Wiley Park, New South Wales

Wiley Park
Sydney, New South Wales

King Georges Road, Lakemba
Coordinates 33°55′33″S 151°03′48″E / 33.92594°S 151.06347°E / -33.92594; 151.06347Coordinates: 33°55′33″S 151°03′48″E / 33.92594°S 151.06347°E / -33.92594; 151.06347
Population 9,698 (2011 census)[1]
Postcode(s) 2195
Location 17 km (11 mi) south-west of Sydney CBD
LGA(s) Canterbury-Bankstown Council
State electorate(s) Lakemba
Federal Division(s) Watson
Suburbs around Wiley Park:
Punchbowl Punchbowl Lakemba
Punchbowl Wiley Park Lakemba
Roselands Roselands Roselands
Cao Dai Temple, King Georges Road
Wiley Park Station, King Georges Road
The Wiley Park amphitheatre
Ponds bordering the east side of Wiley Park

Wiley Park is a suburb in south-western Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. Wiley Park is located 17 kilometres south-west of the Sydney central business district in the Canterbury-Bankstown Council.

History

There is little documentary or archeological evidence of the activities of indigenous Australians in the suburb Wiley Park, although they lived in the Canterbury Municipality. The 20 acres (81,000 m2) now comprising Wiley Park was initially part of 60 acres (240,000 m2) of land granted to Robert Wilkinson in 1832. It passed to the Wiley family in 1862.

Wiley Park is named after the reserve of 20 acres (81,000 m2) that was bequeathed in the will of Mr. J.V. Wiley in 1906 for a park and recreational ground for local residents. Wiley was a shoemaker who died unmarried and without children.

At the time the bequest caused some dissent with the local council but after much debate at a public meeting it was decided to accept the bequest. This park is bounded by King Georges Road, Canterbury Road, Clio Street and Edge Street.[2]

Commercial area

Wiley Park is a predominantly residential area, with both detached houses and a great many small apartment blocks constructed in the 1960s and 1970s. A small shopping strip is located on King Georges Road, near the railway station. The adjoining suburbs have a greater degree of commercial activity. The suburb is also close to the large Roselands shopping centre. Also on King Georges Road, south of the train station is the Cao Dai Temple.

Schools

Wiley Park Public School (formerly the Years 3-6 part of Lakemba Public School until 1984) and Lakemba Public School are located on opposite sides of King Georges Road.

Lakemba Public School was established on its present site around 1913. It had a reputation for high academic standards, and an "opportunity class" for Years 5 and 6 students in the region was located at the school for many years.

Lakemba Public School has also produced a number of highly respected professionals. One prominent example is Vin Wallace QC, who was a Crown Prosecutor in New South Wales from 1954 retiring as Senior Crown Prosecutor for the State of N.S.W. in 1978

Wiley Park Girls High School (established 1957) is also located here. Former NSW Ombudsman Irene Moss attended the school. The NSW Teachers Federation asserts that the school is currently understaffed. A boys high school (Punchbowl Boys' High) is located in the adjoining suburb of Punchbowl.

Transport

Wiley Park railway station is on the Bankstown Line of the Sydney Trains network.

King Georges Road is a main road running through Wiley Park that starts as Wiley Avenue, to the north in Greenacre through to Beverly Hills in the south and beyond. Canterbury Road runs along the southern border of the suburb.

Parks and culture

Wiley Park, on the corner of King Georges and Canterbury roads currently has a recreational area over 2.5 km². It has a large pond, and houses the Wiley Park Bicentennial Amphitheatre where local events such as Carols in the Park at Christmas and Youth X Festival are held.

Until the 1980s, Wiley Park included a large velodrome that held events including Australian Championships and hosted concerts by a range of artists including Johnny O'Keefe. Cycling in the area was a popular sport, and a famous cycling store was operated by Jack Walsh in the adjoining suburb of Punchbowl for 50 years. Unfortunately the council allowed the velodrome to fall into disrepair and removed it without community consultation, replacing part of its area with an amphitheatre. Some sources cite that the loss of the velodrome was due to road widening.[3]

The amphitheater and its inside meeting room is now the home of Horizon Theatre Company www.horizonTheatre.org.au

Population

Wiley Park was formerly inhabited largely by Anglo Celtic residents of a working-class background. The suburb was to become an increasingly multicultural suburb from the late 1970s onwards, with many residents born overseas or having parents born overseas, from countries such as Lebanon, Vietnam, Italy, Greece, the Philippines and the Pacific Islands. At the 2011 census, 10% of the population was born in Bangladesh and 7.7% in Lebanon. The most common responses for religion in Wiley Park were Islam 44.0%, Catholic 15.0%, No Religion 6.3%, Eastern Orthodox 6.1% and Buddhism 6.0%.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 Australian Bureau of Statistics (31 October 2012). "Wiley Park (State Suburb)". 2011 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 19 April 2015.
  2. The Book of Sydney Suburbs, Compiled by Frances Pollon, Angus & Robertson Publishers, 1990, Published in Australia ISBN 0-207-14495-8, page 271
  3. http://gtveloce.com/bike/bike5b.html
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