Cootamundra


Cootamundra, nicknamed Coota, is a town in the South West Slopes region of New South Wales, Australia and within the Riverina. It is within the Cootamundra-Gundagai Regional Council. At the 2016 Census, Cootamundra had a population of 6,782. It is located on the Olympic Highway at the point where it crosses the Muttama Creek, between Junee and Cowra. Its railway station is on the Main Southern line, part of the Melbourne-to-Sydney line.
Cootamundra is the birthplace of Sir Donald Bradman, an Australian cricketer universally regarded as the greatest batsman of all time. It is also known for being the site of Cootamundra Domestic Training Home for Aboriginal Girls, an institution housing Aboriginal girls who were forcibly taken from their families.
It is also the home of the Cootamundra wattle. Every year there is a large "Wattle Time" Festival held at the time the wattle starts to bloom, with an art show and festivities.

History

The traditional owners of the area where present day Cootamundra exists are considered to be the Wiradjuri people, with the name "Cootamundra" probably deriving from the Wiradjuri language word guudhamang for "turtle".
Cootamundra was incorporated as a township on 9 August 1861, and the first settlers bought their lots in early 1862. Like many other towns in the Riverina, it was originally populated by those attracted by the gold rush of the 1860s but became a quiet yet prosperous agricultural community after the local deposits were exhausted. However, the potential sale of a recently disused mine near Adelong may have piqued the curiosity of would-be prospectors.
It is one of the oldest towns in Australia.
The town's rugby league team, the Cootamundra Bulldogs, competed in the Maher Cup.

Timeline

  • 1837 – John Hurley and Patrick Fennell licensed to stock Coramundra Run
  • 1847 – Cootamundry Run, a large stock run, is the first colonist settlement in the area.
  • 1860 – Plan of proposed village drawn up by surveyor Philip Francis Adams
  • 1861 – The site of Cootamundry is published in the NSW Government Gazette
  • 1862 – Gold mining commences at the nearby 'Muttama Reef' mine.
  • 1864 – The first church and post office are established
  • 1874 — Convent for the Presentation Order of nuns opened by Bishop of Goulburn
  • 1875 – The first school in the district opens.
  • 1877 – First issue of Cootamundra Herald published by Frederick Pinkstone and Thomas Campbell Brown
  • 1878 – Christ Church of England opens
  • 1879 – St Columba's church opens
  • 1881 – Post Office opened
  • 1882 – First Show held at Albert Park
  • 1884 – Cootamundra is gazetted as a municipality and John Frederick Barnes elected first mayor.
  • 1885 — Salt Clay Creek railway disaster - seven killed and dozens injured when culvert collapsed
  • 1886 – Solomon Cohen establishes his store, corner of Wallendoon and Parker streets
  • 1889 – First hospital opens on hill north east of the town, became Bimbadeen Aboriginal Girls' Home in 1911.
  • 1893 – Dam on Hardy's Folly Creek constructed as town's water supply, but never satisfactory
  • 1896 – Cootamundra Cycling Club. It is probably the oldest continual club in NSW, although as was the case with most clubs it went into recess during the war years.
  • 1908 – Donald Bradman is born in Cootamundra.
  • 1911–1968 – Cootamundra Domestic Training Home for Aboriginal Girls opens in former hospital.
  • 1928 – Cootamundra is first town to receive Burrinjuck hydro-electric power.
  • 1933 – Water from Burrinjuck replaces supply from bores and Hardy's Folly Dam.
  • 1942 – On 3 December, the corvette, named for the town, is launched.
  • 1951 – Cootamundra Jazz Band is formed by John Ansell.
  • 1952 – Name of Cootamundry officially changed to Cootamundra.
  • 1955 – The first Cootamundra Annual Classic cycling handicap race, one of the oldest open races in NSW.
  • 1956 – Cootamundra's rugby league football club's Bill Marsh is first selected to play for the Australian national team.
  • 1960 – Cootamundra Blues Australian rules football club is established.
  • 1982 – In November 1982, aviation company Masling Industries is formed. This was restructured in June 1993 after the death of its owner.
  • 1986 – Popular Australian singer/songwriter/bush poet John R Williamson released his song 'Cootamundra Wattle'.
  • 1998 – Phase 1 of Cricket Captains' Walk declared open; all busts the work of Harden–Murrumburrah sculptor Carl Valerius
  • 2000 – The first annual beach volleyball competition. Truckloads of sand are deposited in a main street for "Coota Beach".
  • 2015 – Australian youth radio station Triple J featured the 'Cootamundra bonus weather rap'.

    Churches

The first churches in Cootamundra were:
;Primitive Methodist
Rev. Smith was minister from around 1874, succeeded by J. Spalding, who was minister in 1877, and services were held on alternate Sunday afternoons.
;Wesleyan Methodist
The church, seating 100 persons, was opened on 17 December 1876. Rev. G. Thompson was minister in 1878 and services were held regularly. In 1880 Rev. R. East was the only minister resident in the town.
;Anglican
Christ Church opened on 12 July 1878; the vicar W. Cocks shared with Murrumburrah. In January 1880 Rev. S. B. Holt left Gundagai to take up the position.
;Roman Catholic
Eighty confirmations were performed in 1875 in conjunction with a jubilee attended by Bishop Lanigan of Goulburn and Fathers Bermingham, Dunne and O'Dwyer, and Hanley.
Mass was held fortnightly in the schoolroom by visiting priests from Gundagai.
St Columba's church was consecrated on 30 November 1879.
The first resident pastor was Rev. Richard Butler in 1881.

Military history

During World War II, Cootamundra was the location of RAAF No.3 Inland Aircraft Fuel Depot, completed in 1942 and closed on 14 June 1944. It was located in an area of land near the intersection of Olympic Highway and Thompson Street. Usually consisting of 4 tanks, 31 fuel depots were built across Australia for the storage and supply of aircraft fuel for the RAAF and the US Army Air Forces at a total cost of £900,000.
It was also home to the No 1 Air Observers School, commemorated by a plaque at Cootamundra Airfield.
A plane from the No. 31 Beaufighter Squadron, RAAF, from Wagga Wagga, crashed nearby on 21 September 1942 during training exercises, resulting in the death of Flt/Sgt J. E. Jenkins and Sgt V. Sutherst. A memorial alongside the main road to Young, dedicated on 28 April 1990, is regularly tended. See Gallery below.

Heritage listings

Cootamundra has a number of heritage-listed sites, including:
Cootamundra is located in the South West Slopes region of New South Wales, within the Riverina region.
It is within the local government area of Cootamundra-Gundagai Regional Council. Abb McAlister was elected mayor of the newly-formed Cootamundra-Gundagai Regional Council on 21 September 2017.
The town is known as the birthplace of the great cricketer Sir Donald Bradman. Although he never lived in the town and his parents left Yeo Yeo when he was two, the town celebrates this connection with the Sir Donald Bradman Birthplace Museum, the home where "The Don" was born, a fully restored visitors' site featuring cricketing memorabilia and artefacts.
The Coota Ex-Services Club is an ex-servicemen's club that is open to the public as a restaurant.
Hemet, California, is a sister city.

Cricket Captains' Walk

In 1998 a collection of 14 captains of the Australia International Test XI cricket team was unveiled in Jubilee Park, adjacent the Caravan Park. Specially commissioned, they were all the work of Harden-Murrumburrah sculptor Carl Valerius.
In 2008 a further 30 busts were installed on either side of a looping path, making a full set of Australian Test cricket captains, with three more added in 2020 to bring the list up to date. These are by various artists from the Tom Bass sculpture studio. The all-weather path, which starts and ends at Wallendoon Street is family, jogger, and wheelchair friendly, and approximately 250 metres long.
A life-sized bronze statue of Bradman in action, also by Valerius, is nearby, as is a newly-installed barbecue and playground. Jubilee Park, the site of these attractions, is on land reclaimed from the original stock dam, memorialised by a plaque on the Morgan Arch on Wallendoon Street.

The Giant

The large effigy of a fairytale giant gesturing towards to his crotch was created by an unknown artist around 1975 in fibreglass as a mascot for "The Giant Supermarket" on the corner of Cooper and Wallendoon streets.
When the statue was taken down it was purchased by Allan and Phuong Jenkins, who ran a florist shop nearby. In 1985 Allan participated in a Round-Australia marathon run by Rotary International and the Australian Cancer Society as a fundraiser, and his support vehicle was surmounted by "The Giant". In 2014 the Jenkins couple donated the statue to the Cootamundra Heritage Centre.
Local artist Jim Newman did its original paintwork back in 1975, and his brother Robert Newman was responsible for its restoration in 2015. The statue is located alongside the Heritage Centre on Hovell Street, near the railway station.
The Giant, along with Don Bradman's Bat and Stumps in Bradman Oval, are considered to be two of Australia's many Big Things.

Population

According to the 2016 Australian census, there were 6,782 people in Cootamundra. Of these:
  • Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people made up 5.6% of the population.
  • 85.6% of people were born in Australia. The next most common country of birth was England at 2.1%.
  • 91.6% of people spoke only English at home.
  • The most common responses for religion were Catholic 30.8%, Anglican 28.4% and No Religion 16.4%.