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Breakfast Point, New South Wales

City of Canada BaySuburbs of SydneyUse Australian English from August 2019
Breakfast Point Park
Breakfast Point Park

Breakfast Point is a suburb in the Inner West of Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. Breakfast Point is located 16 kilometres west of the Sydney central business district. It is in the local government area of the City of Canada Bay. People from Breakfast Point are colloquially called Breakfastpointers.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Breakfast Point, New South Wales (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Breakfast Point, New South Wales
Admiralty Drive, Sydney Breakfast Point

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Breakfast Point, New South WalesContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N -33.844 ° E 151.1129 °
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Address

Admiralty Drive
2137 Sydney, Breakfast Point
New South Wales, Australia
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Breakfast Point Park
Breakfast Point Park
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Nearby Places

Yaralla Estate
Yaralla Estate

The Yaralla Estate, also known as the Dame Eadith Walker Estate and now home to the Dame Eadith Walker Hospital, is a heritage-listed hospital at The Drive, Concord West, City of Canada Bay in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. Yaralla was the home of Eadith Walker and her father Thomas. The estate is historically significant as one of the last large nineteenth-century estates remaining in metropolitan Sydney. In the 1860s, Thomas Walker commissioned the architect Edmund Blacket to design a home on the shores of the Parramatta River. This Victorian Italianate mansion became the Walker family home. From 1893 to 1899, Eadith Walker built extensions that were designed by the architect John Sulman. A stables and coach house complex were also designed by Sulman at the same time. The entire estate is listed on the New South Wales State Heritage Register and the (now defunct) Register of the National Estate.Dame Eadith Walker , who never married, died at Yaralla in 1937 after a long career devoting her life to the Australian Red Cross and a wide range of other philanthropic organisations. Her estate was disposed of in accordance with the terms of her father's will, brought about by the Thomas Walker Trusts Act (1939), a portion of which was set aside to found the Dame Eadith Walker Convalescent Hospital and income from the remainder went to support the hospital, the Thomas Walker hospital and the Yaralla cottages built by Dame Eadith for elderly people in need.