Puneet Varma (Editor)

Mount Wilson, New South Wales

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Population
  
218 (2006 census)

Postcode(s)
  
2786

State electorate(s)
  
Blue Mountains

Postal code
  
2786

Established
  
1880

LGA(s)
  
City of Blue Mountains

Elevation
  
1,008 m

Mount Wilson, New South Wales wwwbmccnswgovaufilesmountwilsonfrontviewjpg

Location
  
130 km (81 mi) NW of Sydney

Weather
  
18°C, Wind NE at 6 km/h, 100% Humidity

Points of interest
  
Breenhold Gardens, Nooroo Garden, Bebeah Gardens, Windyridge Garden

Mount Wilson is a village and a mountain located in the Blue Mountains region of New South Wales, Australia. The village is approximately 14 kilometres (8.7 mi) east of the township of Bell, and approximately 100 kilometres (62 mi) west of Sydney. At the 2006 census, the village of Mount Wilson had a population of 218 people.

Contents

Map of Mount Wilson NSW 2786, Australia

Description

Mount Wilson is a long, low mountain formation that sprawls for 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) in the northern Blue Mountains area. It is completely surrounded by the Blue Mountains National Park, a World Heritage Area. It has been partly developed as a residential area, with elaborate gardens that have become a tourist attraction. The area is particularly popular in the autumn, when the red and orange leaves give it extra colour. According to some, the "well organised locals have managed to resist the tidal wave of development which swept through the other mountain towns."

History

The Mount Wilson area was surveyed in 1868 by Edward Wyndham. It was subsequently named after John Bowie Wilson, the then Secretary for Lands in the Legislative Assembly of New South Wales. The new township became popular as a summer retreat for the wealthy in the latter part of the 19th century. Extensive gardens were planted around the houses there, taking advantage of the volcanic soils. Historical features that can still be seen include St George's Church, which was built by the children of Henry Marcus Clark and consecrated in 1916; and the house Withycombe, in The Avenue, which was built by George Henry Cox, a grandson of William Cox, who built the first road over the Blue Mountains.

The novelist Patrick White spent some of his youth there, writing about the place in his 1981 memoir Flaws in the Glass; his parents had lived in Mount Wilson between 1912 and 1937. In Flaws in the Glass, he referred to "one of those tedious Australian, would-be tourists attractions called Chinaman's Hat," a reference to a local rock formation.

Activities

Apart from visiting the gardens for which the area is famous, it is also possible to do a number of walks in places like Waterfall Reserve, the rainforest pocket in Davies Lane, the Cathedral of Ferns, Pheasants Cave, Chinamans Hat and, for more experienced walkers, the track to the Wollangambe River. There are also lookouts, e.g. Wynnes Rocks Lookout and Du Faurs Rocks Lookout. There are no authorised camping areas, but it is possible to camp in the Waterfall Reserve picnic area. The area offers plenty of scope for photography.

References

Mount Wilson, New South Wales Wikipedia