Mathoura


Mathoura is a small town in the Riverina region of southern New South Wales, Australia, in the Murray River Council local government area. At the, Mathoura had a population of 938. The town's name is derived from an aboriginal word for 'windy'.

History

In 1848 a reserve was established on Gulpa Creek by Surveyor Townsend. The locality became known as Redbank. By 1853 W. Moore Carter had established an inn at Redbank and in 1856 he was permitted to purchase at £2 10s. per acre. By 1860 Carter had about under cultivation, including a vineyard.
A petition in 1859 called on the Government to put up the reserve at Redbank for sale. However, there were others who considered a more suitable position for a village was at Hill Plain, where Mr. Stuckey had erected an inn.
In 1860 Surveyor McCulloch laid out the township of Redbank near the site of Carter's Redbank Inn. In 1864 Carter was growing tobacco at Redbank.
A traveller passing through Redbank in mid-1865 stated that "Mr. Carter has established a brick public-house… situated on the bank of the Gulpa Creek". The writer added: "I observed three or four acres fenced and stocked with fruit trees, withered and dried up".
In 1865 Henry Burton, a circus proprietor, purchased the Redbank Inn; he held the licence until at least 1870.
Mathoura Post Office opened on 1 September 1867.
The village was made a stopping-place on the Victorian railway line that was extended into New South Wales to Deniliquin. By 1879 it was reported that the village had about six houses of "straggling order" and was supported principally by the timber trade. By 1882 a flour mill had been established at Mathoura; there were two hotels, the Mathoura Inn and the Railway Hotel, as well as a school, a Union church and a sawmill.

Climate

Today

The town has an Australian Rules football team competing in the Picola & District Football League.
Golfers play at the course of the Mathoura Golf Club on the Cobb Highway.