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The first municipal library in New South Wales was established in Newtown in 1868 in the Newtown School of Arts building at the corner of Australia and King Streets. [62] Today, as well as the Newtown Library run by the City of Sydney, the suburb is home to The Women's Library, a feminist library established in 1992. [63] [64]
Intersection of King Street with Enmore Road. King Street is the central thoroughfare of the suburb of Newtown in Sydney, Australia.The residents of the area, including a higher-than-average concentration of students, LGBT people and artists, are most visible on this street, sealing Newtown's reputation as Sydney's premier hub of subcultures.
St Stephen's Anglican Church is a heritage-listed Anglican church and cemetery at 187–189 Church Street, Newtown, Inner West Council, Sydney New South Wales, Australia. It was designed by Edmund Blacket and built from 1871 to 1874 by George Dowling and Robert Kirkham. The church is also known as St Stephen's Church Of England.
File:Newtown NSW, Cnr King Street & Enmore Road, 2019.jpg cropped 34 % horizontally, 36 % vertically using CropTool with precise mode. File usage The following page uses this file:
Newtown was re-created in 1904 as a result of the 1903 New South Wales referendum, which required the number of members of the Legislative Assembly to be reduced from 125 to 90 which saw the districts of Newtown-Camperdown, Newtown-Erskine and Newtown-St Peters abolished and replaced by Newtown and Camperdown. [2] [3] [4]
This file has an extracted image: Newtown NSW, Cnr King Street & Enmore Road, 2019 (cropped).jpg. Camera location 33° 53′ 52.83″ S, 151° 10′ 43.22″ E
Newtown railway station is a heritage-listed railway station located on the Main Suburban line, serving the Sydney suburb of Newtown, in New South Wales, Australia. It is served by Sydney Trains ' T2 Leppington & Inner West Line and T3 Liverpool & Inner West Line services.
New South Wales implemented the federally-issued National Routes system between 1954 and 1955, using white-and-black shields highlighting interstate links between major regional centres; some of these routes were later upgraded into National Highways using green-and-gold shields when the National Roads Act was passed in 1974.