Wetherill Park Sydney, New South Wales |
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Wetherill Park Marketown shopping centre
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Coordinates | 33°50′59″S 150°54′40″E / 33.84972°S 150.91111°ECoordinates: 33°50′59″S 150°54′40″E / 33.84972°S 150.91111°E | ||||||||||||
Population | 6,026 (2011 census) | ||||||||||||
• Density | 538.0/km2 (1,394/sq mi) | ||||||||||||
Postcode(s) | 2164 | ||||||||||||
Area | 11.2 km2 (4.3 sq mi) | ||||||||||||
Location | 34 km (21 mi) west of Sydney CBD | ||||||||||||
LGA(s) | City of Fairfield | ||||||||||||
State electorate(s) | Prospect | ||||||||||||
Federal Division(s) | McMahon | ||||||||||||
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Wetherill Park is a suburb of Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. Wetherill Park is located 34 kilometres west of the Sydney central business district, in the local government area of the City of Fairfield and is part of the Greater Western Sydney region.
The 2011 census recorded that Wetherill Park as having a resident population of 6,026. Just under half (47.5%) of these residents were born in Australia. The area is 11.2 km2. Most residents live in the south-east corner, the larger portion of the suburb being an industrial area.
Wetherill Park sits on the southern border of Prospect Reservoir.
Aboriginal people from the Cabrogal clan of the Gandangara tribe, have lived in the area for more than 30,000 years.
Wetherill Park was named after a businessman who offered 21 acres (85,000 m2) of his property to the State government as a park. The offer was accepted and the park was named after the donor. The first settlers in set up their homes north of the present school site at Wetherill Park. One hundred years ago, there were not enough homes in this suburb to need a school.
With the commencement of the Prospect Reservoir Waterworks, a local storekeeper, Samuel Booth, made available a section of his land for a school, free of charge. The school, called 'Macquarie Park', was located on the corner of Victoria and Daniel Streets being 365 Victoria Street, Wetheril Park. It opened in May 1882 with 8 children but it was changed in June 1882 to 'Boothtown' for Samuel Booth’s involvement in the establishment of the school. In 1884 it became Reservoir Public School and in 1896, it became the Wetherill Park Public School. In 1986 the school made way for the Phuoc Hue Temple, and was relocated down the road to Lily Street and renamed William Stimson Public School, in honour of the first mayor of the City of Fairfield.
A characteristic of Wetherill Park is that all the streets are named after famous writers. Some examples include: Vidal Street (for Gore Vidal), Shakespeare Street (for William Shakespeare), Stevenson Street (for Robert Louis Stevenson), Locke Street (for John Locke), Gogol Place (for Nikolai Gogol), Swinburne Crescent (for Richard Swinburne), Homer Place (for Homer), Emerson Street (for Ralph Waldo Emerson), Wordsworth Street (for William Wordsworth), Dickens Road (for Charles Dickens), Longfellow Street (for Henry Wadsworth Longfellow), Chaucer Street (for Geoffrey Chaucer), Ainsworth Crescent (for William Harrison Ainsworth), Coleridge Road (for Samuel Taylor Coleridge), Frost Close (for Robert Frost), Gissing Street (for George Gissing), Maugham Crescent for Somerset Maugham and Langland Street (for William Langland).