The junction of the Manilla and Namoi Rivers known as 'Maneela', was for generations, a camping ground for the local Indigenous people, members of the large
Kamilaroi (Gamilaraay) tribes of northwestern New South Wales. Thomas Florance led the first British surveying expedition to the region in 1827. The local Aboriginal clan rolled boulders from the hills onto Florance's encampment, whose men then fired upon them. Another skirmish occurred resulting in one of the surveying team being wounded by a spear and Florance shooting an Aboriginal man. In 1832,
Henry Dangar and
Sir William Edward Parry conducted further surveying for the
Australian Agricultural Company and camped on what is now the present site of the Manilla township. They found several Aboriginal families living there. Around 1836, British
pastoral squatters arrived in the area looking to establish large sheep and cattle stations on so-called
crown land for the small leasehold fee of £10 per annum. Three massive properties were soon established in the Manilla region: Greenhatches formed by Joseph Greenhatch on behalf of Sydney businessman Charles Smith; Dinawirindi formed by Otto Baldwin; and Cuerindi formed by
Thomas Simpson Hall and his brothers. Conflict in the area between the colonists and the resident Aboriginal population resulted in the government sending a large detachment of
New South Wales Mounted Police under the command of Major James Nunn to the region in early 1838. Nunn's force captured around 100 Aboriginal people just to the west of what is now Manilla, with fifteen taken prisoner and one being shot dead. Frontier conflict in the immediate vicinity appears to have ended after Nunn's operation, who proceeded north-west with his men, later perpetrating the
Waterloo Creek massacre. During the 1850s, teamsters with bullock waggons were regularly transporting goods from the Hunter District through the Manilla area to outlying cattle stations and the northern goldfield settlements of Bingara and Bundarra. Teams were often delayed at the junction of the Namoi and Manilla Rivers by high water. In 1853, enterprising Englishman George Veness arrived at ‘The Junction’ to set up a store and wine shop at the teamsters’ camping ground. In doing so, Veness is acknowledged as the founder of the Manilla township which was located on the boundary of the Manilla and Dinawirindi pastoral properties. The town's early prosperity was founded on the highly productive wheat and pastoral industries. In 1864, the nascent township was practically wiped out by an immense flood. It took many years for the town to recover, with the first school being built in 1878 and the first post-office in 1880. Australian singer-songwriter
Darren Hanlon produced a song entitled 'Manilla NSW' which appeared on his 2006 record, 'Fingertips and Mountaintops'. At the
2006 census, Manilla had a population of 2,082, whilst as at the there were 2,386 people. ==Rugby League and Dally Messenger==