Please check out our Free Reports and Checklists section, you’ll find a varied range of tips and ideas on buying and selling.
resources_0banner
Erskine Park

Welcome to: Erskine Park NSW, Australia

Location: Where is Erskine Park?

Erskine Park, New South Wales Australia, is located on the eastern fringe of the Penrith Local Government Area. The eastern boundary is Ropes Creek to the south where the southern boundary is located along the Sydney Water Supply Pipeline. The suburb's western border runs along Mamre Road and the Erskine Park Road till the M4 Motorway and up to Ropes Creek. A new housing development during the 1990s has greatly changed this suburb. Its history has been largely rural with some extractive industries in recent years.

Map of Erskine Park
33 46' S 150 46' E

Postcode: 2759 Population: 7,032 (2001 Census) Distance from Sydney: 45.5 km
Land Area: 8.51 km2 or 851 ha Density: 8.26 people per hectare Erskine Park NSW on Google Maps

Government Electorates

Local Government: Erskine Park is located in East Ward of the Penrith Local Government area. Next elections will be held on 13 September 2008.

State Government: Erskine Park is located in the State Government Electorate of Smithfield. Next elections are scheduled for March 2011.
Federal Government: Erskine Park is located in the Federal Government Electorate of Prospect. Next elections will be held in 2010.
Aboriginal Districts: Erskine Park is located in the Deerubbin Local Aboriginal Land Council Area. Next elections will be held in 2011.

Community Profile

This profile is a snapshot of the suburb of Erskine Park as a community.

Community Services

Bus Services

  • Westbus Pty. Ltd. Head Office (02) 9890 0000. All timetables are shown for Erskine Park.

Cemeteries

  • Cemetery Services in the Penrith Local Government Area. In the City of Penrith there are three cemeteries managed by Penrith City Council. They are Penrith, St Marys and Emu Plains.

Children's Services

  • Erskine Park Children's Centre: Cnr. Swallow & Peppertree Drives, Erskine Park
    Ph: (02) 9834 3630.
  • Erskine Park Before and After School Care: Cnr. Swallow & Peppertree Drives
    Ph: (02) 9834 3624.
  • Mountains to Meadows Mobile Preschool: Cnr. Peppertree & Swallow Drives (Mondays & Fridays)
    Ph: (02) 4732 7590.
  • Erskine Park Vacation Care: C/- Julie Lewis
    Ph: (02) 4732 7845.
  • Cooinda Preschool: Lot 601 Colorado Drive, Erskine Park
    Ph: (02) 9834 3857.

Churches

  • StEP (St Clair/Erskine Park) Christian Church: Erskine Park Community Centre, 57 Peppertree Drive, Erskine Park, NSW 2759.
    Ph: (02) 9670 6952. This non-denominational community church has been serving the St Clair and Erskine Park communities since the late 1980s.

Fire Services

  • Erskine Park Rural Fire Service

Halls

Health Services

  • Penrith Council conducts immunisation clinics for all childhood vaccinations including Diphtheria, Tetanus, Whooping Cough, Polio, Measles, Mumps, Rubella and Meningitis. Adult vaccinations for Diphtheria, Tetanus, Polio, Measles, Mumps and Rubella are also available.
  • Medical Services for the Penrith City Local Government Area.

Neighbourhood Centres

Public Libraries

  • St Clair Branch Library: St. Clair Shopping Centre, Corner of Bennett Road and Endeavour Avenue, St. Clair, 2759.
    Ph: (02) 9670 6853. This is the closest branch for Erskine Park residents.

Schools

Population

2001 Census of Population and Housing

Selected Characteristics Male Female Persons
Total Persons 3532 3500 7032
Aged 0-4 336 337 673
Aged 5-9 449 410 859
Aged 10-14 352 321 673
Aged 15 years and over 2394 2431 4825
Aged 65 years and over 82 109 191
Aboriginal 19 33 52
Total Indigenous Persons 19 33 52
Australian Born 2421 2427 4848
Born Overseas 931 903 1834
Speaks English only 2623 4343 6966
Australian Citizen 3170 3115 6285
Living in private dwellings 3532 3500 7032

Housing Selected Statistics Fully owned Being Purchased Rented Total
Separate Houses 471 1141 227 1951
Semi-detached Houses 0 6 9 15
Flats 0 0 0 0

Source: Australian Bureau of Statistics. Copyright in ABS data resides with the Commonwealth of Australia. Used with permission.

For more data on Erskine Park (or any other areas in New South Wales) from the 2001 Census, please use the Australian Bureau of Statistics website, or, contact Penrith Library Research Services (02) 4732 7886, or call in to Penrith City Library Civic Centre 601 High Street Penrith, NSW 2750.

Recreation

  • The Recreation Guide is compiled and updated annually by the staff of the Recreation and Cultural Services Department of Penrith City Council.
    Ph: (02) 4732 7586.

Sporting Groups

Economic/ Land use profile

Infrastructure

Roads

  • Erskine Park Road marks the western boundary of Erskine Park. This road is a vital thoroughfare south to Mamre Road and north to St Marys and Sydney. Named after James Erskine who obtained a land grant in the area.
  • Swallow Drive is one of the main streets into this suburb. Many streets in this suburb are named after birds.
  • Peppertree Drive is one of the main streets into this suburb.
  • M7: Erskine Park links to M7: (25 May 2004) Mayor of Penrith City David Bradbury has welcomed the Premier’s announcement that the NSW State Government will rezone land to enable a road link between the Erskine Park Employment Area and the M7 Western Sydney Orbital.

Industries

  • Erskine Park Employment Area: A high priority for Penrith City Council and local business is the development of the Erskine Park Employment Area measuring 500 hectares. Erskine Park has 13 ownership partners. The area will soon become one of the premier new employment zones for Greater Western Sydney with the potential for as many as 10,000 jobs being made available within the site upon full capacity.

Companies & businesses in Erskine Park

  • Jumpin' Jacks Castle Pty Ltd: 5 Savannah Place, Erskine Park, NSW 2759
    Ph: (02) 9670 6560. Jumpin Jacks Castles is one of Australia's largest jumping and bouncing castle manufacturer and hire companies.

  • Enviroguard: Cnr. Mamre & Erskine Park Roads, Erskine Park
    Ph: (02) 9834 3411.

  • Erskine Park Shopping Centre: Cnr Swallow and Peppertree Drives, Erskine Park, NSW 2759. Includes Franklins Supermarket, hairdresser, newsagent, liquor store, takeaway shop, Chinese restaurant etc.

  • Restaurants in Erskine Park

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 Erskine Park 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.

Bibliography

Cree, Laura Murray, 'Mamre' Place of Promise, St Marys, 1995.
Backhouse, James, 'Account of a Journey from Parramatta Across the Blue Mountains', in Mackaness, George, Fourteen Journeys Over the Blue Mountains of New South Wales 1813-1841, Horwitz-Grahame, 1965.

Other links are:

Origin of the place name - Erskine Park

Erskine Park was the name of a 3,000 acre grant made in 1818 to James Erskine (1765-1825). The grant covered an area east of the present Mamre Road to Rope's Creek taking in what are now the suburbs of St. Clair and Erskine Park. James Erskine was born in 1765 in Ireland and was a career soldier who fought in the West Indies, Ireland and the Peninsular Campaigns. He arrived with his regiment in Sydney on the "Matilda" in August 1817. He was sworn in as Lieutenant-Governor on September 12, 1817. In recent times (1980-81), there were controversial moves within the community to change the name of this historic suburb to St. Clair - a name having no historical connection with the area. The matter was finally resolved in the latter half of 1981, when the Geographical Names Board created two separate suburbs, Erskine Park and St. Clair.

Other historical links:

Historical Timeline

1818 James Erskine given land grant of 3000 acres located from Mamre Road to Ropes Creek.
1823 30 June 1600 acres south Great Western Highway granted to John MacHenry.
1960 Rick Pisaturo purchased 120 acres of an old dairy farm and named it Mandalong Park.
1968 Sydney Regional Outline Plan identified land at St Clair and Erskine Park for future residential development.
1981 Name of suburb officially recognised.
1981 A new breed of beef cattle developed from the Charolais breed at Mandalong Park called Mandalong Specials were officially recognised by the Royal Agricultural Society.
1982 13 January Erskine Park suburb declared by the Geographical Names Board.
1990 17 October First Local Environmental Plan for Erskine Park Employment Area
went on display.
1992 13 May Second Local Environmental Plan for Erskine Park Employment Area went on display.
1992 21 September Local Environmental Plan for Erskine Park Employment
Area is gazetted.
1992 CSR Readymix owners of Erskine Park quarry site plan to rehabilitate the site into parkland.
1993 April Erskine Park Community Centre and Hall opened.
1993 12 July Andrew Thompson Park named.

Bibliography

For more information on Erskine Park:

Economic

  • Penrith City Council, Erskine Park Employment Area: Draft Local Environmental Plan, 1991.

Historical

  • Council supports locals over name-change dispute', Penrith District Star, 17 September 1980.
  • Feltham, Carolyn St Clair Estate and Erskine Park, n.d. - Penrith City Library LCVF - St Clair.
  • Green, Annette, St Marys Industrial Heritage Study, Penrith City Council, Penrith, 1987.
  • Murray, Robert and White, Kate Dharug & Dungaree: The History of Penrith and St.Marys to 1860. Penrith City Council, Penrith, 1988.
  • Nepean District Historical Society, From Castlereagh to Claremont Meadows: Historical Places of Penrith City Council, Penrith, 1997.
  • Parr, Lorna, A History of the Nepean and District Street Names, Nepean District Historical Society, Penrith, 1990.
  • Parr, Lorna, Penrith Calendar, Nepean District Historical Society, 1987.
  • Penrith City Library LCVF - Erskine Park.
  • Stacker, Lorraine Pictorial history: Penrith & St Marys, Kingsclear Books, 2002.
  • Stapleton, E. South Creek - St. Marys - From Village to City St. Marys. St. Marys Historical Society. 1983.
  • Stevenson, Colin R., Place Names and their Origins within the City of Penrith, Penrith City Council, Penrith, 1985.
  • Stickley, Christine, The Old Charm of Penrith, 2nd ed., the author, St. Marys, 1984.


Penrith City Council Library Service
Copyright © Penrith City Council. All rights reserved.
Revised: 26 June 2008
© COPYRIGHT STARR PARTNERS 2008 VIEW LEGAL DISCLAIMER