Men’s Christmas gift guide
Craftsman boots
Everyday boots
Dress boots
Country boots
Jackets
Sweatshirts
Belts
Kangaroo leather
New collection
Christmas gifts
Women’s Christmas gift guide
Lady yearling boots
Bags
Gardener Commando boots
Boot icons
Gardener Commando boot
Lady Yearling boots
Men's boot icons
Women's boot icons
Uncover the story of one of Australia’s most loved boot makers.
The history of R.M.Williams
The Australian icon
Crafting a better future
One piece of leather
Explore stories
Experience our iconic Chelsea boots at our flagship stores and trusted local stockists.
Marlow store
New Bond Street store
Soho store
In-store services
Our stockists
Christmas gifts for him
Christmas gifts for her
Made to last
Boot care products
Sustainability
Online purchases can be returned free of charge within 60 days. Read more
Exchanges for online purchases can be made in-store only.
Once a return is received for processing, refunds generally take up to 10 business days to reach your account depending on your financial institution.
Full returns policy
Accepted debit/credit cards:
Visa, MasterCard, American express
Buy now pay later options:
Klarna, PayPal Pay in 4, Clear pay
Other payment options:
PayPal, R.M.Williams physical gift cards, R.M.Williams digital gift cards
Click and collect is available in all R.M.Williams stores. Simply select the click and collect option at checkout, then collect it from your selected store within 24 hours. Find out more here.
Two farming mates have converted a historic vicarage into a community cafe, breathing life back into a small NSW town.
Story Lauren Munsie | Photos Ange McMaster
Early on a Saturday morning in the small town of North Star, cars make a pilgrimage to what used to be the town’s vicarage. It’s become a journey they make religiously nearly every weekend. But the people come not because of their own faith, but spurred on by the faith of two farmers who converted the old house into the vicarage cafe, bringing coffee and a community back together.
Cafe owners and north star locals James Hardcastle and Simon Doolin grew up together. Their fathers farmed where their grandfathers once did, sealing their own fate early on. ‘I found farming is definitely my niche,’ James says.
When the men were growing up, the town in north-western NSW was larger and had a pub, club and general store, where community members often caught up outside over a beer. But the population dwindled and the pub and store closed. The club slowly shortened its opening hours. In daylight hours, there was nowhere for the community to meet. ‘We were missing that community connection,’ James says.
Two years ago, Simon approached James with a proposition to open a cafe but, at first, James shrugged it off. However, his mate persisted.
‘A lot of people were staying home during the recent drought,’ Simon says. ‘We have so many great people in this area, and we had to find a way to draw them out.’
The building was in an ideal location, but was not an obvious cafe choice. It was built by James’s great uncle in the early 1900s as a masonic lodge, before it became the regular home of the north star church minister, but time had not been kind to the building.
The pair could see its potential and bought it in late 2020, renovating and converting the house into the cafe that opened last year in the township of just 40 people.
“I got a message from a neighbour the other day, which said, ‘Thank you so much for The Vicarage’,” James says. ‘To hear that from one person makes it all worthwhile.’