|
|
|
A potted history: The Surveyor General (Major Thomas Mitchell) first mapped out NSW in 1834. The area now known as Canyonleigh was called “Wombat Brush”. Jane Murray called her forty acrea property “Canyan Leigh” when she opened that post office there in 1893.
The Paddy’s River area was known as Murrimba. There were two Hotels, a Blacksmiths Shop and Jane Murray’s General Store located there. The bushranger’s Ben Hall, John Gilbert and John Dunn held up the General Store and “Jeffery’s Inn” in 1865.
The Canyan Leigh Post Office was moved to “Glencoe” (now in ruins on
Inverary Road) in 1909, then in 1915 a new office was established at
Hoddle’s Crossroads, “Keerarbin” post office opposite Quigg’s reserve
closed in 1949.
There were Timber Mills located at: Millview, Golden Valley, Sandy Flat, Hickory Hill, Foxgrove (Now Cobbadah) and the Bangadilly Road area. There were a number of coal mines in Canyonleigh: the main one being on Foxgrove Road. At another mine a tram line was used to haul coal across the Long Swamp. In the 1980’s Government bureaucracy saw fit to change the name from Canyan Leigh to Canyonleigh. The 1950’s-1960’s saw a mass clearing of Canyonleigh timberstands to convert the land pastoral use.
The Canyonleigh Community Hall (opened in 1993) was constructed by members of the Canyonleigh community from timber on the Hall site and stands as a tribute of local ingenuity. |