Mandandanji Prior to British colonisation, the Aboriginal peoples of the
Mandandanji Nation occupied this region.
Mandandanji (also known as Mandandanyi, Mandandanjdji, Kogai) is an
Australian Aboriginal language spoken by the Mandandanji people. The Mandandanji language region is within the local government boundaries of the
Maranoa Region, particularly Roma,
Yuleba and
Surat, then east towards
Chinchilla and south-west towards
Mitchell and
St George.
British exploration The first documented British explorers to enter the region were Sir
Thomas Mitchell and
Edmund Kennedy on their 1846 expedition. Mitchell named a nearby hill
Mount Abundance due to the rich plains he encountered around what is now Roma. He called these plains the Fitzroy Downs in honour of the newly appointed
Governor of New South Wales,
Charles Augustus FitzRoy. Mitchell and Kennedy encountered a community of around 200 Aboriginal people in this vicinity. After initial friendly communication, hostilities arose with Kennedy's men dispersing a group of Mandandanji after they tried to burn down the explorer's encampment. In August 1848, James Blyth attempted to establish a
sheep station on
Bungil Creek but the resident Mandandanji drove him off, spearing Blyth in the leg, killing his stockman and taking 3,000 of his sheep. This incident was the start of a lengthy war between the Aboriginal people of the area and the colonists. In late 1848, Macpherson had several skirmishes with Aboriginal people around Bungil Creek, killing an indeterminate number. By April 1849 the Mandandanji had killed seven of Macpherson's stockmen, and the local
Crown Lands Commissioner, John Durbin, with his contingent of mounted
Border Police troopers was called in to give armed assistance. Despite this, Macpherson was defeated and forced to abandon his Mount Abundance station in May 1849. Upon their exit, Macpherson and Durbin requested the government to mobilise the newly formed
Native Police force to eliminate Aboriginal resistance in the region. Subsequently, in July 1849,
Frederick Walker led his Native Police troopers against the "Fitzroy Downs blacks", shooting many during a large skirmish. In late 1850, the Mandandanji regrouped to attack Paddy McEnroe who had attempted to re-establish the Mount Abundance pastoral station. They killed one of his shepherds, burnt down a hut and took 400 cattle. Roderick Mitchell, the local Crown Lands Commissioner who had replaced Durbin, led a reprisal raid consisting of his police troopers and nearby squatter colonists, which recovered the cattle and killed 13 Aborigines.
Township of Roma In 1862, the
Government of Queensland issued instructions for a town to be created in the
Maranoa Region. Surveyors
Robert Austin and
A.C. Gregory chose a site adjacent to Bungil Creek on Stephen Spencer's Mount Abundance pastoral station. This site became the township of Roma. Initially consisting of nothing more than three
public houses, Roma was named after Lady
Diamantina Bowen (Contessa Diamantina di Roma), wife of the first
Governor of Queensland,
George Bowen. founded in 1866 by
Samuel Symons Bassett founded in 1866 by
Samuel Symons Bassett In 1863
Samuel Symons Bassett brought Queensland's vine cuttings to Roma and established the
Romavilla Winery in 1866 on
Bungil Creek north of Roma. In 1864, Reverend Adam McIntyre of the
Free Church of Scotland commenced services at pastoral stations in the Maranoa district with the intention that he would be established as a permanent minister in Roma. However, on 22 May 1866 he died at Brucedale pastoral station on Bungil Creek south-east of Roma (), now in
Tingun .
Captain Starlight, a cattle rustler, was tried and acquitted in the
Roma Courthouse in February 1873. Roma State School, the first school in Roma, opened on 21 March 1870 and closed on 31 December 1986. St John's School was established by the
Sisters of Mercy in 1881. Roma was the site of Australia's first oil and gas discoveries. During
World War II, Roma was the location of
RAAF No.22 Inland Aircraft Fuel Depot (IAFD), completed in 1942 and closed on 29 August 1944. Usually consisting of 4 tanks, 31 fuel depots were built across Australia for the storage and supply of aircraft fuel for the
RAAF and the
US Army Air Forces at a total cost of £900,000 ($1,800,000). Roma Special School opened on 25 January 1982 and closed on 31 December 1995. In 2004, Roma had a low unemployment rate of 2.9%, which is among the lowest unemployment rates in Australia. 68.5% of the people in the labour force living in Roma were employed full-time, with 21.9% working on a part-time basis. The Roma State College opened on 1 January 2006 as an amalgamation of Roma Junior School and Roma Middle School, and the addition of a new senior component. In 2010, a Santos project study investigated the possibility of introducing treated
CSG produce water into Roma's existing underground aquifer which supplies the town's water needs, including drinking water The Roma Managed Aquifer Recharge Study is the first of its kind in Australia. It is also considered experimental in nature as the risks are largely unknown. The Roma CSG Field pilot trial (Hermitage) Stage 4 is in operation (Completed Q4 2012) and Roma CSG Field (The Bend) Stage 4 operation is due to commence Q3/Q4 2014. The project will allow for the injection of up to 24 ML/d of treated coal seam gas water into the Gubberamunda Sandstone aquifer for up to 20 years. Water bores have been shut down and hence been restarted at nearby Wallumbilla due to
methane being detected in the Gubberamunda Sandstone aquifer (2014). == Demographics ==