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Branxton, New South Wales
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| type | town |
| name | Branxton |
| state | nsw |
| image | Branxton New England Highway 001.JPG |
| caption | New England Highway at Branxton |
| coordinates | |
| pushpin_label_position | left |
| lga | City of Cessnock |
| lga2 | Singleton Council |
| region | Hunter Region |
| postcode | 2335 |
| pop | 2255 |
| pop_year | |
| pop_footnotes | |
| stategov | Cessnock |
| stategov2 | Upper Hunter |
| fedgov | Hunter |
Branxton is a town in the Hunter Region of New South Wales, Australia. Branxton is 171 km north of Sydney via the Pacific Motorway and New England Highway. Branxton is located mostly in the City of Cessnock, but part of it is in Singleton Shire.
History
Branxton lies on the Traditional Country of the Wonnarua people. In 1801 William Paterson (explorer) was the first European to sight the area when he travelled up the Hunter River as far as Dalwood. After colonisation, the township was initially referred to as Black Creek, but in 1848, its name was changed to Branxton as the developer believed that the Black Creek would not attract buyers. As settlers took up further land grants the township expanded capitalising on trade from settlers heading further north to settle the Liverpool Plains. By 1860 it was a village of 500 residents, a steam mill, post office, a mechanics institute and four hotels. 1860 also saw the main road being built by the general store, Victoria House. In 1865 a Methodist church was built. In 1871 St John's Anglican Church was built. In 1880 the police station was completed.
Population
At the 2021 Census the population of Branxton was 2,255, of whom 2,025 were born in Australia, while 151 identified as Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islanders. The most common responses for religion were Catholic 22.4% and Anglican 11.9%, while No Religion jumped from 21.4% at the 2016 census to 32.8%.
At the , Branxton had a population of 1,991.
Transport
Branxton is located on the New England Highway between Maitland and Singleton. While the highway passes through the centre of the town, most through traffic bypasses via the Hunter Expressway.
An infamous road sign on one approach to the town states that Branxton has "two cemeteries no hospital". The sign, erected by the local Lions Club, is meant to act as a deterrent to rule-breaking motorists.
Branxton is located on the Main Northern railway line and has its own railway station, served by NSW TrainLink's Hunter line.
Hunter Valley Buses operates three bus routes through the village of Branxton:
- 179: Stockland Greenhills to North Rothbury via East Maitland, Maitland, Rutherford, Lochinvar, Greta
- 180: Stockland Greenhills to Singleton Heights via East Maitland, Maitland, Rutherford, Lochinvar, Greta and Singleton
- 180X: Maitland station to Singleton station via Lochinvar and Greta
Wine history

Winemaker James Busby, widely regarded as the "father" of the Australian wine industry, planted his first grape vines on his property "Kirkton", located at Belford in the Branxton district. He later sold 600 vines to George Wyndham, who arrived in 1827 after purchasing 2000 acres of land from David Maziere adjoining the Hunter River near to where William Paterson had explored 26 years earlier. His original homestead, Dalwood House, is preserved within the grounds of the modern Wyndham Estate complex is located five kilometres east of the current town. Management was eventually taken over by his son John who expanded the business, bringing it to international acclaim receiving awards at local and international exhibitions, including the Paris International Exhibition of 1867. The Wyndhams named some of their wines after local Aboriginal words such as Bukkulla. At the height of Dalwood's success, a set of promotional photographs of the vineyard were produced in 1886, which was presented to various local dignitaries, including Queen Victoria.
Facilities
Branxton is a busy service township with a supermarket, medical centre, swimming school and an art school.
The town has several different sporting clubs. These include Greta-Branxton Colts Rugby League Football Club, Greta-Branxton Wildcats Soccer Club, Greta-Branxton United Cricket Club, and Branxton District Netball Club. Branxton also has facilities for tennis, croquet, golf and athletics.
There are two primary schools within Branxton; Branxton Public School, and Rosary Park Catholic School. There is no high school in the town, and most students attend high school in nearby Maitland, Singleton or Cessnock.
Heritage listings
Branxton has a number of heritage-listed sites, including:
- Main Northern railway: Branxton railway station
- Dalwood Road: Dalwood House
References
References
- {{Census 2016 AUS
- "Preserving history and culture {{!}} Office of the Registrar of Indigenous Corporations".
- Wonnarua People. "Boundaries of the Hunter Valley Aboriginal people.". Wonnarua Aboriginal Corporation.
- "Houses erected on original land grants in the Lower Hunter, Paterson and Williams River Valleys between 1800-1850".
- "Branxton, NSW".
- "2021 Branxton, Census All persons QuickStats | Australian Bureau of Statistics".
- "Branxton, Hunter Valley, Australia".
- "{{!}} transportnsw.info".
- "{{!}} transportnsw.info".
- "{{!}} transportnsw.info".
- scheme=AGLSTERMS. AglsAgent; corporateName=State Library of New South Wales; address=Macquarie Street, Sydney. (2016-02-17). "Wyndhams {{!}} Australian agricultural and rural life".
- (1867-02-28). "INTERCOLONIAL AND PARIS EXHIBITION.". Sydney Morning Herald (NSW : 1842 - 1954).
- "Home - Branxton Public School".
- "Rosary Park Catholic School – Branxton".
- {{cite NSW SHR. 5011953. Branxton Railway Station group and movable relics
- {{cite NSW SHR. 5045253. Dalwood House and surrounds of Wyndham Estate
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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