Bybera, Queensland


Bybera is a rural locality in the Goondiwindi Region, Queensland, Australia. In the, Bybera had "no people or a very low population".

Geography

The Twenty Five Mile Rocky Waterhole is a waterhole.
White Dam is a reservoir.
Much of the locality is within the protected areas of:
Apart from these protected areas, the land use is predominantly grazing on native vegetation with some crop growing in the south-west of the locality.

History

The name derives from the homestead "Bybera" which was owned by Eugen Hirschfeld. Hirschfeld had been a member of the Queensland Legislative Council and the Queensland Medical Board before he was interned and then later exiled for being German during World War I. He was not allowed to return to Australia after the war, until General Sir John Monash personally campaigned for his return. When Hirschfeld finally returned to Australia in 1927, he purchased pastoral properties in the Inglewood and Yelarbon areas, where he experimented with pasture improvement. He also researched the potential of Australian native vegetables, especially in relation to Aboriginal nutrition. On 18 June 1946, he died at this property Bybera and was buried there.

Demographics

In the, Bybera had a population of 3 people.
In the, Bybera had "no people or a very low population".

Education

There are no schools at Bybera. The nearest government primary schools are Inglewood State School in neighbouring Inglewood to south-east and Yelarbon State School in Yelarbon to the south. The nearest government secondary school is Inglewood State School but students in the north-west of the locality may be too distant to attend this school. Also there are no nearby schools providing education to Year 12. The alternatives are distance education and boarding school.

Notable residents