Farina, South Australia Explained

Type:town
Farina
State:sa
Image Upright:0.8
Coordinates:-30.0751°N 138.276°W
Coord Ref:[1]
Pop:15 (includes other localities in the "State Suburb of Farina")
Established:21 March 1878 (town)
29 May 1997 (locality)
Established Footnotes:[2] [3]
Postcode:5733
Elevation:303
Timezone:ACST
Utc:+9:30
Timezone-Dst:ACDT
Utc-Dst:+10:30
Dist3:55
Dir3:S
Location3:Marree
Lga:Pastoral Unincorporated Area
Region:Far North
Stategov:Stuart[4]
Fedgov:Grey[5]
Maxtemp:27.0
Maxtemp Footnotes:[6]
Mintemp:12.4
Rainfall:164.2
Near-N:Farina Station
Near-Ne:Farina Station
Near-E:Farina Station
Near-Se:Farina Station
Near-S:Farina Station
Near-Sw:Farina Station
Near-W:Farina Station
Near-Nw:Farina Station
Footnotes:Adjoining localities

Farina, formerly Farina Town and originally Government Gums, is an abandoned town in the Australian state of South Australia. The name also applies to an area of about 8500km2 in which the town is located. At the 2006 census, 55 people lived in the larger area; by the 2021 census, the population had fallen to 15.

Farina sits within the arid Lake Eyre basin, north of Lyndhurst and south of Marree where the Oodnadatta Track and the Birdsville Track commence. It is 540abbr=offNaNabbr=off due north of the state capital; Adelaide[7] in the days when the rail connection was narrow gauge to Port Augusta, the distance by rail was 657km (408miles).

A drone view of Farina is here.

History

In 1876, after a police trooper had been posted to the Government Gums, a "long neglected district", a deputation asked for a portion of the district to be allotted as a township so that a post office might be erected; that a telegraph station be opened; and that a weekly mail service from Beltana to the north-west be set up. The townsite, on a reserve surrounding Gums Waterhole, was surveyed and on 21 March 1878, Farina Town was proclaimed.[8]

Originally called The Gums or Government Gums,[9] Farina was settled in 1878 by optimistic farmers hoping that rain follows the plough.[10] The town became a railhead in 1882, but the railway was extended to Marree in 1884. During the wet years of the 1880s, plans were laid out for a town with 432 quarter-acre (0.10 hectares) blocks. It was believed that the area would be good for growing wheat and barley, but normal rainfall proved to be nowhere near enough for that. Several silver and copper mines were opened in the surrounding area.

Farina grew to reach a peak population of about 600 in the late 19th century. In its heyday, the town had two hotels (the Transcontinental and the Exchange), an underground bakery, a bank, two breweries, a general store, an Anglican church, five blacksmiths, a school (1879–1957) and a brothel.[8] In 1909, a 1143kg (2,520lb) iron meteorite was discovered north-east of the town.[11]

Today, little remains of the township, except for stone ruins, a seasonally operating underground bakery, and the elevated water tank of the former railway. The post office closed in the 1960s. The narrow-gauge Central Australia Railway closed in 1958.

The name Farina was adopted on 5 April 1979.[8]

The town has not been inhabited since 1967,[12] with the closest residents living at Farina station, visible to the west of the town. A bush camping area is maintained by the owners of Farina station.

In 2008, Farina Restoration Group was formed, and in May of that year, 30 people attended a 14-day restoration program at Farina.[13] These efforts have included the repair of the bakery and the addition of informational signs.[14]

Cemeteries

The town's cemetery is a few kilometres away via a signposted track. Of interest is the Afghan corner of the cemetery, which contains several headstones with both English and Arabic inscriptions, plus several headstones without inscriptions, marking the resting place of former Farina residents of Afghan origin, who were involved in or connected with the camel trains which used to provide transport services before the railway was extended. In the Islamic tradition, all the gravestones face Mecca

First World War enlistments

During the First World War, 33 men who were born in Farina enlisted for the duration of the war and for four months after its end. All of them were volunteers. Of the total, five were killed in action, ten were wounded, and one died at sea en route to England. One of the youngest Farina residents to enlist was 15-year-old William James Denham Robinson, who used an alias of Charles Robison; he served in both world wars.

World War II

During World War II, 35 men born in Farina enlisted. Of those, nine served in the Royal Australian Air Force. The first man enlisted on 18 October 1939 and the last man on 15 March 1945. The youngest was 18 when he enlisted and the oldest was 45. Three men were killed in action and a fourth died during his service in the army. The last Farina man was discharged in October 1948.

Climate

Farina has a hot desert climate, although a temperature station has not been in operation there since 1939.[6]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Search results for 'Farina, LOCB' with the following datasets being selected – 'Suburbs and Localities', 'Government Towns', 'Local Government Areas', 'SA Government Regions' and 'Gazetteer' . Location SA Map Viewer . Government of South Australia . 22 March 2019.
  2. Web site: Morgan . William . Untitled proclamation re the "Township of Farina Town" . The South Australian Government Gazette . Government of South Australia . 22 March 2019 . 621 . 21 March 1878.
  3. Web site: Kentish. P.M.. GEOGRAPHICAL NAMES ACT 1991 Notice to Assign Boundaries to Places (localities of Beltana, Cockburn, Marree, Farina and Waukaringa). The South Australian Government Gazette. South Australian government. 20 February 2018. 2691. 29 May 1997.
  4. Web site: District of Stuart Background Profile. ELECTORAL COMMISSION SA. 22 March 2019.
  5. Web site: Federal electoral division of Grey, boundary gazetted 16 December 2011. Australian Electoral Commission. 22 March 2019.
  6. Web site: Monthly climate statistics: Summary statistics MARREE (FARINA) (nearest station) . Commonwealth of Australia, Bureau of Meteorology . 23 March 2019.
  7. Web site: Farina . State Library of South Australia . 2 December 2023.
  8. Web site: A compendium of the place names of South Australia . Manning . Geoffrey H. . 2012 . The State Library of South Australia . 2 December 2023 .
  9. Book: Fuller . Basil . The Ghan: The Story of the Alice Springs Railway . 1975 . Rigby . Adelaide, S.A. . 9781742572758.
  10. http://www.australiangeographic.com.au/travel/destinations/2010/05/six-of-the-best-ghost-towns/ Brennan, Bridget (2010). "Six of the best ghost towns", Australian Geographic, Issue 97, 21 May.
  11. News: 6 April 1910 . The Murnpeowie Meteorite . 8 . The Register (Adelaide, SA : 1901 - 1929) . 29 May 2023 . Trove.
  12. News: Corvo . Shannon . Lysaght . Gary-Jon . Ghost town restoration of Farina a labour of love for volunteers across the years . ABC North and West SA . 2019-08-27 . 2022-10-04 .
  13. Web site: The Farina time-line . farinarestoration.com . 2016-06-05.
  14. News: Grey nomad volunteers are dusting off an outback ghost town . Mike . Sexton . 2013-06-20 . ABC News . Australian Broadcasting Corporation . 2023-07-03.