Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography/united-kingdom

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Dubbo

Dubbo

FieldValue
typecity
nameDubbo
statensw
image2020-10-07 Dubbo, New South Wales 3.jpg
captionDubbo town centre from above, 2020
reliefyes
coordinates
pop43,516
pop_year2021
pop_footnotes
poprank37
established1849
1966 (city)
established_footnotes
postcode2830
elevation275
elevation_footnotes
area182.6
timezoneAEST
utc+10
timezone-dstAEDT
utc-dst+11
dist1392
dir1NW
location1Sydney
dist2144
dir2NNW
location2Orange
dist3120
dir3NNE
location3Parkes
dist466
dir4S
location4Gilgandra
dist5308
dir5SW
location5Tamworth
lgaDubbo Regional Council
regionOrana
countyGordon
stategovDubbo
fedgovParkes
maxtemp24.7
maxtemp_footnotes
mintemp10.3
mintemp_footnotes
rainfall584.5
rainfall_footnotes
Note

1966 (city) | timezone-dst = AEDT | utc-dst = +11 | near-n = | near-ne = | near-e = | near-se = | near-s = | near-sw = | near-w = | near-nw = Dubbo ( ; ) is a city in the Orana Region of New South Wales, Australia. It is the largest population centre in the Orana region, with a population of 43,516 at June 2021.

The city is located at the intersection of the Newell, Mitchell, and Golden highways. Dubbo officially became a city in the year 1966. Dubbo is located roughly 275 m above sea level, 303 km north-west of Sydney (400 km by road) and is a major road and rail freight hub to other parts of New South Wales. It is linked by national highways north to Brisbane and Charleville, south towards Melbourne and Canberra, east to Sydney, Newcastle and Gosford and west to Broken Hill and Adelaide.

Dubbo is included in the rainfall and weather forecast region for the Central West Slopes and in the Central West Slopes and Plains division of the Bureau of Meteorology forecasts.

History

Evidence of habitation by the Wiradjuri tribe, Indigenous Australians dates back over 40,000 years.

Explorer and surveyor John Oxley was the first European to report on the area, now known as Dubbo, in 1818.

Dulhunty occupied a property, known as Dubbo Station (established in 1828), from the early 1830s on a squatting basis. With the passing of the Squatting Act in 1836, he took out a licence on the property.

Dulhunty showed an affinity with Indigenous Australians, his party included some 40 Aboriginals and he favoured using Aboriginal names for properties, including Dubbo. Dubbo is now thought to be a mispronunciation of the local Wiradjuri word thubbo, but because of a lack of precise records from Dulhunty at the time and an incomplete knowledge of the Wiradjuri language today, some conjecture remains over the word's meaning. Some references indicate that Dubbo was the name of an old Wiradjuri man who resided at the site when Dulhunty took the land. Dubbo's name apparently meant "red soil", consistent with the local landscape. Thubbo or tubbo possibly is Wiradjuri for "head covering".

Dundullimal Homestead is a farmhouse from that period, built around 1840 by John Maugham on his 26000 acre sheep station. The building is one of the oldest homesteads still standing in western NSW and today is open to visitors.

In 1846, due to the number of settlers in the area, the government decided to establish a courthouse, police station, and lock-up in the Dubbo area. A constable's residence was completed in 1847 and a wooden slab-construction courthouse and lock-up was completed in early 1848. By this time, the settlement had only four buildings - the constable's residence, courthouse and lock-up, a store, and an inn.

Due to the lack of title for the land, in 1848, storekeeper Jean Emile Serisier organised a petition asking for a land sale of town allotments. The plan was presented to the colony's surveyor general in May 1849 by surveyor G. Boyle White. The settlement was gazetted as a village in November 1849 with the first land sales taking place in 1850. Population growth was slow until the Victorian gold rush of the 1860s brought an increase in north–south trade. The first bank was opened in 1867. Steady population growth caused the town to be proclaimed a municipality in 1872, when its population was 850. By 1897, Dubbo had a general store, Carrier Arms, a slab courthouse, a jail, and a police hut. The final section of the Molong to Dubbo railway opened in late May 1925. Dubbo was officially proclaimed a city in 1966.

Heritage listings

The former Dubbo Post Office

Dubbo has a number of heritage-listed sites, including:

  • Cobra Street: Dubbo RAAF Stores Depot
  • Macquarie Street: Talbragar Shire Council Chambers
  • 110–114 Macquarie Street: National Australia Bank building, Dubbo
  • 118 Macquarie Street: Colonial Mutual Life building, Dubbo
  • 195–197 Macquarie Street: Milestone Hotel
  • 215 Macquarie Street: Old Dubbo Gaol
  • Main Western railway: Dubbo railway station
  • Main Western railway 462.762 km: Macquarie River railway bridge, Dubbo
  • Obley Road: Dundullimal Homestead

Geography

Plains of the Dubbo region, north of the township

The Macquarie River runs through Dubbo, as does Troy Creek. The City of Dubbo lies within a transition zone between the ranges and tablelands of the Great Dividing Range to the east and the Darling Basin plains to the west.

Climate

Dubbo falls in the warm temperate climate zone. Under the Köppen climate classification, Dubbo has a humid subtropical climate (Cfa) that borders the semi-arid climate (BSk). Summers are warm to hot, and winters cool to cold, bringing some occurrences of early morning frost but generally no snowfall – unlike the nearby city of Orange. The last occurrence of snow was recorded by The Dubbo Liberal and Macquarie Advocate in July 1951 and 1920, with a heavy fall of snow in July 1900. The town's location in this transition area allows a large temperature variation during the year, with high summer temperatures, often peaking above 40 °C typical of western New South Wales, and colder subzero temperatures typical of the Central Tablelands in winter.

Dubbo's location in the transition area between the Central Tablelands and the Central Western Plains has provided a mild distribution of rainfall throughout the year. Dubbo's wettest month is January with an average rainfall of 58.7 mm occurring on average over five days. Evaporation in the Dubbo area averages around 1880 mm per year. Dubbo is considerably sunny, receiving 148.6 days of clear skies annually, in contrast to Sydney's 104 days.

Wind patterns vary over the whole year. The prevailing winds at Dubbo are from the southeast, south, southwest and west, which account for a combined 64.4% of the wind direction over the whole year.

|Jan record high C = 46.1 |Feb record high C = 46.1 |Mar record high C = 40.8 |Apr record high C = 34.4 |May record high C = 28.6 |Jun record high C = 24.2 |Jul record high C = 24.0 |Aug record high C = 28.3 |Sep record high C = 35.5 |Oct record high C = 38.1 |Nov record high C = 44.3 |Dec record high C = 44.9 |Jan record low C = 5.8 |Feb record low C = 6.3 |Mar record low C = 3.4 |Apr record low C = -2.2 |May record low C = -4.0 |Jun record low C = -4.9 |Jul record low C = -6.0 |Aug record low C = -4.9 |Sep record low C = -3.2 |Oct record low C = -0.4 |Nov record low C = 2.0 |Dec record low C = 4.5 |Jan dew point C = 11.2 |Feb dew point C = 11.8 |Mar dew point C = 9.7 |Apr dew point C = 7.0 |May dew point C = 6.7 |Jun dew point C = 6.6 |Jul dew point C = 5.0 |Aug dew point C = 4.3 |Sep dew point C = 5.5 |Oct dew point C = 5.3 |Nov dew point C = 8.0 |Dec dew point C = 8.3 |year dew point C = 7.4

Demographics

|1921|5032 |1933|8344 |1947|9686 |1954|12009 |1961|14118 |1966|15629 |1971|17810 |1976|20149 |1981|23986 |1986|25796 |1991|28064 |1996|30102 |2001|30860 |2006|30574 |2011|32327 |2016|34339 |2021|38783

St Brigids Catholic Church

In August 2021, the population of Dubbo was 43,516; 51.6% of residents were female and 48.4% were male. The median age is 35, slightly younger than the national average of 38. People aged 0–14 constitute 21.5% of the population compared to 18.2% nationally, and 15.6% of residents are Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander; the median age in this group is 22.

About 81.2% of residents report being born in Australia, notably higher than the national average of 66.9%. Other than Australia, the most common countries of birth are India (1.7%), Nepal (1.6%), England (1.0%), the Philippines (0.8%), and New Zealand (0.7%). The most common reported ancestries in Dubbo are Australian, English, Australian Aboriginal, Irish, and Scottish.

Around 72.3% of residents report both parents having been born in Australia, significantly higher than the national average of 45.9%. About 82.7% of people only spoke English at home. Other languages spoken at home included Nepali (1.7%), Punjabi (0.8%), Malayalam (0.5%), Urdu (0.5%), and Mandarin (0.4%).

The top religious groups in Dubbo are Catholic (26.4%), Anglican (17.7%), and Uniting Church (3.7%); 27.2% reported no religion (lower than the 38.4% nationally) and 9.2% did not answer the question.

Economy

Macquarie Street, a civic and commercial hub

The city's largest private employer is Fletcher International Exports, which exports lamb and mutton globally. Other local industries reflect the city's status as a regional base for surrounding agricultural regions.

A large employer is the Dubbo Base Hospital, with hospitals (excluding psychiatric hospitals) being the area's single largest employer.

Retail

Dubbo Square

Dubbo is also considered a major shopping centre for the surrounding regional areas in the Central and Far Western districts of New South Wales. Dubbo has many shopping districts, including the large Orana Mall (East Dubbo), Macquarie and Talbragar Streets (City Centre), Centro Dubbo, Riverdale, Delroy Park (West Dubbo) and Tamworth Street local stores (South Dubbo). Dubbo features many boutiques and unique stores, as well as major national stores.

Tourism

Taronga Western Plains Zoo

Tourism is also a significant local industry. Dubbo features the open-range Taronga Western Plains Zoo, which is home to various species of endangered animals, including the white, black, and Indian rhinoceroses, and runs a successful breeding program for a number of endangered species. The zoo is home to numerous specimens from around the world in spacious open-range moat enclosures, grouped according to their continent of origin. Other town attractions include the historic Dundullimal Homestead, and the historic Old Dubbo Gaol in the middle of the commercial centre of Macquarie Street. The Western Plains Cultural Centre includes four gallery exhibition spaces, two museum exhibition spaces, and a community arts centre.

The Royal Flying Doctor Service base at Dubbo Regional Airport has a large visitor information centre, staffed by volunteers, which features a King Air 200 turboprop aircraft and a variety of touch-screen interactive displays illustrating aspects of RFDS operations.

Rare-earths

The Dubbo mine and processing plant, located on the Toongi mineral deposit, has total ore reserves of over 75 million tonnes, and a rare-earth oxides proportion of 0.74%. The mine will produce zirconium dioxide, a material used in dental implants. The mine is being developed by Australian Strategic Minerals in partnership with Hyundai, with plans to process the ore in South Korea. It is a recipient of a government grant under the Commonwealth Government's "International Partnerships in Critical Minerals" program.

Education

The 20 schools and secondary colleges include the Dubbo School of Distance Education. It is home to one of the four main campuses of Charles Sturt University, which is located next to the Senior Campus of Dubbo College (successor to Dubbo High School, founded in 1917). There are three private K–12 schools located in Dubbo which are Macquarie Anglican Grammar School, Dubbo Christian School and St Johns College.

Architecture

Dubbo has several fine examples of Victorian civic architecture, including the (third) Courthouse (1887), the Lands Office with its use of timber and corrugated iron cladding, and the railway station (1881).{{Cite web |title=Dubbo |publisher=WalkAbout |access-date = 19 April 2008 |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080223121426/http://www.walkabout.com.au/locations/NSWDubbo.shtml |archive-date = 23 February 2008}}. Towards the centre of the city, the older residential areas contain numerous examples of red brick houses built in the "California Bungalow" style architecture of the early 20th century, together with Victorian terraced houses (mostly in the Darling Street area) and a few Edwardian semidetached homes.

File:Dubbo Court House, NSW, Australia, 2021, 02.jpg|alt=|Dubbo Courthouse File:Old Bank building on Macquarie St (1).jpg|alt=|Old Bank Building File:California Bungalow Styled Home.jpg|alt=|Bungalow home File:Station Master's Residence in Dubbo 01.jpg|alt=|Station Master's Residence; an early Victorian residence File:Terrace in Dubbo New South Wales.jpg|Victorian Terraces

Transport

[[Dubbo railway station

Dubbo railway station lies on the Main Western railway line between Sydney and Bourke and opened in 1881. The Mindyarra Maintenance Centre is scheduled to open 700 metres to the east of the station in the mid-2020s, as the home depot for the NSW TrainLink Regional Train fleet.

Dubbo Buslines operates services within the city. BusBiz operates coach services under contract to NSW TrainLink and maintains a depot in the city.

Dubbo Regional Airport has flights to Sydney (QantasLink, Rex Airlines), Newcastle (FlyPelican), Canberra (FlyPelican) and other small outback New South Wales towns (Air Link).

Media

Local print media include:

  • The Daily Liberal
  • The Weekly Dubbo Photo News

Three commercially licensed radio stations broadcast in the city:

  • Triple M broadcasts on FM 93.5, playing rock music.
  • 2DU – a local heritage station, it broadcasts on AM 1251.
  • Zoo FM – a rock music station, it broadcasts on FM 92.7.

ABC Radio also has a studio in the city: ABC Western Plains, local news and talk on 95.9FM.

ABC Radio broadcasts five services to the Dubbo area: ABC Local, ABC Radio National, Triple J, ABC Classic FM, and ABC NewsRadio.

The city also has narrowcast stations on 90.3 FM Racing Radio, a tourist radio station and a country music station. The city has two community stations: DCFM 88.9 Dubbo Community radio, and Rhema FM, which broadcasts Christian music.

The Dubbo area is served by five television stations. In common with all Australian TV stations, they now broadcast digital transmissions only, with the primary program in each case being designated as:

  • Seven (formerly branded as Prime7 and Prime Television), 7two, 7mate, 7Bravo, 7flix – owned and operated by the Seven Network since 2022 and formerly a Seven Network affiliate.
  • 10 Regional, 10 Drama, 10 Comedy, Nickelodeon – owned and operated by Network 10
  • WIN Television's Nine, 9Go!, 9Gem, 9Life – an affiliate of the Nine Network
  • ABC TV – ABC, ABC Family, ABC Kids, ABC Entertains, ABC News
  • SBS Television – SBS, SBS Viceland, SBS World Movies, SBS WorldWatch, SBS Food, NITV

Seven (formerly branded as Prime7 and Prime Television) and WIN Television both produce half-hour-long local news bulletins. Seven News (formerly Prime7 News and Prime News) screens at 6 pm, while WIN News screens at 5:30 pm from Monday to Friday. Nine News Central West was an hour-long bulletin that mixed local and national news, broadcast on the Southern Cross Austereo primary channel, when it was a Nine affiliate.

Subscription Television services are provided by Foxtel.

Sport and recreation

Dubbo Botanical Garden
Victoria Park

Sports play a big role in Dubbo's community life. Rugby league is popular in Dubbo. Two teams compete in the Group 11 Rugby League – the Dubbo CYMS and Dubbo Macquarie Raiders. The city also has an Australian rules football team, the Dubbo Demons, who were premiers in the Central West Australian Football League in 2007. Two rugby union teams are active, the Dubbo Kangaroos (Roos) and the Dubbo Rhinos, which compete in the Central West Rugby competition, the Blowes Clothing Cup.

Dubbo Junior Cricket Association conducts cricket for over 500 children aged between 5 and 16 during October to March and also conducts first-, second-, and third-grade competitions during this time.

Dubbo has a turf club, which incorporates a pony club and horse racing, and organises shows and gymkhana. Ultimate Frisbee is a new sport to the town and is rapidly growing in popularity.

The Dubbo Ultimate Frisbee Federation (DUFF) is the local Ultimate club and organises a local league and the Dubbo Meerkats Mixed rep side. The Dubbo Rams compete in the men's and women's NSW State Basketball Leagues. Netball is also popular in Dubbo with competitions every weekend for all age groups during netball season at the Nita McGrath netball courts near the Macquarie River in Central Dubbo. Dubbo has a large Junior and Senior Hockey Association with representative teams for all ages, while also participating in the Premier League Hockey Competition in both the Men's (Dubbo Lions) and Women's (Dubbo Blue Jays). Soccer is very popular, particularly among children. Dubbo has its own all-age men's and women's competition and has three teams – Dubbo FC Bulls, Westside Panthers, and Orana Spurs, which compete in the Western Premier League. Dubbo also has one of the only 10-lane pools outside of Sydney in NSW, the Dubbo Aquatic and Leisure Centre. The centre hosts meets through the Western Swimming Association (and affiliated clubs Dubbo City Swimtech and Orana Aquatic) and school carnivals.

Dubbo's Caltex Park hosted the annual City vs Country Origin match in 2006, with an attendance of 11,423, and in 2014, with an attendance of more than 9,600 in rainy conditions.

In 2007, Dubbo hosted the Junior World Orienteering Championships with most of the events held in the granite outcrops of the nearby Sappa Bulga Range. From this event, the orienteering club Western Plains Orienteers was born. Other sports popular in Dubbo include lawn bowls, via the huge variety of bowling clubs, and golf (on Dubbo's 27-hole golf course).

In 2022, Dubbo hosted the NSWPSSA Boys Cricket State Championships. The competition took place in Victoria Park, and Lady Cuttler Fields 1–5.

Named for a famous blacktracker, the Tracker Riley bike path is part of a 12.5-km walking and cycling loop along the Macquarie River.

The Dubbo Stampede is an annual running festival held in Dubbo. It features multiple distances, including a 5.3km, 10km, half marathon and marathon. It is typically held on Father's Day in September each year.

Image:Memorial gates Dubbo.jpg|WWI Memorial gates Image:Jacaranda avenue Dubbo.jpg|Avenue of jacarandas Image:Dubbo War Memorial 08.jpg|WWII Memorial Image:Tracker Riley path.jpg|Start of Tracker Riley cycle path Image:Shibble Bridge, Dubbo.jpg|Shibble Bridge, Tracker Riley cycleway

Notable people

  • City of Dubbo (former local government area)
  • Electoral district of Dubbo
  • Orana (New South Wales)

References

References

  1. "2021 Dubbo, Census All persons QuickStats". Australian Bureau of Statistics.
  2. "DCC Annual Report". [[City of Dubbo.
  3. {{BoM Aust stats. (September 2014)
  4. ''[[Macquarie Dictionary]], Fourth Edition'' (2005). Melbourne, The Macquarie Library Pty Ltd. {{ISBN. 1-876429-14-3
  5. [https://www.dubbo.nsw.gov.au/ArticleDocuments/278/Rerun%20Business%20Paper%20-%20Ordinary%20Council%20-%2026%20May%202022.pdf.aspx?Embed=Y AGENDA ORDINARY COUNCIL MEETING 26 MAY 2022]
  6. "Great Circle Distance between DUBBO and SYDNEY". Geoscience Australia.
  7. "Driving directions to Sydney NSW". Google Maps.
  8. ''Weather'', The Land newspaper, 29 October 2009, Rural Press, North Richmond, NSW.
  9. "New South Wales Forecast Area Map". Bureau of Meteorology.
  10. Greenwood, Paul. "Traditional Wiradjuri Culture".
  11. "DISCOVER {{!}} Western Plains Cultural Centre".
  12. (6 December 1935). "PIONEER DAYS NEAR DUBBO". [[The Land (newspaper).
  13. "Australian Heritage – Dubbo". Heritage Australia Publishing.
  14. Hornage, Bill. (1974). "Old Dubbo Gaol". Gaol Restoration Committee of the Dubbo Museum and Historical Society.
  15. (16 June 1930). "THE OLD DAYS". [[Dubbo Dispatch and Wellington Independent]].
  16. (13 May 1964). "PLACE NAMES.". National Library of Australia.
  17. "HMS - ViewItem".
  18. Aitken, Christo. (1 April 2008). "Dubbo Urban Heritage Review 2006-07 - Community-Based Heritage Study". Dubbo City Council.
  19. (18 October 1850). "PROCLAMATION.". [[New South Wales Government Gazette]].
  20. Bozier, Rolfe. "Dubbo Station". NSWrail.net.
  21. (31 January 1881). "EXTENSION OF THE RAILWAY FROM WELLINGTON TO DUB[?].". National Library of Australia.
  22. (14 February 1881). "OUR RAILWAYS.". National Library of Australia.
  23. (30 May 1925). "RAILWAYS.". National Library of Australia.
  24. Bozier, Rolfe. "Molong-Dubbo Line". NSWrail.net.
  25. (9 September 1966). "Local Government Act, 1919.—Proclamation". [[Government Gazette of the State of New South Wales]].
  26. "Dubbo".
  27. {{cite NSW SHR. 5054834. Dubbo RAAF Stores Depot (former)
  28. {{cite NSW SHR. 5045080. Talbragar Shire Council Chambers
  29. {{cite NSW SHR. 5045275. CBC Bank
  30. {{cite NSW SHR. 5045497. CML Building
  31. {{cite NSW SHR. 5045507. Kemwah Court
  32. {{cite NSW SHR. 5050315. Old Dubbo Gaol
  33. {{cite NSW SHR. 5011998. Dubbo Railway Station and yard group
  34. {{cite NSW SHR. 5011997. Dubbo rail bridge over Macquarie River
  35. {{cite NSW SHR. 5051311. Dundullimal
  36. Stern, H., de Hoedt, G. and Ernst, J. 2000. Objective Classification of Australian Climates. Bureau of Meteorology, Melbourne.
  37. R.L. Specht. (6 December 2012). "Mediterranean-type Ecosystems: A data source book". Springer Science & Business Media.
  38. "Biodiversity survey and assessment". Charles Sturt University.
  39. Sahukar, R. Gallery, C., Smart, J. and Mitchell, P. (2003). The Bioregions of New South Wales – Their biodiversity, conservation and history. NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service, Hurstville.
  40. (7 July 1900). "Heavy fall of snow in Dubbo". [[Trove]].
  41. {{BoM Aust stats. (March 2013)
  42. "Climate Information".
  43. "Dubbo Airport AWS, NSW Climate (1946-present normals and extremes)". [[Bureau of Meteorology]].
  44. "Statistics by Catalogue Number". Australian Bureau of Statistics.
  45. "Search Census data". Australian Bureau of Statistics.
  46. (24 June 2005). "Program aims to cut Dubbo unemployment". Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
  47. {{Census 2016 AUS
  48. Casey, JP. (22 November 2022). "Expansion and independence: Australia's latest rare earth mines".
  49. (6 December 2024). "$40 million for international critical minerals partnerships".
  50. McCANN, JILL. (2001-06-07). "Dubbo High may be gone but will not be forgotten".
  51. The station is the terminus for the daily [[NSW TrainLink]] ''[[Central West Express. Central West XPT]]'' service from [[Central railway station, Sydney. Sydney]] with connecting road coach services to [[Broken Hill]], [[Bourke, New South Wales. Bourke]], [[Cootamundra]], [[Lightning Ridge]], [[Nyngan]] and [[Tamworth, New South Wales. Tamworth]].{{Cite New South Wales transport timetables. Western Region
  52. [https://www.transport.nsw.gov.au/newsroom-and-events/media-releases/new-regional-train-fleet-on-track NSW Region train fleet on track] Transport for New South Wales 14 August 2017
  53. [https://web.archive.org/web/20190620022247/https://www.transport.nsw.gov.au/system/files/media/documents/2018/Dubbo-Maintenance-Facility-REF.pdf Dubbo Maintenance Facility: Review of Environmental Factors] [[Transport for NSW]] 1 August 2018
  54. (31 May 2017). "Regional Rail".
  55. [https://www.buslinesgroup.com.au/dubbo Home] Dubbo Buslines
  56. "Dubbo Ultimate Frisbee Federation".
  57. AAP. (13 May 2006). "Finch shines for Country". [[TVNZ]].
  58. (24 February 2023). "Tracker Riley cycleway". NSW Government.
  59. "Dubbo Stampede Running Festival 2025 {{!}} Dubbo, NSW".
  60. "Browsing birth town: Dubbo, New South Wales, Australia".
  61. (28 October 2024). "Isobelle Mary Ferguson". [[ANU]]. [[National Centre of Biography]].
  62. (29 February 2016). "Remembering Jack Patten (1905–1957)".
  63. (2007). "Australian Dictionary of Biography". MUP.
  64. Packham Hargrave, Margaret. (15 February 2011). "Councillor for C Ward". LinkMe.
  65. "Amy-Lea Mills {{!}} Deaflympics".
  66. "Serisier, Jean Emile (1824–1881)". Australian Dictionary of Biography, Online.
  67. "Shoyoen Sister City Garden & Jurian Ceremonial Tea House Points of Interest". Dubbo City Council.
  68. ''Dubbo The City and its History'' by Bill Hornage
  69. ''Dubbo City on the Plain'' by Marion Dormer
  70. "Browsing birth town: Dubbo, New South Wales, Australia".
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Dubbo — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report