William Hundy & His Family

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

William Hundy & His Family The Old Man of Meroo William Hundy & his family waterman convict emancipist shepherd settler selector Researched and written by Fred Hundy Cover illustration: William Hundy (The Old Man of Meroo) in his eighties c.1895 Published in 2011 by Fred Hundy 12 Rathbone Court Mudgeeraba Qld 4213 © 2011 Fred Hundy This book is copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, no part may be reproduced by any process without written permission. Enquiries should be addressed to the Publisher. 2 Contents William Hundy’s Family Tree ................................................................................................... 8 Honorah McGrath’s Family Tree.............................................................................................. 9 Catherine Hayes’ Family Tree ................................................................................................ 10 List of Illustrations ................................................................................................................... 11 Acknowledgments ................................................................................................................... 17 Introduction ............................................................................................................................. 18 Worcestershire: Hundy Country ............................................................................................. 20 Convict 33/2330: ‘A Government Man’ ................................................................................... 26 The Emancipist: ‘On His Own Hands’ .................................................................................. 44 Murder, Mayhem, and the McGraths ..................................................................................... 55 The Old Man of Meroo: On His Selection ............................................................................. 67 The Cornstalks: The Australian family ................................................................................... 74 Thomas Hundy ....................................................................................................................... 78 James Hundy ........................................................................................................................... 79 Elizabeth Hundy ..................................................................................................................... 86 William Emanuel Hundy ........................................................................................................ 92 Michael Hundy ........................................................................................................................ 98 Patrick Hundy ........................................................................................................................ 100 George Hundy ........................................................................................................................ 105 John Hundy ............................................................................................................................ 111 Thomas Hundy ...................................................................................................................... 113 John Edward Hundy .............................................................................................................. 119 Reference List ......................................................................................................................... 128 3 For Rory, Keira, Briannah & Madalyn Hundy, and all the Hundys to come. 4 ‘The Old Man of Meroo’ – William Hundy 5 How The Land Was Won The future was dark and the past was dead As they gazed on the sea once more – But a nation was born when the immigrants said "Good-bye!" as they stepped ashore! In their loneliness they were parted thus Because of the work to do, A wild wide land to be won for us By hearts and hands so few. The darkest land 'neath a blue sky's dome, And the widest waste on earth; The strangest scenes and the least like home In the lands of our fathers' birth; The loneliest land in the wide world then, And away on the furthest seas, A land most barren of life for men – And they won it by twos and threes! With God, or a dog, to watch, they slept By the camp-fires' ghastly glow, Where the scrubs were dark as the blacks that crept With "nulla" and spear held low; Death was hidden amongst the trees, And bare on the glaring sand They fought and perished by twos and threes – And that's how they won the land! It was two that failed by the dry creek bed, While one reeled on alone – The dust of Australia's greatest dead With the dust of the desert blown! Gaunt cheek-bones cracking the parchment skin That scorched in the blazing sun, Black lips that broke in a ghastly grin – And that's how the land was won! Starvation and toil on the tracks they went, And death by the lonely way; The childbirth under the tilt or tent, The childbirth under the dray! The childbirth out in the desolate hut With a half-wild gin for nurse – That's how the first were born to bear The brunt of the first man's curse! 6 They toiled and they fought through the shame of it – Through wilderness, flood, and drought; They worked, in the struggles of early days, Their sons' salvation out. The white girl-wife in the hut alone, The men on the boundless run, The miseries suffered, unvoiced, unknown – And that's how the land was won. No armchair rest for the old folk then – But, ruined by blight and drought, They blazed the tracks to the camps again In the big scrubs further out. The worn haft, wet with a father's sweat, Gripped hard by the eldest son, The boy's back formed to the hump of toil – And that's how the land was won! And beyond Up Country, beyond Out Back, And the rainless belt, they ride, The currency lad and the ne'er-do-well And the black sheep, side by side; In wheeling horizons of endless haze That disk through the Great North-west, They ride for ever by twos and by threes – And that's how they win the rest. Henry Lawson 1899 7 William Hundy’s Family Tree William Hundy 1813 - 1899 m. 19 February 1843 Norah McGrath 1824 - 1855 Thomas James Elizabeth William Michael Patrick 1843-1859 1845 - 1919 1847-1915 1850-1936 1853-1895 1855-1937 m. 16 November 1856 Catherine Hayes 1819-1899 George John Thomas John 1857-1945 1858-1861 c.1861-1937 c.1862-1943 8 Honorah McGrath’s Family Tree Patrick & Honora McGrath James McGrath c.1810 Patrick McGrath c.1805- Frances Gleeson c.1815 Honora Loughlin c.1806- Thomas Honora 1824-1855 c.1835 m.1843 William Hundy Emma Louisa Bolland 1813-1899 c.1836 Michael Rodolph 1826-1894 1857 Patrick 1828- Evelyn 1863 m.1854 Anne McNevin 1822- Lewis 1865 Fanny 1854- Florence 1866 Thomas 1856-1930 Ada 1871 William 1858- William c.1840-1915 Michael Henry 1861-1866 William female c.1831- Thomas male c.1833- James male c.1836 9 Catherine Hayes’ Family Tree Michael Hayes m. Mary Crow Catherine Hayes b. 1819 m.1843 m.1856 Joseph William Russell Hundy Mary 1845-1915 m. 1863 m.1873 Luke Madigan Patrick Costello James Mary Anne Bridget Joseph George William Charles Catherine L. Mary C. Michael Madigan Madigan Madigan Madigan Costello Costello Costello Costello Costello Costello Costello b.1864 b.1866 b.1867 b.1871 b.1873 b.1875 b.1879 b.1881 b.1883 b.1884 b.1887 Michael 1848- 1936 m. 1870 Margaret Geohagan Bridget Catherine Michael P. Alice Theresa Mary Amelia Russell Russell Russell Russell Russell Russell Russell b.1871 b.1871 b.1877 b.1879 b.1881 b.1884 b.1890 Catherine b.1849- c.1855 Female Female 10 List of Illustrations Worcestershire: Hundy Country Figure 1: Map of England showing Crowle north west of London in the West Midlands of England. Figure 2: Map of south east Worcestershire showing the key locations of William Hundy’s formative years. Figure 3: A 1795 illustration of a loaded barge on the River Avon at Pershore. Figure 4: Main Street Crowle 1912. A Government Man: Convict 33230 Figure 1: Longboats of convicts approaching a typical prison hulk in the River Thames at Deptford in 1826. Figure 2: One of the few surviving convict uniforms used in the period 1830-1849 as secondary punishment. Figure 3: Sydney Harbour 1830s showing the prevalence of windmills. Figure 4: Looking west from the wharves along George St, Sydney 1829. Figure 5: Sydney looking north from Hyde Park c.1830. Figure 6: Convicts at work on Wolloomoolloo Hill in Sydney c.1830. Figure 7: The drained swamps on the flats of Burrundulla today after Michael Lahy’s handiwork. Figure 8: Uamby – William’s first home upon arrival in the colony in 1834. Figure 9: Cox’s property Uamby and Michael Lahy’s country to the north. Figure 10: Looking west toward today’s Uamby house and outbuildings. Figure 11: Grattai Station, originally held by William’s second convict master William Reeves. Figure 12: Grattai Station looking west. Figure 13: William Reeves holding ‘Grattai’, including his daughters property ‘Yerouera’. Figure 14: Hartley Courthouse where William obtained his Certificate of Freedom in 1840. Figure 15: Certificate of Freedom granted to William Hundy in 1840 by the Hartley Magistrates Bench. The Emancipist: On His Own Hands Figure 1: The Limits of Settlement and Squatting Districts at 1840 - ‘bond’ population means convicts. Figure 2: Meroo Tributaries map of 1843 showing the upper Campbells Creek catchment area & sheepyards. Figure 3: The County of Tipperary, Ireland. Figure 4:
Recommended publications
  • Gazette No 118 of 1 October 2010
    4967 Government Gazette OF THE STATE OF NEW SOUTH WALES Number 118 Friday, 1 October 2010 Published under authority by Government Advertising LEGISLATION Online notification of the making of statutory instruments Week beginning 20 September 2010 THE following instruments were officially notified on the NSW legislation website (www.legislation.nsw.gov.au) on the dates indicated: Proclamations commencing Acts Commercial Arbitration Act 2010 No. 61 (2010-541) – published LW 24 September 2010 Parliamentary Electorates and Elections Amendment (Automatic Enrolment) Act 2009 No. 102 (2010-542) – published LW 24 September 2010 Regulations and other statutory instruments Commercial Vessels Legislation Amendment (Fees, Expenses and Charges) Regulation 2010 (2010-544) – published LW 24 September 2010 Environmental Planning and Assessment (Burwood Town Centre Planning Panel) Amendment Order 2010 (2010-545) – published LW 24 September 2010 Management of Waters and Waterside Lands Amendment (Fees) Regulation 2010 (2010-546) – published LW 24 September 2010 Marine Safety (General) Further Amendment (Fees) Regulation 2010 (2010-547) – published LW 24 September 2010 National Parks and Wildlife Amendment (Aboriginal Objects and Aboriginal Places) Regulation 2010 (2010-548) – published LW 24 September 2010 Order under section 17 (1) of the Civil Liability Act 2002 (2010-543) – published LW 24 September 2010 Parliamentary Electorates and Elections Amendment (Transitional Provisions) Regulation 2010 (2010-549) – published LW 24 September 2010 Environmental Planning Instruments Liverpool Local Environmental Plan 2008 (Amendment No. 7) (2010-550) – published LW 24 September 2010 4968 LEGISLATION 1 October 2010 Maitland Local Environmental Plan 1993 (Amendment No. 104) (2010-551) – published LW 24 September 2010 Maitland Local Environmental Plan 1993 (Amendment No.
    [Show full text]
  • 6.2.13 Naming of Unnamed Streets in the Valley Grove Estate Subdivision
    Mid-Western Regional Council ORDINARY MEETING - 23 JULY 2014 161 6.2.13 Naming of unnamed streets in the Valley Grove Estate subdivision REPORT BY THE REVENUE & PROPERTY MANAGER TO 23 JULY 2014 COUNCIL MEETING Naming of unnamed streets in the Valley Grove Estate subdivision GOV400038, A0790141 RECOMMENDATION That: 1. the report by the Revenue & Property Manager on the Naming of unnamed streets in the Valley Grove Estate subdivision be received; 2. Council name road no 1 Charles Lester Place, road no 2 Pirie Close and road no 3 Michelle Court. Executive summary A new subdivision off Bellevue Road in Mudgee includes three new streets. Addressing requirements for the new subdivision will necessitate the naming of these new streets. Detailed report Council, being the Roads Authority, is required to name new or unnamed streets and roads. The purpose of this report is to provide a list of names submitted by the public from which Council can choose names for these unnamed streets. Council wrote to neighbours of the road reserves on 30 May 2014 requesting their naming suggestions. Public consultation was also invited in an advertisement placed in the 6 June 2014 issue of the Mudgee Guardian. Submissions closed on 27 June 2014 and during this period four (4) submissions were received with the following names suggested: 1. Michelle Court 2. Binnawee Place 3. Pirie Close 4. Lester Place 5. Charles Lester Place Financial and Operational Plan implications The cost of Gazettal notice is approximately $60. The purchase and installation of three (3) to four (4) street signs will be met by the Developer.
    [Show full text]
  • The Emancipist: 'On His Own Hands'
    The Emancipist: ‘On His Own Hands’ 1840 – 1858 “You must fetch wood an’ water, bake an’ boil, Act as butcher when we kill; The corn an’ taters you must hill, Keep the gardens spick and span. You must not scruple in the rain To take to market all the grain. Be sure you come back sober again To be a squatter’s man.” (The Squatter’s Man – Traditional) As an emancipist, William was now ‘on his own hands’ in the colloquial vernacular of the time meaning he was his own man and not beholden to anyone or the Crown. William’s freedom in 1840 coincided with the end of the transportation era in the colony of N.S.W. As befitted a newly emerging and confident state, pressure had been mounting from within the colony for an end to the transportation of criminals in favour of encouraging free settlers. On the 22nd of May 1840, an order was made by the Government that no more convicts be brought to the colony of NSW effective from the 1st of August 1840. The last load of convicts, 270 males, was subsequently deposited at Port Jackson from the ‘Eden’ on the 18th of November.1 Prior to this, the pastoral industry had continued to grow through the 1830s, as settlers continued to take land beyond the official ‘limits of settlement’ bringing continual conflict with Indigenous landholders. The land was being taken up by squatters from the English aristocratic or military classes as well as through less official means by emancipated and escaped convicts.
    [Show full text]
  • List-Of-All-Postcodes-In-Australia.Pdf
    Postcodes An alphabetical list of postcodes throughout Australia September 2019 How to find a postcode Addressing your mail correctly To find a postcode simply locate the place name from the alphabetical listing in this With the use of high speed electronic mail processing equipment, it is most important booklet. that your mail is addressed clearly and neatly. This is why we ask you to use a standard format for addressing all your mail. Correct addressing is mandatory to receive bulk Some place names occur more than once in a state, and the nearest centre is shown mail discounts. after the town, in italics, as a guide. It is important that the “zones” on the envelope, as indicated below, are observed at Complete listings of the locations in this booklet are available from Australia Post’s all times. The complete delivery address should be positioned: website. This data is also available from state offices via the postcode enquiry service telephone number (see below). 1 at least 40mm from the top edge of the article Additional postal ranges have been allocated for Post Office Box installations, Large 2 at least 15mm from the bottom edge of the article Volume Receivers and other special uses such as competitions. These postcodes follow 3 at least 10mm from the left and right edges of the article. the same correct addressing guidelines as ordinary addresses. The postal ranges for each of the states and territories are now: 85mm New South Wales 1000–2599, 2620–2899, 2921–2999 Victoria 3000–3999, 8000–8999 Service zone Postage zone 1 Queensland
    [Show full text]
  • Development Control Plan 2013
    Development Control Plan 2013 Amendment No. 5 Further information email [email protected] or telephone 1300 765 002 www.midwestern.nsw.gov.au CONTENTS Part 1 Introduction ....................................................................................................... 4 1.1 Purpose of the Plan ................................................................................................................. 4 1.2 Aim of the Plan ......................................................................................................................... 4 1.3 How the Plan Works ................................................................................................................. 4 1.4 Transition Provision ............................................................................................................................ 4 1.5 Fast Track Determinations ............................................................................................................... 5 1.6 Documentation Required to Accompany a FAST TRACK DA ........................................... 6 1.7 Don’t meet the “deemed to satisfy” standards? ..................................................................... 6 1.8 Relationship to other Plans ..................................................................................................... 6 1.9 Developer Contributions ................................................................................................................. 7 1.10 Private Covenants ...........................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • The Select Committees of the New South Wales Legislative Council 1824-1856
    PARLIAMENT OF NEW SOUTH WALES Parliamentary Library ________________________________________ New South Wales Legislative Council 1824-1856 The Select Committees Compiled by R F Doust New South Wales Legislative Council 1824-1856 The Select Committees Compiled by R F Doust NEW SOUTH WALES PARLIAMENTARY LIBRARY New South Wales Parliamentary Library cataloguing-in-publication data: New South Wales. Parliament. Legislative Council New South Wales Legislative Council, 1824-1856: the select committees,.compiled by R.F. Doust. – [Partially revised edition published in electronic format, Sydney, N.S.W: NSW Parliamentary Library November 2011] ISBN 978 0 7313 1883 4 I. New South Wales. Parliament. Legislative Council. I. Title. II. Doust, R.F. (Russell Fletcher) III. New South Wales. Parliamentary Library. Note: Previously published in three parts--- Part I 1824-1843, Part II 1844-1848, Part III 1849-1856 © R F Doust 2011 The Select Committees of the New South Wales Legislative Council 1824-1856 The Select Committees is a work which identifies and describes the many committees of inquiry appointed by the first Legislative Council of the Colony of New South Wales in the first half of the nineteenth century. From the arrival of the first fleet bringing convicts to the Colony of New South Wales in 1788, supreme power was vested until 1824 in the Governor, acting in accordance with instructions from the Imperial Government in London. The first Legislative Council of New South Wales, appointed by His Majesty to advise the Governor, and consisting of five officials employed by the Crown, met for the first time on 24 August 1824. It had as a primary role the scrutiny of legislative measures proposed by the Governor.
    [Show full text]
  • Region Localities Inclusion Support Agency New South Wales
    u Inclusion and Professional Support Program (IPSP) Grant Application Process 2013-2016 Region Localities Inclusion Support Agency New South Wales This document lists the localities which comprise each Statistical Area Level 2 within each ISA Region in New South Wales. Description This document provides greater detail on the Australian Bureau of Statistics, Statistical Areal Level 2 boundaries within each ISA Region. The localities listed in this document are the ‘gazetted locality boundaries’ supplied by the state or territory government and may differ from commonly used locality and/or suburb names. This document does not provide a definitive list of every suburb included within each ISA Region as this information is not available. Postcodes are provided for those localities which either: cross ISA boundaries or where the same locality name appears in more than one ISA region within the same state or territory. IPSP 2013-2016: ISA Region Localities – New South Wales ISA Region 1 – Sydney Inner – Localities Alexandria Eastlakes Point Piper Annandale Edgecliff Port Botany Balmain Elizabeth Bay Potts Point Balmain East Enmore Pyrmont Banksmeadow (Postcode: 2042) Queens Park Barangaroo Erskineville Randwick Beaconsfield Eveleigh Redfern Bellevue Hill Forest Lodge Rose Bay Birchgrove Glebe Rosebery Bondi Haymarket Rozelle Bondi Beach Hillsdale Rushcutters Bay Bondi Junction Kensington South Coogee Botany Kingsford St Peters Bronte La Perouse Stanmore Camperdown Leichhardt Surry Hills Centennial
    [Show full text]
  • Building the River System Model for the Macquarie Valley Regulated River System
    NSW HEALTHY FLOODPLAINS Building the river system model for the Macquarie Valley regulated river system Conceptualisation, construction and calibration March 2021 NSW Department of Planning, Industry and Environment | dpie.nsw.gov.au Published by NSW Department of Planning, Industry and Environment dpie.nsw.gov.au Title: Building the river system model for the Macquarie Valley regulated river system Subtitle: Conceptualisation, construction and calibration First published: March 2021 Department reference number: PUB21/181 © State of New South Wales through Department of Planning, Industry and Environment 2021. You may copy, distribute, display, download and otherwise freely deal with this publication for any purpose, provided that you attribute the Department of Planning, Industry and Environment as the owner. However, you must obtain permission if you wish to charge others for access to the publication (other than at cost); include the publication in advertising or a product for sale; modify the publication; or republish the publication on a website. You may freely link to the publication on a departmental website. Disclaimer: The information contained in this publication is based on knowledge and understanding at the time of writing (March 2021) and may not be accurate, current or complete. The State of New South Wales (including the NSW Department of Planning, Industry and Environment), the author and the publisher take no responsibility, and will accept no liability, for the accuracy, currency, reliability or correctness of any information included in the document (including material provided by third parties). Readers should make their own inquiries and rely on their own advice when making decisions related to material contained in this publication.
    [Show full text]
  • Canb Svy Corps Assoc Newsletter 2-17
    Page 1 Canberra Newsletter Issue 1/18 Canberra Survey Corps Association Canberra Newsletter IN THIS ISSUE 1/18 Edition – APRIL 2018 From the Editor/President 1 Christmas Happy Hour 2017 2 1918 and each ten years hence – some happening in the Royal Australian Survey Corps 2 Army’s new organisation for geospatial support 8 Facing the Past 10 Postcards – people, events and what’s new 20 Our Association Calendar 2018 - the fridge magnet 20 From the Editor/President Welcome to all members of the Canberra Survey Corps Association to this first newsletter of 2018. For this issue I thank John Mobbs and Josh Andrews for their support and most welcome contributions. Email will continue to be used as the primary means of communication for our Association. The Corps Facebook page is a very useful tool for rapid dissemination of information and keeping in touch and it is increasingly helpful for projects such as John Mobbs’ Faces of the Corps where crowd-sourcing helps. But many members do not have or want a Facebook account. One issue which has come to light is the matter of on-forwarding contact information of Association members and others who served in the Corps. It is a policy of our Association that contact information which is provided by members for the purposes of the Association will not be provided to any third person without the approval of the member. This also applies to projects sponsored by the Association such as the Corps Nominal Roll and Faces of the Corps. I encourage all members to treat other members’ contact information similarly.
    [Show full text]
  • And Numerous Chinese." I a Search for the Individual in the Central Tablelands of New South Wales, C1848-1901 I I Un Johnston I I I
    I I I " •••• and numerous Chinese." I A search for the individual in the Central Tablelands of New South Wales, c1848-1901 I I Un Johnston I I I . I I .- ~ I , I- . \:: I- I- I- ..... ~. - >._-- -'- I --, ~,--~ \--(\' \~,; Thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Arts 2002 (Honours). School of Philosophical and Historical Inquiry, Department of Prehistorical I and Historical Archaeology. University of Sydney_ - I I~ I I. I " •••• and numerous Chinese." I A search for the individual in the Central Tablelands of New South Wales, c1848-1901 I I Un Johnston I I I I I I I I I I Thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Arts 2002 I (Honours), School of Philosophical and Historical Inquiry, Department of Prehistorical and Historical Archaeology, University of Sydney. I I I I I I I Preface I In 1858 Harold McLean, Gold Commissioner for the Western Districts, received a letter I from the Colonial Secretary advising him to proceed with hiring an interpreter because "numerous bodies of Chinese" had arrived on the Western Goldfields. Variations on this I phrase, such as 'another shipload', 'large numbers of Chinese', 'large bodies of I Chinese', 'numerous Chinese' were frequently used to refer to the arrival of Chinese immigrants in the Australian colonies, while knowledge of or reference to individuals in I administrative correspondence or newspapers was rare. It is the purpose of this study to discover the long-term results of this immigration into the country and the nature of I interaction between Chinese and Europeans on an individual level, through the I examination of documentary and material evidence for an urban and a former gold mining area in the Central Tablelands of New South Wales.
    [Show full text]
  • Government Gazette of the STATE of NEW SOUTH WALES Number 38 Friday, 20 February 2009 Published Under Authority by Government Advertising
    1033 Government Gazette OF THE STATE OF NEW SOUTH WALES Number 38 Friday, 20 February 2009 Published under authority by Government Advertising LEGISLATION Announcement Online notification of the making of statutory instruments Following the commencement of the remaining provisions of the Interpretation Amendment Act 2006, the following statutory instruments are to be notified on the official NSW legislation website (www.legislation.nsw.gov.au) instead of being published in the Gazette: (a) all environmental planning instruments, on and from 26 January 2009, (b) all statutory instruments drafted by the Parliamentary Counsel’s Office and made by the Governor (mainly regulations and commencement proclamations) and court rules, on and from 2 March 2009. Instruments for notification on the website are to be sent via email to [email protected] or fax (02) 9232 4796 to the Parliamentary Counsel's Office. These instruments will be listed on the “Notification” page of the NSW legislation website and will be published as part of the permanent “As Made” collection on the website and also delivered to subscribers to the weekly email service. Principal statutory instruments also appear in the “In Force” collection where they are maintained in an up-to-date consolidated form. Notified instruments will also be listed in the Gazette for the week following notification. For further information about the new notification process contact the Parliamentary Counsel’s Office on (02) 9321 3333. 1034 LEGISLATION 20 February 2009 Online notification
    [Show full text]
  • Suburb Postcode State 1 AARONS PASS 2850 NSW 2 ABBA RIVER
    Suburb Postcode State 1 AARONS PASS 2850 NSW 2 ABBA RIVER 6280 WA 3 ABBEY 6280 WA 4 ABBEYARD 3737 VIC 5 ABBOTSBURY 2176 NSW 6 ABBOTSFORD 2046 NSW 7 ABBOTSFORD 3067 VIC 8 ABERCROMBIE RIVER 2795 NSW 9 ABERDARE 2325 NSW 10 ABERDEEN 2336 NSW 11 ABERDEEN 2359 NSW 12 ABERFELDIE 3040 VIC 13 ABERFELDY 3825 VIC 14 ABERFOYLE 2350 NSW 15 ABERFOYLE PARK 5159 SA 16 ABERGLASSLYN 2320 NSW 17 ABERMAIN 2326 NSW 18 ABERNETHY 2325 NSW 19 ABINGTON 2350 NSW 20 ACACIA CREEK 2476 NSW 21 ACACIA GARDENS 2763 NSW 22 ACACIA PLATEAU 2476 NSW 23 ACACIA RIDGE 4110 QLD 24 ACACIA RIDGE BC 4110 QLD 25 ACACIA RIDGE DC 4110 QLD 26 ACHERON 3714 VIC 27 ACLAND 4401 QLD 28 ACTON 2601 ACT 29 ACTON 7320 TAS 30 ACTON PARK 6280 WA 31 ACTON PARK 7170 TAS 32 ADA 3833 VIC 33 ADAMINABY 2629 NSW 34 ADAMS ESTATE 3984 VIC 35 ADAMSTOWN 2289 NSW 36 ADAMSTOWN HEIGHTS 2289 NSW 37 ADAMSVALE 6375 WA 38 ADDINGTON 3352 VIC 39 ADELAIDE 5000 SA 40 ADELAIDE 5001 SA 41 ADELAIDE 5800 SA 42 ADELAIDE 5810 SA 43 ADELAIDE 5839 SA 44 ADELAIDE AIRPORT 5950 SA 45 ADELAIDE BC 5000 SA 46 ADELAIDE LEAD 3465 VIC 47 ADELAIDE MAIL CENTRE 5860 SA 48 ADELAIDE MAIL CENTRE 5861 SA 49 ADELAIDE MAIL CENTRE 5862 SA 50 ADELAIDE MAIL CENTRE 5863 SA 51 ADELAIDE MAIL CENTRE 5864 SA 52 ADELAIDE MAIL CENTRE 5865 SA 53 ADELAIDE MAIL CENTRE 5866 SA 54 ADELAIDE MAIL CENTRE 5867 SA 55 ADELAIDE MAIL CENTRE 5868 SA 56 ADELAIDE MAIL CENTRE 5869 SA 57 ADELAIDE MAIL CENTRE 5870 SA 58 ADELAIDE MAIL CENTRE 5871 SA 59 ADELAIDE MAIL CENTRE 5872 SA 60 ADELAIDE MAIL CENTRE 5873 SA 61 ADELAIDE MAIL CENTRE 5874 SA 62 ADELAIDE MAIL CENTRE
    [Show full text]