Woronora

Woronora
Sydney, New South Wales

Woronora, on the banks of the Woronora River
Woronora
Coordinates 34°01′40″S 151°02′29″E / 34.02772°S 151.04152°E / -34.02772; 151.04152Coordinates: 34°01′40″S 151°02′29″E / 34.02772°S 151.04152°E / -34.02772; 151.04152
Population 2,151 (2006 census)[1]
Postcode(s) 2232
Location 27 km (17 mi) from Sydney CBD
LGA(s) Sutherland Shire
State electorate(s) Heathcote
Federal Division(s) Hughes
Suburbs around Woronora:
Bangor Bonnet Bay Jannali
Bangor Woronora Sutherland
Woronora Heights Woronora Heights Sutherland

Woronora is a suburb in southern Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. Woronora is located 27 kilometres south of the Sydney central business district, in the local government area of the Sutherland Shire. Woronora Heights is a separate suburb, to the south-west.

Placename history

'Woronora' is an Aboriginal placename. Records show the spelling of the name has varied since it first appeared in the 19th century, the earliest being Wooloonora (Dixon, 1827, quoted in Walker 1974:66[2]), followed by Wolonora (Dixon, 1837[3]), and Woronora (Mitchell, 1835[4]). The name was first applied to the Woronora River, a tributary of the Georges River, before being given to a hundred, an electoral district, a local road east of the river, and finally the suburb itself.

The following meanings have been suggested for Woronora:

Variations such as 'black cliffs' and 'sharkless waters' have also been suggested by local residents.

The Aboriginal language known variously as Dharug, Eora or simply 'the Sydney Language' was spoken around Woronora at the time of colonisation (Troy 1994:61[8]). Lists of Dharug words gathered around the turn of the century provide a number of possibilities regarding the number of morphemes and likely constituents of the placename. An analysis of the number of syllables in Dharug words recorded by Mathews (1901[9]) shows over 50% contained two syllables, and just under 40% contained three, while only 1.45% contained one syllable:

syllables 1 2 3 4 5 TOTAL
no. words 4 139 109 23 1 276
% of total 1.45% 50.37% 39.49% 8.33% 0.36% 100%

It therefore seems likely that Woronora is made up of two disyllabic elements.

In light of what historical Dharug information is available, the meaning of the suffix of Woronora seems most transparent. A range of phonetically similar words are present in the sources:

We may tentatively conclude therefore that *-ngurra could function as a locative suffix in Dharug.

The stem of Woronora is much harder to specify. Unfortunately, no word list contains a word *wooloo, *wolo, or *woro, but the following orthographically similar words are present:

Oft-cited definitions like 'black rocks' find no support in the written records. Words for 'black', 'shark' and 'water' do not resemble any element of Woronora, though we lack a record for the Dharug words for 'rock', 'cliff', 'river', and 'creek', and thus cannot categorically rule these out.

Guesses regarding the original form of the placename depend largely upon the degree of mishearing assumed to have taken place between the Aboriginal informant and the European recorder. Might a surveyor have missed a syllable in *wolaru-ngurra? Although English speakers frequently reproduced trilled rhotics as either /r/ or /l/ orthographically (Donaldson 2002:235[15]), it is difficult to establish whether the name was misheard from Aboriginal sources three times (producing the Wooloo-, Wolo-, and Woro- variants), or whether the change in spelling was a product of changing European pronunciation without reference to Aboriginal people. The latter is quite likely considering that until the 1840s, and possibly beyond, it was the only official placename from the mouth of the river southwards (Dixon 1841[16]), and thus must have been written and pronounced frequently in reference to a large area.

Assuming therefore that the original placename most closely resembled Wooloonora, and acknowledging the inadequacy of our records due to language loss, three potential definitions present themselves:

Cultural information could be the deciding factor in defining Woronora. Was there a Rain or Wallaroo Dreaming in this part of Sydney? Could reported dialogue of the Dreamtime ancestors[17] make sense of 'then place'? Or was there another noun unknown to us relating to black rock/s? Unfortunately the consequences of colonisation for the Dharug people in terms of land loss, dispersal and language loss mean this will probably never be known.

Geography

The residential area of Woronora lines both sides of the Woronora River. The Woronora Bridge is northern limit to residential housing. A footbridge crosses the river at the southernmost limit of housing on the western bank. The housing on the eastern bank continues beyond the end of Prince Edward Park Road, and some houses can only be reached by a walking track or by boat.

Woronora River

The suburb is completely ringed by bushland, with only a single road providing access. Many think that this adds to the charm of the suburb which has curiously escaped the development that its surrounding suburbs have experienced. They feel that this has contributed to the sense of community in Woronora.

The Woronora River is tidal at this point. River levels and water quality at Woronora can be affected by the release of water from the Woronora Dam upstream from the suburb.

Woronora Plateau, is a geographical region adjacent to the Sydney Plain. Slightly higher in altitude, it is capped with Hawkesbury Sandstone. The Woronora River flows through the deeply dissected plateau to the Georges River from near the sources of the Port Hacking, within the Sutherland Shire.

Transport

Woronora Bridge, view towards Sutherland
Old Woronora Bridge

The Woronora Bridge, was built to eliminate the steep decents and ascents for traffic between Sutherland and Menai. The bridge is approximately 600 metres long and was completed in 2001 as an alternative to the Old Woronora Bridge. There is a public path located just underneath the road on the bridge shared between bicycle and pedestrians. The path can be accessed from Menai Road on the Bangor side and Prince Edward Park Road or River Road on the Sutherland side.

Woronora Fire Trail

There is a fire trail between Woronora and Woronora Heights that is closed to all vehicles. It is accessible to pedestrians, cyclists and for emergency access. It has remained closed due to protests from those who live in Woronora and parts of Woronora Heights concerned that if the fire trail was opened to general transport, it would create an influx of vehicles from Engadine using Woronora as a 'shortcut' to Menai and Sutherland. They feel it would congest and change the character of the small suburb. In 2006, Frank Sartor, a member for the NSW State Government intervened and zoned the fire trail such that it would not be able to be used for public or general transport. Up until this decision, many houses through the area displayed placards protesting against members of the local Sutherland Shire Council that were pushing to have the road opened to public transport, and others that sought to see the road opened to general traffic.

Features and facilities

Woronora features an RSL Club, boatshed, rugby league football oval (which is also a cricket ground in summer), caravan park, primary school which opened in 1942, cafe, restaurant (riverside), a fire station, hairdresser, bottle shop, general store and the Sutherland Region Guides Hall, situated by the Woronora River. It is also home to the only floating fire station in Australia to provide for residents which do not have road access.[18]

Prince Edward Park is situated between the Woronora River and Sutherland. Along the river, a cleared area was created as a recreational park, with facilities for boating and fishing. It is also the location for the Guides Hall and the Woronora Life Saving Club. Going towards Sutherland, the park is dense bushland, with some walking trails.

References

  1. Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2006
  2. 1 2 Walker, John (1974). Two hundred years in retrospect, Kurnell–Sutherland 1770–1970. Cronulla, NSW, Australia: The Cronulla Printing Co Pty Ltd.
  3. Dixon, Robert (1837). This map of the colony of New South Wales: exhibiting the situation and extent of the appropriated lands. 18 Holborn (opposite Furnivals Inn), London: J. Cross.
  4. Mitchell, Thomas (1835). Original maps of the Hundreds in the County of Cumberland. NSW, Australia.
  5. Appleton and Appleton (1992). The Cambridge dictionary of Australian places. Melbourne, Australia: Cambridge University Press.
  6. Neve, Marjorie Hutton (1970). Bygone days of Sutherland Shire. Caringbah, NSW, Australia: Shire Pictorial Publications.
  7. Bolton, Doreen (2000). Woronora. Hurstville, NSW, Australia: Parker Pattinson Publishing.
  8. 1 2 3 Troy, Jakelin (1994). Thieberger and McGregor, ed. Macquarie Aboriginal Words: a dictionary of words from Australian Aboriginal and Torres Straight Islander Languages. Sydney, Australia: The Macquarie Library Pty Ltd.
  9. 1 2 3 4 Mathews, R.H. (1901). "The Dharuk Language". Journal and Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales for 1901. 35: 155–160.
  10. Stockton, Eugene (1993). Blue Mountains dreaming: the Aboriginal heritage. Winmalee, NSW, Australia: Three Sisters Productions Pty Ltd.
  11. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Troy, Jakelin (1993). The Sydney language. Canberra, ACT, Australia: Australian Dictionaries Project and the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies.
  12. 1 2 Kohen, James (1993). The Darug and their neighbours: the traditional Aboriginal owners of the Sydney region. Sydney, NSW, Australia: Blacktown and District Historical Society.
  13. Kohen, James (1990). A dictionary of the Dharug language: the inland dialect (2nd ed.). Sydney, NSW, Australia: Blacktown and District Historical Society.
  14. 1 2 Ridley, William A (1875). Kamilaroi and Other Australian Languages. Sydney, Australia: Government Printer.
  15. Donaldson, Tamsin (2002). Hercus, Hodges and Simpson, ed. The Land is a Map: placenames of Indigenous origin in Australia. Canberra, ACT, Australia: Pandanus Books for Pacific Linguistics.
  16. Dixon, Robert (1841). This map of the colony of New South Wales: exhibiting the situation and extent of the appropriated lands. 18 Holborn (opposite Furnivals Inn), London: J. Cross.
  17. Hercus reports such unlikely Victorian placename definitions as ‘where is it?’, ‘behind’, and ‘you come here’, which suggest miscommunication between the surveyor and local informants, are in fact accurate, as they are the reported dialogue of Dreaming ancestors which took place at the sites indicated (Hercus, Luise. 2002. Is it really a placename? The Land is a Map: placenames of Indigenous origin in Australia, ed. by L. Hercus, F. Hodges and J. Simpson, 63–72. Canberra: Pandanus Books for Pacific Linguistics.)
  18. "The Leader". The Leader. 16 September 2011. It is also home to the only floating fire station in Australia to provide for residents which do not have road access.
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