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Places named after Macquarie
Many places in Australia have been named in Macquarie's honour (some of these were named by Macquarie himself). They include:
At the time of his governorship or shortly thereafter:
• Macquarie Island between Tasmania and Antarctica
• Lake Macquarie on the coast of New South Wales between Sydney and Newcastle renamed after Macquarie in 1826
• Macquarie River a significant inland river in New South Wales which passes Bathurst, Wellington, Dubbo and Warren before entering the Macquarie Marshes and the Barwon River.
• Lachlan River, another significant river in New South Wales
• Port Macquarie, a city at the mouth of the Hastings River on the North Coast, New South Wales.
• Macquarie Pass, a route traversing the escarpment between the Illawarra district and the Southern Highlands district of New South Wales.
• Macquarie Rivulet, a river 23 kilometers long which rises near Robertson, New South Wales and drains into Lake Illawarra.
• Around Sydney:
o Macquarie Street, one of the principal streets of downtown Sydney, home of the New South Wales Legislative Council
o Macquarie Place a small park in the Sydney CBD
o Macquarie Lighthouse, Australia's first and longest operating navigational light
o The former Fort Macquarie on Bennelong Point
o Macquarie Fields, now a suburb of Sydney but named by surveyor Evans after the governor[4]
o Lachlan Avenue,
• In Tasmania:
o Macquarie Street, one of the principal streets of Hobart, Tasmania
o Macquarie Street, one of the principal streets of the historic town of Evandale, Tasmania. A town he founded in 1811.
o Macquarie Harbour on the west coast of Tasmania
o Lachlan a small town named by Sir John Franklin in 1837[5]
o Macquarie River
• Macquarie Hill, formerly known as Mount Macquarie, in Wingecarribee Shire, Southern Highlands, New South Wales
• Macquarie Pass, north-east of Robertson, New South Wales
• Macquarie Pier, built in 1818 on the Hunter River for the port of Newcastle, a breakwater linking Coal Island, now known as Nobby's Head, to the mainland at South Head (now Fort Scratchley)
• The Macquarie Arms Hotel at Windsor, New South Wales built in 1815. It ceased operating in 1840, but reopened in 1874 and has been used continuously as a hotel ever since. Windsor also contains a Macquarie Street.
• Several Civil parishes in Dubbo, near Bathurst and Hastings are named after Macquarie
Many years after his governorship:
• Macquarie Park and Macquarie Links, suburbs of Sydney.
• Macquarie Shopping Centre, North Ryde
• Macquarie, a suburb of Canberra, Australia
• Division of Macquarie, one of the first 75 Australian House of Representatives electoral Divisions created for the Australian Parliament in 1901.
Institutions named after Macquarie:
• Macquarie Hospital, Sydney
• Macquarie University, Sydney
• Macquarie Bank, an investment bank founded in 1970
Places named after or in honour of Macquarie's wife
Places named after or in honour of Macquarie's wife, Elizabeth (nee Campbell 1778-1835):
• Elizabeth Street, another of the principal streets of Hobart, Tasmania named after Macquarie's wife
• Elizabeth Street, Sydney, one of the principal streets of Sydney, named after Macquarie's wife
• Elizabeth Bay a bay of Port Jackson and suburb of Sydney
• Mrs Macquarie's Chair, a rock cut into a chair shape Mrs Macquarie's Point, a peninsula in Sydney Harbour, at the end of Mrs. Macquarie's Road
• Campbelltown, New South Wales, a town founded in 1820, one of a series of settlements south-west of Sydney being established by Macquarie at that time
• Meredith Island off the coast of New South Wales was named after Elizabeth Macquarie's close friend[6]
• Campbell Town, Tasmania[7]
• Elizabeth River, Tasmania[8]
• Elizabeth Town, Tasmania[9]. |
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