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Tumbulgum, New South Wales

Tumbulgum
New South Wales
Tumbulgum is located in New South Wales
Tumbulgum
Tumbulgum
Coordinates 28°17′0″S 153°29′0″E / 28.28333°S 153.48333°E / -28.28333; 153.48333Coordinates: 28°17′0″S 153°29′0″E / 28.28333°S 153.48333°E / -28.28333; 153.48333
Population 349 (2006 census)
Postcode(s) 2490
Location
LGA(s) Tweed Shire
State electorate(s) Tweed
Federal Division(s) Richmond

Tumbulgum (/tʌmˈbʌlɡəm/ tum-BUL-gəm) is a town in northern New South Wales, Australia. The town is in the Tweed Shire local government area, at the confluence of the Rous and Tweed Rivers, 818 kilometres (508 mi) north east of the state capital, Sydney and 120 kilometres (75 mi) south east of Brisbane. At the 2006 census, Tumbulgum had a population of 349.

In the 1880s Tumbulgum was the principal town in the Tweed Valley with an active commercial sector, including a bank. It was not until construction of the rail line to Lismore in 1897 and the Murwillumbah Bridge in 1901 that Murwillumbah supplanted Tumbulgum as the major centre on the Tweed.The Australian Red Cedar growing in the Tumbulgum area attracted timber-cutters from the 1840s and by the early 1860s a small community and river port had been established on the northern side of the Tweed River where it met the Rous. The town was originally called "Tweed Junction" but in 1880 the residents petitioned to have the name changed to "Tumbulgum". This was claimed to mean "meeting place of the waters" in an Aboriginal language but others claimed translations include "a large fig" or "wild fig tree". By 1885, the town had mostly moved to the southern bank of the Tweed.

There is general acceptance among our Tweed Aboriginal community of the presence of three main groups in the Tweed River Valley. These were the Goodjinburra people for the Tweed Coastal area, the Tul-gi-gin people for the North Arm (Rous), and the Moorang-Moobar people for the Southern and Central Arms around Wollumbin (Mt Warning).


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