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Jerrinja is the name of an Aboriginal Australian people from the South Coast of New South Wales, Australia.Their traditional lands cover from Crooked River in the north to Clyde River in the south, from the coast (Roseby Park) in the east to the mountains in the west [1] (Braidwood, New South Wales).
The Yuin are considered as the traditional owners of Wallaga Lake land. [12] The former Wallaga Lake National Park is incorporated into Gulaga National Park . [ 27 ] Gulaga Mountain , in the Gulaga National Park , is described by Aboriginal people as the place of ancestral origin for Yuin people.
Braidwood was formerly the seat of the Tallaganda local government area. However, following restructuring of local government areas by the New South Wales Government, it is now part of Queanbeyan-Palerang Regional Council. The local paper is now called the Braidwood Times. Through much of the 20th century, Braidwood was essentially in rural ...
The history of Braidwood, New South Wales in Australia dates back to the early nineteenth century. The historic nature of the town has been recognised with the listing of the entire town on the former Register of the National Estate on 21 October 1980 and the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 3 April 2006.
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Braidwood District Historical Society Museum is a heritage-listed former hotel and Oddfellows Hall and now museum located on Wallace Street, Braidwood, in the Southern Tablelands region of New South Wales, Australia. The property is owned by Braidwood Historical Society. It was added to the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 2 April ...
Jordon Hudson is getting ready to cheer on her boyfriend, Bill Belichick, at his coaching job.. As Belichick, 72, is set to begin a new role as head football coach at the University of North ...
He was born at Braidwood and he was one of the first cohort that would all attend school. His father, Thomas Farrell (1811—1901), was an ex-convict carpenter at Mount Elrington, when he married Mary Connell's younger sister, Ellen (c.1824—1902), in 1841.