Bourke, town, north-central New South Wales, Australia. It lies on the Darling River.
The town originated with a stockade, Fort Bourke, built in 1835 by Sir Thomas Livingstone Mitchell as a defense against Aborigines, that was named for Governor Sir Richard Bourke. The town, surveyed in 1862 and made a municipality in 1878, was a busy port in the 1880s and 1890s, was incorporated into Darling Shire in 1955, and is now part of Bourke Shire. Located along the Mitchell Highway, with air and rail links to Sydney (410 miles [660 km] southeast), Bourke serves a large section of outback (inland rural areas) that supports sheep raising and irrigated citrus fruit and fodder farming. An important wool-shipping point, the town has meatworks and a wool-scouring plant. Fort Bourke is preserved by the Royal Australian Historical Society. Pop. (2006) local government area, 3,095; (2011) local government area, 2,868.