The town's main beach is Austinmer Beach, a patrolled surf beach and a popular tourist beach. A second smaller and unpatrolled beach lies directly to the north of Austinmer beach. It is called Little Austinmer Beach, known locally as 'dog beach', as it is a popular off-leash zone for dog walking.
The main road through the town is Lawrence Hargrave Drive, which connects with the Princes Highway at Bulli Pass. Moore Street connects Austinmer railway station to Lawrence Hargrave Drive, and, along with a short stretch along Lawrence Hargrave Drive, constitutes Austinmer's commercial presence, as well as a police station, school, churches, and veterinary clinic.
The Headland Hotel to the north of Austinmer Beach was featured in the 2005 to 2006 television series headLand.
By the 1860s, the area was simply called "North Bulli". The name was later changed to Austinmere (later dropping the final "e" and pronounced "mer", the French word for "sea"; Austin (the original mine owner/manager) by the sea) with the opening of the North Illawarra Coal Company's mine around 1887.[2] Some have suggested that the area was originally called Sidmouth, named after the Devonshire birthplace of Robert Marsh Westmacott who owned land that now includes Austinmer.
It turns out that a future owner, one Biddulph Henning, named it Sidmouth after where he had been staying in 1891 just prior to his return to Australia and subsequent purchasing of the land in Austinmer.[citation needed] As the historian Joseph Davis explained, the name "Sidmouth" is unrecorded prior to Henning's purchase of the property.[citation needed]
Austinmer was the site of the Hicks Point coal jetty[3] from 1886 to 1915, when it was destroyed by fire.[4] Iron dowel pins that secured the timber uprights of the wharf to the bedrock and an iron mooring ring set into in the rock are all that remain of it today.[5]
Demographics
In the 2021 Census, there were 2,725 people in Austinmer. 81.2% of people were born in Australia. The next most common country of birth was England at 5.8%. 93.7% of people only spoke English at home. The most common responses for religion were No Religion 53.2%, Catholic 18.6% and Anglican 13.2%.[1]
Glastonbury Gardens
Established in 1965, the park is a historical part of Austinmer as it was the site for colliery dam. Adjacent to the Lawrence Hargrave Drive, the public park consists of Sabal palms, Norfolk Island Pines (Araucaria heterophylla) and Canary Island Date PalmPhoenix canariensis. It was dedicated to Reg Glastonbury, the Wollongong City Council City Engineer from 1947 to 1962 and was named after him.[6]
Schools
Austinmer Public School
Churches
All Saints Anglican Church
Notable people
Notable people from or who have lived in Austinmer include: