Pilga Station is a pastoral lease and sheep station located 48km (30miles) south west of Marble Bar and 210km (130miles) north of Newman in the Pilbara region of Western Australia.
The station occupies an area of 215025acres and in 1946 had 159miles of fencing and the property was divided into 16 paddocks. The property also had 23 wells, was equipped with mills, a homestead and shearing shed.[1] The Shaw River flows through a portion of Pilga.
In 1928 sheep from Pilga produced 134 bales of wool.[2]
Shearers shore 15,400 sheep at Pilga in 1934, including 3,000 summer lambs producing 151 bales of wool; the clip was 3LT better than the previous record.[3]
In 1954 the station owner, J. J. Doughty, took miners to the Wardens court to seek the forfeiture of 16 mining tenements for non-compliance of labour conditions and continual use of water rights at the Cooglegong tin-field situated on the property.[4]