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Dulwich Hill

Dulwich Hill is a suburb in the Inner West of Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. It is 7.5 kilometres south-west of the Sydney central business district, in the local government area of Inner West Council. Dulwich Hill stretches south to the shore of the Cooks River.[2]

Dulwich Hill
SydneyNew South Wales
Map
Population14,046 (SAL 2021)[1]
Established1892
Postcode(s)2203
Elevation42 m (138 ft)
Area2.1 km2 (0.8 sq mi)
Location7.5 km (5 mi) inner-west of Sydney CBD
LGA(s)Inner West Council
State electorate(s)Summer Hill
Federal division(s)

History edit

The suburb takes its name from the area of Dulwich in London. The name Dulwich Hill appears in Sands Directory of 1892. It had been known by several different names prior to this. Following European settlement, it was called Petersham Hill. It later took the name Wardell's Bush, a reference to Dr Robert Wardell, one of the area's early landowners. Other names the area was given were South Petersham and Fern Hill.[3]

 
Gladstone Hotel, Dulwich Hill

The area became part of Sydney's expanding tram network in 1889 and, like many suburbs in the inner-west, experienced rapid growth in the early twentieth century.[citation needed] As a consequence, the suburb has a large number of examples of Australian Federation architecture. It also features examples of Edwardian, Gothic and Italianate architecture. The tramway ran up until 1957.

Listed on the Register of the National Estate is the former public school in Seaview Street, which now operates as the Dulwich Hill High School of Visual Arts and Design. The building was designed by W.E.Kemp in the Romanesque style and built circa 1892.[4] Situated in the same street is the former location of the Dulwich Hill Library, a converted cottage in the Victorian Gothic style.

Commercial area edit

Dulwich Hill features two shopping areas, a small number of shops on Wardell Road near Dulwich Hill railway station and the main shopping area around the northern end of Marrickville Road and its intersection with New Canterbury Road. The Marrickville Road shopping area centred on the former tram line (now replaced by buses), and continues onto New Canterbury Road. Cafés and restaurants have become popular as the suburb becomes gentrified. Marrickville Council upgraded the shopping strip in the early 2000s, enhancing the look and character of the area. Dulwich Hill has a library (a branch of Marrickville Library and the Inner West Library Service) and a post office, but was never chartered a town hall or police station (the nearest is Marrickville Local Area Command).

Education edit

 
Dulwich High School of Visual Arts and Design

Dulwich Hill contains three primary schools: Dulwich Hill Public School in Kintore Street, St Maroun's College in Wardell Road and St Paul of the Cross, a Catholic school in New Canterbury Road, as well as one secondary school, Dulwich High School of Visual Arts & Design in Seaview Street. Dulwich High School was the first Visual Arts School in Australia.[5]

Notable graduates of the high school include former Parramatta rugby league coach Terry Fearnley, tennis player Phil Dent and opera singer Yvonne Minton, while former rugby league referee Jack Danzey taught there.[6]

Transport edit

Tram history edit

Until the late 1950s, when the local tramway system was closed, electric trams ran to Dulwich Hill and the Cooks River from Circular Quay. The line to Dulwich Hill branched from the Cooks River line at Newtown, turning off King Street into Enmore Road,[7] travelling through Marrickville and Dulwich Hill, via Victoria and Marrickville Roads.[8] A tram tuning loop was provided at the Canterbury Road terminus.[9]

Modern transport edit

 
The Wardell Road Junction in 2009. This is now where the heavy rail and light rail lines meet. Dulwich Hill station can be seen top left. The overgrown tracks curving towards the station are now used by the light rail, which opened in 2014. The tracks curving in the other direction became disused when the freight services that had used this line ceased operating.

Modern public transport to the area comprises one railway station, four light rail stops and several bus routes.

Dulwich Hill railway station is located on Wardell Road, in the southern part of the suburb. The station is serviced by the Bankstown Line of the Sydney Trains network which provides reasonably frequent services to the Sydney CBD and south-western suburbs.

The Inner West Light Rail includes four stations located in the suburb. These are - Dulwich Hill (adjacent to the railway station), Dulwich Grove (between New Canterbury Road and Hercules Street), Arlington (adjacent to Johnson Park near Constitution Road) and Waratah Mills (near Davis Street). Access to the city is quicker by the heavy rail Bankstown Line, but the light rail may be used for some cross-regional journeys. The service also interchanges with Lewisham railway station on the Inner West & Leppington Line.

The 426, 428 and 412 routes provide bus connections between Dulwich Hill and the Sydney CBD. The 426 is the suburb's main bus route, starting at the corner of Marrickville and New Canterbury Roads and running along Marrickville Road towards Marrickville. The 428 service runs from Canterbury station along New Canterbury Road towards Petersham. Both routes merge at Enmore and proceed to the city via King Street, Newtown. The 412 runs from Campsie to the city. It comes up Wardell Road, passing Dulwich Hill railway station, before running along the south side of the railway and proceeding up Livingstone Road towards Marrickville and Petersham. In the CBD, all routes proceed up Elizabeth Street and terminate at Martin Place.

Other routes serving the suburb are the 445, 418 and 425. The 445 routes run from Campsie station to Balmain via Leichhardt, following the same route as the 428 through Dulwich Hill. The 418 between Bondi Junction and Burwood via Ashfield follows the same route as 426 between Marrickville and Dulwich Hill shops, before swinging on to New Canterbury Road, and then south to Hurlstone Park Station. The 425 follows the same route as the 426 to Marrickville, before heading to Tempe. It only operates during daytime hours on weekdays and Saturdays. All routes are operated by Transit Systems.[10]

Demographics edit

According to the 2016 census there were 13,715 people in Dulwich Hill. 58.7% of people were born in Australia. The most common other countries of birth were England 3.4%, Greece 3.1%, New Zealand 2.2%, Vietnam 2.1% and Philippines 1.6%. 61.1% of people only spoke English at home. Other languages spoken at home included Greek 5.6%, Arabic 3.2%, Vietnamese 2.9%, Portuguese 2.4% and Spanish 2.0%. The most common responses for religion were No Religion 37.3% and Catholic 23.8%, Not stated 10.6%, Eastern Orthodox 7.4% and Anglican 6.2%.

Of occupied private dwellings in Dulwich Hill, 54.0% were flat or apartments, 31.0% were separate houses, 11.3% were semi-detached and 3.1% were other dwellings.[11]

Notable people edit

Governance edit

Dulwich Hill is primarily located in the federal electoral division of Grayndler, currently held by Anthony Albanese, of the Australian Labor Party (ALP), who was last re-elected in the 2007 General Election and has been named as the leader of the Labor party after its defeat in the election.[14] The seat of Grayndler has been held continuously by the ALP since it was proclaimed in 1949.[15] The section of Dulwich Hill south of the railway line is in the federal electoral division of Barton held by Linda Burney, of the Australian Labor Party (ALP), the first Aboriginal woman elected to the House of Reprentatives.

 
Cooks River

At the state level, Dulwich Hill is located in the electoral district of Summer Hill, which has been held by Labor's Jo Haylen since its creation at the 2015 election.

At the local level, Dulwich Hill is part of the Inner West Council, established in 2015. Prior to 2015, it was part of Marrickville Council, one of three councils that were amalgamated to form Inner West Council.

Sport and recreation edit

Arlington Recreation Ground in Williams Parade is home to the Dulwich Hill FC soccer club, which plays in the NSW Super League, the second tier of senior soccer in Sydney, and also the Stanmore Hawks soccer club which plays in the NSW State League Division One, the third tier.

Residential edit

A number of residential subdivisions in Dulwich Hill occurred in the early 20th century, and include well preserved Federation and Interwar era houses. These include, for example the Abelgeldie Estate in the northwest as well as the area around Hoskins Park, which are protected as heritage conservation areas.[16][17] The former freight line, now light rail line, runs north-south through Dulwich Hill, and is the centre of an area formerly of industrial use, now mostly converted to medium density residential flats.

Churches edit

The area is served by several religious organisations, including Anglican, Catholic, Greek Orthodox and Salvation Army churches.

References edit

  1. ^ Australian Bureau of Statistics (28 June 2022). "Dulwich Hill (suburb and locality)". Australian Census 2021 QuickStats. Retrieved 28 June 2022.  
  2. ^ Gregory's Sydney Street Directory, Gregory's Publishing Company, 2008
  3. ^ . Marrickville Council. Archived from the original on 24 December 2008. Retrieved 29 August 2007.
  4. ^ The Heritage of Australia, Macmillan Company, 1981
  5. ^ Dulwich High School website
  6. ^ Meader C, Cashman R, Carolan A (1994). Marrickville:People and Places. Marrickville: Hale and Ironmonger. p. 119. ISBN 0-86806-559-5.
  7. ^ 1950's Gregory's street directory, map 9, F 4
  8. ^ 1950's Gregory's street directory, map 28, H 13
  9. ^ 1950's Gregory's street directory, map 33, E 2
  10. ^ Sydney Buses Southern Region Guide (March 2010)
  11. ^ Australian Bureau of Statistics (27 June 2017). "Dulwich Hill (State Suburb)". 2016 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 14 September 2017.  
  12. ^ Herbertson, Lisa (5 October 2015). "Australian Olympic swimming great Leisel Jones has released a book called Body Lengths". Inner West Courier Inner City.
  13. ^ Jennie Lees, "Eveline Pauline (Queenie) Paul" in Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 18 (MUP 2012).
  14. ^ "Rudd hands out portfolios". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 2007.
  15. ^ "Grayndler". Australian Electoral Commission. Retrieved 29 August 2007.
  16. ^ Ablegeldie Estate - Marrickville Council
  17. ^ Hoskins Park - Marrickville Council

External links edit

33°54′30″S 151°08′30″E / 33.90833°S 151.14167°E / -33.90833; 151.14167

dulwich, hill, suburb, inner, west, sydney, state, south, wales, australia, kilometres, south, west, sydney, central, business, district, local, government, area, inner, west, council, stretches, south, shore, cooks, river, sydney, south, walesmappopulation14,. Dulwich Hill is a suburb in the Inner West of Sydney in the state of New South Wales Australia It is 7 5 kilometres south west of the Sydney central business district in the local government area of Inner West Council Dulwich Hill stretches south to the shore of the Cooks River 2 Dulwich Hill Sydney New South WalesMapPopulation14 046 SAL 2021 1 Established1892Postcode s 2203Elevation42 m 138 ft Area2 1 km2 0 8 sq mi Location7 5 km 5 mi inner west of Sydney CBDLGA s Inner West CouncilState electorate s Summer HillFederal division s BartonGrayndlerSuburbs around Dulwich Hill Summer Hill Lewisham PetershamHurlstone Park Dulwich Hill MarrickvilleEarlwood Earlwood Marrickville South Dulwich Hill within the Inner West Council area Contents 1 History 2 Commercial area 3 Education 4 Transport 4 1 Tram history 4 2 Modern transport 5 Demographics 6 Notable people 7 Governance 8 Sport and recreation 9 Residential 10 Churches 11 References 12 External linksHistory editThe suburb takes its name from the area of Dulwich in London The name Dulwich Hill appears in Sands Directory of 1892 It had been known by several different names prior to this Following European settlement it was called Petersham Hill It later took the name Wardell s Bush a reference to Dr Robert Wardell one of the area s early landowners Other names the area was given were South Petersham and Fern Hill 3 nbsp Gladstone Hotel Dulwich Hill The area became part of Sydney s expanding tram network in 1889 and like many suburbs in the inner west experienced rapid growth in the early twentieth century citation needed As a consequence the suburb has a large number of examples of Australian Federation architecture It also features examples of Edwardian Gothic and Italianate architecture The tramway ran up until 1957 Listed on the Register of the National Estate is the former public school in Seaview Street which now operates as the Dulwich Hill High School of Visual Arts and Design The building was designed by W E Kemp in the Romanesque style and built circa 1892 4 Situated in the same street is the former location of the Dulwich Hill Library a converted cottage in the Victorian Gothic style Commercial area editDulwich Hill features two shopping areas a small number of shops on Wardell Road near Dulwich Hill railway station and the main shopping area around the northern end of Marrickville Road and its intersection with New Canterbury Road The Marrickville Road shopping area centred on the former tram line now replaced by buses and continues onto New Canterbury Road Cafes and restaurants have become popular as the suburb becomes gentrified Marrickville Council upgraded the shopping strip in the early 2000s enhancing the look and character of the area Dulwich Hill has a library a branch of Marrickville Library and the Inner West Library Service and a post office but was never chartered a town hall or police station the nearest is Marrickville Local Area Command Education edit nbsp Dulwich High School of Visual Arts and Design Dulwich Hill contains three primary schools Dulwich Hill Public School in Kintore Street St Maroun s College in Wardell Road and St Paul of the Cross a Catholic school in New Canterbury Road as well as one secondary school Dulwich High School of Visual Arts amp Design in Seaview Street Dulwich High School was the first Visual Arts School in Australia 5 Notable graduates of the high school include former Parramatta rugby league coach Terry Fearnley tennis player Phil Dent and opera singer Yvonne Minton while former rugby league referee Jack Danzey taught there 6 Transport editTram history edit Main article Trams in Sydney Until the late 1950s when the local tramway system was closed electric trams ran to Dulwich Hill and the Cooks River from Circular Quay The line to Dulwich Hill branched from the Cooks River line at Newtown turning off King Street into Enmore Road 7 travelling through Marrickville and Dulwich Hill via Victoria and Marrickville Roads 8 A tram tuning loop was provided at the Canterbury Road terminus 9 Modern transport edit nbsp The Wardell Road Junction in 2009 This is now where the heavy rail and light rail lines meet Dulwich Hill station can be seen top left The overgrown tracks curving towards the station are now used by the light rail which opened in 2014 The tracks curving in the other direction became disused when the freight services that had used this line ceased operating Modern public transport to the area comprises one railway station four light rail stops and several bus routes Dulwich Hill railway station is located on Wardell Road in the southern part of the suburb The station is serviced by the Bankstown Line of the Sydney Trains network which provides reasonably frequent services to the Sydney CBD and south western suburbs The Inner West Light Rail includes four stations located in the suburb These are Dulwich Hill adjacent to the railway station Dulwich Grove between New Canterbury Road and Hercules Street Arlington adjacent to Johnson Park near Constitution Road and Waratah Mills near Davis Street Access to the city is quicker by the heavy rail Bankstown Line but the light rail may be used for some cross regional journeys The service also interchanges with Lewisham railway station on the Inner West amp Leppington Line The 426 428 and 412 routes provide bus connections between Dulwich Hill and the Sydney CBD The 426 is the suburb s main bus route starting at the corner of Marrickville and New Canterbury Roads and running along Marrickville Road towards Marrickville The 428 service runs from Canterbury station along New Canterbury Road towards Petersham Both routes merge at Enmore and proceed to the city via King Street Newtown The 412 runs from Campsie to the city It comes up Wardell Road passing Dulwich Hill railway station before running along the south side of the railway and proceeding up Livingstone Road towards Marrickville and Petersham In the CBD all routes proceed up Elizabeth Street and terminate at Martin Place Other routes serving the suburb are the 445 418 and 425 The 445 routes run from Campsie station to Balmain via Leichhardt following the same route as the 428 through Dulwich Hill The 418 between Bondi Junction and Burwood via Ashfield follows the same route as 426 between Marrickville and Dulwich Hill shops before swinging on to New Canterbury Road and then south to Hurlstone Park Station The 425 follows the same route as the 426 to Marrickville before heading to Tempe It only operates during daytime hours on weekdays and Saturdays All routes are operated by Transit Systems 10 Demographics editAccording to the 2016 census there were 13 715 people in Dulwich Hill 58 7 of people were born in Australia The most common other countries of birth were England 3 4 Greece 3 1 New Zealand 2 2 Vietnam 2 1 and Philippines 1 6 61 1 of people only spoke English at home Other languages spoken at home included Greek 5 6 Arabic 3 2 Vietnamese 2 9 Portuguese 2 4 and Spanish 2 0 The most common responses for religion were No Religion 37 3 and Catholic 23 8 Not stated 10 6 Eastern Orthodox 7 4 and Anglican 6 2 Of occupied private dwellings in Dulwich Hill 54 0 were flat or apartments 31 0 were separate houses 11 3 were semi detached and 3 1 were other dwellings 11 Notable people editLeisel Jones Olympic swimmer 12 Queenie Paul vaudeville entertainer 13 Joe Hildebrand Journalist William Shakespeare singerGovernance editDulwich Hill is primarily located in the federal electoral division of Grayndler currently held by Anthony Albanese of the Australian Labor Party ALP who was last re elected in the 2007 General Election and has been named as the leader of the Labor party after its defeat in the election 14 The seat of Grayndler has been held continuously by the ALP since it was proclaimed in 1949 15 The section of Dulwich Hill south of the railway line is in the federal electoral division of Barton held by Linda Burney of the Australian Labor Party ALP the first Aboriginal woman elected to the House of Reprentatives nbsp Cooks River At the state level Dulwich Hill is located in the electoral district of Summer Hill which has been held by Labor s Jo Haylen since its creation at the 2015 election At the local level Dulwich Hill is part of the Inner West Council established in 2015 Prior to 2015 it was part of Marrickville Council one of three councils that were amalgamated to form Inner West Council Sport and recreation editArlington Recreation Ground in Williams Parade is home to the Dulwich Hill FC soccer club which plays in the NSW Super League the second tier of senior soccer in Sydney and also the Stanmore Hawks soccer club which plays in the NSW State League Division One the third tier Residential editA number of residential subdivisions in Dulwich Hill occurred in the early 20th century and include well preserved Federation and Interwar era houses These include for example the Abelgeldie Estate in the northwest as well as the area around Hoskins Park which are protected as heritage conservation areas 16 17 The former freight line now light rail line runs north south through Dulwich Hill and is the centre of an area formerly of industrial use now mostly converted to medium density residential flats Churches editThe area is served by several religious organisations including Anglican Catholic Greek Orthodox and Salvation Army churches nbsp St Marouns Catholic Monastery nbsp St Paul of the Cross Catholic ChurchReferences edit Australian Bureau of Statistics 28 June 2022 Dulwich Hill suburb and locality Australian Census 2021 QuickStats Retrieved 28 June 2022 nbsp Gregory s Sydney Street Directory Gregory s Publishing Company 2008 History of Suburbs Marrickville Council Archived from the original on 24 December 2008 Retrieved 29 August 2007 The Heritage of Australia Macmillan Company 1981 Dulwich High School website Meader C Cashman R Carolan A 1994 Marrickville People and Places Marrickville Hale and Ironmonger p 119 ISBN 0 86806 559 5 1950 s Gregory s street directory map 9 F 4 1950 s Gregory s street directory map 28 H 13 1950 s Gregory s street directory map 33 E 2 Sydney Buses Southern Region Guide March 2010 Australian Bureau of Statistics 27 June 2017 Dulwich Hill State Suburb 2016 Census QuickStats Retrieved 14 September 2017 nbsp Herbertson Lisa 5 October 2015 Australian Olympic swimming great Leisel Jones has released a book called Body Lengths Inner West Courier Inner City Jennie Lees Eveline Pauline Queenie Paul in Australian Dictionary of Biography Volume 18 MUP 2012 Rudd hands out portfolios Australian Broadcasting Corporation 2007 Grayndler Australian Electoral Commission Retrieved 29 August 2007 Ablegeldie Estate Marrickville Council Hoskins Park Marrickville Council Snapshot Dulwich Hill Sydney Morning Herald 25 October 2005 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dulwich Hill New South Wales 33 54 30 S 151 08 30 E 33 90833 S 151 14167 E 33 90833 151 14167 Marrickville Heritage Society Archived 7 September 2020 at the Wayback Machine Geographical Names Board of NSW suburb boundary map permanent dead link Marrickville Council History of Suburbs Dulwich Hill Community Chrys Meader 2008 Dulwich Hill Dictionary of Sydney Retrieved 27 September 2015 CC By SA Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dulwich Hill amp oldid 1190825592, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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