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Orchard Hills is a suburb of Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. Orchard Hills is located 56 kilometres west of the Sydney central business district, in the local government area of the City of Penrith and is part of the Greater Western Sydney region.
[edit] Location
Orchard Hills has a wonderful rural character with undulating hills and scenic vistas. Its landscape is mainly overlaid with orchards and grapevines. Its southern boundary line is Sydney Water's supply pipeline. There has also been some housing development over the years. This suburb resembles the City of Penrith's vision of a region with a harmony of urban and rural qualities.
[edit] History
Orchard Hills takes its name from the orchards located on the area's undulating hills at the turn of the Twentieth Century. In 1806, Governor Philip King granted 600 acres (2.4 km²) in what is now Orchard Hills to Mary Putland, the daughter of the incoming governor, William Bligh. She named the property Frogmore. Adjoining the Frogmore Estate was the York Estate, originally owned by the York family. When it was subdivided in the late 1880s, the land was mainly sold for orchards and vineyards. By the early 1900s a rural community had established in the area and a village developed. The Mount Hope Methodist Church was built in 1904 and the York Estate Public School was built in 1910. Until this time the area had no consistent name being known by different people as Frogmore, York and Mount Hope. A public meeting was called in October 1910 at the new shool to choose a name and Orchard Hills won the day.[1]
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