Bairnsdale, Victoria
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| Bairnsdale Victoria |
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Location of Bairnsdale, Victoria (in red) |
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| Population: | 11,282 (2006)[1] | ||||||
| Postcode: | 3875 | ||||||
| Elevation: | 49 m (161 ft) | ||||||
| Location: | |||||||
| LGA: | Shire of East Gippsland | ||||||
| State District: | Gippsland East | ||||||
| Federal Division: | Gippsland | ||||||
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Bairnsdale (pronounced /ˈbænsdæɪl/) is a town in Gippsland, Victoria, Australia. With a population at the 2006 census of 11,282, it is a major regional centre of eastern Victoria along with Traralgon and Sale.
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[edit] Location and facilities
Bairnsdale is situated at latitude 37°49'32" S, longitude 147°36'46" E, on the Princes Highway, a section of Australia's Highway 1. It is 285 kilometres, or approximately three hours drive, east of the state capital Melbourne. Bairnsdale is close to the Gippsland Lakes and Bass Strait, and is the official starting point of the Great Alpine Road which winds across the Australian Alps.
Bairnsdale is located on the river flats of the Mitchell River, near where the Mitchell River empties into Lake King. It is sited on a bend in the river, with the river flowing in along the northern edge of the town, before turning south to flow along the eastern edge, although suburbs are now found across the river to both north and east.
Nearby towns include Paynesville, Lakes Entrance, Bruthen and Metung. Along the Princes Highway to the west are Stratford and Sale, and to the east is Orbost. To the north along the Great Alpine Road are Ensay, Swifts Creek and Omeo, as well as Benambra.
Bairnsdale is the commercial centre for the East Gippsland region and the seat of local government for the Shire of East Gippsland.
Educational facilities in Bairnsdale include two high schools, Bairnsdale Secondary College which has approx 1200 students (Government) and Nagle College which has about 800 students (Catholic Private), a number of primary schools and kindergartens, and limited tertiary education facilities mainly consisting of the East Gippsland Institute of TAFE.
Bairnsdale has it own railway station, which is also the terminus of the Bairnsdale railway line.
[edit] History
The Aboriginal name for Bairnsdale was Wy Yung (or Wy-yung), meaning spoonbill (a type of wading bird). Wy Yung is now the name for a suburb of Bairnsdale, located north of the town across the Mitchell River.
The current name was taken from the name of the property owned by pioneer settler Archibald Macleod, who took up the run on the west bank of the Mitchell River in 1844. Bairnsdale is probably derived from the name of Macleod’s family home on the Isle of Skye, Scotland, which had the name ‘Bernisdale’. An alternative interpretation was that Macleod returned after a long absence to find a number of ‘bairns’ (a Scottish term for babies) at the station. The name may in fact be a conjunction of these two stories, accounting for the transformation of ‘Bernis’ to ‘Bairns’.
The town site itself was not surveyed until 1859, with the first blocks of land sold in 1860. Lucknow (now an eastern suburb of Bairnsdale on the east bank of the river, was named for the Indian city of Lucknow)to which horses bred in the Bairnsdale area were sent to aid the British Crown, during the Inian uprising, was at this time already a thriving village.
[edit] Attractions
The Mitchell River empties into Lake King at Eagle Point Bluff. Between the town of Bairnsdale and Eagle Point Bluff are found enormous silt jetties, second only in length to those formed at the mouth of the Mississippi River in the USA.
One of the most notable landmarks of Bairnsdale are the murals on the ceiling and walls of St Mary’s Roman Catholic Church in Main St (Princes Highway). These murals were painted by out of work Italian artist Francesco Floreani during the Great Depression and remain a fascination to this day.
Also of note are the gardens maintained on the median strip of Main St. This very wide median strip stretches right from the Mitchell River to the western edge of town, a distance of about four kilometres. The main garden section runs for over half a kilometre through the central commercial district, and features beds of flowering annuals and perennials, numerous mature deciduous and evergreen trees, the town’s war memorials, and a restored historic band rotunda. The rotunda itself was first constructed in 1910, and restored to its present condition in 1993.
Bairnsdale is the site of the beginning of the East Gippsland Rail Trail which is a walking, cycling and equestrian trail nearly 100 km in length, winding along the alignment of the former railway line to Orbost.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Australian Bureau of Statistics (25 October 2007). Bairnsdale (Urban Centre/Locality). 2006 Census QuickStats. Retrieved on 2007-10-25.
- Gardner, P.D. (1997) Names of the Great Alpine Road Between Bairnsdale and Omeo. Ensay: Ngarak Press.
- Land.vic Vicnames
[edit] External links
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