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Cobram, Victoria

Cobram
Victoria
Punt road cobram.JPG
Punt Road
Cobram is located in Shire of Moira
Cobram
Cobram
Coordinates 35°58′S 145°39′E / 35.967°S 145.650°E / -35.967; 145.650Coordinates: 35°58′S 145°39′E / 35.967°S 145.650°E / -35.967; 145.650
Population 6,018 (2011 census)
Postcode(s) 3644
Elevation 123 m (404 ft)
Location
LGA(s) Shire of Moira
State electorate(s) Ovens Valley
Federal Division(s) Murray
Mean max temp Mean min temp Annual rainfall
22.8 °C
73 °F
9.6 °C
49 °F
460 mm
18.1 in
Localities around Cobram:
Koonoomoo Barooga (NSW) Boomanoomana (NSW)
Yarroweyah Cobram Cobram East
Katunga Muckatah Katamatite

Cobram is a town in Victoria, Australia. It is on the Murray River which forms the border between Victoria and New South Wales. Cobram along with the nearby towns of Numurkah and Yarrawonga is part of Shire of Moira and is the administrative centre of the Council. Its twin town of Barooga is located on the north side of the Murray River. Surrounding Cobram are a number of orchards, dairy farms and wineries. At the 2011 census, Cobram had a population of 6,018. Barooga's population is currently 1,497.

Aboriginals, although they had disappeared from the area prior to European settlement, were believed to inhabit the stretch of region bound by the Murray River from Tocumwal to the east of Cobram and south as far as the Broken Creek. Unfortunately, the area bound by Melbourne, Echuca and Albury was a trouble area for recording Aboriginal presence. The main tribe believed to have occupied the area were the Bangerang. A ‘horde’, or smaller grouping of about 100 persons, named Angootheraban, are believed to have lived in the immediate Cobram area.

Charles Sturt first passed through the region on the northern bank of the Murray River in June 1838 en route to South Australia, leading a cattle droving party, with 300 head of cattle.

In January 1845, Octavius Phillpotts established Cobram station between the already existing Yarrawonga and Strathmerton stations, located where Cobram East now is. This was divided into the Cobram and St. James stations in 1855.

By the 1860s, present day Cobram still hadn’t begun to exist, and the area was still broadly referred to as Yarroweyah. In 1868, the old township of Cobram, bound by Warkil Street to the west and the Murray River to the east was reserved for future use, about 15 kilometres west of Cobram East.

Up until this time, the area of Cobram was part of the Echuca Shire, Cobram station was included when Yarrawonga Shire was created on 15 May 1878. It would later be part of the Tungamah shire in its creation on 17 February 1893. On 12 August 1879 the first school, 2166 Cobram, opened, later renamed Cobram East.


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