Dandaloo
Dandaloo New South Wales | |
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Bogan River on the Dandaloo-Trangie Road, Dandaloo. | |
Dandaloo | |
Coordinates | 32°21′S 147°30′E / 32.350°S 147.500°ECoordinates: 32°21′S 147°30′E / 32.350°S 147.500°E |
Postcode(s) | 2873 |
LGA(s) | Narromine Shire |
State electorate(s) | Barwon |
Federal Division(s) | Parkes |
Dandaloo is a rural locality and cadastral parish in Narromine County, New South Wales, approximately 370 km north west from Sydney, about 15 km north east of Albert and about 40 km south west of Trangie. It is within the Narromine Council area.[1][2]
The locality was named by local landowner Florent Martel after a town in France,[3] and is the subject of the Banjo Paterson poem "An Idyll of Dandaloo".[4]
During the colonial era a village of Dandaloo was proposed where the Trangie-Melrose Road crosses the Bogan River. Although subdivision commenced the proposal was revoked in June 1895 and the town site remains largely paddocks to this day. Although a few houses, a church graveyard and disused post office building are scattered across the area.
During the Second World War the Royal Australian Air Force built a satellite airfield seventeen kilometres west-north-west of its Elementary Flying Training School at RAAF Station Narromine. Known as RAAF Dandaloo, the former comprised a single 5,000' east-west gravel runway (and eight hideouts) with no other permanent above-ground structures. The site (32°10'60.00"S 148° 4'30.00"E) has since reverted to cultivation.
References
- ↑ Oz Directory Online
- ↑ OK travel
- ↑ "Dandaloo". Geographical Names Register (GNR) of NSW. Geographical Names Board of New South Wales. Retrieved 4 August 2013.
- ↑ An Idyll of Dandaloo
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Dandaloo Rd,