Blackheath, New South Wales

Blackheath (elevation 1065 metres) is a small town in New South Wales located near the top of the Blue Mountains, and also part of the City of the Blue Mountains, just west of Sydney, Australia. It was named Blackheath in 1815 by Governor Lachlan Macquarie after the colour of the native shrubbery in the area. Macquarie recorded in his journal: "This place having a black wild appearance I have this day named it Black-Heath." It also sometimes taken as reference to the frequently bleak weather. The population of Blackheath is around 3,000, a large number of which are weekday residents of Sydney. Today, Blackheath does not look "black" at all. The town is the highest on the Great Western Highway and occasionally receives snowfalls. In September, daffodils are in bloom and in October-November many of Rhododendrons are on display.

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
long integer
salim ali
99 flake
strategic rocket forces
clockwise
uss tunny (ss 282)
uss tunny (ssn 682)
uss tunny
santiago carrillo
little roger and the goosebumps
new math
dietrich eckart
jim mcdermott
segue
yumjaagiyn tsedenbal
bmx bandits
liberality and prodigality
jennicam
grim the collier of croydon
multiply accumulate
hatton garden
fused multiply add
list of movie awards
cessna 170
ieee 754r
chaldean
danelectro
sergio oliva
cyril smith
brunswick rifle
irrlicht
polar cod
rhn mountains
vinnie taylor
american record corporation
dude, where's my country?
standing order
vladimir dzhanibekov
mccarthy
list of biosphere reserves in germany
tom brown (satirist)
prophets of islam
michael murphey
vogelsberg mountains