Land in the Murray Mallee region was first taken up on pastoral lease in the late 1850s. For the first twenty years there were several lessees; the area had limited grazing during this time. After a well was dug at Lameroo, then known as Wow Wow Plain, in 1884, settlement on Wow Wow Plain became permanent. The land was surveyed in 1894, and the initial survey of Wow Wow Plain gave each block some natural open land to start cultivating. The town reserve was proclaimed in 1894 and a Government well was excavated.
The town was named Lameroo in 1904 at the suggestion of J.M. Johnston who had worked on the Overland Telegraph Line and heard the word in Darwin (as the name of the Lameroo Beach) and liked the sound of it.[9]
The Pinnaroo railway line opened through Lameroo in 1906. It initially carried mixed goods, as well as passengers. In later years, only bulk grain was transported on the line, with trains emptying the silos at Lameroo. After mid-2015, the railway ceased to be used, and the 2015 harvest onwards would be transported away by road.[20]
Media
Lameroo was the home of the Pinnaroo Country News (5 June 1908 – 31 March 1922),[21] which was the first country newspaper established by newspaperman James Barclay, in partnership with William Macfarlane.[22] After 1911, it suffered due to the arrival of the Pinnaroo and Border Times (1911–1941).
Lameroo was also home to two short-lived publications: the Lameroo Weekly News (9 – 30 June 1922), printed by Chas. Laycock;[23] and, the Lameroo Mail (11 – 18 February 1927), printed by G.W. Veale.[24]
Attractions
Lameroo is sandwiched between the Billiatt Wilderness Protection Area to the north, and the Ngarkat Conservation Park to the south. Both protected areas are reserves for bushwalkers and nature enthusiasts. In spring, native Australian wildflowers abound in the Ngarkat, while the Billiatt offers native fauna such as kangaroos and mallee fowl.
^Jenkins, J.G. (17 November 1904). "TOWNS OF PINNAROO AND LAMEROO"(PDF). The South Australian Government Gazette. Government of South Australia: 919–920. Retrieved 5 May 2018.