Penong, South Australia
Penong is a town and locality on the Nullarbor Plain, in the far west of the Australian state of South Australia located about north-west of the state capital of Adelaide. It is a popular rest-stop for travellers crossing on the Eyre Highway between Ceduna and Western Australia, 400 km away.
The 2016 Australian census recorded that the localities of Penong and the small farming community of Bookabie, 35 km to Penong's west, had a population of 289 people.
Penong is the closest town to the Chadinga Conservation Park. To its south is Cactus Beach, a popular surfing beach on the western side of Point Sinclair; Port Le Hunte – also known as Port Irvine – is on the sheltered eastern side. The Lake MacDonnell gypsum field – the largest in the Southern Hemisphere – is near the coast 15 km to the south. The major port of Cape Thevenard, collocated with Ceduna, is 75 km to the south-east.
History
The name Penong is believed to have derived from an Aboriginal name for a rockhole or corruption of an Aboriginal word, poomong, meaning "tea tree".The area surrounding Penong was settled by pastoralists in the late 19th century. The town was proclaimed on 28 April 1892, when roads were simply rough tracks. There was access to the port at Cape Thevenard, but the all-important railway to send grain and wool cheaply to Port Lincoln, 426 km to the south-east, did not reach the town until 1924. Rail services were withdrawn in 1997.
Boundaries for the locality of Penong were created on 8 February 2001 and include the government town of Penong. Additional land including the Chadinga Conservation Park was added on 26 April 2013.