Cessnock, New South Wales (original) (raw)

Town in New South Wales, Australia

CessnockNew South Wales
Vincent Street, the main street of Cessnock
Cessnock is located in New South WalesCessnockCessnock
Coordinates 32°50′3″S 151°21′19.8″E / 32.83417°S 151.355500°E / -32.83417; 151.355500
Population 23,211 (UCL 2021)[1]
Postcode(s) 2325
Elevation 80 m (262 ft)
Time zone AEST (UTC+10)
• Summer (DST) AEDT (UTC+11)
Location 154 km (96 mi) N of Sydney 52 km (32 mi) W of Newcastle 83 km (52 mi) NW of Gosford 27 km (17 mi) SW of Maitland 44 km (27 mi) SE of Singleton
LGA(s) City of Cessnock
Region Hunter
County Northumberland
Parish Cessnock
State electorate(s) Cessnock Upper Hunter
Federal division(s) Hunter
Mean max temp Mean min temp Annual rainfall 24.6 °C 76 °F 11.1 °C 52 °F 747.5 mm 29.4 in

Cessnock () is a city in the Hunter Valley of New South Wales, Australia, about 52 km (32 mi) by road west of Newcastle. It is the administrative centre of the City of Cessnock LGA and was named after an 1826 grant of land called Cessnock Estate, which was owned by John Campbell.[2][3] The local area was once known as "The Coalfields", and it is the gateway city to the vineyards of the Hunter Valley, which includes Pokolbin, Mount View, Lovedale, Broke, Rothbury, and Branxton.

The Wonnarua people are the traditional owners of the Cessnock area. Many were killed or died as a result of European diseases after colonisation. Others were forced onto neighbouring tribal territory and killed. The city of Cessnock features many Indigenous place names including Congewai, Kurri Kurri, Laguna, Nulkaba and Wollombi.[4][5]

Lying between Australia's earliest European settlements – Sydney, the Hawkesbury River and Newcastle, pastoralists commenced settlement of the land in the 1820s. Cessnock was named by Scottish settler John Campbell, after his grandfather's baronial Cessnock Castle in Galston, East Ayrshire, to reflect the aristocratic heritage and ambitions for this estate.[2][3] The township of Cessnock developed from 1850, as a service centre at the junction of the Great North Road from Sydney to the Hunter Valley, with branches to Maitland and Singleton.

The establishment of the South Maitland coalfields generated extensive land settlement between 1903 and 1923. The current pattern of urban development, transport routes and industrial landscape was laid at this time. The surveying of the Greta coal seam by Professor Edgeworth David around 1888[6] became the impetus for considerable social and economic change in the area with the development of the coal mining industry.[7]

St Joseph's Catholic Church

According to the 2021 census, there were 63,632 people in the Cessnock LGA.

The Royal Oak Hotel

The decline of mining on the South Maitland Coalfields has been paralleled by growth in the wine industry and better access to other employment centres.

The Hunter Valley wine-growing area near Cessnock is Australia's oldest wine region and one of the most famous, with around 1,800 hectares (4,448 acres) under vine. The vineyards of Pokolbin, Mount View and Allandale, with their rich volcanic soils tended by entrepreneurial vignerons, are also the focus of a thriving and growing tourism industry. The extension and eventual completion of the F3 Freeway, created a property and tourism boom during the 1990s.

Cessnock has begun to develop other tourist ventures beyond the wine industry such as championship golf courses, hot air ballooning,[9] sky-diving, and guest house accommodation.

The city council has actively pursued a policy of urban renewal in the city centre since 2001. The local council was one of the first to introduce a recycling program for waste disposal in the state. [_citation needed_]

Most employment comes from the local port city of Newcastle, the nearby major centres of Maitland and Singleton and in service industries in the local council area, which comprises many small towns, such as Kurri Kurri, Weston, Neath, Abernethy, Kearsley and Pokolbin.

The town is located in the rich alluvial and volcanic soils of the Hunter Valley. Rich coal seams underlie much of the area. [_citation needed_] The Brokenback Range (part of the Great Dividing Range) rises to the west of the city. The Hunter River flows down the Hunter Valley approximately 20 km (12 mi) to the north. Cessnock lies within the Hunter Valley Important Bird Area.[10]

Cessnock has a humid subtropical climate (Cfa) with hot summers and cool winters, similar to Penrith, a suburb in Greater Western Sydney to the south. Summers may be dry due to their inland location, but humid days are not uncommon. Winters are usually dry with cold nights, which may be frosty.

Climate data for Cessnock Airport (32º47'S, 151º20'E, 67 m AMSL) (1994–2020 normals, extremes 1968-2024)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 45.1(113.2) 46.8(116.2) 39.3(102.7) 35.2(95.4) 29.2(84.6) 25.6(78.1) 25.3(77.5) 30.0(86.0) 35.7(96.3) 38.6(101.5) 44.5(112.1) 43.6(110.5) 46.8(116.2)
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 30.6(87.1) 29.6(85.3) 27.4(81.3) 24.3(75.7) 20.9(69.6) 17.9(64.2) 17.6(63.7) 19.5(67.1) 22.8(73.0) 25.4(77.7) 27.3(81.1) 29.1(84.4) 24.4(75.9)
Daily mean °C (°F) 24.0(75.2) 23.4(74.1) 21.2(70.2) 17.6(63.7) 14.2(57.6) 11.9(53.4) 10.9(51.6) 12.0(53.6) 15.1(59.2) 17.7(63.9) 20.3(68.5) 22.3(72.1) 17.6(63.6)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) 17.3(63.1) 17.1(62.8) 15.0(59.0) 10.8(51.4) 7.5(45.5) 5.9(42.6) 4.2(39.6) 4.4(39.9) 7.3(45.1) 10.0(50.0) 13.3(55.9) 15.4(59.7) 10.7(51.2)
Record low °C (°F) 7.6(45.7) 8.0(46.4) 5.0(41.0) −1.2(29.8) −3.5(25.7) −4.3(24.3) −6.5(20.3) −6.7(19.9) −2.8(27.0) 0.9(33.6) 2.8(37.0) 3.2(37.8) −6.7(19.9)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 71.1(2.80) 99.0(3.90) 76.8(3.02) 56.1(2.21) 40.0(1.57) 61.2(2.41) 32.4(1.28) 31.4(1.24) 43.7(1.72) 53.1(2.09) 71.5(2.81) 75.1(2.96) 709.9(27.95)
Average precipitation days (≥ 1.0 mm) 6.5 7.7 7.4 5.8 4.9 6.0 4.3 3.8 5.4 6.0 7.2 7.3 72.3
Average relative humidity (%) 46 53 53 52 53 55 50 41 42 44 47 46 49
Average dew point °C (°F) 14.6(58.3) 16.3(61.3) 14.7(58.5) 11.6(52.9) 8.9(48.0) 7.2(45.0) 5.3(41.5) 4.1(39.4) 6.4(43.5) 8.6(47.5) 11.6(52.9) 13.3(55.9) 10.2(50.4)
Source: Australian Bureau of Meteorology (1991-2020 normals, extremes 1968-2024)[11][12]

Historical population

Year Pop. ±%
1933 14,385
1947 13,029 −9.4%
1954 14,417 +10.7%
1961 13,833 −4.1%
1966 15,332 +10.8%
1971 16,160 +5.4%
1976 16,256 +0.6%
1981 16,916 +4.1%
1986 17,506 +3.5%
1991 17,932 +2.4%
1996 17,540 −2.2%
2001 17,791 +1.4%
2006 18,316 +3.0%
2011 20,013 +9.3%
2016 21,725 +8.6%
2021 23,211 +6.8%
Source: Australian Bureau of Statistics data.[13][14]

Cessnock is serviced by a number of regional newspapers, radio stations and television stations.

Radio stations include:

Cessnock was featured in national tech news[18] in 2020 with the release of a video game called Cessnock.Life, which is a fictional simulation game based in Cessnock.

Performance Arts Culture Cessnock (PACC)

[edit]

The PACC is a Local Government owned theatre that holds concerts, plays and community events. Originally opened in 2008 and known as the Cessnock Performing Arts Centre it frequently has acts shows such as comedians, tribute bands and musicals, as well as other events such as drama lessons.[19]

Rodeo at Cessnock showground

The city has many sporting facilities. The city competes in several regional sporting competitions, particularly the Cessnock Goannas competing in Newcastle-based rugby league competition. Some very successful sporting players can trace their roots to the local district, including Australian Rugby League representative players and brothers Andrew and Matthew Johns. World-renowned golfer and TV commentator Jack Newton is also from Cessnock. His annual Sub-Juniors Golf Tournament has unearthed some talented young golfers and is held on the local championship courses of Pokolbin. Cessnock was the base camp for the Japan national football team during the 2015 AFC Asian Cup.

For a century Cessnock was served by the South Maitland Railway network, originally constructed for the coal industry, but which at one time had considerable passenger services terminating at Cessnock railway station, including a direct train to Sydney known as the Cessnock Flyer.

The Sydney–Newcastle Freeway's Cessnock exit at Freemans Waterhole provides one of the main road connections from Sydney to Cessnock via The Gap, a pass through the Watagan Mountains range just north of Mount Heaton.

Until the Hunter Expressway opened in 2014, linking the New England Highway at Branxton and the Sydney-Newcastle Freeway at West Wallsend, through traffic passed through Cessnock.

The local airport is placed just to the north of the city, at the entrance to the Vineyard District. It has a small public passenger terminal and also serves as the base for aviation training organisations such as Avondale College's school of Aviation and Hunter Valley Aviation. The airport is not served by RPT flights. Access by air to the region is by Newcastle Airport at Williamtown, 53 km (33 mi) away.

The local bus service is run by Rover Coaches which provide services to Maitland, Newcastle and Morisset and school bus services.

Cessnock Court House, Maitland Road, designed by Government Architect George McRae

Greater Cessnock contains a number of buildings and sites that are on the Register of the National Estate.[20]

In 2021, Cessnock had an amphetamine use/possession rate of 137.1 per 100,000, which is significantly higher than the NSW state average of '90.0 per 100,000.[21]

The suburb of Cessnock had an assault incidents crime rate of 1264.6 per 100,000 people in 2019, which is significantly higher than the NSW state average of 822.3 during the same period.[22]

Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Cessnock.