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Booboorowie, South Australia

Booborowie
South Australia
Booborowie is located in South Australia
Booborowie
Booborowie
Coordinates 33°33′46″S 138°45′45″E / 33.56278°S 138.76250°E / -33.56278; 138.76250Coordinates: 33°33′46″S 138°45′45″E / 33.56278°S 138.76250°E / -33.56278; 138.76250
Population 355 (shared with other localities within the “State Suburb of Booborowie”) (2011 census)
Established 1877
Postcode(s) 5416
Time zone ACST (UTC+9:30)
 • Summer (DST) ACDT (UTC+10:30)
Location 200 km (124 mi) N of Adelaide
LGA(s) Regional Council of Goyder
Region Mid North
State electorate(s) Stuart
Federal Division(s) Division of Grey
Localities around Booborowie:
Spalding North Booborowie Mount Bryan
Spalding Booborowie Mount Bryan
Andrews Leighton Burra

Booborowie is a locality in South Australia. It is located 200 km (124 mi) north of Adelaide. At the 2011 census, the Booborowie district had a population of 355.

In 1843, Dr William James Browne and his brother Dr John Harris Browne took up the Booborowie run. In 1851 they purchased a crown lease of 153 square miles, and in 1853 the brothers purchased 46,978 acres of the lease.

The Browne brothers established a merino stud and ran shorthorn cattle. They went on to purchase properties on the Adelaide Plains, at Mount Gambier, the Flinders Ranges, and the Eyre Peninsula, and were instrumental in establishing Katherine in the Northern Territory. This led to a large sheep and cattle drive, under the supervision of Alfred Giles, to leave South Australia in 1878.

The northern portion of the station was sold to Henry Dutton and George Melrose in 1897. The remainder of the station was sold in 1910 and 1912 for closer settlement.

Baldry Township was first surveyed in 1875 near Leighton, but was abandoned at the time. The Booborowie Township was proclaimed on 29 March 1877.

Being a farming community, the chief products produced are wool, wheat, lucerne and canola.

The town is named after the nearby Booborowie Waterhole, a small round-shaped and usually dry waterhole about 1 km (0.6 mi) north west of the town, the "owie" signifying "waterhole" in the language of the indigenous Ngadjuri people, as in Minlacowie, Terowie and Yarcowie (modern linguists tend to render the word as 'awi'). The spelling "Booboorowie" was common in the 19th century.

A feature of the area is the "Camel Hump", a drystone wall which runs over 30 kilometres (19 mi) from Booborowie to Farrell Flat.


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