Howlong, New South Wales Website Links For
Howlong
 

Information About

Howlong, New South Wales




Howlong is a medium sized border town west of Albury , and is situated on the Murray River which separates the states of New South Wales and Victoria . The town has a population of about 1500 people.

Prior to the founding of the township the surveyor-general of New South Wales at that time Major Thomas Mitchell crossed the Murray river during his exploration of the area. Indeed there is a monument to Mitchell on the Victorian side of the river which states that Mitchell and his party camped at the location on 17 October, 1836 and then crossed the river slightly downstream of their camping point, on the following day.

Two years later two men with a property in the area set off on the longest cattle drive of its kind attempted in Australia at that time driving 300 head to South Australia .

Also in 1838 the site of the Mitchell river crossing became the location of the first postage mail delivery by a mail carrier, John Conway Bourke when he undertook to deliver the overland mail from Sydney to what would later be called Melbourne .

The township appears to have taken its title from a property named Hoolong in the area which was owned by Isaac Rudd and was named after an Aboriginal place name meaning 'beginning of the plains'.

Howlong as a township was laid out in 1854 and is now an important inland township which services the smaller villages of the area with a range of stores that meet most of the everyday needs of the people of the area. Nearby villages in the area include Brocklesby , Walbundrie & Chiltern