Havilah, New South Wales

Havilah is an Australian bounded rural locality and a grazing property.[1] It is located 13 km from Mudgee on the Lue Road and has the postcode 2850.[2] The locality also has a limestone and carbonates quarry.[3]

Farm and homestead

Havilah took its name after a visiting clergyman discovered specks of gold and, citing Genesis, named the area the 'land of Havilah'. The farm was first owned by Nicholas Paget Bayly (1814–1879) and was sold after his death to Henry Charles White (1837–1905). The farm is renowned for a history of producing high quality merino sheep and horses.[4] The homestead has major additions designed by architect John Horbury Hunt.[5]

Memorial church

Havilah Memorial Church was built in 1905 and gifted to the Anglican Church by Hunter White (1867–1947) in memory of his father, Henry Charles White. It lies on the Lue road and has an adjacent small cemetery.[6]

Literary connection

Havilah appears as 'Haviland' and H.C. White as 'Old Black' in Henry Lawson's story 'Joe Wilson's courtship'.[7]

gollark: I'm pretty sure it was Noether, and you seem to have ignored what I just said.
gollark: If someone found tomorrow that you could create energy from nothing, and it can't be proved that that *can't* happen unless you already start from a model, the models would have to be updated.
gollark: The models in physics are created from reality, not the other way round.
gollark: In maths you can go "if we know X axioms, we can definitely say that Y"; in science you can at most say something like "we found that things in situations X, Y, Z obey A and it's very unlikely that this result was obtained by random chance".
gollark: How? The incompleteness thing?

References

  1. Havilah, New South Wales.
  2. Unlocking Regional Memory.
  3. Map of Havilah Quarry.
  4. Unlocking Regional Memory.
  5. "Havilah". Australian Town and Country Journal. Sydney. 6 July 1889. p. 15. Retrieved 2 January 2015 via National Library of Australia.
  6. Havilah Cemetery.
  7. J. Broadley, Historic Houses of Mudgee, 2011, p. 201.


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