
'Stratfieldsaye'
[now demolished] |
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On 2nd June 1885,
Strathfield Municipality was incorporated under the name of Strathfield,
replacing the old district name of Redmyre [formerly Redmire]. ‘Strathfield’
was the name of a prominent home originally built as ‘Strathfieldsaye’ in
1868 for Walter Renny, painter and decorator and Lord Mayor of Sydney [1869-70].
‘Strathfieldsaye’ was a
two-storey brick residence with a lodge, stables and other outbuildings and was
set back about 600 feet from The Boulevarde. The name ‘Strathfieldsaye’
appears to derive from a ship carrying immigrants, including Henry Parkes, which
made four voyages to Sydney between 1838 and 1854. This ship was reputedly named
for the country estate, Stratfield Saye, of the Duke of Wellington
[website link:
www.stratfield-saye.co.uk].
Ownership of the property was transferred several times including to Davidson
Nichol, who shortened the name to ‘Strathfield House’, then ‘Strathfield’.
After Nichol’s death in 1880, the property was sub-divided with ‘Strathfield’
preserving over 3 acres and located at the end of the newly created Strathfield
Avenue cul-de-sac. The sub-division labelled ‘The Strathfield Estate’ also
created Woodgreen Rd [later renamed Torrington Avenue] and Nichol Parade to the
boundary of Wynne’s Paddock [lot 36 of the Redmire Estate which sub-divided in
1885].
Shortly
after the sub-division went on the market, ‘Strathfield House’ was sold to John
Hardy of Hardy Brothers, silversmiths and jewellers in September 1881. John
Hardy lived at ‘Strathfield’ for nearly twenty years before transferring
ownership to his wife Emma Elizabeth Hardy in 1900. For a short time, John
Maclean Arnott, managing director of Arnott’s Biscuits lived at ‘Strathfield’
after his marriage to Hardy’s daughter, Adeline. In 1907 Mrs Hardy disposed of
the property to Joseph Vickery for £5000, who added the tower and upper
verandahs to the house. Following Vickery’s death in 1930, ownership was
transferred to his daughters Lillian and Mary Vickery and son, Harland Vickery
in joint tenancy. The new owners decided to further reduce the land size and
subdivided the remainder with provision for extension of Strathfield Avenue
through to Nichol Parade and its dedication as a public road in 1935. The
Vickery family maintained ownership of the house, though further lots were sold
between July 1937 and November 1938. Located near the western end of Strathfield
Avenue, the house was tenanted from 1940 until 1957 when it was demolished for
further residential sub-division.
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