I didn't actually read Johnw's link.
So ghosta, this might help (might not either

)
never-never land 1. any remote, sparsely populated place: e.g., He grew tired of life in the city and now lives out in the middle of never-never somewhere.
2. imaginary: e.g., never-never land.
Australia Decodednever-never landnoun
1. an unreal, imaginary, or ideal state, condition, place, etc.
2. any remote, isolated, barren, or sparsely settled region.
dictionary.comnever-never landA fantasy land, an imaginary place, as in I don't know what's gotten into Marge she's way off in never-never land . This expression gained currency when James Barrie used it in Peter Pan (1904) for the place where Peter and the Lost Boys live. However, in the second half of the 1800s Australians already were using it for vast unsettled areas of their continent ( the outback ), and there the term became popular through Mrs. Aeneas Gunn's We of the Never Never (1908). In Australia it still refers to northwest Queensland or northern Australia in general. Elsewhere it simply signifies a fantasy or daydream.
dictionary.com1833 - W. H. BRETON
Excursions 213 refers to Aboriginals as "The Never-never blacks" so-called because they have hitherto kept aloof from the whites.
1882 - Alexander Jenyns Boyd's book "
Old Colonials" has the line “What on earth is to be done in this wretched Never Never country?”
1891 -
The Never Never: is the name of a vast, remote area of the Australian Outback, as described in Barcroft Boake's poem "Where the Dead Men Lie".
Out on the wastes of the Never Never -
That's where the dead men lie!
There where the heat-waves dance forever -
That's where the dead men lie!
(Boake's Poem)
1896 - Henry Lawson wrote a screenplay based on Barcroft Boake's poem. The play was called "THE AUSTRALIAN CINEMATOGRAPH".
1901 -
The Never-Never Country: is a poem by Henry Lawson (
Lawson's Poem)
1902 - "
We of the Never Never" is an autobiographical novel by Jeannie Gunn (pen name Mrs. Aeneas Gunn). Although published as a novel, it is an account of the author's experiences in 1902 at Elsey Station near Mataranka, Northern Territory.
Wikipedia.
1904 - Neverland: (also spelled Never Land or expanded as Never Never Land) is a fictional world featured in the works of J. M. Barrie and those based on them. It is the dwelling place of Peter Pan, Tinker Bell, the Lost Boys, and others.
Wikipedia. Pan is the name of the Greek god that ruled all natural forces. He was god over forests, flocks of animals, and their keepers, like shepherds and herders, and was represented with the head, chest, and arms of a man and the legs, horns, and ears of a goat.
Edit: Chronological order. Edit: more additions to timeline.