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Eulo, Queensland

Eulo, Queensland

FieldValue
typetown
nameEulo
stateqld
imageEntry to Eulo.jpg
captionEntry to Eulo, 2006
coordinates
pop94
pop_year
pop_footnotes
postcode4491
area6078.0
timezoneAEST
utc+10:00
elevation137
elevation_footnotes
dist167.2
dir1W
location1Cunnamulla
dist2129
dir2E
location2Thargomindah
dist3324
dir3NNW
location3Bourke
dist4361
dir4W
location4St George
dist5857
dir5W
location5Brisbane
lgaShire of Paroo
stategovWarrego
fedgovMaranoa
maxtemp28.2
mintemp13.8
rainfall332.0
near-nHumeburn
near-neHumeburn
near-eCunnamulla
near-seCuttaburra
near-sHungerford
near-swHungerford
near-wThargomindah
near-nwYowah

| near-n = Humeburn | near-ne = Humeburn | near-e = Cunnamulla | near-se = Cuttaburra | near-s = Hungerford | near-sw = Hungerford | near-w = Thargomindah | near-nw = Yowah

Eulo ( ) is an outback town and locality in the Shire of Paroo, Queensland, Australia. It is known for its opal mining. In the , the locality of Eulo had a population of 94 people.

Geography

Paroo River near Eulo, 2008

Eulo is 64 km west of Cunnamulla and 887 km west of Brisbane.

The town is located beside and to the east of the Paroo River which flows in a roughly north–south direction. This results in flooding events that affects people, livestock, and wildlife. With Cyclone Audrey in mid-January 1964, the town experienced 11 in of rain in one twenty-four hour period, which was double the previous record of 1887. Former-Cyclone Dianne saw flood waters came south from Longreach, resulting in the Paroo breaching the town's levee on Saturday, 29 March 2025. Occupants of only three houses were impacted, and sixty persons in the town otherwise unaffected.

The Bulloo Developmental Road (part of the Adventure Way) connects Eulo to Cunnamulla to the east and Thargomindah to the west.

Preferring barren, dry, rocky sites in only a few selected locations in Australia, the flowering Prostanthera megacalyx shrub can be found in the Eulo area.

History

Prior to European settlement, Eulo was in the area of the Kalali people. Margany (also known as Marganj, Mardigan, Marukanji, Maranganji) is an Australian Aboriginal language spoken by the Margany people. The Margany language region includes the landscape within the local government boundaries of the Quilpie Shire, taking in Quilpie, Cheepie and Beechal extending towards Eulo and Thargomindah, as well as the properties of Dynevor Downs and Ardoch.

Vincent Dowling (1835–1903) began exploring in south west Queensland, tracing the Paroo and the Bulloo Rivers to their sources, and in 1861, established Caiwarroo and Eulo stations, and later a pastoral lease of Thargomindah. The town takes its name from a settlement on the Paroo River first appearing on an 1872 map of Queensland map.

The post office opened on 6 September 1872; the first postmaster was the publican William Shearer.

A town reserve was proclaimed in 1874 described as "near the Eulo waterhole".

A police station was established about 1 January 1880.

A Court of Petty Sessions was established on 18 August 1880 and operated until 31 December 1964.

A telegraph office opened in 1881.

By 1883, the Cobb and Co. mail and stage coach would leave Thargomindah on a Wednesday at 1:00 pm to arrive in Hungerford by 6:00 pm Friday; and from there leaving Sunday at 6:00 am, arriving in Eulo at 1:00 pm Monday, and back at Thargomindah by 1:00 pm Tuesday. Stage coach driver Billy Chute (William Tuite) later went on to run the Gladstone Hotel with his wife Margaret. The last Cobb and Co. coach ran in Australia in 1920.

The Eulo Provisional School opened on 7 May 1888. On 1 January 1909 it became the Eulo State School.

Over time, there were a number of public hotels:

  • Eulo Hotel (established 1868) with licensee (G)eorge Felix Davies. The name was changed to the Royal Mail Hotel (), then the licence went to Richard Robinson and his wife Isabel Gray whence it was renamed as the Empire Hotel in May 1894, before closing in 1898. Frank Hickling was also identified as a proprietor of the Empire in 1896.

: A robbery of the Empire Hotel occurred in May 1896 during a ball where the landlord's safe was removed, with over £50 cash and £20 of opals; with the offenders later arrested.

: The Empire Hotel was destroyed by fire, "burned to the ground", in January 1911. Made from pise, the mud walls remained long afterwards.

Isabel Gray, the ''Eulo Queen''
  • Metropolitan Hotel (established 1888), closed in December 1912, and allegedly destroyed by fire later on.

: By 1894 with Robinson at the Royal Mail Hotel, James Wheeler held the licence for the Metropolitan. It was bought in 1912 by Isabel Gray and her husband Richard Robinson. In the same year, the hotel's cook was very successful on a Melbourne Cup sweeps with £1000 (as of 2020, equivalent of A$125,000), such that within a few days she wed one of the "big gun fencers of the district".

  • Gladstone Hotel (established 1900). Margaret continued on after the death of her husband. William Henry Tuite (–1935; also called 'Billy Chute') and Margaret Tuite took over the Gladstone by 1928, where William had been a driver for the Cobb and Co. mail coaches for over 25 years. He sold the hotel in June 1945.

: The hotel was destroyed by fire at 0:45 am, Monday, 10 October 1949. It was described as a single-story wooden hotel, "a relic of the days of Cobb and Co." stage coaching. At the time there were twelve boarders and the licensee Mrs V. B. Prow. As the last Eulo hotel, there was no bar for 100 mi between Thargomindah and Cunnamulla. As a result in a town with 11 houses and 60 residents, a working bee created a temporary bar within days.

: The hotel was rebuilt and renamed as the Eulo Queen Hotel, on Leo Street. At a time, Samuel Lovie was the publican, before moving south in 1958. It was otherwise possibly originally established in 1886.

There was some unfriendly rivalry between the hotels, when in early 1890, Isabel Gray had her substantial liquor holdings (£350; as of 2020, in excess of A$55,000) and furniture seized, upon information supplied by Hickling (formerly of the Gladstone and the Royal Mail), Kearney (of the Gladstone), and one other. She had just purchased the Royal Mail Hotel from merchant R. Burke on 1 September 1889, where the furniture of former licensee Mr Julius was held by a bill-of-sale. Kearney was appointed as a trustee for the possible insolvency of Julius; but had a conflict of interest as a rival to Gray. The matter went before the court, where the confiscation order was annulled.

Circa 1900, Thomas James Cooney (1873–1953) opened a small butchering business in Eulo, having worked the area as a blade shearer involved in the 1894 shearers strike, was an opal gouger, and undertook fence post cutting and kangaroo shooting to make a living. The business and his family expanded, before going onto acquire several large sheep and cattle properties including Goonamurra, and Turn Turn (SW of Eulo).

The telephone exchange opened in 1923.

Saint Francis' Anglican Church was dedicated by Archbishop Reginald Halse on 15 September 1957. Its closure on 12 June 2010 was approved by Archbishop Phillip Aspinall. A former Catholic church of Saint Joseph is beside Saint Francis. The first wedding celebrated at the church was that of the eldest son of butcher-cum-grazier Tom Cooney on 17 March 1929, although that was subject to a decree nisi in October 1937.

The town hosts an old World War II air raid shelter on Leo Street, the town then being a communications link, and on the flight path from Darwin to Melbourne.

The eastern entrance to the town has a statue of a diprotodon.

Demographics

In the , the locality of Eulo had a population of 108 people.

In the , the locality of Eulo had a population of 95 people.

In the , the locality of Eulo had a population of 94 people.

Heritage listings

  • 1929 building of Eulo State School

Facilities

Eulo has one public hotel and a small general store as well as fuel service station. The general store and fuel bowsers were destroyed by fire on 25 July 2011, but since rebuilt.

Immediately south of the town is the 2000 m earthen runway airport (ICAO code YEUO). In 2023, the airstrip became the first Queensland town to test runway emergency lanterns that could be used by the Royal Flying Doctor Service for night-time call-outs.

Education

Eulo State School is a government primary (Early childhood to Year 6) school for boys and girls on the southern corner of Leo Street and Emu Street (). The enrolments between 2010 and 2012 have ranged from 11 to 16 students. In 2018, the school had an enrolment of 14 students with two teachers and four non-teaching staff (two full-time equivalent). Some students travel up to 130 km each day to attend school, while other students live in the Eulo and District Hostel during the week in order to attend. After completing primary school in Eulo, there are no nearby secondary schools, so most students attend a secondary boarding school in Brisbane or Toowoomba.

Events

Eulo lizard racing track, 2006

Eulo hosts an annual lizard racing championships on their Paroo Track every August/September, which commenced in 1968, held in conjunction with the Cunnamulla and Eulo Opal Festival.

The Eulo Polocrosse Club has an annual July event, and a motorbike gymkhana and enduro is conducted each Easter.

The town was one of the stops in the March 2023 Shitbox Rally motoring event rally.

Notable residents

  • Isabel Gray (better known as the Eulo Queen) was a publican, storekeeper and prostitute

References

References

  1. "Summary statistics: Eulo Post Office".
  2. {{cite QPN. 11930. Eulo. town in Shire of Paroo
  3. {{cite QPN. 42654. Eulo. locality in Shire of Paroo
  4. (15 January 1964). "Audrey Blows Ruin, Then Brings Drought-ending Rain". [[The Age]].
  5. (30 April 2025). "Flooding yet to reach isolated parts of western Queensland like Thargomindah, says premier". Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
  6. (1978). "Cradle of Incense". Stanley Smith Memorial Publication Fund.
  7. "Margany".
  8. Rutledge, Martha. "Australian Dictionary of Biography". Australian National Bibliography.
  9. Premier Postal History. "Post Office List". Premier Postal Auctions.
  10. {{cite QSA Agency. 1559. Police station, Eulo. 17 May 2014
  11. {{cite QSA Agency. 698. Court of Petty Sessions, Eulo. 17 May 2014
  12. (30 May 1883). "Advertising". [[The Western Star (Queensland).
  13. (6 August 1935). "Family Notices". [[The Muswellbrook Chronicle]].
  14. {{Cite QldSchool
  15. "Queensland schools past and present". [[Queensland Family History Society]].
  16. (12 November 2023). "The sad demise of publican and courtesan the 'Eulo Queen'".
  17. (27 June 1868). "The Warrego". Dalby Herald and Western Queensland Advertiser.
  18. (5 May 1894). "Current News". [[The Queenslander]].
  19. (20 June 1896). "Advertising". Worker.
  20. (29 May 1896). "Queensland". [[Barrier Miner]].
  21. (28 January 1911). "Barcaldine General Budget". [[The Western Champion and General Advertiser for the Central-Western Districts]].
  22. (11 December 1935). "Glimpses of country life". [[The Sydney Mail]].
  23. (27 April 2021). "Eulo town book. The land of plenty of time and wait a while".
  24. (5 May 1894). "Current news". [[The Queenslander]].
  25. (14 December 1912). ""Eulo Queen" in Trouble". [[Balonne Beacon]].
  26. (19 December 1912). "Personal". [[The Gympie Times.
  27. (18 January 1919). "Personal notes". [[The Queenslander]].
  28. (2 March 1937). "Objection to licence". [[The Courier-Mail]].
  29. (24 January 1945). "On the track". [[Townsville Bulletin.
  30. (13 October 1949). "Eulo Hotel burned". [[The Charleville Times]].
  31. (13 October 1949). "Eulo Hotel fire". [[The Charleville Times]].
  32. (10 October 1949). "Fire Sweeps Eulo Hotel". [[Telegraph (Brisbane).
  33. (11 October 1949). "Temporary bar built". Bundaberg News-Mail.
  34. (12 August 1960). "Obituary". The Western Herald.
  35. "Our history".
  36. (1 March 1890). "Sly Grog-selling". [[The Queenslander]].
  37. (24 February 1890). "Sly grog-selling". [[The Brisbane Courier]].
  38. (12 November 1949). "The rut was no place for him--He got out". [[Smith's Weekly]].
  39. (9 October 1953). "£106,490 left by Q'land grazier". [[Warwick Daily News]].
  40. "History". Eulo Queen Hotel.
  41. Anglican Church of Southern Queensland. "Closed Churches".
  42. (3 April 1929). "COONEY—M'CARTHY". [[The Brisbane Courier]].
  43. (22 October 1937). "Grazier obtains divorce after finding wife in flat with man". [[Telegraph (Brisbane).
  44. (17 November 1951). "Old Bill's". [[Telegraph (Brisbane).
  45. {{Census 2006 AUS
  46. {{Census 2016 AUS
  47. {{Census 2021 AUS
  48. "Paroo Shire Planning Scheme: Schedule 6 - Local Heritage Places".
  49. (26 July 2011). "Blaze claims historic general store". Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
  50. "Community Website".
  51. (11 March 2023). "Outback Queensland town becomes first to trial emergency airstrip lanterns for RFDS". Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
  52. (9 July 2018). "State and non-state school details". [[Queensland Government]].
  53. (29 November 2020). "Eulo State School".
  54. "ACARA School Profile 2018". [[Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority]].
  55. "School Report". Eulo State School.
  56. (November 2006). "Topend Sports Logo Lizard Racing".
  57. Gill, J. C. H.. "Gray, Isabel (1851–1929)". National Centre for Biography, Australian National University.
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