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Bacchus Marsh

Bacchus Marsh (Wathawurrung: Pullerbopulloke)[3] is an urban centre and suburban locality in Victoria, Australia located approximately 50 kilometres (30 mi) north west of the state capital Melbourne and 14 kilometres (9 mi) west of Melton at a near equidistance to the major cities of Melbourne, Ballarat and Geelong. The population of the Bacchus Marsh urban area was 22,223[1] at June 2018. Bacchus Marsh is the largest urban area in the local government area of Shire of Moorabool.

Bacchus Marsh
Victoria
Main St, Bacchus Marsh
Bacchus Marsh
Coordinates37°40′30″S 144°26′20″E / 37.67500°S 144.43889°E / -37.67500; 144.43889Coordinates: 37°40′30″S 144°26′20″E / 37.67500°S 144.43889°E / -37.67500; 144.43889
Population
  • 22,223 (2018, Urban Area)[1]
  • 7,808 (2021, suburbs and localities)[2]
 • Density113.209/km2 (293.21/sq mi)
Postcode(s)3340
Elevation118 m (387 ft)
Area196.3 km2 (75.8 sq mi)
Location
LGA(s)Shire of Moorabool
State electorate(s)Eureka
Federal division(s)Hawke
Localities around Bacchus Marsh:
Pentland Hills Darley Merrimu
Pentland Hills Bacchus Marsh Hopetoun Park
Maddingley Maddingley Parwan

Traditionally a market garden area producing a large amount of the region's fruits and vegetables, in recent decades it has transformed into the main commuter town on the Melbourne-Ballarat corridor.[4][5]

It was named after the colonial settler Captain William Henry Bacchus, who saw the great value of this locality as it was situated on two rivers — the Lerderderg and Werribee.

History

Aboriginal

Bacchus Marsh is on the border between the Woiwurrung and Wathaurong territories of the Kulin Nation. The local clans were the Marpeang balug of the Wathaurong, and the Gunung-willam-bulluk (Wurundjeri) of the Woiwurrung. Bacchus Marsh was a meeting ground for anywhere between 150 and 400 Aboriginals even after white settlement, and corroborees were held quite regularly. While there do not appear to be any records of open hostilities between whites and indigenous people, by 1863 there were a total of only 33 Aboriginal people left in the Bacchus Marsh district, and apart from a handful of recollections of the original inhabitants preserved by pioneer settlers, sadly little remains apart from present-day locality names, mainly of watercourses: Coimadai, Djerriwarrh, Korkuperrimul, Lerderderg, Merrimu, Myrniong, Werribee.[6][7] The Wathawurrung name for the area is Pullerbopulloke with 'buluk' meaning lake.

European settlement

One of the first white men to reach the Bacchus Marsh valley was pastoralist Kenneth Scobie Clarke (c. 1806–79), a native of Sutherland in Scotland. Clarke was a manager for the Great Lake Company of Van Diemen’s Land and arrived in the Port Phillip District from George Town on 25 March 1836. Captain Bacchus credited Clarke as being the first man to shear sheep in Victoria, although the Hentys had arrived in Portland with their sheep some two years earlier.

On 29 November 1836, Clarke headed west from Port Phillip with a large flock of sheep, arriving in the Bacchus Marsh district a few days later. He built a hut on the west bank of the Lerderderg River near Darley, and lived there until early 1838. According to pastoralist George Russell, Clarke had acted on information obtained from Mr Aitken, an Edinburgh man, who was most put out when he discovered that Clarke had beaten him to the Pentland Hills run.[8]

 
Captain William Bacchus, image from display in Bacchus Marsh Library, 2015.

In 1838, Englishman Captain William Henry Bacchus (1782–1849, originally of the 2nd Royal Surrey Militia) and his son William Henry Bacchus junior (1820–87) also brought sheep from Tasmania and came to the district which now bears their name. On their arrival, Clarke made an arrangement with them and ceded his run, moving to the nearby hills known as the Pentlands. The then very swampy valley was not really suitable for sheep, as they were prone to footrot. Clarke stayed in the district until 1840 or 1841, and later went to New Zealand, where he died in 1879.

As all land within 3 miles (5 km) of a squatter’s hut was considered to belong to him, Bacchus and his son immediately set about consolidating their land holdings. By 1839–40, they had a homestead and four outstations on the Lardedark run, which in 1845 covered about 22 square miles (57 km2) and carried nearly 3,000 sheep. Between 1845–47 Captain Bacchus built the Manor House, a two-storey Georgian brick building that still stands in the township today. Captain Bacchus died in 1849 and was buried in what later became the grounds of Holy Trinity Anglican Church, Gisborne Road. By 1851, Henry Bacchus junior had sold his holdings in Bacchus Marsh and moved to Peerewur (or Perewerrh) run near Ballarat.[7][9][10]

Situated roughly halfway between Melbourne and Ballarat, Bacchus Marsh was a popular stopover for travellers during the Victorian Gold Rush. Diarist Charles Evans described the location in 1853:

We passed through a delightful valley called Bachus's Marsh [sic], the first cultivated land we have seen since we left Melbourne – barley and oats were flourishing in the richest luxuriance. There was a steam flour mill, three good looking inns, and a number of houses and stores.[11]

19th century to present

The township was originally known as Ballan, a Post Office opening under that name around July 1844 (Bacchus Marsh from 1 July 1850).[12] The Bacchus Marsh Road District Board was proclaimed on 30 September 1856, with one of its first tasks being to construct a gravel road through the town, as at that time the road was barely passable in winter. Bacchus Marsh was created a district on 14 October 1862, and the Road Board was the governing body until the Shire of Bacchus Marsh was proclaimed on 23 January 1871.[13] The railway came to Bacchus Marsh on 15 February 1887, and the through line to Ballarat was built in 1890.[9][13][14]'

During the 1970s and 1980s it was home to the Bacchus Marsh Lion and Tiger Safari.[15]

In 1994 the Shire of Bacchus Marsh was amalgamated with the Shire of Ballan and parts of the Shires of Bungaree and Werribee to form the Shire of Moorabool.[16]

Bacchus Marsh and its suburbs form the largest settlement in Moorabool Shire.

Bacchus Marsh grew rapidly from the 1990s.

Heritage listed sites

Bacchus Marsh contains a number of heritage listed sites, including:

  • Bacchus Marsh Road, Bacchus Marsh Avenue of Honour[17]
  • 123 Main Street, Bacchus Marsh Court House[18]
  • 8 Gisborne Road and 8 Church Street, Bacchus Marsh Express Office and Printing Works[19]
  • 119 Main Street, Bacchus Marsh Police Station and Old Lock-Up[20]
  • 100–102 Main Street, Blacksmith's Cottage and Shop[21]
  • 12 Ellerslie Court, Ellerslie[22]
  • 28–32 Manor Street, Manor House[23]
  • 37 Grant Street, Millbank[24]
  • 6 Gisborne Road, Residence[25]
  • 10 Gisborne Road, Residence[26]

In addition, a Pioneer Women's Memorial Avenue commemorates the lives of the women of the Bacchus Marsh area.[27]

Urban structure

 
The urban area as viewed from its rural-urban fringe.
 
Aerial perspective of Bacchus Marsh. Taken Autumn 2018

At June 2018, Bacchus Marsh had a population of 22,223.[1]

According to the 2016 census of Population, the Bacchus Marsh Significant Urban Area recorded the following highlights:

  • Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people made up 1.3% of the population.
  • 81.1% of people were born in Australia. The next most common countries of birth were England 3.5%, New Zealand 1.4%, India 0.8%, Scotland 0.6% and Germany 0.5%.
  • 88.2% of people spoke only English at home. Other languages spoken at home included Italian 0.5% and Punjabi 0.5%.
  • The most common responses for religion were No Religion 35.7%, Catholic 28.0% and Anglican 11.9%.[28]

It covers a large area in the Werribee Valley with its Central Business District centred along Main Street between Bennett Street to the north, Grant Street/Gisborne Road to the west, Young/Lord Streets to the east and Waddell/Simpson Streets to the south. Bacchus Marsh Village shopping centre is its main indoor shopping mall. The state suburb by the same name is home to 6,394[2] people and contains the central business district. The population of the urban area of Bacchus Marsh has grown by 34.6% over the decade leading to 2016.[1]

Beyond central Bacchus Marsh, suburban areas such as the former towns of Darley (1861) to the north and Maddingley to the south continue to grow rapidly. Housing development has also occurred in the natural extension of Bacchus Marsh like Underbank, and its surrounding areas including Parwan, Hopetoun Park and Merrimu.

Transport

 
The Bacchus Marsh Avenue of Honour, an Elm tree lined avenue forms the main entrance to the CBD from the east.

Automobiles are the main form of transport. The Western Freeway which is the main route to both Melbourne (approximately 48 minutes) in the east and Ballarat (46 minutes) to the west. The freeway divides Bacchus Marsh and its northern suburb Darley. Three interchanges serve the urban area – the Gisborne Road (full- diamond) along with Hallets Way and Bacchus Marsh Road (both with a half-diamond). With the exception of the central business district and neighbouring areas, the majority of the urban area is laid out in a street hierarchy pattern with collector roads leading to the two major cross roads – Bacchus Marsh Road (C802) and Bacchus Marsh-Gisborne Road/Bacchus Marsh-Geelong Road (C704) which bear the majority of vehicular traffic.

Until 2012, the entrance to the town from Melbourne was via Anthonys Cutting, a relatively steep downhill run, which is speed limited to 80 km/h. The freeway was realigned under the Victorian Transport Plan bypassing Anthony's cutting, resulting in decreased travel time to Melbourne.[29]

The Bacchus Marsh station is on the Ballarat line. V/Line provides VLocity services to Melbourne (from 38 minutes) and Ballarat (from 34 minutes).

A bus service connects the station with the town centre and other residential areas.

Bacchus Marsh Airfield (located in Parwan to the south) provides for general aviation and the area is home to a flying school and three gliding clubs.

Recreation and open space

 
Lerderderg River

One of Bacchus Marsh’s principal recreation areas is Maddingley Park, which is a favourite picnic destination for both locals and visitors. Near the south gates of the park, opposite the Bacchus Marsh railway station, is the Nieuwesteeg Heritage Rose Garden of mainly twentieth century hybrid teas.

Walks along the Lerderderg River provide access to the steep, rugged and overgrown Lerderderg Gorge and the extensive Wombat State Park that surrounds it, criss-crossed by four-wheel drive tracks, extensive bushwalking amongst historic mining relics and natural bush.

Bacchus Marsh Airfield is home to the largest site in Australia for recreational gliding.

Health services

The township of Bacchus Marsh is serviced by the Djerriwarrh Health Services (Bacchus Marsh Hospital) formerly, Bacchus Marsh War Memorial Hospital, and several general practice medical centres, including Bacchus Marsh Medical Centre located opposite the hospital in Turner Street and The Elms Family Medical Centre located at the Bacchus Marsh Village Shopping Centre on Main Street near the Avenue of Honour. The Elms Family Medical Centre was established in 1994 and is actively involved in the teaching and mentoring of future general practitioners. Doctors from both practices provide comprehensive medical care to patients at the Bacchus Marsh Hospital, as well as at the local Providence Aged Care Hostel and Grant Lodge Nursing Home. Both clinics have affiliations with the Deakin University School of Medicine through the hosting of third year medical students as part of the Integrated Model of Medical Education in Rural Settings (IMMERSE) program, with The Elms first having a medical student in 2011 and the Bacchus Marsh Medical Centre in 2014.

Education

Schools in Bacchus Marsh include:

Adult & Vocational Education

  • Bacchus Marsh Community College aka The Laurels
  • Western Institute of Technology

Community Learning

  • Darley Neighbourhood House & Learning Centre

Sports and community groups

 
Junior Australian Rules Football at Darley Park (BFL League)
  • Australian rules football, Cricket, Soccer and Netball are all very popular.
  • Notable sporting teams include Darley Football Club and Bacchus Marsh Football Club who both compete in the Ballarat Football League.
  • Bacchus Marsh Tigers Baseball Club compete in the Geelong Baseball Association winter competition.
  • Bacchus Marsh Scorpions Soccer Club play at Masons Lane Reserve and compete in FFV metro and Ballarat and District Soccer Association. Soccer In Bacchus Marsh has grown to be one of the largest participation sports.
  • Another sport that has come popular over the years in Bacchus Marsh is the Korfball Association.
  • Golfers play at the Bacchus Marsh Golf Club on Links Road[30] or at the Bacchus Marsh West Golf Club on Bacchus Marsh – Balliang Road.[31]
  • The Bacchus Marsh Tennis Club maintains 9 artificial grass courts and 13 grass courts. It is a social venue for all groups and abilities, with well maintained multi-surface courts including grass, artificial grass and red porous. A full-time club coach is available for private and group lessons.
  • The airfield is also the home of three gliding clubs: Geelong Gliding Club, Melbourne Gliding Club (VMFG) and Beaufort Gliding Club. Pilots from these clubs have represented Australia in international gliding competitions.

Notable people

 *AFL player Zak Butters (b. 2000) 
  • AFL player Liam Duggan (b. 1996)
  • Botanist Lesley R. Kerr (1900–1927) who formulated the term and analysis of Lignotubers in Eucalyptus[35]

References

  1. ^ a b c d "3218.0 – Regional Population Growth, Australia, 2017–18: Population Estimates by Significant Urban Area, 2008 to 2018". Australian Bureau of Statistics. Australian Bureau of Statistics. 27 March 2019. Retrieved 22 April 2019. Estimated resident population, 30 June 2018. 
  2. ^ a b Australian Bureau of Statistics (28 June 2022). "Bacchus Marsh (Suburbs and Localities)". 2021 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 18 November 2022.  
  3. ^ Clark, Ian D. (2002). Dictionary of Aboriginal placenames of Victoria. Heydon, Toby, 1972-, Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages. Melbourne: Victorian Aboriginal Corp. for Languages. ISBN 0-9579360-2-8. OCLC 54913331.
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 20 September 2010. Retrieved 30 September 2010.
  5. ^ Gray, Darren; Rood, David (8 May 2008). "Sleepy Bacchus Marsh tipped for a new honour in rural boom". The Age. Melbourne.
  6. ^ Some recollections of the Aboriginal inhabitants of the district in the 1840s may be found in the journal of squatter Charles Griffith. Recollections from the 1850s and early 1860s come from Joseph Lodge and Mrs Catherine Kerr, but were only recorded many years later, in the period 1913–17.
  7. ^ a b Cited by Betty Osborn The Bacchus Story. Bacchus Marsh & District Historical Society. 1973.
  8. ^ The Narrative of George Russell of Golf Hill, cited by Betty Osborn in The Bacchus Story. Bacchus Marsh & District Historical Society. 1973.
  9. ^ a b Back to Bacchus Marsh 12–27 October 1957. Bacchus Marsh: Souvenir Booklet, Crisp & Son Printers. 1957.
  10. ^ Osborn, Betty (1971). A History of Holy Trinity Church of England Bacchus Marsh. Bacchus Marsh & District Historical Society.
  11. ^ Evans, Charles. "Diary of Charles Evans, 1853 September 24 -1855 January 21 [manuscript]". State Library of Victoria. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
  12. ^ Phoenix Auctions History. "Post Office List". Retrieved 25 February 2021.
  13. ^ a b Victorian Municipal Directory. 1956.
  14. ^ Lloyd, John (1986). Local Government in Bacchus Marsh: The Road District Years 1853–1871. Shire of Bacchus Marsh.
  15. ^ Morgan, Evan (20 June 2020). "The Tiger King of Bacchus Marsh and the years of living dangerously". ABC News. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  16. ^ Shire of Moorabool
  17. ^ "Avenue of Honour (H2238)". Victorian Heritage Register. Heritage Victoria. Retrieved 7 July 2014.
  18. ^ "Court House (H1461)". Victorian Heritage Register. Heritage Victoria. Retrieved 7 July 2014.
  19. ^ "Bacchus Marsh Express Office and Printing Works". Victorian Heritage Register. Heritage Victoria. Retrieved 7 July 2014.
  20. ^ "Police Station and Old Lock-Up (H1546)". Victorian Heritage Register. Heritage Victoria. Retrieved 7 July 2014.
  21. ^ "Former Blacksmith's Cottage and Shop (H0462)". Victorian Heritage Register. Heritage Victoria. Retrieved 7 July 2014.
  22. ^ "Ellerslie (H0592)". Victorian Heritage Register. Heritage Victoria. Retrieved 7 July 2014.
  23. ^ "The Manor House (H0264)". Victorian Heritage Register. Heritage Victoria. Retrieved 7 July 2014.
  24. ^ "Millbank (H0263)". Victorian Heritage Register. Heritage Victoria. Retrieved 7 July 2014.
  25. ^ "Residence (H0503)". Victorian Heritage Register. Heritage Victoria. Retrieved 7 July 2014.
  26. ^ "Residence (H0505)". Victorian Heritage Register. Heritage Victoria. Retrieved 7 July 2014.
  27. ^ Design, UBC Web. "Pioneer Women's Memorial Avenue Monument Australia". monumentaustralia.org.au. Retrieved 10 April 2016.
  28. ^ Australian Bureau of Statistics (27 June 2017). "Bacchus Marsh (Significant Urban Area)". 2016 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 31 December 2018.    Material was copied from this source, which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
  29. ^ . Archived from the original on 19 November 2010. Retrieved 8 October 2010.
  30. ^ Golf Select. "Bacchus Marsh". Retrieved 11 May 2009.
  31. ^ AusGolf. "Bacchus Marsh West". Retrieved 17 May 2015.
  32. ^ "News of the Week". The Bacchus Marsh Express (Vic. : 1866 – 1918). Vic.: National Library of Australia. 23 March 1867. p. 2. Retrieved 13 September 2013.
  33. ^ Rupert Vance Moon#Memorial Garden
  34. ^ Peterson, Isabel Varney Desmond (1892–1967). Australian Dictionary of Biography. from the original on 10 June 2009. Retrieved 4 May 2009.
  35. ^ "Kerr, Lesley Ruth – biography". www.anbg.gov.au. Retrieved 20 January 2020.

External links

  Media related to Bacchus Marsh at Wikimedia Commons

  • Bacchus Marsh & District Historical Society Inc.
  • Bacchus Marsh Tourism Association Inc.
  • Bacchus Marsh History Website
  • [1]

bacchus, marsh, wathawurrung, pullerbopulloke, urban, centre, suburban, locality, victoria, australia, located, approximately, kilometres, north, west, state, capital, melbourne, kilometres, west, melton, near, equidistance, major, cities, melbourne, ballarat,. Bacchus Marsh Wathawurrung Pullerbopulloke 3 is an urban centre and suburban locality in Victoria Australia located approximately 50 kilometres 30 mi north west of the state capital Melbourne and 14 kilometres 9 mi west of Melton at a near equidistance to the major cities of Melbourne Ballarat and Geelong The population of the Bacchus Marsh urban area was 22 223 1 at June 2018 Bacchus Marsh is the largest urban area in the local government area of Shire of Moorabool Bacchus Marsh VictoriaMain St Bacchus MarshBacchus MarshCoordinates37 40 30 S 144 26 20 E 37 67500 S 144 43889 E 37 67500 144 43889 Coordinates 37 40 30 S 144 26 20 E 37 67500 S 144 43889 E 37 67500 144 43889Population22 223 2018 Urban Area 1 7 808 2021 suburbs and localities 2 Density113 209 km2 293 21 sq mi Postcode s 3340Elevation118 m 387 ft Area196 3 km2 75 8 sq mi Location49 km 30 mi NW of Melbourne52 km 32 mi SE of Ballarat53 km 33 mi N of GeelongLGA s Shire of MooraboolState electorate s EurekaFederal division s HawkeLocalities around Bacchus Marsh Pentland Hills Darley MerrimuPentland Hills Bacchus Marsh Hopetoun ParkMaddingley Maddingley ParwanTraditionally a market garden area producing a large amount of the region s fruits and vegetables in recent decades it has transformed into the main commuter town on the Melbourne Ballarat corridor 4 5 It was named after the colonial settler Captain William Henry Bacchus who saw the great value of this locality as it was situated on two rivers the Lerderderg and Werribee Contents 1 History 1 1 Aboriginal 1 2 European settlement 1 3 19th century to present 1 4 Heritage listed sites 2 Urban structure 3 Transport 4 Recreation and open space 5 Health services 6 Education 7 Sports and community groups 8 Notable people 9 References 10 External linksHistory EditAboriginal Edit Bacchus Marsh is on the border between the Woiwurrung and Wathaurong territories of the Kulin Nation The local clans were the Marpeang balug of the Wathaurong and the Gunung willam bulluk Wurundjeri of the Woiwurrung Bacchus Marsh was a meeting ground for anywhere between 150 and 400 Aboriginals even after white settlement and corroborees were held quite regularly While there do not appear to be any records of open hostilities between whites and indigenous people by 1863 there were a total of only 33 Aboriginal people left in the Bacchus Marsh district and apart from a handful of recollections of the original inhabitants preserved by pioneer settlers sadly little remains apart from present day locality names mainly of watercourses Coimadai Djerriwarrh Korkuperrimul Lerderderg Merrimu Myrniong Werribee 6 7 The Wathawurrung name for the area is Pullerbopulloke with buluk meaning lake European settlement Edit One of the first white men to reach the Bacchus Marsh valley was pastoralist Kenneth Scobie Clarke c 1806 79 a native of Sutherland in Scotland Clarke was a manager for the Great Lake Company of Van Diemen s Land and arrived in the Port Phillip District from George Town on 25 March 1836 Captain Bacchus credited Clarke as being the first man to shear sheep in Victoria although the Hentys had arrived in Portland with their sheep some two years earlier On 29 November 1836 Clarke headed west from Port Phillip with a large flock of sheep arriving in the Bacchus Marsh district a few days later He built a hut on the west bank of the Lerderderg River near Darley and lived there until early 1838 According to pastoralist George Russell Clarke had acted on information obtained from Mr Aitken an Edinburgh man who was most put out when he discovered that Clarke had beaten him to the Pentland Hills run 8 Captain William Bacchus image from display in Bacchus Marsh Library 2015 In 1838 Englishman Captain William Henry Bacchus 1782 1849 originally of the 2nd Royal Surrey Militia and his son William Henry Bacchus junior 1820 87 also brought sheep from Tasmania and came to the district which now bears their name On their arrival Clarke made an arrangement with them and ceded his run moving to the nearby hills known as the Pentlands The then very swampy valley was not really suitable for sheep as they were prone to footrot Clarke stayed in the district until 1840 or 1841 and later went to New Zealand where he died in 1879 As all land within 3 miles 5 km of a squatter s hut was considered to belong to him Bacchus and his son immediately set about consolidating their land holdings By 1839 40 they had a homestead and four outstations on the Lardedark run which in 1845 covered about 22 square miles 57 km2 and carried nearly 3 000 sheep Between 1845 47 Captain Bacchus built the Manor House a two storey Georgian brick building that still stands in the township today Captain Bacchus died in 1849 and was buried in what later became the grounds of Holy Trinity Anglican Church Gisborne Road By 1851 Henry Bacchus junior had sold his holdings in Bacchus Marsh and moved to Peerewur or Perewerrh run near Ballarat 7 9 10 Situated roughly halfway between Melbourne and Ballarat Bacchus Marsh was a popular stopover for travellers during the Victorian Gold Rush Diarist Charles Evans described the location in 1853 We passed through a delightful valley called Bachus s Marsh sic the first cultivated land we have seen since we left Melbourne barley and oats were flourishing in the richest luxuriance There was a steam flour mill three good looking inns and a number of houses and stores 11 19th century to present Edit The township was originally known as Ballan a Post Office opening under that name around July 1844 Bacchus Marsh from 1 July 1850 12 The Bacchus Marsh Road District Board was proclaimed on 30 September 1856 with one of its first tasks being to construct a gravel road through the town as at that time the road was barely passable in winter Bacchus Marsh was created a district on 14 October 1862 and the Road Board was the governing body until the Shire of Bacchus Marsh was proclaimed on 23 January 1871 13 The railway came to Bacchus Marsh on 15 February 1887 and the through line to Ballarat was built in 1890 9 13 14 During the 1970s and 1980s it was home to the Bacchus Marsh Lion and Tiger Safari 15 In 1994 the Shire of Bacchus Marsh was amalgamated with the Shire of Ballan and parts of the Shires of Bungaree and Werribee to form the Shire of Moorabool 16 Bacchus Marsh and its suburbs form the largest settlement in Moorabool Shire Bacchus Marsh grew rapidly from the 1990s Heritage listed sites Edit Bacchus Marsh contains a number of heritage listed sites including Bacchus Marsh Road Bacchus Marsh Avenue of Honour 17 123 Main Street Bacchus Marsh Court House 18 8 Gisborne Road and 8 Church Street Bacchus Marsh Express Office and Printing Works 19 119 Main Street Bacchus Marsh Police Station and Old Lock Up 20 100 102 Main Street Blacksmith s Cottage and Shop 21 12 Ellerslie Court Ellerslie 22 28 32 Manor Street Manor House 23 37 Grant Street Millbank 24 6 Gisborne Road Residence 25 10 Gisborne Road Residence 26 In addition a Pioneer Women s Memorial Avenue commemorates the lives of the women of the Bacchus Marsh area 27 Urban structure Edit The urban area as viewed from its rural urban fringe Aerial perspective of Bacchus Marsh Taken Autumn 2018 At June 2018 Bacchus Marsh had a population of 22 223 1 According to the 2016 census of Population the Bacchus Marsh Significant Urban Area recorded the following highlights Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people made up 1 3 of the population 81 1 of people were born in Australia The next most common countries of birth were England 3 5 New Zealand 1 4 India 0 8 Scotland 0 6 and Germany 0 5 88 2 of people spoke only English at home Other languages spoken at home included Italian 0 5 and Punjabi 0 5 The most common responses for religion were No Religion 35 7 Catholic 28 0 and Anglican 11 9 28 It covers a large area in the Werribee Valley with its Central Business District centred along Main Street between Bennett Street to the north Grant Street Gisborne Road to the west Young Lord Streets to the east and Waddell Simpson Streets to the south Bacchus Marsh Village shopping centre is its main indoor shopping mall The state suburb by the same name is home to 6 394 2 people and contains the central business district The population of the urban area of Bacchus Marsh has grown by 34 6 over the decade leading to 2016 1 Beyond central Bacchus Marsh suburban areas such as the former towns of Darley 1861 to the north and Maddingley to the south continue to grow rapidly Housing development has also occurred in the natural extension of Bacchus Marsh like Underbank and its surrounding areas including Parwan Hopetoun Park and Merrimu Transport Edit The Bacchus Marsh Avenue of Honour an Elm tree lined avenue forms the main entrance to the CBD from the east Bacchus Marsh railway station in Maddingley Automobiles are the main form of transport The Western Freeway which is the main route to both Melbourne approximately 48 minutes in the east and Ballarat 46 minutes to the west The freeway divides Bacchus Marsh and its northern suburb Darley Three interchanges serve the urban area the Gisborne Road full diamond along with Hallets Way and Bacchus Marsh Road both with a half diamond With the exception of the central business district and neighbouring areas the majority of the urban area is laid out in a street hierarchy pattern with collector roads leading to the two major cross roads Bacchus Marsh Road C802 and Bacchus Marsh Gisborne Road Bacchus Marsh Geelong Road C704 which bear the majority of vehicular traffic Until 2012 the entrance to the town from Melbourne was via Anthonys Cutting a relatively steep downhill run which is speed limited to 80 km h The freeway was realigned under the Victorian Transport Plan bypassing Anthony s cutting resulting in decreased travel time to Melbourne 29 The Bacchus Marsh station is on the Ballarat line V Line provides VLocity services to Melbourne from 38 minutes and Ballarat from 34 minutes A bus service connects the station with the town centre and other residential areas Bacchus Marsh Airfield located in Parwan to the south provides for general aviation and the area is home to a flying school and three gliding clubs Recreation and open space Edit Lerderderg River One of Bacchus Marsh s principal recreation areas is Maddingley Park which is a favourite picnic destination for both locals and visitors Near the south gates of the park opposite the Bacchus Marsh railway station is the Nieuwesteeg Heritage Rose Garden of mainly twentieth century hybrid teas Walks along the Lerderderg River provide access to the steep rugged and overgrown Lerderderg Gorge and the extensive Wombat State Park that surrounds it criss crossed by four wheel drive tracks extensive bushwalking amongst historic mining relics and natural bush Bacchus Marsh Airfield is home to the largest site in Australia for recreational gliding Health services EditThe township of Bacchus Marsh is serviced by the Djerriwarrh Health Services Bacchus Marsh Hospital formerly Bacchus Marsh War Memorial Hospital and several general practice medical centres including Bacchus Marsh Medical Centre located opposite the hospital in Turner Street and The Elms Family Medical Centre located at the Bacchus Marsh Village Shopping Centre on Main Street near the Avenue of Honour The Elms Family Medical Centre was established in 1994 and is actively involved in the teaching and mentoring of future general practitioners Doctors from both practices provide comprehensive medical care to patients at the Bacchus Marsh Hospital as well as at the local Providence Aged Care Hostel and Grant Lodge Nursing Home Both clinics have affiliations with the Deakin University School of Medicine through the hosting of third year medical students as part of the Integrated Model of Medical Education in Rural Settings IMMERSE program with The Elms first having a medical student in 2011 and the Bacchus Marsh Medical Centre in 2014 Education EditSchools in Bacchus Marsh include Bacchus Marsh Primary School Darley Primary School Pentland Primary School St Bernard s Primary School Catholic Balliang East Primary Bacchus Marsh College Bacchus Marsh GrammarAdult amp Vocational Education Bacchus Marsh Community College aka The Laurels Western Institute of TechnologyCommunity Learning Darley Neighbourhood House amp Learning CentreSports and community groups Edit Junior Australian Rules Football at Darley Park BFL League Australian rules football Cricket Soccer and Netball are all very popular Notable sporting teams include Darley Football Club and Bacchus Marsh Football Club who both compete in the Ballarat Football League Bacchus Marsh Tigers Baseball Club compete in the Geelong Baseball Association winter competition Bacchus Marsh Scorpions Soccer Club play at Masons Lane Reserve and compete in FFV metro and Ballarat and District Soccer Association Soccer In Bacchus Marsh has grown to be one of the largest participation sports Another sport that has come popular over the years in Bacchus Marsh is the Korfball Association Golfers play at the Bacchus Marsh Golf Club on Links Road 30 or at the Bacchus Marsh West Golf Club on Bacchus Marsh Balliang Road 31 The Bacchus Marsh Tennis Club maintains 9 artificial grass courts and 13 grass courts It is a social venue for all groups and abilities with well maintained multi surface courts including grass artificial grass and red porous A full time club coach is available for private and group lessons The airfield is also the home of three gliding clubs Geelong Gliding Club Melbourne Gliding Club VMFG and Beaufort Gliding Club Pilots from these clubs have represented Australia in international gliding competitions Notable people EditWilliam Symington C E ca 1802 17 March 1867 inventor and son of steamboat pioneer William Symington 32 Victorian Cross recipient Rupert Vance Moon 33 Physicist and professor Sir Kerr Grant 1878 1967 Victorian Premier from 1927 1928 and 1929 1932 Edmond Hogan 1883 1964 Pianist and composer Isabel Varney Desmond Peterson 1892 1967 34 Carlton Australian rules footballer Harry Soapy Vallence 1905 1991 Author Frank Hardy 1917 1994 and his sister actor and comedian Mary Hardy 1931 1985 Dual Booker Prize winning author Peter Carey Home to Dancing with the Stars judge Helen Richey AFL star Doug Hawkins b 1960 AFL Footballer from Fremantle Football Club Nick Suban b 1990 Actor Travis Burns b 1991 Australian scientific illustrator plant pathologist mycologist fungi specialist university lecturer and dairy farmer Charles Clifton Brittlebank 1 Jan 1863 3 Nov 1945 AFL player Zak Butters b 2000 AFL player Liam Duggan b 1996 Botanist Lesley R Kerr 1900 1927 who formulated the term and analysis of Lignotubers in Eucalyptus 35 References Edit a b c d 3218 0 Regional Population Growth Australia 2017 18 Population Estimates by Significant Urban Area 2008 to 2018 Australian Bureau of Statistics Australian Bureau of Statistics 27 March 2019 Retrieved 22 April 2019 Estimated resident population 30 June 2018 a b Australian Bureau of Statistics 28 June 2022 Bacchus Marsh Suburbs and Localities 2021 Census QuickStats Retrieved 18 November 2022 Clark Ian D 2002 Dictionary of Aboriginal placenames of Victoria Heydon Toby 1972 Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages Melbourne Victorian Aboriginal Corp for Languages ISBN 0 9579360 2 8 OCLC 54913331 Bacchus Marsh short of infrastructure for 5000 new residents Council News Melton Leader Archived from the original on 20 September 2010 Retrieved 30 September 2010 Gray Darren Rood David 8 May 2008 Sleepy Bacchus Marsh tipped for a new honour in rural boom The Age Melbourne Some recollections of the Aboriginal inhabitants of the district in the 1840s may be found in the journal of squatter Charles Griffith Recollections from the 1850s and early 1860s come from Joseph Lodge and Mrs Catherine Kerr but were only recorded many years later in the period 1913 17 a b Cited by Betty Osborn The Bacchus Story Bacchus Marsh amp District Historical Society 1973 The Narrative of George Russell of Golf Hill cited by Betty Osborn in The Bacchus Story Bacchus Marsh amp District Historical Society 1973 a b Back to Bacchus Marsh 12 27 October 1957 Bacchus Marsh Souvenir Booklet Crisp amp Son Printers 1957 Osborn Betty 1971 A History of Holy Trinity Church of England Bacchus Marsh Bacchus Marsh amp District Historical Society Evans Charles Diary of Charles Evans 1853 September 24 1855 January 21 manuscript State Library of Victoria Retrieved 28 July 2020 Phoenix Auctions History Post Office List Retrieved 25 February 2021 a b Victorian Municipal Directory 1956 Lloyd John 1986 Local Government in Bacchus Marsh The Road District Years 1853 1871 Shire of Bacchus Marsh Morgan Evan 20 June 2020 The Tiger King of Bacchus Marsh and the years of living dangerously ABC News Retrieved 20 March 2021 Shire of Moorabool Avenue of Honour H2238 Victorian Heritage Register Heritage Victoria Retrieved 7 July 2014 Court House H1461 Victorian Heritage Register Heritage Victoria Retrieved 7 July 2014 Bacchus Marsh Express Office and Printing Works Victorian Heritage Register Heritage Victoria Retrieved 7 July 2014 Police Station and Old Lock Up H1546 Victorian Heritage Register Heritage Victoria Retrieved 7 July 2014 Former Blacksmith s Cottage and Shop H0462 Victorian Heritage Register Heritage Victoria Retrieved 7 July 2014 Ellerslie H0592 Victorian Heritage Register Heritage Victoria Retrieved 7 July 2014 The Manor House H0264 Victorian Heritage Register Heritage Victoria Retrieved 7 July 2014 Millbank H0263 Victorian Heritage Register Heritage Victoria Retrieved 7 July 2014 Residence H0503 Victorian Heritage Register Heritage Victoria Retrieved 7 July 2014 Residence H0505 Victorian Heritage Register Heritage Victoria Retrieved 7 July 2014 Design UBC Web Pioneer Women s Memorial Avenue Monument Australia monumentaustralia org au Retrieved 10 April 2016 Australian Bureau of Statistics 27 June 2017 Bacchus Marsh Significant Urban Area 2016 Census QuickStats Retrieved 31 December 2018 Material was copied from this source which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4 0 International License The Victorian Transport Plan Western Highway realignment Melton to Bacchus Marsh Archived from the original on 19 November 2010 Retrieved 8 October 2010 Golf Select Bacchus Marsh Retrieved 11 May 2009 AusGolf Bacchus Marsh West Retrieved 17 May 2015 News of the Week The Bacchus Marsh Express Vic 1866 1918 Vic National Library of Australia 23 March 1867 p 2 Retrieved 13 September 2013 Rupert Vance Moon Memorial Garden Peterson Isabel Varney Desmond 1892 1967 Australian Dictionary of Biography Archived from the original on 10 June 2009 Retrieved 4 May 2009 Kerr Lesley Ruth biography www anbg gov au Retrieved 20 January 2020 External links Edit Media related to Bacchus Marsh at Wikimedia Commons Bacchus Marsh amp District Historical Society Inc Bacchus Marsh Tourism Association Inc Bacchus Marsh History Website 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bacchus Marsh amp oldid 1125354453, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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