Toganmain Station, located between Darlington Point and Carrathool on the southern side of the Murrumbidgee River, was one of the principal grazing properties in the Riverina. With about 13 miles of river frontage the station was first established by NSW’s Colonial Secretary Sir Alexander Macleay whose initials gave Toganmain its distinctive AML brand.
Toganmain’s 167,000 acres were purchased by Thomas Robertson Senior in blocks commencing in 1867. It would remain in the Robertson family until 1988.
Ranged along the riverbank were the homestead, manager’s residence, and the wool store wharf.
It originally boasted a 110 blade stand. So it was not unusual to have 60 shearers engaged, along with rouseabouts, cooks and shearing hands, as well as another 30 men employed on contract to work at wool scouring.
In September 1876 Toganmain recorded a total of 202,292 sheep shorn by 92 blade shearers, an Australian record never to be beaten.
By 1891 Toganmain was a massive property – over 300,000 acres in size. With Thomas Robertson as manager, a horse tramway connected the woolshed to the wool stores and wool scour beside the Murrumbidgee.
In that year, 218,000 sheep were shorn at Toganmain. Two years on, the homestead already had electric lights installed, and telephone communication with the Toganmain outstations in place. Expansion was only halted by the great drought of 1895-1903.
When Thomas Robertson died in 1904, his 22-year old youngest son John Seymour Robertson took over management. Despite the recent drought, the property still held 100,000 sheep. In 1910 John Seymour sold off 46,259 acres to pay for his father’s probate.
Source & Images:Toganmain
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