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Churches
Matraville is home to St Agnes Catholic Church, Matraville Baptist Church and East Sydney Community Christian Church [4]. Matraville also has a large Jehovah's Witness congregation with a Kingdom Hall.
Commercial Areas
Matraville is a suburb with a mixture of residential, commercial and industrial uses. A small shopping centre is located on Bunnerong Road. There are three chemists, a newly refurbished fire station, a Post Office, which has moved from its older, more stylish premises, a medical centre, a diving shop, a veterinarian surgery and two petrol stations. There are also take away food shops, among them the famous 'House of Pie' pie shop which has received numerous awards. Matraville is also home to one of the last bastions of traditional Chinese market gardens. Matraville was once home to a coal fired power plant, which was demolished in the 1980s to make way for further Port Botany expansion and a State Transit Authority bus depot, which provides services from the peninsula to the city. The only remaining part of the Bunnerong power station is called 'the Sucko', due to the 'sucking' inlet valve for water to cool the power plant. It is a popular swimming spot. Matraville also houses the Australian paper recycling mills along Botany Road.
Culture
Matraville once had a drive-in theatre until the 1980s when it was sold, and then demolished to make way for medium density housing commission homes and private dwellings. Matraville drive-in was used to film the horror movie Dead End Drive-In. Matraville also hosts a very large Christmas lights decoration in the areas around Flanders Avenue, Knowles Avenue, Franklin Street and Clarence Street.
Description
Matraville is a suburb in south-eastern Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. Matraville is located 11 kilometres south-east of the Sydney central business district, in the local government area of the City of Randwick.
History
Matraville was originally reserved for the Church and Schools Corporation with income generated intended to support clergy and teachers. The school was established in 1904, thanks to the efforts of John Rowland Dacey, the state member for Botany, who had nearby suburb of Daceyville named after him. The school was originally known as Cross Roads but Dacey suggested that the name Matra would be more appropriate in honour of Mario Matra was a midshipman on the voyage by Captain James Cook to Botany Bay in 1770. Matra was born in New York, but later settled in England. Cook wrote his name as Magra, as this was the spelling Matra used early in his life. Matra had walked over the area with Cook and his close friend, botanist Joseph Banks. Matra had also proposed to the British government that it establish a colony at Botany Bay in 1783, which he envisaged could be a place that American loyalists could also settle. Dacey's suggestion was accepted by the Department of Education and the school and suburb became Matraville. The land at Matraville reverted to the crown in 1917 and 72.5 acres were allocated for a settlement for soldiers returning from World War I. The Voluntary Workers Association was formed to build homes for soldiers and their families at the intersection of Anzac Parade and Beauchamp Road. The first cottage at the settlement was completed in 1919 and the residential area became known as Matraville Soldiers Garden Village.[1] A total of ninety-three cottages were built between 1918 and 1925. They were eventually taken over as State Government public housing. In 1977, all the cottages except one were demolished in spite of public protest; the one remaining cottage can still be seen in Somme Way. All that is left of the other cottages is a park with sections of sandstone walls and foundation stones laid by a number of people, including then Prime Minister William Morris Hughes.[2] Matraville was split between Randwick and Botany Councils. When problems arose from the division in 1961, Botany Council decided to rename its portion Gilmore, to honour Australian poet Dame Mary Gilmore (1864-1962). After the post masters general office pointed out that there already was a Gilmore, New South Wales, the council chose Hillsdale to honour Patrick Darcy Hills, who was the New South Wales minister for local government. It was a controversial choice since most residents believed that a name should have been chosen that reflected Australia's history. Matraville Soldiers' Settlement Public School is surrounded by roads commemorating the battlefields of World War I. These include Amiens, Ypres, Pozieres, Beauchamp, Menin, Flanders, Amiens, Bullecourt, Bapaume, Hamel, Armentieres inter alia. Other streets in the area are named after rivers, Torrens, Franklin, Namoi, Hunter, Clarence and also early Australian explorers, Cunningham, Blaxland, Lawson and Oxley.
Landmarks
Eastern Suburbs Memorial Park [3] sits along the southern border of the suburb and incorporates Botany Cemetery, Eastern Suburbs Crematorium and Pioneer Park. Arthur Stace, known in Sydney as Mr Eternity, is buried at Botany Cemetery. He was famous for his practice of writing the word Eternity all over Sydney during the fifties and sixties. The Malabar Riding school is located on Wassel Street near the Chinese Gardens. Matraville is also home to its own local RSL club, incorporating a bowling club as well.
Schools
There are three primary schools and Matraville Sports High School. Soldiers Settlement School previously had a separate Infants and Primary School which are now combined into one larger school following the acquisition of park land at Finucane Crescent. The first dux of Matraville High School in 1964, was Robert Carr who later went on to become the Premier of New South Wales. Cottage in Somme Way, the only surviving cottage from the soldiers' settlement Sandstone wall at the site of the soldiers' settlement Foundation stone laid by Prime Minister Hughes Horse paddock, Franklin Street