Albury has an urban population of 53,677[4] and is separated from its twin city in Victoria,Wodonga, by the Murray River. Together,the two cities form an urban area with a population of 97,793 in 2021.[5] It is 554 kilometres (344 mi) from the state capital Sydney and 326 kilometres (203 mi) from theVictorian capital Melbourne.
Said to be named after avillage in England, United Kingdom, Albury developed as a major transport link between New South Wales and Victoria and was proclaimed a city in 1946.
TheWiradjuri (Wiradjuri northern dialect pronunciation [wiraːjd̪uːraj]) or Wirraayjuurray people (Wiradjuri southern dialect pronunciation [wiraːjɟuːraj]) people were the first known humans to occupy the area, and are a group of Indigenous Australian Aboriginal people that were united by a common language, strong ties of kinship and survived as skilled hunter–fisher–gatherers in family groups or clans scattered throughout central New South Wales.
In the 21st century, major Wiradjuri groups live inCondobolin,Peak Hill,Narrandera andGriffith. There are significant populations at Wagga Wagga and Leeton and smaller groups at West Wyalong, Parkes, Dubbo, Forbes, Cootamundra, Cowra and Young.
The explorersHume and Hovell arrived at what their maps called 'Crossing Point', but is now known as theMurray River at Albury, on 16 November 1824. They named the river theHume River, after Hume's father, and the next day inscribed a tree by the river bank before continuing their journey south to Westernport in Victoria. In 1830, explorer CaptainCharles Sturt discovered the Hume River downstream at its junction with theMurrumbidgee River. Not realising it was the same river, he named it the Murray River.[6] Both names persisted for some time, Hume falling into disuse eventually in favour of Murray. The Aboriginal name for the river wasMillewa. A crossing place for the Murray became popular close to where Hovell inscribed the tree.[citation needed] In summer it was usually possible to cross the river by foot.
Among the firstsquatters to follow in the steps of the explorers and settle in the district were William Wyse andCharles Ebden.
The first European buildings erected at the crossing place were a provisions store and some small huts. A survey for a town was commissioned in 1838 by Assistant Surveyor Thomas Townsend who mapped out Wodonga Place (the present Wodonga Place) as the western boundary, Hume Street as the northern boundary, Kiewa Street to the east and Nurigong Street to the south, with Townsend Street being the only other north–south road, and Ebden and Hovell Streets being the two other east–west roads. Townsend proposed the settlement be named 'Bungambrawatha ', the Aboriginal name for the area, but when his plan was eventually approved and published in the Government Gazette on 13 April 1839 the name had been changed to Albury.[7][8]
Albury is said to be named after a village inKent, England which it apparently resembled,[9] though that referenced publication seems incorrect since there is no Albury in Kent. More plausible is Albury in adjacent Surrey, straddling the Tillingbourne river and a significant 18th century site of mills and industry.[10]
The historic Albury Court House was completed in 1860
By 1847 the Albury settlement included twopublic houses and a handful of huts, a police barracks and a blacksmiths. A log punt established in 1844 serviced the crossing of theMurray River. Albury Post Office opened on 1 April 1843, closed in 1845, then reopened in the township on 1 February 1847.[11]
In 1851, with the separation of Victoria from New South Wales, and the border falling on the Murray River, Albury found itself a frontier town. With an increase in commerce with Melbourne, the first bridge was built in 1860 to the design of surveyorWilliam Snell Chauncy.[12] Albury at this time became a customs post between the two colonies as New South Wales held a protectionist stance after gaining its constitution in 1856.
Albury was at this time starting to grow substantially withGerman speaking immigrants using the area to grow grapes for wine. By the 1870s a butter factory was established,flour mill,wineries and locally brewedcider and soft drinks were available.[citation needed]
Birds-eye view of Albury, New South Wales, 1881, by Gibbs, Shallard, & Co.
The railway line from Sydney arrived at Albury in 1881 (seeTransport-Rail below). A temporary wooden railway bridge joined the line to the Victorian network in 1883. New South Wales and Victoria had different track gauges until 1962, when the first train ran direct from Sydney to Melbourne. The two states could not initially agree which should be the transfer point so they had an expensive and attractive iron lattice bridge sent from Scotland which accommodated both gauges.
There was a school operating at Albury in 1848, catering for 13 private students. The following year the first National School opened on the corner of Dean and Kiewa Streets, with 73 students enrolled. In 1862 a new school was built in Olive Street on land which is now part of Albury Public School. The city's first mayor, James Fallon, was an innovator of thePublic School, funding a demonstration High School to be built on Kiewa Streets.[citation needed] Albury High School opened in Kiewa Street in 1927.
Overlooking Albury from Monument Hill in the 1920s
TheRoyal Commission on Sites for the Seat of Government of the Commonwealth report of 1903 recommended Albury (along withTumut) as the preferred candidate for thenational capital,[13] though the proposal met staunch opposition from residents.[14] At a public meeting, just one member of parliament voted in favour of Albury –Isaac Isaacs, member forIndi. The lack of support for other places ultimately led to the selection of Canberra as the preferred site.[14][15]
The Uiver being pulled out of the mud after its emergency landing in Albury in 1934
In 1934, aDouglas DC-2 airliner ofKLM (the "Uiver"), a competitor in theMacRobertson Trophy Air Race (also known as the London to Melbourne Air Race), made an emergency night landing at the town's racecourse after becoming lost during severe thunderstorms. After signalling byMorse code A-L-B-U-R-Y to the lost aircrew by using the entire town's public lighting system, the "Uiver" was guided in to land safely. The makeshift runway at the racecourse was illuminated by the headlights of cars belonging to local residents who had responded to a special news bulletin on ABC radio station 2CO. After refuelling the next day, many local volunteers helped pull the stranded aircraft out of the mud and the aircraft was able to take off and continue to Melbourne where it won first prize in the race's handicap category and was second overall.[16][17]
Albury's proximity to Wodonga has spurred several efforts to achieve some kind of municipal governmental union (seeAlbury-Wodonga). In 1973, Albury-Wodonga was selected as the primary focus of theWhitlam federal government's scheme to redirect the uncontrolled growth of Australia's large coastal cities (Sydney and Melbourne in particular) by encouraging decentralisation. Grand plans were made to turn Albury-Wodonga into a major inland city and large areas of the surrounding farmland were compulsorily purchased by the government. Some industries were enticed to move there, and a certain amount of population movement resulted. However, the current urban population is approximately 92,200.[18]
According to the2021 census of Population, there were 53,677 people in the Albury part of the Albury – Wodonga Urban Centre.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people made up 2.9% of the population.
81.2% of people were born in Australia. The next most common countries of birth were England 1.9%, India 1.2%, New Zealand 1.0%, Philippines 0.6% and Bhutan 0.6%.
86.0% of people only spoke English at home. Other languages spoken at home included Nepali 1.1%, Punjabi 0.6%, Mandarin 0.3%, Greek 0.3% and Hindi 0.3%.
The most common responses for religion were No Religion 27.7%, Catholic 25.4% and Anglican 16.7%.[21]
Albury is situated above the river flats of the Murray River, in the foothills of theGreat Dividing Range. At the city's airport, Albury is 164 metres (538 ft) above sea level.[22]
Alpine areas such asMount Bogong are visible from Albury on clear days.
In high summer, the mean daily maximum temperature is 31 °C (88 °F) with low humidity; however, this is subject to substantial daily variation. An average of 17 days with a maximum above 35 °C (95 °F) occur in this summer period, with many cooler days. Mean mid winter maxima are 12 °C (54 °F) with many cloudy days, and is likewise the wettest season. Albury gets approximately 20 days per year featuring minima of below freezing, though the cloud cover tends to limit frost.[25]Sleet may occur during the winter months, but settling snowfalls are very rare, with the last significant snowfall in July 1966. The highest temperature recorded at Albury was 46.1 °C on 4 January 2020, and the lowest temperature was −4.0 °C recorded on 8 August 1994 (both at the Airport AWS station).[23]
Albury's mean annual rainfall is 699.1 millimetres (27.52 in). Rainfall peaks distinctly in the winter months with a high mean of 75.9 mm (2.99 in) in July and August, comparing with the February low of 42.1 mm (1.66 in). Albury has quite a high evaporation rate in summer, giving the environment a relatively arid appearance. The city enjoys a high amount of sunshine, getting around 108 days of clear skies annually (with the majority in summer and early autumn). The sunniest month is January, with 14.6 clear days (and 7.7 cloudy days), and the cloudiest month is July, with 17.5 cloudy days (and 3.9 clear days).[23]
Climate data for Albury (Hume Reservoir, 1922–2022, extremes 1965–2022); 184 m AMSL; 36.10° S, 147.03° E
The airport is a more sheltered site than the reservoir, generally attaining greater maximum temperatures but also lower minima. Rainfall is lower across the board.
Climate data forAlbury Airport AWS (1993–2022); 164 m AMSL; 36.07° S, 146.95° E
Local government is the responsibility of theAlbury City Council, whose area of responsibility has gradually been enlarged to cover new housing estates on the city's fringes. Amanda Duncan-Strelec became Albury's first femaleMayor in 1995, serving for one year. The current mayor of Albury is Kevin Mack.[29]
Albury has a longstanding connection to conservative politics. Following the first convention inCanberra to form theLiberal Party of Australia, delegates, includingSir Robert Menzies, met for a second conference in Albury at Mate's Department Store between 14 and 16 December 1944. The delegates agreed on the structure of the party organisation, adopted a provisional constitution and appointed a federal executive until one could be formally elected.[30][31]
Central Albury comprises the central business district (CBD) and lies between the railway line, the Murray River and Monument Hill. Much commercial activity is concentrated here, with Dean Street forming the axis of the main shopping and office district. A cultural precinct is centred on QEII Square, which includes theAlbury Library Museum, Murray Art Museum Albury (MAMA), Albury Entertainment Centre and Convention Centre, and the Murray Conservatorium. In the same block are the Post Office, Police Station and Courthouse, and St Matthew's Anglican Church (which was rebuilt after being destroyed by fire in 1990). The Albury City Council offices are located on Kiewa Street.
Forrest Hill lies directly north west and covers the saddle between Monument Hill and Nail Can Hill. West over the ridge liesWest Albury. West Albury is primarily a residential area, but it is home to the First World War Memorial (locally known as the Monument), Riverwood Retirement Village, Albury Wodonga Private Hospital (which lies on the corner of Pemberton Street and the Riverina Highway), and the Albury sewage treatment plant. All of West Albury was once wetland and bush. The only remnant of this is Horseshoe Lagoon to the south-west of the suburb, which has been declared a Wildlife Refuge by NSW Parks & Wildlife and incorporated into the Wonga Wetlands. To the north-west of West Albury isPemberton Park.
East Albury lies east of the railway line/freeway from the CBD and houses now cover the eastern hill alongside the Albury Base Hospital, while the flat land directly north of it is covered by parkland, housing and light industry, and aretail park includingHarvey Norman andSpotlight franchises, as well as thecity airport. The Mungabareena Reserve lies on the Murray south of the airport, and is considered an Aboriginal cultural site of some significance. Mungabareena means "place of plenty talk" in theWiradjuri language.[32]
South Albury is a mix of residential and industrial areas, with the floodplains south of the railway line and freeway still used for farming and grazing. Flood mitigation works in the 1990s have dramatically reduced the risk of flooding in this area.
North Albury was covered by orchards and vineyards in the first half of the 20th century, and a swamp existed where James Fallon High School now stands. After the World War II, housing development in the area increased and Waugh Road was extended from David Street to the "Five Ways" intersection at Union Road, which ascribes the border between North Albury andLavington. The locality ofGlenroy is adjacent to North Albury, west of the Bungambrawartha Creek, and housing was developed here in the 1970s, including a significantHousing Commission public housing estate.
Lavington is the largest suburb of Albury, and the only suburb which has its own postcode (2641, as opposed to 2640 for the balance of Albury). The suburb was originally named Black Range in the 1850s and 1860s, before being renamed Lavington in 1910.[33] Originally within the boundaries of Hume Shire, it was absorbed into the City of AlburyLocal Government Area in the 1950s. Housing and commercial development has continued from that point until this day. Prior to 2007, theHume Highway – passed north-east through the suburb, with Urana Road passing north-west through the suburb from the "Five Ways" road junction. In 2007, an internal bypass of the Hume Freeway was opened,[34] with the former name of the Hume Highway section officially reverting to the commonly used "Wagga Road". The suburb of Lavington also includes the localities of Springdale Heights, Hamilton Valley and Norris Park. Albury's lawn cemetery and crematorium lies at the western end of Union Road.
Thurgoona, to the east of Lavington, was established as a new residential suburb by theAlbury Wodonga Development Corporation in the 1970s. In the 1990s a new campus ofCharles Sturt University was established here, as was an office of the Murray Darling Freshwater Research Centre. A major golf club (Thurgoona Country Club Resort) is also situated in this suburb.[35]
Further outlying localities includeSplitters Creek – a small residential/farming community to the west, Ettamogah (home of theEttamogah Pub),Bowna andTable Top to the north, andWirlinga andLake Hume village to the east.Howlong (20 km west) andJindera (16 km north) are the closest towns outside the Albury city area, and act as commuter dormitories as well as service centres for the local rural industries.
Albury's houses and buildings are numbered using a special system introduced in 1920. The centre of the city, which is defined as the intersection of Dean and Olive Streets, is numbered 500, and all other houses are numbered depending on whether they are north, south, east or west of the centre.[36]
Lake Hume is situated on the Murray River 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) upstream of Albury. The Hume Dam (colloquially termed theWeir locally) wall construction took 17 years, from 1919 to 1936. A hydro-electric power plant supplies 60 MW of power to the state grid. When full, the lake covers 80 square kilometres (31 sq mi).
Lake Hume from the air in Summer
The lake was created forirrigation purposes and has caused significant changes to the flow patterns and ecology of the Murray River. Before the construction of the Hume Weir, flows in normal (non-drought) years were low in summer and autumn (though still significant overall), rising in winter due to seasonal rainfall and reaching a flood-peak in late spring due to snow-melt in the Murray and its tributaries' alpine headwaters. The flow is now effectively reversed, with low flows in winter and sustained, relatively high flows in late spring, summer and early autumn to meet irrigation demands, although the spring flood peak has been virtually eliminated. The water released from the base of the Hume Weir is unnaturally cold, at least 10 °C (18 °F) colder than it naturally should be.[37] This flow reversal, temperature depression, and removal of the spring flood peak, has led to the drying out and loss of many billabongs and has harmed the populations of native fish of the Murray River such as the iconicMurray Cod.[38][39]
Situated on theHume Highway, Albury is a major transit point for interstate commerce. In March 2007, Albury city centre was bypassed by a new section of theHume Freeway. The city centre bypass includes the new Spirit of Progress Bridge over the Murray River, and cost $518 million, the most expensive road project built in rural Australia at that time.[42]
Creation of the lake resulting from construction of the Hume Dam from 1915 onward necessitated a 30 km deviation of the Hume Highway. The Highway originally ran east out of Albury, along what is now the Riverina Highway, then turned north through Thurgoona via today’s Table Top Rd then Old Sydney Road, then crossed Bowna Creek to follow Plunkett Rd to Bowna. The deviation, opened in 1933, follows the first 9 km of the Wagga Road, then crossed the railway and ran to Bells Road before turning east then southeast to Bowna. Most of this route, although now duplicated, remains as part of the Hume Highway, other than the 2009 Yellow Creek deviation.
In 1888, the Smollett Street wrought iron arch bridge was constructed over Bungambrawatha Creek. Smollet Street was extended westward through the botanical gardens to give direct access fromAlbury railway station to Howlong Road by a straight street. The bridge is near the botanic gardens and the local swimming pool. The bridge is a rare example of a metal arch bridge in New South Wales, and is the oldest of only two such bridges in New South Wales, the other being theSydney Harbour Bridge.[43]
Albury railway station is on the main Sydney-Melbourne railway line. Originally, New South Wales and Victoria had differenttrack gauges, which meant that all travellers in either direction had to change trains at Albury. To accommodate this, a very longrailway platform was needed; the 450-metre (1,480 ft) long covered platform is one of the longest in Australia.[44] The broad gauge section of track between Seymour and Albury has now been converted to standard gauge; there is no longer abreak-of-gauge at Albury station. The station is served by a three dailyV/Line train services fromMelbourne (terminating at Albury) and theNSW TrainLink Melbourne-SydneyXPT service, which runs twice daily in each direction.In 1873, the 5-foot-3-inch (1.60 m)broad gauge railway line from Melbourne reached the township of Belvoir/Wodonga. In 1881, the New South Wales 4-foot-8.5-inch (1.435 m)standard gauge railway line reached Albury, with a railway bridge joining the two colonies in 1883. Albury became the stop over, where passengers on the Melbourne-Sydney journey changed trains until 1962, when a standard gauge track was opened between the two capitals. After World War II, in an attempt to overcome the difference in gauges and speed up traffic, abogie exchange device lifted freight wagons and carriages allowing workers to refit rolling stock with different gauged wheel-sets.
The break of railway gauge at Albury was a major impediment to Australia's war effort and infrastructure during both World Wars, as every soldier, every item of equipment, and all supplies had to be off-loaded from the broad gauge and reloaded onto a standard gauge railway wagon on the opposite side of the platform. In his bookTramps Abroad, writerMark Twain in 1895 wrote of the break of gauge at Albury and changing trains: ""Now comes a singular thing, the oddest thing, the strangest thing, the most unaccountable marvel that Australia can show. At the frontier between NSW and Victoria our multitude of passengers were routed out of their snug beds by lantern light in the morning in the biting cold to change cars. Think of the paralysis of intellect that gave that idea birth, imagine the boulder it emerged from, on some petrified legislator's shoulders."[45]
During World War II military armouries and warehouses were established in the vicinity of Albury at Bonegilla, Wirlinga and Bandiana. Similar stores were also established atTocumwal andOaklands. The conversion of the broad gauge track to a second standard gauge track, betweenSeymour and Albury, was substantially completed in 2011. The railway station and its associated yards are listed on both theAustralian National Heritage List and theNew South Wales State Heritage Register.[46][47]
Albury Airport, owned and operated by theCity of Albury, is the second busiest regional airport in New South Wales with around 280,000 passenger movements per year. The airport, 4 kilometres (2.5 mi) east of the city centre, has scheduled daily flights toSydney,Melbourne andBrisbane through commercial carriers. The road leading from Albury Airport to the city was renamed Borella Road in 1979, in honour ofVictoria Cross recipientAlbert Chalmers Borella, who was buried at Albury.[48]
Local public transport is provided exclusively by private bus operators, Martin's Albury andDysons who run day time bus services. The overwhelming majority of local transport is by private car, however traffic is generally moderate. The opening of the Hume Freeway bypass on 4 March 2007,[49] has greatly eased previous traffic congestion on the Lincoln Causeway, allowing vastly better flow between Albury and Wodonga.
There is a good network of bicycle paths in the city, including one to the outlying suburb of Thurgoona and across the state border to Wodonga. A new program has built many more bike tracks, including one from the riverside parks to Wonga Wetlands.[50]
Albury serves as an administrative centre for the agricultural communities around the area, and the city is the home of theNorske Skog newsprint paper mill which processes the pine logs planted in the mountains to the east, a major processing centre of theAustralian Taxation Office, and many other smaller secondary industries. Other large employers are: The Commercial Club Albury andHume Bank.
The Albury Allied Flour Mill
One of Albury's major employers was DSI Holdings. Originally the Kaitlers Road facility was opened as an expansion forBorg-Warner in 1971, manufacturing gearboxes for various manufacturers includingFord,Holden and evenMaserati. At its peak in 1982 it employed 1251 people. The ownership of the plant changed several times – it was sold in 1987 toNylex. It was sold again in 2002 to ION Ltd but the company collapsed in 2004 with debt to creditors of $550 million. Due to a failed deal with Holden the workforce was reduced to 750 people. Chinese car manufacturerGeely Group then purchased the bankrupt DSI company for $48 million in March 2009 and the plant then exported automatic transmissions to Geely,Ssangyong andMahindra. In 2014 DSI Holdings closed the Lavington factory resulting in the loss of the remaining 142 jobs.[51]
The Australian pizza chainEagle Boys was founded in Albury but ceased operations in 2017 when it was purchased by Pizza Hut.
The region surrounding Albury provides a variety of tourist attractions, including the wine region centred onRutherglen, the historic goldfield towns ofBeechworth andYackandandah, boating, fishing and canoe hire on the many rivers and lakes, includingLake Hume, the forests and mountains of theGreat Dividing Range and slightly further afield the snowfieldsFalls Creek andMount Hotham.
Within the city of Albury itself, Monument Hill, at the western end of the CBD is the location of the city's distinctive First World War Memorial and provides a good view of the city. Wonga Wetlands, 2.5 kilometres (1.6 mi) west of the city and adjacent to the River Murray is a key feature of Albury's use of treated wastewater and consists of a series of lagoons and billabongs. Wonga Wetlands boasts more than 150 species of birdlife and is home to the Aquatic Environment Education Centre.
Albury is home to one of the campuses ofCharles Sturt University. The original Albury campus was located in the northern part of the CBD between Kiewa and David streets. Charles Sturt University relocated to a new purpose-built campus at Thurgoona in 2009. CSU offers courses in Arts, Business, Education, Medicine and Science.
TheAlbury-Wodonga campus ofLa Trobe University is also a large and growing educational institution with several thousand undergraduates and postgraduates in its two colleges. Degrees in Business, Arts, Science, Bioscience, Nursing, and various Allied Health disciplines, are available.
Albury Library Museum
Riverina Institute ofTAFE operates a campus in Albury. There is also a campus of theUNSW Rural Clinical School of Medicine adjacent to the Albury Base Hospital.
Regent Cinemas on Dean Street have operated since 1929
HotHouse Theatre is Albury's only professional theatre company, previously known as the Murray River Performance Group which formed in 1979. It spawnedThe Flying Fruit Fly Circus in 1979, and these days conducts many productions through theHotHouse Theatre located on Gateway Island between Albury and Wodonga, though still in Victoria rather than New South Wales.
Albury is home to a large number of amateur theatre companies presenting productions ranging from plays in intimate settings to major musicals in the Albury Entertainment Centre and Shakespeare and other events in the Albury Botanic Gardens. The oldest theatre company in Albury is the Albury Wodonga Theatre Company and its associated youth theatre company BYTESized Productions often presenting shows in its small theatre in Olive St, South Albury . Other companies and organisations producing theatre in Albury Wodonga are Livid Productions, The Other Theatre Company, Revolution Theatre, and Centre Stage Event Company.
The Murray Conservatorium of Music
Jazz Albury Wodonga also regularly hosts national and international artists at the Jazz Basement which is located on Gateway Island.
Touring productions and major music acts often perform at the Albury Entertainment Centre.[54] Regent Cinemas on Dean Street have operated since 1929.[citation needed]
Since 2007, the city has hosted the annualAlbury City Short Story Award, curated by the Write Around the Murray Writers' Festival.[55]
In 2015Murray Art Museum Albury (MAMA) was opened, formerly known as Albury Regional Arts Centre. The art museum has 10 galleries with double the space of the former art centre. Canvas Eatery is also attached to MAMA, facing onto Queen Elizabeth II Square.[56]
In 2003, a sister city relationship withNanping in north westernFujianprovince, China, was formalised.[57]
Albury serves as a regional media centre. A daily tabloid owned by Nine Entertainment, TheBorder Mail, is printed in, and has offices in, Wodonga.
There was a free monthly independent community newspaper, The Situation, which launched in Albury–Wodonga in 2013. Later it expanded into other Victorian communities in the north and north-east such asBenalla,Echuca–Moama,Seymour,Shepparton andWangaratta. It shut down in 2019.[citation needed]
Of the three main commercial networks,Seven airs a half-hour localnews bulletin at 6 pm each weeknight, produced from a newsroom in the city but broadcast from studios inCanberra.[58]
WIN Television broadcasts a half-hour state-wide regionalWIN News bulletin each weeknight at 5:30 pm, produced from studios inWollongong. Previously a local edition was produced by WIN until the closure of its Albury newsroom in June 2019.[59][60]
On 5 May 2011, analogue television transmissions ceased in most areas of regional Victoria and some border regions including Albury–Wodonga.[61] All local free-to-air television services are now broadcasting in digital transmission only. This was done as part of the Federal Government's plan forDigital terrestrial television in Australia where all analogue transmission systems are gradually turned off and replaced with modernDVB-T transmission systems.
There are three commercial radio stations in Albury –2AY on 1494 AM,Triple M The Border on 105.7 FM andHit The Border on 104.9 FM. Hit 104.9 The Border's south eastern network is programmed out of the Albury/Wodonga Hub, going to centres in the Australian Capital Territory, New South Wales, Victoria, Tasmania and South Australia. Broadcasting out of the same building is Triple M 105.7 The Border, which is also networked to local stations around the Australian Capital Territory, New South Wales, Victoria, Tasmania and South Australia.
Albury/Wodonga is one radio market, thus advertisements are directed to both sides of the border. The Albury/Wodonga market underwent significant change in 2005 whenMacquarie Southern Cross Media bought 105.7 The River fromRG Capital, and 2AY and Star FM fromDMG Radio Australia. Due to cross-media ownership laws preventing the ownership of more than two stations in one market, Macquarie was required to sell one of these stations and in September 2005 sold 2AY to theAce Radio network. 2AY takes much of its daytime and evening programming from3AW in Melbourne. TheABC produces breakfast and morning radio programs through its local radio network, from the studios ofABC Goulburn Murray, 106.5 FM, located in Wodonga. Most of the rest its programming content is delivered from Melbourne. The ABC also has local transmitters forABC Radio National, 990 AM;ABC News Radio, 100.9 FM;ABC Classic, 104.1 FM andTriple J, 103.3 FM
There is also a community radio station known as 2REM 107.3 FM. The Albury Wodonga Community Radio station broadcasts a large number of speciality programs including those for the retiree, racing enthusiast, ethnic and Aboriginal communities and a range of musical styles including underground and independent artists from 8:00 pm onwards. 2GHR 96.7 FM is another community radio station that plays classic hits. Oak 101.3 FM (from Wangaratta) can be heard clearly across the region.KIX 801 AM (on the narrowcast band) plays country music.Sky Radio is a sports and racing station which can be heard on 99.3 FM
In addition, the area is serviced bySBS Radio andNiche Radio, which provide national multicutural stations. SBS Radio 1 is available on 1701 AM, SBS Radio 2 is available on 89.5 FM, while Niche Radio broadcasts on 87.6 FM.2APH 101.7 FM is a reading for the print handicapped station.TAFE FM isWodonga's broadcasting and training station on 88.4 that also serves the area. Albury-Wodonga Christian Broadcasters transmits as 98.5 The Light.[62] Other religious stations include Faith FM which broadcasts on 88.0[63] and Vision Christian Radio that airs on 1611 AM.[64] The dance music stationRaw FM airs on 107.9
Football is also a very popular code with more than 2,500 players registered from twelve local clubs (six from Albury) competing in theAlbury Wodonga Football Association. Clubs have teams from U10s through to Senior Men and Women and play on Sundays with MiniRoos providing Football for ages 4–12 on Saturdays. Since 2016,Murray United Football Club, a team encompassing Albury, Wodonga and the wider region, has been competing in theNational Premier Leagues Victoria, the highest level of Football in the area. On 9 February 2014,Melbourne City (then known as Melbourne Heart) triumphed 2–1 againstPerth Glory in scorching conditions, where the temperature got as high as 41 °C, at theLavington Sports Ground.
Albury has a strongrugby league community, with three senior teams based in the city, theAlbury Thunder, Border Bears and CSU Mud Dogs. The Thunder compete in the strong,Riverina-basedGroup 9 Rugby League competition, while the Bears and Mud Dogs compete in theGoulburn Murray Rugby League run under the banner of theVictorian Rugby League. Albury Thunder Juniors is one of the largest junior rugby league clubs outside of metropolitan areas, offering rugby league and league tag to the Border's young men and women from 5 years to 16 years.[66] Albury has produced many great rugby league players, with the two most famous exports being former Canberra and Penrith flyerAdrian Purtell andAustralian fullbackDylan Edwards.
The Albury-Wodonga Steamers are the localrugby union club, playing in the Southern Inland Rugby Union competition. The Steamers have produced several players for theAustralian Rugby Union National Talent Squad.
The Albury Gold Cup horse race is the major autumn event for the district. In 2005, it attracted a record crowd in excess of 18,600 racegoers.[67]
Albury has lately become a stronghold of junior hockey, boasting one of the few synthetic fields in the area. The town also has the Albury Grass Tennis Courts.Supercars Championship teamBrad Jones Racing is based in Albury, making it the only team in the championship to have its workshop in New South Wales.
Albury is the birthplace of controversial former tennis playerMargaret Court, winner of 62 Women's Grand Slam titles including eleven Australian titles, four Grand Slam singles titles played in one year (1970), four mixed doubles titles with Ken Fletcher in 1963 and many other titles around the world.WNBA MVP winnerLauren Jackson,NRL PlayerAdrian Purtell, andtest cricketerSteve Rixon are among other champion sports people from the area.
Albury's most notorious crime is also one of Australia's most famous, the 'Pyjama Girl Murder' in 1934. Other notable crimes include the murders of Bronwynne Richardson who was abducted on Smollett Street on 12 October 1973. Her body was found in Horseshoe Lagoon two days later. The case has never been solved despite a coronial inquest in 2011 which resulted in an arrest. In another case, on 23 March 1996, Kim Meredith was murdered in Macauley Street while walking from Sodens Hotel to the Termo Hotel. A memorial to Kim was later placed in Queen Elizabeth II Square by the citizens of Albury.[68]
^NSW Cold Water Pollution Interagency Group (2012)Cold Water Pollution Strategy inNSW – report on the implementation of stage one, NSW Department of Primary Industries, a division of NSWDepartment of Trade and Investment, Regional Infrastructure and Services, Sydney, New South Wales,ISBN9781742563107
^Lugg, A. & Copeland, C. (2014). "Review of cold water pollution in the Murray–Darling Basin and the impacts on fish communities".Ecological Management and Restoration.15 (1):71–79.Bibcode:2014EcoMR..15...71L.doi:10.1111/emr.12074.
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