Bonalbo, a rural village in the Northern Rivers region of New South Wales,
John Donald McLean was the first European to settle in the area. He was a Scotsman who moved his sheep up from the Hunter Valley when the depression hit in 1841. He settled on the ‘Bunalbo’ or Duck Creek run. Later he became a major landholder and the Queensland treasurer. He sold to the Robertson family in 1853. The Robertson Land Acts of 1861 opened the territories up to free selectors (small landowners) but it was not until 1887 that the first, Donald McIntyre, took up a section of the old station. It was at this time that cedar-getters first moved into the area.
Bonalbo township later developed on a part of McIntyre’s holding which fronted on to Peacock Creek. However, the depression of the 1890s drove a number of selectors away, including McIntyre who sold his land to Paddy McNamee.
New selectors appeared in the 1900s when McNamee proved the land was arable and when sawmills opened up west of the range. By 1910 there were about 100 selectors in the area living on densely timbered land and with no roads to facilitate access to the wider world. Land was purchased from McNamee and the township was established in 1911 with McNamee building and owning the butcher shop, hotel and billiard room. He may have also built the post office and hall.
The Proposed Railway Project was Abandoned
In the 1920s, a railway branch line was intended to connect Casino with Bonalbo but construction was abandoned due to the advent of the Second World War. Historically the town’s economy was supported by dairy farming and the timber industry. However, both the sawmill and milk factory have been closed for several decades.
The population today is about 300. (Background source Wikipedia).
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