Hundred of Booyoolie South Australia | |||||||||||||||
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Coordinates | 33°13′S 138°18′E / 33.21°S 138.30°E[1] | ||||||||||||||
Established | 6 July 1871[2] | ||||||||||||||
Area | 190 km2 (75 sq mi)[3] | ||||||||||||||
LGA(s) | Northern Areas | ||||||||||||||
Region | Mid North | ||||||||||||||
County | Victoria | ||||||||||||||
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The Hundred of Booyoolie is a cadastral unit of hundred in South Australia.[1] It is one of the 14 hundreds of the County of Victoria and was proclaimed by Governor James Fergusson in July 1871.
The hundred includes the towns of Gladstone, Laura and Stone Hut within its bounds. It was named for Booyoolie Station, the homestead for which was located immediately west of the present township of Gladstone.[4] The source of the station name is unclear. It may have been named for an indigenous phrase meaning "boiling up smoke cloud" but this supposed etymology lacks contemporary corroboration. Official sources suggest the name was a settler invention formed from the words "beau ewe lea".[1][4]
Derivation: Booyoolie Station; Other Details: Booyoolie Station was founded by J B Hughes in 1843, and is taken from the Aboriginal name meaning "boiling up of smoke cloud".
Alterate name: Booyoolee (Homestead); Other details: Name of H.B. Hughes Station, reported by Mrs.Laura Hughes to Mr. Beare as being a corruption of the native name "beau-ewe lea", meaning beautiful sheep pasture (Talbot page 127). There is considerable doubt as to the origin of this name, and it is suggested that it is a "made up" Aboriginal place name.