Lands administrative divisions of New South Wales

The 141 counties of New South Wales, with the original Nineteen shown in pink
The parishes of Cumberland County

The lands administrative divisions of New South Wales refers to the 141 counties within the Colony of New South Wales, that later became the Australian state of New South Wales.

The counties were further subdivided into 7,419 parishes. There are also three land divisions, approximately one hundred land districts, and several other types of districts as well as land boards used at various periods. There were also thirteen hundreds proclaimed in Cumberland County, which were later abolished. These divisions are part of the lands administrative divisions of Australia. Unlike the local government areas of New South Wales, which have gone through restructuring periods by the government, the counties have been the same since the nineteenth century.[1]

Creation of county areas

1832 map showing the nine counties in use before Thomas Mitchell surveyed the Nineteen Counties in 1834

The first county proclaimed was Cumberland on 6 June 1788. Northumberland was named in 1804. Several other counties were established around Sydney; by the 1820s there were nine counties (see 1828 and 1832 maps). They were: Roxburgh, Northumberland, Durham, Westmoreland, Cumberland, Argyle, Camden, Ayr and Cambridge. They were in the approximate area of the present day cadastral units except that some of them were larger and took up land which was in 1834 assigned to other counties. Ayr and Cambridge were not used in the 1834 counties, taking up area which is approximately in what became Macquarie County and Brisbane County.

Instructions were given to Governor Brisbane in 1825 to survey New South Wales and divide it into counties of various sizes, hundreds, and parishes between 15 and 25 square miles (40 and 65 km²). The Nineteen Counties were surveyed by Thomas Mitchell in 1834. Thirteen hundreds were proclaimed in Cumberland county, but not in anywhere else in New South Wales, and these were repealed in 1888.

As the counties are based on area, rather than population, there are huge differences in the populations of the coastal counties with those for the remote west. The whole of Sydney with several million people is located within Cumberland County, while there are many counties for areas in the Far West which have a very low population.

Use

The counties have little official function and are only now used for land titles and geographic surveying, and as an area of coverage within some industrial awards. Yancowinna County is also legally the only part of the state in the South Australian timezone.

Genealogy records from the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries for New South Wales commonly use the town name followed by the county. The 1911 Britannica lists all towns in New South Wales the same way, such as Albury, Goulburn county, Broken Hill, Yancowinna county and Wagga Wagga, Wynyard county.

Early land districts

Parts of the land which were outside the Nineteen Counties were divided into squatting districts in the early nineteenth century . In 1846 New South Wales was divided into settled districts, intermediate districts and unsettled districts.[2] In 1861 the system of settled and unsettled districts were abolished with the Crown Lands Acts,[3] while new types of districts called first and second class settled districts, as well as town land and suburban land came into being. The various districts used:

Land divisions, boards and districts

The key from a typical cadastral map from the 1890s showed four types of subdivisions; the parish, county, land district and land division. This one is located in the County of Wallace

The Crown Lands Act of 1884 further divided New South Wales into three land divisions; Western, Central and Eastern; as well as Land Boards and Land Districts. This 1890 map shows 14 land boards and 95 land districts; while a 1907 map shows 13 land boards and 103 land districts. The new land districts were different from the previous land districts which had mostly been used in the western areas of the state before counties were proclaimed there. The land boards were named after the location of the head office. The table below shows the land districts used in 1890 and 1907 (some of the locations of the land boards changed and there were new land districts), with the land boards and land divisions:

Land District Land Board (1890) Land Board (1907) Land Division
AlburyWagga Wagga Wagga Wagga Eastern
ArmidaleArmidale Armidale Eastern
Balranald SouthHay Hay Central
Balranald Hay Western Western
Barmedman East Forbes Central
Barmedman Forbes Central
BathurstOrange Orange Eastern
BegaCooma Goulburn Eastern
Bellingen GraftonEastern
BerrimaSydney Eastern Eastern
BingaraMoree Moree Central
BombalaCooma Goulburn Eastern
BoorowaGoulburn Goulburn Eastern
Bourke Bourke Western Western
BraidwoodGoulburn Goulburn Eastern
Breewarrina Bourke Western Western
Breewarrina East Bourke Central
CampbelltownSydney Eastern
CarcoarOrange Orange Eastern
CasinoGrafton Grafton Eastern
CassillisMaitland Eastern
Cobar Bourke Western Western
Cobar East Bourke Central
CondobolinForbes Forbes Central
CoomaCooma Goulburn Eastern
CoonabarabranTamworth Tamworth Central
CoonambleDubbo Dubbo Eastern
CootamundryWagga Wagga Wagga Wagga Eastern
Cootamundry Central Wagga Wagga Eastern
CorowaWagga Wagga Wagga Wagga Central
CowraOrange Orange Eastern
DeniliquinHay Hay Central
DubboDubbo Dubbo Eastern
DungogMaitland Maitland Eastern
EdenCooma Goulburn Eastern
ForbesForbes Forbes Central
Glen InnesArmidale Armidale Eastern
GosfordSydney Maitland Eastern
GoulburnGoulburn Goulburn Eastern
GraftonGrafton Grafton Eastern
GrenfellForbes Forbes Central
GundagaiWagga Wagga Wagga Wagga Eastern
GunnedahTamworth Tamworth Central
GunningGoulburn Goulburn Eastern
Hay NorthHay Western Western
HayHay Hay Central
Hillston NorthHay Western Western
HillstonHay Hay Central
InverellArmidale Armidale Eastern
KempseyGrafton Grafton Eastern
KiamaSydney Sydney Eastern
LismoreGrafton Grafton Eastern
LithgowSydney Orange Eastern
LiverpoolSydney Eastern
MaitlandMaitland Maitland Eastern
MetropolitanSydney Sydney Eastern
MiltonSydney Sydney Eastern
MolongOrange Orange Eastern
MoreeMoree Moree Central
MoruyaSydney Eastern
MudgeeOrange Orange Eastern
MurrurundiTamworth Tamworth Eastern
MurwillumbahGrafton Grafton Eastern
MuswellbrookMaitland Maitland Eastern
NarrabriTamworth Moree Central
NarranderaWagga Wagga Hay Central
NewcastleMaitland Maitland Eastern
NowraSydney Sydney Eastern
Nyngan Dubbo Eastern
OrangeOrange Orange Eastern
ParkesForbes Forbes Central
ParramattaSydney Sydney Eastern
PatersonMaitland Eastern
PenrithSydney Sydney Eastern
PictonSydney Sydney Eastern
Port MacquarieMaitland Grafton Eastern
QueanbeyanCooma Goulburn Eastern
Raymonod TerraceMaitland Eastern
RylstoneOrange Orange Eastern
SconeMaitland Maitland Eastern
SingletonMaitland Maitland Eastern
StroudMaitland Maitland Eastern
TamworthTamworth Tamworth Eastern
TareeMaitland Maitland Eastern
TenterfieldArmidale Armidale Eastern
Tumbarumba North Wagga Wagga Eastern
Tumbarumba Wagga Wagga Eastern
TumutWagga Wagga Wagga Wagga Eastern
UranaWagga Wagga Wagga Wagga Central
Wagga WaggaWagga Wagga Wagga Wagga Central
WalchaArmidale Armidale Eastern
Walgett NorthMoree Western Western
WalgettMoree Moree Central
WarialdaMoree Moree Central
Warren Dubbo Eastern
WellingtonOrange Orange Eastern
WentworthHay Western Western
Wilcannia Bourke Western Western
WindsorSydney Sydney Eastern
WollombiMaitland Eastern
WollongongSydney Sydney Eastern
Wyalong Forbes Central
YassGoulburn Goulburn Eastern
YoungGoulburn Wagga Wagga Eastern

List of counties

A

  • Argyle
  • Arrawatta
  • Ashburnham
  • Auckland

B

C

D

  • Dampier
  • Darling

  • Delalah
  • Denham
  • Denison
  • Dowling
  • Drake
  • Dudley
  • Durham

E

F

  • Farnell
  • Finch
  • Fitzgerald
  • Fitzroy
  • Flinders
  • Forbes
  • Franklin

G

H

  • Harden
  • Hardinge
  • Hawes
  • Hume
  • Hunter

I

  • Inglis (contains part of Tamworth)
  • Irrara

J

  • Jamison

K

  • Kennedy
  • Kilfera
  • Killara
  • King

L

M

  • Macquarie
  • Manara
  • Menindee
  • Mitchell
  • Monteagle
  • Mootwingee
  • Mossgiel
  • Mouramba
  • Murchison
  • Murray

N

O

  • Oxley

P

R

  • Robinson
  • Rous
  • Roxburgh

S

T

  • Taila
  • Tandora
  • Tara
  • Thoulcanna
  • Tongowoko
  • Townsend (contains Deniliquin)

U

  • Ularara
  • Urana

V

W

Y

See also

References

External links