Mount Barker

Western Australia, Australia
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Mount Barker, town, southwestern Western Australia, lying at the base of 1,890-foot (576-metre) Mount Barker. It is located in the state’s southern region, about 35 miles (56 km) north of Albany.

The mountain was sighted in 1829 and named after Captain Collett Barker, the last military commandant at Albany. The town, proclaimed in 1899, is the administrative headquarters of Plantagenet shire. Situated on the Great Southern Railway and Albany Highway to Perth (210 miles [340 km] northwest), it is a processing centre for a region of beef, sheep, apple, and vegetable farming and manufactures concrete pipe. Mount Barker is a base for excursions to the scenic Porongurups and Stirling ranges and so takes advantage of the growing tourist trade in the Great Southern region. It also has become a wine-growing region of note and has reversed a trend in many rural towns by increasing its population. Pop. (2006) urban centre, 1,761; (2011) urban centre, 1,795.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Virginia Gorlinski.