Cameron's Corner

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cameron's Corner (red)
Cameron's Corner (red)

Cameron's Corner is the point in the outback of central eastern Australia where the border lines of the states of Queensland, South Australia and New South Wales meet. Located 1 400 km west of Brisbane, it was named after New South Wales Lands Department surveyor, John Brewer Cameron, who spent two years from 1880 marking the border between NSW and Queensland and erected a post there in September 1880. He placed a wooden marker every mile (1.6km) along the interstate frontier.

It was first explored by Captain Charles Sturt, who in 1844 went in search of a supposed inland sea in the centre of the Australian continent.

According to the Brisbane Courier Mail, the sole permanent resident of the town is Bill Mitchell, who operates the Cameron Corner Store and a golf course[1]. Apparently, it "is a Queensland business with a NSW postcode and a SA telephone number."[2]

The Dingo Fence passes through the corner along the New South Wales border.

Corners in Australia
Name: Surveyor-General's Poepell's Haddon Cameron's
States: (WA/NT/SA) (NT/SA/Qld) (SA/Qld) (SA/Qld/NSW)


[edit] References

Languages