Nimmitabel
Template:Use Australian English Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Script error: No such module "infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Nimmitabel (Template:IPAc-en Script error: No such module "Respell".[2]) is a small town in the Monaro region in southeast New South Wales, Australia, in the Snowy Monaro Regional Council local government area. At the Template:CensusAU, Nimmitabel had a population of 324.[1]
Etymology
Nimmitabel means "the place where many waters start or divide" in the local Aboriginal language.[3] Many various spellings were adopted for the town, including: Nimmytabell (1837), Nimitabelle (1838), Nimmitabool (1841), Nimmittybel (1844), Nimmitabel (1845), Nimmitybelle, Nimithybale, Nymytable (all in 1848), Nimmitabil (1851), Nimitabille and Nimithy Bell (1856), Nimaty-Bell (1857), Nimmitabel (1858)[4]
History
Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- 1840 Locals started calling the village Nimoitebool
- 1845 Appears on Townsend's map as Nimmitabel
- 1858 Church was built
- 1857 Renewal of licence for hotel
- 1858 Post office arrives
- 1861 Bell's Store
- 1863 Separate Courthouse built
- 1865 Geldmacher builds windmill
- 1866 Cameron's Store opens
- 1869 Nimmitabel Public School opens
- 1912 Railway arrives
- 1921 Area's first saw-mill opens
- 1959 Used as location for multi-Oscar nominated film The Sundowners[5]
- 1986 Railway closes
Geography
The town is Script error: No such module "convert". south of Cooma and Script error: No such module "convert". west of Bega. Nimmitabel is on a stretch of highway shared between the Snowy Mountains Highway (HWY B72) and the Monaro Highway (HWY B23). It is on the southern end of the Great Dividing Range, at the west of the Monaro Range, and lies Script error: No such module "convert". west of the Wadbilliga National Park. The area around Nimmitabel has the only true chernozem soil in Australia, a very rich, fertile and dark coloured soil.[6]
Climate
Nimmitabel has a cool oceanic climate (Köppen Cfb) with cool to mild summers and cold winters, with evenly-spread, modest rainfall throughout the year. Frosts occur regularly throughout the year, even at the height of summer. It is decently sunny, with 102.2 clear days annually, being largely on account of its leeward location.
Because of its elevation and southern latitude, several snowfalls can be expected each year from May through to October; on rare occasions, snow flurries may even occur in summer. Snow can occur heavily at times. The town has recorded sub-freezing daily maxima on multiple occasions: Script error: No such module "convert". on 13 June 1965, and shortly thereafter Script error: No such module "convert". on 17 July 1965.
Script error: No such module "weather box".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Popular Culture
The village was featured on Episode 23 of the 10th Series of the ABC TV program "Back Roads" aired on 22nd October 2024[7]
Gallery
-
Geldmacher's windmill tower at Nimmitabel
-
The concrete elephant “George” at the Nimmitabel Bakery
-
Nimmitabel railway station 21 years after the last train
References
<templatestyles src="Reflist/styles.css" />
- ↑ a b Template:Census 2021 AUS
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Template:NSW GNR
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ "America's Best, Britain's Finest: A Survey of Mixed Movies" - Google Books, John Howard Reid, pub. Lulu.com, March 2006. Template:ISBN, p.241
- ↑ KG McQueen "The Tertiary Geology And Geomorphology Of The Monaro: The Perspective In 1994" [1] Centre For Australian Regolith Studies, Canberra 1994
- ↑ https://iview.abc.net.au/video/RF2327V023S00
Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
External links
- Template:Wikivoyage-inline
- Template:Sister-inline
- Aerial photo of Nimmitabel from TerraserverScript error: No such module "Unsubst".
- Information about Nimmitabel, including history and photos
- Some history from Peter Goed, particular focus on the 1950s
- Article: "The Day the Stars Came to Nimmitabel..The Making of the Sundowners" by Peter Goed @ Cooma-Monaro website (includes photos from the making of the film in 1959)