Goranba, Queensland
Goranba is a rural locality in the Western Downs Region, Queensland, Australia. In the, Goranba had a population of 201 people.
Geography
The Glenmorgan railway line traverses the locality from east to west with railway stations :- Perthton railway station, now abandoned
- Goranba railway station
- Bungybah railway station, now abandoned.
History
The name Goranba is an Aboriginal word referring to a fight over ownership of a tree.Myra Provisional School opened in 1911 and was operated as a part-time school with some of other part-time schools in the district. In 1913, it became a full-time school and was renamed Perthton Provisional School. It was on a site the north-west of the Perthton railway station.
Goranba Provisional School opened February 1925 in a newly constructed hall. In July 1929, it was decided to combine the schools at Perthton and Goranba in single location. In December 1929, the school building at Perthton was relocated to Goranba to establish Goranba State School on a new site. It was located north of the Goranba railway station on the north-east corner of Goranba Lane and Crosbies Road. It closed circa 1941.
In March 1943, the community requested that the Goranba school building be relocated to Warra-Kogan Road near the Myra Meadows property, a site donated by Andrew Watt Adams. The request was approved in October 1943. The relocated school building was opened as Myra State School in 1944 but closed on 2 February 1945. It was a site on the eastern side of Tara Kogan Road in present-day locality of Tara.
Demographics
In the, Goranba had a population of 187 people.In the, Goranba had a population of 201 people.