Sandringham
Sandringham formed part of the early estates in the parish of Moorabbin purchased by Josiah Holloway in 1852. Named Gipsy Village, lots were sold between 1852 and 1854 notwithstanding little settlement taking place at the time.[3] Bluff Town Post Office opened on 1 April 1868, closed in 1871, reopened in 1873 and was renamed Sandringham in 1887.[4]
Sandringham is one of Melbourne’s bayside suburbs, located beside Port Phillip at the end of the Sandringham railway line. Sandringham is a popular location for beachgoers, sightseers, walkers, picnickers, photographers, cyclists and shoppers. It has a quaint village atmosphere with a number of cafes, coffee shops and restaurants (Greek, Chinese, Thai, Vietnamese, Indian, Japanese), take-away food outlets, gourmet food outlets, clothing stores, boutique homewares, hairdressers, professional offices, multi-story apartments, real estate agents, bakeries, a modern bookshop, a news agency, Coles supermarket, a health food store, a chemist, an award-winning library,[5] a historical society, a large modern police station, a medical centre, a Life Saving club, a video store, a hardware store, a wine store, a bank, a large modern hotel (The Sandy) with a balcony overlooking the bay, a bike track and a coastal walking track. The trip by train to and from Melbourne city takes 27 minutes. Buses travel between the Sandringham railway station and St Kilda, Westfield’s Southland, Chadstone shopping centre and other places. The Sandringham Yacht Club is host to a number of Sydney to Hobart yacht race winners. The main streets are home to some elegant old buildings, including the railway station. In the 2011 census the most common ancestries in Sandringham were English 29.3%, Australian 25.8%, Irish 9.7%, Scottish 9.3% and German 3.1%.[6]
Postcode 3191
Population 10,241
From CBD 16km
Sandringham Primary School, that opened in 1855, is one of the oldest schools in Victoria.
Sandringham College – a State secondary college – has two campuses in east Sandringham,[7] one on Bluff Road (Years 7–9) and one on Holloway Road (Years 10–12).[8]
Private schools in the area include Firbank Girls’ Grammar School junior school (known as Sandringham House) and Sacred Heart Parish School. Another school in the area is Sandringham East Primary, which celebrated its 80th anniversary in 2011. Former Mayor Brighton Mayor and Brighton Icebergs Founder John Locco once taught at Sandringham East Primary. Locco once locked a class he was teaching in at the school for some wrongdoing.[9] The Melbourne International School of Japanese, a part-time Japanese education programme, once held its classes at Sandringham East Primary.[10]
This information was sourced from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sandringham,_Victoria