Culcairn New South Wales |
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Balfour St, the main street of Culcairn
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Coordinates | 35°40′0″S 147°03′0″E / 35.66667°S 147.05000°ECoordinates: 35°40′0″S 147°03′0″E / 35.66667°S 147.05000°E |
Population | 1,120 (2006 census) |
Postcode(s) | 2660 |
Location |
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LGA(s) | Greater Hume Shire Council |
County | Hume |
State electorate(s) | Albury |
Federal Division(s) | Farrer |
Culcairn is a town in the south-east Riverina region of New South Wales, Australia. Culcairn is located in the Greater Hume Shire Council local government area on the Olympic Highway between Albury and Wagga Wagga. The town is 514 kilometres (319 mi) south-west of the state capital, Sydney and at the 2006 census had a population of 1,120.
The town is an important supply centre for nearby towns and villages including, Morven, Gerogery, Henty, Walla Walla and Pleasant Hills. Billabong Creek runs along the southern edge of town, lending its name to the local high school.
European settlement of Culcairn began in 1834, following favourable reports on grazing potential and grass cover by the explorers Hume and Hovell when travelling overland to the Port Phillip district in 1824. A number of stations were gazetted and between 1862 and 1865 the district was terrorised by the bushranger, Dan "Mad Dog" Morgan. The reward for Morgan would reach £1,000. He was ambushed and killed in Victoria after his final holdup in 1865.
The town itself was laid out in 1880 by James Balfour, a local landowner, who named it after a property in the parish of Kiltearn, his mother's birthplace. Culcairn Post Office opened on 1 September 1880.