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  2. Bungarribee Homestead Site - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bungarribee_Homestead_Site

    The farm remained unaltered from its natural state, save for an overseer's hut and scattered huts for convict shepherds and labourers, as well as stockyards and fences to enclose grazing areas, until 1810 when the-then Governor Lachlan Macquarie subdivided the farms into smaller parcels of land for free settlers. [5]

  3. Dharug - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dharug

    The farms made by the settlers were barriers to the river and to the food supply of the Dharug people, who were rightly upset by this invasion. The Dharug who crossed the farms to pick up corn were killed by the settlers, so they organized raids to burn the crops. The conflict scaled and in 1795 the government provided troops to protect the farms.

  4. Windsor Court House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windsor_Court_House

    The Dharug and Darkinjung people called the river Deerubbin and it was a vital source of food and transport. [3] [1] Governor Arthur Phillip explored the local area in search of suitable agricultural land in 1789 and discovered and named the Hawkesbury River after Baron Hawkesbury. This region played a significant role in the early development ...

  5. Dharug National Park - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dharug_National_Park

    The Dharug National Park is a protected national park that is located in the Central Coast region of New South Wales, in eastern Australia. The 14,850-hectare (36,700-acre) national park is situated approximately 81 kilometres (50 mi) north of the Sydney and 25 kilometres (16 mi) west of Gosford .

  6. Colebee (Boorooberongal) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colebee_(Boorooberongal)

    Colebee (c.1800 – 1830) was a Boorooberongal man of the Dharug people, an Aboriginal Australian people from present-day New South Wales.Colebee and fellow Dharug man Nurragingy received land grants in recognition of their assistance in guiding British military forces in punitive expeditions against insurgent Gandangara and Darkinjung people in 1816.

  7. Battle of Richmond Hill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Richmond_Hill

    Four hundred British settlers moved onto the lands of the Darug people along the Hawkesbury River in 1794 and began to construct farms. They removed yam beds that had been cultivated along the river by Indigenous people and they planted Indian corn . [3]

  8. Drones spotted by 17 military bases located next to Chinese ...

    www.aol.com/news/drones-spotted-17-military...

    Menawhile, analysis from the Farm Service Agency of the USDA, Chinese investors owned 349,442 acres of US farmland as of December 31, 2022. Billionaire and Chinese Communist Party member Chen ...

  9. Murnong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murnong

    When British settlers moved onto the Hawkesbury River in 1794, they constructed farms by removing the yams and planting Indian corn . The Dharug people saw the corn on their land as a replacement carbohydrate of the yams and when the corn ripened, they carried it away. Settlers fired shots on the Dharug people to drive them away, and a series ...