| Selected Characteristics |
Male |
Female |
Persons |
| Total Persons |
3949 |
3936 |
7885 |
| Aged 0-4 years |
NA |
NA |
557 |
| Aged 5-14 years |
NA |
NA |
1224 |
| Aged 15-24 years |
NA |
NA |
1160 |
| Aged 25 years and over |
NA |
NA |
4944 |
| Median age |
NA |
NA |
33 |
| Indigenous Persons |
NA |
NA |
206 |
| Australian Born |
NA |
NA |
5283 |
| Born Overseas |
NA |
NA |
1916 |
| Speaks English only |
NA |
NA |
5739 |
| Australian Citizens |
NA |
NA |
6739 |
| Dwelling Selected Statistics |
Fully owned |
Being Purchased |
Rented |
Total |
| Total private dwellings |
812 |
1094 |
571 |
2830 |
| Separate Houses |
NA |
NA |
NA |
2602 |
| Semi-detached House, etc |
NA |
NA |
NA |
72 |
| Flats |
NA |
NA |
NA |
27 |
| Other dwellings |
NA |
NA |
NA |
0 |
| Household Characteristics |
| Total number of families |
2130 |
| Median household income |
$1054 |
| Lone person households |
433 |
Source: Australian Bureau of Statistics. Copyright in ABS data resides with the Commonwealth of Australia. Used with permission.
NA: These figures are not yet available.
For more preliminary data on Colyton (or any other areas in New South Wales) from the 2001 Census, please contact Penrith Library Research Services (02) 4732 7886, or call in to Penrith City Library Civic Centre 601 High Street Penrith, NSW 2750.
Recreation
Clubs & Pubs
- Colyton Hotel/Motel: Great Western Highway & Hewitt Street Colyton, NSW 2760, Ph: (02) 96230281. Motel has 30 rooms. It is the closest accommodation to the Eastern Creek Raceway and Australia's Wonderland.
Parks
The area of open space available in Colyton is 40.71 hectares.
- Potter Field, Shepherd Street, Colyton
- Roper Road Soccer Field, Roper Road, Colyton
- Iron Bark Reserve, Iron Bark Drive, Colyton
- Gunning Park, Marsden Road, Colyton
- Kevin Maley Park, Malouf Crescent, Colyton
- Mick Martin Park, Freeman Street, Colyton
Sporting Groups
For information on local sporting groups consult the Recreation Guide which is compiled and updated annually by the staff of the Recreation and Cultural Services Department of Penrith City Council. Ph: (02) 47327586. Local sporting groups on the Web are:
Economic/ Land use profile
Companies & Businesses
- Mobil Service Station: Cr Great Western Highway & Bennett Road Colyton, NSW, 2760.
Ph: (02) 9833 2366.
- Sargents Pies Pty Ltd: 83 Roper Road Colyton 2760.
Ph: (02) 9623 3333.
Roads & Streets
- The Great Western Highway marks the northern boundary of Colyton. This highway is a vital thoroughfare west to Penrith and east to Blacktown and Sydney.
- Bennett Road cuts through Colyton and links the Great Western Highway to the neighbouring suburb of St Clair. Named after James Bennett, founder of the famous St Marys wagon building business.
- Marsden Road is the dividing road between Colyton and St Marys. Named after Rev. Samuel Marsden who owned nearby property Mamre.
- Desborough Road is a major thoroughfare in the suburb. Once Phillip Road, this road was renamed in 1933. Named after Robert Desborough a local tanner whose tannery was
on this road.
- Roper Road runs along the eastern boundary of Colyton along Ropes Creek to
the M4 Motorway
- Carpenter Road is a major thoroughfare in the suburb. Once Gidley Street, this road was renamed in 1933. Named after Mr. J. Carpenter Mayor of St Marys 1909-1911.
- Shepherd Street runs along the southern boundary of Colyton beside the M4 Motorway.
- Hewitt Street, where Colyton Shopping Centre and the Life Education Centre are located. Named after W.S. Hewitt President of Nepean Shire 1936-1939.
Shopping Centres
- Colyton Shopping Centre: Cnr. Jensen & Hewitt Streets Colyton, NSW. It is a neighbourhood shopping complex with 11 specialty shops including Pharmacy, Medical Centre and Jewells Food Barn.
Historical profile
Aboriginal History
For more general information on the Dharug people please see The Dharug Story by Chris Tobin (Penrith City Library collection 994.004 DHA). It is also available online. For information on the Aboriginal population of Colyton from the 2001 Census of Population and Housing see Population section above.
The Aborigines of South Creek
The first inhabitants of the Sydney basin bounded by Port Jackson and Botany Bay in the east, the Blue Mountains to the west, north to the Hawkesbury River and south to Appin, had in common the Dharug language. Fourteen tribes or clans made up this language group and the people who inhabited both sides of South Creek were known as the Gomerrigal-Tongarra clan.
Unlike the Blue Mountains clans who used rock shelters, the Gomerrigal-Tongarra people lived in open camp sites along the creek in simple gunyahs. These were constructed from three leaning poles lashed together at the top and covered on two sides with bark. They had a habit of smearing mud on their skin to protect them from the effects of both weather and insects. In winter they wore animal skins to keep warm.
Very little is known of their cultural and ceremonial life. According to researcher and writer James L. Kohen, the Gomerrigal-Tongarra clan had rights to the ridges at Plumpton and the gravels of Eastern Creek. From these areas they used red silcrete rocks to make sharp flakes which were then fashioned into tools or used as barbs on spears. The MacLaurin family (who lived at Mamre)also asserted that the bodies of the dead were not buried, but wrapped in bark and placed on platforms elevated in the branches of trees.
There are no remaining rock carvings or marked trees in the area. Emily MacLaurin described a meeting place on South Creek at Mamre at a point where '...the Creek takes in a small stream from the west, the right bank of which reaches into the creek in a narrow finger'. It is thought that despite the arrival of the Rev. Samuel Marsden in 1804, ceremonies continued to be held at this spot for some time.
By 1816 however, the Gomerrigal-Tongarra, together with the rest of the Dharug clans, had been ravaged either by clashes with the settlers or by contracting European diseases. They became increasingly dependent on the settlers for their survival. Although they had always maintained a camp on or around the Mamre estate, the Rev. Samuel Marsden now sought to encourage them to work in exchange for food and clothing. He was obviously successful in this endeavour, as by 1835 the Quaker missionary James Backhouse wrote in his journal after a visit to Mamre that '...the South Creek Natives may be considered as half-domesticated, and they often assist in the agricultural operations of the settlers.' He was also impressed by the fact that the wife of their Aboriginal guide - supplied by Marsden - could read, having been 'educated in a school, formerly kept for the Natives, at Parramatta'. The next day, Backhouse travelled onto Penrith, his guide 'another South Creek Black, named Simeon. His wife was killed, about two years ago, by some of those whom he termed "Wild Natives"...We tried in vain to persuade this man to accompany us to Wellington Valley; he did not like to go...These people are afraid of other tribes of their own race'.
Another visitor, Charles Darwin, passing through Mamre in January 1836, was impressed by the '...good humour and superior hunting skills' of the Aborigines he encountered around Penrith.
History has given us sparse records indeed about the Gomerrigal-Tongarra people. As part of the Dharug-speaking Aborigines, their life-style was probably similar to others of the Dharug clans. They were hunter-gatherers over specifically defined territories, in this case, mainly the banks of South Creek; and they adhered to particular laws of kinship, marriage, sexual practice and burial which ensured the well-being of the clan. Men and women had particular roles in the clan which were clearly defined; children were given a totem name; traditional medicine was carried out by the ‘koradji’ or doctor; and, like all Aborigines they had a spiritual Dreaming.
The clash of European and Aboriginal cultures, despite original good intentions, meant that the Gomerrigal-Tongarra people and their culture was virtually destroyed within a century of
white settlement.
Origin of the place name - Colyton
Colyton is named after Colyton House in Devon England which had been the family home of the wife of William Cox Junior, son of the famous builder of the road across the Blue Mountains, also named William. The property of 800 acres had been granted to Cox on 17 August 1819 by Governor Macquarie. It was located on the southern side of the Western Highway opposite the present Colyton Primary School. It was only used for grazing and wheat growing. On 9 April 1842, a notice appeared in the Sydney Herald (see below) advertising the auction sale of William Cox's estate to form the 'Village of Colyton' with surrounding farmlets. The land was described as partly forest and partly alluvial with grass on it being 'abundant and nutritious'. The timber on the land was described as being fit for 'building and farming purposes' and the water 'abundant and never failing' from nearby Rope's Creek. Colyton is now a suburb within the larger regional district of St Marys.
Origin of the place name - Ropes Creek
This watercourse, which forms the eastern boundary of the City of Penrith, was named after Anthony Rope who was a convict who arrived with the First Fleet in 1788. He married a female convict, Elizabeth Pulley in May 1788. Rope learned bricklaying whilst working at Brickfields near Sydney and later moved to the Nepean District. In 1806, the Ropes were renting 48 acres on the Nepean and by 1820 had been granted 20 acres in the district. Anthony Rope died at Castlereagh in 1843. James "Toby" Ryan (1818-1899) was the grandson of Anthony Rope.
Other Historical Links
Historical Timeline
| 1819 |
17 August |
William Cox Junior given land grant of 800 acres and named it Colyton. |
| 1823 |
30 June |
Land grant of 1600 acres to John McHenry between Ropes Creek & Mamre Road. |
| 1832 |
8 July |
John McHenry died. |
| 1842 |
9 April |
Colyton grant advertised for sale and subsequently subdivided forming the village of Colyton now in Mt Druitt. |
| 1861 |
|
First Methodist services held in Robert Thornbury's home. |
| 1861 |
|
E. E. (Jack) Hamon commenced business as blacksmith. |
| 1861 |
25 February |
Application for National School at Colyton. First school in Simpson Hill Road. |
| 1862 |
|
First Methodist service held in a slab hut donated by Thomas Smith behind the Red Cow Inn. Service was conducted by Rev. Richard Amos. |
| 1864 |
|
School moved to the site of the Colyton Post Office on the corner of Simpson Hill Road and the Great Western Highway. |
| 1881 |
|
John McHenry's grant Mountain View Estate was subdivided and sold. |
| 1881 |
|
After an inspection of its dilapidated condition, the school was moved to a two hectare site where the present Colyton Primary School (now Mt Druitt) is located. |
| 1889 |
|
Methven Bros. established an orchard and vineyard. |
| 1892 |
|
Colyton Post Office opened. |
| 1903 |
|
Methven Bros. opened a pulp and canning factory (Balgay) in Roper Street. |
| 1950s |
|
Colyton Hotel opened on the corner of Great Western Highway and Roper Street. |
| 1961 |
14 October |
Bennett Road Public School opened. |
| 1967 |
|
Colyton High opened. |
| 1970s |
|
Ropes Creek Corridor (open space) established. |
| 1975? |
|
Colyton Shopping Centre built. |
| 1976 |
|
Methven Bros. Balgay factory closed. |
| 1983 |
|
Redevelopment of Colyton Shopping Centre. |