Tuena New South Wales |
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Goldfields Inn
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Coordinates | 34°02′S 149°20′E / 34.033°S 149.333°ECoordinates: 34°02′S 149°20′E / 34.033°S 149.333°E |
Population | 187 (2011 census) |
Postcode(s) | 2583 |
Location | |
LGA(s) | Upper Lachlan Shire |
State electorate(s) | Goulburn |
Federal Division(s) | Hume |
Tuena is a town in the Southern Tablelands of New South Wales, Australia, in Upper Lachlan Shire. It is located on Tuena Creek, tributary of the Abercrombie River, 269 km (167 mi) west of the state capital, Sydney. At the 2011 census, Tuena and the surrounding area had a population of 187.
Only nine months after the first payable discovery of gold in Australia at Ophir (start of the Australian gold rushes), gold was found at Tuena.
The site was first explored by Dr. Charles Throsby in 1819, with the first landholder, Samuel Blackman, arriving in 1836. In May 1859, Tuena was formally declared a town.
Gold was discovered at Tuena in November 1851, although gold had been discovered on the Abercrombie River (the Tarshish Diggings), 10 km north some months earlier. The following extract from a contemporary newspaper announces the discovery at Tuena.
Rapid growth due to the gold rush saw construction of many buildings, a post office and police station in 1852, three pubs including the surviving Goldfields Inn (1866), Parson's store, a courthouse (1860s) and a school (1860). The current school dates only to 1889.
The town also boasts three churches - St. Mark's Anglican(1886), thought to be the oldest timber 'miner's church' still standing, the stone St. Margaret's Presbyterian(1890), and St. Mary's Catholic Church in 1896 (built of bricks from the old Cordillera mine).