The locality of Bingil Bay is bounded to the east by the bay of the same name with Ninney Point (17°50′00″S146°06′00″E / 17.8333°S 146.1°E / -17.8333; 146.1 (Ninney Point)) on the north-east coast.[5] A long sandy beach extends south from Ninney Point along the coastline. The town is in the south-eastern corner of the locality.[6]
The land use is a mixture of residential, growing tropical fruit), and grazing on native vegetation.[6]
History
The name Bingil is believed to be an Aboriginal word meaning a good camping ground given to the area by Frederick Cutten, a pioneer settler in the area.[4]
In 1884, the Cutten brothers (Frederick, Leonard, Sydney and James) established the first commercial tea plantation in Australia on their Bicton estate at Bingil Bay, also growing coffee, mangoes, bananas, pineapples and other tropical fruit. At that time, Bingil Bay was only accessible by boat.[7][8][9] Most of the Bicton estate was destroyed by a cyclone in 1918 and although the homestead was rebuilt the remainder of the estate was never restored. The descendants of the original tea plants were rediscovered in the rain-forest by Dr Allan Maruff in 1958 and seedlings from these plants formed the basis for the Nerada Tea plantations.[10]
In 1921, an overland connection was created from El Arish (a distance of 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) away) but it was only usable by a dray and the journey took most of the day.[9]
The area was formerly known as Clump Point (the name of a nearby headland) until 1929 when a post office called Bingal Bay was established.[11]
The Bingil Bay Lifesaving Club opened in 1936.[13]
Around 1966, then Prime Minister of Australia, Harold Holt and his wife Zara Holt, owned a holiday cottage they called "The Shack" at Bingil Bay. It sat high on the hill with views as far as Dunk Island. The couple were keen spearfishers.[14] The cottage did not have a telephone.[15]
Demographics
In the 2011 census, the locality of Bingil Bay had a population of 369 people.[16]
In the 2016 census, the locality of Bingil Bay had a population of 427 people.[17]
In the 2021 census, the locality of Bingil Bay had a population of 438 people.[1]
There are no schools in Bingil Bay. The nearest government primary schools are Mission Beach State School in Wongaling Beach to the south and El Arish State School in El Arish to the west. The nearest government secondary school is Tully State High School in Tully to the south-west.[6]
^"Bingil Bay". Queensland Places. Centre for the Government of Queensland, University of Queensland. Archived from the original on 20 April 2014. Retrieved 20 April 2014.
^"Bingil Bay". Holiday Here Mission Beach. Archived from the original on 4 March 2021. Retrieved 3 April 2021.
Further reading
Mackness, Constance; Mission Beach - Bingil Bay Progress Association (1983), Clump Point and district : an historical record of Tom O'Shanter, South Mission Beach, Mission Beach, Bingil Bay, Garner's Beach and Kurrimine, G.K. Bolton, ISBN978-0-9591796-0-6
Taylor, R. J (1982), The lost plantation : a history of the Australian tea industry, G.K. Bolton, ISBN978-0-909920-16-6 — available online