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Dangin, Western Australia

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Population
  
283 (2006 census)

Postcode(s)
  
6383

State electorate(s)
  
Central Wheatbelt

Founded
  
1902

Postal code
  
6383

Established
  
1902

LGA(s)
  
Shire of Quairading

Elevation
  
259 m

Local time
  
Thursday 10:59 AM

Federal division
  
Division of O'Connor

Dangin, Western Australia

Location
  
160 km (99 mi) E of Perth 7 km (4 mi) SW of Quairading

Weather
  
26°C, Wind SE at 19 km/h, 53% Humidity

Dangin is a small town in the wheatbelt region of Western Australia. It is located about 7 kilometres south-west of Quairading, in the Shire of Quairading. At the 2006 census, Dangin had a population of 283.

Map of Dangin WA 6383, Australia

Dangin is named after the nearby Dangin Spring, which is in turn thought to be an Australian Aboriginal place name meaning "place where the Djanja grows", "Djanja" being a species of Hakea that grows in the vicinity. The name is recorded for 1863 as the name of the farm of Edward Read Parker, son of the first settler in the region. Around 1900, Edward's son Jonah, into whose hands the land had passed, began subdividing the property, forming a townsite of sorts, albeit on private land. In 1902 the town was formally gazetted, but even then it was surrounded by Parker land, and the only access to the town was through a gate. Six years later, Quairading had been established, gazetted, and connected by rail, and thereafter Quairading rapidly took over from Dangin as the main regional centre. It is believed that Dangin was the original town in the area, but the original settlers didn't want to have a hotel in the town. a group decided to move further east to build a pub and a new settlement so the township of Quairading appeared and has grown into a moderate wheatbelt centre while Dangin these days, has only a handful of houses left.

References

Dangin, Western Australia Wikipedia