Macleay River

Macleay River

The Macleay River is a major river on the North Coast, New South Wales, Australia. The headwaters of the Macleay River rise on the eastern side of the Northern Tablelands near Armidale and Walcha, New South Wales. There are a number of spectacular gorges and waterfalls in the Oxley Wild Rivers National Park. The river flows past the town of Kempsey and enters the Pacific Ocean at South West Rocks.

History

The Macleay/Apsley Gorges were the tribal area of the Dangaddi people, whose descendants are now concentrated in the lower Macleay River. Archaeological evidence of Aboriginal camp sites have been found on the upper terraces of the Macleay and Apsley Rivers.

Major Archibald Clunes Innes, sent the first government gang of Australian red cedar (Toona ciliata) cutters to work here in 1827. Prior to this time the River was variously known as Wright River, Trail River, New and McLeay rivers. Later it was named the Macleay River in honour of Innes’s father-in-law, Alexander McLeay, Scottish-born scientist and colonial secretary of New South Wales. [Donald, J.Kay, Exploring the North Coast and New England, Kangaroo Press, Kenthurst, 1978, ISBN 0864171218]

More cedar camps were established on the Macleay during the 1830’s and the area was also a haven for escaped convicts. By 1841, about 200 cutters were working on the river area, where violence and theft of logs was not uncommon. Demand and prices dropped in 1842 and cutting along the Macleay diminished although it continued in the upper tributaries.

When Europeans arrived in the area around the 1820s the river mouth was just south of Grassy Head, and almost a mile wide with a sand spit in the middle. The small town of Stuarts Point was established on the river just inside to serve arriving ships. ["Valley of the Macleay", Marie H. Neil, 1972, ISBN 0-85587-037-0, chapters 1 and 10.]

The area from what is now South West Rocks around to Grassy Head is a wide delta with various channels connected to the river. Around 1885 English marine engineer John Coode advised on improvements to various rivers and ports in Australia, including the Macleay. The Department of Public Works prepared four plans for improvements to the mouth, Coode favoured improving the existing entrance. In 1893 a flood enlarged an opening near South West Rocks and the department elected to improve that, called the New Entrance, though Coode had thought it not enough to drain all the waters of the district.

Work on the new entrance commenced in April 1896, improving the channel and adding training walls. A new pilot station was built in 1902, establishing the town of South West Rocks. Work was completed in 1906. Today the old mouth has silted up, leaving Stuarts Point on a dead-end reach.

The Macleay River is liable to flooding in the Kempsey area, on occasions causing great damage.

The upper reaches of the Macleay River provide some of the best bass fishing spots in the country. [Macleay Valley Coast - Pockets in Paradise]

Interesting Facts

The Macleay River has the world's second-fastest flowing currents during flooding. [Macleay Valley Coast - Pockets in Paradise]

The Macleay River can hold over 200,000 gigalitres of water during a flood time (2,000,000,000 litres)

References

Donald, J.Kay, Exploring the North Coast and New England, Kangaroo Press, Kenthurst, 1978


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