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Pocket Cash
Cash Loan
Pocket Cash
Pocket Cash
Suite 12/10-12 Flushcombe RdBlacktown New South Wales 2148Australia
+61-1300-902-276
Business Description
Pocket Cash is a reliable lender-finder company that gives you access to unique loan lenders. We offer you a chance to find a lender that can meet your unique loan requirements and get you all the help you need. All our services are provided online, meaning you can easily access them anywhere and anytime. We help you find lenders for personal loans, quick cash loans, bond loans, and travel loans. Furthermore, we always simplify the process for our clients by ensuring they only submit one application instead of multiple applications to different lenders. If you find yourself in urgent need of quick cash, you can trust us to meet your needs within the shortest time possible.
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About Blacktown
Blacktown is a city in the City of Blacktown local government area, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. Blacktown is located 34 km (21 mi) west of the Sydney central business district. It is one of the most multicultural places within Greater Sydney. == History == Prior to the arrival of the First Fleet in 1788, the area of today's Blacktown was inhabited by different groups of the Darug people including the Warmuli, based around what is now Prospect, and their neighbours the Gomerigal from the South Creek area and the Wawarawarry from the Eastern Creek area. It is estimated that fifty to ninety percent of the Darug died of smallpox and other introduced diseases within a few years of the British arrival. Governor Arthur Phillip began granting land in the area to white settlers in 1791. In 1819 Governor Lachlan Macquarie granted land to two indigenous men, Colebee and Nurragingy as payment for their service to The Crown, for assisting Cox with the road over the Blue Mountains and in dealing with Aboriginal issues.In 1823, the Native Institution (a school for Aboriginal children) was moved from Parramatta to the site where Richmond Road meets Rooty Hill Road North (this intersection is now in the suburbs of Oakhurst and Glendenning) which was named "The Blacks Town". The institution was then known as Black Town Native Institute and it was synonymous with the stolen generation. Although the institution closed in 1833, the road heading out to the Institute became known as the Black Town Road. In 1860 the Railway Department gave the name of Black Town Road Station to the railway station at the junction of the railway and the Black Town Road, with the name shortening to Blacktown by 1862.The arrival of the railway led to the formation of a town around the station.