Albury Wodonga - Victoria


Visitor Information Centre
Wodonga, VIC 3690
1300 796 222

Albury Wodonga History Helps You Discover City’s Glorious Past

If you have the habit of turning the pages of history to discover a city’s glorious past, its time you cast a glance at Albury Wodonga history. Albury Wodonga history has been intrinsically linked to the broad settlement incorporating the twin Australian cities of Albury and Wodonga.

Being on the natural border between the two oldest and strongest colonies, Albury- Wodonga in Victoria grew up as both river port and rail link. As a meeting point of contrast and culture, its significance stretches back to the first Aboriginal inhabitants who came here long before the arrival of Europeans.

The contrasts and contradictions of time and place, history and progress, river and mountain, culture and cultivation have melded themselves into an unlikely harmony of differences that you cannot experience anywhere else in the country. The duality of sense and style is a vivid and contrast feature of Albury Wodonga history.

From the excavation of the remains, you will get a clear view of the uses and artifact construction as well as the habitation of the land. The richness of the river plains in terms of wildlife and the wandering nature of the early aboriginal tribes suggest that the region was indeed used as a perfect hunting ground. A few rock shelters in the surrounding areas in addition to some faded rock art also support a history of tribal habitation.

By 1847, Albury boasted a handful of huts, blacksmith shops, public houses, police barracks and a post office. In 1851, separation was achieved between Northern and Southern New South Wales. By separation, the German settlers escaping the rising nationalism in their homeland started arriving. They found the region quiet suitable for trade and commerce. The increased commerce between Sydney and Melbourne thus necessitated the development of the faster means of transport.

The need for the growing population to be independent of supplies from the larger settlements led to the establishments of various industries and railway lines between the two states Albury and Wodonga. The border anomalies still plague the border cities with distinguished state regulations in force within stone’s throw of each other. Currently the two separate local administrations of Albury and Wodonga though divided only by river but politically by two separate governments.

Now the border cities of Albury and Wodonga have witnessed a miraculous change. They have continued to prosper attracting new industries and offering a relaxed lifestyle unmatched by the metropolitan capital cities. The city of Albury with population over 42,000 and Wodonga with 30,730 gives urban Albury-Wodonga in Victoria a vast population boom.
 

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