Bedourie, Queensland
Bedourie is an outback town and locality in the Shire of Diamantina, Queensland, Australia. It is on the border with the Northern Territory. According to, the locality of Bedourie had a population of 150 people. The name ‘Bedourie’ is understood to mean ‘dust storm’ in the language of the traditional custodians, the Wangkamahdla people.
Geography
Bedourie is located in the Channel Country of Central West Queensland, Australia, lying on Eyre Creek. It is located west of the state capital, Brisbane, and north of Birdsville.Bedourie is the administrative centre of the Diamantina Shire, which also comprises the towns of Birdsville and Betoota.
When the Georgina River experiences severe floods the town can be cut off by road for months at a time.
Bedourie has the following mountains:
- Black Hill
- Mount Cuttiguree
- Mount Prout
- Mount Tarley
- Mount Woneeala
- Pampra Hill
- The Brothers
- The Sisters
History
In 1881, a Native Police camp known as the Eyre's Creek barracks was established on the site by Sub-Inspector Robert Barrington Sharpe. Operations were conducted from the barracks until it was decommissioned in 1889. Sharpe shot himself in the head in 1886 and was replaced by Sub-Inspector Robert Kyle Little who shot numerous Indigenous people on at least one punitive expedition. Little later died from heat exhaustion just before the barracks closed.
In February 1887, were reserved as the site for a town.
The Royal Hotel was constructed and opened in 1886 by Hylock & Co. with a thatched roof and the locality was renamed Bedourie.
Bedourie Post Office opened around July 1903.
The Diamantina Shire Council moved its headquarters from Birdsville to Bedourie in 1953.
Bedourie State School opened on 16 May 1960. The current school building opened in 1967.
The Bedourie Public Library had a major refurbishment in 2009.
Demographics
In the, the town of Bedourie had a population of 60 people.In the, the locality of Bedourie and the surrounding area had a population of 142 people.
In the, the locality of Bedourie had a population of 122 people.
In the, the locality of Bedourie had a population of 150 people.
Heritage listings
There are a number of heritage-listed sites in Bedourie, including:- Kidman's Tree of Knowledge at Glengyle Station
- Bedourie Pisé House, 5 Herbert Street
Education
There are no secondary schools in Bedourie or nearby. The options are distance education and boarding school.
Amenities
Bedourie has an aquatic centre, museum, outback golf course, visitor information centre, a tourist park and a racetrack.The Royal Hotel was built from adobe bricks in the 1880s.
The Diamantina Shire Council operates the Bedourie Library on 13 Herbert Street.
The Simpson Desert Roadhouse provides petrol and automotive services, accommodation, general supplies, restaurant and bar.