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Quakers Hill

Suburb in Western Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

Quakers Hill

Summary

Suburb in Western Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

FieldValue
typesuburb
nameQuakers Hill
citySydney
statensw
imageQuakersHillNSWqcourt.jpg
captionQuakers Court shopping centre 2009
alternative_location_mapAustralia NSW metro Sydney
pushpin_map_captionLocation in greater metropolitan Sydney
coordinates
local_mapyes
zoom12
lgaCity of Blacktown
postcode2763
pop27,893
pop_year
pop_footnotes
elevation33
area9.25
area_footnotes
est1904
stategovBlacktown
Riverstone
fedgovGreenway
fedgov2Chifley
near-nwSchofields
near-nThe Ponds
near-neParklea
near-wNirimba Fields
near-eAcacia Gardens
near-swDean Park Glendenning Doonside
near-sWoodcroft
near-seKings Park Marayong
dist140
dir1north-west
location1Sydney CBD

the suburb in New South Wales, Australia

Riverstone | near-nw = Schofields | near-n = The Ponds | near-ne = Parklea | near-w = Nirimba Fields | near-e = Acacia Gardens | near-sw = Dean Park Glendenning Doonside | near-s = Woodcroft | near-se = Kings Park Marayong

A roundabout connecting Hambledon Road, Burdekin Road, and the Stanhope Parkway.

Quakers Hill is a suburb of Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. It is 40 km westnorth-west (WNW) of the Sydney central business district, in the local government area of the City of Blacktown. Quakers Hill is part of the Greater Western Sydney region. Quakers Hill is colloquially known as 'Quakers'.

History

The first recorded cartographic use in NSW of the 'Quaker' name is that of "Quaker's Row", today's Church Street, Parramatta. In November 1788 a second settlement was established by Governor Phillip at Rose Hill and was renamed in June 1791, Parramatta. In July 1790 he laid out his plan for the town, with High Street (now George) the main road with another (143 feet / 43.6 m wide) starting at the south bank of the river where Phillip intended a town square with government buildings and an extended wharf. This he named Quakers Row.

Alan Sharpe, in his "Pictorial History Blacktown and District" (referenced below) on page 84 has no mention of the historic town plan of July 1790.

Development at Parramatta was swift, with the Rev Samuel Marsden establishing conformist religious services. The Quaker's Row inhabitants were moved further west to The Quaker's Hills, where they re-established themselves. It is said they were responsible for burying the dead in simple cairn marked graves that lay in the fields, paddocks and creeks who were all victims of the 1804 uprising and rebellion.

The name Quakers Hill was in an 1806 report of the area by government surveyor James Meehan. The origin of the name is unclear and the next references are more than sixty years later when Thomas Harvey used it for his property in what is now western Quakers Hill. When the railway station was built in 1872, it was called Douglas' Siding for over thirty years. The catalyst for the name change came with the subdivision of Harvey's Quakers Hill property in 1904. The residents of the newly forming village preferred that name and in 1905, the name of the railway station was changed to Quakers Hill.

Postal services began in 1907 and the first post office was built in 1915. A school opened in the Presbyterian church hall in what is now Marayong in 1911 and Quakers Hill Public School took its first students in 1912. During the 1920s, the population grew dramatically, a number of shops opened in the area around the station and a public hall, the Empire Theatre, opened in 1925, screening movies and hosting dances. The village became a centre for the surrounding farms.

In the 1960s, Sydney's suburban sprawl reached the Quakers Hill area and the five acre farms surrounding the village began to be subdivided. In 1994, HMAS Nirimba, a naval training property on the western side of the suburb, was decommissioned and converted into an educational precinct. In 1996, a new development in the north-east of Quakers Hill was converted into a new suburb, Acacia Gardens. In November 2020, the small portion of the suburb north of Quakers Hill Parkway became part of the new suburb of Nirimba Fields.

Nursing home fire

Main article: Quakers Hill Nursing Home fire

On 18 November 2011, an early morning fire at Quakers Hill Nursing Home killed 11 elderly residents, seriously injured others and caused the evacuation of up to 100 people. Three people died in the fire, and a further eight residents of the home died later in hospital from their injuries. The fire started in two places and was regarded by police as suspicious. A nurse working in the home, 36-year-old Roger Kingsley Dean, was charged for the fire and the deaths it caused and was sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole.

Transport

Public transport to and from Quakers Hill is provided by train and a number of bus services by Busways, namely routes: 731 (outskirts), 732 (west), 734 (outskirts), 745 (all over), 752 (all over) and 753 (south). Quakers Hill railway station is on the Richmond line. Bus services connect to Sydney Metro network at Tallawong, Rouse Hill and Bella Vista stations.

Quakers Hill has experienced much road development over recent years including the construction of a new road leading directly to the education precinct, bypassing the town centre. The Westlink M7, which links the suburb directly to all major routes in and out of the greater Sydney region, opened in December 2005. Following this opening the road overpass for the Quakers Hill Parkway has been widened from two to four lanes, including the bridge over the railway line, improving toll-free traffic flow between Richmond and Sunnyholt Roads.

Education

Quakers Hill is home to numerous schools and educational institutions. The oldest is Quakers Hill Public School, opened in 1912. Two other public primary schools (Barnier and Hambledon) were opened in the 1990s to cope with suburb's growing population. High schools in Quakers Hill are split between Quakers Hill High School, catering to Years 7–12, and Wyndham College, years 11–12. There is also a Catholic primary school (Mary Immaculate) and high school (Terra Sancta College). Post-secondary education is serviced by Nirimba TAFE College and the University of Western Sydney, Blacktown Campus. Four of these facilities (UWS, Nirimba TAFE, Wyndham and St John Paul II) are located together in the Nirimba Education Precinct.

Demographics

url-status=dead}}</ref> with the 2021 census recording 27,893 people.<ref name=ABS/>

In the , the majority of people from Quakers Hill were born in Australia (52.8%). The second top response was India (15.8%). Most people identified as having an Australian ancestry (21.1%), followed by English (19.3%).

Most people from Quakers Hill identified as Catholic in 2021 (24.9%), followed by No Religion (18.6%).

Notable residents

  • Mel McLaughlin, sports journalist
  • Fabrice Lapierre, long jumper
  • Miracle, hip hop artist
  • Aaron Mooy, footballer for the Socceroos and Celtic
  • Michael Clifford, guitarist in the band 5 Seconds of Summer
  • Matthew Norman convicted drug smuggler and member of the Bali nine

References

References

  1. {{Census 2021 AUS
  2. RTA NSW. "Parramatta... a heritage of roads and transport".
  3. Sharpe, Alan: ''Pictorial History – Blacktown & District'', page 84-87. Kingsclear Books, 2000 {{ISBN. 0-908272-64-2
  4. Sharpe, Alan: ''Pictorial History – Blacktown & District'', page 87-89. Kingsclear Books, 2000 {{ISBN. 0-908272-64-2
  5. Sharpe, Alan: ''Pictorial History – Blacktown & District'', page 2,90. Kingsclear Books, 2000 {{ISBN. 0-908272-64-2
  6. (28 October 2020). "Previous Suburb Boundaries and Names".
  7. [https://www.nationaltribune.com.au/new-blacktown-city-suburbs-officially-named/ New Blacktown City suburbs officially named] The National Tribune 2 November 2020
  8. Glenda Kwek. (18 November 2011). "A firefighter's worst nightmare' as multiple deaths confirmed after fire breaks out in nursing home". [[The Sydney Morning Herald]].
  9. (2016-02-13). "Case 06: Roger Dean – Casefile: True Crime Podcast". Casefile: True Crime Podcast.
  10. (26 November 2011). "Nursing home tragedy claims 10th victim". smh.com.au.
  11. (30 November 2011). "Further fire victims named – Strike Force Westall". NSW Police Force.
  12. (2 August 2013). "Life sentence won't ease victims' pain".
  13. "{{!}} transportnsw.info".
  14. (8 November 2007). "Quakers Hill Public School". NSW Department of Education.
  15. "Barnier Public School". NSW Department of Education.
  16. "Hambledon Public School". NSW Department of Education.
  17. "Quakers Hill High School". NSW Department of Education.
  18. "Wyndham College". NSW Department of Education.
  19. "Mary Immaculate Primary". Diocese of Parramatta.
  20. "St John Paul II Catholic College College". Diocese of Parramatta.
  21. "Nirimba Education Precinct". NSW Department of Education.
  22. {{Census 2006 AUS
  23. "2016 Census QuickStats: Quakers Hill".
  24. (26 March 2016). "'Sport running through her blood ': Mel McLaughlin steps into the 7 News nightly sports presenter role". 7News.
  25. (26 August 2015). "'Didn't train, played video games all day'".
  26. Georgakopoulos, C. (4 October 2013). "Quakers Hill midfielder Aaron Mooy optimistic about Western Sydney Wanderers' second A-League season".
Wikipedia Source

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