Bogan Gate


title: "Bogan Gate" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["towns-in-new-south-wales", "towns-in-the-central-west-(new-south-wales)", "parkes-shire"] topic_path: "geography/united-kingdom" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bogan_Gate" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::data[format=table title="Infobox Australian place"]

FieldValue
typetown
nameBogan Gate
statensw
imageBogan Gate Bogan Way Sign 001.JPG
captionMain street of Bogan Gate
lgaParkes Shire
postcode2876
pop269
pop_year
pop_footnotes
elevation235
coordinates
maxtemp48
mintemp12
stategovOrange
fedgovParkes
dist142
dir1W
location1Forbes
dist2189
dir2SW
location2Dubbo
dist338
dir3W
location3Parkes
dist465
dir4E
location4Condobolin
dist5392
dir5W
location5Sydney
::

| type = town | name = Bogan Gate | state = nsw | image = Bogan Gate Bogan Way Sign 001.JPG | caption = Main street of Bogan Gate | lga = Parkes Shire | postcode = 2876 | est = | pop = 269 | pop_year = | pop_footnotes = | elevation = 235 | coordinates = | maxtemp = 48 | mintemp =12 | rainfall = | stategov = Orange | fedgov = Parkes | dist1 = 42 | dir1 = W | location1 = Forbes | dist2 = 189 | dir2 = SW | location2 = Dubbo | dist3 = 38 | dir3 = W | location3 = Parkes | dist4 = 65 | dir4 = E | location4 = Condobolin | dist5 = 392 | dir5 = W | location5 = Sydney

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/18/Bogan_Gate_Hotel.jpg" caption="Bogan Gate Hotel before it was destroyed by fire in December 1930"] ::

Bogan Gate () is a small village in Parkes Shire of the Central West of New South Wales, Australia. At the , Bogan Gate and the surrounding area had a population of 307. Bogan Gate is derived from the local Aboriginal word meaning "the birthplace of a notable headman of the local tribe".

The village lies in wheat and sheep growing country and is on the Sydney - Broken Hill rail line, and it is the junction for the Bogan Gate–Tottenham Branch line.

Attractions include the annual Bogan Gate Arts Festival and golf tournaments at the local nine-hole Bogan Gate Golf Club.

History

19th century

Explorer John Oxley passed through the area in 1817. An early reference to the name Bogan Gate is in the New South Wales Government Gazette for 19 May 1876. Tenders were called for the conveyance of mail to Bogan Gate in May 1877. Bogan Gate Post Office opened on 15 December 1896.

The arrival of the railway line late in the 19th century transformed Bogan Gate and agriculture in the region. The western line from Sydney reached Parkes and Forbes in 1893. When it reached the Bogan Gate area in 1896, the settlement moved south to relocate near the railway station. Land for the township was surveyed in 1897 and a public school was built the following year. The railway station was at the heart of the community and busiest during the shearing and harvest times.

The railway made it possible to grow commercial wheat crops in the area. Previously the high cost of transport had made the crop uneconomic in western New South Wales. Also significant in expansion of wheat growing in the region was the practice of share farming, introduced into New South Wales from the United States in 1893.

20th century

The town had a spurt of growth in the years immediately after the railway station opened. By 1903, Bogan Gate had a public school with 67 students, a police station, post office, sawmill, general store, butcher, baker, blacksmith and two hotels; the Bogan Gate Hotel (built 1899), which had 17 rooms, and the Railway Hotel.

Bogan Gate had a population of 300 when the Shire of Goobang came into existence in 1906. By the 1920s, there was a general store employing 11 people, stock and station agencies, a bank, a doctor's surgery and another hotel. The Great Depression forced many residents to move in search of work to larger towns and cities.

An explosives testing ground was established near Bogan Gate during World War II. The site was used by the Australian Army and Royal Australian Air Force to store munitions for decades. As of 2014, the former Defence site was leased to several companies.

21st century

Modern Bogan Gate has a public hall, school, Post Office & hotel/motel.

Recreational facilities include Burrawang Park, & a nine-hole golf course and night-lit tennis courts.

A festival, that included a competition to find “Australia’s Biggest Bogan,” was held in the town in July 2019.

Notable residents

References

Gallery

File:BoganGatePostOffice.JPG|Bogan Gate Post office File:BoganGateCWARooms.JPG|Bogan gate CWA Rooms File:Bogan Gate Police Station.JPG|Bogan gate Police Station File:Bogan Gate Rural Fire Service Shed.JPG|Bogan gate Rural Fire Service File:Bogan Gate CWA RSL & Red Cross Building 002.JPG|Bogan Gate RSL CWA and Red Cross rooms File:Bogan Gate General Store.JPG|General Store at Bogan gate File:Bogan Gate Park 001.JPG|Bogan gate park File:Bogan Gate Anglican Church 001.JPG|Anglican Church File:BoganGateRomanCatholicChurch.JPG|Roman Catholic Church File:Bogan Gate Pioneer Monument 001.JPG|Bogan Gate Pioneer Monument File:Bogan Gate War Memorial 005.JPG|Bogan Gate War Memorial File:Bogan Gate Public Hall 001.JPG|Bogan Gate Public Hall File:Bogan Gate Public School 001.JPG|Bogan Gate Public School File:Bogan Gate Uniting Church 001.JPG|Bogan Gate Uniting Church

References

  1. ''[[Macquarie Dictionary. Macquarie Dictionary, Fourth Edition]]'' (2005). Melbourne, The Macquarie Library Pty Ltd. {{ISBN. 1-876429-14-3
  2. {{Census 2011 AUS
  3. "Bogan Gate".
  4. [http://www.parkes.nsw.gov.au/about/1009/1026.html Parkes Shire Council: About the Shire: Bogan Gate] {{webarchive. link. (August 19, 2006)
  5. [https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/223650378/12930131#P12930139 ''New South Wales Government Gazette'', 19 May 1876, supplement, p.1,955]
  6. requestHandler. anyWords. dateTo. dateFrom
  7. Phoenix Auctions History. "Post Office List". Phoenix Auctions.
  8. Gunn, John (1989) ''Along parallel lines; a history of the railways of New South Wales'', Melbourne University Press, p.225. {{ISBN. 0522843875
  9. requestHandler. anyWords. dateTo. dateFrom
  10. [https://www.environment.nsw.gov.au/resources/heritagebranch/heritage/thematichistorycentralwest.pdf Kass, Terry (2003) ''A thematic history of the central west; comprising the NSW historical regions of Lachlan and central tablelands'', Sydney, NSW Heritage Office, p.46]
  11. Tindall, Ronald T. (1982) ''Parkes: one hundred years of local government'', Council of the Shire of Parkes, p.128. {{ISBN. 0959278605
  12. Gunn, p.235
  13. anyWords. notWords. requestHandler. dateFrom. dateTo. sortby ''The Western Champion'' (Parkes), 4 September 1903, p.7]
  14. Tindall, pp.107-8
  15. Tindall, p.108
  16. Kass, p.25 & 65
  17. (24 November 2014). "Bomb squad police investigate Bogan Gate explosion". ABC News.
  18. [https://www.parkeschampionpost.com.au/story/6279939/bogans-on-parade-at-first-biggest-bogan-festival-in-shire/ ''Forbes Champion-Post'', 18 July 2019]

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towns-in-new-south-walestowns-in-the-central-west-(new-south-wales)parkes-shire