Kilcoy, Queensland
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kilcoy Queensland |
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Population: | 3200 |
Postcode: | 4515 |
LGA: | Kilcoy Shire Council |
State District: | Nanango |
Federal Division: | Blair |
Kilcoy is a small farming town (pop. 1,200) and the administrative centre of the Kilcoy Shire Local Government Area in South East Queensland, Australia. The township lies on the D'Aguilar Highway, 94 km north west of the state capital, Brisbane, and just to the north of Lake Somerset. Kilcoy Shire covers an area of over 1442 square kilometres with a population of approximately 3200 (2001). Most residents of Kilcoy are employed servicing the surrounding pastoral area.
Kilcoy claims to be the home of the mythical Yowie, Australia's equivalent of Bigfoot or the Yeti, which is said to live in the hills around Kilcoy. There is a large wooden statue of the creature in town. The last reported Yowie sighting in Kilcoy was in December 1979.
Scottish migrants opened up the area in the early 1840s and cleared land to run beef and dairy cattle. The first settler was Sir Evan Mackenzie, who named his landholding 'Kilcoy' after his family estate in Scotland. Timber felling and milling was also important in the early development of Kilcoy, which was founded in the 1890s.
The town itself was originally named 'Hopetown' or 'Hopetoun' but renamed 'Kilcoy' after the mail kept getting lost.
In 1842 on the outskirts of Kilcoy Station owned by MacKenzie, 30-60 Native Aborigines of the Kabi Kabi (or gubi gubi) died from eating flour laced with strychnine or arsenic. The Mackenzies were admonished for this mass killing by attorney-General John Hubert Plunkett (1802 - 1869), who threatened prosecution if an official complaint was lodged. Up until the early 1990s Evan Mackenzie, the station owner, was a prime suspect but recent research suggests that he himself was probably not responsible for the massacre, since he was in Sydney at the time. Though MacKenzie's involvemnet was never verified, this incident was mentioned in a select committee in 1861 and repeated by W. Coote in 1867. The English overseer disappeared upon Mackenzie returning. Mackenzie organised the conspiracy of silence to protect the Englishman. This is one of many massacres that were perpetrated by the white settlers of the area.
[edit] Books
The book "Moreton Bay Scots 1841-59" by John MacKenzie-Smith, published by Church Activists Press in Virginia, Queensland, Australia in 2000 provides some more detail around the founding of Kilcoy and the people involved.
[edit] External links
- Landcruiser Mountain Park The one of the main reasons why people pass through Kilcoy is to go to Landcruiser Mountain Park, whose main event is Mud Bulls and Music, a country music festival / four wheel drive extravagansa.