Canonba is a locality in the
Orana region of New South Wales, Australia. There was also a village of the same name (sometimes spelt Canonbar or Cannonbar), which is now a ghost town. It lay on Duck Creek, a tributary of the
Bogan River
Bogan River, a perennial river that is part of the Macquarie– Barwon catchment within the Murray–Darling basin, is located in the central west and Orana regions of New South Wales, Australia.
From its origin near Parkes, the Bogan Rive ...
, approximately 30 km north-east of
Nyngan
Nyngan () is a town in the centre of New South Wales, Australia, in the Bogan Shire local government area within the Orana Region of central New South Wales. At the 2016 census, Nyngan had a population of 1,988 people. Nyngan is situated on t ...
. Since 1983, the old village site has been known officially as Old Canonba.
History
Aboriginal history
The area upon which Canonba lay is on the traditional lands of the
Wangaaypuwan
The Wangaaypuwan, also known as the Wangaibon or Ngiyampaa Wangaaypuwan, are an Aboriginal Australian people who traditionally lived between Nyngan, the headwaters of Bogan Creek, and on Tigers Camp and Boggy Cowal creeks and west to Ivanhoe, ...
dialect speakers (also known as Wangaibon) of the
Ngiyampaa
The Ngiyampaa, also known as the Ngemba, are an Aboriginal Australian people of the state of New South Wales. The generic name refers to an aggregation of three groups, the Ngiyampaa, the Ngiyampaa Wangaaypuwan, and the Ngiyampaa Weilwan, resp ...
people. After colonisation, although dispossessed, the local people remained on their lands; as late as 1889, a
corroboree
A corroboree is a generic word for a meeting of Australian Aboriginal peoples. It may be a sacred ceremony, a festive celebration, or of a warlike character. A word coined by the first British settlers in the Sydney area from a word in the ...
took place near Canonba. In the year 1907, there were 35 Aborigines recorded as living at 'Canonbar'.
The name Canonba may be derived from a local language word for the
shingle-back lizard (''Tiliqua rugosa'').
Early settlers recalled the word as ''Carringbung''.
Settler colonisation, conflict and killings
The association of colonial settlers with the area dates from the time of the second expedition of the explorer and
surveyor-general
A surveyor general is an official responsible for government surveying in a specific country or territory. Historically, this would often have been a military appointment, but it is now more likely to be a civilian post.
The following surveyor gen ...
Sir Thomas Mitchell
Sir Thomas Livingstone Mitchell (15 June 1792 – 5 October 1855), surveyor and explorer of Southeastern Australia, was born at Grangemouth in Stirlingshire, Scotland. In 1827 he took up an appointment as Assistant Surveyor General of New Sout ...
, in 1835. Duck Creek was surveyed by
James Larmer
James Larmer (b. 1808 or 1809 – d. 1886) was a government surveyor in the colony of New South Wales. Between 1830 and 1859, he surveyed land, roads and settlements in New South Wales. He was an Assistant Surveyor to the Surveyor-General, Sir Th ...
, an assistant-surveyor and second-in-command of the expedition. Mitchell returned to the area, in January 1847, when his third expedition camped for two weeks at the 'ponds of Canonba', which would later become the site of the village.
The area between the Macquarie and the Bogan Rivers contains other watercourses, including Duck Creek,
Gunningbar Creek, Crooked Creek and Marra Creek.
Although the area was a
semi-arid
A semi-arid climate, semi-desert climate, or steppe climate is a dry climate sub-type. It is located on regions that receive precipitation below potential evapotranspiration, but not as low as a desert climate. There are different kinds of semi- ...
saltbush plain, the watercourses, waterholes, and
billabongs improved the potential of the area for grazing, encouraging some settlers to move into the area, even though the same water sources were precious to the traditional owners. The area was outside the boundary of the
Nineteen Counties
The Nineteen Counties were the limits of location in the colony of New South Wales, Australia. Settlers were permitted to take up land only within the counties due to the dangers in the wilderness.
They were defined by the Governor of New Sout ...
—within which the colonial government of New South Wales allowed settlers to purchase land—but, from 1836, specific sections of land could be leased there for an annual payment, under the Squatting Act, 1836.
The area was the site of frontier violence in late 1841. Seeking water for their stock during a dry period, seven
stockmen—working for
William Lee and Joseph Moulder—drove 600 head of cattle off a legal grazing lease and into the area near the Canonba waterhole. It seems the cattle muddied and polluted the waterhole angering the traditional owners, who attacked the stockmen, killing three, and wounding three others. A stockman who was away from the main group, used his pistol to cover the wounded survivors as they escaped.
Mounted Police
Mounted police are police who patrol on horseback or camelback. Their day-to-day function is typically picturesque or ceremonial, but they are also employed in crowd control because of their mobile mass and height advantage and increasingly in ...
from
Bathurst, augmented by some stockmen, made a reprisal attack, at Duck Creek, that became a massacre. A contemporary report stated—although it was not known for certain how many died—there were fifteen or as many as thirty Aborigines killed. Only three of the Aborigines who died were identified as being involved in the stockmen's deaths. The party captured three other Aboriginal men, supposed to be involved in the stockmen's deaths, one of whom later escaped.
Even at the time, the actions of the Mounted Police were highly controversial. They had set out, during the absence of their commander, to assist the stockmen—who themselves had been acting illegally—carried out a frontier policing role normally that of the
Border Police—under the command of local Commissioner for Crown Lands, Allman—and had killed many Aborigines who, although of the same tribe, were innocent of the killing of the stockmen. For his part in causing the original trouble with the Aborigines,
Governor Gipps
Sir George Gipps (23 December 1790 – 28 February 1847) was the Governor of the British colony of New South Wales for eight years, between 1838 and 1846. His governorship oversaw a tumultuous period where the rights to land were bitterly conte ...
revoked Lee's lease. Sadly, this was far from the only incident of horrific frontier violence and killing near the Bogan River during the 1840s.
The village of Canonba
Growth and heyday
By the very early 1850s,
squatters
Squatting is the action of occupying an abandoned or unoccupied area of land or a building, usually residential, that the squatter does not own, rent or otherwise have lawful permission to use. The United Nations estimated in 2003 that there ...
were taking up runs in the district officially. A prominent early settler was John Brown, who had a landholding called Canonba''
' on Duck Creek.
A hotel and store were built on part of Brown's land and, in September 1853, the government reserved a piece of nearby Crown Land as the site of a village. This circumstance could have led to a settlement partially on the government village reserve—on the north-east side of Duck Creek—and partially on Brown's land, on the south-west, or left, bank. The privately-owned section was sometimes referred to as 'Brownstown'.
However, a bridge crossing Duck Creek and connecting the two parts of the village site was not completed until 1874
and, probably for that reason, the village seems to have developed mainly on the south-west side of the creek.

Canonba's position between the
Macquarie and Bogan Rivers, its water, and its good soil were advantages of its location.
In 1858, a post office was opened there, with a police station following in 1864. The village was proclaimed in 1866 and a town plan published in the same year, making it one of the earliest official settlements of the region.
During the next 15 years, the village grew to be the main settlement in the region west of Dubbo.
It was the site of cattle and sheep sales, the point from which the mail service for
Bourke started, and a stopping place on the
Cobb & Co.'s stage coach
A stagecoach is a four-wheeled public transport coach used to carry paying passengers and light packages on journeys long enough to need a change of horses. It is strongly sprung and generally drawn by four horses although some versions are draw ...
route from Dubbo to Bourke. In 1870, Canonba was described as ''"rather a nice town, being built principally of brick, and is in the heart of one of the finest squatting districts in the colony."'' By 1870, the village had a court of petty sessions, three public houses with a fourth on the way, some stores, and the usual trades of a rural settlement—saddle and harness makers, blacksmiths, tailors, bootmakers, wheelwrights—orchards and a vineyard; John Brown had built himself a double storey house of brick, overlooking what was by then being called a town, and a public schoolhouse awaiting a teacher.
A school opened—unofficially—in 1871 but closed in 1872,
being without an officially appointed teacher. A new schoolhouse was built by the government and opened in 1878.
By 1874, probably on the right bank of Duck Creek, there were two acres of vegetable gardens operated by ethnic-Chinese market gardeners.
In 1881, the population reached what was probably its peak of 472.
Decline
In 1883, the
Main Western railway line
The Main Western Railway is a major railway in New South Wales, Australia. It runs through the Blue Mountains, Central West, North West Slopes and the Far West regions. It is with operational & under construction & repairs.
Description of ...
bypassed Canonba and instead ran to what is now the site of
Nyngan
Nyngan () is a town in the centre of New South Wales, Australia, in the Bogan Shire local government area within the Orana Region of central New South Wales. At the 2016 census, Nyngan had a population of 1,988 people. Nyngan is situated on t ...
—where the line crossed the Bogan River—resulting in the establishment of a rival settlement there around 1882. Another settlement nearby,
Girilambone
Girilambone is a small village in western New South Wales, Australia. It is located north of Nyngan and 666 km north-west of Sydney. At the 2016 census, the population of the village and its surrounding area was only 107, but it had falle ...
, was established, in 1880 as a private town associated with a copper mine, and it was also on the railway line from 1884.
[Girilambone station](_blank)
NSWrail.net, accessed 8 September 2009. These developments led to the almost total decline of Canonba, in only a few years.
Many residents left Canonba and moved to Nyngan. A number of Canonba's houses and other buildings were pulled down and relocated to Nyngan. Businesses and public institutions followed. By 1887, the town no longer had a bank, just one public house and one store, and its church was described as "roofless walls", its belfry having been dismantled. John Brown, the 'King of Canonbar' and the driving force behind the village, although immensely wealthy, was in decline himself; around 1881, he had retired to
Emu Hall
Emu Hall is a historic house in the Sydney suburb of Emu Plains in the state of New South Wales, Australia. It is west of the Sydney central business district, in the local government area of the City of Penrith and is part of the Greater West ...
at
Emu Plains
Emu Plains is a suburb of Sydney in the state of New South Wales, Australia. It is 58 kilometres west of the Sydney central business district, in the local government area of the City of Penrith and is part of the Greater Western Sydney re ...
, where he died in 1888. The school closed in 1890. By the 1891 census, there were only 58 inhabitants and 12 dwellings left.
The design of the village was altered to reduce the scale of the settlement and more realistically reflect its diminished future prospects. Canonba lingered on as a rural hamlet for a time, still significant enough to be a polling place into the early 1930s. The post office, named 'Cannonbar', closed in late 1924. Canonba gave its name to the surrounding area and its Pasture Protection Board, then faded away completely.
Canonba lost its status as a village, in 1983, and was officially renamed 'Old Canonba'.
Remnants
The old village site lies just on the upstream side of where the modern-day Canonba Road crosses Duck Creek. One of its streets, Duck Street, still appears on maps—although its alignment no longer follows the old town plan—as do building allotments of the old village. All that is left of Canonba is its neglected cemetery and a boulder marked with a plaque that commemorates the former village.
There is no commemoration of the frontier violence and massacres of the 1840s.
Present day
The locality of Canonba is now a quiet rural area, with grazing being the main occupation.
Reference section
{{reflist
External links
Plan of the Village of Canonba
New South Wales
Ghost towns in New South Wales
Bogan Shire