Curlewis, NSW, Australia

Curlewis, NSW, Australia Curlewis is a village of ~600 people, rich in history, interesting people and diversity of nature. Only positive news and comments published.

This page aims to showcase its history, its people, its diverse nature, its uniqueness.

01/07/2022

Many Curlewis people will remember John and Nan, taking Curlewis students to school for decades…and several generations of families!
All the best in retirement.

Childhood memories were made. Santa arrived in the Fire Truck and the Curlewis Rural Fire Brigade tested their hoses ahe...
18/12/2021

Childhood memories were made. Santa arrived in the Fire Truck and the Curlewis Rural Fire Brigade tested their hoses ahead of the summer fire season.
Children played on the streets as the crowd sang Christmas Carols. The event was finished with a spectacular fireworks show.
It was a joyous time.
Congratulations Curlewis Progress NSW, a wonderful community night.

A few pics of the water. One taken from Preston Road, near the new water supply tanks.
23/11/2021

A few pics of the water. One taken from Preston Road, near the new water supply tanks.

22/11/2021

Quite a bit of water around the village at the moment!
The water flows around the village, past the cemetery, across the highway and into the Curlewis Swamp/Common.
Hard to believe this land was decimated in the drought 2 years ago, what a transformation.

Video captured November 22, after 100mm fell on the weekend.

What a spring! 🌱🌾After years of drought Mother Nature has blessed us with a good drop of rain over the last few months.T...
17/10/2021

What a spring! 🌱🌾
After years of drought Mother Nature has blessed us with a good drop of rain over the last few months.
This is the Recreation Ground, looking towards the Campdraft area. Doesn’t it look great!
Well done to those who have kept the area tidy 👌🏻.

In 2020 we were unable to gather together to commemorate Anzac Day. This video was created to mark the occasion.🇦🇺 Lest ...
24/04/2021

In 2020 we were unable to gather together to commemorate Anzac Day. This video was created to mark the occasion.
🇦🇺 Lest We Forget 🇦🇺.

While COVID is still a risk, in 2021 there will only be a dawn service. 5 am for a 5.15 start.

https://youtu.be/9v-rNqs1_OU.

In 2020, as Australia is in the middle of the worldwide COVID-19 pandemic traditional Anzac Day commemorations are prohibited. This video has compiled a coll...

Curlewis is alive this weekend with truckloads of people and horses (literally!) attending the Liverpool Plains Campdraf...
20/03/2021

Curlewis is alive this weekend with truckloads of people and horses (literally!) attending the Liverpool Plains Campdraft. This is a roof top shot from Poole St, overlooking the Campdraft area, the old football oval to the right. After years of drought and then COVID it is a glorious sight 🐴🐴.
Welcome to all the visitors.

A Curlewis resident recently asked if we knew when the original Curlewis Store burnt down.We have come across the news r...
14/03/2021

A Curlewis resident recently asked if we knew when the original Curlewis Store burnt down.
We have come across the news report and thought we would share!
The fire occurred in the early hours of the morning of Saturday February 21, 1987. There was nothing that could be done to save the 70 year old building.

Do you remember the night the Store burnt down, and the shop being quickly set up in the hall?

We have had a query about the origins of the name Curlewis. The following is an extract from the Curlewis School Centena...
01/02/2021

We have had a query about the origins of the name Curlewis. The following is an extract from the Curlewis School Centenary book. Others may know more, or families may have unearthed more information since 1985....

The origin of the name of Curlewis has prompted lively discussion and correspondence over many decades. “Curlewis” is not of aboriginal derivation, nor can be found any famous dignitary, explorer or surveyor after whom it could be named in official records.
Local historian W.O. Manning corresponded with a professor of Proper Names at the Liverpool University; England who had become interested in the unusual name. Two possibilities were considered:
1. That the village was named after the Curlew bird, which inhabited the area in the 1800s
2. That the village was named after the family of Judges Herbert and Adrian Curlewis, prominent Sydney barristers.
W.O. Manning’s conclusions support the first possibility the “pre 1860 a teamster’s camp near a swamp on the wet weather road from Breeza to Gunnedah became known as the Curlew’s place because of the great number of Curlew birds inhabiting the area”.
This theory was supported by long-time Curlewsites who related stories of swagmen and bullock teamsters camping by the swamp, being kept awake at night be the Curlew’s bird loud mournful, high pitched, wailing cries of “cur-loo”. Because of its distinctive cry, the Curlew bird was said to be associated with aboriginal legend and when white man came to the area Pullaming seemed to be a type of boundary, as the aboriginals were continually travelling from Pullaming to Borah Crossing.
Research for the 1985 School Centenary (ISBN 0958971404) that included correspondence with the Curlewis family historians supports the second possibility.
George Campbell Curlewis selected land in southern NSW (future northern Victoria) by 1841. Some of the area is still known as Curlewis, Victoria. George Campbell Curlewis has a partner, Robert Campbell who selected land in the Hunter Valley. As the partners took up their land, family historians believe that they named their land after each other. An early pastoral holding near Singleton, named Curlewis was acquired by John Browne. By 1847 John Browne’s pastoral holding on the Liverpool Plans was named “Curlewis” being part of his larger holding of “Pullaming”.
One of George Campbell Curlewis’ sons was an explorer about the same time as Burke and Wills and was killed near the Paroo River, Queensland in 1861.
Another son owned a brickyard in Sydney and was the father of Judge Herbert Curlewis (admitted to the Bar in the 1890s). Judge Herbert Curlewis married Ethel Turner, author of many books and newspaper articles including the novel Seven Little Australians. Herbert and Ethel were the parents of Judge Adrian Curlewis. At the time of writing Seven Little Australians (1894) in which there is reference to “Curlewis…the nearest railway station to Yarrahappini” Ethel Turner was secretly engaged to Herbert Curlewis.
Phillipa Poole, granddaughter of Herbert and Ethel and publisher of The Diaries of Ethel Turner believed that Ethel could have considered it a complement to her future husband and his family to use the name on her book. There is no known connection between the family of Ethel Turner and the Turner family of Digby.
In 1871 a surveyor named Dewhurst suggested the name for Curlewis parish when he surveyed 4800 acres for the site of the village reserve. Curlewis township is located at the western end of this reserve. Dewhurst also recorded the name of the Curlewis swamp.
When a rail siding was erected in 1880 William Charles Browne M.L.A. for Patricks Plains and son of John Brown suggested the name of Curlewis for the siding.
The name perpetuated when, in 1885, Edwin Woodward Turner, surveyor of Digby surveyed the site of the village of Curlewis. The village and suburban boundaries were notified July 3 1886 and Curlewis was proclaimed a village on October 4 1890.

Congratulations to the Curlewis Progress Association and Curlewis Community Church for the Christmas Carols last night. ...
13/12/2020

Congratulations to the Curlewis Progress Association and Curlewis Community Church for the Christmas Carols last night. We even enjoyed a visit from Santa, escorted by our fabulous Rural Bushfire Brigade!
Local talent playing the music and leading us in song, children playing and laughing, with a cooling summer breeze as the sun set behind us.

A positive way to end 2020. Thank you 🎄🙏

The wheat harvest is coming to an end around the district. While the rains and storms have lowered the quality it is sti...
22/11/2020

The wheat harvest is coming to an end around the district. While the rains and storms have lowered the quality it is still liquid gold following many years of drought. There is certainly a buzz in the air – though that might be the summer flies we can hear!

This super photo was taken on the property Rugby just before a bumper harvest. This same spot is where Martha Poole was one of the first to grow wheat in the district (circa 1882). Her son, Alfred Lithgow Poole is credited with discovering coal at Curlewis in this same area later that decade.

During the early 1890s small patches of wheat were grown around Curlewis, with Ellicott’s claiming to be the first to grow wheat on Tally-Ho. 1899 is the first recorded wheat harvest in the Curlewis district.
Railway tonnage from Curlewis:
1899 – 2 234 tonnes
1900 – 10 618
1901 – 17 041
1902 – 30 750.

Carara & Rockvale were another two properties that were cleared for wheat growing, where the Federation variety was grown in the early days.

Photo credit Pia Walker

Springtime in Curlewis 💚The days are warming, the air is clear. The park looks fabulous, a great spot for a picnic where...
18/09/2020

Springtime in Curlewis 💚
The days are warming, the air is clear. The park looks fabulous, a great spot for a picnic where young ones can run freely and safely.

This shelter has been a hang out spot for quite a few generations, loads of memories under this roof!

Enjoy the weekend ☀️☘️🐨

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Curlewis, NSW

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