| |
The first land
grants to free settlers in NSW. were made in the Strathfield Municipality in
1793 in response to Governor Philip’s request for the introduction of ‘practical
farmers’ to the settlement. These settlers ( who arrived on the ship Bellona in
January, 1793) were described in the Secretary of State’s Despatch of July 14th,
1792, as “Thomas Rose, aged 40, farmer from Blandford, his wife, Mrs. Jane Rose,
and their children, Thomas, Mary, Joshua and Richard, also Elizabeth Fish, aged
18, related to the family.”
Other members of the group were “Edward Powell, aged 30, farmer and fisherman
from Lancaster, Thomas Webb (and his wife) gardener, Joseph Webb, aged 18,
nephew of Thomas Webb, Frederick Meredith, baker, and Walter Brodie,
blacksmith”. Meredith, Thomas Webb and Powell had already visited Sydney as
ordinary seamen.
An area ‘at the upper end of the harbour above the flats and to the South Side’
having been selected by the settlers, their different allotments were surveyed
and marked out and early in the month they took possession of their land, giving
the name “Liberty Plains” to the district in which their farms were situated.’
Powell and Thomas Webb
first received 80 acres each, Meredith and J. Webb, 60 acres each and Rose and
his family, 120 acres. All settlers had their passages paid and received on landing an assortment of
tools and implements from public stores, 2 years provisions, 1 year of clothing,
and the services of convicts assigned to them. Joseph Webb named his grant
“Lutner Farm”, Rose “Hunter’s Hut”, Meredith “Charlotte Farm”, Thomas Webb
“Webb’s Endeavour” and Powell “Dorset Green”.
The settlement at Liberty Plains for agricultural purposes was immediately
followed by a progressive settlement of the surrounding area — it had been
Grose’s wish to have a settlement midway between Sydney and Parramatta for the
“convenience and safety of the traveling public”.
Hence, much of the land immediately to the North (Concord) and North West
(Abbatoirs and its environs) was allotted to the non-commissioned officers and
privates of the NSW. Corps (many of whom disposed of their 25 acre lots as
soon as granted).
With the assistance of convict labour the ‘Liberty Plains’ settlers cleared and
cultivated the land, but the productive capacity of the land becoming soon
exhausted under cropping, continuous clearing of the land was found necessary
and this costly process appeared to have reduced the farmers to a state of
poverty. Such was their plight that a Committee of Enquiry under Samuel Marsden
and Surgeon Arndell was set up to report and as a result it was decided to
increase the holdings of the settlers in 1798 — hence an additional 70 acres was
granted to Rose and his sons, and 60 acres fronting Parramatta Road and Homebush
Bay to Meredith.
So unproductive was the
land that most settlers, whilst retaining an interest in their farms, obtained
employment elsewhere. e.g. Powell entered the Public Service as a constable at
the Hawkesbury River. Mrs. Thomas Webb, whose
husband had died in 1795, abandoned her right to her husband’s land and this,
together with Powell’s grant ultimately became the property of Simeon Lord whose
name appears on the official maps as grantee of the combined areas of 160 acres.
Meanwhile, Captain Thomas
Rowley, having been granted an area of 260 acres in 1799, adjoining the other
grants, increased his Liberty Plains property in 1803 by adding the grant of
Joseph Webb and the end of Rose’s 120 acres.
Following the first unsuccessful farming attempts, the area remained almost in a
state of neglect until the return of Powell in 1807 to his original grants,
which he again took up, in addition to the adjoining 80 acres formerly held by
Thomas Webb.
Shortly afterwards,
Powell was granted an additional 19 acres with frontage to the Parramatta Road
on the North and (the now) Coventry Road on the West. Anticipating the
patronage of the traveling public, Powell erected a building on the Parramatta
Road which he called the “Halfway House” and having obtained a liquor licence,
established a hotel and store.
By his death in 1814, Powell had acquired 500 acres — that is all of the land
granted to the free settlers on the left bank of Powell’s Creek. The entire property
having been left to his son, Edward Powell, and daughter, Mary, it was first
rented out and then purchased in 1823 by James Underwood (the original grantee’s
son-in-law).
Meanwhile, further grants
had been made to the north west and south of the original grants: 920 acres to
Darcy Wentworth in an area north of Parramatta Road and running from Powell’s
Creek to Haslam’s Creek and to the Parramatta River upon which Wentworth chose
to erect his homestead named “The Homebush Estate”: and 570 acres in 1808 to
James Wilshire, bounded on the south by the Cooks River (between the now
Chalmers Road and the Boulevarde and Coronation Parade) which he called
‘Wilshire’s Farm’. This land was later acquired by Samuel Terry in 1824 and
named the ‘Redmire Estate’ after Terry’s birthplace in Yorkshire. After the
death of his widow, Rosetta, in 1858, the land was sold to W. W. Bilyard. The
Estate was further subdivided in 1867 into blocks from 3-13 acres each with
frontages from 4-8 chains to Station Road, Railway Road, Homebush Road,
Liverpool Road, Water and Dean Streets and Redmire Boulevarde (former name of
The Boulevarde).
The Redmire locality became incorporated under the name of ‘Strathfield’ (the
residence of John Hardy, a City jeweler) on June 2, 1885, when local government
was formed. The original areas of the new Strathfield Municipality
included Redmire, Druitt Town [now Strathfield South] and Homebush.
Sections of the Underwood
property to the south of the railway (opened in 1855) were subdivided for sale
in 1878.
The Sydney Morning Herald of November 2, 1878, described the subdivision thus:
“. . . a portion of the estate close to the railway station has been laid out as
the ‘Village of Homebush’. The ground was allotted into 15 sections, intersected
by streets, with names almost identical with those in use to-day.
On June 30, 1823, 450 acres to the west of the free settlers’ land and extending
from Parramatta Road southerly to the Liverpool Road had been granted as a
‘glebe’ to the Chaplain of St. James’ Church, Sydney. After 1826, this reverted
to the Crown, and in 1841 was divided into 2 portions of 256 and 283 acres and
sold. The northern 256 acres was purchased by Joseph Hyde Potts, and the
southern 283 acres, purchased by Joseph Newton. (Barker Road now separates
these two areas.)
In 1858 the Newton Estate was acquired by Judge Joshua Josephson and marginal
portions of the area were afterwards subdivided and sold. Most were sold under
the title ‘Josephson’s Estate’ from 1916 onwards.
Father John Joseph Therry was granted 47 acres in an area called ‘Bark Huts’ in
March 1837. To finance the building of the original St. Anne’s Church
(foundation stone laid July 1841) Father Therry offered 4 acre blocks for £25,
but insufficient money being available, a further 134 allotments were offered
for sale in 1854 and the streets of the subdivision named after Saints or
dignitaries of the Church.
So it was that during the latter part of the 19th century many of the old
semi-rural grants within the “Liberty Plains” District, especially along the
principal lines of traffic, were subdivided into homestead areas and later into
residential allotments, to meet the requirements of professional men, merchants
and government officials.
This information was originally published in
‘Some Notes on the Municipality’, Strathfield Council, 1974. Some corrections
and amendments
have been made to this material by Cathy Jones 2004.
|