The Overflow, New South Wales

The Overflow is a bounded rural locality, cadastral parish and Sheep station,[1][2] 100 kilometers south of Nyngan, New South Wales. It is located at 32°12′05″S 146°38′31″E on Gunningbar Creek near the junction with the Bogan River and is in Bogan Shire and Flinders County.[3] The locality is 32 kilometers south of the town of Nymagee,[4] and west of Tottenham, New South Wales.

The Overflow
New South Wales
The Overflow is located in New South Wales
The Overflow
The Overflow
Coordinates32°12′05″S 146°38′31″E
Postcode(s)2877
Elevation168 m (551 ft)
Location618 km (384 mi) from Sydney
LGA(s)Bogan Shire Council
State electorate(s)Barwon
Federal division(s)Parkes

The elevation of "The Overflow" is 168 meters above sea level.[5]

History

The original inhabitants of the area were the Wiradjuri Australian aboriginal tribe. However, anthropologist Norman Tindale believed the area around "The Overflow" was traditional lands of the neighboring Wangaibon a tribe of the Ngiyambaa peoples,[6] though this may have been due to an error in one of his source materials.

Thomas Mitchell explored the area around the Bogan River in 1835.

"The Overflow" entered the Australian cultural consciousness with the poem Clancy of the Overflow by Banjo Paterson,[7][8] and to a less extent the poems The Man from Snowy River (poem), and the satirical Banjo, of the Overflow, as well as the Bulletin Debate, all published about 1888/89. Clancy of the Overflow painted a somewhat idyllic picture of rural life, and this idealised "The Overflow" has become somewhat symbolic of the central west of New South Wales.

See also

extract of 1880s parish map of Flinders County NSW.[9]

References

  1. H.E.C. Robinson Pty Ltd, Map of New South Wales showing pastoral stations &c (Canberra, 1923).
  2. Weston's innovation rewarded The Land (NewsPaper) 26 Jan 2013.
  3. The Overflow – NSW at OZexplore.com.
  4. "Nymagee, NSW - declan.tv". www.yamasa.org. Archived from the original on 7 February 2005.
  5. Map of The Overflow, NSW.
  6. Tindale's Aboriginal Tribes of Australia (1974). Wongaibon (NSW) ,
  7. "Was Clancy of the Overflow a real person?". Radio National. Aujstralian Broadcasting Corporation. 28 February 2014. Retrieved 11 April 2016.
  8. Baglin, Douglass (1985). Banjo Paterson's Images of Australia. French's Forest (Sydney): Reed Books. ISBN 0730101002.
  9. The map shows the Overflow Sheep Station in central NSW at the time that the poem Clancy of the overflow was written.


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