Mandurama is a village in the Blayney Shire, New South Wales, Australia. The site of the village and surrounding areas was home to the Wiradjuri people prior to settlement, and the name "Mandurama" is derived from their word for 'water holes'. Mandurama is situated 259 kilometres west of Sydney, 59 kilometres southwest of Bathurst, and 47 kilometres northeast of Cowra on the Mid-Western Highway. Established in 1876 as a privately owned village for the workers of Thomas Icely's Coombing Park, it has since developed, along with nearby Lyndhurst into a modest service centre for the surrounding localities and farmland.© Wikipedia
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Mandurama is a small community located on the Mid Western Highway between Cowra and Blayney in central western NSW. I must admit I have not stopped in Mandurama for a number of years but I do enjoy looking at the quaint old houses as we drive through on our way to Bathurst.
Mandurama has a general store, cafe, Service Station and Hotel for the convenience of travellers wishing to stop and explore the area. It is surrounded by farmland and has a population of about 500 people.