Grafton, New South Wales
Grafton is a city in the Northern Rivers region of the Australian state of New South Wales. It is located on the Clarence River, approximately by road north-northeast of the state capital Sydney. The closest major cities, Brisbane and the Gold Coast, are located across the border in South-East Queensland. At June 2018 Grafton had a population of 19,078. The city is the largest settlement and administrative centre of the Clarence Valley Council local government area, which is home to over 50,000 people in all.
History
Before European settlement, the Clarence River marked the border between the Bundjalung and Gumbaynggirr peoples, and so descendants of both language groups can now be found in the Grafton region.Grafton, like many other settlements in the area, was first opened up to white settlement by the cedar-getters. An escaped convict, Richard Craig, discovered the district in 1831. With the wealth of 'red gold' cedar just waiting for exploitation, he was given a pardon and one hundred pounds to bring a party of cedar-getters on the cutter 'Prince George' to the region. Word of such wealth to be had did not take long to spread and one of the arrivals was pioneer John Small on the 'Susan' in 1838, and he first occupied land on Woodford Island. 'The Settlement' was established shortly after.
In 1851, Governor FitzRoy officially named the town "Grafton", after his grandfather, the Duke of Grafton, a former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. Grafton was proclaimed a city in 1885. Local industries include logging, beef cattle, fishing/prawning, sugar, manufacturing and tourism.
The Grafton Bridge, connecting the main townsite with South Grafton, opened in 1932. It completed the standard-gauge rail connection between Sydney and Brisbane, and also forming a vital link for the Pacific Highway. Previously the only way to travel from Grafton to South Grafton was via ferry. As a result, South Grafton developed quite a separate identity, and in fact had its own municipal government from 1896 to 1956.
Heritage listings
Grafton has a number of heritage-listed sites, including:- Duke Street: Christ Church Cathedral
- 170 Hoof Street: Grafton Correctional Centre
- North Coast railway: Grafton Bridge
- 95 Prince Street: Saraton Theatre
- 150 Victoria Street: Arcola, Grafton
Population
From the 2016 census of Population:
- Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people made up 8.7% of Grafton's population.
- 87.1% of people were born in Australia. The next most common countries of birth were England 1.5% and New Zealand 0.7%.
- 90.5% of people spoke only English at home.
- The most common responses for religion were Anglican 27.0%, No Religion 24.5% and Catholic 21.1%.
Climate
Culture
Grafton is known and promoted as the Jacaranda City, in reference to its tree-lined streets and to the annual Jacaranda Festival. Inaugurated in 1935, Jacaranda is held each October/November. A half-day public holiday is observed locally on the first Thursday of November, the Festival's major focal day. During the 1963 festival, inventor John W. Dickenson demonstrated on the Clarence River the first hang glider that was controlled by weight shifts of the pilot from a swinging control frame – the birth of modern hang gliding.A half-day public holiday is also observed for the Grafton Cup horse race, held each year on the second Thursday in July. It is the high point of the city's annual Racing Carnival—Australia's largest and richest non-metropolitan Carnival—which takes place over a fortnight in that month.
Grafton is the birthplace of several renowned country music players. Local artist Troy Cassar-Daley received four Golden Guitar awards at the 2006 Tamworth Country Music Awards—the largest and most prestigious country music awards in Australia. At the same event Samantha McClymont, the 2005/2006 Grafton Jacaranda Queen and sister of Brooke McClymont, also received an award for her country music talent.
A vision of Grafton with its numerous brilliantly-flowered trees in bloom is immortalised in Australian popular music in Cold Chisel's song Flame Trees, written by band member Don Walker, who had lived in Grafton during his formative years.
Notable buildings
Christ Church Cathedral, designed by John Horbury Hunt, was consecrated in 1884 and is the seat of the Anglican Diocese of Grafton.Schaeffer House is a historic 1900 Federation house and contains the collection of the Clarence River Historical Society, which was formed in 1931.
Transportation
The Murwillumbah – Byron Bay – Lismore railway was extended to Grafton's original railway station in 1905; for details, see Murwillumbah railway line. The North Coast Line reached South Grafton's railway station from Sydney in 1915. Pending the opening of the combined road and rail bascule bridge in 1932, Grafton had a train ferry to connect the two railways. Clarence Valley Regional Airport is the airport that services Grafton.Grafton also lies on the Pacific Highway, the main North–South road route through Eastern Australia, and links it to the Gwydir Highway, one of the primary east–west routes through Eastern Australia.
Busways Grafton is the operator for local town routes, as well as out-of-town routes to Junction Hill, Jackadgery/Cangai, Copmanhurst, and Maclean and Yamba.
Lawrence Bus Service operates a shopper service, as well as school service on school days, to and from Lawrence.
Northern Rivers Buslines operates a weekday service to Lismore via Maclean, Evans Head and Coraki.
NSW TrainLink provides a coach service to Byron Bay, connecting off the train from Sydney. It also offers a coach service to Moree via Glen Innes, connecting from the train from Brisbane.
Industry
From 1904 to 1917 the Grafton Copper Mining Company Ltd operated a copper mine, smelter and tramway at Cangai, more than 100 km from Grafton via the Clarence and Mann rivers, today about 70 km over the Gwydir Highway. From 1952 to 1997, first as an independent company, then owned by Tooheys since 1961, the Grafton brewery provided Grafton Bitter to the North Coast. The nearby Harwood Mill is the oldest working sugar mill in New South Wales.Newspapers
The daily newspaper of Grafton is The Daily Examiner, owned by media conglomerate Australian Provincial Newspapers.Radio and television
Radio stations
- 2GF 1206 AM/103.9 FM
- FM 104.7
- Triple J 91.5 FM/96.1 FM
- ABC Northern Rivers 738 AM/94.5 FM
- ABC Classic FM 97.9 FM/95.3 FM
- Radio National 99.5 FM/96.9 FM
- Racing Radio 101.5 FM
- Life FM 103.1
- Raw FM 87.6
Television channels
- Prime7, 7TWO, 7mate, 7flix, ishop tv, Racing.com,
- Nine ; 9Gem, 9Go!, 9Life, owned and operated by the
- WIN Television; 10 Bold, 10 Peach,
- ABC Television including ABC, ABC Comedy, ABC Me and ABC News, part of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation
- Special Broadcasting Service, SBS, SBS Viceland, SBS Food and NITV
Of the three main networks, NBN produces an evening news bulletin containing regional, national and international news, screening every night at 6:00pm on Channel 9. Prime7 News produces a mid north coast new bulletin screening weeknights at 6:00pm. WIN Television produces news updates throughout the day, broadcast from the Wollongong studios.
Education
Public schools
- Gillwinga Public School
- Grafton High School
- Grafton Public School
- South Grafton High School
- South Grafton Public School
- Westlawn Public School
Independent schools
- Clarence Valley Anglican School
- McAuley Catholic College
- St. Joseph's Primary School
- St. Mary's Primary School
- St. Andrew's Christian School
Defunct public schools
- Alumny Creek 1872–1969
- Angowrie 1895–1899
- Billys Creek 1946–1963
- Calliope 1890–1983
- Carr's Creek 1877–1964
- Clouds Creek 1943–1964
- Coalcroft 1875–1971
- Coldstream Lower 1873–1966
- Copmanhurst 1866–1938
- Eatonsville 1881–1961
- Glenferneigh 1928–1967
- Kungala 1926–1977
- Lawrence Lower 1883–1955
- Mororo 1886–1939
- Palmers Channel 1869–1975
- Seelands 1889–1967
- Shark Creek 1877–1927
- Smalls Forest 1885–1971
- South Arm 1871–1967
- Southgate 1867–1875
- Stockyard Creek 1882–1895
- Swan Creek 1870–1994
- Trenayr 1901–1970
- Tullymorgan 1886–1971
- Tyndale 1868–1975
- Ulgundah Island Aboriginal 1908–1951
- Woodford Leigh 1869–1956
- Woombah 1872–1953
Military history
Notable people
Notable people who were born or lived in Grafton include:- James Armah professional dual Commonwealth champion boxer
- Troy Cassar-Daley, country musician
- Fanny Cohen, headmistress
- Matthew Colless astronomer and Director of the Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics at the Australian National University. He was for nine years previously the Director of the Australian Astronomical Observatory, Australia's national optical observatory.
- Peter Drysdale, economist
- Adam Eckersley, musician
- Havelock Ellis, pioneer sexologist, held the position of assistant master at a local private grammar school during 1877.
- Nick Emmett, rugby league player
- Jim Eggins, politician
- Gary Foley, Aboriginal activist, academic, writer
- Charles Hercules Green, officer
- George Green, rugby league player
- Henry Kendall
- Robyn Lambley, politician
- Jimmy Lisle, rugby league and rugby union player
- Brent Livermore, field hockey midfielder
- The McClymonts, country music group consisting of sisters Brooke, Samantha and Mollie
- Frank McGuren, politician
- Iven Giffard Mackay, Lieutenant General
- David Marchant AM, railway industry executive
- Bill McLennan, statistician
- Chris Masters, journalist
- Gillian Mears, author
- James Lionel Michael, poet and solicitor
- Tony Mundine, boxer
- Warren Mundine, politician
- Kevin Nichols, track cyclist
- Sir Earle Page, Prime Minister of Australia, 1939
- Geoff Page poet
- Ruby Payne-Scott, pioneer in radiophysics and radio astronomy
- Frank Partridge, recipient of the Victoria Cross
- Cameron Pilley, squash player
- Eddie Purkiss, rugby union player
- Tyrone Roberts, Newcastle Knights footballer
- Michael Rush, rower
- Henry Ernest Searle, rower
- Sir Grafton Elliot Smith, anatomist and palaeoanthropologist
- Tse Tsan-tai, Chinese revolutionary
- James Tully, politician
- William Edward Vincent, founded The Clarence and Richmond Examiner
- Brenda Walker, writer
- Don Walker, musician
- Arthur Bache Walkom, palaeobotanist and museum director
- Bill Weiley, politician
- Danny Wicks, rugby league player
- Graham Wilson, rugby league footballer of the 1960s
- Walter George Woolnough, geologist
- Beau Young, singer-songwriter, surfer