Bagdad is a small town north of Hobart, Tasmania. It is in the Southern Midlands Council.

In the days of the horse and buggy, Bagdad was an important rest area and horse-changing place for those continuing their journey up Constitution Hill. It is now an area of orchards and small mixed farms and a commuter settlement.

History

The town was named by the explorer Hugh Germain, a private in the Royal Marines. He was said by James Backhouse in his book "A Narrative of a Visit to the Australian Colonies", published in 1901, to carry two books in his saddlebags while traveling: the Bible and the Arabian Nights, which he used as inspiration when he named places.

Bagdad Post Office opened on 1 December 1878.

A railway line connected the town with Hobart from 1891 until 1947.

In April 2003, during the early part of the Iraq war, the town's website was bombarded by confused internet users from around the world trying to contact Iraqis.

Demographics

The 2021 Census by the Australian Bureau of Statistics counted 1482 people in Bagdad on census night. Of these, 51.5% were male and 48.5% were female.