Local Government
Kulin
Region
Wheatbelt
Pingaring
Includes: CWA Rooms, Hall, General Store & Post Office and Shop Residence, Pingaring Motors, Garage House, Horsmann House & Wyatt's House sites
Kulin
Wheatbelt
Constructed from 1930
Type | Status | Date | Documents | More information |
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Type | Status | Date | Grading/Management | More information | |
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Category | Description | ||||
Municipal Inventory | Adopted | 19 Mar 1997 | Category 5 |
Category 5 |
The town is significant for all that it represents in community cooperation
and determination to succeed.
The railway came to Pingaring in 1931, opening for rail traffic in
1932. Workers came to the area to join in the construction of the railway line and the water tank to
provide water for them and the trains. With the establishment of the railway line, the community
focus at North Burngup, 5 miles south east of the siding (in the Lake Grace Shire), moved to the area
of the siding by the 1940s. The school relocated to Pingaring, on the south of the townsite, in the
Lake Grace Shire, despite moves to locate it on the west of town, the parents perceived a great
danger of the children being run over by the "weekly" train. In 1933 the unofficial post office was
established in the store which had been erected at the siding in May 1931.
The town of Pingaring was not a gazetted town, but an evolution of buildings on land donated by
Luke Price. Price was a bachelor farmer who made significant contributions to the community. The
town developed slowly, given the Great Depression created difficult times throughout Australia
through the 1930s, and no sooner was the recovery being experienced than Australia went to war.
After World War Two, the community of Pingaring prospered and established their community
organisations, the CWA, the Golf Club, lobbying for a new school and hall. So the 1950s reflect the
greatest period of development in Pingaring Town.
The 1950s was a time of prosperity, the wool prices were up, and the use of trace elements for wheat
facilitated the opening up of marginal land.
The store was established in 1931, when the railway line came through, and McCallum operated the
post office from a building where the CWA is now, from 1937 to about 1950.
It was after 1950 that the town expanded. In 1954, Alf Baker, June Hansen's father built a house for
June & her husband, next to McCallum's. McCallum's place was demolished, and the post office
operated from Hansens until 1956 when Mrs Byass took it over and operated again from the General
Store.
In 1954 a new school (Lake Grace Shire) was also constructed, together with schoolteacher
accomodation. The CWA was constructed between 1954 -56 and the Pingaring Hall was built in
1956.
In 1955/56, Stan Horsmann built a garage and ran a mechanical business while living in the garage
until he built a brick house on the block in 1959. In c1963 he relocated a former Southern Cross
(Bullfinch) mining house into Pingaring town to provide accommodation for his mechanic. Some
years later the house burnet down. Horsmann's garage was the first business besides the store and
post office, to establish in Pingaring.
In the 1980s Wyatt established a house in town by relocating a workman's house from Bill Andrew's
property.
In 1996, there are 4 houses and streetlights in the township of Pingaring, in addition to the public
and commercial buildings.
Precinct
Ref ID No | Ref Name | Ref Source | Ref Date |
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"Research". | Pingaring Community- Unpublished | 1996 | |
WE Greble; "A Bold Yeomanry Social Change in a Wheatbelt District Kulin 1848-1970". | Shire of Kulin | 1979 |
Historic Site
Epoch | General | Specific |
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Original Use | COMMERCIAL | Other |
Present Use | VACANT\UNUSED | Vacant\Unused |
General | Specific |
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DEMOGRAPHIC SETTLEMENT & MOBILITY | Settlements |
This information is provided voluntarily as a public service. The information provided is made available in good faith and is derived from sources believed to be reliable and accurate. However, the information is provided solely on the basis that readers will be responsible for making their own assessment of the matters discussed herein and are advised to verify all relevant representations, statements and information.