Bredbo is a village on the Monaro plains of New South Wales, Australia. The village is on the Monaro Highway 34 kilometres (21 mi) north of Cooma. The village is in the Cooma-Monaro Shire shire and had a population of 169 in 2006.
Located at the junction of the Bredbo and Murrumbidgee rivers, the Bredbo area was historically prone to flooding. As a way-point on the road from Sydney to the Snowy Mountains, travellers were frequently stranded by rising water. By 1839 the Bredbo Inn had been established to accommodate travellers. The Inn was a Cobb and Co stagecoach post, with stables located behind the Inn which are still standing today.
The surrounding settlement was developed to support squatters' runs established in the district between 1848 to 1850. Bredbo was officially proclaimed a village in 1888.
Gold was discovered in the area by the Reverend William Branwhite Clarke, who also discovered gold at Kiandra. A field was proclaimed along the Bredbo River, which was worked until 1921. In the 1930s a geological survey was undertaken and a mine opened and operated until 1942. The field at Cowra Creek were worked from 1888 and are still popular for fossicking.
i always wanted to believe all those promises
though i knew they were empty
and i always wanted to keep the secrets
though i knew they should have been revealed
i stood up for you
though tou were never that around
i saw you off to the journey
yeah yeah yeah
i couldn't come along
no no no
i saw you off to the journey
yeah yeah yeah
but i wrote you a song
i wrote you a song
i always forgave all those mistakes
though i knew you would do them all again
and i always apologized for my words
though i knew you deserved all of them
i saw you off to the journey
yeah yeah yeah
i couldn't come along
no no no
i saw you off to the journey
yeah yeah yeah
but i wrote you a song