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South Hurstville

South Hurstville

FieldValue
typesuburb
nameSouth Hurstville
citySydney
statensw
imageSouth Hurstville Friendship Park.JPG
captionMa'anshan Friendship Park
alternative_location_mapAustralia NSW metro Sydney
pushpin_map_captionLocation in greater metropolitan Sydney
coordinates
local_mapyes
zoom13
lgaGeorges River Council
postcode2221
pop5,221
pop_year
pop_footnotes
elevation44
stategovKogarah
stategov2Oatley
fedgovBanks
fedgov2Barton
near-nwHurstville
near-nHurstville
near-neAllawah
near-wHurstville Grove
near-eKogarah Bay
near-swConnells Point
near-sBlakehurst
near-seCarlton
dist118
dir1south
location1Sydney CBD

| near-nw = Hurstville | near-n = Hurstville | near-ne = Allawah | near-w = Hurstville Grove | near-e = Kogarah Bay | near-sw = Connells Point | near-s = Blakehurst | near-se = Carlton

South Hurstville is a suburb in the St George area of Southern Sydney, 18 kilometres south of the Sydney central business district. South Hurstville is in the local government area of the Georges River Council. Hurstville and Hurstville Grove are separate neighbouring suburbs.

History

The Hurstville area was granted to Captain John Townson and his brother Robert Townson in 1808; Captain Townson was granted 1950 acre which was on the land now occupied by the suburb of Hurstville and parts of Bexley, while Robert was granted the land which is now occupied by Penshurst, Mortdale, and parts of Peakhurst. The next year, Captain Townson was granted an additional 250 acre in the area now occupied by Kingsgrove and Beverly Hills. The Townson brothers, however, were not happy with the heavily timbered land that they were given because it was not suitable for the farming of sheep for wool; consequently, it is likely that the brothers never occupied their land.

The land was sold to a wealthy merchant named Simeon Lord (1771–1840) in 1812, who called his land Lord's Bush. When Simeon Lord died, the land became the property of John Rose Holden and James Holt of the Bank of New South Wales.

The land was sold to Michael Gannon (1800–1861) in 1850 and became known as Gannon's Forest. The Gannon's Forest post office opened in 1881. The local school was known as Hurstville by School Inspector MacIntyre in 1876. When the railway arrived in 1884, the station took the name "Hurstville" from the school. Hurstville municipality was incorporated in 1887.

Commercial area

Connells Point Road

South Hurstville is mainly residential with a small commercial/shopping area. A conventional style shopfront strip is located around King Georges Road and Connells Point Road. The Kings Head Tavern is a landmark at this location as well. An IGA Supa supermarket, McDonald's, Fast Food outlet, BWS Liquor store are located nearby. A light industrial area is located in lower Halstead Street, alongside fitness businesses.

Places of Worship

  • St Marks Anglican Church
  • South Hurstville Uniting Church
  • South Hurstville Christian Brethren Church
  • St Raphael's Catholic Church

Schools

Hurstville South Public School is located on Maher Street (technically in Hurstville); St. Raphael's Catholic Primary School on George Street.

Transport

Veolia Transport runs services through South Hurstville. Routes 970 and 971 Miranda via Sylvania Heights and Sylvania Heights to Hurstville. Route 959 from Bald Face at Blakehurst to Hurstville. Punchbowl Bus Company runs Route 953 Hurstville via Kyle Bay, Connells Point and South Hurstville (Loop service).

Landmarks

  • South Hurstville Library
  • Poulton Park

Population

In the 2021 Census, there were 5,221 people in South Hurstville. 49.1% of people were born in Australia. The next most common countries of birth were China (18.0%), Hong Kong (3.7%) and Lebanon (2.3%). 36.4% of people spoke only English at home. Other languages spoken at home included Mandarin (16.9%), Cantonese (13.9%), Arabic (6.0%), Greek (5.2%) and Macedonian (2.3%).

The most common responses for religious affiliation were No Religion (33.1%), Catholic (18.6%) and Eastern Orthodox (10.0%).

References

References

  1. {{Census 2021 AUS
  2. "Archived copy".
  3. "South Hurstville".
  4. Pollon, F. (1990.) ''The Book of Sydney Suburbs'', Angus & Robertson Publishers, Sydney, p. 130.
  5. "South Hurstville".
Wikipedia Source

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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