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Mudgee, New South Wales

 

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Mudgee, New South Wales



 
 
Mudgee is a town in central New South Wales
New South Wales

New South Wales is Australia's oldest and most populous States and territories of Australia, located in the south-east of the country, north of Victoria and south of Queensland....
, Australia
Australia

Australia, officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a country in the southern hemisphere comprising the Australia of the world's smallest continent, the major island of Tasmania, and numerous list of islands of Australia in the Indian Ocean and Pacific Oceans....
. It is located in the broad fertile Cudgegong River
Cudgegong River

The Cudgegong River is a tributary of the Macquarie River in New South Wales. It rises near Rylstone, New South Wales and flows generally north-west past Mudgee it flows past the edge of Gulgong and then into Lake Burrendong which is created by Burrendong Dam on the Macquarie River....
 valley 261 kilometres north west of Sydney
Sydney

Sydney is the List of cities in Australia by population in Australia, with a metropolitan area population of approximately 4.34 million . It is the List of Australian capital cities of New South Wales, and was the site of the first British Empire colony in Australia....
. As of 2004, Mudgee is the centre of the Mid-Western Regional Council Local Government Area with a population of 24,000 (2006 est). At the 2001 census
Census in Australia

The Australian census is administered by the Australian Bureau of Statistics every five years. The most recent census was conducted on 8 August 2006....
 the town itself has 8,603 inhabitants..

Mudgee district is well known for its fine wine. Mudgee has developed as a wine
Wine

Wine is an alcoholic beverage often made of fermentation grape juice. The natural chemical balance of grapes is such that they can ferment without the addition of sugars, acids, enzymes or other nutrients....
 producing region and is a popular destination for people to visit the forty wineries operating in the Mudgee district.






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Mudgee is a town in central New South Wales
New South Wales

New South Wales is Australia's oldest and most populous States and territories of Australia, located in the south-east of the country, north of Victoria and south of Queensland....
, Australia
Australia

Australia, officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a country in the southern hemisphere comprising the Australia of the world's smallest continent, the major island of Tasmania, and numerous list of islands of Australia in the Indian Ocean and Pacific Oceans....
. It is located in the broad fertile Cudgegong River
Cudgegong River

The Cudgegong River is a tributary of the Macquarie River in New South Wales. It rises near Rylstone, New South Wales and flows generally north-west past Mudgee it flows past the edge of Gulgong and then into Lake Burrendong which is created by Burrendong Dam on the Macquarie River....
 valley 261 kilometres north west of Sydney
Sydney

Sydney is the List of cities in Australia by population in Australia, with a metropolitan area population of approximately 4.34 million . It is the List of Australian capital cities of New South Wales, and was the site of the first British Empire colony in Australia....
. As of 2004, Mudgee is the centre of the Mid-Western Regional Council Local Government Area with a population of 24,000 (2006 est). At the 2001 census
Census in Australia

The Australian census is administered by the Australian Bureau of Statistics every five years. The most recent census was conducted on 8 August 2006....
 the town itself has 8,603 inhabitants..

Economy

The Mudgee district is well known for its fine wine. Mudgee has developed as a wine
Wine

Wine is an alcoholic beverage often made of fermentation grape juice. The natural chemical balance of grapes is such that they can ferment without the addition of sugars, acids, enzymes or other nutrients....
 producing region and is a popular destination for people to visit the forty wineries operating in the Mudgee district. Other rural produce includes cattle, sheep, wheat, lucerne, olives, fruit, tomatoes, corn, honey and dairy products.

The Ulan coal mines are in the district. During the 19th century, the area was a major goldmining area and the district also produces marble, pottery clays, shale and dolomite. The tourism industry is also a growing industry based largely on the wineries. A laboratory was established in 1987 to test meat for pesticide residues.

The Mudgee local economy has a domestic production of around $550 million each year. This comes mainly from the primary and tertiary industries. Housing growth in Mudgee had a growth rate of 17% within the last 5 years. Mudgee also has the second highest median house price west of the great dividing range of $236 500, compared with Bathurst at $236 700.

Mudgee has a greater number of grape vines in the ground than the Hunter Valley . The Hunter Valley receives over 200 000 visitors each year, Mudgee attracts only around 10% of that number.

Mudgee has a hospitality sector with many bed & breakfasts, cafes and restaurants which add flair to its diverse wine community.
P4140072a

History


Early history to 1850

The name Mudgee is derived from the Wiradjuri term Moothi meaning "Nest in the Hills". was the first European settler to cross the Cudgegong River in 1821 followed quickly by Lieutenant William Lawson
William Lawson

William Lawson was an explorer of New South Wales, Australia who co-discovered a passage inland through the Blue Mountains from Sydney.Lawson was born in London and arrived in Sydney as an ensign with the New South Wales Corps in 1800, soon being posted to Norfolk Island....
 who was then commandant of Bathurst
Bathurst, New South Wales

Bathurst is a regional centre in the state of New South Wales, Australia approximately 200km west of Sydney and is the seat of the Bathurst Regional Council Local Government Areas in Australia....
. Lawson would later take up 6,000 acres (24 kmē) in the area.

George and Henry Cox, sons of William Cox
William Cox (pioneer)

William Cox was a soldier, explorer, road builder and Australian pioneer....
, were the first settlers on the Cudgegong River when they established the Menah run, 3 kilometres north of the current town. The European settlers were soon in conflict with the Wiradjuri over a range of issues including killing of livestock and animals such as kangaroos and possums which were major food sources for the Wiradjuri. Martial law
Martial law

Martial law is the system of rules that takes effect when the military takes control of the normal administration of justice.Martial law is sometimes imposed during wars or occupied territory in the absence of any other civil government....
 was declared in 1824 leading to a significant reduction in the population of the Wiradjuri.

While the site of Mudgee was surveyed for a village in 1823, Menah was the original settlement having a police station and a lock up by 1833. Robert Hoddle
Robert Hoddle

Robert Hoddle was a surveyor of Port Phillip in the 1830s, and the creator of the Hoddle Grid, the innovative street grid system on which inner city Melbourne, Australia is based....
 designed the village which was gazetted in 1838. built a slab hut, the first dewlling in Mudgee and its general store. By 1841, there were 36 dwellings, three hotels, a hospital, a post office, two stores and an Anglican church. The police station moved from Menah in the mid-1840s while an Anglican school was established in that decade as well.

History 1850 to present

In 1851, the population of Mudgee was 200. However, the population exploded as the discovery of gold in nearby Hargraves by Edward Hargraves
Edward Hargraves

Edward Hammond Hargraves was a gold prospector who claimed to have found gold in Australia in 1851, starting the Australian gold rush.Hargraves was born at Gosport, Hampshire, England, third son of Lieutenant John Edward Hargraves and his wife Elizabeth....
 led to a gold rush
Gold rush

A gold rush is a period of feverish migration of workers into the area of a dramatic discovery of commercial quantities of gold.Eight gold rushes took place throughout the 19th century in Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, New Zealand, South Africa, and the United States....
 in New South Wales. While no gold was found in Mudgee itself, the town prospered as gold was discovered in nearby towns such as Gulgong, Hill End
Hill End, New South Wales

Hill End is a former gold mining town in New South Wales, Australia, in Bathurst Regional Council. It owes its existence to the New South Wales gold rush of the 1850s, and at its peak in the early 1870s it had a population estimated at 8,000 served by two newspapers, five banks, eight churches, and twenty-eight pubs....
 and Windeyer
Windeyer

Windeyer may refer to:People*Charles Windeyer , Australian magistrate* Chris Windeyer, Canadian author* Gordon Windeyer, List of Australian athletics champions 1976-78, Commonwealth Games 1974...
 temporarily reached populations of 20,000. Mudgee was a centre for the local goldfields and grew rapidly as a result. Mudgee was declared as a municipality in 1860 making it the second oldest municipality west of the Great Dividing Range
Great Dividing Range

The Great Dividing Range, or the Eastern Highlands, is Australia's most substantial mountain range and the 4th longest in the world. The range stretches more than 3,500 km from Dauan_Island,_Queensland off the northeastern tip of Queensland, running the entire length of the eastern coastline through New South Wales, then into Victoria...
 with a population of 1500 in 1861. A public school was built in the 1850s together with the present Catholic and Anglican churches and a Methodist and Presbyterian church. A new police station, courthouse, Mechanics Institute and a town hall were built in the 1860s. There were four coach factories operating in Mudgee to cater for the demand of the nearby goldfields. The National Trust of Australia
National Trust of Australia

The Australian Council of National Trusts is a community-based, non-government organisation, committed to promoting and conserving Australia's indigenous, natural and historic heritage by assisting the work of the State Trusts....
 has a number of these buildings registered including the Mudgee Museum (formerly the Colonial Inn), the Catholic presbytery, the court house, the police station and the Anglican Church.

One of the gold miners attracted to the Mudgee district was Niels Peter Larsen who married Louisa Albury in Mudgee in 1866. They had a child, leading Australian poet Henry Lawson
Henry Lawson

Henry Lawson was an Australian writer and poet . Along with his contemporary Banjo Paterson, Lawson is among the best-known Australian poets and fiction writers of the colonial period, and is often called Australia's "greatest writer"....
 in Grenfell
Grenfell, New South Wales

Grenfell is a country town in the Central West, New South Wales of New South Wales, Australia, in Weddin Shire. It is 370 kilometres west of Sydney and five hours' drive from the city....
 in 1867 and changed their names to Peter and Louisa Lawson
Louisa Lawson

Louisa Lawson was an Australian writer, publisher, Suffragette, and feminist.Louisa Lawson was born and raised in Mudgee, New South Wales. The second of 12 children, her family were typical strugglers, and like many girls at that time left school at the age of thirteen....
. By the birth of their third child, they moved to a selection at Pipeclay (now Eurunderee) 8 kilometres north of Mudgee. Louisa Lawson's vigorous lobbying led to the establishment of the slab-and-bark Eurunderee Public School in 1876 with Henry Lawson attending the school for the first time aged nine. He would later write about the school in his poem "The Old Bark School". Lawson would later attend St. Matthews Central School, Mudgee
St. Matthews Central School, Mudgee

St Matthew's Central School is a Catholic school located in Lewis Street, Mudgee, New South Wales, New South Wales teaching from kindergarten to year 10....
 before his progressively worsening deafness leading to him leaving school at the age of 14. Lawson would live in the Mudgee district until the age of 15 and many of his stories were written about the district.

As the gold mines petered out in the latter half of the 19th century
19th century

The 19th century began on January 1, 1801 and ended on December 31, 1900, according to the Gregorian calendar.During the 19th century, the Spanish Empire, Portuguese Empire, Late Imperial China, and Ottoman Empire empires began to crumble, the Holy Roman Empire was dissolved, and the Mughal Empire empire collapsed....
, Mudgee was sustained by the strength of its wool industry as well as the nascent wine industry established by a German immigrant, Adam Roth, in the 1850s. The arrival of the railway in 1884 further boosted the towns agricultural industries. The Wallaby Track Drive Tour visits various sites associated with Lawson including the old Eurundee Public School, the Henry Lawson memorial, the Budgee Budgee Inn, Sapling Gully, Golden Gully and the Albury Pub which was owned by Lawson's grandfather.

Climate

Average temperatures range between 15 and 40 degrees Celsius in the summer (December - February) and -3 and 15 degrees Celsius in the winter (June-August). The average annual rainfall is 650 mm.

Famous Mudgeeans

  • Darrell Hair
    Darrell Hair

    Darrell Bruce Hair, , is an Australian Australian Test Cricket Umpires, from New South Wales. He stood on the Emirates International panel of umpires from 2002 to 2003, before he, along with fellow Australian Simon Taufel, and New Zealander Billy Bowden, was appointed to the ICC Elite umpire panel....
     - born in Mudgee, now living in Lincoln, UK
    Lincoln, Lincolnshire

    Lincoln is a cathedral city and county town of Lincolnshire, England.The non-metropolitan district of Lincoln has a population of around 101,000 - the 2001 census gave the entire urban area of Lincoln a population of 120,779....
    , a controversial cricket umpire.
  • Ken Sutcliffe
    Ken Sutcliffe

    Ken Sutcliffe is a popular sporting television personality, born in Mudgee, New South Wales, New South Wales. Also known as the "Male Model from Mudgee" and "Ken Withsport"....
     - born in Mudgee, Australian Television Personality, sports reader for Channel Nine.
  • Natarsha Belling
    Natarsha Belling

    Natarsha Belling is a news anchor on Australia television's Channel Ten. She reads the 11am edition of Ten News. She is also Ten's award winning Medical Reporter....
     - born in Mudgee, family resides in Mudgee. National newsreader for Channel 10.
  • Henry Lawson
    Henry Lawson

    Henry Lawson was an Australian writer and poet . Along with his contemporary Banjo Paterson, Lawson is among the best-known Australian poets and fiction writers of the colonial period, and is often called Australia's "greatest writer"....
     - One of Australia's most recognised poets. Lived in Mudgee for 16 years during childhood after birth in Grenfell.
  • Karlissa Kennedy - Contemporary Artist and Printmaker. Born and lived in Mudgee, now lives and works in Sydney.
  • Louisa Lawson
    Louisa Lawson

    Louisa Lawson was an Australian writer, publisher, Suffragette, and feminist.Louisa Lawson was born and raised in Mudgee, New South Wales. The second of 12 children, her family were typical strugglers, and like many girls at that time left school at the age of thirteen....
     - Mother of Henry Lawson, Prolific feminist activist.
  • Lisa Keightly - Played cricket for the national women's cricket team, first woman to score 100 ( a century) at Lord's in England.
  • Aaron Downes
    Aaron Downes

    Aaron Terry Downes is an Australian Association football who currently plays for Chesterfield F.C. as a centre back....
     - Professional soccer player, captain of Chesterfield in England.
  • Tanya Hollow - Professional polo-cross player and captain of Australian team
  • Ryan Williamson - Plays for the Sydney Roosters in the NRL


See also

  • Mudgee Airport
    Mudgee Airport

    Mudgee Airport is an airport in Mudgee, New South Wales, New South Wales, Australia. The airport is frequently used for technical training....


See also

  • Australian wine
    Australian wine

    The Australian wine industry is the fourth-largest exporter in the world, exporting over 400 million litres a year to a large international export market that includes "old world" wine-producing countries such as France, Italy and Spain....


External links