Tallong

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Tallong is a village in the Southern Highlands [1] of New South Wales, Australia. It is located about 1½ hours’ drive (approximately 170 km) from Sydney, the capital of NSW, and just over an hour (about 125 km) from Canberra, the nation’s capital. In the 19th Century the village was known as Barber's Creek. The area of which Tallong is a part was first charted by explorers Hume, Throsby and Smith in their 1818 and 1820 expeditions. [2]Tallong was part of Mulwaree Shire prior to the forced council amalgamations of 2004; it is now in Goulburn Mulwaree Council.

History

(CC) Photo: Aleta Curry
The Shoalhaven Gorge, viewed from Badgery's Lookout in March 2003. The Shoalhaven River is low due to drought.

Tallong was once a thriving agricultural community, known particularly for its pome fruit and its wool. The Tallong Public School was begun by railway workers and was for a time the only school in the vicinity. Several large stations were in operation, Caoura, Tea Tree and Boswick were among the best-known.

The village sent an annual exhibit of a tall pyramid of fruit to the Sydney Royal Easter Show; Tallong's apples and pears took top honours several times through mid-century; in 1940 the village won first place for both apples and pears. [3]

Tallong was destroyed in the Chatsbury bushfires of 1965. Its economy did not recover and the award-winning fruit industry folded. Many residents moved; the Post Office and small businesses closed. [4] [5] [6]

Tallong continued to stagnate through the end of the 20th Century. Land prices were much lower than some neighbouring villages, the cricket pitch became unusable, and the heritage sites "The Dungeons" and the "Cheese Caves", built by convict labour, were closed due to hazardous conditions.

Tallong today

The 21st Century boom in the real estate market in Sydney brought the affordable land in the Southern Villages to the attention of home buyers, investors and speculators. Property value has almost tripled in some areas. According to the postal service, postal drops have increased by 100 households over the last two years, more than a 33% increase. [7]

In 2004, Mulwaree Shire was profitable and was the fastest-growing shire outside of Sydney. The city of Goulburn operated with considerable debt. [8] Following the forced council takeover, Tallong's resources were no longer managed by locals. As of the 2006 assessment, land rates (taxes based on the estimated value of the land) more than doubled.

Modern Tallong is saved from obscurity by a few unique factors

Local organisations

(CC) Photo: Aleta Curry
Saint Stephen's Church (Anglican) - Tallong, NSW.
  • Marulan and districts Lions Club
  • Tallong Community Focus Group
  • Tallong Rural Fire Brigade
  • St Stephen's Church

Main businesses

  • The Tallong General Store
  • The Big Apple (fruit)
  • The Sheepskin Shed (tannery)

Tallong today is a hamlet of agrarian and trade workers, cottage industries, including stud farms, and commuters who work in the neighbouring towns of Goulburn, Moss Vale and Mittagong, or who make the commute to Sydney or Canberra. It has significant populations of older residents who are pensioners (retirees) and weekend residents who use the Southern Highlands as a retreat from the fast pace of city life.


Notes

  1. Whether or not Tallong is actually located in the Southern Highlands, as opposed to the Southern Tablelands, has been a subject of debate for at least half a century. See the Debate Guide
  2. These dates are quoted in a fact sheet distributed at the Marulan tourism information centre, n.a., n.p., n.d., but evidently printed circa 2001. The dates are contradicted in a book by Maureen Eddy
  3. There are photographs of the winning exhibits on display in the Tallong Memorial Hall.
  4. These changes are within living memory
  5. Typed memoirs were exhibited as part of Tallong Apple Day, 2006 and 2007
  6. Fact sheet, op.cit.
  7. Information received from the postal delivery person, Mrs Jennifer McNulty
  8. Local Councilwoman Inda Evans; Marulan and Districts Magazine articles, 2004

Bibliography

  • The Tallong Public School, Peter Westren, ed., privately published, Tallong: 1990.
  • Southern Village View Magazine, Published Quarterly by the Southern Village View Association Inc. Wingello, NSW.

External links

  • Santa Sabina College: [1]
  • The Tallong Midge Orchid: [2] and [3]