Aboriginal Australians have lived along the Blackwood River for thousands of years. The
Bibulman Noongar people called the river
Gurbillup buerle, "burle" meaning "river", while the portion of the river at Bridgetown was called
Gigellup buerle. In 1827,
Captain James Stirling,
RN, arrived at the river and named it after
Vice-Admiral Sir Henry Blackwood, under whom he served as a
midshipman on in 1808–1809 during the
Napoleonic Wars, in the North Sea and the Mediterranean. Historically, it was of considerable importance in the early days of the
Swan River Colony, and more recently of importance in the ecology of the Augusta-Margaret River region due to conflicts in land use policy. The upper catchment contains
Toolibin Lake, a nature reserve and
Ramsar site. The river is prone to occasional flooding. In 1945 it rose to the highest level recorded to that date, running over the Russell Street bridge in
Nannup. The river flooded again in 1946 and 1947 closing roads but not causing any significant damage to towns along the river. In 1949
Nannup received of rain in a period of seven hours, causing flooding. A bridge over the Blackwood connecting the town to
Busselton was swept away. In 1982 after the remnants of a
tropical cyclone passed through the southwest, the town and surrounding areas were inundated by heavy rains. The Blackwood rose , submerging over 50 houses in Nannup. ==References==