Aboriginal and early settler history The area which later became the village of Mount Allen lies on the traditional lands of
Wangaaypuwan dialect speakers (also known as Wangaibon) of
Ngiyampaa people. After settlers took over the district, it lay across the boundary of Mount Allen and the Coree parishes, within
Blaxland County. The gold field was dominated by Mount Allen Gold-Mining Company's mine. Operations had ceased by March 1894, due to lack of water to run the 20-head
stamper battery. At first, the flow was 100 gallons per hour, and the water was welcomed; when the mine reached 138 feet in depth, it was necessary to install pumps to remove over 800 gallons of water per hour. In July 1895, the shaft was "flooded out". In October 1895, the mine office and manager's residence were destroyed by fire. A second shaft was sunk in 1897. Around February 1898, poor grades led to the end of mining and the decision to erect a
cyanide plant to reprocess
tailings. From February 1899 to March 1900, tailings were reprocessed to extract residual gold. That seems to have been the end of the operations. By 1901, machinery from the mine had been relocated to another mine at Mount Hope. In 1938, the last use of the mine was as a water supply in time of drought. As late as the 1940s, there was talk of mining resuming, but it came to nothing
Mining village An informal settlement sprang up near the mine, which had a population of 200 by the end of 1893. A village was not officially proclaimed until 22 October 1896. Land was reserved for public and government buildings, and as a common for residents' use. These grandiose plans were never completed and Mount Allen was a short-lived settlement. There was a school at Mount Allen—known as Double Peak, after a landform that lay closer to the village site than the Mount Allen landform—from July 1895 to December 1900. By April 1898, just after mining ceased, it was described as seeming "entirely abandoned, there being only a few habitations occupied." Building allotments in the village became worthless within a few years. Some of the now lost streets of the former village were Cobar, Hope, Abbott,
Carruthers,
Copeland,
Reid and Fulton streets. The village had a market garden operated by ethic-Chinese. The village effectively ceased to exist officially in 1939, when most of its land area was reallocated to the neighbouring pastoral holding, from which it had been excised originally. == Remnants ==