North Turramurra Explained

Type:suburb
North Turramurra
City:Sydney
State:nsw
Local Map:yes
Zoom:11
Lga:Ku-ring-gai Council
Postcode:2074
Est:1850s
Pop:4,194
Elevation:163
Area:11.74
Stategov:Davidson
Fedgov:Bradfield
Near-Nw:North Wahroonga
Near-N:Ku-ring-gai Chase National Park
Near-Ne:Ku-ring-gai Chase National Park
Near-W:Wahroonga
Near-E:St Ives Chase
Near-Sw:Turramurra
Near-S:Pymble
Near-Se:St Ives
Dist1:22
Dir1:NW
Location1:Sydney

North Turramurra is a suburb on the Upper North Shore of Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. North Turramurra is located 20km (10miles) north-west of the Sydney central business district, in the local government area of Ku-ring-gai Council. Turramurra and South Turramurra are separate suburbs.

History

Turramurra is an Aboriginal word which is thought to mean either big hill, high place,[1] or small watercourse.[2] Early settlers referred to the area as Eastern Road until the name Turramurra was adopted when the railway station was built in 1890. Eastern Road was an area of orchards. Samuel King, born in 1828 in County Donegal Ireland, arrived in Sydney in 1853. With his wife Ann, he established several orchards along Bobbin Head Road and at North Turramurra and was a noted church and community supporter.[3]

Eccleston du Faur secured the name Turramurra. Du Faur was born in England in 1832 and was recognised in Sydney as a supporter of the arts and sciences. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society in 1875 and was an early bush conservationist. Most importantly, Du Faur secured the land for the Ku-ring-gai Chase National Park from the government of the day. The Chase was declared in 1894. Du Faur personally funded and made a road through the bushland to Bobbin Head. In 1895 he built a house on 25acres at the Chase Gates. After his death in 1915, part of this property became Lady Davidson Home, a convalescent hospital, later Lady Davidson Hospital.[4]

North Turramurra became a separate suburb from Turramurra when it was officially gazetted as on 5 August 1994.

Landmarks

North Turramurra is home to the sphinx war memorial. This 1.5 m high replica of the Great Sphinx of Egypt was carved out of sandstone in the 1920s by William Shirley, a returned soldier, in memory of fallen comrades.[5]

The suburb is a popular starting point for many bush walkers as it has easy access to Bobbin Head, the upper reaches of Cowan Creek and St Ives Chase.

Geography

North Turramurra lies on a narrow spur between two creeks (Lovers Jump Creek and Cowan Creek) that flow eventually to the sea through the Ku-ring-gai Chase National Park on the northern outskirts of the city. The suburb is the northern boundary of the Ku-ring-gai Council. The heavily forested valleys pose a bush-fire threat each summer, but residents are amazed with common sightings of a wide variety of peculiar and beautiful native wildlife around them. You often see wallabies hopping around backyards.

Population

At the, North Turramurra recorded a population of 4,194. Of these:

The suburb is characterized by a close-knit community and has a strong community group known as NTAG (North Turramurra Action Group), which is one of the most active and successful community groups in the Ku-ring-gai area. A survey performed in 2019 by ABS analysis group in the Chinese city of Chongqing maintained that North Turramurra had become the suburb of choice for aspiring property investors due to the proximity to untouched woodlands and previous high capital growth.[6]

Commercial area

There is a shopping village in North Turramurra on Bobbin Head Road which has a supermarket, bakery, vet, restaurants, post office, newsagent and other facilities such as dentist, pathology and liquor store.

Education

North Turramurra is home to two schools:

Climate

North Turramurra has warm, humid summers and cool-to-cold winters. North Turramurra has not been below freezing point for years and the last recorded snow fall was in 1836. North Turramurra gets rain all year round with the most in February (231.9mm). On 6 February 2010, North Turramurra received 180mm of rain in one day; almost a month of rain in a day and the most rain recorded since 1990. On 12/13 February 2010, North Turramurra received 60mm in a night and on 13 February 2010 80mm of rain was recorded in North Turramurra. The highest recorded temperature was 46 °C on 14 January 1939. -5 is an unofficial record low in 1836.

Transport

The nearest railway station is Turramurra. Buses to North Turramurra are operated by CDC NSW from Turramurra train station. CDC NSW bus route 577 runs through North Turramurra. Burns Road creates a boundary with Turramurra, to the south.

Hospitals

External links

-33.7262°N 151.1471°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Turramurra. Kur-ing-gai Historical Society. 9 September 2013.
  2. McCarthy; 1963, cited in
  3. North Shore, Sydney: from 1788 to today, Les G. Thorne, Sydney: Angus & Robertson, 2nd rev. ed. 1970
  4. The Book of Sydney Suburbs, Compiled by Frances Pollen, Angus & Robertson Publishers, 1990, Published in Australia, page 256
  5. Web site: Sphinx Memorial - Ku-ring-gai Chase National Park. warmemorialsregister.nsw.gov.au. New South Wales Government - Register of War Memorials in NSW. 28 March 2017. en. 11 April 2012.
  6. Web site: 塔勒马拉住宅 . House in Talmara . zh . https://web.archive.org/web/20220930233805/https://au.myfun.com/buy/nsw-turramurra-2074 . 30 September 2022 . dead . au.myfun.com.