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Woolgoolga is a town on the Mid North Coast of New South Wales, Australia. It is on the Pacific Highway , approximately 550 km north of Sydney and 365 km south of Brisbane . The closest city to Woolgoolga is Coffs Harbour , which lies 24.8 km to the south.
The Tramways of Woolgoolga, The British Australian Timber Company. Australian Railway History Society, ARHS Bn No. 94, August 1945. N. Yeates: Woolgoolga - The History of a Village, North Coast, N.S.W. Advocate-Opinion Press, Coffs Harbour, 1982. J. Longworth The Jetty and Sawmill Tramways of Woolgoolga.
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Woolgoolga High School is located 2 kilometres (1 mi) north of the township of Woolgoolga. While the school does not have its own sporting facilities, it is within two hundred metres of Woolgoolga Sports Ground and Tennis Courts. The agricultural facilities are located off campus within the township of Woolgoolga.
It took in the coastal strip south from near One Tree Point, Woolgoolga and Nambucca Heads. [15] The thin coastal zone from Coffs Harbour to Evans Head was Yaygir territory. [16] To their north were the twenty groups speaking various dialects of the Bandjalang. The Jukambal were to their west and the Nganyaywana/Anēwan in the environs of .
Group 2 Rugby League on facebook Group 2 is a rugby league competition on the north coast of New South Wales Since 1966, run under the auspices of the Country Rugby League . The Group 2 area runs from Grafton in the north to Macksville in the south.
Nambucca Heads aerial panorama – sunset in 2018 Nambucca Heads panoramic perspective. Nambucca Heads is the current and historical homeland of the Gumbaynggirr people. . Gumbaynggirr lands stretch from Pillar Valley, Tyndale, Grafton and Copmanhurst in the north, to Glen Innes, Guyra and Black Mountain to the west, and to Bowraville to the so
The pull of the Sikh community in Woolgoolga led to Sikhs from other areas of the country migrating to Woolgoolga in the hope they could follow their kinsmen to a banana led success. In 1968 the First Sikh Temple was opened in Woolgoolga, becoming the first Gurdwara to be opened in the country. [9]