Puneet Varma (Editor)

Penguin, Tasmania

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Population
  
3,924 (2011 census)

Postcode(s)
  
7316

Founded
  
1861

Local time
  
Sunday 4:54 PM

Established
  
1861

State electorate(s)
  
Braddon

Postal code
  
7316

Federal division
  
Division of Braddon

Penguin, Tasmania httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Location
  
283 km (176 mi) NW of Hobart 128 km (80 mi) NW of Launceston 29 km (18 mi) W of Devonport

Weather
  
22°C, Wind N at 10 km/h, 70% Humidity

Lga
  
Central Coast Council, Tasmania

Points of interest
  
Penguin Beach, Watcombe Beach, Mount Dial

For sale 4 games place penguin tasmania australia


Penguin is a town on the north-west coast of Tasmania, Australia. It is in the Central Coast Council local government area and on the Bass Highway, between Burnie and Ulverstone. At the 2011 census, Penguin had a population of 3,924.

Contents

Map of Penguin TAS 7316, Australia

History

Penguin was first settled in 1861 as a timber town, and proclaimed on 25 October 1875. The area's dense bushland and easy access to the sea led to Penguin becoming a significant port town, with large quantities of timber shipped across Bass Strait to Victoria, where the 1850s gold rushes were taking place. The town was named by the botanist Ronald Campbell Gunn for the little penguin rookeries that are common along the less populated areas of the coast.

Sulphur Creek Post Office opened on 1 January 1867 and was replaced by the Penguin Creek office in 1868. The latter office was renamed Penguin in 1895.

Penguin was one of the last districts settled along the North West coast of Tasmania, possibly because of an absence of a river, for safe anchorage. Nearly all travel in those days was by boat as bush made the land almost impenetrable. Many of the settlers probably emigrated from Liverpool via landing in Launceston then sailing west along the coast. Trade began when the wharf was built in 1870, allowing timber and potatoes to be exported. Penguin Silver Mine, along the foreshore slightly to the east of the town opened in 1870 but failed a year later. Neptune Mine, a tad further along, likewise failed. The rail from Ulverstone arrived in 1901, after which trade by sea declined. Passing of the Local Government Act in 1906 saw Tasmania divided into 48 Municipalities. Penguin’s first Council was elected in 1907.

Aboriginal connections

Aboriginal bands, limited to just a few hundred people and collectively known as the North Tribe, consisted primarily of the Punnilerpanner people from Port Sorell, the Pallittorre from Quamby Bluff, the Noeteeler at the Hampshire Hills, and, most pertinent to Penguin, the Plairhekehillerplue at Emu Bluff. Occupation of the inland plains is understood to have been seasonal due to the severity of winter conditions during which months these bands migrated to the coastline. The absence of Aboriginal sites around Penguin is likely to be explained by disturbances due to agricultural activity and residential development.

Recent history

The most notable episode, this century, in Penguin’s ongoing evolution was the attempt by property developers, from 2005 to 2008, to purchase properties along the CBD beachfront on Main St with the aim of transforming them into four-storey commercial/residential opportunities. Support for development was mixed, which resulted, eventually, in the developers foregoing all interest in the seaside town. One manoeuvre to circumvent development involved heritage-listing as much of the CBD as possible. Currently, Penguin has 26 heritage-listed sites.

Notable residents

  • World champion track cyclist Amy Cure, winner of the 2014 Women's 25 km Points race in Cali, Colombia
  • Fashion designer Alannah Hill lived in Penguin during her childhood (1960s?-1979), as her parents owned a milk bar in the town.
  • On 13 May 2016, former world 22 Tetris player Dave Humphreys visited Penguin.
  • Trevor Kaine, the second Chief Minister of the Australian Capital Territory, 1989–91, was born in Penguin in 1928.
  • Russell Robertson, an Australian rules footballer for the Melbourne Demons, attended Penguin High School from 1991 to 1994.
  • John Wilton, member for Broadmeadows in the Victorian Legislative Assembly from 1962 to 1985, was born in Penguin in 1925.
  • Alister Nicholson, sports commentator for ABC Grandstand, covered events such as 2014 Commonwealth Games, 2016 Olympic Games and regular AFL and international cricket.
  • Education

    The Penguin district has two public schools; a kindergarten to year 10 school - Penguin District School and Riana Primary School. Penguin also has one of only two Seventh-day Adventist schools in Tasmania, called the North West Christian School.

    Attractions

    Penguin is home to the Big Penguin, and all street refuse bins are decorated with ornamental cement fairy penguins. Mount Montgomery is also in the Penguin area. The Big Penguin, made of ferro cement by the Goliath Cement Co of Railton and later coated with fibreglass, is located in the town’s centre opposite the Post Office, and is the town’s most photographed icon. Unveiled on 25 October 1975, it was erected to commemorate the centenary of the naming of the town. Concerns were raised in 2008 as to the possibility of asbestos contamination, but the Big Penguin was given the all clear.

    Penguin General Cemetery, with its stunning sunrise views over Bass Strait, is located a kilometre west of the Post Office. Opened in the 1860s, it closed in 1977 and was heritage-listed in 2007.

    The response to the cemetery's ongoing and widespread publicity was such that the Tasmanian Association for Hospice & Palliative Care (TAH&PC) funded the inaugural Penguin Twilight Celebration of the Dead - music among the tombstones. The event, held in the cemetery on 7 January 2015, was supported by the broader Penguin community. It marked the centenary of the cemetery's unknown burial. The one-hour musical extravaganza, involving pipers, vocalists, choir, violinist, flautist and guitarist had the crowd of 120-150 people meandering around six of the more significant tombstones. The celebration culminated in a butterfly release in the commemorative garden dedicated to the tens of unnamed babies in the cemetery. A fund-raising onsite formal long-table dinner was held in February 2016.

    References

    Penguin, Tasmania Wikipedia