Narembeen means place of female emus in the local Aboriginal language.
History
The area was initially surveyed in 1836 by the Surveyor General John Septimus Roe. After camping on a rocky outcrop and seeing a group of emus he named the area Emu Hill. By the 1850s, European settlers arrived in the area looking for pastoral land for wheat and grazing. Sandalwood cutters also frequented the area during this time.
In 1901 the rabbit proof fence was constructed just to the east of Narembeen, and can still be seen today.
A settler named Charles Smith bought a property he called Narimbeen. By the 1900s more farmers moved to the area as land was opened up, and by 1918 the town-site of Emu Hill was gazetted.
In 1920, the town-site of Narembeen only existed as a minor siding to the railway line that had only just been built to Emu Hill.[4]
By the 1920s Emu Hill was the largest community in the region but the local populace opposed the building of a hotel in the town.
As a result of this a Perth lawyer, Henry Dale and a publican, Paddy Conlon, purchased 30 acres (120,000 m2) of land at the railway siding of Narembeen to build a hotel.
The town of Narembeen was established in 1922 about 5 km from the Emu Hill town-site. The location of Narembeen was not the best choice as it is prone to flooding.
In 1924, there were rumours that gold had been discovered close to the rabbit proof fence and the town of Holleton was established about 50 km from Narembeen, but Narembeen prospered as it was the closest train station to Holleton and offered a motor transport service to the miners.[5]
Narembeen had a population of 2,100 by 1925 and Emu Hill was no more.