The Bogan River is an inland river of New South Wales, Australia. It begins at Goonumbla, near Parkes. It flows in a north west direction for about 370 mi (595 km) before it joins the Darling River near Bourke.[1] The towns of Tottenham, Peak Hill and Nyngan are built on the banks of the Bogan River.
The first European to see the Bogan River was Charles Sturt in 1828-9.[1] He named it New Year Creek. However the Indigenous Australian name, Bogan, which means birthplace of a king, was the name that was used.[1] The explorer Sir Thomas Mitchell created a painting in 1836 of an Aboriginal man, Combo, from the Bogan River.
At Peak Hill, the local weir is built on Aboriginal stone fishing traps, similar to those in Brewarrina.