St Ruth, Queensland Explained

Type:suburb
St Ruth
State:qld
Coordinates:-27.3169°N 151.2572°W
Pop:165
Postcode:4405
Area:218.1
Timezone:AEST
Utc:+10:00
Dist1:23.5
Dir1:S
Location1:Dalby
Dist2:76.7
Dir2:WNW
Location2:Toowoomba
Dist3:203
Dir3:W
Location3:Brisbane
Lga:Western Downs Region
Lga2:Toowoomba Region
Stategov:Warrego
Stategov2:Condamine
Fedgov:Maranoa
Fedgov2:Groom
Near-N:Dalby
Near-Ne:Bowenville
Near-E:Formartin
Near-Se:West Prairie
Near-S:Tipton
Near-Sw:Cecil Plains
Near-W:Springvale
Near-Nw:Nandi

St Ruth is a locality split between the Western Downs Region and the Toowoomba Region in Queensland, Australia.[1] [2] In the, St Ruth had a population of 165 people.

Geography

The Dalby–Cecil Plains Road (State Route 82) runs through from north to south.[3]

History

The locality was originally called St Ruth's after the parish name which was in turn named after the St Ruth's pastoral run taken up as part of Cecil Plains pastoral run by Henry Stuart Russell in 1842. It was separated from Cecil Plains in 1842 by Richard Jones, probably for the Aberdeen Company. Later the name was simplified to be St Ruth.[1]

In 1877, of land was resumed from the St Ruth pastoral run to establish smaller farms. The land was offered for selection on 24 April 1877.[4]

St Ruth Provisional School opened circa 1888. In 1918, it became a half-time school in conjunction with West Prairie Provisional School (meaning the schools shared a single teacher). In 1919, it returned to full-time school status but then closed in 1920.

Demographics

In the, St Ruth had a population of 139 people.

In the, St Ruth had a population of 165 people.

Education

There are no schools in St Ruth. The nearest government primary schools are Dalby South State School and Dalby State School, both in neighbouring Dalby to the north, and Cecil Plains State School in neighbouring Cecil Plains to the south-west. The nearest government secondary schools are Cecil Plains State School (to Year 9) and Dalby State High School (to Year 12) in Dalby.[5]

Notes and References

  1. 31 December 2017.
  2. 31 December 2017.
  3. St Ruth, Queensland. OpenStreetMap. 18 January 2022.
  4. News: Proclamations under the New Land Acts.. 2 March 1877. The Brisbane Courier. 19 February 2020. Queensland, Australia. 3. Trove. 27 August 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200827084837/https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/1361846. live.
  5. Web site: Layers: Locality; Schools and school catchments . 29 October 2024 . Queensland Globe . Queensland Government.