翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Ivanhoe Masonic Temple
・ Ivanhoe Mines
・ Ivanhoe mining district
・ Ivanhoe railway station
・ Ivanhoe railway station, Melbourne
・ Ivanhoe railway station, New South Wales
・ Ivanhoe River
・ Ivanhoe Station
・ Ivanhoe Township, Finney County, Kansas
・ Ivanhoe's Restaurant
・ Ivanhoe, California
・ Ivanhoe, Fannin County, Texas
・ Ivanhoe, Illinois
・ Ivanhoe, Iowa
・ Ivanhoe, Minnesota
Ivanhoe, New South Wales
・ Ivanhoe, Newfoundland and Labrador
・ Ivanhoe, North Carolina
・ Ivanhoe, Texas
・ Ivanhoe, the Norman Swordsman
・ Ivanhoe, Tyler County, Texas
・ Ivanhoe, Victoria
・ Ivanhoe, Virginia
・ Ivanhood
・ Ivanhorod
・ Ivanhorod, Zaporizhia Raion
・ Ivanhoé
・ Ivanhoé Cambridge
・ Ivanica
・ Ivanice


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Ivanhoe, New South Wales : ウィキペディア英語版
Ivanhoe, New South Wales

Ivanhoe is a very small township on the Cobb Highway between the Lachlan and Darling rivers in New South Wales, Australia.  It is located within the Central Darling Shire local government area.  Ivanhoe functions as a service centre for the surrounding area.  The township is characterised by a particularly wide main street. At the 2011 census, Ivanhoe had a population of 200 people.〔
The town was founded in the early 1870s, and was named after Sir Walter Scott's work of historical fiction, Ivanhoe.  The township was situated on well-used coach and stock routes connecting Wilcannia on the Darling River with Balranald on the Murrumbidgee and Booligal on the Lachlan.
==History==

In 1869 George Brown Williamson, the postmaster and a storekeeper at Booligal, purchased from the "Waiko" pastoral run at the site which was to become the township of Ivanhoe.  Williamson selected the location as a business opportunity, being the junction of two roads from Booligal and Balranald leading to Wilcannia on the Darling River.  Williamson began operating a branch store at the location under the charge of his employee Charles Hiller.  George Williamson was a native of Morayshire in Scotland, and is believed to have chosen the name ‘Ivanhoe’.  Initially the nearest water supply to Ivanhoe was at Kilfera Lake, 25 kilometres away, from which drinking water had to be carted by dray.〔Glover, H. M. (Noni), ''A Town called Ivanhoe: a History'', 1989 (Riverine Grazier); Williamson may have initially just occupied the land at Ivanhoe and purchased it later – there is a record of George Williamson purchasing at Ivanhoe at the Hay Land Office in November 1873 (''Riverine Grazier'', 19 November 1873, p. 2).〕
A hotel was built at Ivanhoe in 1871 (the Ivanhoe Hotel); the licensee was James Eade, who remained publican until 1875 (apart from during 1873 when Joshua Smith held the license).  A post office opened at Ivanhoe on 1 January 1874 at Williamson's store (renamed ‘The Post Office Store’), with Charles Hiller in charge (though Williamson was the designated Postmaster).  On 1 February 1876, after a ten-year stint at Booligal, George Williamson moved to Ivanhoe.  In 1876 two new hotels opened at Ivanhoe: the Horse and Jockey (licensee, Duncan McGregor) and Mac's Ivanhoe Hotel (licensee, Henry Gayson).  The licensee of the Ivanhoe Hotel in 1876 was Roberick MacKenzie.  In 1879 a police presence was maintained at Ivanhoe to protect local residents from the Hatfield Bushrangers.〔Glover, ''op. cit''.; Lists of Publican licenses, ''New South Wales Government Gazettes''; ''Riverine Grazier'', 29 December 1875, p. 2.〕
The Ivanhoe Hotel ceased operating from 1882, leaving two hotels in the township.  During 1882 work commenced on the erection of a telegraph line from Booligal to Wilcannia.  A telegraph station was opened at Ivanhoe on 5 February 1883 under the charge of Alfred Webber Rice, who had been promoted from his position at Campbelltown.  The township was described in 1883 as having about 50 residents, a blacksmith's shop, two hotels, two stores (Williamson's and Stewart's), and "a few cottages".  By 1884 Ivanhoe was a major change-station for Cobb & Co.'s horses on the coach routes to and from the Darling River.  In 1884 businesses in the township included the Cobb & Co. Chaff House and Millie's Stable and Yards (Henry Thomas Millie was the licensee of Mac's Ivanhoe Hotel at that time).  The mounted police were established at Ivanhoe in 1885.  The Ivanhoe Jockey Club held its first race meeting in May 1885.  From 1887 race meetings were held twice a year (until the late 1930s) on a course which formed part of the town common.  In 1889 a school opened in the township.〔Glover, ''op. cit''.〕 The summer heat was a significant problem for the school. Refrigerating paint and a veranda were used to ward off the sun but the school was closed during the extended drought of 1904 to 1907.

Ivanhoe was officially proclaimed a township in 1890.  A new Post Office building was constructed, which opened in January 1898.  The Ivanhoe Post Office building, though it has been renovated in recent years, still stands adjacent to its original site.〔
The founder of Ivanhoe, George Williamson, died in 1907.〔NSW Births, Deaths & Marriages.〕
In 1925 Ivanhoe was linked by railway to Sydney via Parkes.  Two years later the extension to Broken Hill was completed.  The line through Ivanhoe later became part of the transcontinental Indian Pacific railway connecting Sydney to Perth.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Ivanhoe, New South Wales」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.