Narwee, New South Wales

Coordinates: 33°56′51″S 151°4′15″E / 33.94750°S 151.07083°E / -33.94750; 151.07083
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Narwee
Federal division(s)
Suburbs around Narwee:
Roselands Roselands Roselands
Riverwood Narwee Beverly Hills
Peakhurst
Penshurst Beverly Hills

Narwee is a

Beverly Hills
.

The main street of Narwee is Broadarrow Road, which runs from King Georges Road in Beverly Hills to just past Bonds Road in Riverwood. Broadarrow Road is also the boundary line between the southern part of the City of Canterbury-Bankstown and the northern part of the Georges River Council areas.

History

Narwee is an Aboriginal word meaning "sun", an appropriate name for an area once called 'Sunning Hill Farm'.

Jannali. Jannali supposedly means "moon" and was apparently named at the same time as Narwee, as a "sister suburb".[citation needed
]

The name Narwee was adopted when the railway station opened on 21 December 1931. People living there at the time were mostly poultry farmers and market gardeners, and a city florist had a large garden west of the railway station.[citation needed] After the railway came through, people bought up land for residences. Little building was done during the Depression and World War II, but the suburb grew rapidly in the 1950s, when the area was settled by young families. The post office opened in 1948.[citation needed]

Narwee Primary School is built on land given in 1809, to Richard Podmore, a free settler, who came to New South Wales as a soldier in the N.S.W. Corps in 1792, on the ship "Pitt". Land between today's Penshurst Road and King Georges Road belonged to Richard Tuckwell, another soldier from the same Company. At the time of the land, the area was covered with a very thick ironbark forest.[citation needed]

Tuckwell and Podmore sold their grants to Patrick Moore and Robert Gardner, both ex-convicts, in 1819 and 1820, and "Bob the Gardener", as he was known, began to clear trees and develop a farm on Podmore's grant, which he called "Sunning Hill Farm". The property was later extended to cover Emery's 30-acre (120,000 m2) grant next door. This was farmed by Gardner's adopted son, Thomas Gardner Whitehall.[citation needed]

At that stage, there were very few farms in the district. Men earned a living by cutting down the trees and selling the logs for firewood and timber to build houses and boats. Narwee did not exist as a locality; it was called "Bob the Gardner's Farm", and there were so few people living in the area that bushrangers could easily hide for weeks in the forest without being discovered.[3]

Commercial area

The main shopping strip is located in Broad Arrow Road parallel with and adjacent to Narwee railway station. Like many small suburbs, Narwee was formerly served by two banks (Westpac and Commonwealth) and many small shops. Both banks have now closed, although the post office remains. Narwee Hotel is located just 2 mins from Narwee train station

Transport

Hannans Road subway, the main access to Narwee railway station

Narwee railway station is on the Airport & South Line of the Sydney Trains network, with Riverwood to the west and Beverly Hills to the east.

For details of bus services see Narwee railway station.

Churches

The largest church in the area is Narwee Baptist Church.[4]

Schools

Narwee has a public school and once had a high school. Narwee High School was located at the suburb's highest point but closed in 2001. It has been redeveloped into a complex of residential houses.

Population

Autumn in the residential area of Narwee, New South Wales

According to the

Buddhist (8.4%), and Orthodox (7.2%).[1]

References

  1. ^ a b Australian Bureau of Statistics (27 June 2017). "Narwee (State Suburb)". 2016 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 11 April 2018. Edit this at Wikidata
  2. , page 184
  3. ^ History of Narwee www.wiki.jeremymacpherson.net
  4. ^ Bringing the hope of Jesus to our local community and the world Narwee Baptist Church

33°56′51″S 151°4′15″E / 33.94750°S 151.07083°E / -33.94750; 151.07083