Hunters Hill, New South Wales

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Hunters Hill
SydneyNew South Wales

Hunters Hill Post Office
Population: 9,024 [1]
Established: 1861
Postcode: 2110
Area: 5.75 km² (2.2 sq mi)
Property Value: AUD $1,420,000 (2007)
Location: km (6 mi) north-west of Sydney CBD
LGA: Municipality of Hunter's Hill
State District: Lane Cove
Federal Division: North Sydney
Suburbs around Hunters Hill:
East Ryde Linley Point Longueville
Gladesville Hunters Hill Woolwich
Huntleys Cove Huntleys Point Drummoyne
View from Mornington Reserve
View from Mornington Reserve

Hunters Hill (also spelt Hunter's Hill) is a suburb on the Lower North Shore of Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. Hunters Hill is located 9 kilometres north-west of the Sydney central business district and is the administrative centre for the local government area of the Municipality of Hunter's Hill.

Hunters Hill is situated on a small peninsula that separates the Lane Cove River and Parramatta River. It can be reached by bus or by ferry.

Contents

[edit] History

The area's Aboriginal name is 'Mookaboola' or 'Moocooboola', which means meeting of waters.

Hunters Hill was named after John Hunter the second Governor of New South Wales between 1795 and 1800. [2]

The area that is now Hunters Hill was settled in 1835. One of the earliest settlers was Mary Reiby, the first female retailer in Sydney. She built a cottage on land that fronted the Lane Cove River; Reiby Street is named after her. During the 1840s, bushrangers and convicts who had escaped from the penal settlement on Cockatoo Island took refuge in Hunters Hill.

Many of the suburb's early houses were built from the local sandstone. A number were built by Frenchman Didier Numa Joubert (1816-1881), who bought 200 acres of land from Mary Reiby from 1847 and used seventy stonemasons from Italy to construct solid artistic houses. Hunters Hill was proclaimed as a municipality on 5 January 1861. The first Gladesville Bridge constructed in 1881 linked the area to Drummoyne and the southern side of the Parramatta River.

[edit] Commercial area

Hunters Hill has several commercial areas. A small group of shops is located on the corner of Alexandra and Ferry Street, with others scattered along these streets and Woolwich Road. A busier commercial area is located around the intersection of Ryde Road and Gladesville Road, near Burns Bay Road.

[edit] Schools

Hunters Hill is the site of the Catholic boys' secondary school, St Joseph's College, Hunters Hill High School, Boronia Park Public School, Hunters Hill Primary School and Villa Maria Primary School.

[edit] Churches

  • All Saints Anglican Church, St Marks Anglican Church
  • St Peter Chanel Catholic Church, Holy Name of Mary Catholic Church
  • Hunters Hill Community Church

[edit] Landmarks

There is a private hospital in Alexandra Street and in High Street, a Jewish nursing home and synagogue named the Sir Moses Montefiore Home. The historic Hunters Hill Town Hall is located in Alexandra Street, close to the historic post office.

The Great North Walk, a walking trail from Sydney to Newcastle,[3] passes through Boronia Park; a large waterfront parkland reserve which contains Aboriginal drawings thought to date back to before the start of the colony.

[edit] Heritage

Fig Tree House
Fig Tree House

The following buildings are listed on the Register of the National Estate.[4]

  • Public School including Eulbertie, Alexandra Street
  • Post Office, Alexandra Street
  • Town Hall, Alexandra Street
  • St Ives, Crescent Street
  • Anglican Church of All Saints, corner Ferry and Ambrose Streets
  • Kyarra, Madeline Street
  • Fig Tree House, Reiby Road
  • Clifton, Woolwich Road
  • Waiwera, Woolwich Road
  • St Claire, Wybalena Road
  • The Chalet, Yerton Avenue
  • Woolwich Dock, Franki Avenue, Woolwich
  • Former Garibaldi Inn, Alexandra Street

[edit] Houses

Hunters Hill has an area of 5.75 square kilometres including some 650,000 square metres of parks and reserves. Developments are mostly residential.

Hunters Hill has a number of heritage-listed buildings and is positioned near the confluence of the Lane Cove and Parramatta Rivers, as well as the headwaters of Sydney Harbour, which provides river and harbour views. Previously having a number of residents of French extraction, it was known as the "French Village"[citation needed] and shares a friendship with a sister city near Paris, Le Vésinet[citation needed].

[edit] Transport

Several bus routes run through Hunters Hill, including the 506 to the city and the 536 to Chatswood.

The closest ferry wharves are Valencia Street Wharf in Woolwich and Huntleys Point. These provide access to the Inner Harbour ferry services which run between Circular Quay and Parramatta. There is no rail service to Hunters Hill but a new station at North Ryde, about 5 kilometres away, will be the closest.

[edit] Population

[edit] Demographics

In the 2006 Australian Bureau of Statistics Census of Population and Housing, the population of Hunters Hill stood at 9,024 people, comprised of 49.3% females and 50.7% males, and with a Median age of 41 years. 24.5% of the population was born overseas with England (4.2%), New Zealand (1.4%), China (1.4%) and Italy (1.4%) the most common. The five strongest religious affiliations in the area were in descending order: Catholic (38.2%), Anglican (18.9%), no religion (13.5%), Judaism (4%) and Eastern Orthodox (3.8%).[1]

Hunters Hill's has a median weekly household income of $1,842, compared with $1,027 in Australia. The most common types of occupation for employed persons were Professionals (35.7%), Managers (22.4%), and Clerical and Administrative Workers (15.6%). 67.5% of the suburbs occupied private dwellings were family households, 24.1% were lone person households and 1.5% were group households.[1]

[edit] Notable residents

[edit] Politics

State Elections[5]
  Liberal 62.7%
  Labor 16.9%
  Greens 12.4%
  Democrats 4.7%
  Christian Democrats 2.0%
  Unity Party 1.3%
Federal Elections[6]
  Liberal 67.27%
  Labor 24.02%
  Greens 7.16%
  Independent 0.44%
  Family First 0.39%
  Climate Change 0.33%
  Citizens Electoral Council 0.28%
  Christian Democrats 0.11%

Hunters Hill is in the federal electoral division of North Sydney. This seat was won by Joe Hockey, the current Shadow Minister for Health and Ageing at the 1996 federal election and retained most recently in the 2007 federal election. [7] North Sydney is one of only two original divisions in New South Wales, along with Wentworth, which have never been held by the Australian Labor Party (ALP).

For NSW state elections, Hunters Hill is in the Electoral district of Lane Cove. As of 2003 this seat is held by Liberal MP Anthony Roberts, who was last re-elected in the 2007 state election.[8]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c Australian Bureau of Statistics (25 October 2007). Hunters Hill (State Suburb). 2006 Census QuickStats. Retrieved on 2007-12-21.
  2. ^ The Book of Sydney Suburbs, Frances Pollon, Angus & Robertson Publishers, 1990, p.126, ISBN 0-207-14495-8, page 127
  3. ^ Sydney and Blue Mountains Bushwalks, Neil Paton, Kangaroo Press, 2004
  4. ^ The Heritage of Australia, Macmillan Company, 1981, p.2/30
  5. ^ State Electoral District - Lane Cove Results 2007. State Elections. Electoral Commission NSW (2007). Retrieved on 2007-12-28. Percentages calculated using combined results for "Hunter's Hill" polling booths, and only counting formal votes.
  6. ^ Polling Place - Hunter's Hill. House of Representatives - Election 2007. Australian Electoral Commission (2007). Retrieved on 2007-12-28.
  7. ^ Electoral Division of North Sydney (NSW) The Hon Joe Hockey MP. Members. Commonwealth of Australia (2008-03-14). Retrieved on 2008-03-16.
  8. ^ Mr Anthony John ROBERTS, MP. Legislative Assembly. Parliament of New South Wales (2007). Retrieved on 2007-12-19.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
  • The Official Community Profile of Hunters Hill

[edit] External links