Before the onset of British colonisation, the area around Windorah was inhabited by the
Kulumali people, who spoke the
Birria (Pirriya) language. The men of this group were circumcised, cut
cicatrices on their chest and had one or two of their upper central
incisors removed as part of their
initiation rites. They also chewed
pituri as a stimulant. The population upon first contact with the British was estimated to be under 1,000 people. The British first entered the region in August 1847 with the arrival of the expedition led by
Edmund Kennedy. He encountered hundreds of Kulumali people living in the region and had several tense interactions with them over the ability to pass through their land and have access to their waterholes. Near the present town of Windorah, the situation was further inflamed with the Aboriginal people tampering with the expedition's cache of flour and by Kennedy twice attempting to force a negotiation in which he would take an Aboriginal child. A
nulla nulla was thrown, and on two occasions Kennedy's men charged their horses at a group of resident Kulumali, whipping them and firing pistols above their heads to disperse them.
Cobb & Co once ran a stage coach service between Windorah and
Adavale. It is stated that the town is named after the local
Aboriginal word for "Big Fish", On 5 January 1884, police constable Nathaniel Roberts stationed at Windorah died from thirst while lost in the bush near
Connemarra Station. Windorah Provisional School opened on 30 July 1888. In 1897 it became a half-time school, sharing a teacher with Cooper's Creek Provisional School, but reverted to a full-time school in 1903. In 1907, it became a half-time school with Cooper's Creek school again, and then closed in 1915. However, it reopened in 1916, only to close again in 1918. In 1926, it reopened and remains operating as Windorah State School. It celebrated its 125th anniversary in 2013. On 30 November 1888, police constable Thomas Joseph Callaghan died while on patrol near Whitula pastoral station when he became lost in the bush without water and died of thirst. The temperature at the time was up to in the shade. He was buried in an unmarked grave west of the town of Windorah. The town was completely isolated by floodwater in 1949 after surrounding areas were inundated by heavy rainfall. Low cloud and more rain prevented relief food supplies from being delivered by air from a
RAAF Dakota. In 2009,
Ergon Energy established its first
solar farm in Windorah. The
Windorah Solar Farm provides electricity to the town of Windorah and surrounding rural areas. == Demographics ==