Settlers The original occupants were the
Wiradjuri Aboriginals. In 1838 Thomas Icely requested that a village be established to service his large pastoral estate. On 29 September 1839 Carcoar became just the third settlement west of the
Blue Mountains to be
gazetted. The first allotments in the town were sold in 1840. By 1850 Carcoar was the second most populous town west of the mountains, second in size only to
Bathurst, and became a banking and administrative centre for the area. In 1857 the town's public school opened. It has continued to function as a school since that day, making it one of the oldest continuous schools in Australia. The main street is Naylor Street. It was named after the first Anglican minister, the Reverend Thomas Beagley Naylor. Tenders were called in March 1842 for the construction of a court house and lock up and these structures were built soon after. The court house also served as a place of worship. It was replaced by a second court house, of an
Italianate design, that was commenced in 1879 and finished in 1882. The discovery of
gold further to the west in the mid-1860s started the decline of the town. The government began erecting a number of significant
public buildings starting in the late 1870s.
Railways The location of the town at the bottom of a steep valley counted against it when it came to railway construction. Another blow came to the town when the railway went to
Blayney (13 km to the North East) in 1874. By the early 1880s, the population was in decline. Carcoar was not on the railway line until 1888, when the
Blayney–Demondrille railway line, which is an extension of the
Main Southern Line, was constructed. In the 1980s, passenger services were suspended between
Cowra and
Blayney (including Carcoar). This section was used by the
Lachlan Valley Railway for many years until the line was closed in 2009.
Convicts and bushrangers Carcoar's population growth in the mid-19th century also brought crime problems, with increased activity by local renegade
convicts and
bushrangers by the late 1830s. In response, local authorities threatened to impose
martial law and withdraw all convict privileges in 1841. However, Carcoar's crime problems largely subsided following the capture of bushranger Paddy Curran, the arrival of a magistrate, and the addition of more police. The activity of Irish convicts-turned-bushrangers operating in Australia was the subject of ballads, including "
The Wild Colonial Boy."
John Peisley, born in
Bathurst in 1835, was a notorious horse thief in the area in the early 1850s. While imprisoned on
Cockatoo Island near
Sydney, now called Biloela, he met veteran prisoner
Frank Gardiner, labelled a "Cockatoo Hand." Peisley received his
ticket of leave in December 1860, conditional on his remaining in the
Hunter River Valley. He absconded to the Abercrombie Rangies, where his parents had previously lived, and began a series of highway robberies in the south and west of Bathurst. Frank Gardiner joined him after two months, followed by Johnny Gilbert three weeks later. Peisley was captured in late January 1862, charged with murdering a Bigga innkeeper, and hanged at Bathurst. Frank Gardiner served imprisonment six years for horse theft; upon his release, he broke his parole and took up
cattle thieving. Two local men from the Mount Macquarie area (now
Neville), long-term friends Mickey Bourke and Johnny Vane attempted to steal a
racehorse from
Coombing. In the process Bourke non-fatally shot
stablehand German Charley, who tried to stop them, in the mouth. Bourke went on to join
Ben Hall's bushranger gang. On 13 July 1863, Ben Hall, with Johnny Gilbert and John O'Meally, held up the Carcoar Commercial Bank in broad daylight. This marked Australia's first bank robbery. It was thwarted when a bank teller fired a shot into the bank's ceiling, and the gang fled without seizing anything but shooting the manager as he was returning to the bank. The three, this time joined by Johnny Vane and Mickey Bourke, then held up a jeweller's shop and the Sportsman's Arms Hotel in Bathurst in broad daylight in October 1863. The gang escaped down George Street, exchanging shots with police. They returned three days later and robbed more stores, homes, and businesses on the outskirts of Bathurst. Weeks later, twenty-year-old Mickey Burke was shot in the stomach during a hold-up of Gold Commissioner Keightley in
Rockley. Believing he was about to die, he shot himself in the head; still alive and in pain, Hall killed him. Some time later, Ben Hall held up Presbyterian Reverend James Adam, who made such a good impression on the bushranger that Hall let him go without robbing him. Ben Hall died in a gunfight near Forbes in May 1865 and was buried in the Forbes cemetery. In Ben Hall's three years as their leader, the gang robbed two mail coaches, committed 21 hold-ups, and stole 23 racehorses.
Mining Copper was mined at nearby
Coombing Park at various times between 1848 and 1878. Iron ore was also mined there from 1899 to 1923. There was also gold in the area, at the Three Mile Diggings to the west of Carcoar. Carcoar was the site of Australia's first documented
uranium deposit, found in 1894. The uranium ore deposit was located within a
cobalt mine—mined from 1888 to 1895—and was in the form of
copper uranite.
Proposed national capital site An area referred to as 'Forest Reefs', at the time, was one of the proposed sites for Australia's national capital. The area does not correspond with the modern-day locality of
Forest Reefs. but lay immediately to the north of the township of Carcoar, upon which it bordered. ==Climate==