Jim Curran
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James Lawrence Curran (15 April 1927 – 18 May 2005) was a NSW politician (Australia) from Gilgandra, NSW. He was a Labor Party member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly from 1980 to 1981, representing the electorate of Castlereagh.
Curran was born in 1927 at Gilgandra where his father, Gilbert Curran, had arrived in 1908 as a young man from Horsham, Vic, with his own parents, brothers and sisters. Gilbert Curran's father, Con Curran snr, had purchased Gilgandra's Royal Hotel in May 1908,[1] and in early 1909 Gilbert purchased a block of land of 3,650 acres adjacent to the Marthaguy Creek, which had been subdivided from "Berida" station.[2] Jim Curran and his brothers were raised on this farming property, named "Bundah", located sixteen kilometres (ten miles) west from Gilgandra township. He later attended boarding school at St Stanislaus College in Bathurst, and won a scholarship to attend Armidale Teachers College.
He was appointed as a teacher in mid 1947.[3] He taught variously in Moree, Bourke and Sydney. He met fellow teacher June Duffy and they were married in Sydney in 1949.[4] They had no children. After his father's death in February 1957, Curran resigned from the Department of Education effective 9 Sept 1957[5] and moved to Malaya with his wife where they both took up school teaching posts at a company-owned tin-mining town on the east coast. They enjoyed a stimulating three-year period among the expatriate community engaged by the mine owners and made many lifelong international friends.
In 1960, after three years in Malaya, Mr and Mrs Curran returned to Australia. Curran gave up teaching to live at Gilgandra. He bought out his brothers' share in the family property "Bundah" and farmed there from 1960/61.[6] He ran "Bundah" successfully as a mixed farm, growing wheat and raising sheep and beef cattle while his wife taught at Gilgandra primary school. He became heavily involved in the local farming community, serving as secretary and president of the United Farmers and Woolgrowers Association in Gilgandra, and being an active member of several farming and breeding groups. He was also a farming commentator for the local ABC station for a period. In 1971, he returned to teaching, running the library at Gilgandra High School and later taking up a position as library adviser to the Western Area for the Department of Education. In this role he had a stint in England on a library research grant. His wife June also taught in the library at Gilgandra High School.