Jennacubbine, Western Australia

Jennacubbine, Western Australia

Infobox Australian Place | type = town
name = Jennacubbine
state = wa


caption =
lga = Shire of Goomalling
postcode = 6401
est = 1902
pop = 174 (2006 Census) [Census 2006 AUS|id=SSC54201|name=Jennacubbine (State Suburb)|quick=on|accessdate=2008-09-20]
elevation= 187
stategov = Central Wheatbelt
fedgov = O'Connor
dist1 = 122 | dir1 = NE | location1 = Perth
dist2 = 25 | dir2 = N | location2 = Northam
dist3 = 26 | dir3 = SSW| location3 = Goomalling
coord|-31.441|116.724|type:city(100)_region:AU-WA_scale:50000|format=dms|display=title

Jennacubbine is a small town located in the Wheatbelt region of Western Australia, to the east of Perth, Western Australia between the towns of Northam and Goomalling.

History

The town's name derives from the Noongar name for a well in the area, which may mean "salt water" according to some sources and was first recorded by explorer Augustus Gregory in 1848 as "Jenacubine", with the current spelling being adopted in 1889. Jennacubbine was established as a siding on the railway line from Northam to Goomalling in June 1902. [LandInfo WA|c|J|2007-06-02]

At this time, Jennacubbine had a hotel, a general store, two other shops, and eight houses in the main street. The sealed main street ended at the front door of the hotel. Several railway huts were constructed on the opposite side of the rail line from the main street, and a Catholic church was constructed in 1905 and was used as a school until 1911. By the 1960s, all that was left was the hotel, the general store and one house.

In 1970 the general store was burnt to the ground, in a late night fire that was reported to have been caused by the store's old kerosene refrigerators. The store was over 100 years old when it was destroyed. A fire truck from Goomalling attended the fire, but its onboard water tanks were dry from a previous fire, and there was no town water in Jennacubbine.

Ironically, the state's Water Authority had gazetted that Jennacubbine was to get town water, and pipes had been laid in the ground to the town, but there had been no connections to any building nor any public facilities including fire hydrants.

Today, the hotel is the social hub of the local farming community.

Yarramony crossing incident

On 8 July 2000, three teenagers were killed when their Toyota Landcruiser collided with a southbound grain train at a level crossing near the town on Yarramony Road. [cite news|last=Stanton|first=Vivienne|title=Screech, bang and silence|work=The West Australian|page=3|date=10 July 2000] The accident led to a Government report on potential methods to increase safety at level crossings. One of the recommendations saw the compulsory fitting of ditch-lights on all locomotives operating in Western Australia. [cite news|last=McCulloch|first=Joanne|title=Government sees the light on trains|work=The Sunday Times|page=18|date=27 January 2002]

References


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