Aramac

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Aramac
Queensland
Aramac is located in Queensland
Aramac
Aramac
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Population 341 (2006 census)[1]
Established 1869
Postcode(s) 4726
Location
LGA(s) Barcaldine Region
State electorate(s) Gregory
Federal Division(s) Flynn

Aramac /ˈærəmæk/ is a small town in the Barcaldine Region, Queensland, Australia.[2] It is located 68 kilometres (42 mi) north of Barcaldine, and 1,280 kilometres (800 mi) by road from the state capital, Brisbane. It is situated on Aramac Creek, which flows into the Thomson River 60 kilometres (37 mi) west of town. At the 2006 census, Aramac had a population of 341.[1]

The predominant industry is grazing. The town water for Aramac is supplied from two bores connecting into the Great Artesian Basin.

History

William Landsborough explored the area in 1859. In the 1850s, pastoralist and future Premier of Queensland Robert Ramsey Mackenzie travelled through the area. He blazed a tree with the inscription 'R R Mac', which was later corrupted into the name of the town.[3]

The town was originally called Marathon. The name was changed to that of a surrounding station when a survey was conducted in 1875.[4]

There was a massacre of 25 local Aborigines at the nearby Mailman's Gorge.[5]

The town was initially a major outback town. However, the railway line ran through Barcaldine to the south, taking away the trade. The local council built a spur line (tramway) from Barcaldine, which opened on the 2 July 1913. The tramway operated until the 31 December 1975. A tramway museum that opened in 1994, occupies the old goods sheds.[4]

The white bull (pictured) was stolen by Henry 'Harry' Redford, otherwise known as Captain Starlight who duffed cattle from a property called Bowen Downs. The herd of cattle was driven overland to South Australia where some of the thieves were caught and tried.

In 1867 an employee of Aramac Station, John William Kingston, opened a bark-hut store at an outlying point on the Aramac Creek. Enlarged two years later to include a hotel (Kingston's Bazaar), Kingston's settlement was declared a town site in 1869 and surveyed as a town in 1875. The town settlement by John William Kingston was the region's first town, and the centre of the first local-government division (see Aramac Shire). Aramac Post Office opened on 1 March 1874,[6] a school in 1878 and a hospital in 1879.

Facilities

Aramac has public library, visitor information centre, swimming pool, town hall, memorial park, showground and a pub. [7]

Heritage listings

Aramac has a number of heritage-listed sites, including:

See also

References

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  3. Aramac, Queensland
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  5. Walkabout - Aramac
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External links