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Suburbs of Liverpool

You are on Country

Stories, rock art, stone artefacts and Aboriginal sites across Liverpool show that First Nations Peoples have been here for up to 60,000 years. Liverpool is in the territory of the Cabrogal band of the Darug (Dharruk, Dharug) People. The Cabrogal are named for the cobra (cabra) grub found near the Tucoreah-Georges River and Cabramatta Creek. What is now known as Liverpool was also accessed by peoples of the Tharawal (Thurrrawal) and Gandangara (Gundungurra) Nations.The Nepean River and Tucoreah-Georges River provided a natural boundary between the Darug and the neighbouring Tharawal. Each group had its own definite area and was a separate population, speaking a separate language.

First Nations people have, since 1788, resisted and survived colonial violence. Liverpool City Council is privileged to have three local Aboriginal Land Councils operating within its LGA: Gandangara Local Aboriginal Land Council, Deerubin Local Aboriginal Land Council and Tharawal Local Aboriginal Land Council.

Every suburb of Liverpool lives in the legacy of Aboriginal history, culture and deep-time traditions.

42 Suburbs of Liverpool

Liverpool Council was incorporated as a municipality on 27 June 1872, just over 70 years after Governor Lachlan Macquarie declared Liverpool a town to the south-west of Sydney on 7 November 1810.

Today, the Liverpool Local Government Area (LGA) covers a huge footprint measuring 305 square kilometres. It has 30 suburbs located completely within its boundaries and shares 12 suburbs with the bordering LGAs of Penrith, Camden, Campbelltown, or Fairfield.

Separated into the East Ward and the West Ward, Liverpool’s suburbs stretch from Greendale in the west to Hammondville in the east. Nestled between the mountains and the inner-city, Liverpool still consists of semi-rural areas but also has a rapidly developing urban city centre. It is a city of car yards and highway bypasses, but its rivers, open parklands and agricultural land also mark it as a place of immense natural significance.

Today, Liverpool has a layered and dynamic social, political, architectural and environmental history. Liverpool is home to one of the highest concentrations of Australia’s recent arrivals, and to many culturally and linguistically diverse communities. Liverpool's population is over 214,000. By 2031, more than 300,000 people are expected to call Liverpool home.

Liverpool’s past is not static. It is always growing and changing.

Suburb Origin Dates

The dates for when a suburb was first established by Liverpool Council have been taken from Government Gazettes. However, the official proclamation of a suburb may have come years, if not decades, after residents had settled in the area, with schools, post offices, roads and other amenities already in use. Often the establishment of a new suburb was officially commemorated with a turning of the first sod.

See something missing?

You know your suburb better than anyone. If you think an important part of your suburb’s history is missing, whether recent or distant, reach out to the Local Studies Team through our online Local and Family History enquiry form. We are always looking for new ways to bring the vibrant history of Liverpool to life!

Carnes Hill
The suburb of Carnes Hill is named for Thomas Carne, who was granted land near the current location of Carnes Hill in the Parish of Cabramatta in 1819. It was originally officially gazetted as a hill on 21 March 1975.
Cartwright
The suburb of Cartwright was officially gazetted on 7 April 1972. Cartwright is one of the six suburbs of the Green Valley Housing Estate established between 1961-1965 by the NSW Housing Commission to provides homes for up to 30,000 people.
Casula
Casula is comprised of land grants originally made to Dr Charles Throsby, Richard Guise and Captain Eber Bunker (1761-1836). Casula was officially gazetted on 7 April 1972 as part of the Parish of St Luke and Minto.
Cecil Hills
Originally part of Cecil Park, Cecil Hills was created after a subdivision and was officially gazetted on 2 October 1992. It was named for John Wylde’s farm, after his home Cecil Lodge at Chestnut in Hertfordshire.
Cecil Park
Cecil Park was officially gazetted as a suburb on 7 April 1972. Cecil Park was originally a much larger area, covering the present-day suburbs of Cecil Park, Cecil Hills and Elizabeth Hills after subdivisions in 1992 and 2009.