Location
Tallong is a village within the Southern Tablelands region of New South Wales, Australia, in Goulburn-Mulwaree Council. The village is located just outside the southern extremity of the Southern Highlands region and has some cultural and historic connections with this region also. The town is 8.5 km from the town of Marulan and 25 km from the town of Bundanoon.
Tallong is home to the Tallong Midge Orchid (Genoplesium plumosum), a tiny flower found only in the area surrounding the town. This orchid is now a protected species. It was discovered in 1997. (wikipedia)
History
The first European settler in the area was George Barber, a cattle farmer. In 1814 Barber established a cattle station along what became known as Barber’s Creek. In 1821 he received a grant of 300 acres covering the general Tallong-Marulan district, to be converted from cedar brush to farmland. Before his death in a riding accident in 1844, Barber had extended his local landholdings to 4,000 acres, which he named “Glenrock”. He is buried in the Old Marulan Cemetery in Marulan.
In the late 1820s, that portion of Barber’s land that would eventually become the township was sold or reallocated to Sydney entrepreneur and mariner Billy Blue. Convict labour was used to clear the grazing land and prepare a route for the Main South railway line to Goulburn. Tallong was selected as the location for a railway refuelling point, and the town’s initial population consisted of convicts, woodcutters, railway workers and their families.
The opening of the railway in 1869 brought shops, a school, hotels and a post office to the town.
Post-Federation
By 1900, cattle grazing was slowly giving way to a thriving fruit industry, known particularly for apples and pears.
The population reached 200 in 1920, and a Memorial Hall was constructed to mark the town’s growth and record the servise of local residents in World War I. The Hall and war memorial are still standing today.
In 1955 the Australian poet and novelist Seaforth Mackenzie drowned while attempting to swim across Tallong (formerly Barber’s) Creek near the town.
Tallong was destroyed in the Chatsbury bushfire of 1965. Its economy did not fully recover and the award-winning fruit industry folded. Many residents moved and the post office and a number of small businesses closed. (wikipedia)
Places of Interest
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