Farina was settled in 1878, reaching its peak in the late 1880s when it was a transport, mining and agriculture hub on the alignment of the Great Northern Railway, later known as the Ghan Railway.
Dieri, Arabana, and Kokatha Uwankara people lived around the Lake Eyre Basin.
Song cycles, dance rituals and stories describe landmarks, water sources, and natural features created by the ancestral begins from the Dreaming. Some Songlines traverse hundreds of kilometres.
The outback bakery oopened in 2013, operating from late April through to May.
Farina Town Walking Trail
The Lake Eyre Basin has 71 Aboriginal language groups and many songlines and historical trade routes (ochre). Songlines are believed by the Aboriginal people to be the journeys of creation ancestors which shaped the land and environment.
The Dreaming is the time when the land was inhabited by ancestral beings.
Dreaming Spirits "also deposited the spirits of unborn children and determined the forms of human society", thereby establishing tribal law and totemic paradigms (Molyneaux, Brian Leigh; Vitebsky, Piers (2001).
The Lake Eyre Basin has natural extremes of drought and flood, and many Aboriginal groups have lived scattered across a vast area.
Performance of tritichinna ceremony of snake totem, Urabunna Tribe, Lake Eyre (pub. in The commonwealth of Australia; federal handbook, prepared in connection with the eighty-fourth meeting of the British association for the advancement of science, held in Australia, August, 1914[, by George Handley Knibbs |
During the rainy season, there existed plentiful food sources, but the Aboriginal people stayed camped around waterholes and springs during the dry periods.
1850s
A pastoral lease was taken up in the area along the Leigh Creek, known as Government Gums, in 1859 by George Davenport and William Fowler.
A site for a town was surveyed in 1876 near the water reserve, with 432 town blocks, 88 suburban blocks and small acreages inspired by Colonel Light's planned grid of Adelaide. The area was proclaimed a town on 21/03/1878 and called, “Government Gums”.
Tom Harding and a group of grey nomads begin restoring the town around 2008.
A pastoral lease was taken up in the area along the Leigh Creek, known as Government Gums, in 1859 by George Davenport and William Fowler.
1870s
Governor Jervois named the town "Farina" from the Latin word for flour.
The Finke River Mission was established in 1877 by German missionaries.
100 adults and 50 children living in Farina in 1880.
Farina boomed from 1882 to 1884.
The government gave a free travel pass to Farina to increase settlement.
In 1886, the population was 300, with 2 butchers, storekeepers, hotels, fruiterers, colt breakers, 3 blacksmiths, 4 saddlers, 8 teamsters, 2 debt-free churches and 1 accountant.
Afghan cameleers lived in tents before purchasing land outside the township, and building corrugated iron huts. Remains of an Afghan village have been found outside of Farina (Parkes 1997).
1900s
WWII
1920s
of the railway line, is now a mere
street of houses in the sand."
'The Big Walkabout', Shepparton Advertiser (Vic. : 1887 - 1953), 9 December, 1938
1940s and WWII
The school closed in 1957.
By 1967, all residents had left the town because of the drought and the re-routing of the original Ghan train line. (3.)
In 1878 construction commenced on the Port Augusta and Government Gums (Farina) Railway.
The foundation stone of the Transcontinental Hotel was laid by a local Aboriginal woman on 5 June 1878.
The hotel was licensed in 1879, at the same time as the second hotel in town, the Exchange Hotel. There were also breweries within the two hotels.
The Telegraph Office opened on 28 September 1878. Charles Todd also partly established a meteorological station at Farina.
The Telegraph Office opened on 28 September 1878. Charles Todd also partly established a meteorological station at Farina.
The narrow-gauge railway line from Port Augusta, through the Pichi Richi Pass, to Quorn opened in 1879 and extended north to Government Gums (Farina) in 1882.
1880s
"John Opie joined the mounted
police in 1882, and a year later, with others, was
stationed at the Government Gums, now known as Farina.
police in 1882, and a year later, with others, was
stationed at the Government Gums, now known as Farina.
A canvas tent was their dwelling
place, and their lock-up a post, to which prisoners were chained." (1.)
place, and their lock-up a post, to which prisoners were chained." (1.)
|
In 1886, the population was 300, with 2 butchers, storekeepers, hotels, fruiterers, colt breakers, 3 blacksmiths, 4 saddlers, 8 teamsters, 2 debt-free churches and 1 accountant.
Afghan cameleers lived in tents before purchasing land outside the township, and building corrugated iron huts. Remains of an Afghan village have been found outside of Farina (Parkes 1997).
1900s
FARINA: Premises of the police station at Farina, South Australia. 1900, SLSA |
FARINA: Premises of the Transcontinental Hotel at Farina, South Australia., About 1900, SLSA |
FARINA: Premises of the post office at Farina where local children play by a post and rail fence. About 1900, SLSA |
FARINA: Premises of the school at Farina, with a partial view of the schoolmaster's residence. About 1900, SLSA |
Exchange Hotel, Farina, SA, 1900, SLSA |
FARINA: A group of four Aboriginal people sitting with a dog outside their dwelling at Farina; left to right: Lizzie; Lucy; Cramner; Jimmie Tart. 1900, SLSA |
Advertiser (Adelaide, SA : 1889 - 1931), Wednesday 12 October 1904 |
Adelaide Observer (SA : 1843 - 1904), Saturday 2 January 1904 |
Donkey teams at Innamincka en route to Farina with Nappa Merrie wool, SA. Observer (Adelaide, SA : 1905 - 1931), Saturday 14 August 1909 |
Farina, SA : Camel drawn wagons outside Manfield building, Approximately 1890-1910. SLSA |
Farina : Interior timber church (Anglican). View of alter, organ and lectern, Approximately 1890-1910. SLSA |
ABORIGINAL MUSTERERS. Sydney Mail and New South Wales Advertiser (NSW : 1871 - 1912), Wednesday 16 November 1910 |
Chronicle (Adelaide, SA : 1895 - 1954), Saturday 5 February 1910 |
A BLACKFELLOW'S WURLIE E AT FARINA. Chronicle (Adelaide, SA : 1895 - 1954), Saturday 14 January 1911 (Wurley- Aboriginal shelter) |
THE FARINA RESERVOIR, FROM WHICH THE RESIDENTS OBTAIN THEIR WATER SUPPLY. Chronicle (Adelaide, SA : 1895 - 1954), Saturday 14 January 1911 |
1920s
FARINA, SA: Group of men standing on the platform of the Farina railway station. 1920, SLSA |
Exchange Hotel, located in Farina, South Australia, on the right when Frederick J. Rodley was the publican (1921-1922), with three other smaller buildings to the left. About 1921, SLSA |
The aeroplane, Wattle Bird, recently landed on the racecourse at Farina on the way to Oodnadatta. SA, Chronicle (Adelaide, SA : 1895 - 1954), Saturday 18 February 1928, |
ACROSS BARREN WASTES TO FARINA. — A 30-donkey power waggon, .bringing in a load of wool to Farina. Sun (Sydney, NSW : 1910 - 1954), Friday 13 July 1928 |
FARINA, SA: Two Aboriginal ladies - Polly and Fanny. 1920, SLSA |
1930s
Premises of Bell Bros. general store in Farina, South Australia. About 1930, SLSA |
Farina, SA, Chronicle (Adelaide, SA : 1895 - 1954), Thursday 28 June 1934 |
Mail (Adelaide, SA : 1912 - 1954), Saturday 14 September 1935 |
News (Adelaide, SA : 1923 - 1954), Thursday 25 June 1936 |
SAND IS RELENTLESSLY CREEPING ON FARINA and slowly burying the once prosperous town in the Far North, 400 miles from Adelaide. News (Adelaide, SA : 1923 - 1954), Thursday 25 June 1936 |
IF YOU WANT TO SEE HOW a 3 1/2-ton load of wood cm sink into the sand of a water course, go to Farina. Mail (Adelaide, SA : 1912 - 1954), Saturday 16 October 1937 |
of the railway line, is now a mere
street of houses in the sand."
'The Big Walkabout', Shepparton Advertiser (Vic. : 1887 - 1953), 9 December, 1938
FARINA: Railway accident involving a locomotive at Farina, SA. 1939, SLSA |
1940s and WWII
During World War II, 35 men born in Farina enlisted.
1950s
Toas are small composite and painted artifacts made by members of the Diyari people, collected by Lutheran Missionary Johann Reuther at the Killalpaninna Mission in South Australia beginning in 1904. Toas combined Aboriginal and European technologies.
News (Adelaide, SA : 1923 - 1954), Thursday 23 November 1950 |
1950s
Benno (Ben) Murray (1893–1994), stockman, cameleer, linguist, and storyteller who assisted the ethnologist Norman Tindale , settled in the deserted town of Farina in 1959, soon becoming its sole resident.
The old police station was his home, and the rail link enabled him to "jump on the rattler" and visit friends and family in Marree, to the north. (4.) (son of Bejah Dervish, Afghan cameleer, and Annie Murray, an Arabana-Thirari woman whose European name derived from the family for whom she worked as a maid).
1960s
1980s
In 1980, when the railway line moved west of Lake Torrens, through Tarcoola, Farina rail was no longer in use.
At the 2006 census, Farina had a population of 55.
2000s
Around Farina
Farina, SA, ruins, rail precinct |
Exchange Hotel, Farina, SA, ruins |
Transcontinetal Hotel, Farina, SA, ruins. The building was the Transcontinental Hotel from 1878 to 1928. It was the Bush Nursing Hospital from 1928 to 1945. From 1945 to 1955 it was a boarding house. |
Farina, SA, ruins |
Farina, SA, ruins |
Former post office, Farina, SA |
Farina Restoration Group Inc The most Remote Underground Pop Up Bakery, underground bakehouse, Farina, SA (built 1888) |
Farina, SA, ruins |
Historic Cemetery, Farina, SA |
Farins, SA, campgrounds, accomodation |
Things To Do and Places To Go