Macquarie Fields, New South Wales

For other suburbs with Macquarie in the title, see Macquarie Links, New South Wales and Macquarie Park, New South Wales.
Macquarie Fields
Sydney, New South Wales

Glenquarie Shopping Centre, Macquarie Fields
Coordinates 33°59′40″S 150°53′15″E / 33.99434°S 150.88757°E / -33.99434; 150.88757Coordinates: 33°59′40″S 150°53′15″E / 33.99434°S 150.88757°E / -33.99434; 150.88757
Population 13,170 (2011 census)[1]
Established 1883
Postcode(s) 2564
Location 42 km (26 mi) south-west of Sydney
LGA(s) Campbelltown
State electorate(s) Macquarie Fields
Federal Division(s) Werriwa
Suburbs around Macquarie Fields:
Macquarie Links Glenfield Holsworthy
Macquarie Links Macquarie Fields Holsworthy
Ingleburn Ingleburn Long Point

Macquarie Fields is a suburb of Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. Macquarie Fields is located 42 kilometres south-west of the Sydney central business district, in the local government area of the City of Campbelltown and is part of the Macarthur region.

Macquarie Fields has a mix of public and private housing and is surrounded by bushland. Nearby Macquarie Links, is a high-security housing estate beside an international standard golf course.

History

The original inhabitants of the Macquarie Fields area were the Darug people of western Sydney.[2] The rich soil of the area was home to an abundance of plants which in turn attracted animals such as kangaroos and emus, both of which along with yams and other native vegetables and fruit were part of the diet of the Darug.[3] They lived in small huts called gunyahs, made spears, tomahawks and boomerangs for hunting and had an elaborate system of tribal law and rituals with its origins in the Dreamtime.[4] However, following the arrival of the First Fleet in 1788, they were pushed off their land by the British settlers.[5]

Macquarie Fields was named by early landholder James Meehan in honour of the Governor of New South Wales, Lachlan Macquarie.[6] The area was surveyed by Meehan in the early 19th century. Although transported to Australia as a convict for his role in the Irish Rebellion of 1798, Meehan had trained as a surveyor in Ireland and in 1803 was appointed assistant to NSW Surveyor-General Charles Grimes. In 1806 he was granted a full pardon and in 1810 became Surveyor-General. For his work, he was granted a number of parcels of land including 2,020 acres (8.2 km2) in what is now Macquarie Fields and neighbouring suburbs. He used the rich soil to grow cereal crops, fruit trees and to graze livestock.<ref name="History of Macquarie Fields"/

The property changed hands a couple of times after Meehan's death and in the 1840s, Samuel Terry built a Regency mansion, Macquarie Fields House, which still stands to this day. It is now listed on the Register of the National Estate.[7] In 1883, then owner William Phillips subdivided the land to create a new town he called Glenwood Estate with grand boulevards and fine buildings. A railway station was added to the line in 1888 but the depression of the 1890s meant the grand town failed to materialise with only a few small houses built on the lots. In the next Great Depression of the 1930s, the area became popular with the homeless who made makeshift huts not unlike those of the earlier Darug people.[6]

After World War II, the village grew steadily. A public school was opened in 1958 and by 1971, the population reached 3700. In the mid 1970s, a large Housing Commission development was built on the east side of town and given the suburb names of Bunbury (later Guise) and Curran after the local creek. Residents of the privately owned areas of Macquarie Fields were strongly opposed to the new developments being included in their suburb and this continued well into the 1980s. Since that time, local authorities have tried to blend the area into a single suburb. Private housing developments sprung up further around and the weight of population contributed to a larger town centre.[6]

Macquarie Fields gained notoriety as the location of riots in 2005.

Notable people

Brett Emerton attended Macquarie Fields Public School and Macquarie Fields High School and played for the local soccer club, Gunners United Soccer Club.

Evan Ockers - Renowned outlaw who rose to notoriety in the area heralded as "the second coming of Ned Kelly" after the infamous 2016 Glenquarie Shopping Centre Socioeconomic Status riots

Transport

Macquarie Fields Station

Macquarie Fields railway station is serviced by the Airport, Inner West & South Line and Cumberland Line of the Sydney Trains network.

Macquarie Fields is serviced by five Busabout bus routes:
870 Campbelltown Hospital to Liverpool Station
871 Campbelltown Hospital to Liverpool Station
872 Campbelltown Hospital to Liverpool Station
876 Eucalyptus Drive to Macquarie Fields Station

S9 Shopper Hopper - servicing Glenfield Station - Frank Widdon Masonic Homes - Glenquarie Shopping Centre

For Timetables, Maps and More Information please visit

[8]

Schools

Sport and recreation

The town is home to Macquarie Fields Leisure Centre, which contains an indoor aquatic centre and an outdoor olympic sized swimming pool. It also encompasses a gymnasium and indoor sports facilities. There is also a number of sporting fields in the town. Sporting fields include Hazlet Oval, Monarch Oval and Third Avenue.

Population

Macquarie Fields is a suburb with a diverse community. According to the 2006 Australian Bureau of Statistics Census, it had a population of 12,973 people. Languages spoken in the area included Arabic (4%), Samoan (2.8%), Hindi (2.6%), Bengali (2%) and Spanish (1.8%). The unemployment rate (10.6%) was more than double the national average and the median family income ($1005 per week) was slightly lower than average. The most common occupations were clerical and administrative (18%), technicians and tradespeople (16%), labourers (15%) and machinery operators and drivers (14%).[9]

Services

Macquarie Fields contains the WorkVentures Connect Centre at Macquarie Fields.

References

  1. Australian Bureau of Statistics (31 October 2012). "Macquarie Fields (State Suburb)". 2011 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 17 April 2015.
  2. Kohen, J: The Darug and their neighbours, page 9-22. ISBN 0-646-13619-4
  3. Kohen, J: The Darug and their neighbours, page 23-30. ISBN 0-646-13619-4
  4. Kohen, J: The Darug and their neighbours, page 23-46. ISBN 0-646-13619-4
  5. Kohen, J: The Darug and their neighbours, page 47-67. ISBN 0-646-13619-4
  6. 1 2 3 "History of Macquarie Fields". Campbelltown City Council. Retrieved 3 March 2008.
  7. The Heritage of Australia, Macmillan Company, 1981, p.2/21
  8. "Interline Bus Services". Interline Bus Service. Retrieved 25 February 2008.
  9. Australian Bureau of Statistics (25 October 2007). "Macquarie Fields (State Suburb)". 2006 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 30 December 2007.
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