Jannali

Jannali is a suburb in southern Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. Jannali is located 28 kilometres south of the Sydney central business district in the local government area of the Sutherland Shire. The majority of land use in Jannali is residential and bushland reserve, while the suburb is bisected by the north-south railway line. The majority of Jannali's enterprises are located close to the suburb's railway station.

Jannali
Sydney, New South Wales
Box Road, Jannali viewing east up shopping strip.
Population6,184 (2016 census)[1]
Postcode(s)2226
Location28 km (17 mi) south of Sydney CBD
LGA(s)Sutherland Shire
State electorate(s)Miranda
Federal Division(s)Hughes, Cook
Suburbs around Jannali:
Como Oyster Bay Kareela
Bonnet Bay Jannali Sylvania
Woronora Heights Sutherland Kirrawee
Box Road, Jannali viewing west down shopping strip

History

Jannali is an Aboriginal word, meaning the Place of the Moon, originating from an unknown language as recorded by George Thornton[2]. The Dharug language word for the Moon is 'yanada', and Jannali may be an alternative Anglicization of this.[3]

The area began to develop with the arrival of the railway line in 1884. However, the railway station at Jannali was not built until 1931. The department of railways paid for the construction of the railway station and ramps while the local council paid for the road bridge over the line at the southern end of the station. This attracted residents to the suburb and many more homes were built after World War II when blocks of land were offered to returned servicemen.[4]

Jannali had a 10-court squash centre between 1978 and 2001. The building has been demolished and offices and apartments built on the site. During the existence of the squash centre, Jannali Squash Club, who leased courts at the centre, produced many players of first grade standard and in the mid-1980s was considered Sydney's leading Squash Club and one of the strongest in Australia.

Transport

Jannali railway station is on the Illawarra line of the Sydney Trains network. Access to the platform for city-bound trains and the railway ticket office is off Janalli Avenue, while access to platform for south-bound trains is off Railway Crescent.

Transdev NSW buses (routes 967 and 968) link Jannali to Miranda, Oyster Bay, Kareela, Como West and Bonnet Bay.

Commercial and community-based enterprises

Shops and commercial businesses provide a broad range of services to the Jannali community. Most are centred on the main transport hub of the railway station and the bridge over the railway line. This bridge provides the only link for both automotive and pedestrian movement between the eastern and western portions of the Jannali community.

While the majority of enterprises are located on the eastern side of the railway line, i.e., along Railway Crescent and Box Road, further enterprises are located in White Street (off Railway Crescent). A small group of business are situated in Jannali Avenue on the western side of the railway line, as is Sutherland Shire Council's Kurranulla Aboriginal Resources Centre and the community hall.

Parks

The residential streets feature many houses, units and local reserves which contain a diversity of flora and fauna. Jannali Reserve is a large recreational area on the western border. Playgrounds in the area include Charles Orwin Reserve (2 Davey Street, Jannali) and Alice Street Reserve (8 Alice Street, Jannali).

Education

The suburb has three public schools: the Jannali High School, Jannali Public School & Jannali East Public School.[5] The Jannali High School was formed in 1992 from the amalgamation of Jannali Girls' High School (1953) and Jannali Boys' High School (1956). Jannali East primary opened in 1956.

The St George & Sutherland Community College (SGSCC) is housed in the former Jannali Girls High School grounds. SGSCC has over 40 staff and operates a range of courses including leisure, work skills, disability, international, school-age coaching, English, including courses at Diploma to Certificate IV levels.[6]

Churches

Jannali Anglican Church,[7] Jannali Uniting Church, Jannali Presbyterian Church, Jannali Congregational Church, Seechange Community Church.[8]

Sport

The local soccer team is Como-West-Jannali Junior Soccer Club, based at Jannali Oval. Jannali also has a baseball club known as the "Comets", based at the playing fields at Soldiers Rd. The local rugby league team is the Como-Jannali Crocodiles who are based at Scylla Bay Oval in nearby Como.

As part of the boom in Squash in the late 1970s, on 30 October 1978, a new, state-of-the-art squash centre was opened by local Member of Parliament. Maurie Keane at 48-54 Railway Crescent. The centre featured 10 competition squash courts, a gymnasium, and sports therapist underneath. The centre closed in 2001, the squash boom having long ended, however during its time, the Jannali Squash Club rose to be one of the strongest in the country, winning several men's and women's first grade premierships and at times reaching over 200 playing members from Jannali and neighbouring suburbs.

Population

In the 2016 Census, there were 6,184 people in Jannali. 75.4% of people were born in Australia. The next most common countries of birth were England 4.0%, and China 2.2%. 82.8% of people spoke only English at home. Other languages spoken at home included Mandarin at 1.9%.The top responses for religious affiliation were Catholic 27.2%, No Religion 26.9% and Anglican 20.1%. The median weekly household income of $1,784 was higher than the national figure of $1,438. [1]

Notable residents

gollark: > not being immortal
gollark: Yet you are *not* supreme eternal world dictator yet?
gollark: This is probably true of basically everything.
gollark: You can't actually just stop yourself from having mental disorders via sheer force of will, see.
gollark: Well, having money is good, so it's actually reasonable to do stuff to obtain money.

See also

  • 1994 Eastern seaboard fires

References

  1. Australian Bureau of Statistics (27 June 2017). "Jannali (State Suburb)". 2016 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 15 March 2018.
  2. Royal Anthropological Society of Australasia. (1898), Science of man and journal of the Royal Anthropological Society of Australasia, G. Watson, retrieved 3 July 2019
  3. "Origin of Suburbs" (PDF). Sutherland Shire Council. Retrieved 3 July 2019.
  4. The Book of Sydney Suburbs, Compiled by Frances Pollon, Angus & Robertson Publishers, 1990, Published in Australia ISBN 0-207-14495-8, page 133
  5. http://www.jannalie-p.schools.nsw.edu.au/
  6. http://www.sgscc.edu.au/
  7. http://www.jannalianglican.org.au
  8. http://www.kingsway.org.au/jannali/home


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