Coach Charter Sydney & SCBA offers the finest Newcastle City Tours starting from Sydney. Discover Newcastle.
The Aboriginal peoples -
Awabakal and
Worimi clans are recognised as the traditional custodians of the land and waters of the
Newcastle area. The earliest
Aboriginal reference to the naming of
Newcastle is
Muloobinba (Mu-lu-bin-ba) meaning edible Mulubin sea fern.
Following European settlement,
Newcastle became a penal station, a coal town and a steel city. It has a working port, and is steeped in a long heritage of labour and trade unionism.
Today, it is NSW's second largest city and the seventh largest city in Australia.
Newcastle was named after the English city of Newcastle.
Discovered in 1797, Newcastle is the site of the second European settlement in Australia. A city rich in history. A visit to
Newcastle provides countless opportunities to uncover Australia's convict past. Take a dip in the Bogey Hole which was cut into ocean rocks by convict labour in 1819. You will realise the convicts amazing achievement when you see the waves crashing into the pool.
Perched high above
Newcastle Harbour is
Fort Scratchley atop of
Nobbys Island. This was constructed during the Crimean War to protect the city from invasion from the Russians, just as Sydney Harbour's Fort Dennison was built to defend from Russian invasion.
In 1942, at the height of
World War II, the fort returned fire at a
Japanese submarine shelling BHP, the only fort in Australia to have engaged the enemy in a maritime attack.
Newcastle is a river port with a main channel depth of 15.2 metres. The main export is coal and the port is the largest coal port in the World. The majority of the coal is railed to the port from extensive Hunter Valley coalfields.
Fort Scratchley
Foreshore Promenade
Nobbys Beach
Newcastle Ocean Baths
Bogey Hole
Civic Theatre
Newcastle Region Art Gallery
Honeysuckle Markets
King Edward Park
The Obelisk
Christ Church Cathedral
Blackbutt Reserve
At 10.27am on Thursday 28th December 1989 a moderate
earthquake registering 5.6 on the Richter Scale devastated
Newcastle and killed 13 people. The tremor was the first in Australian history known to claim human lives. The extensive damage to buildings and other structures resulted from an underlying thin layer of alluvium allowing the shaking to cause greater damage than that expected for a relatively small magnitude earthquake. The epicentre was located near Boolaroo, a Lake Macquarie suburb 15km from the city centre.