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Sunbury, Victoria

Sunbury (/ˈsʌnbəri/ SUN-bər-ee)[5] is a suburb in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 38 kilometres (24 mi) north-west of Melbourne's Central Business District, located within the City of Hume local government area. Sunbury recorded a population of 38,851 at the 2021 census.[1]

Sunbury
Victoria
Aerial view of Sunbury, Victoria
Sunbury
Location in metropolitan Melbourne
Coordinates37°34′52″S 144°42′50″E / 37.58111°S 144.71389°E / -37.58111; 144.71389
Population38,851 (2021 census)[1]
 • Density1,758/km2 (4,553/sq mi)
Established1836
Postcode(s)3429
Elevation309 m (1,014 ft)
Area22.1 km2 (8.5 sq mi)
Location38 km (24 mi) NW of Melbourne CBD
LGA(s)City of Hume
State electorate(s)Sunbury
Federal division(s)McEwen
Mean max temp[2] Mean min temp[3] Annual rainfall[4]
19.9 °C
68 °F
9.6 °C
49 °F
586.5 mm
23.1 in

Statistically, Sunbury is considered part of Greater Melbourne, as per the Victorian Government's 2009 decision to extend the urban growth boundary in 2011 to include the area in the Melbourne Urban Area as the north-western fringe of the Greater Melbourne area, giving its land urban status and value.[6]

History Edit

The Sunbury area has several important Aboriginal archaeological sites, including five earth rings, which were identified in the 1970s and 1980s, and believed to have been used for ceremonial gatherings. Records of corroborees and other large gatherings during early settlement attest to the importance of the area for Aboriginal people of the Wurundjeri tribe.[7][8][9] One Indigenous name for the area of unknown language and meaning is 'Koorakoorakup'.[10]

Sunbury was first settled in 1836, by George Evans and William Jackson. It was Jackson and his brother, Samuel, who named the township Sunbury, after Sunbury-on-Thames, in Middlesex, England when it was established in 1857. The Post Office opened on 13 January 1858.[11]

Sunbury's connection with the history and development of Victoria is influential because of its most famous and powerful citizen, "Big" Clarke. In 1837, Clarke came to the area, and gained vast pastoral licences encompassing Sunbury, Clarkefield and Monegeetta.[12] His role as one of the biggest pastoralists in the colony, and his power and position within the Victorian Legislative Council, were highly significant in the early years of Victoria.

During the early decades of self-government in the Colony of Victoria there was a continual struggle in parliament, between the Legislative Assembly and the Legislative Council for ascendancy and the control of government. It was Council members, such as Clarke, who attempted to negate what they saw as the excesses of manhood suffrage, republicanism and Chartism, as embodied in the Assembly, in order to protect their own position.[13]

"Big" Clarke, as a member of the so-called bunyip aristocracy, also helped to frustrate legislative measures involving opening land to small farm selectors. Melbourne Punch depicted Clarke in anti-squatter cartoons, such as "The Man in Possession"[14] In 1859, "Big" Clarke was involved in a scandal around the discovery of gold on his holdings in Deep Creek. Shares in the Bolinda company soared and Clarke sold his shares at the peak of the rush, before the fraud was exposed. The gold assay was actually 'salted', possibly via a shotgun blast of golden pellets into the samples. Clarke claimed the rich assay was proved when washed in a soup bowl. The ever-barbed Melbourne Punch explained how the fraud worked in a cartoon of a chipped Chinese Willow Pattern plate titled "The Soup Plate".[15]

In 1874, Clarke's son William built a mansion on an estate named "Rupertswood", after his own son, Rupert. The estate had access to a private railway station. Though the station was constructed in the late 19th century, the Clarkes did not pay the railways for its construction until the 1960s. (Rupertswood railway station was closed as a result of the Regional Fast Rail project and is now only a disused platform).[16] The Clarkes also had a connection to the Kelly Gang story via their police connection with Superintendent Hare.

The younger William was the president of the Melbourne Cricket Club, and it was through that position that the touring English cricket team came to spend the Christmas of 1882 at Rupertswood. On Christmas Eve, the English team played a social game of cricket against a local team. Lady Clarke took one or more bails, burnt them, and put the ashes in a small urn, wrapped in a red velvet bag, which she presented to the English Captain, Ivo Bligh.[17] She proposed that the ashes be used as a perpetual trophy for matches between the two countries. The Ashes has since become one of the world's most sought-after sporting trophies.

In 1922, the Clarke family sold the property to H V McKay, the owner of the Sunshine Harvester Works, who died in 1926. His estate sold the property in 1927 to the Salesian Catholic order. Until recently, the mansion and surrounding property were used for educational and agricultural purposes, and as a boarding school for students undertaking both academic and agricultural endeavours. The school, known as Salesian College, Rupertswood, is still located on the property. The mansion has been restored, and is used for weddings and other formal functions.

In the early 1970s, the area, which was then still largely rural, became famous in Australia as the site of the Sunbury Pop Festival, which was held annually from 1972 to 1975.

Culture Edit

 
The front of the Rupertswood mansion, located in the Rupertswood Estate, Sunbury

Sunbury's residents represent diverse cultural backgrounds, and include a major working-class sector, dependent on proximity to major manufacturing and transport hubs, such as Melbourne Airport which is only 17.5 kilometres (11 mi) from the township. A recent trend for people who work in the Melbourne CBD to trade longer commute times for a more economic lifestyle (due to cheaper housing), has seen the population of Sunbury grow in number, with numerous new housing estates ringing the borders of the established township. Sunbury's population was recorded as being 25,086 in the 2001 census, and is estimated at 34,000 in 2016 census,[18] making it the 38th largest urban centre by population in Australia.

Retail and entertainment Edit

Sunbury has a town centre containing Boost Juice, Jaycar Electronics, Calco Electrical, Coles, Woolworths, FoodWorks and IGA supermarkets, as well as Big W, Cotton On and Target, The Good Guys, Godfrey's department stores. Away from the town centre is an Aldi Supermarket, and Bunnings Warehouse hardware store. There are also many food outlets located in Sunbury such as Nando's, Vics Cuisine, Rocquette, Restaurant 77, Schnitz, and a variety of pizza restaurants, fish and chip shops and Asian restaurants. Sunbury also has many cafes to dine at such as The Spotted Owl, Sacco Coffee, café Circe and Mac's Lounge. Sunbury has a Reading Cinema, three Hotels and The Alley, a 330-person capacity nightclub.

Transport Edit

 
Sunbury railway station in November 2012

Bus Edit

Nine bus routes service Sunbury:

  •  479 : Westfield Airport WestSunbury station via Melbourne Airport. Operated by CDC Melbourne.[19]
  •  481 : Sunbury station – Mount Lion. Operated by Sunbury Bus Service.[20]
  •  483 : Sunbury station – Moonee Ponds Junction via Diggers Rest. Operated by Sunbury Bus Service.[21]
  •  485 : Sunbury station – Wilsons Lane. Operated by Sunbury Bus Service.[22]
  •  486 : Sunbury station – Rolling Meadows. Operated by Sunbury Bus Service.[23]
  •  487 : Sunbury station – Killara Heights. Operated by Sunbury Bus Service.[24]
  •  488 : Sunbury station – Jacksons Hill. Operated by Sunbury Bus Service.[25]
  •  489 : Sunbury station – Canterbury Hills. Operated by Sunbury Bus Service.[26]
  • Lancefield – Sunbury – Clarkefield via Romsey and Monegeetta. Operated by Dysons.[27]

Train Edit

Sunbury station is connected by Metro services to Melbourne on the Sunbury Line and by V/Line services on the Bendigo line to both Melbourne and country Victoria. V/Line services are not as frequent as those on the metropolitan Metro service – an approximate hourly frequency is provided by V/Line on weekdays, although on weekends service levels can be as infrequent as once every 80 minutes.

The State Government electrified the tracks between Sunbury and Sydenham in a $270 million investment, bringing more frequent passenger services to the town – these Metro services started operating on 18 November 2012.[28]

Education Edit

 
The Asylum on Jacksons Hill Sunbury – Later turned into one of Victoria University Campuses and then closed down in 2008

Primary schools

  • Sunbury West Primary School
  • Sunbury Primary School
  • Sunbury Heights Primary School
  • Killara Primary School
  • Kismet Park Primary School
  • St Anne's Primary School
  • Our Lady of Mount Carmel Primary School
  • Goonawarra Primary School
  • Holy Trinity Primary School

Secondary schools and high schools

Others

  • Sunbury and Macedon Ranges Special School

Sport Edit

Sunbury is represented in the following sporting leagues:

  • Athletics
    • Sunbury Little Athletics Centre Inc[29]
  • Australian rules football
  • Bandy
    • Australian Bandy League is based here.[31]
  • Badminton
    • Sunbury Badminton Club Inc
  • Baseball
    • Sunbury Titans Baseball club
  • Basketball
    • Sunbury Basketball Association
    • Big V Basketball
  • Bicycle
    • Sunbury Bicycle User Group
  • Cricket
    • Sunbury Cricket Club, Clarke Oval
    • Gisborne and District Cricket Association
    • East Sunbury Cricket Club
    • Sunbury Kangaroos Cricket Club
    • Sunbury United Cricket Club
    • Rupertswood Cricket Club
  • Dancing
    • Roselind Calisthenics
    • Classique School of Dance
    • Flash Dance
    • Sunbury school of Calisthenics
    • Hotpink Dance Centre
    • Shirley Rogers Academy of Dance
    • Concept Performing Arts
  • Girl Guides
    • Sunbury Leadbeater Guides (Age 5–7 years)
    • Sunbury Sugarglider Guides (Age 5–7 years)
    • Sunbury Wongguri Guides (Age 7–11 years)
    • Sunbury Kamballa Guides (Age 11–14 years)
    • Sunbury Bluebell Guides (Age 14–17 years)
  • Golf
    • Golfers play at the course of the Goonawarra Golf Club at Francis Boulevard, Sunbury.[32]
    • Sunbury Golf Range located just off Sunbury Road on the way to Melbourne Airport.
  • Horse riding
    • Sunbury Pony Club
    • Sunbury Riding Centre
  • Lawn Bowls
    • Royal Victorian Bowls Association – Metro
    • Sunbury Bowling Club
    • Victorian Ladies' Bowls Association
  • Rugby league
    • Sunbury Tigers (Victorian Rugby League) – club official website
    • Junior Side (Melbourne Junior Rugby League)
  • Soccer
    • Sunbury United (Victorian State League 2)
    • Sunbury United Junior Football Club
  • Softball
    • Sunbury Softball Association
  • Swimming
    • Sunbury Amateur Swimming Club
    • Aqua Wolves Swimming Club
  • Table Tennis
    • The Sunbury & District Table Tennis Association – club official website
  • Tennis
    • Sunbury Lawn Tennis Club
    • Mt. Carmel Tennis Club

Politics Edit

Sunbury is represented by Cr Trevor Dance, Cr Jarrod Bell and Cr Steve (Jack) Medcraft in the Jacksons Creek Ward of the City of Hume. At State level, Sunbury is in the Electoral district of Sunbury, represented by Josh Bull. Federally, Sunbury is located in the Division of Hawke, represented by Sam_Rae.

Notable people Edit

See also Edit

Historical bibliography Edit

  • O'Brien, Antony. Shenanigans on the Ovens Goldfields: the 1859 election, Artillery Publishing, Hartwell, 2005. (details on the Bolinda Company gold scam and 'Big'Clarke's role in Upper House)
  • Serle, Geoffrey. The Golden Age: A History of the Colony of Victoria, 1851-1861, Melbourne University Press, Carlton, 1963. (gold, squatters and government)
  • Spreadbrough Robert and Anderson, Hugh. Victorian Squatters, Red Rooster, Ascot Vale, 1983. (detailed maps of squatters runs in the district)
  • Turner, Henry Giles, A History of the Colony of Victoria: from its discovery to its absorption in the Commonwealth of Australia, Vols 1 & 2, Melbourne, 1904.

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Australian Bureau of Statistics (28 June 2022). "Sunbury (Suburbs and Localities)". 2021 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 1 July 2022.  
  2. ^ http://www.bom.gov.au/jsp/ncc/cdio/weatherData/av?p_nccObsCode=36&p_display_type=dataFile&p_stn_num=086282[bare URL]
  3. ^ http://www.bom.gov.au/jsp/ncc/cdio/weatherData/av?p_nccObsCode=38&p_display_type=dataFile&p_stn_num=086282[bare URL]
  4. ^ http://www.bom.gov.au/jsp/ncc/cdio/weatherData/av?p_nccObsCode=139&p_display_type=dataFile&p_stn_num=087061[bare URL]
  5. ^ Butler, Susan, ed. (2009). Macquarie Dictionary (5th ed.). Sydney: Macquarie Dictionary Publishers Pty Ltd. 1952 pages. ISBN 978-1-876-42966-9. from the original on 12 January 2014.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 28 January 2010.
  7. ^ Meyer Eidelson, The Melbourne Dreaming: A Guide to the Aboriginal Places of Melbourne, Aboriginal Studies Press, Canberra, (1997; 2000). ISBN 0-85575-306-4
  8. ^ Bowdler, Sandra, 1999, A study of Indigenous ceremonial ("Bora") sites in eastern Australia, Centre for Archaeology, University of Western Australia, paper delivered at "Heritage Landscapes: Understanding Place &Communities" conference, Southern Cross University, Lismore, November 1999 14 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ Frankel, David 1982 Earth rings at Sunbury, Victoria. Archaeology in Oceania 17: 83-89.
  10. ^ 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.
  11. ^ Premier Postal History, Post Office List, retrieved 11 April 2008
  12. ^ Spreadbrough, Victorian Squatters
  13. ^ Serle,The Golden Age, pp.146–150
  14. ^ Punch, 2 December 1858, p.149
  15. ^ Punch 9 February 1860, p. 21 see also O'Brien, Shenanigans, Ch. 3 for an insight and cartoons of the 1850s, see also M. Clarke, "Big" Clarke for a comprehensive family history
  16. ^ M. Clarke, "Big" Clarke
  17. ^ The Times (London), 27 June 1930. page 7.
  18. ^ "2016 Sunbury, Census All persons QuickStats | Australian Bureau of Statistics".
  19. ^ "479 Airport West SC - Sunbury Station via Melbourne Airport". Public Transport Victoria.
  20. ^ "481 Sunbury Railway Station - Mount Lion". Public Transport Victoria.
  21. ^ "483 Sunbury - Moonee Ponds via Diggers Rest". Public Transport Victoria.
  22. ^ "485 Sunbury Railway Station - Wilsons Lane". Public Transport Victoria.
  23. ^ "486 Sunbury Railway Station - Rolling Meadows". Public Transport Victoria.
  24. ^ "487 Sunbury Railway Station - Killara Heights". Public Transport Victoria.
  25. ^ "488 Sunbury Railway Station - Jacksons Hill". Public Transport Victoria.
  26. ^ "489 Sunbury Railway Station - Canterbury Hills". Public Transport Victoria.
  27. ^ Lancefield - Sunbury-Clarkefield via Romsey & Monegeeta Public Transport Victoria
  28. ^ "Sunbury Electrification Project Overview". Victorian State Government Department of Transport. from the original on 28 March 2011. Retrieved 25 June 2011.
  29. ^ "Sunbury Little Athletics". sunburylac.org.au. from the original on 17 March 2018. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
  30. ^ Full Points Footy, Sunbury, from the original on 9 March 2009, retrieved 15 April 2009
  31. ^ . worldbandy.com. Archived from the original on 16 October 2013. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
  32. ^ Golf Select, Goonawarra, from the original on 24 September 2009, retrieved 11 May 2009
  33. ^ Lofthouse, Andrea (1982). Who's Who of Australian Women. Methuen Australia.
  34. ^ . Archived from the original on 25 April 2013. Retrieved 24 February 2013.

External links Edit

  • Sunbury 3429
  • The Carroll Directory
  • Sunbury Online
  • Hume City Council
  • Sunbury Community Festival
  • Sunbury Radio 3NRG
  • Sunbury Family History Society
  • Sunbury Swimming Club

sunbury, victoria, sunbury, bər, suburb, melbourne, victoria, australia, kilometres, north, west, melbourne, central, business, district, located, within, city, hume, local, government, area, sunbury, recorded, population, 2021, census, sunbury, victoriaaerial. Sunbury ˈ s ʌ n b er i SUN ber ee 5 is a suburb in Melbourne Victoria Australia 38 kilometres 24 mi north west of Melbourne s Central Business District located within the City of Hume local government area Sunbury recorded a population of 38 851 at the 2021 census 1 Sunbury VictoriaAerial view of Sunbury VictoriaSunburyLocation in metropolitan MelbourneCoordinates37 34 52 S 144 42 50 E 37 58111 S 144 71389 E 37 58111 144 71389Population38 851 2021 census 1 Density1 758 km2 4 553 sq mi Established1836Postcode s 3429Elevation309 m 1 014 ft Area22 1 km2 8 5 sq mi Location38 km 24 mi NW of Melbourne CBDLGA s City of HumeState electorate s SunburyFederal division s McEwenMean max temp 2 Mean min temp 3 Annual rainfall 4 19 9 C 68 F 9 6 C 49 F 586 5 mm 23 1 inSuburbs around Sunbury Gisborne Riddells Creek ClarkefieldGisborne South Sunbury WildwoodMelton Hillside Diggers Rest BullaStatistically Sunbury is considered part of Greater Melbourne as per the Victorian Government s 2009 decision to extend the urban growth boundary in 2011 to include the area in the Melbourne Urban Area as the north western fringe of the Greater Melbourne area giving its land urban status and value 6 Contents 1 History 2 Culture 3 Retail and entertainment 4 Transport 4 1 Bus 4 2 Train 5 Education 6 Sport 7 Politics 8 Notable people 9 See also 10 Historical bibliography 11 References 12 External linksHistory EditThe Sunbury area has several important Aboriginal archaeological sites including five earth rings which were identified in the 1970s and 1980s and believed to have been used for ceremonial gatherings Records of corroborees and other large gatherings during early settlement attest to the importance of the area for Aboriginal people of the Wurundjeri tribe 7 8 9 One Indigenous name for the area of unknown language and meaning is Koorakoorakup 10 Sunbury was first settled in 1836 by George Evans and William Jackson It was Jackson and his brother Samuel who named the township Sunbury after Sunbury on Thames in Middlesex England when it was established in 1857 The Post Office opened on 13 January 1858 11 Sunbury s connection with the history and development of Victoria is influential because of its most famous and powerful citizen Big Clarke In 1837 Clarke came to the area and gained vast pastoral licences encompassing Sunbury Clarkefield and Monegeetta 12 His role as one of the biggest pastoralists in the colony and his power and position within the Victorian Legislative Council were highly significant in the early years of Victoria During the early decades of self government in the Colony of Victoria there was a continual struggle in parliament between the Legislative Assembly and the Legislative Council for ascendancy and the control of government It was Council members such as Clarke who attempted to negate what they saw as the excesses of manhood suffrage republicanism and Chartism as embodied in the Assembly in order to protect their own position 13 Big Clarke as a member of the so called bunyip aristocracy also helped to frustrate legislative measures involving opening land to small farm selectors Melbourne Punch depicted Clarke in anti squatter cartoons such as The Man in Possession 14 In 1859 Big Clarke was involved in a scandal around the discovery of gold on his holdings in Deep Creek Shares in the Bolinda company soared and Clarke sold his shares at the peak of the rush before the fraud was exposed The gold assay was actually salted possibly via a shotgun blast of golden pellets into the samples Clarke claimed the rich assay was proved when washed in a soup bowl The ever barbed Melbourne Punch explained how the fraud worked in a cartoon of a chipped Chinese Willow Pattern plate titled The Soup Plate 15 In 1874 Clarke s son William built a mansion on an estate named Rupertswood after his own son Rupert The estate had access to a private railway station Though the station was constructed in the late 19th century the Clarkes did not pay the railways for its construction until the 1960s Rupertswood railway station was closed as a result of the Regional Fast Rail project and is now only a disused platform 16 The Clarkes also had a connection to the Kelly Gang story via their police connection with Superintendent Hare The younger William was the president of the Melbourne Cricket Club and it was through that position that the touring English cricket team came to spend the Christmas of 1882 at Rupertswood On Christmas Eve the English team played a social game of cricket against a local team Lady Clarke took one or more bails burnt them and put the ashes in a small urn wrapped in a red velvet bag which she presented to the English Captain Ivo Bligh 17 She proposed that the ashes be used as a perpetual trophy for matches between the two countries The Ashes has since become one of the world s most sought after sporting trophies In 1922 the Clarke family sold the property to H V McKay the owner of the Sunshine Harvester Works who died in 1926 His estate sold the property in 1927 to the Salesian Catholic order Until recently the mansion and surrounding property were used for educational and agricultural purposes and as a boarding school for students undertaking both academic and agricultural endeavours The school known as Salesian College Rupertswood is still located on the property The mansion has been restored and is used for weddings and other formal functions In the early 1970s the area which was then still largely rural became famous in Australia as the site of the Sunbury Pop Festival which was held annually from 1972 to 1975 Culture Edit nbsp The front of the Rupertswood mansion located in the Rupertswood Estate SunburySunbury s residents represent diverse cultural backgrounds and include a major working class sector dependent on proximity to major manufacturing and transport hubs such as Melbourne Airport which is only 17 5 kilometres 11 mi from the township A recent trend for people who work in the Melbourne CBD to trade longer commute times for a more economic lifestyle due to cheaper housing has seen the population of Sunbury grow in number with numerous new housing estates ringing the borders of the established township Sunbury s population was recorded as being 25 086 in the 2001 census and is estimated at 34 000 in 2016 census 18 making it the 38th largest urban centre by population in Australia Retail and entertainment EditSunbury has a town centre containing Boost Juice Jaycar Electronics Calco Electrical Coles Woolworths FoodWorks and IGA supermarkets as well as Big W Cotton On and Target The Good Guys Godfrey s department stores Away from the town centre is an Aldi Supermarket and Bunnings Warehouse hardware store There are also many food outlets located in Sunbury such as Nando s Vics Cuisine Rocquette Restaurant 77 Schnitz and a variety of pizza restaurants fish and chip shops and Asian restaurants Sunbury also has many cafes to dine at such as The Spotted Owl Sacco Coffee cafe Circe and Mac s Lounge Sunbury has a Reading Cinema three Hotels and The Alley a 330 person capacity nightclub Transport Edit nbsp Sunbury railway station in November 2012Bus Edit Nine bus routes service Sunbury 479 Westfield Airport West Sunbury station via Melbourne Airport Operated by CDC Melbourne 19 481 Sunbury station Mount Lion Operated by Sunbury Bus Service 20 483 Sunbury station Moonee Ponds Junction via Diggers Rest Operated by Sunbury Bus Service 21 485 Sunbury station Wilsons Lane Operated by Sunbury Bus Service 22 486 Sunbury station Rolling Meadows Operated by Sunbury Bus Service 23 487 Sunbury station Killara Heights Operated by Sunbury Bus Service 24 488 Sunbury station Jacksons Hill Operated by Sunbury Bus Service 25 489 Sunbury station Canterbury Hills Operated by Sunbury Bus Service 26 Lancefield Sunbury Clarkefield via Romsey and Monegeetta Operated by Dysons 27 Train Edit Sunbury station is connected by Metro services to Melbourne on the Sunbury Line and by V Line services on the Bendigo line to both Melbourne and country Victoria V Line services are not as frequent as those on the metropolitan Metro service an approximate hourly frequency is provided by V Line on weekdays although on weekends service levels can be as infrequent as once every 80 minutes The State Government electrified the tracks between Sunbury and Sydenham in a 270 million investment bringing more frequent passenger services to the town these Metro services started operating on 18 November 2012 28 Education Edit nbsp The Asylum on Jacksons Hill Sunbury Later turned into one of Victoria University Campuses and then closed down in 2008Primary schools Sunbury West Primary School Sunbury Primary School Sunbury Heights Primary School Killara Primary School Kismet Park Primary School St Anne s Primary School Our Lady of Mount Carmel Primary School Goonawarra Primary School Holy Trinity Primary SchoolSecondary schools and high schools Sunbury Downs College formerly Sunbury Post primary School Sunbury College formerly Sunbury Secondary College Sunbury High School Salesian CollegeOthers Sunbury and Macedon Ranges Special SchoolSport EditSunbury is represented in the following sporting leagues Athletics Sunbury Little Athletics Centre Inc 29 Australian rules football Sunbury Football Club Ballarat Football League 30 Sunbury Kangaroos Junior Football Club Riddell District Football League club official website Rupertswood Football Club Victorian Amateur Football Association club official website East Sunbury Sporting Group Seniors and juniors Football Club Essendon District Football League club official website Bandy Australian Bandy League is based here 31 Badminton Sunbury Badminton Club Inc Baseball Sunbury Titans Baseball club Basketball Sunbury Basketball Association Big V Basketball Bicycle Sunbury Bicycle User Group Cricket Sunbury Cricket Club Clarke Oval Gisborne and District Cricket Association East Sunbury Cricket Club Sunbury Kangaroos Cricket Club Sunbury United Cricket Club Rupertswood Cricket Club Dancing Roselind Calisthenics Classique School of Dance Flash Dance Sunbury school of Calisthenics Hotpink Dance Centre Shirley Rogers Academy of Dance Concept Performing Arts Girl Guides Sunbury Leadbeater Guides Age 5 7 years Sunbury Sugarglider Guides Age 5 7 years Sunbury Wongguri Guides Age 7 11 years Sunbury Kamballa Guides Age 11 14 years Sunbury Bluebell Guides Age 14 17 years Golf Golfers play at the course of the Goonawarra Golf Club at Francis Boulevard Sunbury 32 Sunbury Golf Range located just off Sunbury Road on the way to Melbourne Airport Horse riding Sunbury Pony Club Sunbury Riding Centre Lawn Bowls Royal Victorian Bowls Association Metro Sunbury Bowling Club Victorian Ladies Bowls Association Rugby league Sunbury Tigers Victorian Rugby League club official website Junior Side Melbourne Junior Rugby League Soccer Sunbury United Victorian State League 2 Sunbury United Junior Football Club Softball Sunbury Softball Association Swimming Sunbury Amateur Swimming Club Aqua Wolves Swimming Club Table Tennis The Sunbury amp District Table Tennis Association club official website Tennis Sunbury Lawn Tennis Club Mt Carmel Tennis ClubPolitics EditSunbury is represented by Cr Trevor Dance Cr Jarrod Bell and Cr Steve Jack Medcraft in the Jacksons Creek Ward of the City of Hume At State level Sunbury is in the Electoral district of Sunbury represented by Josh Bull Federally Sunbury is located in the Division of Hawke represented by Sam Rae Notable people EditMark Blicavs Australian rules footballer Sara Blicavs WNBL player and Australian Opals player Matthew Egan Australian rules footballer Cameron Guthrie Australian rules footballer Zach Guthrie Australian rules footballer Mark Johnson Australian rules footballer James Kelly Australian rules footballer Jamie Maclaren Australian Soccer player striker for Melbourne City FC Hibernian F C and Australia Shirley McKerrow Politician first woman elected Federal President of any Australian political party 33 34 Nathan Phillips Actor David Schwarz Australian rules footballer Cassi Van Den Dungen Model runner up in 2009 on Australia s Next Top Model Cameron Wight Australian rules footballer Linden Hall AthleteSee also EditShire of Bulla Sunbury was previously within this former local government area Rupertswood Salesian College Sunbury Bus Service Sunbury Downs College Sunbury Industrial School Sunbury Lunatic Asylum Sunbury on Thames Sunbury Pop Festival Sunbury railway stationHistorical bibliography EditO Brien Antony Shenanigans on the Ovens Goldfields the 1859 election Artillery Publishing Hartwell 2005 details on the Bolinda Company gold scam and Big Clarke s role in Upper House Serle Geoffrey The Golden Age A History of the Colony of Victoria 1851 1861 Melbourne University Press Carlton 1963 gold squatters and government Spreadbrough Robert and Anderson Hugh Victorian Squatters Red Rooster Ascot Vale 1983 detailed maps of squatters runs in the district Turner Henry Giles A History of the Colony of Victoria from its discovery to its absorption in the Commonwealth of Australia Vols 1 amp 2 Melbourne 1904 References Edit a b Australian Bureau of Statistics 28 June 2022 Sunbury Suburbs and Localities 2021 Census QuickStats Retrieved 1 July 2022 nbsp http www bom gov au jsp ncc cdio weatherData av p nccObsCode 36 amp p display type dataFile amp p stn num 086282 bare URL http www bom gov au jsp ncc cdio weatherData av p nccObsCode 38 amp p display type dataFile amp p stn num 086282 bare URL http www bom gov au jsp ncc cdio weatherData av p nccObsCode 139 amp p display type dataFile amp p stn num 087061 bare URL Butler Susan ed 2009 Macquarie Dictionary 5th ed Sydney Macquarie Dictionary Publishers Pty Ltd 1952 pages ISBN 978 1 876 42966 9 Archived from the original on 12 January 2014 Big growth tax grab in Sunbury Council News Sunbury Leader Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 Retrieved 28 January 2010 Meyer Eidelson The Melbourne Dreaming A Guide to the Aboriginal Places of Melbourne Aboriginal Studies Press Canberra 1997 2000 ISBN 0 85575 306 4 Bowdler Sandra 1999 A study of Indigenous ceremonial Bora sites in eastern Australia Centre for Archaeology University of Western Australia paper delivered at Heritage Landscapes Understanding Place amp Communities conference Southern Cross University Lismore November 1999 Archived 14 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine Frankel David 1982 Earth rings at Sunbury Victoria Archaeology in Oceania 17 83 89 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 Premier Postal History Post Office List retrieved 11 April 2008 Spreadbrough Victorian Squatters Serle The Golden Age pp 146 150 Punch 2 December 1858 p 149 Punch 9 February 1860 p 21 see also O Brien Shenanigans Ch 3 for an insight and cartoons of the 1850s see also M Clarke Big Clarke for a comprehensive family history M Clarke Big Clarke The Times London 27 June 1930 page 7 2016 Sunbury Census All persons QuickStats Australian Bureau of Statistics 479 Airport West SC Sunbury Station via Melbourne Airport Public Transport Victoria 481 Sunbury Railway Station Mount Lion Public Transport Victoria 483 Sunbury Moonee Ponds via Diggers Rest Public Transport Victoria 485 Sunbury Railway Station Wilsons Lane Public Transport Victoria 486 Sunbury Railway Station Rolling Meadows Public Transport Victoria 487 Sunbury Railway Station Killara Heights Public Transport Victoria 488 Sunbury Railway Station Jacksons Hill Public Transport Victoria 489 Sunbury Railway Station Canterbury Hills Public Transport Victoria Lancefield Sunbury Clarkefield via Romsey amp Monegeeta Public Transport Victoria Sunbury Electrification Project Overview Victorian State Government Department of Transport Archived from the original on 28 March 2011 Retrieved 25 June 2011 Sunbury Little Athletics sunburylac org au Archived from the original on 17 March 2018 Retrieved 24 April 2018 Full Points Footy Sunbury archived from the original on 9 March 2009 retrieved 15 April 2009 Members worldbandy com Archived from the original on 16 October 2013 Retrieved 24 April 2018 Golf Select Goonawarra archived from the original on 24 September 2009 retrieved 11 May 2009 Lofthouse Andrea 1982 Who s Who of Australian Women Methuen Australia Distinguished Women in The Nationals Archived from the original on 25 April 2013 Retrieved 24 February 2013 External links EditSunbury 3429 The Carroll Directory Sunbury Online Hume City Council Sunbury Community Festival Sunbury Radio 3NRG Sunbury Family History Society Sunbury Swimming Club Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sunbury Victoria amp oldid 1160207797, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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