place

Golden Gully

BendigoTowns in Victoria (state)Use Australian English from August 2019Victoria (state) geography stubs

Golden Gully is a suburb in the City of Greater Bendigo.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Golden Gully (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Golden Gully
Woodward Road, Bendigo Golden Gully (Golden Gully)

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Golden GullyContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N -36.791666666667 ° E 144.265 °
placeShow on map

Address

Woodward Road

Woodward Road
3550 Bendigo, Golden Gully (Golden Gully)
Victoria, Australia
mapOpen on Google Maps

Share experience

Nearby Places

Golden Square Secondary College

Golden Square High School in the city of Bendigo in the state of Victoria, Australia, was established in temporary accommodation at Camp Hill Primary School in central Bendigo in 1960. With the completion of the new school's buildings, it moved to 50 MacDougall Road in the Bendigo suburb of Golden Square in 1962, providing for forms 1 to 6, now known as years 7 to 12. In 1978 it became a 7–10 school and was one of the original feeder schools to Bendigo Senior High School. In 1986, a Hearing Impaired Unit was established and in 1990 it underwent a name change to become Golden Square Secondary College. The college catered for students from a range of backgrounds, drawn from around 30 urban and rural primary schools. Former students of the school include Bendigo West MP Bob Cameron; AFL and Richmond footballer Wayne Campbell; VFL and Carlton footballer Rod Ashman; First Lady of East Timor Kirsty Sword Gusmão; Australian Armed Forces Brigadier James Simpson; Software Developer Brendan Sheehan (student 2006 to 2008); journalist Adrian Lowe of the Melbourne daily newspaper The Age; Anglican Bishop of Bendigo Andrew Curnow (2003–2017); water skiing champion Kaye Thurlow; and Pete Miller, inventor of the "Bed Beer". The Golden Square Secondary College campus closed on 28 November 2008. It merged with Kangaroo Flat and Flora Hill secondary colleges as part of the implementation of the Bendigo Education Plan. Its buildings were demolished. In 2022 it was announced by the Victorian State Government that the site would be officially handed over to the Dja Dja Wurrung Clans Aboriginal Corporation to begin building the Dja Dja Wurrung Corporate and Community Centre.