Gerogery, New South Wales

Gerogery, New South Wales

Infobox Australian Place | type = town
name = Gerogery
state = nsw


caption = Gerogery Hotel
lga = Greater Hume Shire
postcode = 2642
est =
pop =
elevation=
maxtemp =
mintemp =
rainfall =
county = Goulburn
stategov = Albury
fedgov = Farrer
dist1 = 534
location1= Sydney
dist2 = 342
location2= Melbourne
dist3 = 34
location3= Albury
dist4 = 19
location4= Culcairn

Gerogery is a small village in Greater Hume Shire Council in the state of New South Wales, Australia. Gerogery serves a rural farming community. The village is located on the Main South railway line between Sydney and Melbourne, where it intersects with the Olympic Way. Gerogery has a temperate climate. It lies close to the Yambla Range, with its striking Table Top and Sugar Loaf ridge at the southern end.

History

Gerogery is on land originally inhabited by the Wiradjuri people. In English, the place name is pronounced Jer-rodge-er-rree; however, in Indigenous language it could have been a repeated "Jerro-Jerro ee". Local understanding is the place is named after the Wiradjuri word for magpies, plentiful in the locality.

The arrival of European settlers meant that trees were extensively cleared and wheat planted, along with sheep and cattle grazed.

During the 1860s bushranger Mad Dan Morgan held up Sam Watson at Gerogery East. (The bushranger was subject of a Dennis Hopper film Mad Dog Morgan.)

Gerogery was at the eastern-most extent of nineteenth century German immigration up the Murray River from South Australia.

The coming of the Sydney Great Southern Railway in 1880 made Gerogery the temporary terminus while building proceeded on to Albury. This railway resulted in moving the centre of population from an original settlement (now Gerogery West) to the railway line. The station master's residence is a beautiful two story house listed by the National Trust. The original station was removed in the 1980s.

A one-teacher government school was set up close to the railway line in 1884, as part of the general plan by the New South Wales government to stem the spread of religious-based education that was springing up for the poor of the colony.

Not far from Gerogery on the way to Walla Walla is a peak of rocks which was used as a meeting place and lookout to help break the shearers' strike of 1891.

The Gerogery Commemoration Hall was built in the 1920s. Many concerts and gatherings, including for the monthly Country Women's Association branch, have met here. In the 1930s the area was populous enough to support sporting teams.

Gerogery Creek was "straightened" behind Gerogery as part of a work-for-the-dole scheme in the 1930sFact|date=February 2007.

Being twenty miles from Albury, and on a stock route, the Gerogery Pub attracted Sunday clientele from Albury, who were able to use a statutory loophole to evade Sunday closing, and order a drink.

Prosperity brought by the Korean War wool boom saw the expansion of Gerogery township in the 1950s, with a few general stores, but this had contracted to just one combined post office store by the late 1960s.

In 1974 the area was included in the area to be developed as part of a proposed greater Albury-Wodonga region, proposed by the Whitlam Government as part of its national decentralisation program, but these plans were dismantled by Prime Minister Gough Whitlam's successor, Malcolm Fraser. By the end of the twentieth century increased use of the car meant that Gerogery had become a dormitory suburb of Albury.

In the 1960s Aboriginal stone tools were found a couple of kilometres north-west of the township.

Railway

The railway has a crossing loop at Gerogery. Under the AusLink plan, the line between Gerogery and the next crossing loop to the south, Tabletop, will be duplicated. The duplicated line will be about 14 km long and will allow for running crosses, where trains in opposing directions need not slow down or stop, and where flights of trains can also pass each other.

Due to cost saving measures, the length of the passing lanes have been reduced to approximately 6km.Fact|date=April 2008

In 2001, there was a fatal accident at a level crossing on the railway line along Bells Road on the Olympic Way. As a result the level crossing has been replaced by the "Five Mates Bridge".

Adjacent stations

* northside - Culcairn
* southside - Tabletop

Tourist Attractions

The architecture of the station master's house, the Gerogery Pub, and Commemoration Hall, are worthy of note. The Gerogery Doll Museum is also an attraction. Brendon Manson is a well-known local, he is renowned for his bread making. He is the co-founder of Bakers Delight.Fact|date=August 2007

References

External links

* [http://www.fallingrain.com/world/AS/2/Gerogery.html FallingRain map - elevation = 305m]


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