1903.
In 1895 the Great Artesian Basin, which sits under Moree, was tapped; it yields more than thirteen megalitres of water daily. The bore was sunk to 3,000 ft (910 m) deep in order to provide water for agricultural pursuits, but was proved to be unsuitable for this purpose.
The railway line and service from Sydney arrived in 1897. This increased the access to markets and goods for both producers and consumers in the town.[8]
Wheat cultivation increased after World War II, and a flour mill was built at Moree in 1951. Other new crops were added.
The first commercial pecan nut farm was established on the Gwydir Highway east of Moree in 1966. The Trawalla Pecan Nut Farm is the largest pecan nut farm in the southern hemisphere, growing about 75,000 trees. In 1994 the Gwydir Olive Grove Company was established when two Moree families started producing olive oil from olives grown in the area.[10]
Moree was one of the destinations of the famous 1965 Freedom Bus ride, a historic trip through northern NSW led by activist Charles Perkins to bring media attention to discrimination against Indigenous Australians. The racial segregation of rural Australia was brought to the attention of urban Australians, in particular at the Moree Baths and Swimming Pool. Aboriginal people were also refused entry to pubs and theatres.
At the Moree swimming pool, after the Freedom Riders confronted the local council and pool management, they agreed to allow Indigenous children to swim in the pool outside school hours.[11][12][13]
Tensions and discrimination have continued. In 1982, after a large, racially charged brawl between young white and black men, gangs of white men went around Moree shooting at Aboriginal people. Geoffrey Wilmot, Warren Ledingham, Steven Delamothe and Ian Bowen, armed with semi-automatic rifles and shot-guns, wounded several Aboriginal people, and killed nineteen-year-old Ronald McIntosh. Ledingham and Delamothe were later found guilty of manslaughter in ths case.[6]
After the government establishment the Aboriginal Protection Board (APB) in 1883, it developed Aboriginal reserves, where the indigenous people were supposed to live. The so-called Aborigines Protection Act 1909 enabled the government to conduct forced removals of children from the reserves, for education and welfare. Children of mixed race, called half-caste were among those removed, so that they could be raised with white people. To avoid this, Aboriginal families often left the reserves in order to escape white oversight, setting up fringe camps around towns to survive.[7]
Moree Mission Aboriginal School was operating by 1933.[14]
Aboriginal people moved from the Terry Hie Hie reserve, south-east of Moree, in the early 1920s to escape the forced removals by the APB of Aboriginal and "half-caste" children from their families. They created an informal settlement at Moree known as Top Camp, which existed until 1967. Steel Bridge Camp and Top Camp were both associated with Terry Hie Hie.[7]
Middle Camp was established on the other side of town, next to the Mehi River, and Bottom Camp further downstream. In 1953 this latter camp was enlarged into a station known as Mehi Crescent Reserve or Mehi Mission.[7]
"Moree Aborigines' Station" was in 1953 described as "a little over two miles west of the town on the left bank of the Mehi". C. F. Boughton, in an article in the North West Champion, describes what the New South Wales Aborigines Welfare Board was doing in its 19 Aboriginal reserves for "the uplift and welfare of the aborigines in this district".
The station was managed by a Mr E. Morgan. It had a school with a headmaster and two assistants, where girls were taught cookery and sewing.[15] There were 118 students at the school, and some were brought by bus from nearby camps. The residents had formed a Progressive Association in 1951. They had a public address system and a football club, which played in the district competition. The manager's wife ran a girl guides troop and there was a boys' club.[16]
An Aboriginal reserve was declared on 17 July 1970[17] (effective 21 August 1970), and revoked on 20 September 1974.[18] Other reserves and places of Aboriginal significance at nearby at Terry Hie Hie, and one called Wirajarai on the Gwydir River.[17]
In 2007 the Moree Plains Council announced plans for a $14m upgrade to the hot thermal baths.[10]
The Steel Bridge Aboriginal Campsite is a site of moderate to high Aboriginal cultural and social significance. 6 km (3.7 mi) outside town, the Gamilaroi Nature Reserve and Terry Hie Hie reserve are also of cultural and historical significance to Aboriginal people.[7]
Year | Pop. | ±% |
---|---|---|
1921 | 3,019 | — |
1933 | 4,355 | +44.3% |
1947 | 5,106 | +17.2% |
1954 | 5,502 | +7.8% |
1961 | 6,795 | +23.5% |
1966 | 8,094 | +19.1% |
1971 | 9,139 | +12.9% |
1976 | 9,359 | +2.4% |
1981 | 10,459 | +11.8% |
1986 | 10,215 | −2.3% |
1991 | 10,062 | −1.5% |
1996 | 9,270 | −7.9% |
2001 | 9,274 | +0.0% |
2006 | 8,083 | −12.8% |
2011 | 7,720 | −4.5% |
2016 | 7,383 | −4.4% |
2021 | 7,070 | −4.2% |
Source: Australian Bureau of Statistics data.[23][24] |
In the 2021 Australian census, there were 7,070 people registered in the town. Of these, nearly a quarter identified as Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander. Around 70 per cent of the population were born in Australia.[1]
Moree is home to artesian hot spring baths that are famous for their reputed healing qualities.[8] Long before the arrival of the British colonists, the Aboriginal people made use of the hot springs.
BAMM: Bank Art Museum Moree, until 2018 known as Moree Plains Gallery, holds a significant collection of Aboriginal art. It was established and run by Moree Plains Shire Council until 2018, when the Moree Cultural Art Foundation took over management of the gallery.[25]
It also holds a series of photographs of people from the two Moree missions, called A common place: Portraits of Moree Murries, created in 1990 by Michael Riley, an Indigenous artist. His mother grew up on one of the missions.[26]
Moree possesses a semi-arid-influenced humid subtropical climate (Köppen: Cfa), with hot, relatively wet summers and mild, dry winters with cool nights. Average maxima vary from 34.4 °C (93.9 °F) in January to 18.4 °C (65.1 °F) in July while average minima fluctuate between 20.5 °C (68.9 °F) in January and 4.6 °C (40.3 °F) in July. Mean average annual precipitation is moderately low, 577.8 mm (22.75 in), and is spread across 75.9 precipitation days. The town is quite sunny, experiencing 155.2 clear days and 80.6 cloudy days per annum. Extreme temperatures have ranged from 47.3 °C (117.1 °F) on 3 January 2014 and on 12 February 2017 to −4.3 °C (24.3 °F) on 2 July 2002.[27]
Climate data for Moree (29.49°S 149.85°E, 213 m AMSL) (1995-2024 normals & extremes) | |||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Month | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | Year |
Record high °C (°F) | 47.3 (117.1) |
47.3 (117.1) |
41.3 (106.3) |
35.8 (96.4) |
30.6 (87.1) |
27.1 (80.8) |
27.3 (81.1) |
36.1 (97.0) |
37.8 (100.0) |
40.4 (104.7) |
44.3 (111.7) |
45.9 (114.6) |
47.3 (117.1) |
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) | 34.4 (93.9) |
33.3 (91.9) |
31.2 (88.2) |
27.3 (81.1) |
22.6 (72.7) |
18.9 (66.0) |
18.4 (65.1) |
20.7 (69.3) |
24.6 (76.3) |
28.2 (82.8) |
30.9 (87.6) |
33.0 (91.4) |
27.0 (80.5) |
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) | 20.5 (68.9) |
19.7 (67.5) |
17.5 (63.5) |
12.8 (55.0) |
8.3 (46.9) |
5.9 (42.6) |
4.6 (40.3) |
5.5 (41.9) |
9.0 (48.2) |
12.9 (55.2) |
16.4 (61.5) |
18.6 (65.5) |
12.6 (54.8) |
Record low °C (°F) | 10.8 (51.4) |
9.9 (49.8) |
5.9 (42.6) |
1.2 (34.2) |
−1.8 (28.8) |
−3.8 (25.2) |
−4.3 (24.3) |
−3.8 (25.2) |
−1.9 (28.6) |
2.6 (36.7) |
5.0 (41.0) |
7.7 (45.9) |
−4.3 (24.3) |
Average precipitation mm (inches) | 77.1 (3.04) |
66.6 (2.62) |
61.8 (2.43) |
23.6 (0.93) |
29.2 (1.15) |
36.8 (1.45) |
33.2 (1.31) |
25.8 (1.02) |
35.1 (1.38) |
50.2 (1.98) |
74.1 (2.92) |
66.4 (2.61) |
577.8 (22.75) |
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.2 mm) | 7.3 | 7.0 | 6.8 | 4.1 | 5.2 | 6.5 | 6.2 | 4.7 | 5.0 | 6.8 | 7.9 | 8.4 | 75.9 |
Average afternoon relative humidity (%) | 35 | 37 | 34 | 32 | 38 | 46 | 43 | 35 | 32 | 30 | 32 | 32 | 35 |
Average dew point °C (°F) | 12.5 (54.5) |
13.3 (55.9) |
10.6 (51.1) |
6.9 (44.4) |
5.4 (41.7) |
5.2 (41.4) |
3.6 (38.5) |
2.3 (36.1) |
3.8 (38.8) |
4.7 (40.5) |
7.8 (46.0) |
9.9 (49.8) |
7.2 (44.9) |
Mean monthly sunshine hours | 310.0 | 276.9 | 291.4 | 273.0 | 251.1 | 213.0 | 238.7 | 279.0 | 285.0 | 300.7 | 288.0 | 310.0 | 3,316.8 |
Percent possible sunshine | 72 | 75 | 77 | 80 | 76 | 69 | 74 | 81 | 80 | 76 | 71 | 71 | 75 |
Source: Bureau of Meteorology (1995-2024 normals & extremes)[2] |
In January 1910 floods in the Moree district caused numerous washouts of the railway to the town. An unknown number of livestock were drowned, and at least four people drowned in the Moree area.[28][29]
In January 1946 a flood cut the township in two, and damaged several hundred homes.[30] The flood waters affected the local power station and caused a blackout. The floods also damaged roads and railway lines in the region.[30] The Gwydir River bridge at Moree was also damaged.[31]
In February 1955 the highest recorded major flood hit Moree, with a record flood peak of 10.85 metres (35.6 ft). Most of the central business district of the town and 800 homes were flooded.[32]
In February 1971 a major flood affected the town, with a flood peak of 10.35 metres (34.0 ft). Four hundred people were evacuated and the township was isolated for two weeks.[32]
In February 1976, another major flood hit Moree, with a flood peak of 10.60 metres (34.8 ft). Nearly three quarters of the buildings in north Moree either had floodwater surrounding them or water in them. This included the central business district.[32]
In February 2001, another major flood peak was recorded in Moree. There were a few houses with over floor flooding. Before the flood, nearly 250 millimetres or 10 inches fell at Moree Airport within 48 hours.[33]
In November 2011, major flooding affected parts of Moree, with a peak of 10.21 metres (33.5 ft). People were urged to evacuate from parts of north Moree and houses were flooded. Nearly 225 millimetres or 9 inches of rain was recorded over 72 hours with 112 millimetres (4.41 in) falling in the final 24 hours of rainfall.[34] Moree and numerous other shires were declared natural disaster zones.[35]
In February 2012, major flooding again occurred in Moree. Peaking just 10 centimetres (3.9 in) above the February 1976 floods at 10.69 metres (35.1 ft), the water inundated hundreds of houses in and around Moree. the floods were the second highest ever recorded in Moree. Nearly the whole of north Moree had water in the streets.
The whole of north Moree was told to evacuate the day before the flood peak, including the nearby villages of Yarraman, Gwydirfield, Bendygleet, Pallamallawa and Biniguy.[36][37] Some of the lower parts of south Moree became inundated with flooding. It was expected to be the worst flooding in 35 years. No fatalities were recorded.[38][39] Nearly 190 millimetres (7.48 in) of rain was recorded at the Moree Meteorological Station in the 72 hours before the flood.[40]
In March 2021, heavy rainfall affected North and East NSW, causing major flooding. On 23 March, Moree received 150 mm (5.9 in), which was the second-wettest day on record for any month since February 1888. Flood levels on the Mehi River reached 14.2 metres or 46.6 feet on 25 of March. (0.4m below the 1955 record of 10.85 metres or 35.6 feet)[41] The total rainfall for March 2021 was 263.4 millimetres or 10.37 inches[42] as against an average of 62.8 millimetres or 2.47 inches [43]
In October 2022, Moree experienced major flooding with the Mehi River peaking at 10.50 m (34.4 ft)[44][failed verification] Some 4,000 residents had been told to evacuate in advance of the rains. This was part of an event that caused major flood levels state wide.[45]
The most popular sport in Moree by a wide margin is rugby league. There are two rugby league teams from the town, the Moree Boars of Group 4, and the famous Aboriginal team the Moree Boomerangs of Group 19. The teams play at Boughton Oval and Burt Jovanovich Oval, respectively, often in front of many spectators.
Rugby league teams in Moree
Other sports teams include the Narrabri Eagles/Moree Suns, who play in AFL North West, and Moree Weebolla Bulls RUFC.
Moree is served by the Moree Champion newspaper, owned by Rural Press. It is published on Tuesdays and Thursdays.
Radio stations 2VM and 98.3 NOW FM broadcast from Moree. The NOW FM transmitter site is located on Mt Dowe, whilst the 2VM transmitter is located 5 kilometres east of Moree on the Gwydir Highway. Both stations are owned by the Broadcast Operations Group and broadcast weekday breakfast and afternoon programs.
Seven's Tamworth station had a news bureau in Moree. It closed in 2000 due to financial problems.
The closest television networks shown in Moree are Seven, Nine and WIN Television. They are broadcast from Tamworth.
Moree Airport is served by regional airline Fly Corporate with regular services to and from Brisbane[46] as well as regular Qantas airline services to Sydney.[47] The now defunct Brindabella Airlines provided a service to and from Brisbane until 27 January 2012.
Moree railway station is situated on the Mungindi line, 665 kilometres (413 mi) from Sydney.[48] The station opened in 1897 and marks the northernmost point of passenger services on the line, a daily NSW TrainLink Xplorer DMU to and from Sydney.[49]
NSW TrainLink operate a coach service from Moree to Grafton.[50] Crisps Coaches operate a coach service from Moree to Warwick with connections to Brisbane and Toowoomba.[51][52]
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