Moogara


Moogara is a rural locality in the local government area of Derwent Valley in the South-east LGA region of Tasmania. The locality is about west of the town of New Norfolk. The 2016 census has a population of 49 for the state suburb of Moogara.

Geography

It is situated approximately from Hobart, Moogara used to be a bustling hamlet with 100 families, some of which had up to 16 children, it had its own school, general store, saw mills and farms.
While Moogara's population is not as high as it once was, it is still home to several families some of which are direct descendants of those who originally settled in the area. The Plenty River forms much of the eastern boundary.

History

Moogara is a confirmed locality.
It was named by Barney McGuire. He named it Moogara as it is Aboriginal for "Journey of one day" as it took him this long to walk from Plenty to select his property.
Moogara's hub was the post office, which began business on 11 November 1911 under Mrs H. Simco. On 1 September 1924 it was taken over by Amos McGuire; it was run by the McGuire family until it closed on 31 January 1970. Emma Townsend was the last postmistress; Emma and husband Norman lived where the old post office was located until 1999.

Road infrastructure

Route C610 passes through from north-east to north-west.