Cunningham, Queensland

Cunningham is a rural locality in the Southern Downs Region, Queensland, Australia. In the, Cunningham had a population of 58 people.

Geography
The Condamine River forms the north-eastern boundary of the locality. The Cunningham Highway passes through the locality in an approximately east–west direction and forms part of the southern boundary. The South Western railway line passes through the locality from the north-east to the south-west. The land is mostly used for farming. There is a small urban centre on the Leyburn-Cunningham Road which features the Country Women's Association Memorial Hall at Cunningham Road, a memorial park and the now disused Cunningham railway station.

History
The locality is named after explorer and botanist Allan Cunningham who was the first European to see the lush pastures of the Darling Downs in 1827.

Demographics
In the Cunningham had a population of 66 people.

In the, Cunningham had a population of 58 people.

Amenities
The memorial park has a picnic table as well as three memorials to (left to right):
 * Patrick Leslie, the first settler on the Darling Downs who founded Toolburra Station north of the park
 * the local servicemen who died in World War I and World War II
 * the pioneer families of the district: Clancy, Mullins, McMahon and Cantwell

The memorial cairn to Patrick Leslie was erected by the Rosenthal Shire Council and unveiled on 10 December 1959 by the Shire Chairman, J. A. Costello.

The Cunningham branch of the Queensland Country Women's Association meets at the QCWA Hall on Cunningham Road.