Currabungla
William Wilson and his second wife, Margaret, lived in Currabungla in 1884.
Now an alpaca farm, we know Currabungla was a village of some sort in the 19th and early 20th centuries because there was a school there. In the 1950s it was an estate which was subdivided to provide allotments for returned soldiers.
Note the names "W Wilson" and "E Withers" in the newspaper article below.
Now an alpaca farm, we know Currabungla was a village of some sort in the 19th and early 20th centuries because there was a school there. In the 1950s it was an estate which was subdivided to provide allotments for returned soldiers.
Note the names "W Wilson" and "E Withers" in the newspaper article below.