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Gin Gin, Queensland

Gin Gin
Queensland
Gin Gin 002.jpg
Bruce Highway passing through Gin Gin
Gin Gin is located in Queensland
Gin Gin
Gin Gin
Coordinates 24°59′27″S 151°57′21″E / 24.99083°S 151.95583°E / -24.99083; 151.95583Coordinates: 24°59′27″S 151°57′21″E / 24.99083°S 151.95583°E / -24.99083; 151.95583
Population 1,190 (2011 census)
Postcode(s) 4671
Location
LGA(s) Bundaberg Region
State electorate(s) Callide
Federal Division(s) Flynn
Localities around Gin Gin:
Monduran Damascus Mardoondan
Moolboolaman Gin Gin McIlwraith
Tirroan Redhill Farms McIlwraith

Gin Gin is a small town and rural locality in the Bundaberg Region, Queensland, Australia.

It is located on the Bruce Highway, approximately 51 kilometres (32 mi) west of Bundaberg and 370 kilometres (230 mi) north-west of Brisbane, the state capital. The town owes its existence to its strategic location about halfway between Brisbane and Rockhampton. It is often used as a stop-over point for drivers travelling between these two centres. In the 2011 census, Gin Gin had a population of 1,190 people.

The town name Gin Gin was derived from the original station name, which used a local Aboriginal word indicating "red soil thick scrub".

The Gin Gin district was originally settled in 1847 when Gregory Blaxland and William Forster moved into the area with sheep and cattle. The site where the town now stands was once part of the sprawling Gin Gin Station owned by Sir Thomas McIlwraith, who was Premier of Queensland three times between 1879 and 1893.

The Gin Gin district is nicknamed Wild Scotsman Country due to the capture of one of Queensland's few bushrangers, James Alpin McPherson, in the area on 30 March 1866. McPherson, who went by the same nickname, was captured at Monduran Station, 13 kilometres (8.1 mi) north of town.

Gin Gin Post Office opened on 15 March 1875.

Gin Gin Provisional School opened on 26 June 1882. It closed on 31 October 1890 to be replaced by Gin Gin State School which opened on 3 November 1890 with 8 students under teacher Arthur William Moore. In 1956, the school expanded to offer secondary schooling, until a separate Gin Gin State High School was established on 1 February 1972. Gin Gin State Pre-School opened on 25 October 1977 and closed in 2006 when it was absorbed into Gin Gin State School.


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