Dapto, New South Wales

Dapto is a suburb of Wollongong in the Illawarra region of New South Wales, Australia, located on the western side of Lake Illawarra and covering an area 7.15 square kilometres in size. As at the 2016 census, the suburb had a population of 10,730.[1]

Dapto
Wollongong, New South Wales
Dapto
Coordinates34°29.5′S 150°47.5′E
Population10,730 (2016 census)[1]
Postcode(s)2530
LGA(s)City of Wollongong
State electorate(s)Shellharbour
Federal Division(s)Whitlam
Suburbs around Dapto:
Kembla Grange Brownsville Kanahooka
Horsley Dapto Koonawarra
Cleveland Yallah Yallah

History

The name Dapto is said to be an Aboriginal word either from Dabpeto meaning "water plenty", or from tap-toe which described the way a lame Aboriginal elder walked.[2] The suburb was officially founded in 1834, when George Brown transferred the Ship Inn from Wollongong to Mullet Creek Farm, in an area now named in his honour as Brownsville. After an unsuccessful attempt at wheat growing in the 1850s, Dapto embraced the dairy industry. In 1887 the railway opened and a butter factory was established. This began a transformation of Dapto and the town centre shifted south to where the new station was located. The Australian Smelting Company's works were established on Kanahooka Road and employed over 500 men. A railway, operated by the Illawarra Harbour and Land Corporation Limited, connected the smelter with the Government railway at Dapto.[3] By 1903 the Commissioner for Railways declared that Dapto was the most valuable station on the Illawarra line, its traffic being double that of Wollongong. The books John Brown of Brownsville (2012), Gooseberry and Hooka (2012) and Lake Illawarra: an ongoing history (2005) – all written by Joseph Davis and published by the Lake Illawarra Authority – contain lots of detail about Dapto's history.

Dapto has a number of heritage-listed sites, including Horsley Homestead on Bong Bong Road.[4]

Population

According to the 2016 census of Population, there were 10,730 people in Dapto.

  • Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people made up 3.7% of the population.
  • 79.0% of people were born in Australia. The next most common countries of birth were England 6.1% and Scotland 1.0%.
  • 89.2% of people spoke only English at home.
  • The most common responses for religion were Catholic 26.1%, No Religion 26.0% and Anglican 23.9%.[1]

Further information

On Koonawarra Point is Mount Brown Reserve, a hill protected by a nature reserve for its important habitat.[5] The eastern side and summit is owned by Tallawarra Power Station. Dapto used to be home to a smelting industry but this has now closed. Most of the town is residential with several commercial areas. The main one includes Dapto Mall, which is on the Princes Highway. A small area of the escarpment west of Dapto is protected as part of the Illawarra Escapment State Recreation Area, though not accessible to the public. The escarpment west of Dapto includes Mount Bong Bong, the site of an aeroplane crash when the controllers mistook Lake Illawarra for Botany Bay. A plaque commemorates this event in Dapto. Much of the land to the west is still used as farmland, though other ventures such as the shooting grounds exist. The land to the west is noticeably more hilly than the plain to the north of Wollongong.

The South Coast line electric rail service terminated in Dapto prior to electrification being extended to Kiama in 2001. The area of Dapto west of this rail line, formerly pastoral land, has undergone significant expansion over the past 20 years. This area has become the fastest growing part of the greater Wollongong region and consists of a sprawling, medium-density suburbia known as Horsley, now officially a suburb in its own right.

The Dapto Greyhound Racing Club, locally known as the 'Dapto Dogs',[6] runs races every Thursday evening.

The Dapto Canaries compete in the local Illawarra Rugby League.

Dapto was once, during an episode of the ABC TV show The Aunty Jack Show, part of a parody of the nearby city of Wollongong. The lyrics of the Lucky Starr song "I've Been Everywhere" were changed so that, instead of listing a wide range of Australian towns, the song said "I've been to Wollongong, Wollongong, Wollongong, Wollongong,... Wollongong, Wollongong, Dapto, Wollongong".

Dapto Mall

Entrance to Dapto Mall

Dapto Mall is fourth-largest shopping centre in the Illawarra region, after competitors Wollongong Central, Stockland Shellharbour and Warrawong Plaza. Dapto Mall features Big W, Woolworths and Coles and around 66 stores.[7]

Dapto Ribbonwood Centre

The centre was Dapto's new community centre after relocating in 2001, it is named so after the species of tree that is planted in front. The local library is located on topmost floor of Level 1. It also hosts several conference rooms that can be hired out for a variety of events, ranging from private, small gatherings, to large social events, such as entertainment. The Ribbonwood Centre is also the home of CPSA Dapto Seniors a 'not for profit' community organisation and the largest senior citizen group in the Illawarra, its fortnightly meetings and many weekly activities take place in Heininger House. Heininger House was incorporated in the Ribbonwood Centre when the community centre was constructed in 2001.

Dapto Anglican Church

The Dapto Anglican Church centre is adjacent to the Dapto Mall and the Dapto Grayhound Racing Club; it has services running from three other sites including the St Aidens building, the hall of Dapto Primary School on a Sunday morning, and the St Lukes Brownsville building (which is historically listed and over 100 years old). There are six services held weekly, as well as children and youth activities on Friday nights, children's programs on a Sunday morning and during the weeks of the school holidays, 'Cafe Church' during the week, and many one-off activities.

Dapto Uniting Church

Dapto Uniting Church.

Dapto Uniting Church is located in the heart of Dapto, next to the Dapto Medical Centre on the Princes Highway. Services are held at 9:30am every Sunday morning and incorporate both contemporary and tradition styles of worship. Children's programs are held during the Sunday service, Sunday's Cool, and mid-week on Wednesdays, Tiddlywinks playgroup. The Dapto Uniting congregation is a healthy community composed of people of all generations, cultures and backgrounds.

The Dapto Uniting Church traces its roots right back to 1841 when Sunday services were first held in a Dapto schoolroom under the leadership of Presbyterian minister Rev. John Tait. With the establishment of the railway network in 1887, the Dapto area experienced a period of continued urban expansion over the ensuing decades. The current red brick building, St Andrews, was officially opened and dedicated on 7 February 1959. Construction work commenced in 1981 to attach new hall facilities to the existing church building.

For many years, the Dapto Uniting family has sought to serve the local community, through ministries such as the Op Shop, regular Market Days, Showground Market Stall, Family Fun Days and group Heart & Soul Exercise sessions.

St. John's Catholic Church

St. John's Church is the public worship centre of Dapto's Catholic population, and can be found in Jeramatta Street. Mass times are: Saturday Vigil Mass – 5:00pm, and Sundays at 7:30, 9:30 and 6:00pm. Cups of tea may be had after every mass. It also has a new Youth Group.

Dapto Public School

The original Dapto Public School opened in August 1875, and was operated out of a local church hall. A permanent and more central location was opened on the corner of Byamee and Moombara Streets in 1928, which remained the schools' location until 2004. Due to large expansion of the Horsley area, the school relocated to Sierra Drive, Horsley, opening in 2004.

gollark: Well, we can have a long-running C vs not-C conflict, sure.
gollark: Yes, praise ferris?
gollark: Also, you need an arc where people campaign to erase C and advocate for Rust constantly.
gollark: There also need to be vague threatening references to antimemes, memetic hazards, apiocryoforms, and other stuff.
gollark: Yes, the orbital lasers can just sit there ominously with "PotatOS Orbital Laser Network" written on them.

See also

References

  1. Australian Bureau of Statistics (27 June 2017). "Dapto". 2016 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 17 July 2017.
  2. "PLACE NAMES". The Australian Women's Weekly. 13 May 1964. p. 61. Retrieved 22 February 2011 via Trove, National Library of Australia.
  3. Singleton, C.C. (September 1941). "New South Wales Private Railways – The Dapto District". Australian Railway Historical Society Bulletin: 37–39.
  4. "Horsley Homestead". New South Wales State Heritage Register. Office of Environment and Heritage. H00134. Retrieved 18 May 2018.
  5. "Mount Brown Reserve". Retrieved 4 April 2016.
  6. "History of Dapto Dogs". The Dapto Greyhound Racing Club. 2016. Retrieved 5 September 2016.
  7. "AMP Capital Shopping Centres overview". www.ampcapital.com.au. Retrieved 7 October 2016.
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