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Cobargo

Towns

Bega Valley Shire Council NSW, PO Box 492, Cobargo, NSW 2550
02 6499 2222

Description

Cobargo is a village in the south-east area of the state of New South Wales in Australia in Bega Valley Shire.

Cobargo is a village in the south-east area of the state of New South Wales in Australia in Bega Valley Shire. At the 2016 census, Cobargo had a population of 776 people. It is 386 km south of Sydney on the Princes Highway between Narooma and Bega. The town suffered heavy losses during the 2019 bushfires.

Cobargo's streetscape features turn of the century buildings. It has developed in the early 21st century from a sleepy and small village into a popular tourist destination. Its attractions include olden-style stores, leather craftworks, potteries, an iron forge, art galleries, tea rooms and antique shops. Wadbilliga National Park is 20 km west of Cobargo.

The name Cobargo may have originated from the local Indigenous Australianword 'cubago' which some sources claim was used to describe nearby Mount Gulaga.

History

The area was settled in the late 1820s when graziers moved stock into the district. William Duggan Tarlinton was the first white man to set foot in the district in 1829, seeking pasture for his cattle. He returned in the 1830s, erecting slab and bark huts in the district and became one of its prominent citizens. By the late 1830s the three Imlay brothers had substantial holdings and around 1840 Alexander Imlay, one of the Imlay brothers, named his property Cobargo.Cobargo was known as 'The Junction' in the late 1860s as it was located at the junction of the Narira and Bredbatoura Creeks. A school opened in 1871 and by that year the village had a post office, store, hotel, church and blacksmith shops. Development gained pace following the construction of a bridge over the Narira Creek in 1882 and improvement of the coast road in the 1880s. By the 1890s the town was large enough to sustain a local newspaper, the Cobargo Watch. A butter factory was established in 1901 and continued butter production until 1980. In 1903 a branch of the Bank of New South Wales was opened. The office built in 1917 on the corner of Bermagui Road operated until 1997.

The town was in decline for much of the twentieth century as transportation has made the larger centres more accessible, however like other nearby villages it has recently been revitalised as a tourist destination.

The main street of the town was devastated by bushfire on 31 December 2019, with significant loss of buildings and life. Four people, including a father and son, were killed. Prime Minister Scott Morrison toured the town several days later, but was heckled and eventually forced out of the town by inflamed residents after forcing a handshake upon a local Cobargo woman.

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Details

Type: Towns

Population: 101-1000

Time zone: UTC +11:00

Area: 104.034 km2

Elevation: 51-200 metres

Town elevation: 86 m

Population number: 776

Local Government Area: Bega Valley Shire Council

Location

Bega Valley Shire Council NSW, PO Box 492, Cobargo, NSW 2550

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Attribution

This article contains content imported from the English Wikipedia article on Cobargo, New South Wales