Coolawanyah Station Explained

Coolawanyah Station, also spelt as Coolawaya Station, is a pastoral lease and sheep station located approximately north of Tom Price, south east of Karratha and 170km (110miles) south west of Port Hedland, in the Shire of Ashburton, part of the Pilbara region of Western Australia. The property shares a boundary with Millstream Chichester National Park to the west.[1]

The property was acquired by Roy Parsons and his partners in 1922 after he served in the navy during World War I. Parsons bought out his partners during the next few years, eventually owning the 1204km2 leasehold outright.[2] In 1949 Parsons and Ted LeFroy formed the Coolawanyah Pastoral Company and acquired Tambrey and Hooley Stations, which they merged with Coolawanyah with a total size of 1770km2. Later they also leased Millstream Station from the Department of Water, creating a total leaseholding of 3001km2.[2]

During the 1950s the property switched from sheep to cattle after suffering from dingo attacks.[3] In 1956 Roy's youngest son, Les, took over management of the property.[2]

The Parsons family are also related to the Withnell family and still ran the property in 2008 with Kim and Cindy Parsons managing the 3000km2 with a herd of 4,000 head of cattle.[4]

Transportation

The locality is served by the Coolawanyah Station Airport .

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Millstream Water Reserve. 26 March 2017. June 2010. Government of Western Australia.
  2. Web site: Roy Parsons' diary. Peter Lee. 3 August 2013. 1 October 2015. Farm Weekly. Fairfax Media. https://web.archive.org/web/20151001181529/http://www.farmweekly.com.au/news/agriculture/general/news/roy-parsons-diary/2666233.aspx. 1 October 2015. dead.
  3. Web site: Pilbara station life in the 1920s revealed in new book. Ben Leahy. 1 October 2015. 7 July 2013. Pilbara Echo. Pilbara Newspapers Pty Ltd.
  4. Web site: Mother of the north-west. John Dunn. 1 May 2008. 1 October 2015. Outback. R. M. Williams. https://web.archive.org/web/20080720065051/http://www.outbackmag.com.au/stories/article-view?319. 20 July 2008. dead.