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Cardiff

Towns & Destinations

Lake Macquarie City Council NSW, Box 1906, Cardiff, NSW 2285
02 4921 0333

Description

Cardiff is a small town in the Lake Macquarie LGA of New South Wales, Australia.

Cardiff is a small town in the Lake Macquarie LGA of New South Wales, Australia.

It is located 17 kilometres (11 mi) west-southwest of Newcastle.

Cardiff is home to two government primary schools, a Catholic primary school and a government high school. It has its own commercial centre with a post office, pub (hotel), real estate agencies, take-away shops, a record store, two opportunity stores, numerous hairdressers and two supermarkets.

History

The Aboriginal people, in this area, the Awabakal, were the first people of this land.The first grant to a white settler in the Cardiff area was a parcel of 2,560 acres (10.4 km2) to George Weller in 1833, stretching west of the current Macquarie Road to Argenton and Cockle Creek. Other selections were taken up by individual settlers from 1862 to the east of the Weller grant. The locality became known as Winding Creek after the stream which wound its way from south-east to north-west across the central valley of the area.

In the latter part of the 19th century two factors attracted people to the Winding Creek area. One was coal mining, with the Lymington (1882) and South Wallsend (1884, later renamed Cardiff) collieries both starting production in the vicinity of the current Cardiff South. The other was the decision to construct the Sydney to Newcastle railway, which led to a navvies camp being established at Winding Creek in 1883, and work continuing through most of the rest of the decade. The line originally ran close to current Myall Rd, however the gradient from Cardiff up to Tickhole Tunnel proved too steep for the trains of the period, and the line was relocated to the present position a few years after it was opened.

For a short period in the 1880s Lymington became the popular name for the whole Cardiff area, supplanting Winding Creek, however it fell foul of the postal authorities, because of its similarity to another, established locality name. There were a number of Welsh settlers living in the area, and on the suggestion of one of them, James Edwards, the name Cardiff was chosen after the capital of Wales. It was officially adopted in 1889.

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Details

Type: Towns

Population: 1,001 - 10,000

Time zone: UTC +11:00

Area: 5.163 km2

Elevation: 11 to 50 metres

Town elevation: 20 m

Population number: 5,830

Local Government Area: Lake Macquarie City Council

Location

Lake Macquarie City Council NSW, Box 1906, Cardiff, NSW 2285

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Attribution

This article contains content imported from the English Wikipedia article on Cardiff, New South Wales