词条 | Carss Park, New South Wales |
释义 |
| type = suburb | name = Carss Park | city = Sydney | state = nsw | image = CarssparkS1.jpg | caption = Carwar Avenue | pop = 1,252 | pop_year = {{CensusAU|2016}} | pop_footnotes = [1] | postcode = 2221 | area = | dist1 = 17 | dir1 = south | location1= Sydney CBD | lga = Georges River Council | stategov = Kogarah | fedgov = Cook | near-n = Allawah | near-ne = Kogarah Bay | near-e = Sans Souci | near-se = Sans Souci | near-s = Georges River | near-sw = Blakehurst | near-w = Blakehurst | near-nw = South Hurstville | est = }} Carss Park is a suburb in southern Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia 17 kilometres south of the Sydney central business district in the local government area of the Georges River Council. Carss Park is part of the St George area. LocationCarss Park is a picturesque suburb around Carss Point, overlooking Kogarah Bay on the Georges River. The suburb is surrounded by the suburbs of Kogarah Bay, Allawah, South Hurstville and Blakehurst. Carss Park is a mostly residential area featuring some valuable real estate with water views and bushland surrounds. HistoryThe area was purchased from the Crown on 28 January 1853 by Jonathon Croft for £123. It changed hands several times before being acquired in 1863 by William Carss, a cabinet-maker, who called his property Carss Bush. He built a stone cottage in the 1860s called Carss Park Cottage. After William Carss died, his family continued to live in the house, including daughter Mary Carss. William had left the estate to the trustees of the Sailor Home in Sydney. When Mary died this clause in her father’s will was honoured and the estate passed to the trustees in 1916. In 1921 the Blakehurst Progress Association made attempts to secure Carss Bush for a public park and Kogarah council was able to acquire the land for the people. Carss Bush Park was dedicated on 26 January 1924 and 150 lots were auctioned on the same day for development. Many of the streets on the new estate were named after Aboriginal tribes.[2] Heritage listingsCarss Park has a number of heritage-listed sites, including:
Commercial areaA small shopping strip is located on the Carwar Avenue near the intersection with the Princes Highway, containing a bottleshop, chemist, hairdresser, newsagent, petrol station and supermarket. A bus service operates between Hurstville and Kogarah via Carss Park. SchoolsBlakehurst Primary School is in the Carss Park area. While Mater Dei Catholic Primary School and Blakehurst High School are just outside. Parks and recreationCarss Park has several recreation facilities including an Olympic Swimming Pool, saltwater baths, a bicycle track and football fields. Parks in the suburb are Carss Bush Park, Carss Park, Todd Park, Parkside Drive Reserve and Fraser Park. PopulationDemographicsAccording to the 2016 Census of Population, there were 1,252 people usually resident in Carss Park. 69.5% of people were born in Australia. 61.2% of people spoke only English at home. Other languages spoken at home included Greek at 12.3%. The most common responses for religious affiliation were Catholic 23.9%, Orthodox 19.9%, No Religion 16.5% and Anglican 14.6%.[1] Notable residents
Pop culture
References1. ^1 {{Census 2016 AUS|id=SSC10837|name=Carss Park (State Suburb)|accessdate=11 April 2018|quick=on}} 2. ^The Book of Sydney Suburbs, Compiled by Frances Pollon, Angus & Robertson Publishers, 1990, Published in Australia {{ISBN|0-207-14495-8}}, page 53 3. ^{{cite NSW SHR|5045326|Carss Cottage|hr=00587|fn=EF14/4794; S90/3454; HC33402|accessdate=18 May 2018}} 4. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1132600/locations|title=Filming locations for 'Packed to the Rafters'|accessdate=4 February 2010}} External links
3 : Suburbs of Sydney|Georges River Council|Carss Park, New South Wales |
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